enses of the election, and finally, a Federal returning board of some kind to receive, compute and cer tify the returns? All this would be as practical and proper, and much more convenient, than to appoint Federal officers to oversee and suj>er vise State elections. All elections should be fair and honed, and ade quate provisions should be made to guarantee and enforce tins fairness anil honesty, if any evil di*j>osed per sou should attempt to produce a false result by fraud or violence; but these provisions should le made by the sev eral States nod not by the federal government The provision* of our election laws in Pennsylvania for the appointment of one overseer from each party to oversee the election whenever citizens js tition for their appointment is a far better guaranty than any that can l>e made by Congress. These •State overseers are ap|)ointcd by the Courts in each county, wli *rc the Judges are generally personally ac quainted with the people ami can make fiiir and judicious sclec tions* whereas, at least, the federal su pcr vison* must be appointed by the U T -H. j District Court, where the district judge could have no personal knot vl | edge of the men he was asked to a,> point. For instance, how could judg 9 Ketchum at Pittsburg make proper selections of supervisors for Bcnner , township, Philipsburg or Houtsdalc i boroughs? The fact is, tho federal supervisor law was never intended to ( promote fairness and honesty iu the t conduct of elections, but, on the other J hand, was devised as a meaus for fraud- < ulentiy aud corruptly controlling j the result of elections against the wish I and voice of a majority of the people. 1 We challenge the Timet to refer to one tingle instance, in which federal super vitort were either appointed or acted for BELLEFONTE, I'A., THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1*7!). any good purpose. There is no such instance on record, and never will he. The whole design of this law is to cover fraudulent and criminal pur jtoses, and all its provisions should he wiped from the federal statute hooks. A REPUBLICAN paper says "a pub lic meeting is to be held in Philadel phia to condemn Wallace for lighting liandall." We have not seen any other evidence that such a meeting is to he held, nor learned that there is any occasion for it. But still it may IK- SO, for there are a great many fools in Philadelphia, as in other places, and if this class wont to air their folly they could not find u man they could injure less with the (icople of Pennsyl vania. We notice that the Republican pa pers, and some others, persistently charge that Senator Wallace labored to defeat Mr. Randall's election as Speaker of the House. Now, Mr. Wallace did no such thing. lie is not that kind of a Democrat, aud was too deeply interested in u successful Democratic organization of Congress to endanger it by any act of his. Mr. Wallace may have had a personal pre ference for the nomination of another man than Mr. Randall, hut if s>, is he to be condemned? Mr. Ramlnll does not hesitate to exercise the right of personal choice, and why should Mr. Wallace he condemned for doing the same thing. We have the very highest regard for both of these di tiuguished men, and will receive with large allowance any reports published to their disadvantage, and manifestly put upon the wing for the same pur pose and by the same men who labor ed last fall to distract and defeat the Democratic party. REPUBLICAN Statesmen who arc just now making so much fuss over what they are pleased to term the "revolu tionary" altitude of the democrats in Cougrcss have extremely short memo ries. They seem to forget that when they were in power they gave the na tion many example* of the same kind of revolutionary legislation which they are now so free to coudemn. I >cnio crats only propose to repeal the ob noxious election enactments in the same manner in which thev became laws. Most all of them were passed by republican congresses as riders to appropriation bills, and if it was right to pas* them in that way, certainly it cannot he wrong to rejieal them in the same way. In truth the majority that now controls congress can find pre cedents made by the other side for everything they intend to do in rela tion to the rcjH-al of the Inws in issue between the two parties. Gen. Gar field, the republican leader of the house, worn* to be conspicuous in de nunciation of the mode by which dem ocrats have determined to wipe from the statute hook* this partisan ma ! chinery of the republican* to control elections, and the New York World '• given him n gentle reminder of the pant that should l>c effective in calm* j ing the excitement of mind with which he in now apparently afflicted. It nap: " General Garfield's horror nl the < revol utionary ' proposition of the Democrat* in | relation to the election laws is rather over j done, (leneral (iarfleld observed to our correspondent that wicked a the Demo . cratic proposition was in itself it was not so wicked or so dangerous to the country aa the revolutionary method by which ft was proposed to enforce it. To tack par tisan legislation to an appropriation hill is ' the nefarious thing which he will resist to the last gasp. This may bo regarded at a pledge for the future if General (larfleld should ever belong to a majority In the House, but that contingency ts too remote to be profitably discussed. The past, how ever, is not so secure as some of us would like to see it; and it is therefore in order for Genera) (iarfleld to rise in his place and declare, with his hand on hia heart, hat a proposition to enforce any partisan I 4tiletion by attaching it to an appropria ti on bill was always scouted by the Re- Ktblfcan majority of which he was a part the days of the lamented Andrew Jack son - We have every respect of course for Gen era) Garfield, but when h talks in this desp airing way about the Democrats, the imps dsn of our fallen human nature is to say, admply, 'Scat!"' THIRTY-THREE republican members of the Kansas Legislature join in charging 8-nator logalls of bribery. THE STATE COLLEGE.