She grmomt. BELLEFONTE, PA. Tha Largest, Cheapest and Best Paper PUHLIHIIBD IN CENTRE COUNTY. A POLITICAL PARALLEL. Senator Pendleton on the Party Issues of the May. W HAT THE REPUBLICAN ORCIANS AND OKA TORS CUAROE ANI> TIIK DEMOCRATS DROVE —WHY TIIK DEMOCRATS DEMAND A CIIANUE IN THE ADMINISTRATION or THE OOVERNMKNT. Prom lll E-l-ntun (Otiio) Special. KEI.LOW-CITIEENH : We aro confronted by questions as great as ever stirred parties in this Government. They touch not only good administration, honest, wise execution of the laws, but they touch the very groundwork of our en lire system. These questions involve elections, free from military and govern mental interference, and currency ami trade, free from the control of gigantic moneyed corporations. The Republi can party claims the right to use the army at the polls. 1 will do them no injustice. They do not avow the pur i>ose of controlling the votes. They say it is only to keep the peace. We dem onstrate that the use erf armed force at the perils for any purpose is dangerous ; that it degenerates into an effort to con trol results ; that it is of itself a menace and coercion ; that it subverts public liberty. And these gentlemen all in chorus, hut in different keys, following the brilliant conception of Senator Riainc, who showed that our army, if distributed pro rata, would give only one soldier to many thousand people, exclaim : "< >h, it is such a little thing !" We show that a people jealous of lib erty will resist the very beginning of danger, will permit neither great nor little armies to interfere with free bal lots, and thereupon they answer that we l>emocrats desire that election day --the day which above all others should ho consecrated to peace nnd harmony— shall be given over to turbulenco ami violence. We Democrats, who repre sent more than half the people of the land—less of the money, it is true, but h-tlf the virtue and honor and patriot ism and intelligence, and more than half of the bone and sinew, more than half of the poor and lowly and laboring anil aspiring, whoso all for themselves and their families throughout all their lives depends upon the peace and order of the industries and the quietude of civil society, who have the largest stake in the well-ordered community—we de sire that violence and intimidation and lawlessness should riot in the land ! It would be an offense to our manhood uud patriotism if it were not so palpable a confession of the weakness of their ciuseand the impossibility of an Argu ment. It would bo an offense to public intelligence if it were not so transparent an outrage on public decency. We show that for 200 years Great Hritian has permitted no armed soldiers under any pretence to approach the jiolls; that no nation has ever permit ted it and preserved |>opular govern ment, and they cry out, following in this the example of the President, that this Administration does not now in tend, and never has intended, to use, never has used, and never will use, the army at the JKJIIS. We put to theui this question : "Why, if you never intend, do not now intend, never did, and never will, use the army at tho polls, have you so strenuously re sisted tbe repeal of the law ?" And an nouncing at once their purpose and their answer, they all exclaim—and here the Stalwart comes to the fore— "We will never surrender this power, which may become necessary to con tinue the Administration in our hands." Mrs. Toodles, when she bought the brass door plate with another man's name on it, informed her inquiring husband : "It is such a bandy thing to have about the house." We point to the evidence taken in Roston and Newjiort and Cincinnati this very summer. We point to the evidence of our candid and just minded marshal in Cincinnati. Ife does not believe in any new-fan gled civil service reform ; not he. He has no reason to do so. Ife did his duty as an officer of the court efficiently, hon estly, impartially. He did his duty in the appointment of deputy marshals ac cording to the spirit and intent of the law. lie says he appointed all Republi cans ; he associated with such people and be knew them ; not a Democrat, he might be deceived in them. He sta tioned them all in Democratic wards. He knew the Republican wards would not need them. He knew that in Re publican wards there could not be any illegal voting, or hardly any ; certainly not enough to hurt the Republican party, and, therefore, he left them alone. We show by testimony, perfectly ir refragable, that by the intent and pro visions