BY P. GRAY MEEK. Tuk Slings. —Pay-as-you enter cars do not please the Pittsburg people. ~The panic of 1907 is over. Let us for- get it. This ain’t 1907. Its a dead ove. —Anyway it is easy to change the 7 into an 8 after we bave written it the same old way, 1907. ~—1It is now the inning of the girl whose lover hasn't bad the nerve to do it within the past three years. —When our navy falls into the oom- maud of the pill rollers look ont for a diarrhoea of words and a series of wind- jamming expeditions. —The Batler prophet who has been pre- dioting such awful things for 1908 should be placed among that olass of pessimists who are no good, no how. —Two daye are a long time for some of the New Year resolutions to last. Stick to them, because the first few daysfare al- ways the hardest and longest. —8ecretary TAFT bas put it up to the people. He declares that he stands for TeEpDY and wants to know whether the people are going to stand for him. —TAFT has equatted so near the center of the RoosEvELT platform that there cer- tainly won’t be room for any more aspir- ants on that particular structure. —All the soft corn in Centre county is not confined in the farmer’s oribs. There are a few kept in the shoes of some of the people we see passing on the streets. —A Paris insarance company refuses risks on men who dye their hair. Certain it is that that company could not do much business among the women of this coun- try. — President ROOSEVELT shook six thou. gand hands at his New Year's reception. It is not probable that any of them gave him the grip of his famous ‘‘Ananias Club.” —Belonging to the Rassian Douma isn’$ just the kind of a job thas the patriots of this country would be looking for. One hundred and sixty-seven of them have been sentenced to prison for signing a mere man- ifesto. —Louisiana hasn’t so much on Centre county. What if TEDDY did go down there to bunt bear last fall? Hasn't JAMES A. GARFIELD, son of the former President, just concluded a bear hunting expedition into our own ‘‘Bear meadows.” =--The wills are startivg up again al} over the country and the feeling of con- fidenoe is growing to such proportions that it might not be long until the panic of 1907 is remembered only as a horrible dream in the night hetween two eras of prosperity. —The temple of Neptune nsed as a stock exchange in Rome was blown up by a bomb on Weduesday. It isa wonder that an exchange with such a name did not col- lapse without the bomb’s help when we come to realize that about all the water has - been squeezed out of the stocks. —Four Bellefonters wanted a Lino street howe for $3500.00, but thought they could get it for less. That's hesitation. A Zion farmer stepped in and bought it tor $3300.00 That's action. Now one of the four offers the farmer $4000.00 for the property. That's paying too much for being too slow. ~Why should the Japs make a fuss bhe- cause they have discovered graft in conneo- tion with the purchase of the street ril- ways in Tokyo ? Aren’t they always up in the air for fear they won't be on an equal footing with the most favored nations. The rest all have it. Japan should be happy. —Gradually the farmers of the State are being led away from the good old apple butter bilin, saver-kraut making stage of living. At their Congress at State College this week they are to get a dose of en- thenics that will transport them {olear into the field of angel foods and peach merangue. —The New Year will bave brightoess for those who try to make it bright. You"can’t live in the depths and enjoy the exhilera- tion of the heights. Hold your head up and be happy. Don’t let a few reverses put gloom into you. Profit by their les- sons and keep on the cheerful way and you will find 1908 the happiest year of your life. —Things are beginning to look up in 1ycal polities. AlreadysHENRY WHIPPO, HARRY KERNS and JAMES RINE bave of- fered themselves as successor to JOHN D. Love, who is the retiring overseer of the poor. On the Democratic side there has not been much activity though PAT GHER- RITY has been considering the matter of asking for the nomination. —The approach of the spring elections prompts us to repeat the oft given advice to be careful about the character of the men nominated. It is neither good politics nor good citizenship to put men on the ticket who are unfit for the offices to be filled. It is unreasonable to expect that sensible voters will support such nominees and just because of this lack of care in making up local tickets more personal and oligue enmity is aroused than in any other way. Itis always disastrous. We trust that the Democrats in all parts of the county will select such nominees as they need not have to apologize for. VOL. 53 The Highway Commissioners Absurd Defence. State highway commissioner Josep W. HUNTER asks the newspapers of the Com- monwealth to publish an ‘‘opinion"’ re- cently rendered by deputy attorney gen- eral FREDERICK W. FLEITZ, vindicating his palpable usurpation of power and fla- grant violation of the law in employing party pensioners and political healers to serve in the capacity of inspectors ‘during the construction of state roads.” For some years the office of Astorney