BY PP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. Tt isn’t for a horseless carriage . That the housewife longs today ; ~ It isn’t a divorceless marriage, As some of the goo-goos say ; It isn’t pianos or golf sticks , Or wash tubs or for wringers; But house cleaning time is in its prime,. And she wants a handful of hammerless fingers. —The farmers of Centre county have sur- vived the harrowing time they had with their corn ground. —There is no royal road to success, they say, but what of the gambler who makes a specialty of a royal flush. —The news from South Africa seems to show that the Boers are in retreat, but it is not so precipitate that any of them are be- ing shot in the back. —Well, well, well! WELLS has resigned already. This will certainly be well for the welfare of the dairy and food branch of the Agricultural Department. —The seventeen year locusts are adver- tised for this season, but the Centre county farmers are not to be scared with this bug- aboo. Few of them bave enough grain to make even a light lunch for a seventeen year locust. —The Populists now require two nation- al conventions in order to express them- selves. Their party has split and the “Middle of the Roaders’’ are switched away off on a side track, so the other wing of the Pops believes. —On Monday the State Treasury passed into the control of Col. JAMES E. BARNETT and it was reported that the balance on hand was $3,500,000. That might have been the balance, but were the funds on hand or had they all heen farmed out to machine banks? —They accused State Treasurer JAMES E. BARNETT, of having gotten ‘‘cold feet’ when he was Lt. Col. of the Tenth and that gallant regiment was in action. Let us hope that he won’t get the same com- plaint and walk off when he has the most in the treasury pile at Harrisburg. —With Joe NoBre’s death the ma- chine’s chances for making false election returns in the dago districts of Philadel- phia are seriously crippled. He was a wily Italian and was a power among the foreign element in the lower end of that city. His affiliation with the QUAY faction was suffi- cient to condemn his political methods. —The engagement of ALFRED VANDER- BILT to Miss ELSIE FRENCH has been an- nounced and when those two interesting youngsters get ‘‘hitched’’ there will be a union that will be a gilded one ‘‘for fair.” He is worth thirty-six million and she will have ten more to give him. How would you like to have the job keeping the wolf from their door? --The Philadelphia North American has started after the state hospitals for the in- sane with the same sharp stick that stirred up such a nauseating smell in the Agri- cultural Department. If it keeps on the atmosphere about the latter will become so unwholesome as to probably make the heads of some of the Agricultural Depart- ments fit subjects for the insane hospitals. -—With IcNATIUS DONNELLY, of Min- nesota, on their ticket for President, and WHARTON BARKER, of Philadel- phia, for Vice President, the Pops would have a hard team to handle. We fear IeaNATIUS would take the bit in his mouth and run clear away from PFEFFER, JERRY SIMPSON, MARY ELLEN LEASE and all the other tallow-dips that furnish lu- mincsity and guiding light to the populistic propaganda. —The mischievous youngster who filled a companion full of compressed air at CrAMP’S ship yards in Philadelphia, on Wednesday, thereby causing his death, un- wittingly revealed to the world a great fact. “ Under the light of this singular fatality it is apparent that some men are ‘‘hlowing off’’ all the time as a matter of self preser- vation. It is probably not (?) because they like to blow so much as on account of the instinctive knowledge they have that they would meet the fate of this poor lad were they to keep their mouths shut. —The American navy officer who has in- vented a shell that will easily pierce a 14 inch Harveyized armor plate has made a fortune for himself, not to mention the cost of new armor for all battle ships. The 14 inch Harveyized plate was the best known, but now it is as weak as the worst, because it is penetrable by the new projectile. What a lovely thing it would be if some one would only invent some kind of a shell that would send bullets of public indigna- tion through the HANNAized brass plate that surrounds the present administration. —With the helpless human beings dying like flies in India and brave soldiers being mowed down like grass before the cycle in South Africa England had better throw a few spasms of commiseration in those di- rections, instead of tearing her great big (?) heart asunder over the Ottawa fire. In the latter disaster six people were killed, a thousand or more rendered homeless and quite a considerable sum of money lost. But what is that in comparison to the mil- lions who are starving in India and the thousands of widows and orphans this at- tempt to kill a struggling Republic in South Africa has made? If your sympa- thy goes out at all JoHN BULL, let it go where it is needed most. Don’t let your eyes become so blinded with tears for Ot- tawa that you can’t see India or the Vaal. “VOL. 45 ; / STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Ly PA, ia An Opportunity to Show Its Honesty. Now that the