Benoni atc. BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Talk about it as you please, civil ser- vice might be all right in theory, but it is certainly pretty near all wrong in practice. — What HANNA needs more than any thing else is a fishing retreat on the Indian river. He might learn something from the tarpon down there. —Congressman ARNOLD, of this district, has announced his withdrawal from the race for the gubernatorial nomination so there will likely be some chance for the other aspirants. He has magnanimously decided to take the nomination for Con- gressman-at-large instead of having him- self elected Governor. He is probably acting upon the advice of A. A. Dale Esq. —DAVE BATES, the Chicago dime museum attraction, who charges ten cents every time you look at him because he has been brave enough to marry six wives, all of whom are alive, has just been fined $1,000 and given an indeterminate sentence in the penitentiary. Cruel treatment for a man who evidently was doing his best to relieve the congested condition of the matrimonial market. —1It is needless to state that it wasn’t one of HANNA'S friends who remarked that the present Senator from Ohio ‘‘stands about as much chance of re-election as he would of escaping from hell on a wooden leg.”” The comparison isn’t as beautiful as it is comparative, but we’ll bet a grand piano to a tin soldier that MARK would be perfectly willing to run his chances on a wooden leg if he could only get hack to the Senate first. —War clouds scurry up and then scurry away like grim spectres, but the events of the past decade have proven them quite ephemeral. Two weeks ago it was thought that the dogs of war would be let loose to fight over the Chinese bone. They all ran together with unwarranted haste, but the moment they saw their shadows in the water every one got afraid and now they say there has been a peaceful settlement of the difficulty. ——The . assignment of the OVERMAN wheel company, of Chicopee Falls, Mass., on the 27th ult., is another indication of the growing tendency of the United States to over-do the manufacturing business. The OVERMAN company are makers of the Victor bicycle, a splendid machine, but the bicycle business, like every other busi- ness, is over doneand as long as high tariffs are prejudicial to the acquiring of foreign markets there will necessarily be a con- gestion of our manufacturing interests. ~The protest that has been entered by the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union against the sale of a saloon privilege for the new congressional library building in Washington should never have been nec- essary. It will be beyond the compre- hension of most people that such a thing as selling liquor in the world’s most magnifi- cent public library building should have been thought of by anyone. Rum and letters never did mix well and we are sur- prised at this attempted mixture under sanction of the government. —New England cotton mill operatives are finding that their prosperous New Year under the DINGLEY tariff is not starting off so auspiciously. In the Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine mills orders for reductions of from ten to fifteen per cent. in the wages have been posted to take effect on the 10th. With a similar discouraging condition of affairs in their great shoe indus- tries the shrewd Yankees will begin to think they weren’t so foxy, after all, in pinning their faith so emphatically to the gold cause. —Mr. Secretary of the Treasury, though we are not at all alarmed about the new counterfeit one hundred dollar note that is deceiving even the government experts, we have read your call to have all silver certificates of that denomination sent in and will consign a car load to you next week, f. 0. b. You needn’t mind making any return, whatever, for them. We have no use for notes so large, anyway, as no body in Bellefonte can ever change one and they invariably start an epidemic of pink eye. —The man who protests against a full and accurate publication of the roll of United States pensioners lends his support toa system of fraud so gigantic that no one has a conception of what itis. Were every pensioner in every community made known the fellows who have gotten onto the lists through the dishonesty of pension sharks would soon he exposed and drop- ped. It would not only be a saving of millions of dollars, annually, but it would purge the rolls and make them once more the roster of honor they once were. —With a great appropriation of easily gotten newspaper space JIM CORBETT is blowing off again by indulging in his customary talk about his own greatness and patting himself on the back as being the elevator man of the prize ring. He says : ‘‘What the public expects from me is to maintain the manly dignity of the ring, and not be a brawler, nor a shifty evader of the honest principles which govern honest men when adjusting their respective merits.”’ Yes, he certainly was maintaining manly dignity when he spat on FITZSIMMONS in GREEN’S hotel, in Philadelphia, and when he ignored the latter’s daily salutation, as they passed one another while in training at Carson City. It certainly was manly and dignified to make the spectacle of himself that he did after he had gotten the licking he so richly merited. CULOETLL SE & 6 EO itll Ohio’s Revolt Against Hanna. The opposition to MARK HANNA'S elec- tion to the United States Senate has devel- oped proportions that were scarcely expect- ed. It was well known that many of the Ohio Republican politicians were hostile to him, and their hostility would give him some trouble in securing an election, but it was not believed that it would present so formidable a front as it has done, and give so doubtful an appearance to his chance of success. The election will take place on the 12th of this month, but in the prelimi- nary movements connected with the orga- nization of the Legislature his enemies have gained a decided advantage. There is good reason for even the Repub- licans to revolt against the domination of this man HANNA. Familiar as they are with the corrupt practices of their party, the blunt brutality with which HANNA has laid out to effect all his political ends with money has been too much for even the Republican sense of decency in politics The members of the old party can condone, most of the corruption practiced to secure the party’s success, but the spectacle of HANNA deliberately start- ing out to buy the Presidency, and cool- ly shaking in the face of the American people the boodle fund amounting to mil- lions of dollars with which he proposed to make the purchase, must have shocked many of the Republicans who, though in- terested in carrying the election, could not survive if HANNA’s method of electing Presidents should be adopted. It is questionable whether the Ohio lead- ers who are now fighting HANNA are oppos- ing him on account of his unexampled crime of making the Presidency an object of purchase, for they are not of the kind that are squeamish about the means they employ in politics, but there can not be a doubt that the honest Republican senti- ment in Ohio revolts at HANNA'S politi- cal methods, which employs money as a legitimate factor in politics, and would de- liver the government to those who may bid the highest for it at a cash sale. The Report of the Goldbug Commission. The monetary commission that has vol- unteered its service to give the country honest money and a sound currency, has reported its plan of reform and would like Congress to give it immediate attention. Fortunately Congress is so constituted that there is but little prospect of this monetary scheme being jammed through. The commission recommends a distinct affirmation in favor of the gold standard and an enactment to the effect that the ob- ligations of the government must be paid in gold. This, it claims, would be simply re-enacting ‘‘the provisions of existing law as interpreted by succeeding administra- tions of all parties since the resumption of specie payments in 1879.” In view of the fact that the people have been led to be- lieve that the payment of the government obligations in any other way than in gold would be a violation of the national honor and a breach of the public faith, there is something singular in the commission’s proposition that there should be an enact- ment that such obligations mst be paid in gold. It would appear from this that there is no law requiring gold payments, other- wise there would be no occasion for the legislation which the commission asks for. The fact is that the existing law, which authorizes the use of either gold or silver, has been ‘‘interpreted by succeeding admin- istrations of all parties’ in the interest of the Wall street money changers, requiring the use of gold, exclusively, when silver could be used with equal legality. It was upon this misinterpretation of existing law by treasury officials favoring the gold in- terest that those who maintained that sil- ver could be used equally with gold in the payment of the government’s obligations were denounced as enemies of the nation’s honor and conspirators against the public credit. The scheme of this currency reform com- mission is likely to come in collision with an element in Congress that will prefer to stand by the existing law in regard to gov- ernment payments, not as it has been in- terpreted by Wall street’s agents in the treasury department, but as it has been declared to mean by the STANLEY MAT- THEW’S resolution which was explicit in its declaration, as the sense of the representa- tives of the people, that the law which directed that the government’s obligations should he paid in ‘‘the lawful coin of the country’’ meant that silver, equally with gold, could be used for that purpose. There are indications that the reply which Con- gress will give to the commission’s goldbug scheme will be a reaffirmation of the STAN- LEY MATTHEW’S resolution. ——The Pittsburg Post almanac for 1898 is what one could truly call a useful publi- cation, for it contains 448 pages of statistical matter that is of exceptional value for ref- erence and particularly adapted to Penn- sylvanians. The Post attaches the more pretentious title of ‘‘Encyclopedia’” to its publication and judging from the grist of information to be found between its covers the word has nof been used inaplicably. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. General Gobin on the Pension Abuses. General J. P. S. GOBIN, commander-in- chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, appears to have been awakened to the fact that there is something crooked in the pension system by which so large a part of the government revenues is squandered. To the ordinary popular intelligence it has been for some years evident that there is not only looseness but actual corruption in the management of the pensions, but it is just beginning to dawn upon general GoBIN’s understanding that the bounty of the government is being bestowed upon undeserving pensioners. Those to whom the loose methods of the pension system are objectionable have enter- tained a suspicion that the Grand Army of the Republic was responsible for them in a large measure, as pL great influence was believed to have been exerted in securing the indiscriminate and extravagant pension legislation which has caused a heavier draft upon the resources of the government than any other item of public expense, and has become the most demoralizing and danger- ous abuse connected with our public af- fairs. General GoOBIN, however, denies that this evil has been encouraged and sus- tained by the organization of which he is commander-in-chief, but, on the contrary, he says that it has always opposed the vicious project of a service pension, and that it has never favored the practice of ex- tending the bounty of the government to undeserving claimants. Granting that the general is correct in his denial that this abuse received en- couragement from the Grand Army of the Republi¢, it is nevertheless unfortunate that the irregularities in the pension sys- tem have not met with such opposition from that organization as would have helped to arrest an evil which is not only doing a great injury to public interests, but is casting a stigma upon a system which should be free from the imputation of fraud and dishonor. There may be truth in ‘general GOBIN’S assertion that ‘‘the Grand Army believes that no one should receive a pension who is not suffering from actual disability,” yet the tone of his expression on this sub- ject would seem to imply an ignorance of the fact that persons not disabled are receiving pensions, and that if this wrong could be clearly made to appear it would deserve the reprobation and excite the cor- rective action of those who deprecate such a perversion of a system of government bounty whose only legitimate object is the relief of disabled veterans. But it is pos- sible that general GOBIN does not clearly know that a large percentage of pensioners are persons who are not suffering from any disability, whatever, a fact which anyone can verify by personable ehservation among those who are receiving pensions? Is he not aware of the disgraceful fact that among these recipients of public largess are to be found not only such as are fully able to earn their living, but actually men of ample means ? These are facts that should be fully within the knowledge of general GOBIN, as it is well known to almost every- body of ordinary observation that pensions are being received by men in such physical and pecuniary condition that their being on the pension rolls is a positive disgrace to them, and in addition to these are the innumerable bummers whose military ser- vice was as much of a fake as is their claim to the bounty of the government. If such undeserving claimants were removed from the list of pensioners there would be a saving of at least half of the extravagant outlay that has embarrassed the public finances and deprived the pension roll of its character as a roll of honor. Less Semse Than Charity. The clergy, as a class, are as much dis- tinguished for good sense as for ‘correct re- ligious principles, but there are instances in which clergymen display a lack of com- mon sense, however well they may intend in a spiritual way. This deficiency is more frequently shown when they switch off on the political track, as was the case with BURCHARD, or when they get to annoying the President with remarks which in his opinion are not suitable to the pulpit. Among the preachers who may be classed with those that are not overstocked with common sense are reverends JAMES W. PurNAM and WALTER RANSCHENBUSCH, respectively belonging to the Baptist and Presbyterian denominations in New York city, who from a mistaken idea of what was their duty foolishly refrained from afford- ing relief to suffering humanity. The circumstances under which these senseless pastors committed so culpable an error were as follows: After TAMMANY closed the municipal campaign that brought Greater New York under Demo- cratic control, the campaign funds re- maining over amounted to a surplus of $20,000. If such a thing had occur- red - in Philadelphia politics the Repub- lican machine managers would have disposed of the overplus by sticking it in their pockets as their share of the campaign plunder. But TAMMANY is less selfishly BELLEFONTE, PA.. JAN. 7, 1898. inclined, and is more honorable in dispos- ing of such funds. The chiefs directed that this surplus of $20,000 should be distribu- ted among the poor of the city through the clergy, and $50 was the share of it sent re- spectively to Revs. PUTNAM and RANSCH- ENBUSCH for such distribution. It should be thought that as charitable pastors hav- ing a sympathetic feeling for the suffer- ing of the poor they would have gladly availed themselves of such means of afford- ing relief. But instead of allowing them- selves so be directed by the dictates of true benevolence, they assumed