Demo fata -— ad “BY P. GRAY MEEK. -— Ink Slings, —1It takes more than an act of Assembly and acourt of justice to make a Greater Pittsburg. It is up to the people out there now. —Here's hoping that Governor STUART'S eyes will be opened to the fact that there is only ove State College in Pennsylvania after all. —Four hours of hard thinking is said to exhaust the ordinary individual as much as ten hours of manual labor, yet how many people prefer the thinking parts. —It Mr. BRYAN could only he persnad- ed that the Democracy will call him, if it wants him, a lot of embarrassing situations might be avoided between now and next fall. —JouN D. ROCKEFELLER has made public the fact that he doesn’t own any government bonds at all. What a relief ! We were under the impression that he owned everything. —Judging from the way State’s football team has heen playing lately it is highly probable that the remaining board-walks in that borough will be left to serve other purposes than that of jollification bon-fires, —The South has gone dry to save the men. The North applauds accordingly. But let the South lynch a fiend to save the women. Then listen to the North howl. To say the least it isn’t gallantry. —Mme TETRAZAZZINI is to receive two hundred and forty thousand dollars for an opera season in this country. There is some satisfaction that the price of butter and eggs and potatoes is going up along with that of dago opera singers. —11 it was so soon to be done for what in the world was it ever begun for. Two weeks ago the Cambria iron works at Johnstown discharged fifteen hundred men because tome one shot a panic hogy-man up into the industrial skies. Wednesday all of them were ordered back to work. —Judge GRAY would be good enough for us as a presidential candidate. Surely the good, sound sense he displayed at the time he settled the great anthracite coal strike in this State should appeal to the people who have come tu our way of think- ing that you can’t make Presidents out of anything nowadays. —Now is the time when every small town in the county should arrange to have some kind of an entertainment for the hen- efit of the hospital. There ought tojbe at least ten such bepefits aggregating five hun. dred dollars for the new bailding which is just abont completed with about that som short in ite payments. —The New York man who drew two thousand dollars from a bank and had it sewed up in the hem of one of his wife's old skirte whioh was hid away doubtless thought it was safer there than¥in the bank. The baok is still doing business, however, while the man has a force of de- geotives at work hunting the thief who stole the skirt the very same day he hid it. —The Dochess of MARLBOROUGH has just vieited the Tombs in New York and, after expressing the opinion that the New York prisons are cleaner and better than the English ones, she stated that she found HARRY THAW quite unattractive. The judgment of the Conntess is scarcely germaine. Had it not heen fora certain Duke she picked out as being quite at sractive we would have paid more respect to her verdiot of THAW. —The President is going to tell just who did it in his forth coming message to Con- gress. It is expected that this will be the only case on record showing that some- thing was done without TEDDY'S having a band in it. We refer to the so called pan- jo. Of course you all know that TEDDY made the big bay and grain crops in this county, but up to the time of going to press we hadn’t heard of his claiming cred- it for the potato rot and the soft corn. —The Pittsburg banks have just un- earthed a scheme of a large baud of crooks operating all over the country whereby they were attempting to get an acourate list of all the persons who have withdrawn their money from the banks. Had the plan, which was cleverly worked, {not been found out there might have been no end of robberies and murders of those who bad taken their money to their homes under the mistaken idea that it is safer there than in the banks. —t seems to us just a trifle premature to boom Captain BarcLAY for a second term in Congress before he has served bis first. While there is no doubt of his being a very nice gentleman, nice gentlemen don’t necessarily mean useful or able Con- gressmen ; hesides, there are some explava- tions that the Captain will bave to make concerning the Bellefonte postoffice before be finde many of the Republicaus over this way falling over themselves in an effort to push him into a second term. —Dancing on Sunday on the United States naval vessels, as was theJoase at League Island last Sunday, might well cause the christian people of the land to think that there might have been sowe ul- terior motive in removing the motto : ‘‘In God we Truss,” from our new coins. In times of peace if our jackies can’t be given enough time for social pleasures on week days some of the expensive maneuvers and spectacular parades to gratify the personal vanity of the President bad better be ont out, in order that they may he shown that the government, at jot, regards the Sab- bath day as holy and will keep it sacred. SE SERA BET STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 52 Outrage Upon Cheistian Sentiment. Whether the sentiment “In God We