RTT GRAY MEEK. c= Ink Slings. 8Y.P. —Highwaymen on Bellefonte streets ! Now don’t that make some of you timid girls think of sleeping with a light in your bedroom. — A Bellefonte wag remarked, on Tues- day, that Centre county’s Representative, Mr. THOMPSON, is probably well of his lumbago on one side, but whether it is the QUAY or Insurgent side he can’t tell. —WILLIE WAY-OUT ASTOR, the man without a country, is trying to buy a place in London society again. He has given $25,000 to the Princess of Wales fund for the families of soldiers in the South Afri- kan war. —TUnele SAM has decided to try to stop the war in the Philippines by deporting the Filipinos to the island of Guam. Wouldn’t it be better to let the Filipinos where they are and deport our soldiers to the United States of America ? —Representative WELTY, of Franklin county, says he agreed to vote for QUAY because he lost his head. It is probable that if his constituents had known that he was to lose it so soon they would have spared themselves the ignominy of being misrepresented by such a man and given him the ax, themselves, at the election, — Bishop POTTER, of New York, was over to Philadelphia on Wednesday night inaugurating a crusade against vice. He was enthusiastically received by the Phila- delphians, probably because it was a tacit acknowledgement, on the part of an emi- nent New Yorker, that the Quaker city does have enough get up in’ her to be ‘bad. —Queen WILHELMINA, of Holland, has at last secured consent of her people to get married, Mrs. ASTOR has giv en her ball in New York and increased ‘‘ the Four Hun- dred’ to five, and sister MARY ELLEN LEASE has decided to give up the stump and go home to mind her children. It is well that the twentieth century is deliver- ed of three such momentous events thus arly in her life. ——HoBsON achieved greatness by his bravery in the harbor of Santiago ; then Tost it hy the silly practice of kissing freak- ish girls. DEWEY became the public idol by his clever strategy in Manila bay ; and fell shattered to the ground ‘when he gave that house to his wife. JOHN THOMPSON became popular in Centre county because he'was a good fellow ; things are different now hecause he got an attack of lumbago. ——This Congress has at least done some- thing that will make it a traly memorable one. On Wednesday the Senate concurred in the Honse hill to abolish the canteen in ‘our armies and that ‘vicious and vile sys- tem” that has heen a canker in the flesh of a pure government will have to go. Presi- dent MoKINLEY’s War Secretary, Mr. Root, was for retaining the canteen ‘and making bar keepers out of boys 'who' had enlisted to fight for their country, but the Senate and Congress were above the per- suasions of the brewers and distillers and honor has won for once. —— “The people of. York county,’’ says the. York Gazette, ‘‘are entirely satisfied with the action of their Representatives in the Legislature.” Possibly they are, but we doubt it. We have, howey er, known persons who have lived in such surround- ings and amid stenchs’ so long that they ‘could neither appreciate nor distinguish the odor of a rose bed from that of a phos- phate factory. Possibly the people of that county who are satisfied with the ac- tion of their Representatives are in such a condition. : EL Tt looks very much as if the burr ‘under the tail of the Republican filly in Pennsylvania is not to be removed. There are but three votes needed to keep it just whete it is, and cash’ can get these needed three. What a kicking and cavorting we may expect to see, if the animal is able to hold out,and the burr keeps strictly to busi- ness’! In fact there ig no telling what fan there is ahead for the people. At least for those who don’t care what comes of Mr. QUAY or the party that would: bie g0 de- lighted to get rid of him. While Prine D. ARMOUR, the mil- lionaite Chicago pork packer was ‘‘a little short on church ‘daties,’” as ‘he’ himself said shortly before his death, the millions he left ito charities ought to be a passporh that St. PETER could honor, avithout soruple. Probably Mr ARMOUR'S personal efforts conld not have accomplished one millionth part of the. good the, funds he has left for that purpose will ‘do. ‘He was. not a bad man in any sense and who can say that he will not reap an eternal harvest from the seed sown in his will giv- ing so much to charities. ~The. character of the present adminis- tration finds no. worse commentary ‘than is to be seen in several orders recently is- sued ‘in the army. Former President HARRISON has heen by no means hack- ward in asserting that the constitution must follow the flag. If sach is held to be the case then President MOKINLEY will be adjudged guilty of violating the constitu- tion in his regulations concerning the ac- quisition of Porto Rico and the Philip- pines. The question is soon to be decided the Supreme court. Only afew days ago Russenr HARRISON, a son of the former President, was relieved from duty i in the Philippines and at’ the same time two sons of two associate justices of the Supreme { court were ordered to the Orient for serv- ioe in fat army offices. A bed post could | almost see rR ‘this move. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 46 BELLEFONTE, PA., JAN. 11, 1901. Amendments That Don’t Improve. That the adoption of the Australian vot- ing system, as is now being urged by the so called Ballot Reform Association, would remedy the wrongs committed at local and general elections in this State, we have se- rious doubts. That system, as we under- stand it, and as it is proposed to be enacted into law, differs from our present method only in the make up, or form in which the ticket is printed. It groups the candi- dates for any one office all under the head of that office, in place of separating them into columns according to their political affiliations, thus requiring the voter to se- lect from the whole number of candidates for the position, the name or names of those he desires to vote for, and to place a mark opposite each one. This is the one material change that is suggested, and. in what manner it would prevent the rottenness and wrongs that are so prevalent at electious,and which it is io- tended to cure, we are frank. to admit is a mystery to us. Its adoption would not do away with the outrages upon the rights of the people that arise from the arbitrary ruling of partisan courts as to the names entitled to be print- ed upon a ticket. : It. would not prevent the opportunities for bribery now given by allowing the voter ‘assistance in the booth.’ It wonld not prevent the substitution of marked unofficial ballots, for the un- ‘marked -official one handed the voter: by the election hoard. Tt would not insure an honest conut and a correct return of the votes cast. And if it prevents none of these wrongs, whereiii does’ it reform our present fraud- breeding and disgraceful system. As'we read the suggested amendments they continue the same power in the hands of the courts that they now possess—to practically select the candidate for all par- ties in cases that are brought before them, and to prohibit the printing of tickets for others than these whom. they designate as the proper nominees, If the courts are to be continued as the final ‘people shall have 0 Heir ticket, or'How uniform rules for making nominations and name. the time at which, nominating con- ventions should meet; and the power of the courts should be confined to questions growing out of the violations of these rules. At present party usuages, alleged customs, unpublished rules, and techuicalites of all sorts are used as a basis for judicial inter ferences and furnish abundant excuses for decisions that are asked for and granted solely for partisan purposes. To group- the ticket, as is proposed, simply means, that every, voter must remem- ber the names of every candidate upon the ticket for whom he desires to vote, have intelligence enough to select those names from among many more and place his mark opposite’ to each one.. "We venture the assertion “that in years in which there may be State, district and county tickets to be elected, not one voter in ten can recall every name upon the ticket that he desires to vote for. If in ‘the midst of the excitement around him, the cramped condition be is generally placed in ‘and the dread of making mistakes that cling to most persons. while in the booth, he must wade through forty or fifty names to find those he expects to support, how many are there who can do it without error, or who will ‘bother about others, than a few of the most hotly ‘contested positions ?. Under our present system it takes any ordinary voter from three to five minutes to mark ‘a single cross at the top of his ticket. With this additional duty of bunting. out the. name of each candidate he intends voting for from among the many on ‘the ticket, ‘the time now occupied “in voting ‘will he quadrupled, and five times || the booths and double. the. number. of elec- | tion districts, at present needed, will be re- quired to poll the vote. In addition to these