the at- titude of the Pharisee, sending this money back with the offensive declaration that they would have nothing to do with such “ill-gotten gains.”” Considering that they might have used this money in relieving women and children destitute of clothing, bread and shelter, the tiger was infinitely more charitable than these narrow-minded shepherds. That TAMMANY’S campaign fund could be classed as ‘‘ill-gotten gains’’ was an unwarranted assumption of preach- ers who were influenced by partisan preju- dice and bigotry. But let us suppose that an amount of money had been sent to those clergyman from a more congenial source, such as JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, or some other one of the monopolistic sharks who are robbing the American people by trust methods, is it likely that their consciences would have declined to accept it for the reason that it was ‘‘ill-gotten gains?’ ROCKEFELLER’S contribution to the churches are accepted as hallowed tributes to the Lord, although the Standard oil methods by which he has secured the means of giving have included almost every crime that insatiable avarice could commit. A Renegade That Wants to Come Back. The New York Woric is evidently affect- ed by a desire to recover the place it lost as a Democratic organ by its opposition to Democratic principles and issues in the last presidential election. It has become con- vinced that Mr. BRYAN is the representa- tive leader of the Democracy, but having opposed him on the money question it would like him to. abandon free silver in order that the World may save its consis- tency in giving him itssupport. It declares that it sees in Mr. BRYAN ‘‘the logical and ideal leader of all the elements opposed to corporate greed and plunder,” and if he would only throw his free silver principles overboard he would receive such support from PULITZER’S paper as would in the modest opinion of its proprietor, ensure his election to the Presidency. There is no probability that Mr. BRYAN will accept the assistance of the World on such terms. It might be a relief to that rather unprincipled paper if there should be such a back down by the Democrats on the silver question as would give the World a right to claim that the course it took in support of the gold standard was the cor- rect one; but the Democratic party is not going to sacrifie its principles to accommo- date a renegade organ by enabling it to come back to the party fold with an appear- ance of having preserved its consistency. Mr. BRYAN is indeed what the World declares him to be, ‘‘the logical and ideal leader of all the elements opposed to cor- porate greed and plunder,” and nothing contributed more to his being such a leader than the position he occupies as"the cham- pion of free silver and the leading opponent of so greedy a monetary monopoly as the gold trust. New York's Canal Steal. It was a dangerous experiment when the people of New York voted, in 1895, for an amendment of the state constitution au- thorizing a loan of $9,000,000 to deepen the Erie and other state canals. It appeared to be necessary that the Erie canal should be improved to enable it to fully perform the service it was intended to do as a pub- lic improvement, but the funds were not available unless authorized by an amend- ment of the constitution. The amend- ment was voted by the people, the money was borrowed by the Republican state ad- ministration, but it is now discovered that the funds ostensibly used for the purpose has not effected the object intended. : The people were told that $9,000,000 would be ample for the intended improve- ment, but that large sum has disappeared without any perceptible results as the fruit of so great an outlay, and the state ad- ministration now informs the people that there must be an appropriation of $7,000,- 000 more if the State is to derive any ad- vantage from the nine million expenditure. It has now become evident that the first appropriation was squandered in the most shameless jobbery. The money that was not directly stolen by those who managed the job has been used for political purposes by the PLATT machine. What became of the money is sufficiently explained by the fact that boss PLATT and his political gang had control of it. The New York Zimes correctly. remarks that this canal steal is ‘‘the greatest public scandal that has been revealed in the af- fairs of the State of New York since Gov. TILDEN’S exposure of the old canal ring in 1875.” The misfortune in this case is that there is not another Gov. TILDEN in sight to turn the rascals out. | It Looks Blue for Hanna in the Ohio Senatorial Struggle. The Anti-Hannaites Elect Their Man Speaker of the House.—Interest in the Contest.—The Vot- ing in the Legislature Bore Out the Predictions to a Nicety—The Extraordinary Combination on Burke in the Senate. CoLuMBUS O., Jan. 4.