Deworraiicyatcn, 8Y PRP. GRAY MEEK. ———————————————————— Ink Slings. —Japan and Russia. They re off! —Japan made the first swat count. --*Jo Jo,” the dog faced boy is dead, but private TOM still lives. —Now wasn’t that just awful, things private ToM said about ns? —The back bone of winter seems to be very flexible, but it will not break. —There were just two crashes of ‘‘the good old summer time’’——thunder— Suday morning. —Saturday will be St Valentine's day and there is no telling what little Dan Cupid will be up to. -—The ice crop isn’t sympathizing any with the Delaware peach buds that are said to be badly frozen. —It is an easy matter to reform. The rub comes in in convincing the needy that they are proper subjects for reformation. them —No man ought to attempt an autobi- ography until he has run for some local of- fice and found out who and what he really is. —China and Korea can scarcely be said to be in a position of standing off jand watching the fun between Russia fand Japan, —There are so many reasons why it is nicer to be rich than poor that it is really a surprise that so many of us persist in remaining poor. —After Japan had sunk three of her war ships and captured several others the Rus- sians woke up and declared that ‘‘a state of war exists.” —The decision that plates dressed frogs legs on the duty list as poultry has more basis than some people are proue to give it credit with. Don’t frogs lay eggs? —Among the applicants for license in this county this spring there are said to be several who were turned down by Judge SMITH, in Clearfield recently. —Mauny a man who thinks he has every- thing at his command wakes up to the re- alization that the world is too full of would be commanders to make such a thing pos sible. —If what the Gozette says is true the Democratic nominee for treasurer of Belle- fonte is a bold, bad, buccaneer and he ought to be slapped on the wrist, real hard twice. —So far as incidents happening about Port Arthur lately are concerned the Rus- sian bear must realize that there is a bull market in her battleships—they are all go- ing up. —Hunting lions in Africa will no longer be the height of dangerous sport sinee two New York firemen put two of the mighty monarchs of the forest to flight with a stream of water. © —If there had been more foreign wars and less geography when the present gener- ation went to school there would be less trouble today locating where the Japs and Russians are really fighting. —In the Russzian-Japan war the Ameri- can mind will halt between the long friendship existing between our govern- ment and Russia and admiration for the plucky little Japs who have ‘‘tquared off’’ for such a much larger foe. —Of course everyone understands that such terrible fires as caused a loss of over one hundred million dollars /in Baltimore during the fore part of the week should not be possible, but the real question is how to make them impossible. —Governor PENNYPACKER has ‘‘shinned up the tree’ in the face of the out-break of righteous indignation over the unearthing of his scheme to get onto the Supreme bench. He is likely to stay up there until ‘‘cousin MATT’' tells him he can come down. —The Massachusetts Legislature is going to pass av act that will make the quart bottle hold a quart. It will be a good act in some respects, but those who are most interested in the exact volume of contents in a quart bottle are the ones who would fare the best if it held even less than ib does. — MARK HANNA, as a prominent public character, is the object of many a oruel and vieious fling from his political oppo- nents, but as a citizen and a man stricken with fever his political foes join with his closest associates in the earnest hope that his life may be spared. —The Czar of all the Russias is the dis- tinguished potentate who first agitated The Hague peace tribunal. A piece of Man- charia and China seems to have made him forget all about his first peace pursuit, hut we’ll bet the jolt Japan gave him on Tues- day sent his mind wandering back towards The Hague. . —The North American says Mayor WEAVER, of that city, caught a ton of fish in one day in Florida. How many suckers do you suppose he caught on a certain elec- tion day that the gang elected him mayor of Philadelphia? That is, how many do yon suppose thonght he was going to prove a right honest official? —The proposed abandonment of circus parades will be a canse of real regret to the many who enjoy every feature and exciting incident of ‘circus day in town.” But it will bring the keeness disappoint- ment to the fellow who is in the habit of showing his little folks the parade and making them believe they have seen the whole show. C VOL. 49 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., FEBRUARY 12, 1904. Philadelphia and the South. Those esteemed Philadelphia contempor- aries which are madly inveighing against the Pennsylvania Railroad because of some fancied fault which impairs the trade re- lations between that city and the South have poorly diagnosed the cause of their commercial malady. There was a time when Philadelphia was the supply station for the entire South. Before the Civil war no southern merchant ever thought of any other market in which either to sell