Trast” shall remain on the coins of the country is of less consequence than that it shall be eliminated by an imperial fat. The phrase was adopted at a critical period in the history of the country and was uni- versally approved by the moral sentiment of the people. It added wvothing to the value of the coin and made no difference in the purchasing power of a day's wages. But it expressed a Christian thought and a wholesome idea aod after having been so acoepted for a period of more than a genera- tion it ought not to have been eliminated without an expression of popular opinion on the subject. The mere fact that Presi- dent ROOSEVELT entertained some absurd notions respecting it was not a sufficient reason for making the change. The people of the United States are es- sentially a Christian people. During the period between 1861 and 165 their faith in the principles of Christian civilization was put to a severe test. Reverses on the field of battle in a conflict which involved the perpetuity of the government created doubts. The expression of confidence in the justice of God on the onins was the sign of the triumph of piety. If no better rea- sons existed for continuing the sentiment on the coins that one fact should have heen sufficient. At least it should have proved potent until after mature deliberation and frank and free discussion a majority of the people had decided the question adversely. No man has the right toolandestinely alter the form or face of the.coins. The excuse given by President ROOSE- vELT for makiag this radical change in the coinage of the country is puerile. He says that during a heated political campaign the sentiment was ridiculed and that for that reason it ought to have been abolish- ed. When Christ was on earth working in His way for the salvation of the human race not only He bat all His efforts were ridiculed and flonted by a lot of men who imagined that they knew more than the Divine. President RoosevELT has follow- ed the example of the sooffers of that time and with less reasnn for they enjoyed the legal right to do what they did while he usurped an authority which no other Presi. dent would have diewymed of claiming. His action was an unmitigated outrage against the religions sentiment of the people. most any levy on such transactions as that | of the Alton, for in that case he created | the stock himself and kept all the proceeds of the sale. But that was an exceptional affair. It is a trifle singular that the legislative mind invariably rans in the direction of taxation. If Mr. HEPBURN really meant, as his suggestion would imply,to put a stop to that sort of inimical speculation, he would probably bave euggested the orimi- pal prosecution of those concerned in that traffic. As President WiLsoN, of Prince- ton University, said in a recent speech putting one man in jail will do more to check certain forms of evil than fiving a thousand corporations. The New Currency Issue. Whatever may be the outcome of the order of the President to issue $100,000,- 000 of interest bearing treasury certificates besides $50,000,000 of Panama honds there will be grave doubts as to its legality. The neoessity for such an expansion of the cir- culating medium in the minds of many people, prinoipally bankers, was obvious. Bueiness bad become stagnant on account of the scarcity of ourrenoy. A panic was threatened for the reason that it was im- possible to- get sufficient funds to perform | the usual duties of commerce. Under such | oiroumstances the government audoubtedly | bas the right to intervene within the law toafford relief. But it is certain that the | President has no right to act outside of the | law. He is amenable to the law just as | others are. In 1903 when President CLEVELAND sold bonds to relieve financial distress he was denounced in che bitterest terms by the Republican newspapers of the coun- try. They protested that it was a orime to issue bouds in time of peace and that the condition of the treasary had nothing to do with the case. At that time the treas- ury was actually empty. The HARRISON administration bad not only drained it but had mortgaged the revenues of the fature to meet current expenses. President CLEVE- LAND endeavored to afford relicf by sell- ing bonds under the anthority of law. Is looks as if President ROOSEVELT were is- suing treasury certificates without the au- thority of law. The people of the conntry don’t want a panic. Past experience has taught them that such financial disturbances are inimi- cal to public interests. But there is greater danger in executive usurpation than io financial distress. In the emergency of war the law conveys to the President the right to issue interest bearing certificates. Bat be has no such authority in times of peace and the exercise of a power not pro- vided by law may entail greater evils than a panic could inflict. We have a two. sided question to consider. The President way have done harm rather than good by hie exercise of extra-constitutional power. We shall await the resalt with interest and concern. Trend of Public Opinien. The admission of Oklahoma as a State in the Federal Union is a distinos gain to the fundawental principles of the government. While the question