Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, December 04, 1879, Image 1

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    @l)c (tcntre ISHJ iOrmncrat,
SHIGKRT \ FOBSTKR, Editors.
+ VOL. I.
?ltr tf nitre 31 cm octal.
Term. 51.50 per Annum, in Advance. I
8. T. SHUGERT .ml R. H. FORSTER. Editors.
Thursday Morning, December 4, 1879.
It is said the Stalwarts of the cabi
net are after the scalp of Secretary
Sohur/. of the Interior Department,
lie jM.sseases an independence they
cannot endure or excuse, ILS well us a
capability of successful administra-'
tion they cannot rival.
THE opposing factions in the Dem
ocratic party in Philadelphia are mak
ing some motion toward reconciliation.
They should have done that before the ,
last election, and saved tliemsc'ves the
disgraceful route which followed their
bickerings. Rut better late thau never, j
Seymovr aud 11 KNDKtCK.s, or Ray- !
A Kl> and MCDONALD, seem to be tbe
ticket now. Rut tbe names may vary ;
much between now aud the meeting of
the National Convention. The senti
ment, however, is universal ttmt all
will concur in the nomination of the
< ''invention.
The Washington I'ost pays it i
probably a lie that Col. McClurc, of
the Philadelphia Time, is about to
study for the Episcopal ministry.
Perhaps it is, but nothing Col. Mc
-1 'lure could do would startle his ac
quaintances much. He would be
splendid in a lecture to our friend.
Col. Forney on ( 'hristiau duty.
As OTHER Equestrian Statue con
templated. At a meeting of the < Jen. i
Meade Veteran A--ociation at ( arli-le,
the initial steps were taken looking to
the erection of a ptatue to R
Meade on one of tbe Government res
ervations in Washington. The Army
of the Potomac are expected to take ,
charge of the movement.
♦
THE Isxk Haven and Clearfield
Railroad, for which a charter has
been granted, will extend from a |oint
on the Raid Eagle Valley Railroad at
the mouth of Bccch ( risk to Philips- j
burg, in this county, traversing the
bituminous coal field. The capital
stork is 11,000,000, divided into 2/XX)
shares of each. The company will
find considerable rough work before
the completion of the road, but if put
through it will open a rich field of iron
and coal to reward their enterprise. ,
THE first stage in the bribery trials
at Harrisburg was reached last week
when Judge Pearson decided that the
indictment agniust Salter, whose rase
Was first called f<£ trial, could not
stand lieeause of tbe error in the com
position of the grand jurv. The next
ease railed was that of the Common
wealth against I/cisenring, of Carbon
county, against whom n true bill had
also been found by the snme grand
jury. The lawyers for the defense
raised the same technical objections to
this indictment, but were met by new
points in favor of sustaining it by the
other side, and tbe judge then post
poned the rase until next Monday,
when his decision will lie given. It
is expected, however, that it will be
the same as in the Salter ease.
SENATOR- JOHN A. LEMON, of
llollidaysburg, it is said, will be a
candidate for the Republican nomina
tion for Auditor-General, and will re
fuse to be put off again for the Sena
torship of the Rlnir district. Col.
Jicmon having been two or three times
induced to withdraw his claims to this
office on the pica that no other Repub
lican could carry his Senatorial dis
trict, is not disposed to lie made a con
venience of auy longer, hut will claim
the promotion he has earned and to
which he is justly entitled from his
party by faithful servieea in it* inter
ests. If a Republican is to he elected
to the important office of Auditor-
General—a calamity we hope the
kindness of Providence will avert —
then we trust it may lie Col. Iscmon,
as he is a gentleman, and competent
to make a good and efficient officer.
"KUL'AL ANI. KUCT JVBTICR TO AI.I. MAN, OK WIIATIVKR STATE OK PKKKLA#IO.V, RKLIOKM KOK I'OI.ITKA L. "-J- ffrro-... TERMS' *1 ."><> |MT A 111111 111 ill \l\ Mll-
Tho Forty-sixth Congress
The long or regular session of the
Forty-sixth Congress begun ut Wa-h
--ington on Inst Monday. Taking all
things into consideration it will un
doubtedly prove a most important
session. There arc grave matters of
great national import to lie decided,
and it is to be hoped that in their dis
cussion ami decision of these things
the leaders of both parties will rise to
the dignity of patriotism and sink
partisanship beneath a love of coun
try. I'pon the shoulders of the
Democratic majority of course rests
the greatest burden, and we have no
doubt of their being equal to every
emergency. I'pon them is imjxtsed
the duty of allaying sectional feeling
and of building up a more cordial
union among the people of our com
mon country. It is the evident pur
pose of the Republican leaders to
keep nlivo the angry passions of the
war. I'pon their success in making a
solid North depends the future of
their organi/jitiou. The Republican
party is not a national party to-day.
It exists in only a portion of tbe
Union, and therefore it is life to its
leaders to foment sectionalism. The
Democrats in Congress should see to
it that they do not aid their opponents
by intemperate utterances in debate.
It will be the studied purpose of
every Republican in Congress to k-vp
the bloody shirt in motion. The bat
tle of next year will be commenced in
the Forty-sixth Congress and our
record now must be our record then.
Hence the importance of wise And
patriotic action on tho part of the
Democratic leaders. The ja-ople
have confidence in the Democratic
majority. It is the height of folly
for any one l<> attribute the dis
asters that befell the party in this
year's elections to its representatives
in Congress. Immediately the result
was known the whole Republican
press shouted in chorus, "The extra
session did it." The Democrats were
not responsible for the extra session.