of the law, and its practicn! ap plication, supervisors and marshals are only partisan electioneer* for the dom inant party, paid out of the public treas ury j and thereupon a ghostly proces sion of fearful figures of State rights, Ku Klux, Kliza Pinkstons, and, above all, Republican defeats—more fearful than those which struck terror to the soul of Richard, file before the eyes of the Attorney General, and he cries out: "The war is not yet over, its results are nil imperiled." Andachorusof voices exclaim : "Confederate brigadier ! Cau cus dictation! Starving the Govern ment 1 Payment of Confederate debt I" Confederate Hrigadiera! Whose fault ia it that Union brigadiers do not rep resent Republican Slates ? C aucus dic tation 1 When it is perfectly notorious that Senator Schurt tried to extort an answer from Senator Sherman on the Finance bill, and utWrlv failed because the Republican caucus forbade. Starv ing tbe Government! Who refused to pass the Army bill when Andrew John son, the brave and i nest old man, was President? Payment of Confederate debit No Democrat has ever suggested it. No Democrat desires it. No party could propose it and live. We turn to financial affairs. We point to tbe enotmoua wrongs which have for years paralyzed (ho industries of tlio country, which have deprived laltoref employment, which have ruined strong men, crushed out youthful mid vigorous enterprise, and sent many who had been prosperous with broken hearts to paupers' graves. We demonstrate these things as the result of the Repub lican policy. We point to a system of National banks, having an unequal ca pacity for combination, wielding an enormous money power, employing the shrewdest talent in the country, pene trating every locality, ntliliated with the Administration by the influence of par ty advantage on the one side, and the use of the public Treasury on the other. We show from the reports of the Treas ury that hundreds of millions of dol lars are left on deposit for months with some; that others are not required to pay for the bonds which they purchase until long after the time fixed by the contract. We show favoritism to mon ey nnd oppression to labor. And Sec retary Sherman shrieks out in his loud est tone : "Specie payments are restored. A good time is coming. Are not our crops good ? Are not crops ahroud scant? is not Ktigland hungry? Is not trade in our favor? How down nnd worship the Republican party. The Democrats want to ulmndon specie pay ments. They hate the sound of reviv ing business. They abhor the idea of the returning prosperity. They gloat over business failures. They want small crops, hard times, depressed industries, starving people—those wicked Demo* erals." The recuperative energy of llie peo ple, the bountiful richness of the soil, the promised recurrence of sunshine and rain, are working to the benefit of the people, and he claims the credit for his policy ! The storm-king, amid the wrecks which his fury has made in the night, points the starved and fro/.en sailors, just cast upon the shore, to the warm, bright sun and balmy air aqd placid ocean, with which the glorious morning has put an end to lus devasta ting tornado, and satirically exclaims: See what blessings I have given you! I believe I have given you a faithful epitome of the argument of our oppo nent*. I believe I have done them no injustice. The air has been vocal with eloquent rhetoric, with praises of Re publican policy, with professions of ro form, with figures Qf economy ; but re duced to tiie last analysis, the argu ment is us I have stated. I appeal to the speeches to which I have alluded. I appeal to every speech that I !yve seen published. I appeal to every issue of the partisan Republican papers of this State. It is becoming that the great ques tions involved should he discussed in this vein before the intelligent people of oen so much disturbance under *uch conditions, and during the slow return to the natural order of things, but that there lias been o general a prevalence of tranquility. Southern society wa* overturned, the bottom was put on top, the people were robbed and outraged. Is it strange that, in the process of getting back to the natural domination of basis, character, wealth and social influence, there have lieeti occasional disturbances and some unpunished crimes! Under the ssme circumstance*, no people on earth would have lorne themselves better, and the **>uthern people to day, a* a rule, are as well governed and orderly as the people of tho North. They will