General has been depended upon to interpret the laws in any old way thas the exigencies of the atrocious ‘‘oriminal conspiracy mas- querading as the Republican party’ re- quires. JonN P. ELKIN decided that the people had no right to vote for a constitu. tional amendment if the Governor objected and HAMPTON L. CArsoN officially declar- ed that the constitution is unconstitutional. But it was left for a deputy in the office to promulgate the absnrd proposition that be- cause the law vests in the head of the Highway Department supervision over “the reconstruction of roads,”’ he has the implied right to hire any number of in- gpectors and pay them at any rate of wages he pleases, out of any money in the treasury that he can get his bands on. Probably no other mau outside of an in- sane assylum, in the entire State, could have heen induced to father so preposter- cue an idea. “Section 9 of the Act of May 1, 1905,” Deputy Attorney Geoeral FLEITZ informs State Highway Commissioner HUNTER, provides that ‘‘the State Highway Depart- ment may, if the funds at its disposal per- mit of so doing, contract jointly with the county and township or townships, in which the said highway lies, to carry ont the recommendations of the State Highway Commissioner ; the cost of the same, inclu- ding all the necessary surveys, grading, material, construction, relocation, changes of grade and expenses in connection with the improvement of said highway to be horne but the work of ocovstruotion shall be done under the supervision of the State Highway Department the same as any other road reconstructed under this act.” Probably that is the exact language of the law. and if it is the Highway Com- missioner had 0d more right to appoint in- speotors and pay them out of the public funds than he would have to break into one of the banks of this town at miduighs, blow up the safe and ron away with the money. The act is specific in the authority it conveys. It requires the Highway Com- missioner to act “jointly with the county and township’ aathorities, and enumer- ates the items for which he may incor ex- penses. Ohvionsly the work of inspection is left to the looal authorities and for that matter it is abouts the only thing they ges for the money they contribute to the vasé cost of the enterprise. The truth of the matter is that in the ap- pointment of the inspectors the Highway Commissioner usurped authority and in paying them out of the public fauds he looted the treasury, violated the law and betrayed his oath of office. If these things bad been done in ignorance, they would have been bad enough, for ‘‘iguorance of the law excuseth no man.”’ Bat the infer- ence is clear that the outrages were perpe- trated with the full aoderstanding of their criminal character and for the purpose of saddling upon the people of the State the expenses of machine politics. The High- way Department was oreated [for that par- pose and presumably ite chief was selected with the view of facilitating the work. From the beginning the Department has been a ‘‘sink of iniquity,’’ the stench from whioh has offended the nostrils of every decent man in the Commonwealth. The onlawful employment of inspectors is among the least of 1s offenses and in get- ting an absurd endorsement from an in- competent clerk in the office of the Attor- ney General, the commissioner has insalt- ed the intelligence of the public after plundering the treasury of the people. In the quotations above we have given the enbstance of Mr. FLEITZ'S opinion and won’t waste space with the frills. Soa Secretary Taft's Platform. Secretary TAPI's Boston speech of Mon- day night is distinctly a disappointment. It was expected that he would declare his own policies and purposes, in the event of his election to the Presidency, and instead of that he simply eulogized ROOSEVELT and left the pablic to infer that he has no ideas of his own, His review of the causes of the panic were precisely what any intel - ligent man would bave advanced with the exception that he confused ROOSEVELT'S hysteria with the prosecution of criminals of “high estate.” The salient feature of Mr. TAFT'S speech was his declaration against government ownership of interstate commerce utilities. In that he has adopted precisely the idea expressed by Mr. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN on his return from abroad a year ago. Mr. BRyansaid shat if it became a question of the government owning the TATE R railroads or the railroads owning the gov- ernment, he would favor government own- ership of the railroads. Mr. TAFT'S phrases are that if we recede from the ROOSEVELT policy of government regalation of rail- roads, the alternative is government own- ership. The difference is the same as that between tweedledum and tweedledee. The trath is, however, that the coming campaign will not be laid on those lines. There is not and has not been serious ob- | jection to rational government regulation of everything from the rates of railroads to the style of diapers for babies and the people are tired of his absurd caprices and foolish fancies. If Secretary TAFT has nothing better to offer than the promise of a contin- uance of that