BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. f —Yes, Congress had better adjourn and go home. It has done about all the bad it can do and adjournment would certainly be making the most of a bad job. —The Mifflin county farmer who possesses a pig with three fully developed ears, must have adopted the Potter county breed. That is the only section we know of where “pig’s ears’’ are sO prolific. — DEWEY’s defeat of MoNTEJO'S fleet was very disastrous to Spain, but develop- ments of late have proven that he isn’t near the diplomat on land that he is on sea. His own knockout of himself is the most disastrous thing he has ever done. ——If the last fight in Centre county did nothing else it lined up former county chairman W. E. Gray. He had been do- ing the political elquilibristic act, with a pail on each shoulder, for some time, but they caught him on Friday before the con- vention and WILLIE'S water began to spill so rapidly that he slid in out of the wet and is now an avowed QUAYite. Better be something, and be it right, Than a shifting coward, in any fight. —The papers were’nt full of the frocks and hats worn by GROVER’S babies during the annual egg rolling fete on the White House lawn this year. GROVER is living in retirement at Princeton now, where the quiet life is evidently not much to his lik- ing, for ever and anon he throws up dis- tress signals calling for a political life boat to come and take him off. —1It is not to the credit of the United States Senate to have unseated CLARK, of Montana, and permitted HANNA, of Ohio, to remain. Both bought their elections by bribing Legislators and they should have suffered alike, but it is probable that the millionaire Senators had an extra grudge against the red headed Croesus because he has more money than any of them. — While the President is in New York attending the ecumenical conference on Foreign Missions tomorrow afternoon he might tell his Methedist brethren, gather- ed there from all parts of the world, that, according to his imperialistic notions, the best way to christianize is to benevolently assimilate with bullets and bayonets. —Governor TAYLOR, of Kentucky, call- ed on the President at the White House on Tuesday. He was probably there to get a few pointers on ‘‘plain duty’ and ‘‘benev- olent assimilation.’”” By the way,wouldn’t TAYLOR make agoocd running mate for Mc- KiNLEY? There would certainly be no clash of ideas between them, as both he- lieve in holding power at the point of the bayonet. —Every political contest in Centre coun- ty develops the fact that there are more men who can be ‘‘seen.’’ A new lot is heard of after every contest and if the lots keep on growing with the rapidity of the past few years the time will soon be at hand when such a thing as an election on the question of the respective merits of the candidates will be out of the question. It will be a sad spectacle that will confront a county like Centre, but it will be none the less true. —The Sultan of Turkey is acting in bad faith with us. After promising to pay $90,000 indemnity for the destruction of American colleges during the Armenian massacre in 1895, and permit their rebuild- ing, he has done neither. The result is that diplomatic relations are strained and it is not altogether beyond the range of possibilities that DEWEY may be sent over there to knock a little of the stuffing out of Turkey; at least $90,000 worth. —A Lycoming county sportsman club is all wrought up over the fact that among a recent consignment of trout fry they re- ceived was one fish with two perfectly de- veloped heads. That’snothing. From the way the writer's bait disappeared on Mon- day, when fingers were too cold to put on new worms, we are willing to bet there are thousands of trout in Spring creek that have a half a dozen heads each, and stomachs, too, for that matter. —1It was little wonder that the soprancs in one of the local church choirs ‘shrieked “Mercy !”? ‘Mercy I’ on Sunday night, when ghe tenors and altos were shouting something about God appointing a day. The “Mercy!” ‘Mercy!’ was in the libretto all right enough, but the discord was so horrible that the sopranos would probably have resorted to just such worded shrieks, even if they had not been there. Why they say that the jarring of the wave motions of sound withered the Easter lillies that decorated the choir box. —Bad butter usually raises more of a stink than anything else and that is the reason Secretary of Agriculture JoHN HAM- 1LTON hurried off to Philadelphia on Tues- day to investigate the charges of crookedness in one of his departments, that of dairy and food, made by the North American. It ap- pears that Secretary HAMILTON'S deputies in Philadelphia have been in collusion with the wholesale dealers of oleomargerine down there. The deal was that the whole- salers were to sell oleo to the retailers at an advance of one cent a pound, the ad- vance of one cent being turned over to the food inspectors as hush money. The net is likely to scoop in a great many rascals and when the whole thing becomes public our good Presbyterian elder will have re- vealed the kind of fellows he got himself in with when he jnmped out of the HASTINGS bed and got under the covers with QUAY and his gang. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 45 BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 20, 1900. The Making of a New King. Did you ask why does not the constity- tion go hand in hand with the flag into our new possessions? Are you anxious to know why the liberties and rights and op- portunities, guaranteed by our organic law, are not secured to all the people who are under the protection of the stars and stripes? Simply because personal ambition and greed for political patronage wills it other- wise. Mr. McKINLEY rejoices in the pow- er that has been conferred upon him as President of the United States. Unforiu- nately for his greed that power is limited by constitutional restrictions. Outside of that constitution there is neither proscribed bounds for itching ambition, nor inhibited restraints upon the creation and control of public patronage. Under the constitution Mr. McKINLEY could not be King, or Emperor, or dictator of Porto Rico. Outside of it he can, in fact is. Under the bill to form a civil govern- ment for the unfortunate residents of that island he will have more power than bad the Queen of Spain, from whose autocratic authority we thought we were rescuing a helpless and oppressed people. The new bill, dictated by him and enacted into law by those professing to be his friends and followers, gives him as ahsolute and dicta- torial power over all the affairs of that island as has the Czar of Russia over the empire that he rules and speaks for. Through its provisions he appoints its gov- ernor, the executive council, the judges and the officers who select the persons to fill every appointive office. He vetoes such legislation as his appointees may enact that does not suit his purposes. Through these appointees he grants or refuses such fran- chises as he pleases. Through these he en- forces such edicts and collects such taxesas he may see proper. The people there are absolotely helpless. They have neither voice nor part in their government. They must pay taxes, but have no representation ; submit to laws the enactment of which they were even not consulted about, and obey edicts promul- gated without their advice or consent. As were our forefathers under King George III, during the oppressive years that preceded” $he revolution, so are the people of Porto Rico now, under King WILLIAM I In addition to the power that his bill gives him, the patronage that it enables him to distribute at the expense of the peo- ple is as unlimited in amount as itis lib- eral in salaries. . It empowers him to appoint A governor at $8,000 a year. A secretary of the council at $4,000 a year. An attorney general at $4,000 a year. An insular treasurer at $5,000 a year. An auditor at $4,500 a year. A commissioner of the interior at $4,000 a ear. y A commissioner of education at $3,000 a year. A chief justice of the supreme court at $5,000 a year. Four associate justices of the supreme court at $4,500 a year each. A marshall of the supreme court at $3,000 a year. ‘A United States district judge at $5,000 a year. A United States district attorney at $4,000 a year. A United States district marshal at $3,500 a year. Three members of a commission to codify the laws of the island at $5,000 a year each. Five members of the executive council, whose salaries are to be fixed by the Porto Rican Legislature. To those he can, and will, add as his necessities require and as he can find ex- cuse. And the necessities of the Republi- can party for patronage know no bounds. ‘What positions HANNA needs to retain pow- er for McKINLEY will be created, and fill- ed, if, like the locusts of Egypt, the hoards of Republican officials eat every green and growing thing on that ill fated island. _ The American people may love justice. If they do there will be little of power or glory left for McKINLEY when they pass judgment on his attempt to govern Porto Rico outside the bounds of constitutional authority. Proving Its Efficacy. Four years ago when the Democrats were contending for more money Republican speakers and papers denounced them as repudiationists and cheap money cranks. Then we had a per capita circulation, or an ayerage amount for each individual, of $21.53. Now we have $26.12. This in- crease has been hrought about by the coin- age and use of silver that had been stored in the treasury vaults and by the increas- ed out-put of gold. If there is more pros- perity in the country to-day than there was in April, 1896, it is due more to the fact of an increased volume of circulating medi- um than to any other single condition. And if this ie so, does it not affirm the Democratic position of four years ago ? An increase of $492,645,043, in the total money circulation, in four years and the much vaunted prosperity that Republicans are given to boasting about, coming with that increase, has a tendency, if nothing more, to prove the correctness of those who’ con- tended for more money for the people and should prove a squelcher for the single standard or scarce money advocates of the country. Barkis is Willin’. D. Loxg, of Massachusetts, has expressed himself as willing to accept the nomination for Vice-President on the ticket with Me- KINLEY. Senators HANNA and PLATT have been looking for some time for a can- _lidate for that office, but had been unable to find a suitable one. There isn’t much in the office to attract men of capacity, and