the products of the plantation or bay the mate- rials for consumption in that vast section of wealth, sunshine and generosity. Every train which came from the South was bur- dened with men and women in esearch of business or pleasure and Philadelphia was the destination in either event. In fact there was hetween the metropolis of Penn- sylvania and the South a bond of iriendship which was expressed in social and business relations alike, close and kindly. This condition has changed, unquestion- ably, but not on account of any ‘‘cut-off’’ regulations of the Pennsylvania Railroad or discrimination of any description against that city by that company. On the con- trary, the interests of Philadelphia have been served by the Pennsylvania Railroad with singuiar fidelity and zeal. The cause which has influenced the South to seek other markets for commercial operations is vastly deeper and broader than that ofa railroad schedule and more significant than a time-table. Differences have arisen between Philadelphia and the South but not on account of the location of the railroad stations of the city. It requires something more important to move a thoughtful and earnest people and the people of the South are that. The differences which have arisen between them aud the city of Phila- delphia are upon principles that are fandamental. Before the war of the rebellion the South came to Philadelphia with confidence of a tried and trusted friendship. The people of that section came to that natural gate- way to the northern manufacturing region in a spirit of brotherhood certain to find sympathy in their troubles and secure justice in their transactions. They found the social life attractive and satisfactory. But since that fratricidal conflict they have forind ‘no such Wobpitality. At the close of hostilities, whch the South turned its atten. tion to business and directed its energies to the work of recuperation sue offered to re- new her relations with Philadelphia only to meet repulse. During that memorable period of national angdish when the South, “in sackcloth and ashes,” was sincerely paying penance for her error, every Phila- delpbia Representative in Congress, with the exception of the late Mr. RANDALL, voted on every occasion to heap further burdens on her bent back and add to the just penalty of rebellion mountains of in- justice and iniquity. The saving sense of justice in the Repre- sentatives of other cities and sections res- cued the people of the South ultimately from the misery avhich the Philadelphia Representatives inn Congress would have heaped on them and their own courage and fortitude was rapiply working out re- cuperation when the walignity of the Re- publican party against them took another form. In the morbid brain of some devil- ish irreconcilables the ‘Force Bill’’ was con- ceived and every Representative for Phila- delphia in Congress except Mr. RANDALL supported it with the earnestness of zealots. Still the South came to Philadelphia to trade. Still the memory of the kindly relations of a previous period influenced them, the sturdy championship of justice in their behalf by Mr. RANDALL stimulat- ed a weakening friendship and they came as before until finally Mr. RANDALL died and thereafter there was no man of all the number which represented Philadelphia to raise his voice against any iniquity direct- ed toward the South. "Since the death of Mr. RANDALL, except for a short time while Mr. MCALEER was permitted to represent the 3rd district of that city, the unanimous vote of its Repre- sentatives in Congress has been cast for every vicious means intended to wrong or rob the South, even to the voting out of Congress of every Representative from that section against whose election a rapscallion could be found to make a contest. And this work of wrong to the South by its Congressmen has been endorsed and re-endorsed by the public rentiment of Philadelphia. And those who have done this thing wonder why the South passes by their doors to do its trading. New York appears to have had .a differ- ent conception of its duty toward that section. Without condoning the. crime of rebellion, with wrong, without in the least measure modifying a just reprehension of what had ocourred, the hroad mind of thas great city was moved to a proper appreciation of con- ditions and her Representatives in Congress spoke with the tongue of eloquence in be- half of the principles of justice. = Boston followed in the same amiable course “and her Representatives in Congress spoke without indicating sympathy: for mercy as well as justice. Baltimore, rapidly developing commercial character, adopted the same line and it is small won- der that under the circumstances the nar- row bigotry of Philadelphia should ulti- mately tarn the friendly feelings of the South into a sentiment of hostility which finds expression in transferring business relations to other cities. Business opera- tions are not based on sentiment, as a rule, but sentiment has something to do with business. Besides, the people of the South are not blind to conditions as they exist in Phila- delphia or oblivious of incidents of the past. They know as well as we under- stand that the business interests of Phila- delphia