—A move was made iu the Legislature on Mon day uight, during the session of the , House, that looks like au investigation of the alliiirs of the State College, by a Legislative committee. The officers of the College will no doubt he able to meet in a satisfactory manner all inquiries that may he made. The fol lowing preamble and resolution, in troduced into the House by Mr. Kin raid, a member from Erie county, me adopted: WUKKKAH, Hv certain act* of as'embly paiMsl in 1H I mi institution was incurix,. 1 rated called iho "Farmer's High School <>f Pennsylvania," having for it* object " the education of youth in the various branches of science, learning and practi cal agriculture," tin- name of which insti tution was subsequently changed to the Pennsylvania slate college : A tut B7i erras, By an at of congress ap proved July 2, IK<;2, land scrip amounting in TSO.IIOO acres was donated to the state for the benefit of agriculture and mechani cal arts, whieh land scrip wa sulw-queritly sold for the sum of $130,4*1} so, arid by aet of IHO7 one-tenth of the proceeds of said sub- was appropriated to said college, to gether with the inn-rest and income of the entire residues. And 11 '/irrrai, The slate ha* at other times made other large appropriations by B< t* of 1H57, lb'il and ISTs.Ui said college to uid in carrying out the purpoaes for which the institution was incorporated : therefore be it Rtudwl (if the senate concur). That a committee of irom the house and 'I from the senate be Hp|>inti-d to examine the several acta of tho legislature relating to -aid college, and ascertain what authority or control, if any, the state may have over the same, and also whether the same, as now carried on and conduiled, be such an institution as was contemplated by acts of incorporation and as is required bv the provisions of the several acts appropriat ing money for its support, and also the ad vantages resulting to the agricultural in tere-sts of tho stale have been commensu rate with so large an investment. This com mi lie shall have power to send for jer suns and pajiers and examine witnesses un der oath, and rejairt the result of their in vestigation to thish-gislalure not later than 20 days after their appointment. TIIE following hamL-sinx* tribute to a noble man we take great pleasure in copying from the Harrishurg Patriot: "The army ia always considered an element of danger to a free country," waa the remark of Gen. W. ,S. Hancock the other day to a St. t/vuia interriewer. For thia reason the General believes that the armv will not lo increased. There is no soldier in this or any other coun try who haa clearer or more patriotic idea* on the subject of the relation of the military to the civil power than • sen. Hancock, lie boa giTen evidence of thia fact on more than one occasion. Ilia proclamation while commanding at New * trleans during the reoonsfruciton period in which he made a plea fot civil liberty worthy of the greatest statesmen of the republic is well remem bered. While a true and brave soldier General Hancock evinces statesmanship of a high order, ile has evidently given carctui study to the federal constitu tion and republican institutions, lie has thus learned what too many military men often overlook, that in time of |>eace and in a country where the ad ministration of the laws is not impeded the civil power i* superior to any mili tary authority. With a man of hfa liberal and enlightened views at the head of the army or at the head of tho government the liliortiea of the |M-ople would le safe. The time may not t* far distant when Winfieid Scott Han cock will he the favorite of the people as lie haa been and ia the idol of the army. This reads as though the Patriot would like to sec the gallant hero iu the White House nt Washington, and the DEMOCRAT feci* a strong incliua | tion to second the motion. REPRESENTATIVE FAUNCE is having an excellent run through the Demo cratic papers of the Htatc as a candi date for State Treasurer.—Philadel phia Time*. And who is more deserving *an excellent run V Honest, fearless and reliable, no fair Democrat can object to him. A COMMITTEE box lccn raised in the Legislature to investigate alleged stationery frauds. This is right. If frauds rtist they should be exposed ami punished. But why should the committee set with closed doors? Can it l>c that the members' stationery ac counts will not bear the light? It is somewhat remarkable in these days of economy and retrenchment, that the stationery account should swell from $8,403 in 1876 to $23,580 in 1878. This increase certainly needs ex planation, and should be made, in the light of day, so clear that tho people can understand why these expenses should have such a constant annual upwartTtendeucy. TKIIMS: |mt Annum, in Advanc**. GENERAL. NEWS. The boiler, of Johnson A Oo.'s distil lery fit nt t'leburnc, Texas, blew up on Friday killing two men. Major Philip It. Tondall, of the Unit ed States marine corps, died suddenly at Portsmouth, N. 11,, on Friday morn ing. 