was pending the Presi- dent ‘‘butted in’’ with the purpose of in- flnencing the actions of the people. He wanted to compel a Republican viotory in the new State. Bat so far from yielding to his demands the people resented his interference. They elected a Democratic Governor, a majority of Democratic Con- gressmen and a Demooratio Legislature whiob will in tarn elect two Democratic Senators in Congress. It was a clean sweep of Democracy against imperialism. The 1esalt of the recent election in Oklahoma is mote significant than the election of a Democratic Governor would imply. It means something wore than a temporary trinmph of the Democratic party in the new State. It clearly reveals a revaleion of matured public judgment againet the trend toward imperialism throughout the country which is expressed in everything which President ROOSEVELT does. In fact the new Governer of the new State declared, practically, in his inanga- ral, that the Demooratic majority in the State wasa sign of the reversal of the ROOSEVELT notion of centralization. The American people are essentially conservative. Immediately after the Span- ish war the spirit ol jiugoism rav through tue country. But it bas already exbaasted its potency. We no looger hear of creating military organization in the public schools to teach militant patriotism. The present aspiration of she citizenship is to teach the value of industrial and commercial suprem- acy and that is what she fathers of the Republic aimed to promote. A dozen years from now, unless the signs are mis- leading, there will he no demande from the White House for increased facilities of the army and pavy. What the people will want is an increase in the rewards of labor. Bogus Rotormer Squenling. A lot of Philadelphia bogus reformers are raising a great ‘hoe and ory’’ because it has been discovered that she majority in tavor of the $10,000,000 loan, voted on at the recent election, was made up of frand- ulent'votes. These ‘‘milk-sop’’ politicians who recently returned to the service of the atrocious machine were opposed to the loan. They protested, justly, uo doubs, that the money is to be squandered in the interest of the municipal contractors who have been despoiling the city for years, and complain because it is likely to cost them something in the way of increased | taxes. They are not likely to get mach sympathy, however. We have no doubt tbat all that bas been said about fraudulent votes in favor of the | loan bill is true and probably the half! hasn't been told. Bat it is a sale guess that for every fraudulent vote cast for the loan bill another was cast for JOHN O. SHEATZ for State Treasurer. The machine is never satisfied with hall a bite. It wants the whole thing and it was just as easy to put a [raudulent vote into the bal- lot box for the entire Republican ticket as for the loan bill and the chances are that the fraud included all. The machine was as anxious to elect SHEATZ as it was to pass the loan bill. The twin purposes went together at every stage of the game. The newspapers representing these bogus reformers are anxious to create the impres- sion that the vote on the Treasuryship was honest while that on the loan bill was fraudulent. Nothiug could be more pre- posterous. The loan hill never would bave been endorsed if the reformers badn’t been #0 auxious to eleot SHEATZ that they were willing to condone any electoral crime to accomplish it and the reformers having thas proved recreant to their professions of reform we hope that their worst apprehen- gions with respect to the increase of taxes Not the Best Remedy. Representative HEPBURN, of Iowa, offers a new preventive of panios, if not a pavacia for those evils. He would put a federal tax on all sales of stooks and bonds on “‘margins.”’ Sach sales for instant deliv- ery would escape the tax for the reason that presumably they are sold in a legiti- mate business way and purchased as an in- vestment. As an evidence of good faith Mr. HEPBURN would allow a day or two will be fulfilled. for the transfer of sisle to the property. There might he some merit in this prop- They deserve all they will get. osition. It is certain that if the tax were high enough and the law strictly enforced, it would stop that form of speculative activ- ~The weather man must have been working over time this week in his en- deavor to make it as disagreeable as possi- ity. Of course HARRIMAN could pay al- ble. BELLEFONTE, PA., NOVEMBER 22, 1907. A Tale of Two Panles 1¢ is not so long since the beginning of the panic of 1893 that a majority of the people now in active life may not contrast the tone of the Republican press, the lead- ing financiers and the manufacturing barons of that time and now. Theo the Republi can newspapers with almost complete unanimity encouraged the panic, if that term is permissible. That is to say they pub- lished inflammatory descriptions of the peril in which the country stood and need every expedient to undermine confidence and oreate distrust. The financiers of the ‘“frenzied’’ variety supported the lugubri- ons “‘tales of woe’ by every possible means of exciting alarm. Now they are pursuing an entirely dif- ferent line of action. The newspapers which then howled calamity