have been prostituted to the base purposes of debauching elections in order that hogus Republican majorities may be oreated in Congress tostifle the voice of the South in the councils of the Nation. The people of the South are aware that the leading business men and most respectable citizens of Philadelphia have knowingly contributed funds to purchase votes and provoke race prejudices in the South. They have learned how 80,000 frandulent votes are polled in Philadelphia annually in order that a unanimous delegation op- posed to the interests and even the tran- quility of the South may be returned to Congress at each election. With the knowledge of these things to guide them it would be strange, indeed, if}3thelfSouth were not moved to resentment. No, the schedule of the Pennsylvania railroad is not responsible for the trans- ferrence of the trade of the South from Philadelphia to other commercial centres. If any influence on earth could hold the people of the South to their old friendship for Philadelphia it is the Pennsylvauia railroad. The splendid equipment and magnificent management of that great cor- poration challenges the admiration of the whole world and its intimate association with the Philadelphia of the time when if was the mecca of the South would natural- ly appeal to the peopie of that section, There is no discrimination against Phila- delphia in the movement of trains, more=- over, which could work injury to Philadel- phia. No railroad train from the South gets as close to the businessjcentre of] New York as the West Philadelphia] station is to the trading section of Philadelphia. The railroad facilities of Boston are no better and those of Baltimore are not as good. Then what is the complaint about ? Philadelphia, ‘‘corrupt and contenced,’’ wants the patronage of a people which she has outraged most villainonsly and some not too discriminating newspapers condemn the Pennsylvania railroad because the cupidity of certain citizens is disappointed. Philadelphia, which hasn’t enough civic pride to enforce the law against self-con- fessed ballot box stuffers, covets business which it has driven away,and rails against the ouly institution which gives it char- acter, for the reason that its passion is not fed. But it doesn’t deceive the public by its maudlin complaints. It may fool a com- munity which is manifestly unfit for self- government because it can’t restrain the criminal impulses of its own governing agents. But the intelligent people of Pennsylvania are not hood- winked by such subterfuges as are expressed in the absurd attack npon the Pennsylvania railroad in the Philadelphia papers. Roosevelt's Passion for Tinsel, If it were not fraught with such grave danger there could be nothing more amus- ing shan the powp with which the Presi- dent always endeavors to surround him- self. Like the savages'in fastnesses as yes unexplored or untouched by the wand of civilization, be takes to gaudy decorations and highly colored uniforms. At his re- ceptions he loves to see the trappings and tinsel which are essential to European courts and under his direesion and influ- ence all the simplicity whieh cliaracterized the elegance ‘of our early national life is disappearing. This was sbrikingly re- vealed the other night on the occasion of the usual, reception to the Juodges of the Supreme court. Of all the receptions at the White House during the years since they were first in- troducad, the simplest but. most dignified has been that to the Judges of the Supreme court. The guests of honor, themselves distinguished men, invariably have worn the conventional co:tume of an American gentleman, siuce the ruffles and knee breeches have gone out of fashion, the black broadcloth swallow-tail. Knowing that the Diplomatists, ont of compliment to the President’s bonored guests, have adopted the same dress. But this yearn sending ont invitations for that function, to the Diplomatists, the President’s -social secretary, a new office by the way, put in a tip that it would please the President if they would ‘come 1n their gandy « court uniforms. Of course, as President BAER of the Reading railroad once said, a request from the President is equivalent to a command and the Diplomatists come to the reception in question radiant in gold lace and gaudy trimmings and to show his appreciation of their obedience the President directed that they be put ahead of the guests of honor in the line of procession to the receiving chamber. It was a beastly breach of etiquette and a gross insult to the jurists, but what did ROOSEVELT care so long as his show was made attractive by the bright uniforms? Like an Indian on the frootier he gratifies his passion for decoration at the expense of decency, as well as decorum. Absurdities of Confused Senators. There was an interesting debate in the United States Senate the other day in which Senators TILLMAN, of South Caro- lina, LODGE, of Massachusetts, and PLATT, of Connecticut, participated. It related to the appointment of WILLIAM D. CRUM, negro, to the office of collector of the port of Charleston, South Caroliua, and is re- ported on pages 1696, 1697, 1698 and 1699 of the Congressional Record. Senator TILL- MAN read the reply of the Secretary