delinquencies of the Re- publican state adininistration, in failing to enforce the anti-oleomargarine laws, have been exposed by the North American, the organ of that administration—the Phila- || delphia Inquirer—comes to the front in great style demanding the prosecution of those who have been caught in violating the law. In its estimation there can be no courts too swift in the prosecution or no punishment too severe for the frauds that have been uncovered. Unfortunately for the Inquirei’s preten- ded abhorrence for the crimes committed, it has failed to discern that the real culprits in this dirty work of palming off cotton- seed grease as pure butter are the agents of the Republican state administration. It is either blind to this fact or over-locks it entirely, and until it has the honesty of purpese to demand their removal and punishment the public can have but little confidence in its professed indignation or demands for justice. This work of cheating the people, and at the same time robbing the farmers through fraudulent competition, has been going on a long time. There are a score or more of Republican officials who are paid good salaries to protect and prevent just such violations of law. It is what the pure food bureau of the Agricultural Department was organized and paid for doing. It is what Secretary HAMILTON and those under him are expected, and paid, to prevent. But much as these Republican officials are paid, and great as their expenses have been to the State, in not a single instance have they detected any wrong and at no time has any one ever heard of them attempting to pre- vent any of the violations of law that are now shown to have heen as plentiful as are Republican promises of reform before elec- tions. In every instance these flaunters of the Quay flag and drawers of unearned salaries have proven themselves either base- ly corrupt or ignorantly inefficient. It is to these men, and the necessity of dealing with them as worthless or corrupt officials sheuld be dealt with, that the In- quirer should turn its attention. The courts will ‘take care of the other fellows. They are in tlie hands now of the powers that are constituted to punish for the mis- deeds they have committed, and it won't take outside influence or exertion to have that punishment inflicted. But there is some influence and honesty needed in rid- ding the State of a lot of worthless, over- paid ring officials, who, if not in actual conspiracy with the oleomargarine syndi- cate, are either too dumb to know what they are hired for or too negligent to re- port a wrong if some one was to call their attention to it. : In getting rid of these men and in saving the State the disgrace their incompetency is fastening upon it, as well as the salaries they are drawing, this organ of the QUAY administration can do great work. Its ad- vise to Governor STONE will go much farch- er than will its demands on the courts. If it is in earnest in this matter it will sug- gest in the most positive manner that every one of the parties connected with this de- partment, and who are in anyway responsi- ble for the crookedness that has been going on or the inefficiency that has been mani- fested, be given a ticket of leave at once. This would be taking the public teat out of the mouth of many a QUAY squealer, but it would do more to stay the stench this oleomargarine exposition has made than all the howling that can be dons about the duty of the courts or all the punish- ment that can be meted out to the dealers in cotton-seed butter. The Right Time to Blow. Republican papers are making great ado about the big balance they now report as being in the State Treasury. $6,000,000, we believe, is the amount they claim to have on hand. Possibly if they will take into consideration the income the State has to fall back upon, the excessive taxation that is imposed on everything taxable for state purposes, and then remember how they have robbed the school fund; starved the public charities; crippled and crowded the state asylums; closed public hospitals and left uncompleted the disgraceful looking barracks that is called the State Capitol, they will not feel like crowing so loudly over the accummulations in the Treasury. The truth is that the State has been at no expense for the past year except the beg- garly amounts paid out to charities, and the salaries and expenditures of its ring officials. The fight in the last Legis- lature among the Republican theives prevented either gang getting away with the State’s money, and the re- sult is the Treasury now promises the richest kind of stealings for those who can handle and control its accumula- tions. It is well, however, that whatever blow is to be made about the amount of money on hand be done now. A new Legis- lature will soon convene. The chances are great that it will be Republican, If it is, the whole big sum now get-at-able will vanish, as does a stack of fodder before a Kansas cyclone. Plainer Than Day-Light. It is a very black eye that Judge LocH- REN’S decision, in the ORTIZ habeas corpus case, gave to Mr. McKINLEY’S doctrine of governmental authority outside of the con- stitution. In rendering it that eminent jurist said he * % % * “Considered Porto