in hysterical terms are now nrging confidence and pa- tienoe and the frenzied financiers are taking all sorts of hazards by offering their own and other people's credit through the medium of clearing house certificates to bolster up confidence and avert danger. MORGAN, ROCKEFELLER, STILLMAN,HAR- RIMAN and dozens of others;who werejthen secretly helping along the panicky distrust are now ‘moving heaven and earth” to allay and abate it. They are offering not only their advice but pecuniary assistance to any of the fivancial ‘lame ducks’’ whose failure might impair confidence. We make no complaint against the pres- ent astitude of those agencies. We wel- come the help of all in the present emer- genoy to avert a really serious state jof af- fairs. A panic such as would have been inevitable if relief had not come promptly is a national calamity and all alike would bave suffered from it. But we can’t re- train from calling attention to the differ- ence hetween the actions of the Republican newspapers and financiers then and now. The Democratic papers and business men might have made a panic certain within a few weeks if they had pursued the course adopted by the others in 1893, but they had too muoh patriotism and too little partisanship to do so. ry The Kind of a Man Who Won't Win, If the Philadelphia papers, that are al- ways gorged with advice for the Democra- oy before a convention aud always ‘‘fer- ninst it" after its ticket is named, want to see this State declare for the nomination of Mr. BRYAN for the Presidency, they are pursuing exactly the course best calculated to bring that end about. The belittling of the Nebraska statesinan aud the laudation of those claiming to be Democrats, who opposed the party nomiuees in 1896 and again in 1900, can have but one result in Pennsylvania ; aud that will be an over- whelming aud positive declaration for Mr. Bryan and the election of a delegation that will be not only in hearty sympathy with that declaration but with his candi daoy as weil. It may he that Pennsylvania will speak for some candidate other than Mr. BRYAN but it won’t be for one who openly fought the Democratic ticket when it bad an op- portunity to win, nor for a man who failed tostand by his party and ite principles when trusts and corporations bad joined hands with its enemies for the control of the Federal Government. The Then and the Now of It Keep your ear as closely to the ground as yon cau you can’t hear a word about “fiat money’ now. Only a few years age, when Mr. BRYAN was raoning for the Presidency, every banker and broker, and money changer and trust backer, in the country was ‘‘cock sure” that rnin and financial disaster followed in the wake of any circulating medium not based on gold. But how different at this time! Clearing house certificates, corporation due bills, manufacturers scrip, store-keepers shin plasters, and in fact any old kind of a promise to pay seems good enough now when the Republican party is to be helped out of its money panic. As the late Mr. Joseras would have remarked : ‘‘Jimmin- ity" what a contemplation for the advocates of a single standard currency in the then and the now of it ?"’ —— La Bellefonte, the second number of Edmund G. Joseph's little paper has reach ed our desk. Instead of a four column folio it is now issued as a two columu quar- to and is just as full of interesting reading matter as a nut is of kernel. The paper is now being issned from the Democrat office, Lock Haven. —— William Eby, of this place, evident- ly believes in taking time by the forelook as he already is in the field as a candidate for the legislative nomination on the Re- publican ticket next year. Ol course when the right time comes it is hardly likely he will be alone in the race. ——A# their big fair in Look Haven last week the Hope Hose company aud the City band realized about four hundred dollars net each; the entire proceeds being be- tween twelve and fifteen hundred dollars. EE 3G The Great Panjandram of Presiden- tial Enfalitbility. Mrs. “Bob White in Philadelphia North Amer- fran, Presidential Iofallibility is a new doc- trinein the United States, but that is no reason why it should be laughed at. Many good things were new in their time. The audacious scoffers who refase to look upon the White House as the ceunser of knowl- edge upon all possible subjects should be called by several short and ugly names. Did they ever charge up San Juan Hill be- hind the colored troops and reach the summit in time to discharge a revolver at the backs of several of the flying foe and diotate sell-landatory dispatches to the press ? Did they ever pluuge their knives deep into the bosom of the sacred oata- moant in fal! view of the bandy camera ? Did they ever stop the revolving car wheels upon thousands of miles of track, draw the fires of scores of furnaces, choke the our- rents of irade, disorder the operations finance, close the banks and the workshops and give notice to open the soup kitchens and increase the accommodations in the poorhouse ? Until they have done all these Sviuge let them preserve a becoming si- ence. Why should uot ‘‘the Great Pavjandrum with the little round button at the top’ be proud of its work ? Why should our oninage bear