of the Treasury to a resolution previously intro- duaced by himself, in which it was stated that Mr. CRUM had heen appointed to the office he holds on March 20th, 1903, and was again appointed on December 7th, 1903, and that be is de facto collector, but is receiving no pay. Mr. TILLMAN charac- terized the statement as remarkable, where- upon this colloquy occurred : Mr. TILLMAN said he wanted to ask the Senator from Massacl.usetts ‘‘whether or not such a case has ever heen known? I bave been examining pretty closely, but so far I have been unable to discover a precedent for a nomination and appointment the same min- ute to any office subject to the approval and confirmation of the Senate. Can the Senator recall one ? We have then this state of facts, Mr. Presi: dent : Daring the recess of Congress, when we were not here, the President nominated and issued temporary commissions to 167 army officers and one collector of the port of Charleston, and he notified us when Congress met in extra session on the 9th of November of his action. The Senate had these nomina- tions under consideration, but it did not con- firm any one of them. Then, when the two sessions merged, the President pro tempore rose from his seat at 12 on December 7th and said—I quote the words from memory—‘‘The time having ar- rived for the assembling of the regular ses sion of the fifty-eighth Congress, I therefore declare the extra session adjourned sine die.” Then he struck his mallet on his desk and said ‘the Senate will come to order,” and the rolliiwas called. I want to ask anybody, anywhere, if there can be, under such con- ditions, a recess. Mr. LopgE. ‘‘Will the Senator allow me ask him a question ?”’ Mr. TiLLMAN. “With pleasure.” Mr. LopGgE. ‘'‘Mr. president, the President of the Senate, on the 7th of December, when he declared the extra session of the Senate adjourned without delay, left the'chair and returned with the chaplain. Then we had prayer—the regular opening of the session. Mr. TiuiMAN. The President pro tem- pore did not go 3 feet from his seat. Mr. LopGge. He left his chair, went down og the floor and cawe back with the chap- ain. Mr. TinLmAN. All right; I do not want to quibble and I am not splitting hairs here. I am endeavoring to get somebody to stand up here in the light of common sense and declare that there was a recess of the Senate in the view of the constitution during that proceeding. Mr. Pratt, of Connecticut. Well, Mr. President, if there was no recess, then is it not true that the recess appointments which had been therefore made, ran over into the so-called regular session. Mr. TiLLMAN. Why, Mr. President, the Senator from Connecticut is too good a law- yer to ask me a question like that. The Senator from Connecticut must understand that our record shows that there was the end of a session. We are not discussing the question of a recess. Do not mix the words as the Secretary of War lias endeavored to doin his special pleading.” We have gone to the pains to reproduce all this stuff from the Congressional Record in order to show to what beggarly expe. dients Republican Senators are driven in order to sustain the absurdities of the cow- boy in the White House. Grammar school boys in a debating society would hardly resort to such pettyfogging as Senators .LoDGR and PLATT indulged on that oces- sion aud both are scholarly and able men. But they don’t even agree with each other. It will be noticed that I.ODGE accepts the President's silly notion of a ‘‘constructive recess,’ while’ PLATT has adopted the sug- gestion of Senator ALLISON that it be put upon the basis of a merger of the two session and therefore the nominations made during the real recess hold until there is an actual adjournment. including probably a trip home. Unfortunately for that theory, how- ever. the constitution says “‘until the end of the session’? and not until there is a re- cess and the end of the session was pro- claimed in the declaration of the President pro tempore that ‘‘the time having arrived for the assembling of the regular session of the fifty-eighth Congress, I therefore de- clare the extra session adjourned sine die.” It ROOSEVELT keeps on he will have ev- ery Republican Senator in an insane asylum. -—The Hon. J. W. KEPLER; of Pine. Grove Mills, was in town on Tuesday night and while here announced his candidacy for re-election to the Legislature. His record during the last session will have hear the closess scrutiny and his energies for the Pennsylvania Staté College, the Philipshurg and Bellefonte hospitals are. enough in themselves to establish a #ood olaim for his re-election. NO. 6. Two Significant Statements. Auditor General HARDENBERGH’S an- nual report, a general summary of which has been published in the daily papers, is significant on account of two statements. The first is that at no time during the year’ covered in the report has the State Treasur- er’s monthly statement shown a balance in the treasury of less than $8,000,000 in the general fund and that for ten months the balance has not been less than $10,000,000. The other is that the ‘‘burdens of taxation, 80 far as can be consistently done, have been taken from the farmer, the laborer and the workingman, and the great major- ity of the revenue of the State is collected from tax on corporations and personal property.”’ Of the first proposition little need be said for its iniquity is obvious. The right of government to protect the individual in person and property. That being true ev- ery dollar taken from the people in excess of the amount necessary for the mainte- nance of government and the discharge of its obligations is robbery. According to the government of Pennsylvania has taken from the people $10,000,000 more, during the present year,than it had a right to take and coneequently, instead of protecting the required, it has robbed them to the vast amount expressed. With respect to the other proposition the Auditor General is simply absurd as every intelligent school boy in the Com- monwealth could point out to. him. It is true that most of the taxes are levied on corporations but the corporation managers charge them back to the users of the corporations and the farmers and met- chants pay through increased charges for ‘carrying and the ““laborers and workmen’’ through decreases in wages, When in the pioneer period of the country farmers and workingmen were obliged to be content with such rudimentary education as is ex- pressed in the ‘‘three Rs”’ they could be fooled with such rubbish as the Auditor General uses. But the improvement of the public schools has broadened their infor- mation and they know better now. The War Jam the East, allio The war in the far E East has begun and until one or the other of two very stubborn antagonists yields to reason the work of destruction will proceed with great vigor and success and it may be predicted that within a year the world will be af least a billion dollars poorer. What powers other than those at present involved will par- ticipate in the operations it is impossible to even conjecture. said that Japan relies on Great Britain to help her out and it is about equally certain that in the event of such interposition France and probably Germany will take a hand ou the other side. The out-look, therefore is for a conflict of vast propor- tions and immense destructiveness, Singularly enough this fearful conflict has been begun without even the shadow of reason. tered upon an enterprise which is certain to entail vast losses in support of a claim which is not only unjust but absurd. In other words having stolen from the Chinese Empire the province of Manchuria the gov- ernment of the Czar now proposes to seize the Kingdom of Korea for the reason that in possession of an enemy it would be a dangerous strategic point. On the other hand Japan proposes to occupy or at least control Korea for the same reason and thus the persons and property of a people are made a subject of traffic or quarrel between swo Empires, neither of which has a shadow of a claim. All this is outrageous of course but it. is in line with the tendencies of the times. When men were more conscientious and rulers more just che small nation was as se- cure in its rights and property as the more powerful. For example, a dozen years ago this country, built upon the rock of con- seience and maintained within the lines of justice, would no more have thought of menacing the weakest Republic in the South American group than it would of sending a fleet of air ships to invade the moon. But now our war Lord, booted and spurred, conspires with adventurers to loot a Republic which we are under treaty obli- gations to protect and refuses to obey the command of Congress for the evidence of his turpitude. Favorite Sons Are Not Always Favor- ites. From the Philadelphia Record. At a dinner at the Manhattan club in New York Judge Parker was hailed trium- phantly as the next President of the Unit- ed States, but Tammany has not yet com- mitted itself and is giving strong indica-’ tions of looking in other directions. Some of the Tammany men talk openly and un- rebuked of other candidates. New York will leatn from Mr. Murphy who her favor: ite son is—her favorite Democratic son is. She may never know who her favorite Re- publican son is; Mr. Root admits that he is not Theodore Roosevels, and yes the State delegation to Chicago may support him for want of sore one else. ‘| was probated Saturday. It may confidently be | That is to say Russia has en- |. -| The sudden rise in the river, ‘caused by the giving away of the ice jam at Spawls from the Keystone. —Northampton county has 20,050 school children between the ages of 6 and 16 years. —Editor Watts, of the Clearfield Monitor sails from New. York, March 6th, on a two month’s visit to the Holy land. —Mis. Fred H. Leederman, of Williams- port, whose husband died last week of small- pox, has developed the disease, and is con- fined to a room in her home on Spruce street, that city. —The 51st annual conclave of the Penn- sylvania Knights Templar will be held in York, May 23rd, 24th and 25th. On this oc- casion it is expected that fully half of the 76 commanderies of the state will be there, with about 2,500 members. —About two hundred and fifty persons visited the Mifflin county jail on visitors day. Itisthe duty of the sheriff to search all visitors, and in doing so three gallons of . whiskey, besides knives and revolvers, were found in