system of administration his candidacy will not commend itsell to rea- son. Philadelphia's Manicipal Election. Before IskARL W. DurHAM, of Phila. delphia, left for his semi-tropical buogalo in Florida, the other day, he announced that the ‘‘leaders’’ bad fixed up the muni- cipal ticket to be elected by the people next month. By the leaders he meant Senator PENROSE, State Senaters Mo- NicuoL and VARE and himself. They had held several meetings in the office of Sen- ator PENROSE and selected the gentlemen to be nominated for councils in the several wards and such other offices as are to he filled at the February election. The peoc- ple of the city, that is to say the Republi can voters, will ratify the selections at the “aniform primaries.” This is essentially a parody on popalar government. The uniform primary elec: tion law was enacted to prevent just such things and it would achieve the purpose in any community capable of self government. But Philadelphia is vot such a community. The eordid, truonlent electorate of that city is either so destitate of intelligence or wanting in the elements of manhood that it doesn’t dare protest againet the usar. pation of what should be its most cherish- ed right by a gang of political pirates, the most conscienceless and predatory ever or- ganized in a oivilized community. DUR- HAM'S announcement confirms the worst that bas ever been said against the oity. Of course there is only one way by which the boast of DURHAM oan be ful- filled. That is by raiding the primary elections by repeaters or falsifying the vote in some other way. This is only possible in the event of popular acquiescence. One man with courage and character in each voting precinot would guarantee a fair elec: tion and houest return of the vote, bat the one man is not available. The entire com- manity is steeped in iniquity and the pub- lic thieves who plunder in the open are not the worst. It is the corrupt business ele- ment, whose greed is so great that in its efforts to accumulate, it forgets all public daty, all public honor and is content with the corruption that makes that city the scorn of honest men everywhere, which gives Philadelphia its unique distinction in vice. A Carions Classification. SmuLn’s Legislative Hand Book for 1908, which will be issued some time dar- ing the first half of the year, will contain the party platforms and some other inter- eating and informing matter which has been left out of the volume, by order of Governor PENNYPACKER, in recent years, according to the esteemed Harrisburg Patriot. The order of expurgation was in the interest of economy, the public was in- formed by Mr. PENNYPACKER. Inciden- tally it may be remarked that the publi- cation afforded no ‘‘rake-off’’ for the ma chine. Mr. PENNYPACKER may bave had that fact in mind. Speaking off SMULL'S Legislative Hand Book it may be remarked that the volame for 1907 haa just been issued recently and though late coming it maintains the high standard of merit established for it long ago. Bat it contains one ourious thing which needs an explanation. In the list of “principal executive, judicial and diplo- matio officers’ of the United States gov- ernment, it places the secretary to the President, WILLIAM LOEB, Jr., second in the list. Most students of our government will bardly consent to estimating the President's secretary as a higher official than the Vice President of the United States. Mr. LOEB is an important fellow un- questionably. When the President is canght in a, let us say misrepresentation, Logs promptly assumes the responsibility. These are important functions for a public official, but the services hardly entitle the man who performs them to rank next to the President in our official classification. The decoy duck is an important adjunct to a hunter's outfit bat it can’t be olassed ahead of the gun, If the President didn’t need that kind of service, moreover, the country might be as wall off. ~——This is ‘Farmer's Week” at The Pennsylvania State College, and a large number of tillers of the soil are present IGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., JANUARY 3, 1908. from all over the State. A Suggestion to Mr. Gompers. The January namber of the ‘‘American Federationiss,” the official organ of the American Federation of Labor and ably edited by SAMUEL GoMPERS, president of thas admirable labor organization, devotes four pages of its valuable space to the pub- lication of she ‘‘record”” of Hon. JOSEPH G. CANNON, speaker of the House of Rep- resentatives. According to this record Mr. CANNON has been consistently opposed to legislation in the interest of labor from the beginning of his long official career. Dar- ing the Fifty-ninth Congress hie antip- athy to organized labor was conspicuously ! and effectively expressed, and the objeos of the pablication of the record was obvious- ly to crysializ: labor sentiment against Mr. CANNON. Flainly the purpose of the publication at this time is to impair the chances of Mr. CANNONS nomination for the Presidency at the coming national convention of his party. Every word contained in the in- teresting editorial is true, no doubt, but it was a waste of mental