the custom has been to select some fellow with a Bar’l and little brains. But by some error of judgment or accident of cir- cumstances the St. Louis Convention named GARRET A. HOBART four years ago, who was a man of brains and character, and the consequence is that the party is now em- barrassed. In order to make the work easy the President some weeks ago made some new rules with the respect to the so- cial status of the incumbent of the office. The manifest purpose was to excite the ambition of some wealthy nobody who would pay the expenses of the campaign and ask no questions. But none such re- sponded to the call and the announcement of Secretary LonaG’s willingness to take the place causes embarrassment, rather than satisfaction. Ms. LONG is not a bad man and under the old rules of party arrangement would not have been a bad candidate. He served with some measure of credit in Congress and has not heen an altogether bad Secte- tary of the Navy. The fact that DAVID A. WELLS filled that position during the war of the rebellion is evidence, however, that it doesn’t require a high order of tal- ent to cut a respectable figure in that of- fice. In fact any ordinary clerk will do as things go, and LoNG got on fairly well until the dispute between Admirals SAMP- SON and SCHLEY arose. Then he lost his balance, but not unnaturally. The Presi- dent was determined not to let any Demo- crat attain the character of a hero in the Spanish-American war. SCHLEY, who is a Democrat, threatened to reach the standard and the President set about to humiliate bim. He made Mr. LoNG take side with SAMPSON and, between them, they were able to give the credit of one of the greatest achievements in the history of the Ameri- ean navy to a man who hadn’t earned it. But he prevented the real hero of that fight from becoming a candidate for Presi- dent against McKINLEY. In view of such services to the President, Mr. LoNG has a right to ask to be nominat- ed for Vice President. As above indicated he wasn’t wanted, and if any one of the men who were desired comes forward and expresses a willingness to take the compli- ment, LONG will be shelved. But in the event that no other candidate comes for- ward nobody will dispute the proposition that he will be a fit candidate for the office. He has already declared himself in favor of imperialism. He is willing to take upon himself any burdens which a more con- scientious and manly man would reject un- der any and all circumstances, and he is ready to perform any menial service which his Imperial Majesty, ‘the Major,’’ imposes. He may not have as much money as MARK HANNA expected the candidate for that of- fice to give up to the committee, but he will do in a pinch and if the party intends to take that kind of a candidate, we can see no way that anything better could be done than nominate Secretary of the Navy, Hon. JouN D. LoxG. He is willing to take the place and few men knowing as much about the affair as he does would go that far. A McKinley Method of Robbing the Peo- ple. The people of this county have a right to consider that $63,000 is a pretty large sum to pay, annually, for county expenditures. These expenditures cover the cost of main- taining the courts, making assessments, building bridges, holding elections, keep- ing in repair the public preperty, main- taining the insane and criminals, managing county affairs, and, in fact, all the expenses incident to, and necessary for, the proper control and maintenance of county govern- ment. When they think of the multiplicity of pur- poses for which this $63,000 is considered an ample, if not extravagant expenditure, they can the better realize the profligacy of Mr. McKINLEY’S methods in connection with his formation of a government for the Philippine islands. Less than a year ago he appointed a com- mission of three persons, with one secretary, to proceed to the Philippines, examine into their condition, ascertain their needs, and report what they discovered, for the Presi- dent’s satisfaction. It went to Manila. It lived fat. It returned and the country, to- day, knows no more about the actual con- dition or what is required for the better- ment of the people of those islands than if that commission had never been heard of. The other day some curious Senator in- troduced a resolution requesting an itemiz- ed statement of the expense of that com- mission. It was furnished on Monday and shows up the pretty total of $117,185, or an average of $29,269 for each one of the four connected with it. Here is almost double the amount of the The Secretary of the Navy, Hon. Jonx | entire yearly expenses of Centre county, paid to four individuals for a single trip to and a few months stay in those islands. They were no part of the army or govern- mental force sent out to establish a gov- ernment, such as Mr. McKINLEY thinks proper for the Filipinos. They were simply visitors, without authority, without in- structions or without use. And yet those four men cost the people of the United States, for a few months junket, $117,185. And the Republican who growls the loudest about his local taxes and next fall will be blathering about Democratic man- agement will step up and vote to endorse McKINLEY, and hisjgovernment by com- mission, just as if it was not the barest- faced robbery of the people, and