the pockets of the visitors. —Because he had been charged by his wife with cruelty to her and their children, Harry Trout, of Pottstown, is now accused of having poured five buckets of cold water from the roof down the stovepipe, caus- ing devastation to the Trout kitchen. —The local subscribers of the United Tele- phone and Telegraph company at Selins- grove, are up in arms against the company for reducing the 20-mile limit agreed upon. If the company insists upon its present re- strictions all the Selinsgrove ‘phones will go out. —George Bell, of Williamsport, formerly United States marine, has offered his services to the Japanese government in the war be tween that country and Russia. Mr. Bell bas spent many months’ in Japan and China ‘inthe service of the United States and is - well acquainted with those countries. report of the Auditor General, therefore, the | —Godfrey Hinkal, aged 65 years, made an unsuccessful attempt to commit suicide at -the home of his niece, Mrs. Louise Marks, ‘in Collumsville,Nippenose valley,at 9 o'clock ‘Saturday morning. He cut his throat with people in their property, as its obligations a razor,making a bad wound, but Dr. Welker arrived in time to save his life. —One school in Wayne township, Mifflin county, has been closed for three weeks be- cause the stove is out of repair and danger- ous to the building. Strangely enough, the Newton Hamilton Watchman is disposed to make a fuss and wants to know what sort of school directors Wayne township has. —John K. Courter, whose home is in Clin- ton county, says he has solved the secret of tempering copper. He has a sample plate which he has sharpened to an edge that will cut wood. He says that he also has a knife blade of copper with which he can shave. He also has a hatchet and several chisels. —A call has been issued for the surviving members of the famous 148th regiment to attend a reunion, rather a business meeting, at Bellefonte, Feb. 24th and 25th. The principal reason for assembling is to make the final arrangement for the publication of the story of the regiment which has been in preparation for over a year. —The will of A. F. Boynton, of Clearfield, It provides that the sum of $1000 shall be paid yearly to his aged parents and that the residue of his for- tune, estimated at $300,000, goes to the Missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal church as trustee, the revenues therefrom to be paid his widow during her life. She is appointed the executrix of the will. The bequest is one of the largest ever left for religious purposes in the state. *—Rev. A. B. Hooven, a well-known mem- ber of the Central Pennsylvania conference of the M. E. church, died at his home in Du- Bois on Sunday night, after an illness of .a few days. He was 71 years old and had been iu the traveling ministry, a member of the Central Pennsylvania conference, since 1869. For the last four years he had been superannuated. He was a truly good man and his works do fellow him. He is sur- vived by his wife and three children. —Dr. J. M. Dumm, of Mackeyville, has an orchard of 3000 peach trees and after the recent cold snap he was of the opinion that the buds had been greatly damaged as they cannot withstand a temperature lower than from 15 to 20 degrees helow zero. This week he removed a number of branches from dif- ferent trees in his orchard and carefully ex- amined over 100 buds, all of which were frozen, this confirming his fears. Hence it is the opinion of Dr. Dumm that the peach crop not only of this section, but all through Pennsylvania will be a total failure. —The wreck of the Cleveland and Cin- cinnati express a mile west of Bellwood about 5 o'clock Friday morbing, asit was speeding westward, might have been much more serious than it was. A wheel of the tender to the engine bursted and all of the cars of the train were derailed and dragged and jolted over the ties for a couple hundred feet. The train consisted of four Pullman sleepers, two coaches and one baggage: car. The passengers all received a severe shaking up, but only one was hurt. Mrs. Charlotte Jago, of Perth Amboy, N. J., was thrown to one side of her berth and in some way sus- tained a fracture of the right thumb, The injury was dressed by a doctor on the train, ‘and when a new train was made up the lady with the other passengers proceeded on her way West. All the cars were more or less damaged, and had to be shopped for repairs. —Daniel G. Shemery, an employee of the Williamsport nail works on the south side, had a narrow escape from drowning Monday afternoon while he was thawing out the end of a discharge steam pipe which is enclosed in a wooden box on the bank of the river. which was Jersey Shore a short time previous, caused the box in which Mr. Shemery was standing to be engulfed by the rushing water so quickly that he failed to immediately realize his perilous position. ' A few moments later he was obliged to dive out of the box through the opening at the bottom and swim to the surface in muskrat fashion in order to save his life. The box is about three feet square and six feet high. The top is cover- ed with heavy planks. The only opening is a small aperture at the bottom for the pur- ose of allowing the steam to escape.