objections such’ a grouping “of ‘candi- dates will only serve to mystify voters and furnish additional excuses for demanding assistance, a matter which loose election boards and political workers will be only 00 Eh to take advantage of. teres. Then to lessen the opportunities for booth affords, the proposed amendments who ave physically disabled. Is there a dividual who would accept a bribe would not swear falsely ? Wherein then will the administration of an oath keep the briber from the booth to mark the ticket of the poor wretch his money has purchased ? Does not this provision simply offer a prize for perjury while it in no way pre- vents the individual who Tas paid a price fora vote from knowing that it was cast as promised. The way to amend this section of the present law, to finke it affective, itors of who the | it shall be made, then. the - law should. fix bribery, that permitting .assistance in the limits assistance to those who. will swear | they cannot read the ticket and to those | man in the State who believes that an in- would be to prevent any assistance to any one except those physically unable to mark a ballot. This might practically disfran- chise some, but it would be their own fault. Their ignorance would be to blame for it. As to other amendments suggested the WATCHMAN may have more to say in the future. It is free to express the opinion, however, that if we cannot get something better than the proposed changes it would be wise to wait until the adoption of the pending constitutional amendments which will permit of voting by machinery and adopt that method. — Mr. QUAY is not elected yet, but his friends are boasting of his strength and popularity, . as if he was the idol that all men worship. It 1s possible that he may succeed, but with his party in the majority in the State almost 300,000, abd controlling over three-fourths of the members of. the Legislature, we don’t see where the popu- and skin through with a barely snfficient vote to elect. : A candidate ‘who can com- mand the support of but 127 out of 193 of his own partisan workers is not entitled to much of a chromo for his personal popular- ity, mor ig there mueh to ‘blow about of political strength. Working For Its Own Defeat. It is but eighteen years ago that Presi- dent ARTHUR attempted to stay the tide of congressional extravagance and save the Republican party a deserved defeat by ve- toing a wasteful River and Harbor appro- priation bill. That year a Republican Congress proposed expending but $19,000,- 000 in this way, It was a largely Repub- lican Congress and it passed its measure over the veto of the President. The an- gwer of the people to this act of Republi- ean extravagance, less than one year there- after, was the election of a Democratic President and a Democratic House and such changes in State Legislatures as gave the Senate to the Democrats ‘a ley years ‘later. And this was but eighteen years ago. : The present Congress is Republican by a less majority than was the 47th. There is no greater demand, in a “public improvements to our rivers and harbors, than there was then. In: fact, the demand is less, for improvements have been going on every year since, and they are now in very different condition from what they were in 1883. But Republican Representatives now propose expending $59,000,000 the coming year in the same way—forty millions more than the 47th Congress squandered for this purpose and brought around the deserved defeat of the party it represented. . Tt looks as if the 56th Congress was de- termined to do that which the 47th ac- complished so easily—arouse the people to the enormity of the extravagance and ‘profligacy of the party in power, and fur- nish reasons for a political revolution that will leave nothing of Republicanism but a memory of its wrongs, and the burdens of taxation that its reckless use of public mon- eys placed upon the shoulders. of the peo- ple. © In this it is doing good work for the Democracy. May it succeed in insuring its own defeat. —Dr. Gro. W. ATHERTON, president of The Pennsylvania State College, has just published a neat brochure on the leg- islative career of the late JUSTIN J. MOR- RILL. ‘The author takes up the life of the eminent statesman from the time of his birth at Strafford, Vermont, April 14th, 1810, and follows it to the close of what he considers ‘‘one of the most fruitful legisla- tive careers thus far recorded in our con- gressional history.’’ The principal object of the sketch is to show the effect that JusTIN 'MORRILL'S forty-four years of continuous service in both branches of Congress had upon free institutions: of learning ‘in’ ‘the United States. Sprang ‘from ‘an humble origin, with’ very meagre means, of satisfy- ing his craving for knowledge it seems but a natural sequence that Mr. MORRILL ‘should have been the father of the Land Grant Act of 1862, which might aptly be called the corner stone laying of a great system of public educational institutions the future usefulness of ‘which no mind can estimate. The Pennsylvania State College is one of the institutions founded by the MOREILL Act. ~— Congress has passed a bill fixing the number of members of that body at 386 in place of 357 as now constituted. If the _measure becomes a law Pennsylvania will ‘have 32 Congressmen, hereafter, an increase of two. That this will better its condition ‘no one will pretend. It will make a place | a for politicians to squabble over—a fat posi- tion for two more men and add to the pub- lic expenditures the amounts they will draw in salaries, mileage, stationary, eto., but where te benefit to the people or the Commonwenlth will come in is not observe. able. larity comes in that must win by bribery, |B and support for himself,an aspirant for the distinguish it. way, | tor | A Hypocritieal Pretense: It is not much that need be said about the efforts of northern Republicans to create race bitterness throughout the South on account of laws that limit the ballot, in a number of those States, to those who can read and write. The object and the hypoc- risy of the movers in this work are both apparent. Here in Pennsylvania, where the negro vote is showing signs of dissatisfaction with Republican treatment, they are ex- pected to be lined up solidly again for whatever that party demands, by the cry that their race is to be disfranchised throughout the South, where Democracy is in the control. The individual who comes to the front in Congress, in this effort, is the Representative from the Dauphin dis- double purpose in view. The one is to keep the colored vote of the State solid for the party that it has so long clung to and from which it has received so little recog- nition. ' The other is to insure its sympathy Republican nomination for Governor. ‘move Mr. OLMSTEAD. ' They are as‘appar- ent as the sun on a cloudless day. ‘If he perpetrated by stultifying the power of the ballot he would find plenty to do right here at home in correcting those wrongs. The difference between the wrong done to the man who is prevented from voting by reason of the lack of qualification and | that committed against the citizen who is qualified and casts a ballot that is mis counted, thrown-out, or made nugatory by reason of fraudulent votes that are allowed to be cast against it, is so small that we doubt if even these Republican bellowers, for universal suffrage in the South, could sylvania, through the aid of imported re- peaters; intimidation, = false counting— methods by which the Republican ma- chine profits, there are more white men practically disfranchised every election, than there are negroes prevented from vot- ing in a all the States of, the South put to- ‘franchise ignorance in the South, through constitutional amendments, what would you call the sneaking, law defying disfran- chisement of the tens of thousands of intel- ‘ligent white men of Pennsylvania, who are nullified every election through the frau- dulent practices that are endorsed and gloried in by the Republican party ? It is in their methods at home and their pretenses of demanding fair play for those whom they wonld make believe are wronged by other States, that the Pennsylvania Re- publicans demonstrate their hypocrisy. Stretching it Too Far. A movement is on foot in Chester county to test the right of the members of the Leg- islature, from that county,to act assuch on the ground that they secured their nomina- tion and ‘election by reason of a pledge or ‘promise given to support Mr. QUAY for election to the United States Senate. A nice case is cooked up in this instance on the presumption that it is a violation of law for candidates to make «ny pledge or promise for the purpose of securing votes. A deeis- ion to this effect, wa believe, was rendered by a Berks county judge, ina Lebanon county contest, last fall. If such is the case and the Chester county Independents can prevent the men, elected to the Legislature last fall from that coun- have given a pledge of the kind, we have fallen upon queer times indeed. The law to which reference is made was intended to prevent. bribery—to prevent