Rico territory of the United States and subject to the constitution the minute it came under the control of this gov- ernment. Unless the constitution extended to Porto Rico in advance of action by Congress, Congress would have no power to legislate for the island at all, because it has no authority to legislate for any except territory to which the constitution has extended.” Just how Mr. McKINLEY, or his adve- cates, will meet a decision of this kind and show that Congress has a right to legislate for territory outside of that to which our constitution extends, is a matter for him or them to explain. How any man can believe that a Presi- dent has a right to use the power of the constitution to raise armies, appropriate money and carry on a war, to acquire terri- tory and then claim that the government of that territory is not subject to the re- strictions, or entitled to the privileges, pro- vided by that constitution, is a matter that we cannot understand. But it is easy to know why Mr. McKIN- LEY and the syndicates that are backing him want to govern Porto Rico, and other territories acquired by the war with Spain, outside of the constitution. In that in- strument there are restrictions as to patron- age and prohibitions as to the grants of power. It is to evade these that they would have different governments for dif- ferent territories belonging to the United States. Outside of the constitution they can make the patronage what they please. It is this that Mr. HANNA'S President is af- ter. With patronage unlimited he can feed, at public expense the, party heelers whose fealty follows the party flesh-pots, and whose services are only to be had when there are prospects of pay ahead. Mr. Me- KINLEY needs these heelers. It is to make places for them, in order to secure their services to retain him in power, that the out-lying dependencies that have been sad- dled upon the United States, are to be gov- erned outside of the constitution. And then outside of the constitution there are no restrictions as to franchises or no limits as to privileges that can be grant- ed. McKINLEY wants the patronage to continue his power. HANA wants the franchises and the opportunities they offer, that he may organize syndicates and benefit by the extraordinary privileges they can enjoy. It is to rob the people, do the busi- ness of the country and pocket the profits that Mr. HANNA is after, and outside the constitution this can be done much more effectively and safely than under it. Its easy for a blind man to see what Mr. McKINLEY and his man behind the throne are after. How the Political Wind Blows. The local elections which were held in Indiana on Wednesday of last week don’t present that hopeful promise to Republi- cans that causes them to rejoice. In fact they are regular wet blankets on the burn- ing enthusiasm of the followers of HANNA, imperialism and trusts. : In nearly every city in which partisan contests were made returns showed uni- versal Democratic gains and, in some, sur- prisingly large ones. Anderson, the home of the present Republican candidate for Governor, ranged itself on the side of the Democracy for the first time since it be- came a city. Many other important places did the same. The labor vote was cast al- most solid for the Democrats, and among the farmers the sentiment and voting was decidedly against the Republicans. There is no question as to which way the wind is Flowing out in the Hoosier State, and if it keeps on increasing as it has been doing the last few months, November will see such a cyclone that there will be noth- ing left of the Republican party but the recollection of its rottenness and the heri- tage of its efforts to establish imperialism and benefit trusts. A Real Business Boomer (2) Business may, as it is asserted, ‘‘follow the flag’’ but in some instances, it evident- ly goes, like the legless soldier, on crutches. At least this is the way it seems to he fol- lowing “‘old glory’’ out in the Philippines. In April all our revenues from every source in that far away land amounted to $831,- 255.50. This seems like a big sum and as if a rattling business was rushing after the flag out there. And soit is if we consider the business that must be done to keep this flag following business going. To collect the $831,255.50 of revenue stated it cost us "just $30,000,000.00 or when we come to fig- ureup results we find we are out just $29 ,- "168,744.60 in this transaction. At this rate ‘‘following the flag’ is a business boomer at both ends. If it fails to make business that has profit in it for the people, it at least gives promise of furnish- ing a flourishing and long continued pros- perity to both tax collector and sheriff. MAY 11. 