a motto declaring trust in God when we have a great Panjandrum to trast in ? President HER iwler &loved the mints and opened the mills. hy should not his successor olose the mille and open the mints ? President MoKinley didn’t bave a little round button at the top ? That little round button should he re- 8 . If it declares that trust in God is blashemy, blashemy it is ! Boe Fm i hep est thing in Washington, aud he replied : “Mr. bas discovered the Ten Com- mandements.” That was when our great petigntutio instructure and universal rego- ator had just begun his platitudinous preachments. Admitting Roosevelt dis- covered the Ten Commandments, has he not made other discoveries, among them that tho best mother for a deserted bird nest is an elephant ; that decapitation is a sure cure for toothache ; that the way to determine what laws should be obeyed and what should be disobeyed is whether or not ‘‘I approve of them." “There is no warrant in law for putting the motto ‘In God We Trust’ on the coin, therefore it nught to come off, Still I would bave allowed it to remain on bad I approved of it. Bas as I dido’s approve of is, I ordered it off.” : Here we have a thoughtless sell revela- tion that throws light on much that bas pozzled patriots and dismayed statesmen. Oar Universal and Infallible Arbiter of Law, Medicine, Business, Finance, Poetry, Philosophy, Architecture, Religions, Mor- als, Science, Procreation, Natural History, Engineering, Commerce, Art, Sport, War, Peace, Literature, Education, Blashemy and Falsehood has, after all a consistent standard. He is not erratio, impulsive, wayward, bot-headed. short sighted, obstinate, sell- willed avd reckless, as many have imagio- ed. Io that little round button at the top there isa fixed idea which guides all his actions : “What I approve is right ; what I disapprove is wrong.” “The Ten Commandments are right be- cause I approve of them (except the Ninth, perhaps !). The motto ou the coins is wrong because I disapprove of it. Paul Morton is all right because I approve of bim. Harriman is all wrong because I disapprove of him.” Now, isn’t that perfectly simple and easy ? Isn't it lovely to have all trouble off our hands, all doubts and difficnlties solved ? What's the use of Congress ? What's she use of statesman, bankers, law- yers, dootors, engineers, architects. bishops, manufacturers, railroad presidents, what's the use of anyhody ? Just r fer every question to the little round button at the top of the Great Panjandrum. If you're a merchant and bankruptey is perionsly near ; if you're a baker and cannot get funds to accommodate custom- ers ; if you'rea manufacturer and must shut down your works ; if you're a me- chanic and cannot find employment, why worry ? The Great Panjandrum still draws his salary from a generous nation, and the little round hatton still holds ite fixed :dea. Presidential Infallibility may he a new doctrine, bat it has its advantages. Optimistically yours, Mgrs. Bop WHITE. Taft's Race Around the World. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. The mystery and the wonder deepen as to the record-making journey around the world now being performed by our seore- wary of war. Having arrived at Vladivostok from Ma- vila, he prudently remains afloat, guarded by his equadron of United Statas warships, until his special train is ready to start on the long journey across Asia and Europe, and he cables his regrets to the kings and potentates who are eager to entertain him, explainiog that ‘‘important business" compels him to return at once to America. Thus does he hurl himself, like a pon- derous projectile, from the Pacific shores of Asia to the Baltic coast of Europe, and then on again, by the quickest possible route, to New York. Not the German kaiser or the president of France, not even King Edward, who is almost as heavy, in his way, as Mr. Taft himself, can allure him to pause for rest or refreshment. Oualy the czar of Roseia, a ruler with sroubles of his own, is to be accorded an interview with our mig globe trotting secretary of war, we may be pardoned for wondering what it is all about. 4 What is the very important business re- ferred to? Why this wild baste to home early in December ? Why this ular care for a conference with the aato- orat of Russia, and with no other big gun or figare-head of foreign power ? Why the journey to Japan and Manila, and why all this sell-important dounble- quick parade Spawls from the Keystone, — Allen Wickel, of Allentown, while eat. ing oysters in a cafe, on Saturday found three fine pearls, which have been appraised at $40. —Instead of paying its employes with sctip or checks the Bethlehem Steel com- pany on Saturday passed out to its 5,000 workmen about $200,000 in coin of the realm. —For a short time the large iron and steel mills at Coatesville were running irregularly owing to a lack of orders, but they have again resumed in full, there being orders to keep the mills busy. ~The milk dealers in Bloomsburg were on Thursday forced to give up their plan of selling milk at seven cents, as the town peo- ple refused to pay the price. Many turned to the condensed milk and others bought ouly haif the usual quantity. ~The United States postoffice department