'I lie town farm-house a' Williman tic, Conn., ww burned on Saturday morning. Los-, f 10,000; insurance, t,vooo. The Reading railroad company com mencerl the payment of it* hand* in It-ading on Mnndny, launching upon that community s*o,ooo. The democrats of the Sixth Texas congressional di-trict convention have nominated Columbus Upson, to fill the vacancy caused by the death ot Mr. Schl icher. The explosion of a boiler at Defor est steam saw mill at Springfield, Mass.. on Friday, probably fatally in jured Tame* Taylor and Horace Lang don, and severely injured two other*. Madame Bonaparte, the famous old lady of Baltimore, is very sick, and there i* little hope of her recovery. She is in her tiine,y sixth year, and ho* al ways said she would live to be one hun dred. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Rtrurd writes froin l*ock Haven that a brick house in that city,occupied by I). F. Good, was partially destroyed by tire on Saturday morning. I/>ss $5,000; covered by insurance. Iho vote in Connecticut House of Representotivea on the question of wom an suffrage was : 25 yeas ; 21 nays —not two third*, necessary for submitting the amendment to the Constitution to the people. Monticclln, the former residence of Thomas Jefferson, wo oid Thursday last at Charlottesville, Va., in partition i between the heirs of the late Commo dore Uriah P. Levy, to Jefferson M. , I/cvy, the principal heir, for SIO,OOO. The ice on the Hudson opposite . I'oughkeepsie, N. V., moved out with •he tide on Sunday afternoon without doiog any damage. A steamer has ar rived frotu New burgh with coal boats in tow. J. F. ttales. General Superintendent of the Kansas Pacific Railroad, has offer ed bis resignation, to take effect on Mtrch 31. Mr. S. T. Smith, Receiver. ; assumes the duties of General Superin i ten dan L The jury in the case of James L. Slaughter, late Cashier of the First Na tional Rank of lndiani|>n!is, Ind., on trial in the Unite,! Slate* Court, before j Judge Blodgett, on the charge of era- I Iwrdetnenl, returned a verdict Monday of not guilty. The trial of Rev. I>r. Talrnage was begun before the Brooklyn Presbytery Monday afternoon. The doctor made a speech, in which ho stated in the most emphatic manner that he courted full investigation of tbechargn against him. denying them in toto. Two contracts hare been received at the works of the Ilarrisburg Car Co. t >ne of these is for 1,000 coal car* for the Central railroad of New Jersey and the other * from the Canada Southern railroad for ft oo boxes cars. The work will liegin in about two weeks, when 500 men will be employed. Pope XIII doe* not countenance the theory that all dancing is of the Evil One. To some ladies who asked his permission to dance during the late carnival he said: "Go, my dears, and < enjoy yourselves in an innocent dance; 1 only don't keep up too late your papas and mamma* when they want to get home again." The treasury department will now re deem called bonds embraced in the six teenth to the eigthtieth calls inclusive, i psying interest to the date of redemp tion ; or it will redeem at once bond* in . eluded in said call*, with interest to . date of maturity, and apply the pro ceeds to the payment of any subscrip tions for tho four (>er cent, consols. About 2 o'clock on Thursday morn ing Matthew Creek, proprietor of a dry go->ds store in Jamestown, Ky., having his suspicions aroused by a noise in his store, arose from his bed. proceeded to the store and found a burglar behind the counter. He shot him dead, fifteen buckshot penetrating his body. It is not known where tin* burglar was from. A large body of miners on Monday Inst were gathering at West Elisabeth. The ]a*t reports slate that one thousand men are there, with bras* bund*. Much indignation has been expressed over the action of I). C. Hulls, suiierin ten dent of the Allegheny county Home, in giv ing the striking minor* an order on a store for five barrels of flour, to be charged to the county. The greatest consternation has leen caused in the town of Heading, by the discovery that treaaurer Nathan P. Pratt, of the Havings bank in that town, ia a defaulter to a large amount, and, while aigoying the fullest confi dence of the community, he baa been for years engaged in a systematic rob bery of the bank. Pratt's defslration will, it is thought, aggregate $90,000. and oover a period of three years. The prospecting committee of tha Kansas colony started upon their jour ney to the West Monday night. The two pioneers, with their garments done up in shawl straps, were escorted by the colonists, to number of 150, each carry ing a torch. A brass band preceded the party, several members of which oar tied banners bearing the words "Go West," M Soldiers' and Sailors' Colony," and similar announcements. NO. 13. The Socr<-lary|of the Treasury has de cided lo redeem $50,000,000 called .V2f>s which mature between April 1, and II on presentation. About four hundred of the planta tion negroes who recently arrived at St. Louis from the South left Saturday night for Kansas, and about two hun dred by the steamer Helena for MUsis aippi Sunday afternoon. Kearney is stumping southern Cali fornia for the new Conaitution. In h* speeches he abuses people without stint. A dispatch from Santa Anna aay* there on J huraday one of the rn en thus vili fied gave Kearney an unmerciful beat ing. Mayor Williams, of Gloucester, Maas , has published a request tor contribu tions trom the country at large in aid of the families of the seaman lost at St. George's Hank during the recent gale*. One hundred and forty six able-bodied men were lost, leaving 57 widows and I Vt orphans dependsr. ujon the chari ty of the public for support. Some days ago, in -New York, torn missioner or Juror* Hunlap selected lorty eight names of jurors for the trial of the suit for 11.00(1,000 by Cornelius ■I. \ anderbilt against William 11. Van derbilt. tin Saturday the counsel met and each struck off twelve names, leaving twenty four, from which twelve will be selected in court for the trial. A storm of the severest nature swept over Memphis just after midnight on Friday of last week. It quite likely came from the southwest and continued three hours. Iluring its progress the lightning struck the Memphis cotton and woolen mill*, situated in the south ern part of the c ity, which were entire ly d.-stroyed. The mills, valued at •90.000, employed a force of 125 hands, who are thrown out of employment. Insurance, g60,000. Colonel Ha/ilewiich. of the Imperial Russian Guard, visiting at Berlin, has i-een sentenced to three months" im prisonment on the charge of picking a lady's pocket. The verdict is generally deemed outrageously unjust on the evidence, the cer/nu deUrti not having been produced. Colonel Bailewitch, who is supposed to have been the victim of conspiring circumstances, ha* gone to St. Petersburg to lay his case before the l.'iar, having been liberated on ap}>eal, after giving his personal security for •kJU.OOO mark*. On and after April 1, the Western ' nion Telegraph Company will with draw from the territory operated by the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad and Telegraph Company The with drawal will affect a number of cities and town* in the State, including Kor rtstown, Phoenixviile, I'otUtown. Read ing. Pottrville, Tsmaqua, Sbamokin, II arris burg and Williamsport. It is understood that an arrangement has been affected by which the receipts will be pooled on a basis very satisfac tory to both companies. It is under stood that the contract covers a period of fifteen years. Saturday afternoon, as a freight train on the Philadelphia and Krie railroad was paa'ing through the ice gorge on 'he track a few milea eat of Kenovo an axle of an oil tank car broke, and in a few minutes thirteen oil cars were wrecked. As aoon as thefirat tank was | broken the oil ignited and almost in • stantly a terrible fire ensued, which, as it communicated to the other cars, caused them to explode. The interne heat warped the ifon rails and consum ed the tie* like paper. As soon as the ; oil was consumed a wrecking train was on band and the rubbish was cleared awav with all |o*aib]e dispatch, and the regular passenger trains were only de tained a fen hours. About three hun dred feet of track had to be relaid en tirely. As each oil car oontaina about 3,600 gallons, the amount of oil con sumed will reach 468,000 gallon*. The balance of the cars were pulled away in time, or the destruction of oil would have been much greater. This is the . jKiint, it should be understood, where j the road was blockaded by ice a few I days ago and a track had to be cut through. The rise in the river at Lock Haven brought aiwrnt 175 raft* to that place, and for three or four days past business has been unusually brisk. Since Satur day morning the river has been falling rapidly, and the water is now too low for rafting purposes. About twenty rafts are now tied up in the pool of the dam awaiting a rise to go below. The market has varied considerably. Prices have ranged all the way from 5 to 15 cents per foot for lumber, according to quality. Oak of course, hss brought the highest price, and the best gradse of pine and spars 10 to 12. The lowest price i* for hemlock. The total num ber of rafts for the spring business is expected to reach from 1,000 to 1,200. Clearfield county alone will send 644) to market. The balance will come from the other tributary streams of the river above here. Of the comparatively small number that have arrived at Lock Haven but a small quantity have gone below. A few are expected to reach Marietta, however, if they are not pur chased at other point*. The achate at Shamokin dam, opposite Sun bury, sus tained great damage during the ice flood, and the passage through it la attended with great danger to rails. When the next rise come* there wilt bo a great rush of rafts for market. The lumber manufacturers are getting their logs ready to drive them down the river to the booms at Lock Haven and Wil lisrosport. It to estimated that the out put of logs will reach 185.000.0CW feet, and it to expected that every saw mill at Williamsport will be running before the middle of April.