the securing of votes for nomination or election’ through promises of positions or something else of value. It was not enacted for the, ‘purpose of preventing, a constituency knowing exactly where those seeking nominations stood on public ques- tions. If we are to consider that a pledge to do that which the people of the county desire is a crime, then how in the name of common sense is any body of voters to know what is to be expected of those they choose as Representatives ? - In this business of challenging the Tight of candidates to avow their preferences, and pledge their actions, we fear the Chester county Independents are “biting off more than they can chew.” It is a dangerous position to take, and one which; if sustain- ed by the courts, would allow every rap- scallion who could manage to be elected, to hetray the people who voted for him without violating a pledge or breaking a promise. It would be forcing the public to elect Representatives as they would buy a “pig in a poke,” without knowing what they were getting, or what they might ex- pect. No law’ was ever piss with such a crazy intent as this, and if the laws we have can be constructed to sustain, any such a belief the sooner they are wiped from the statute books the better: trict, M. E. OLMSTEAD, and he has a| These are the actuating motives that : were opposed ‘to the disfranchisement of | any eitizen, or objected to wrongs that are | ‘to that time. And right here in Pevn- | tit isa crime e Sopenly and frankly dis- end is in sight: now. ty. acting as Representatives, because they | ‘future. A Song of Assimilation. 8. Francis Ingersole in Pittsburg Post. Sigg a song of war time; ard-tack tough and dry: Four-apd-twenty aged cows Ground up into “*pi.” Before the can was opened The smell began to * Sing, Wasn't that a dainty dish For Uncle Sam to bring? The King was in the capitol, Counting o’er his money. The generals were in their tents, Eating bread and hoaey. The soldier boys in storm and sun, No shelter but the sk By hunger torn, and ured thirst, In scores lie down to die. Sing a a song of battle; here neither shot nor shell, Nor deadly Mauser bullet; = ° Though aimed by fiends of hell; E’er waged such deadly warfare As foes, unseen and gaunt, Lurking in swamp an thicket Grim Pestilence and Want. Sing a song of heroes, ho lie beneath the waves; Who, far from home and kindred, floenl in their Southern graves. Who, for a cause unrighteous, Starved, suffered, bled and died; Pleading in vain for succor So heartlessly denied. Sing a song of triumphs; Nay !. .*Tis no vietory gained, vie a Nation’s honor dastard greed is stained. where our country’s vod 5, I bartered, not for right, ie But cruel, rank oppression, And wrong tiphe d by might. . ‘And when, in rong or story. Brave deeds shall live again, To stir a Nation’s pulse beat, /And thrill the hearts of men; In shame, and deep contrition, people, bow your head, And ‘weave undying chaplets' For teed our martyred dead Hoisting the e Danger Sigal. From thé N, Y. Sun. ! The River and Harbor bill’ whith Presi- dent ARTHUR vetoed, which the Forty- seventh Congress passed over his veto, and which at “the election’ oconring a few months later swept the’ ‘Republicans out ‘of power in ‘the House of Representatives, was the most extravagant ever enacted ap Yet it appropriated Tess than $19,000,000. The River and "Harbor bill just reported to the House by the committee of ‘which Mr. BurTox of Ohio is the chairman is'a sixty-million-dollar measure.” * Tt appropri- ates directly for the next fiscal’ year not less than $22,792,711. It. gives authority for incurring obligations under the contin- uing contract system, for work to be done after June 30th, 1902, amounting to $37,- 142,704. The total actually. arried by this bill is $59,935:415. "The country should dude hat x “the propos ition is, and wvhither the river and harbor business is tending. * Some of ‘the proposed’ improvements are legitimate | and absolutely ‘necessary. Others, judg- ing by all precedent and “by the unvarying habits of human nature in Congress when- | ever the pork barrel is opened and the logs |. set a-rolling, are of the Cheesequake order. The aggregate is stupendous. It exceeds the total ‘expenditures of the Federal Government for ‘all purposes, in- cluding interest on the public 'debt, in any year of the nation’s existence up to 1856, less than half a century ago. "This River and Harbor appropriation of 1901, direct and ‘obligatory for the future, is about twelve times as great as the total expenditures