—The Ohio Legis- lature convened to-day. Owing to the senatorial contest, unusual interest was taken in the organization of both houses. The caucuses last Saturday night were not on the usual lines between the Republicans and the Democrats, owing to some of the Republicans members having formed a fusion with the Democratic members for the defeat of Senator Hanna. The Senate stands — Democrats and 18 Republicans, the latter included Senator Voight, who was elected on a fusion ticket from Cincin- nati and who did not attend either eau- cus Saturday night. Senator Burke, Repub- lican, of Cleveland, was not only absent, but he was at the same time nominated by the Democratic caucus for president protem of the Senate. The Republican caucus nominated Senator J. Park Alexander for president protem. The absence of Senator Burke to-day, therefore meant not only his election, but the election of Democrats for the offices in the Senate. Senator Burke is opposed to the election of Senator M. A. Hanna. With party lines drawn in the Senate, Lieutenant Governor A. W. Jones, Republican, would have had the tie vote to cast, and he has been considered as opposed to Hanna. STATUS OF THE HOUSE. The House stands 62 Republicans and 47 Democrats, the former including four fusionists from Cincinnati. At the Repub- lican house caucus Saturday night there were only 52 present and pledged to Alex- ander Boxwell for speaker. Of the ten ab- sentees Griffith of Clinton, was the only one offering an excuse. He wassick. The other nine Republicans members were absent because they are opposed to Hanna and re- garded Boxwell as the Hanna candidate. These nine Republican members met with the Democratic members aud indorsed Har- ry C. Mason of Cleveland, an anti-Hanna Republican for speaker. With these Re- publican members and the 47 Demoratic members Mason would have 56 votes, or more than necessary to elect, but some of the Democratic members refused to be pledged to Republican candidates for Sen- ator, speaker or other offices in the organi- zation of the Legislature. Owing to the patronage in these offices as well as the preferences in chairmanships and the composition of all the committees, it was generally believed that the fats of Senator Hanna, as well as of all his sup- porters depended on the organization of the: Legislature. His opponents claimed that he would be defeated even if the Boxwell ticket was elected, and his friends admitted that the chances were against him if Box- well was defeated. Owing to the Senator- ship being at stake there was an unusually large attendance about the statehouse at an early hour. It required an hour to examine the cre- dentials and swear in the 109 members of fhe House, but the 36 Senators soon quali- BURKE, THE ABSENTEE, ELECTED. All were present in the Senate chamber except Senator Burke, of Cleveland, the Republican who is opposed to Hanna and Senator Voight, the Fusionist from Cin- cinnati. The vote on organization stood 18 to 17 in favor of the Democrats. Senator Burke was elected president. O. D. Cassell (Dem.) was elected chief clerk over A. C. Caine (Rep. ) the latter having expected re-election by Burke’s presence, although Burke would not support Hanna. As Senator Burke was absent and could not be sworn in, Thaddeus E. Cromley (Dem. ) was elected President pro tem. of the Senate. It is understood, however, that he will give way to Senator Burke as soon as the latter arrives to take his seat. In the hall of the house the wildest scenes were witnessed during the first hour of the session. All of the 109 members were in their seats. After the name of Boxwell had been presented as the regular Republican candidate for speaker, the name of Representative Masou (Rep.) was represented by Representative Jones (Rep.) and seconded by two other Republicans. The Democats did not participate in the speaking. : As the ballot proceeded there were loud: cheers as the doubtful members responded to their names, and when the roll call ap- proached the close and Mason secured the necessary majority there was a long demon- stration. The first ballot resulted, Mason 56, Box- well 52, had been claimed since Saturday night by the combined opposition to Sen- ator Hanna. The combine then completed the organization of the House. MALLOY BEATEN TOO. The regular Republican candidate for chief clerk of the house was John R. Mal- loy, secretary of the Republican state com- mittee. Malloy has held the position three terms and was very competent. His voice has been heard at national conventions and he was a favorite, but he was defeated by Charles H. Gerrish, a Republican who has been Mr. Kurtz’s close lieutenant in his opposition to Senator Hanna, by the same vote of 56 to 53. HANNA'S FUTURE GROWING DARK. CoLuMBUS, O., January 4.—The politi- cal future of Senator Hanna is certainly to- night in a closely poised balance. While there are now reported to be only nine dis- senters among the eighty Republican mem- bers, one in the Senate and eight in the House, yet the really doubtful list is limit- ed to two or three. Some of the dissenting Republicans are not likely ever to be recon- ciled to Senator Hanna. They have burned their bridges behind them and openly ad- mit it. The doubtful members are being offered their choice of chairmanships and given opportunity to make all other selections they want. The power of the organization of the House is certainly being used to the greatest possible advantage, and its in- fluence is not to be under-estimated in Concluded on page 4. Spawls froma the Keystone. —TFlorence McAdam, aged 10, died at Leb- anon of lockjaw. —The new hospital at DuBois, with 15 beds, was formally opened on Tuesday. —William Gross, the Allentown jewelry swindler, is in Toronto, Ont., resisting extra- dition. —The Lebanon