take rare of their own matters, and there will la* no further "stretching" of the Constitution m order to meddle with fhem. The Gullj Trial. HEX. cttAt.v EßS* orixiox or tixx. WOOD roRD's IIERAXI). To thw Kulitor of th* My attention ha* just l-een directed to an article in a Republican newspaper calling on Lamar, Singleton or <'bal mora to anwer the statement of Gen. Woodford as to the trial of Gully for the murder of Miss Chisholm. I take pleas ure in answering, as the statement of Gen. Woodford nnd the comments of the Republican press noon it are most startling indications of the extent to which the Repuhlicsn party i* prepared lo go in the destruction of civil liberty. GPH. Woodford state* that the jury were fairly drawn and selected ; that if the judge erred it was against the prisoner ; that the district attorney had prepared his cose well And prosecuted it with ability, nnd that lie wa* assisted in the prosecution by Judge Morri*, one of the ablest criminal lawyers he had ever met. Mr*. Chisholm swore that she *aw the prisoner shoot her daughter, but in thi* she WAS flatly contradicted by a number ol unim|>eachcd witnesses. Mrs. Chisholm wss more likely to have been excited at the lime thnn the other witnesses, snd, therefore, less able to give a correct statement of the facts. The jury, who by law nre the sole judges of the facts, twdieved the other wit nesses, and found Gully not guilty. For this verdict Gen. Woodford vilifiee the jury, and the country and the Republi can papers ask that a search IH> made through the statute* to see if some means cannot be found whereby the Nation can protect its citisens. In oth er words, whether the Nation cannot take away from a Mississippi Democrat, when charged with killing a Republi can, the right of trial by jury. This right, which our ancestors held most sacred, entitled the prisoner to a trial by a jury of the vicinage, and it waa held to be better that ninety nine guil ty men should escape than an innocent man lie punished, It is now asked that this right shall bo taken from Missis sippinns, and when ono i* charged with crime he shall ho tried by a jury of Hon. Woodford's, who godown to regis ter a verdict agreed on before the trial. A new hatch of reconstructed laws are demanded, under which the bloody scene* of judicial murder under Jeffreys and Scruggs may he re-enacted. This is the fate the South may expect from the Republican party, and yet she is denounced for bring solid against it. Yours truly, JAS. K. (,'IIAI.XEKH. ORKNEY SI'RINUH, Sept. 20. ■ • TIIK KOUM.KAKKD M.OVKK. She, stooping in her girlish glee, A* we roamed the meadows over, Plucked from its little solitude A wondrous four-leafed clover. Sho laughed, she tossed her glossy head, "I'm sure pi have a lover, For ev'ry good they *av 'twill bring, Thi* little four-leafed clover." H"w bright the sky—how sweet the air, As wo— girl*—roaiiu-d together, Mid Held* of bloom and o'drous halm, And loveliest of weather. Some year* have told since that sweet time I ve never hud a lover, Hot she, alas! of dusky locks, She found the four-loafed clover. ♦ The Melancholy Czar. Ill* COAT Of MAIt. AMI Ills "st'l.EMiill rui# ON or STATE." fatla Curre*|mili-mr ..I N.- V.,ik W<.r|.|, 1 have come to the conclusion that llu*Hia wants a new Peter the Great. 1 may have taken this conclusion to St. Petersburg with me, but at any rate 1 came away with it, as a result of the little I saw and of the great deal 1 heard. 1 he country is ready tor a new depart ure, and as willing to be led a* ever by itstVir*. but it must bo led in a new way. Alexander now wants to lead in the t>bl way, and hence all the troubles of tin* part of hi* reign. Yet no man has such an opportunity, for he still has mortally speaking, u kind of absolute power. 'I he great mass of the people worship him as their priest and father not le** than a* their I/oni. It is touch ing, I am told, to see them prostrating themselves belore him in the streets, and even ki-sing the ground on which he walk". Thi* only ititen-ilie* the awful solitude of his position—a solitude which tln-y say i* driving him mad. He meet* no man on a footing of inti macy, not even in hi* *|iort*. 