of the United States Govern- ment, exclusive of interest, in the corves- ponding year of thé last century. It exceeds by more than $5,000,000 the | entire expenditures of ‘the United States Government for all purposes in 1847, the year of the war with Mexico. It is only the beginning. An endless prospect of swiftly increasing annual de- | mands of the same sort is indicated by’ the | committee’s report that ‘the total amount required for river and harbor work already planned by the engineers and already defi- ‘nitely ‘estimated as to cost by the War De- partment now approximates three hundred million dollars. And when that $300,000, - 000 has been spent. if spent it is, there will be creeks and 'bayous and inlets enough left ‘on the map. and local hunger enough for a Government appropriation: for | the benefit of the respectives localities; to cou- sume twice and ‘thrice $300,000,000. No No end will he in sight a huudred years hence. | Let Congress think before it votes. recall again to the attention of the Republi- can majority the warning: dgainst extrava- gant appropriations with which President McKINLEY concluded his recent: official disconsses upow: the state of the loounteyes i A Weak Advocate of a Righteous Prop- : : : _osition. i Fr rom the Hi vishirg Star-Tndependent:: It would probably be impossible‘to im- agine anything of less importance than the | ‘opinion of Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, on any subject. If any. other Senator in Congress had expressed. the idea’ that the government of the United States is under | moral obligatiogs to withdraw from the Philippines and leave the natives to their own resources, it would be sufficient. But such a sentiment coming from the Senator from Massachusetts is not worth noticing. Everybody knows that his complete slavery to party will force him to reverse himself whenever the exigencies. of politics require it, and what he says or thinks is of no con- ‘sequence now or hereafter. . ‘But there is a good deal of reason in| the suggestion, ‘nevertheless, and. “though Mr. Hoar will vote against his own motion at the first crack of the party whip, the snbstance of his amendment to the army reorganization bill is certain to attract widespread popular attention in ‘the near | ‘His proposition is that no part of | the increased army be used in the Philip- pines and that only such force be. main- tained there as is necessary ‘‘to keep order in places now under the peaceable control of the United States,'’ and it is rapidly in- ‘creasing in. favor among the people. But it will not he adopted as long as Senator Hoar is its champion, unless, of course, it should hecoute the party policy. «oie i Lipo ! ese Subtrihe for: the WATCHMAS. oh We £ nis hagad | Spawls from the Keystone. ‘ —The new bank and trust company’s building at Greensburg was damaged to the | extent of $1,000 by fire which started at the foot of the elevator Mouday morning. —Capitalists are buying up the coal islands along the line of the West Branch Valley railroad between Clearfield and Karthaus railroad. There will be three bridges on the new road, one at Wolf Run one at Lick Run and the other at Shawsville. —Robert Gearhart, who is 84 years old, recently walked from his: home in Brush Creek township to McConnellsburg, and back, making a round trip of fifty-two miles. He is the father of twenty-eight children and has never been ill in his life. .. # —John Moist, Samuel Stroup'afid ’ John I. Kaufman were arrested oii tl e charge of hunting deer with dogs on Anksgiving day. At the hearing Saturday night Justice R. W. Patton, of Lewistown, fined the sports-: men $100 each and the payment of the costs, —On last Wednesday morning the tannery at Rainsburg, Bedford county, owned by Homer Cessna, was totally destroyed by fire, as were'also the stables of George Strickey, William Smith and Harry Amos. The total loss will approximate $3,000, partly covered by insurance. —The Presbyterian Sunday school at Lewistown on Sunday celebrated its 80th anniversary, and D. W. Woods entered upon ‘his forty-sixth year as its superintendent. The school contributed $500 the past year for missions in addition to supporting a mis- sionary in Japan. —Rev. David T. Neely, pastor of the Pres. byterian church at Milroy, Mifflin county, recently declined a call from the Presby- terian church at Punxsutawney and ac- cepted a call to a Presbyterian church in Baltimore. His resignation was read to the Milroy charge to take effect the last Sunday of January. “John J. Saddler, alias “Pegleg,” will