a simple and sure way of furnishing a Republican President with official patronage and Re- publican office seekers places from which to draw fat salaries. The Impending Struggle. The parallel between the political and industrial conditions of 1892, as compared withthe present time, has not been com- pleted yet, but unfortunately the signs point that way. In 1892, as was stated, the strikes began at New Bethlehem in Febru- ary and culminated in the Homestead riots and slaughter of July following. This year they began nearly a month later, but the progress has been more rapid and the trou- bles have extended with marvelous rapidity inall directions. As we said last week there has been no blood shed yet, happily, but there is no telling what the future has in store. As a matter of fact the clouds are already perceptible and unless the signs are misleading the worst will be here before the midsummer season has arrived. At Croton Dam, New York, on Monday morning 600 troops were mustered to con- front a body of strikers and force them in- to submission. In Chicago the militia are resting on their arms ready at the word of command to pounce upon workingmen who are indulgir ¢ in the mistaken notion that they are entitled to the right to strike against what they esteem to be wrongs per- petrated by their employers. At Cleveland, Ohio,men employed by companies in which MARK HANNA is the controlling influence are held in restraint by the bayonets of mil- itiamen and in a dozen other places which a week ago were quiet and orderly, the “pomp and circumstance of war’’ is now the only power that maintains even the ap- pearance of peace in the communities. We still hope and confidently believe that there will be no repetition of the ever- lasting blight which at Homestead stained the record of civilization in 1892. But it will not be for the reason that there is no just cause for resistance against the atroci- ties of the subsidized trusts and the protect- ed tariff barons. They are oppressing the labor interests and robbing the producers of the country now as they were then and it is only a question of the forbearance of of the people under the severest provoca- tion. We hope there will be no effusion of blood. We confidently pray that the suf- ferers under the injustice will be patient. But we call public attention to the perfect parallel between then and now and ask for justice for the men, if the worst comes to tke worst. Clouds on the Business Sky. To those who keep tab on such things the signs of the times are not nearly so promising as they were one year ago. With stocks anywhere from twenty to one hun- dred per cent less than they were in April 1899; with strikes either threatened or in operation in nearly every working district in the country; with orders falling off in every line of business, and with a general slump in both hopes and prospects, the triumphal march of a prosperity, of which we have seen so much on paper and felt so little of it in our pockets, seems to be com- ing to a premature close. Even so optimistic a representative of the business interests of the country as DUNN'S REPORT says : ‘‘the failures of the first quarter of 1900 seem large. In fact are large compared with last year and 1898 % % % ¥ while Massachusetts and New Eng- land failures have been larger than in the first quarter of any other year since 1894.” It is not a pleasant condition of affairs either to contemplate or confront, but the people will be none the worse off for know- ing and realizing the out look. Some of us may think there is great pros- perity in the country. We only wish every one had reason to feel that such is to be the case Unfortunately facts do not war- rant any such a belief and unfortunately even the seeming prosperity of which we have heard so much and realized so little, has promise of but short life. That it could be otherwise with trusts multiplying and individual energies throt- tled is not to be expected. And he who looks for a different and better condition of af- fairs while HANNAism permeates the gov- ernment, and the power of the adminis- tration is put forth to build up and pro- teot monopolies, at the expense of the in- dividual, is looking for what he will never see and hoping for that which he will | never realize. tion and deadlock the convention. A Comparison that Compares. Champ Clark on New England Methods. Congressman Champ Clark got a splen- did chance the other day to get back at the fellows who have been attacking the south because of the alleged unjust treat- ment of negroes in the matter of voting. It was in the debate of the Hawaiian bill which brought up the principle of taxation without representation. Mr. Clark said : ‘The other day the chairman of the Democratic National committee ordered me to go to Rhode Island and make a couple of speeches. While I was up there I learned a good deal; and among other things I learned this: That the city of Providence, Rhode Island, has nearly half the population of the State ; and it has on- ly one state Senator out of thirty-seven. (Laughter.) No southern State ever did as badly as that. The city of Providence has twelve representatives in the Legisla- ture out of seventy-two ; and one little town that has only 267 votes elects a state Senator. ‘“In that State they have property quali- fication. If a man owns $134 worth of real estate he can vote ; if he pays taxes on $134 worth of personal property he can vote. In the city of Woodsocket 400 men tried to compel the tax assessor to put them on the tax list ; they have been ready to swear that they had the necessary amount of property ; they had heen ready to prove this ; but they were Democrats the assessor was a Republican, and he would not put them on. They undertook to mandamus him, and the judge decided that it was too late. The next time they turned round, and while the assessor was making up the tax list, they tried to mandamus him ; and the Republican judge decided that they could not tell but what he was going to put them on the list the next day, and they were too early.’’ And in view of such a situation he wanted to know what right they had to talk about ‘‘disfranchisement.” He des- scribed it as gall, and the Republican leaders need not think they can cover up injustice to Porto Rico by hurling epithets at the South. The pickpocket is no less guilty because he yells ‘‘stop thief !"’ at some one else to distract attention. Looking for the Lost. From the Portland Oregonian (Rep.) (The Oregonian, is one of the leading Re- publican papers of the Pacific coast. It is so wrought up about the actions of ‘‘Mr. Facing Everywhichway’’ that it bursts in- to this poetic effusion :) We’ve been huntin’ you, McKinley, but we don’t know where you air ; When we clap our fingers on you, why we find you’re never there. When we hunted through the tariff, in the place you’d ought to be, Why you wasn’t ‘round there nowhere, least as far as we could see. . In this Porto Rico thingumbob we thought we'd find you sure ; When we got there you’d been trekking, like the smooth and wily Boer ; So we asked the gold supporters if they thought we'd find you there, And they said they guessed so, some place, but they didn’t know just where. Alger said he hadn’t seen you, and he shed a bitter tear When he said you’d gone an’ left him like a sinking ship last year. When we visited Mark Hanna, who was busy countin’ pelf, y Why, he said he couldn’t tell us, for he didn’t know hisself, So we've just kep’ or a-huntin’ till we're nearly petered out, And, although we thought we had you, now we find we're still in doubt. If these lines should ever reach you, and you’d write us where you be, You’d confer a good-sized favor on your friends, the G. O. P. A National Scandal. From the Clinton Democrat. Delegations representing the country poor arrive at the palace in San Juan, Porto Rico, almost daily. They tell the usual story of starvation and want, and they ask for food and work. Two important dele- gations have put in an appearance this week, the latest being from Aguas Buenos, consisting of one hundred men and fifty women in procession, headed by two 10 year old girls,carrying black flags to signify that they were mourning for existing con- ditions. Porto Rico has been in our hands more than a year and a half. Yet thanks to that pious ‘‘benevolent assimilator’”’ who occupies the executive chair, we are obliged to witness these harrowing spectacles to our humiliation and shame. And even when he was wakened up to ‘‘our plain duty’ he backs down at the first political opposition hie meets. Porto Rico is a national scandal. The political party responsible for the disgrace, cannot continue to command public con- fidence. The War Has Not Begun, From the Rochester, Pa., Commoner. The bravery, skill and persistence of the Boers in their struggle to maintain their independence, continues to excite the ad- miration and sympathy of the civilized world. They have been recouping their losses lately to a wonderful degree and have halted Lord Roberts in what he and his British admirers had fondly hoped would be a triumphal tour of the Trans- vaal. The Boers are fighting for liberty. They are defending their altars and their homes. They are cheered on by their wives and children. They are fighting for all that is worth having in human life, with- out which man’s life is but a brute existence. In such a cause, in their own country they can scarcely be conquered. The war has but begun. Dewey Not Likely to be a Stumbling Block. From the Fulton Mo., Telegraph. There are 930 votes in the Democratic national convention. To nominate 620 are necessary, but 311 can prevent a nomina- The highest possible calculation, allowed to Dewey all the possible states in the last de- gree doubtful, gives him only about 250 votes, not even enough todelay the action of the convention. Spawls from the ¥Kr-ystone. —i —Indicati 1s of oil have becu found at Baumstown, Berks county. —A premature blast at the Alaska shaft, near Mount Carmel, blinded John Hinkle, who has a wife and 11 children. —M7rs. Catharine Leibner, of Pottsville, has received word that a wealthy uncle in Salt Lake City recently died leaving her a fortune of $60,000. —Word has reached her home at York Springs, Adams County. of the death from fever of Miss Annie M. Gardner, at Ponce, Puerto Rico, whither she went to teach in the government schools. —The Carnegie Stcel company has been awarded the contract for structural iron and steel for the rapid transit tunnel. The amount of the bid was not published. —There are almost two hundred rafts ly- ing along the streams of Clearfield