1900. Should Make Judas Envious. How poor old JupAs would curse the fates that he lived at a time when treach- ery rated at only thirty pieces of silver, if he knew what work of that kind brings in these days of Republican trials and tribulations. One would scarcely give credence to it, but itis given out as a posi- tive fact that the failure of ex-Senator QUAY to secure his seat in the Senate was not in consequence of the unconstiutional- ity of his appointment, or senatorial prec- edents in such cases, but because of the amount of cold cash promised the McKiN- LEY campaign fund in case of his rejec- tion. $250,000 is the sum said to have been pledged. This fully accounts for Mr. HANNA'S ac- tion. When it comes toa question between cash and manliness or friendship every one knows on which side to look for HANNA. It is the ‘‘real thing’’ that he is after all the time, and as $250,000 will go farther towards re-electing McKINLEY than the seating of QuAY would have done, it is easy now to understand some actions that were considerable of a mystery a few weeks ago. For the *‘old man’’ this knowledge that his party had been trafficking in his hopes and expectations—has sold his opportuni- ties and official position for a price—must be a pretty bitter dose. After what he has done for, the risks he has taken, and the extent he has gone to secure Repub- lican success to waken up now and discov- er that the controllers of that party, and those reaping the rewards his efforts have made possible, have sold him out for the cash to continue themselves in office, must be a bitterness compared to which gall weuld be sweet. Mr. QUAY may not be worth what $250,- 000 will be to the McKINLEY out-fit in the coming campaign, but a word from him to the “faithful” in Pennsylvania would re- quire Mr. HANNA, who sold him out, to expend every cent he got for his treachery to hold this Srate in line for his protector of trusts and his grabber for imperialistic power. "There was a hanging after JUDAS com- pleted his job. Will there be a political hanging as a result of this betrayal-? Farmers on Whom Sympathy is Wasted. It is only a few months since Governor STONE was speaking out boldly in favor of trusts. Of late he has heen turning his at- tention to the protection of dealers of oleo- margarine. He must be a thick headed farmer, indeed, who cannot see the way he is being robbed by exorbitant prices he is compelled to pay for everything that trusts manufacture; and only a man with a head like a pumpkin would be unable to understand and appreciate the great wrong that the sale of oleomargarine as butter does to the butter makers of the country. And yet the farmers of the State, to a very large extent,go on voting the Republi- can ticket while Republican leaders and Republican office holders go on advocating the interests of monopolies, and the prot ec- tion of syndicates, organized especially to rob them with high prices for the necessar- ies they have to purchase and by forcing down the prices, by unfair competition, of such products as they have for sale. If there is any set of men on GocG’s green earth upon whom sympathy is wasted it is the fool farmer, who, knowing he is fleeced | and who is fleecing him, sticks to his Re- publican politics, notwithstanding the fact that Republican laws and Republican offi- cials are the guilty powers, and the forces whose influences and efforts are with those who are dead against him. That they are against him has been ex- emplified so often that it is like repeating an old song to refer to this fact. The bold- ness ° whi... Governor STONE defends trusts and the manner in which his Secre- tary of Agriculture, Mr. HAMILTON, allow- ed full swing to the illegal work of the oleomargarine syndicate only emphasizes their efforts in this line, and leaves the farmer no excuse for sticking to the party of his enemies. ——The fact that the Philadelphia Press of Sunday last claims thirty seven of the sixty nine Republicans already nominated for the Legislature, as independents or he- longing to the anti-QUAvYites,don’t make 1t 80, by a long slide. Nor does the editorial course of that paper in belittling the an- thority of a party caucus go to show that it has faith in its own figures. If there was any hope of the anti-QUAY portion of the Republican party nominating and electing a majority of the Republican members of the next Legislature every mother’s son of them would be advocating caucus rule, and the fellow who expressed any doubt about its binding authority would be denounced by them just as they are being denounced now by those who wear the boss’ collar. In opposing QUAY the Press is right, but in doing so it might as well show a little con- sistency between its statements and its general political policy. NO. 19. A Lesson for Riphbtiean & Farmers. For many years, or,in fact, ever since the protective system was devised to feed and fatten one class of citizens at the expense of another, Republicans have insisted that it was the seller and not the buyer who paid the tariff. Their contention has been that it was the foreigner whose goods were im- ported that paid the duties imposed, and that it was out of his pocket that this tax came. Tens of thousands of Republicans, and particularly Republican farmers, believed this falacy, and still believe it. Because they do is reason for them now to see the great injustice that the Republican tariff for Porto Rico does them. They are in the same position towards Porto Rico that European manufacturers are towards us. If it is the seller, and not the buyer, who pays the tariff then, under Mr. McKINLEY’S new hill, the farmers of this country will have to pay 2} cents on every bushel of corn; 3 cents on every bushel of corn