be hanged in the jail at Greensburg next Thurs. day afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, unless grant- ed another, respite by the Governor. Sad- ‘dler maintains be is innocent of the crime of murder in ‘the eyes of the law, having shot ‘in self-defense; and says he will not given up hope until the last. James. ‘McLaughlin, a street car con- ductor in Lock ‘Haven, was badly hurt at the. power house Sunday evening. A car was being transferred to another track, and the current being on, ainknown to him, when he ‘stepped between ‘the cars and put’ the ‘trolley on the wire the cars came’ togethér. McLaughlin’ s right leg was caught at the thigh and squeezed # hard that the flesh | was broken. —William Hinkley, the iwallcknowri pas- senger ‘éonductor, found a purse containing $4,800 on the seat of a coach near North- umberland a few days ago. He turned it into t the office at Harrisburg, when he learn- ed. that ‘the owner. had already began tele- graphing for it, The owner was on his way .to Watsontown, where he intended purchas- {ing property. He'did not discover his loss until after’ leaving’ ‘the ‘train. —State Senator Charles A, Muehlbronner will introduce a billat the coming session of ‘the Legislature to provide military training .in the public schools. He: says such: train- ‘ing will improve ‘the physique of ‘children and give them some idea of military 'life. The bill will’ provide that in every public school district there ‘shall’ be military in- ‘struction under the direction of a commis- sioned officer of the National guard. The law may leave the matter of such education optional with the directors of each district. The latest stroke of the Pennsylvania railroad company, in the coal and lumber fields of Somerset county, revives ‘the Mid- land railroad project,, partly carried to com- pletion in Bedford and Blajr counties, a few years ago.» Pennsylvania’ will extend its lines to Central City; near the Somerset and Bedford line, and to this end, it is rumored, an immense force of men and teams has been sent into the territory, and work is expected to begin at once, It is said ‘that fully 200 horses were, landed at Windber last week, destined for work on the extension. | (7 —George TI. ‘Reynolds, a young man of Bolivar, i is reported to have had a thrilling experience a and remar Kable escape, from. death last Friday. The youth was going up ‘to the top of an inclined plane in an empty car, when the down-bound loaded car: became unmanageable by ‘reason of ‘the disarrange- ment of the brakes, and the one’ in which Reynolds was riding plunged into the small building at the top of the plane. The young man was thrown about twenty feet in the air and. landed on another car. Both. arms were crushed and the youth's face and shew! ders badly bruised. i —Matthew Grier, brother of ‘the. ei 1. G. Grier, died at his home at. Mountain Semi- nary, Birmingham, Sunday morning, aged 78 years. (He had been a. resident of that ‘place, and was connected with the Seminary about forty years,since his brother had taken charge of it." Surviving him are two ‘broth- ers, Dr. J. Grier, Pasadena, ‘California, and Dr. Philip Grier, of New Jersey; and one sister, Mrs. Vantress, of Raritan, N. J. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. H. H. Henry, nt the. home: of A. R: Grier at Birmingham, at 7 o'clock Monday evening. Burial ‘was made at ‘the seraetery at’ Doyls- ‘town Tuesday ‘morning. et —A dynamite explosion at, hil son’; Somerset county, Sunday morning, resulted ‘in the instant death of Michael Ferrick and ‘a colored man. ' The men were ‘employed by BO. O'Connor, a contractor who is excavat- ing for an extra track on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad at Philson's. A foreman on ‘Saturday had, put a cap in a stick of dyna- mite and then put it ina bucket. Sunday Ferrick and the negro put the bucket ona stove to thaw the dynamite, not knowing it contained the cap. The explosion which re- ‘sulted was terrific. wrecking the building be- sides killing the two workmen. —While standing on the, running board of an engine that was going at the rate of 18 miles an hour, J. C. Giles, a brakeman in the employ of the New York Central railroad and residing at Jersey Shore, formerly of Phil burg ‘was thrown headfore-most to pve Ne rry Junction Satur- ie a. He ry “fair on his face, ‘sustaining painfal injuries. A gash was cut alongside of] his nose, both cheeks were lacer- ,ated and. od and body more or.] be able to resume. braised. Rr tloer itis Sir be ina day or two,