county, ready to be taken to the lower markets as soon as the water rises sufficiently. —John Kauffman, residing on the Willis farm near Granville bridge, has a curiosity in the shape of a pig with three fully devel- oped ears, the third growing out of the base of one of the others. —Miss Anna M. Himsworth, of 129 Church street, Chester, kneeled by her bedside to say her prayers before retiring Saturday night, and was found lifeless in the same at- titude the next morning by her sister. —The Allegheny county Democratic com- mittee presided over by the new chairman, Thomas B. Alcorn, held a harmonious meet- ing on Saturday last and selected George S. Fleming and Frank P. Iames as members of of the State central committee. —When the April term of Civil Court was called at Doylestown yesterday morning, six cases of the thirteen on the trial list had been settled, and all but two of the balance were either settled or continued when Judge Yerkes called over the list. —The largest remaining tract of drift coal in the Pittsburg district has just been pur- chased by the Midland Coal company, and the property will be developed extensively at once in the interest of the recently or- ganized American Sheet Steel company. —The work of erecting the mammoth steel plant for the Sharon Steel company was commenced yesterday. About $4,000,000 is to be invested in the plant, and it will fur- nish employment for 3,500 hands. A big machine shop will be erected first and the open-hearth steel plant will follow. —An old Ebensburger, on hearing com- plaints of the late spring, thus expressed him- self the other evening: ‘‘People who think this is a backward spring should turn back to 1881, when on April 9th the Ebensburg Branch railroad was blockaded with snow and the workmen on the court house, just being completed, had to be hauled from Cresson in sleds. —The farm house of W. H. Strohecker, between Booneville and Greenburr, Clinton county, occupied by Perry O. Sheats, was burned Saturday morning about 1 o’clock. The contents, except a few articles, were also destroyed. It is believed that the fire was caused by the explosion of a lamp. The loss on the house is $1,200, with $500 insurance. —The Susquehanna boom at Williamsport contains about 15,000,000 feet of logs, and rafting out began Monday morning, so that the mills can start up for the season. The back logs are strung all along the creeks up the river, and only a rise is needed to bring in millions of feet of timber. —There is considerable excitement in Bed- ford county over the discovery of iron ore 60 per cent. pure. Leases for twenty years have been obtained on the land. The Colo- nial Iron company, of Riddlesburg, will build a road to connect with the mines and will use the Pennsylvania raw material rather than the Michigan. —Both Republican factions in Blair county, it is said, are opposing the application of Samuel MeCamant, of Tyrone, for re- appointment as a member of the board of managers of the Huntingdon reformatory. MecCamant is accused of playing fast and lose with both factions, and as a result he is in danger of losing his place at the expiration of his term on May 15th. —Workmen began on Monday morning tearing down the machinery and building of the old Columbia iron and steel works at Uniontown. The project which was to have made that place an industrial centre cost its backers several fortunes. The enterprise was started in 1885 with a capital of $450,000. Uniontown donated $60,000 and a site worth $25,000. Pittsburg banks contributed also. Bad management caused the crash which came in 1892 with the appointment of a re- ceiver. — Mrs. Simon Cramer, the wife of a mill worker Monday at Hazleton, gave her life to save her 5 year old son. With a babe in arms and the boy at her side, she was walk- ing near the railway, when the child ran in front of an approaching train. He became fascinated by the speeding engine and did not hear his mother call. Putting down her baby the mother ran to the boy and threw him to one side. She slipped and fell in front of the locomotive which killed the brave woman instantly. —Some time during the night unknown vandals forced an entrance to the Salvation Army barracks at Reading,burned the Bibles and other religious books, tore the American flag to shreds and further desecrated the place. When Captain Gleter arrived at the barracks he was horrified to find the large Bible which usually graced the pulpit lying on the floor almost totally consumed by fire, while hymn books and other religious books partially burned were strewn about the floor. It is said the police have a clue as to who the miscreants are and arrests will shortly fol low. —William Hammel the quadruple mur. derer, was informed at Williamsport last week that Governor Stone had fixed June 5th as the date for his execution. He almost broke down, and for the first time since his arrest for the terrible crime he showed emo- tion. As he realized he had less than two months to live, tears came to his eyes, the first anyone had seen him shed ; his limbs shook as if with ague, and in a voice he said, “T guess it's all up with me now—that’s the way it looks.” He soon recovered his com- posure, however, and lighting a cigar began pacing to and fro in his cell. Hummel re- quested that no visitors be allowed to see him. .