energy. Mr. CANNON has no more chance of gettingjthat nomination than the man in the moon bas of succeeding KAsgr ; WILLIAM as Emper- or of Germany. It would bave been wiser, therefore, for Mr. GOMPERS to train his gus on Secretary TAFT who,asthe can- didate of the ROOSEVELT administration,is practically certain to secure the favor and whose labor record is not a whit better, from the view point of organized labor, than that of CANNON. Experience has proved that ‘‘baying the moon’’ is a thank- less labor. Bas after all what ie the use in particu- larizing in snch matters? That a stream can be no purer than its source is proverb- ial and itis equally certain that party agents in politics are precisely what the party wants them to be. CANNON antag: onized labor legislation because he thor- oughly understood that his party wanted such legislation epposed and knew that he wonld be rewarded rather than punished for his course. And his judgment has been vindicated in the matter. In the fall light of his record in previous Congresses he was unanimonsly nominated by his party for Speaker and elected to the office by the eutix strength of his party. Therefore if Mr. GOMPERS wauts to make an effective fight againss the enemies of labor legisla- tion he will let individuals aloue and at- tack the Republican party. Interesting Events Promised. There are likely to be some interesting developments after the re-assembling of Congress next week, growing out of the recent episode, it it may be so designated, in the Navy Department. The great ar- mada was dispatched on its search for tron. ble, it appears, without adequate wedical attendance for the reason that several of the various heads of bureaus in the depart- ment were unable to} agree upon what might be termed naval etignette, or, if we may employ the phrase, ‘‘militant§{cour- tesy.” In other words the ohief of the Bureau of Navigation dissented from the opinion of the head of the Barean of Medi- oal Service and the health of the entire force of seawen is jeopardized in conse- quence. In the naval history of thejworld no staff officer, such as paymasters, chaplains or physicians, has ever been assigned to the command of a ship. Until recently no such officer has ever aspired to the com- mand of a ship in our own navy. Bat Surgeon General RIXEY, head of the Medi- ca! Bureau of the Navy, baving become one of the President’s favorites, appears to have become ‘‘ochesty,”’ and demanded that the hospital ship which was to accompany the fleet should be put under the command of a surgeon. The head of the Bureau of Navigation remonstrated and RIXEY ran to ROOSEVELT with ‘“‘a tale of woe." Where the President’s pets arej{concerned: neither traditions, precedents nor laws count. The President decided the ques- tion in favor of RixEy, but the ship counldn’t be got ready, under the new con. ditions, in time for the start. Of course such conflicts amongjthe of- ficials of the navy and changes in the meth- ods of procedure are highly prejudicial to the efficiency as well as the discipline of the navy. But what does the President care for such things ? His purposesjare to have his own way and make things easy for his favorites and he will work forjthose results if the achievement ofjjthem sinks every ship and sacrifices the life of every officer aud man in the force. The present indications are, however, that Congress will institnte an investigation with the view of discovering to what extent these exhibitions of the President's caprices ad- versely affect the public service of the coun- try. ——In the recently published list of students at the West Chester Normal school, Miss Maude E. Miller was credited to Huntingdon county, whereas she isa resident of Centre, her home being near Pennsylvania Furnace. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. Our president has so often shown his free disposition to talk and to keep all others from talking whom he can control, that it is nosarprise tosee him shut up Admiral Browuson and the other naval officers who have, it seems, been restive under the im- ections of our iron clade, that the pub- ic now hears of, and thas it is time to hear a great deal more of, now that the situa- tion bas attracted ite attention, and will surely receive that of Congress, It seems that these imperfections of our war vessels have been well known to the administration, and it further seems that the president, in sending out the great Pacific fleet, has been very hold, if not very indisorees, because of the nnveiling of the imperfections which be might bave been sure would follow. It is this reflec- tion which inclines us to give ear to the conclusion that they exist in the serious degree which intimated. Certainly it would not have heen wise to send oat for display to the Oriental world a fleet fairly open to severe criticiem of its fighting pow- er. We may suspect, therefore, that what- ever its imperfections are, they are not so serions as to detract very greatly from their fighting power, though they may be serious enough to call for radical correo- tions. Until we hear, at the hauds of Congress, just what the degree of trouble is, we may well suspend judgment