meal ; 2} cents on every bushel of oats; 10 cents on every bushel of beans; 1} mills on each pound of oat meal ; 3 mills on each pound of dried apples ; 1} mills on each pound of candles; 3 mills on each pound of lard ; 6 mills on each pound of butter and 3 mills on each pound of soap, shipped from the United States to Porto Rico. It will be seen that there is not much that the farmer raises or has to sell that he will not have to pay a tax on before he can dispose of it in the new market that this new possession was to open up for us, if this Republican doctrine is correct. That it is correct, of course Republicans will insist, and if it is, it is for them to ex- plain the injustice to American farmers that Mr. McKINLEY’s Porto Rican tariff bill imposes. ——The Honorable Court and the editor of the Gazette are friends again;at least they went out fishing in the same carriage on Friday. Who saw them kiss and make up? A Five Thousand Salary and a Pen=- sion Beside. From the Genius of Liberty. Here and there a particulary rabid Re-} publican editor now and then points out that one of the awful dangers to follow national Democratic supremacy in the pen- sioning of Confederate officers and privates. Now, Tow and behold you, Senator Gal- linger, of New Hampshire, Republican, has introduced a bill to pension at $50 a month General Longstreet, who was one of the Confederacy’s ablest captains. Service in the Mexican war is given as the ground for the pension, but that does not alter the fact that Longstreet was a rebel. Jeff Davis could have gotten a pension on the same ground. We fail to see, at present anyhow, that Longstreet is in any need of a pension. As a railway commissioner he is drawing a salary of $5,000 a year from his country, and has been doing so for some time. The Republicans have al- ways taken good care of him since the war. Terror Now Reigns in the Philippines. Former Vice Consul Wildman Contradicts Otis’ Statement That War is Over. NEw York, May 6.—Edwin Wildman, former Vice Consul at Hong Kong, contrib- utes ‘an article on ““A Reign of Terror in the Philippines’ to ILeslie’s Weekly, of which the following is an abstract : ‘Although General Otis would bave us believe that the war in the Philippines is over, I learn from private sources of infor- mation of the highest authority that there exists a veritable reign of terror in most parts of the archipelago within a gunshot from our army posts. Either General Otis is blind to the situation or is keeping the real facts from the American people. Aguinaldo’s forces have scattered into marauding bands and, leaguing them- selves with the mountain Tulisanes and Ladrones, terrorize the country and effect- ually check the cultivation of cropsand the sale of marketable products. TREASURY REPLENISHED. “The few ports that have been opened have shipped away what little supply they contained, and the tons upon tons of hemp sugar and rice that are stored in the interi- or are beyond the reach of buyers. The money paid for the thousands of bales of hemp shipped from garrisoned ports has found its way into the insurgents coffers, and the revolutionary juntas at Hong Kong and Singapore are making extensive purchases of arms, preparatory to a renew- ed season of filibustering and general hos- tilities as soon as the rainy season is over. Our army are busy protecting their posts, while the insurgents carry on their opera- tions in the interior and paralyze agricul- ture and trade. “Scattered bands of armed insurgents wage war against all who hesitate to support the Aguinaldo government, and the inhabi- tants are in a state of terror that prevents honest industry or open alliance with American sovereignty. The American troops makeshort work of these robbers, but our garrisons are so far apart and so few in numbers that they invariably are obliged to fall hack to a seaport town where they can get supplies from Manila, for the insurgents have so.thoroughl y ravag- ed the country that it is impossible to supply even a small battalion with native products. ‘If we ever hope to put an end to this Indian warfare we must send additional forces to the islands. Our present corps is totally inadequate to cope with the situa- tion and bring the war to a close. The islands, commercially or otherwise, will be utterly useless until life and property are made safe.” Spawls from the Keystone. —The Newport Ledger ‘says shad fishing continues with good catches. There have been upwards of 600 caught at the several fisheries already this season. Very few roe fish have been caught. —A. B. Wright shot a fine specimen of eagle along Loyalsock creek, several miles above Montoursville. The bird measures six feet from tip to tip of wings. It was bought by a Williamsport gentleman who will have it mounted. —A 14-year old daughter of James Young, of Clearfield, was severely burned Thursday afternoon while burning brush in the back yard. Her screams brought assistance, and when the fire was smothered out of her clothing it was found that she was severely burned. She has since lain ina precarious condition, and it is not thought she will re- cover. —PForest fires completely consumed the fences surrounding St. Mary’s Slavish and St. Joseph’s Lithuanian