firemen Monday night took 44 ballots for a chief, without arriving at a choice. —Judge William Galbraith, a brother-in- law of William S. Lane, of Philadelphia, died at Erie. —Falling on the ice at Bloomsburg, Rush Shaffer sustained injuries to his head that crazed him. —PFloyd Shay, aged 20 years, of Milton, was drowned in the Susquehanna river, at that place Tuesday. —An organizer for the united mine work- ers of America is organizing the miners in Jefferson county. —The farm house of John H. Hain, Wern- ersville, has been robbed three times within the last six weeks. —Governor Hastings has appointed Joseph G. Isenberg, of Huntingdon, associate judge, vice R. A. Laird, diseased. —The employes of Theilbacher’s silk mill, at Allentown, struck Monday for a raise from $2.50 to $3.50 per cent. —Robert Duffield, a brakeman on the Beech Creek railroad, had his head cut off, by cars near Clearfield Junction. —Casper Scharff, a war veteran, living alone at Reading, was found ill on his cot, on the verge of death from freezing. —John Johenning was arrested at Allen- town for spitting on the floor of a street car and spent 24 hours in the lockup. —Rev. William B. Anderson and his wife, missionaries, who left Lancaster in Novem- ber for India, have arrived at Bombay. —DBoiling lard ignited from the stove and set fire to the clothes of Mrs. Levi Snyder, of Mount Joy and she was fatally burned. —The new hall of Camp No. 274, Patriotic Order Sons of America, at Landingville, Schuylkill county, was dedicated Sunday. —Two factions are trying to get possession of the Polish Catholic church at Mill Creek, near Wilkesbarre, and bloodshed is feared. —In renewing the 180 liquor licenses in Carbon county Monday, Judge Craig warned hotel keepers to discontinue serving free lunch. —Citizens of Newville have secured an in- junction to restrain the town council from contracting for a municipal electric lighting plant. —James Sweeney, aged 19, had the top of his head blown off by the accidental dis- charge of an old musket, at Tamaqua, Mon- day. —Thrown backward by a cat she was car- rying, Mary A. Kelly, living near Sharon, fell into an open fire grate and was burned to death. ! —Robert Johnson, aged 28, had both eyes blown out by an explosion of dynamite while prospecting for coal on his farm in Allegheny county. —James Totten, a member of the Salvation Army at Phoenixville, was found dead in a stable at that place, having died of heart trouble. —By the report of the auditor in the affairs of the united benevolent aid society, at Leb- anon, $54,270.77 will be distributed among holders of matured policies. —Warden Wright, of the western peniten- tiary, says that under the present interpreta- tion of the convigt labor law he can give em- ployment to only 45 per cent. of the inmates. —The cortege following the body of Ed- ward Metzger to the grave at Newton Cen- tre, Luzerne county, was caught in a snow drift, and the corpse had to be transferred to a sled. —Thomas Fryer, W. R. Narvel and Harry Pillman were arrested at Pottstown, Monday for the theft of 700 pounds of brass journals from a tool house of the Reading railway company. —Joe Krietal, the notorious Hungarian rioter, who was sent from Elk county with five other men for burning schutes during the coal strike of 1894, to the penitentiary for five years, died in that institution Mon- day of typhoid fever. —The Rochester mine at DuBois, was closed indefinitely on Tuesday. The min- ers claim that the shut down is due to the operator’s desire to get rid of a number of miners who have been active in organizing since the recent strike. About 1,000 men are thrown out of work. ” —It is reported that Patton will soon have another newspaper. Will Kinsloe, son of R. A. Kinsloe, of Philipsburg, is the one who will make the venture. Opposition will likely be the life of trade at Patton, as it has been at many other places. If the new paper is launched we wish it success. —At a meeting of several ministers of the Central Pennsylvania cenference. at Wil- liamsport the other day, arrangements were’ perfected for the semi-centennial jubilee of Dickinson seminary. The jubilee will begin June 14th and will continue two days. Ad- dresses, historical and otherwise, will be de- livered, and reunions will be held. —Cyrus Graybill, of Northumberland county, was arrested last week for having in his possession and offering for sale rabbits after December 15th. At the hearing before the justice of the peace he was discharged under section eleven of the act which says persons may have in their possession game, providing it was shot before the expiration of the open season, which is the 15th of Decem- ber, and also allows fifteen days grace within which to sell the game. The prosecutor paid the costs. —About six months ago Reuben Lane, a one-legged resident of Barnesboro, started to walk to Kansas, with the intention of wed- ding a rich widow in that state. It now turns out that his only acquaintance with the widow was through the medium of a matrimonial agency, and when he met her in the flesh, with but one leg, and covered with the mingled dust of six or seven states through which he had tramped to join his fiance, she decided that he did not come up to the specifications and declined to marry him. He has now sued her for $10,000 for breach of promise.