about it, but we note now what seems to be obvious, that the president has closed the mouths of the naval commanders to criticism that they conceive to be well founded. This he may bave done because he deemed it inex- pedient that the world at large should be advised of our warship defects ; bat il this has been his view, it is not easy to under- stand why he should have sent them off on an around-the-world cruise. We prefer to account for the president's action in accordance with his well-known disposition to doall the critical talking for the nation himself and to seal the lips of all its other officiale to aught but words of praise for it and its. For Our National Defense. From the Pittsburg Sun. To those who have given much thought to the subject it is clear that the problem of our National defense isn’t to be solved the way most people think it is. Merely adding to the pay of enlisted men in the army aud navy in any amount that the people wounld stand for isn’t going to help matters any. The conditions of professional military service on Earopean lines of caste and tradition aren’t attractive to men of a country where outside of the military call- ing opportunity isequnal to all. Ws» riust devise an American way of meeting hie problem of National defense. It must come out of an adaptation of our militia servioe. Oar regular troops must be given some- thing useful to do in some sort of useful public work where merit and ability are the stepping-stones to promotion and where mere caste is wholly abolished. There is no reason why more thav half the time of an industrious and intelligent man in this country should be needed in purely military training. War is now a matter of mechanics ae much as of military ardor, and men who are trained to build roads, bridges, embankments, to handle and re- pair machinery need but little training in the specialized arta of war. The parade ground are ideals of military service, their millinery and flammery can be wholly dispensed with. Such an army will ap, strange to Earopean eyes, bus of its efficiency and fighting powers there can be no doubt. The State n:ilitias ehould be encouraged with much of the money that is now wasted in maintainiog a deca- dent regulararmy, that is wholly out of touch with our National ideals. Profes- sional fighters have never wou our wars. It is the men who came from the plows and the shops and who went back to them af- ter fighting was over who have counted in our real defense. Some Roosevelt Prosperity. From the Springfield Republican. Salary cutting is to strike the Erie rail- road, and the new year will bring a reduec- tion in the pay of all the general officers of the road, as well as the entire clerical force. The lower salaried men will lose 2 per cent. and from the higher paid olerks and officers 10 per cent. will be sliced. Thus the stroke will operate all the way from President Underwood down to the olerks gesting as little as $60 a month, but beyond this it will nos go, and blessed will be little ! A thousand men will be affect- ed in the general ofiices in New York oity, Buffaio, Cleveland and other points. I the action of the Erie railroad to be the setting of a fashion, or only a sporadic per formance ? That is the thonght that will strike men all over the country as they get the news of this reduction. The hope is still general that the panic of 1907 is to be less productive of lessened incomes for salaried people and wage earners than were the other periods of business depression through which the conntry has passed. Bat there is something ominous in this ac- tive of the management of the Erie rail- The Gospel of the Gans, From the Philadelphia Record. We load up sixteen armored battleships with men and munitions, guns and gun- Jovder, and send them around the world n the view of friendly nations ostensibly on a practice trip which would make them more formidable for fight thao frolic. This is the Big Stick idea of keeping the peace. This was also the Napoleonic idea. ‘I have always observed,’’ said the t Corsican, ‘‘ that God is on the side of the heaviest artillery.” ——On Monday the majority of the stores in Bellefonte inaugurated the six o'clock olosing movement which will be continued until March 15ih, except Wed- nesdays and Satordays. Spawls from the Keystone. ~The losses by fire in Williamsport dur- ing 1907 amounted to ouly $24,000, the small. est amount for many years. —In Northampton county, outside of Eas- ton, during the six months ending December 19, there were 707 deaths and 1,548 births. ~The commissioners of Columbia county have paid out in bounties for weasels §550, for foxes $24 and for minks $25 since the law placing bounties on the heads of these ani- mals was passed. ~—Elmer J. Shofflet, a silk weaver who says he never saw a bank check until a few days ago, was arrested on Friday upon a dozen charges of having passed forged checks in Allentown and Reading. ~—Fire is raging in the Edna mine No. 1 of the Pittsburg Coal company at Adamsburg, six miles from Greensburg. The fire is a se- rious one and efforts to extinguish it have been futile. Over 300 miners are thrown out of employment, —Announcement was