1 have lately looked over hundreds of sketches a! hi* early life at court, preserved in the album* of Do Xn by, who w* for soiiie time painter to the imperial farn • ly. AV hstever the Czar may be doing bunting, dancing, dining or idling—it i* always under conditions which re mind him that he ha* no true fellow ship with hi* kind. When he kill* a l>oar he stand* well ahead of hi* suite to meet the monster, the rest being so dispo-od, indeed, a* to help hirn in case the l titled jailer* stand between huu and the other world. If 1 had time I should like to describe that palace, at the rik ol traveling over ground already covered by the guidebooks. It i* a town within a town. Its inmates are a veritable population, duly grade] into the minutest subdivisions of otlirial rank. The Cxar, to do him justice, often break* bounds, and indeed up to a late date he continued the habit of all hi* predecessors of going out on foot every day. Hut the recent attempt on hi* life has changed all that, and made him more lonely than ever. He has now fallen completely into the hand* of his advisers, and their advice, in de fault of better, i* that he shall increase the di*tanoe l>ctwoon him and human nature. ilefore that unlucky pistol *hot he went out afoot to pay his regu lar morning visit to a j>eron in whom he took particular interest, and to two or three laughing children, who were |erba|># the only "subjects" wbo could venture to treat him with the familiar ity for which his heart must sometimes yearn. He was returning to the palace from aueh a vi*it when that madman, with the method of Nihilism in his road tie*#, meeting him face to face began to make him a target for ball practice with a revolver. It has t>een a mystery to me—it was a mystery to every one how the Czar escajed with his life. The Nihilist meant to kill him; he fired point blank, and shot after shot. It was given out that Alexander wa* not once hit—no doubt to make his prqscr vafion apj>ear something in the nature of a miracle. This was only true in the sense that he was hit more than once, although not wounded. He wore a shirt of very fine, strong chain mail under his coat. It was made for him by 1-ehlanc, of the Houlevard Magenta, a well-known Paris armorer, who sup plies the theatres for their mimic wars, hut who also knows how to turn out work that bear the brunt of a real one. first im|>erial cus tomer was the Kmperor Napoleon 111, and it was probable through the recom mendation of some friend* of the Km |>eror that Alexander, st the beginning of the present troubles, was led to ap ply to I.oblAnc for one of his patent suits. The armorer's own story is that a gentleman sought him out and with some mystery asked if he could make a coat of mail that would turn a revol ver bullet. He waa doubtful himself of hia own power* in thi* respect, though he had already provided Napoleon with an undershirt Warranted to turn the edge of a knife. But an experiment was made with one of hia best suits, and it was found that even a (kill's army re volver made no impression on ita serried rings of steel. Thi* explain* the mira cle of the Ktnperor's preservation. I.e blanc ha* other illustrious customers, among them Prince Bismarck, and the confidential distribution of his business cards seems to be a common courtesy among the potentates of Kurope. Hut the wearing of a cost of mail can hardly be conducive to unalloyed cheerfulness of disposition. The Kmperor has a troubled look ; there is unrest in the very fixity of his gase. He stares at you when he meet* you in the street as though he were wondering with what wea|Ktn you were going lor him thia time—the one-shooter, the six-shooter, the bomb or the knife. TAKING CAHK OK HIM MOIITM. Kol in tlie niowil baby, lb-hardly I-vi-r TI*H ; Ah'l nil ' hit i Jn#t Urn lovely When ho shuts liin I!M rk bun- eye* ! Don't you wi.li ymi could see liim 7 It in worth H tlioii'iiiiil sight*! "I Kum' you wouldn't think *•> If you iiKil to take cure of him night* " I'm gltul lie I* j out no littlu I Wait till hit KIHUIH tin- doom, Wait till ho slumps, nnd shout* nrid scream I!ntil hi! Khaki!* thi! floor* ! Wait till ho wi-ar* great rubber boot*, And ton*!** for ball* and kit*** ! "1 guess you'd bo glad to have him grow If you had to take earn of hint nights." —Dor* UooJal*. In Ht. Kliliolu. Slorlca of I'rof. Morse. When Morae, the father of the tele graph, waa taking daguerreotypes on top of the building at the corner of Nassau and Reekmaii street*, New York, Samuel (xilt, the inventor of the revolver, wan a friend of the electrician. Colt had hi* mind full of a torpedo for the defense ol the coast, which was to he exploded by an electric circuit. A* Morse had the wire* and buttery, the dabbler in torpedoes found liia necessa ry machinery ready at hand. I >n one occasion, when Morse wa* absent, an experiment was to be tried on the roof of the house, with a slight charge of powder, which wa* to be confined under a drum of fig*. 