refused an application for a free delivery route in the vicinity of Draketown, Somer- set county, on account of the rough roads over which the mail carrier would have to pass. This should be an eye opener to all road supervisors. —Henry Dietrich, a farmer of Quakake valley, Schuylkill county, incinerated forty young hogs. The hogs were bought from a carload that bad been shipped from the west a week ago. They were infected with pneu- monia and all had died soon after being placed in the pens. —Ethel and Esther Dortin, aged three and two years respectively, were burned to of | death in a fire that destroyed their home at Soldiers, a mining town south of DuBois Thursday afternoon. The little girls were alone in the house, their mother having gone to a neighbor's home. —While a jar of yeast was being carried across the room at the home of W. B. Har vey, near Buckhorn, Columbia county, a few days ago, it exploded and broke a lamp causing a fire, and Mr. Harvey and his brother, Vincent, were .everely burned while extinguishing the flames. —The bay sbed and contents on the farm of John B. Campbell, in Warriorsmark val- ley, near Hamers mill, were totally destroy- ed by fire Friday evening. Origin unknown. In addition to a large amount of bay, the shed also contained a lot of farm machinery, all of which except two pieces was insured. —On Saturday afternoon at Howards sid- ing, near Emporium, a freight train was standing at a water tank, when another train ran into it,the engine crushing through the caboose. Three men, Thomas Welsh, Casper Frye and a Mr. McCleary, who were in the caboose, were killed. Ove was flung upon the head light of the engine. ~The state fish department has just for- warded to Lew Peters another consignment of frog spawn from the state hatchery, which consists of 45 000 tadpoles, which have been placed in his frog ponds at Granville, Mifliu county. The ponds now contain about 10,000 young frogs which will be ripe for the market in from two to three years. —William 8. Donley, of renovo, who was ‘arrested last week on the charge of murder- ing his 9.year-old niece, Mary Donley, on October 30, was given a hearing on Wednes- day in the Clinton connty jail, and after hearing several witnesses was held commit- ted on the charge. It is stated that he made a confession that he committed the horrible crime. —Upon suggestion of a majority of the citizens affected the borough couneil of Chambersburg has passed an ordinance ex- tendiug the limits of the municipality. The new territory will give the place an area nearly wice as large as the present and add 2,000 persons to the present population of 11,500. The annexed property is valued at $1,000,000. —The wholesale liquor dealers and hotel proprietors of Clearfield county held their second meeting at the Dimeling,in Clearfield on Wednesday, at which there was an unusually large attendance and the pro - ceedings were behind closed doors and very sacred. One of the wholesalers, who, itis alleged, will soon be a millionaire out of the business, is quoted as saying that this meet. ing was called to get ready to eater politics at the April primaries, —The iron work and other material is be- ing placed on the ground to be used shortly in the construction of a substantial foot bridge over the main line tracts at the west ern line of Tyrone station. The bridge will be quite lengthy and will extend from a point near the McClintock & Musser cand y manufactory and the Wilson chemical works and other improvements along the Bald Engle ridge, to a pvint a short distance west from the baggage room. —At & meeting of John 8. Bittner Post G. A. R., held in Jersey Shore, on Monday pight, $500 was voted to be appropriated to the soldiers’ monument fund. It is the in~ tention of this association of old veterans to put forth every effort to raise a sufficient sum of money to meet a like sum which the county commissioners have indicated that they will contribute, so that the sum total, say $10,000 will be available to erect a suitable monument which will be placed in the public square at Jersey Shore. —Abeut 200 foreigners boarded east bound trains at Greensburg on Wednesday evening for New York city, from which point they will embark for their native lands. They were mostly Slavs, but there were many Italians, Hungarians, Croats and other nationalities represented. Because of a slackening up of work in the coke fields some of these foreigners had been put on short time about the coal works and they coneiuded to spend the winter in their na- tive land. They took with them about $20,000 in money. —That trapping is not a lost art has been demonstrated during the last two months by J. P. Swope, the Huntingdon county hunter who is equalling the records made by the woodsmen when the country was young. During September and October Swope made his gun and his traps yield bim a revenue of $778. During October he killed 85 foxes, 9 wildeats, 8 minks, 122 skunks, a total of 382 animals, for which he was paid $442.25 in bounties. In September Swope's work netted him $335.25 making the total of $777.50 for $ha'swo Momthe, The bouutiss ne are as lows: Foxes, $2 each; each: minks and weasels, $1 each gn 25 around the world ? of cents each.