made oun Saturday that the big plant of the American Iron & Steel Manufacturing company at Lebanon, which has been idle for some time will re- sume operations on January 6. This will give employment to 3,000 men. ~The sixth of January has been decided upon by the judges of Westmoreland county as the day for the occupancy of the new court house in Greensburg, an order to this effect baving been issued. The day for its dedication has not as yet been selected. —George D. Hamor, of New Kensington a member of the Westmoreland county bar, while on his way home on Christmas night about 11 o'clock from a lodge meeting, was beld up near his home by two highwaymen, who demanded his money and valuables, They pointed revolvers at his head but he knocked down one of the men when the oth. er fled. —Joseph Filson, aged 24 years, an employe of the Standard machine works at Barn. ham, Miflin county, who went to Harris- burg tospend his Christmas vacation, was found dead in bed at the home of his uncle in that city on Saturday morning, having been asphyxiated by illuminating gas. Itis supposed that on retiring he blew out the light instead of turning off the gas. —While Michael E. Diehl, a young man of Friends Cove, Bedford county, was operat- ing a fodder shredder on last Tuesday on the farm of John Shaffer, near Rainsburg, bis right arm was caught in the machine and so badly lacerated that it had to be ampu- tated above the elbow. In may, 1901, Mr. Diehl bad his left hand injured in a saw mill, requiring the amputation of the thumb and little finger, so that he is now badly crippled. —On Saturday afternoon H. Frank Allen, of Lock Haven, died after an illness of three weeks with heart trouble, aged 84 years, and just sixteen honrs afterward his wife, who had been ill with dropsy for about a year, died also, aged 67 years. Early in life Mr. Allen bad traveled extensively and endured many hardships prospecting for gold in California. His father died at the age of 86 years, his mother at 84, and his grandfather at 122 years, ~Frank Amos, a son-in-law of Charles Martin, of Houtzdule, who has for some time been residing at Hastings, committed suicide ot the latter place on Sunday night, December 220d, but the deed was not discov- ered however, until Christmas. His wife was visiting her parents in Houtzdale at the time. He had written or promised his wife he would join her in the visit, but failing to do go it is said that he committed the rash act rather than face her on her return with his promise broken. He was aged 22 years, and was employed as a miner. ~The treasurer of Huntingdon county has prepared his report to send in to Harrisburg, as the state reimburses the county for all the bounties, and his order calls for $2,955. By carefully going over the records it has been found that in June $113 was paid in boun. ties for weasels, foxes, wild cats and minks; in July, $438; August, $417; September, $528; October, $548; November, $357, and Decem- ber, $262; making the sum total of almost $3.000. The total of the animals killed in that county since July 1, are 784 weasels, 866 foxes, 43 wild cats and 176 minks. —While six burglars calmly robbed Gil- berg & Dickey’s clothing store in Juniata at 1 o'clock Friday morning Jack Barry, bar- ber, who lived over the store stood at a win- dow and watched them with a loaded revol- ver in his hand; but every time he took aim to shoot one of the robbers his nerve failed him, and they got away with $900 worth of clothing, shoes, jewelry, otc. Bar- ry, who had been aroused when the burglais smashed the front window to gain entrance, and who watched the men an hour or more, was afraid to give the alarm until long after the men had departed. —Two daughters of Albert Kessinger, aged 11 and 15 years, respectively, were near- ly asphyxiated from the coal gas origivating from a stove, while in the parlor at their home at Mill Hall, Clinton county, Sunday. One of the girls was in the act of playing the piano when she suddenly fell from the stool. Her sister came to pick her from the floor, when she was overcome by the fumes from the stove. Mrs. Kessinger noticed the children lying on the floor and went to their assistance when she too was slightly affected in a like manner. They were taken into the fresh air, a physician summoned and in a short time were resuscitated. ~The Union Supply company on Christ- mas morning enacted the role of Santa Claus in a manner which for lavishness and gen- eralness had never before been equalled in Westmoreland county. The company saw to it that Christmas was made & merry day for nearly forty thousand men, women and children. At each of its sixty stores there was a live Santa Claus. In some cases he ar- rived in an automobile, in others he came in a gaily decorated wagon, while in other stores he made a descent down the chimney. And everywhere he was welcomed, as he wade his way among the residents of each of the mining towns, scattering candy, presents and cigars, indiscriminately, among all who came in his way. In all nearly forty thous. and pound boxes of candy, sil highly dec- orated, were distributed, while the cigars, ete., handed out were well nigh innumera- ble.