cemeteries Tuesday, despite the cfforts of several men to prevent it. The fences once away the flames leaped across the yard from grave to grave destroy- ing headboards, crosses and other emblems erected over the dead. Many granite stones were also badly damaged. —The barn owned by Wm. App, near Muncy, was destroyed by an incendiary fire Thursday night. Just before the blaze was discovered a man was detected running away from the structure. A horse, 100 chickens, thirteen hogs and several cows perished. Several dwelling houses in the vicinity were saved with great difficulty, as a high wind was blowing. —A destructive fire occurred at Acme, Mount Pleasant township, Westmoreland county, Friday night, by which the large steam flouring mill of J. C. Brown & Co., was burned to the ground, entailing a loss of $10,000 or $12,000, upon which there is said to have been $8,000 insurance. A frame blacksmith and machine shop owned by the Acme Coal company, situated nearby, was also consumed. —Eric Nelson, a disreputable Swede, was shot and instantly killed near Dubois on Thursday, while entering the farm house of John K. Siple. Mr. Siple was away from home and Mrs. Siple, hearing the noise made by Nelson in forcing an entrance, call- ed to her brother-in-law, Albert Siple, who rushed down stairs and shot the intruder through the heart. The coroner’s jury com- pletely exonerated Siple. —Haneyville and vicinity had an old fashioned snow storm Friday afternoon— May 4th. It began snowing about 3 o'clock and continued steadily until after 7. The snow melted as fast as it struck the ground. The flakes were very large and during the prevalence of the storm it was very dark. Passengers who came east on the Beech Creek road Saturday state that there were snow squalls at different places in Clearfield county. ——The opinion prevails that Sheets and Walker, who recently escaped from the Somerset jail, are thousands of miles away by this time, and many people who are op- posed to capital punishment, and others who have been shocked at the morbid curiosity manifested by thousands upon the occasion of the execution of the Nicely boys, the Roddy boys, and Meyers, express the hope that they will never be captured. Up to this time the commissioners have not offered a reward for the capture of Sheets. —A reunion of the Schell family was held at Schellsburg, Bedford county, Tuesday of last week, in the old log church, built in 1806 by John Schell, who settled there in 1800. The reunion was in charge of ex-Au- ditor General Wim. P. Schell, aud many de- scendants from a distance were present. The Schell family is prominent in the his- tory of Bedford county, members of it hav- ing held many state and county offices, as well as important positions in the Mexican and civil was. —At Jersey Shore, Lycoming county, ‘ast Thursday, Charles, the 2-year-old son of L. A. Stonebraker, followed his mother to the rear of the lot, where several hogs were kept The child reached in through the siats to pat the pigs. One vicious hog grabbed the child’s hand between its jaws and began chewing it. The boy's screams hurried the mother to the pen. She was compelled to beat the hog before it would release the child’s hand. The little fellow’s hand and wrist were frightfully lacerated. The wounds were cauterized by a physician. —Rev. Dr. Hunter, a minister of Williams- port, was one of the passengers on the train that collided with a freight near Viaduct on the Beech Creek road. The reverend gen- tleman was thrown violently against a seat in front when the crash came, striking his neck and since then he has been so hoarse at times as to be unable to speak above a whis- per. He is otherwise injured and bruised, and is suffering from nervous prostration. The doctor is somewhat uneasy over his con- dition, fearing that the injury to his vocal organs may be permanent, and that he will never recover his voice. —While Sophie Elsasser, aged 6 years, was watching the erection of the tents for the Forepaugh and Sells circus at Williamsport, Friday morning, a gust of wind blew over several of the big poles supporting the side show banners, and one of them struck the child on the head. With an agonizing shriek the child sank to the ground under the heavy weight. She was picked up and carried into a tent. An examination reveal- ed that her skull was fractured and that her chest was crushed in. Afterwards she was taken to a residence where she died about 2 hours later. The circus people voluntarily gave her parents $500. —OQliver L. Stewart, who was recently de- clared the choice of the Huntingdon county Republicans for Senator in the Thirty-third district, met with an accident Thursday afternoon which resulted in his almost in- stant death. Besides being a leading clothi- er of Huntingdon, Mr. Stewart had large interests in the Malleable Iron Works, and it was in the plant of the latter concern that he met death. While watching the opera- tiops of a new emery wheel, eighteen inches in diameter, the wheel suddenly burst into three parts, and one of the pieces struck Mr. Stewart squarely in the breast. An artery leading from the heart was severed, and Mr. Stewart, after a step or two, fell and died surrounded by shopmen. Go a