'Die gentleman who tells tins story was then a mere lad, light of weight, and was exactly the convenient resisting medium which Colt wanted. It was agreed that the boy should stand on the box while the jiow di-r was fired, Just as all preparation* were completed, and the lad stood on the box, I'rof. Morse appeared, who took in the situation at a glance. "Stop,"' he cried, "Colt, bid that boy get down. If you want to try the experiment, jump up in his place." "Tlicro i not the eighth of a pound of |>owdcr there," said Colt, "hut, lam agreed. I will get up in the Imy's place, l'rofessor, do you touch the key." Touch the key did Morse. An explosion followed, and it was all Colt coul i do, who was a man I of large build, to prevent himself being hurled over into the street below. If the boy had stood there, he would have certainly been lifted into the air. It was evident that then I'rof. Morsi. knew that explosion* were intensified in accordance with the mean* employed to fire peculiar substances, ami must have had an inkling of the effect* of what i* now called the vibratory influ ence on detonating substance*. "Knee," **ys an informant, "in i'rof. Morse* later life, be wanted a package of pa per*, which he told me. were on his table. 1 secured a voluminous bundle of document*, and having brought them down, presented them to the Professor. 'You have mania * mistake; these are not the paper* I wanted. Still, though they are of no moment now, at one time they caused nic a certain amount of disturbance. They represent vouch ers paid by me for lawyers, cost* and expense* in defending my telegraph. I once took the trouble to add up the figures. 1 can't give it exactly now, but the aggregate ought to sum up some thing very close to |WK),OOO. Prof. Morse's chsnties were endles*. All the impecunious of the f'nited State* made him their milch cow. He gave, if not wisely, at least well, and must have, during the la*t twenty year* of his life, dispensed a fortune in small sums. How Did i* (ill**. The oldest specimen of pure glass bearing anything like a date is a little molded lion's head, bearing the name of an Kgytian king of the eleventh dy nasty, in the Slade collection at the British museum. That is to say. at a |>eriod which may be moderately placed as more than 2,(*0 year* It. glass wa* not only made, but made with a skill which show* that the art was notb ing new. The invention of glaring pot tery with a film or varnish of glass is so old that among the fragment* which bear inscriptions of the early Kgytian monarchy are beads ]>o**ih!y of the first dynasty. <een meas ured for the first time. The swiftness of the stream had bntlted all previous efforts, but a cor|is of Government en gineers accomplished the feat. They cmbark<4i in a small boat not far below the falls. An old guide accompanied the party. With great difficulty they approached within a short distance of the American falls, which darted great jets of wster on them. The roar wa* so terrible that no voice or sound could be heard. The leadsman cast the line, which rapidly passed down 83 feet. This was near the shore. Passing out of the friendly eddy which bad enabled them to get so near the falls, they shot rapidly down stream. The next oast of the lead told off 100 feet, deepening to 192 feet a little further down. The average depth to theHwifl Ih-ifl—where the river suddenly becomes narrow, with a velocity too great to be measured —is 153 feet. Just under the lower bridge the Whirlpool rapids set in, and so violently are the waters moved that they rise like ocnn wan to the hcigih of'.!)) f •<•(. At thi point lliny com|iutcl til* depth at 210 feet. For thi* Ijtst '| jmr. Few 11>< flr-jplilr. I hero in u touch of pitthon about do ill It even the simplest tiling "for liio last time. It in not alone kissing tho •lend that given un tiiin strange pain. ou fool it when you have lookeil your lant time upon nonie scene you have loved—whin you stand in some quiet city street where you know you will never stand again. The actor, playing hi# part lor the lout time; the ninger,. whose voice i# cracked hopelessly, ami who after this once will never stan'l he fore the sea of upturned faeea, diaput ing the plaii'litn witli the frenher voices uri'J fairer forum ; the minister, who has preached his last serman—these all know the hidden bitterness of the two words, "never again." How they corns to us on our birthdays as we gtow older. Never again young, always nearer and nearer to the very last—the end which is universal, "the. last thing which shall follow all last things, and turn them, let US hope, from pains to jOJM." We put away our boyish toys with an odd heart ache. \N e are to old to walk any long er on oar stilt* too tall to play marbles on the sidewalks. Vet there was a pang when we thougt we ha J played with our merry thoughts for the last time and life * serious grown-up work wailing lor us. Now. we do not want the lost toys buck. Life has other and larger playthings for U-. May it not bo these, too, shall seem in the light of some far olf days as the boyish games seem to our manhood, and we shall learn that death is but the opening of the gate into the new land of promise ? A lleiiiarkahle Intention. I.IOIIT *\U IUAT I'IOUK HI WIIUOIT WOOD OK urbonn< 1* invention compre hend* both stove and fuel. The fire# could he on the minutest scale or tho largest. They could be used for heat ing a baby food or for roasting an ox. Being lighted instantaneously, they will be a great economy of time." M. Hour bonnel at once patented hi invention, and a body of engineers and savants from I'aris visited hint and pronounced his discovery one of the most remark aide of the age. He has had aeveral offers for the purchase of the patent in France but wants to sell it in England, hi* own occupation being in another line. Before he |erfectt-d it, he was at work on it six years, having discovered it by mean* of two inexhaustible natu ral substances. Ibe .1 tArn# corres l-ondent regards the discovery as tined to settle the great fuel question. Mirage on 1-ake Frio. The Jnvmal, published at St. Thomas, Ontario, wbich i-#f>out ten miles from the shores of Lake l.rie, describes a re markable mirage which was seen at that place. Soon after 12 o'clock. Mr. John took > hanoed to look in a south ward direction from his bouse, and saw- Lake l.rie spread before him with all the distinctness of reality. After look ing for a few moment* he called his family to witness the scene. Thev wcro .joined by Mr. Kathvon. builder, and by Mr. Sexton. The whole jrty could see the lake a* if it were only a few mda off, and the waves rolling in regular succession toward# the shore. Three #te#iner# were speeding towanl the east, the smoke from their funnels streaming behind tbem. while a couple of vessel* under sail were pursuing their steady course. They could see the lay of the land for a considerable distance along the coast, but it seemed as if some hanks intervened to prevent a view of l'ort Stanley. The opposite coast of tho I'rnteil States was so distinctly visible that they could perceive the indenta tions of the shore, the very trees, and a town away to the southeastward, tho buildings of which were plainly discern ible. The meridian sun was shining brightly all this time, and an npsquo cloud, fringed with pink, stretched along the southern sky from east to w-est. I'nder thi# cloud the mirage ap peared, and after for some time present ing the scene disrrihed, faded, and. gradually dissolved away in the direc tion of Buffalo. Was* the preaent Pope >v a cardin al he cherished the idea nl publishing a Catholic journal that should be an organ for hia church, and that could be read by all the people of Kurope and Ameri ca in their mother language. Since hia elevation to the pontificate, he has ex erted himself to start this news|iaper, and now announces that its first num ber will be issued this month. It will be printed in seven different languages; it will diacuaa the political and econom ical questions of the day, and officially represent the opinions of the Holy See. ♦ Hon. flarkmn N. Potter has wtittgp a letter accepting the Itemoeratic nom ination for I.ieutenant-Oovernor of New York. Mr. Potter aays he did not seek the nomination, and, under ordin ary circumstance*, would decline it, but that, at this crisis in the affairs of the party, if it be thought that his name or services nan contribute anything to thn union or success of the l>raocraey. ho doea not feel at liberty to withhold them, and therefore accepts the nomi nation tendered him. - ——w . . ■ AM Irishman, in describing America, said : "1 MI told that you might roll England thru it an' it wouldn't make a dint in the ground: there's fresh wa ter oceans inside that ye moight dround old Ireland in ; an' as for Scotland, ye moight stick it in a corner an' jis'd never lie able to find it out again, except it moight be for the smell "bf lot whisky."