They remained in Washington t the
command of the acting Executive,
and their action throughout met with
the warm commendation of dispas
sionate men of all parties. Was the
extra session responsible for our do
feat in New York where we have nl
most forty thousand majority on the
whole vote and vet lose the State?
Did the extra session make Philadel- I
pliia thirty thousand lb-publican ? or
was it the split there in our own party
which produced the result? Was it
the extra session that flung Ixicka
wana, Luzerne and Schuylkill coun
ties into the Republican column when
possibly one-half the voters in those
counties never heard there was au
extra session ? or was it caused by
some more powerful agency? In our
own county, for instance, was it the
extra sewion that rausril a falling off
of 1 UNI in our vote as compared with
the vote of Inst year ? or wa* it because
the Democrats only neglected in the
unusual apathy of the c-nm|iaign to
goto the polls? It is all the merest
nonsense to talk of a popular verdict
against Congress. There has been
none rendered, and to-day if the saute
questions once more arose the |ieople
would hid their representatives God
speed in their battle against the en
croachment* of the Federal govern
ment. Our representatives in the ex.
trn session fought a noble battle nnd
they fought it well, and the people
will so say next year when they go to
their constituents to render nn ac
count of their stewardship. They
fought fraud triumphant at one end
of the Avenue and n mad hand of
fanatics in the Capitol. That they
difl not succeed in getting all thry
demanded is cause for regret, not dis
may. They were right, nnd they did
at last wrench from n fraudulent
President one dangerous power and
placed it hack in (he bauds of the
poople. That of itself was enough to
entitle them to the gratitude of all
who desire to see our institutions per
petuated.
. BELLEFONTE, IA., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, IH7IE
The Reverend Mr. Colfclt, of W nsh
ington Square Presbyterian Church of
Philadelphia, made a new departure
on Thanksgiving day, that seems a lit
tle startling at first, but we suppose we
will soon get used to it. After Roh
Ingersoll and Henry Ward Reecbcr
had succeeded in disposing ot hell, we
congratulated ourselves that all wiw
not lost yet, that there were -till some
of the honored traditions of the past
left, and we confidingly placed our
hand upon the Rihle, that good old
book, and thought here's something
safe from the unhallowed touch of the
modern iconoclast. Fatal mistake!
Mr. Col felt, the pastor of a fashiona
ble church, the finest pulpit orator in
Philadelphia,deiilM-rately walked into
his church on Thanksgiving day and
took his text from the N. Y, Tribune.
For fear the shock would be t'> much
for his orthodox congregation,he took
the precaution of first laying the
Tribunr under the lid of the Rihle.
This, it is sup|>osed, was intended to
exorcist- the spirit of Jay Gould from
the pages. After waiting a reasonable
length of time, until he wa certain
Gould was once more ntuoiig his !■-
loved "Eantlfs" on Wall street, the
Reverend gentleman anw, He can
fully took the organ of the New York
stock gamblers from Iteneath the lid
of the sacred hook. What to do with
the Rihle must have greatly troubled
him at that time. He couldn't well
heave it out through the beautifully
stained glass windows, and a- he
hadn't any further u-e for it, it seem
ed rather out of place. However he
quietly ignored that |s>inl and preach
ed his sermon direct from the Tribunr.
Whether or not it was the copy of thnt
paper which contained the editorial,'
written to order by the ot>cqiiiou*
editor at the dictation of Gould, and
which broke the New York stock
market and ruined hundreds ~f un
suspecting men on Wall street, we do
not know. It is not known whether
Mr. Colfclt intends to n*c the one pa|-r
at all times or not. He ought cer
tainly to preach one sermon from the j
n|>ologist and defender of Jay (timid ,
and Whitelaw Rcid—the Philadel
phia /Ves.
MR. R. R. HAYES, of Ohio, who
is at present acting in President Til
den's place at Washington, is some
what of a humorist. Following in I
the footsteps of his legally elected
predecessors he has submitted n mess- j
age to < 'ongrcso. The one thing con
spicuous by its absence is the apology
ilue the American people for filling a
position to which another man was
elected, and the one thing conspicuous
bv its presence is thnt part of the
message devoted to civil service re
form. The following sentence occurs :
" By a pro|>cr exercise of authority it
is in the power of the Executive to
do much to promote such a reform." '
This will strike most people as an in
controvertible fact, hut when they
contemplate Moehy at Hong Kong,
Noyex in France, and Wells, Ander
son, ( iisnnave and Marks holding dif
ferent offices of trust and emolument
in Louisiana ; Mrs. Agnes Jeuks ami
others of her kind filling dc|mrtmcnt
positions in Washington, they will
naturally conclude that the Executive
has forgotten to use thnt "proper ex
ercise of authority." Of all shams
this one of civil service reform leads
the van and Mr. Hayes is the chief
j priest.
" PARSON TAI.MAOK rejoice* that
prayers are offered in the White
House every morning." His pious
soul must lie exceedingly jubilant,
when he reflects (hat the prinei|ml oc
cupant of the White House also dis
penses his charities with a lavish hand
by rewarding all the thieves con
nected with the Presidential Steal out
of the people's treasury, nnd only re
serves for himself the $/>O,OOO salary
properly belonging to the parson's
neighbor, Mr. Tilden,
A Now Gospol
M K lay In-fore the readers of the i
DEMOCRAT this week an abstractor
Mr. Ilaye> message to (oiigrcss, the
document being too lengthy to publish I
in full. It i* not a remarkable State
paper in any particular, and will not
command a great degree of respect.
A large portion of it is devoted to
the subject of civil service reform, of
which Mr. Hayes pretends to he a -in
cere advocate. Considering that the
Republicans have been doctoring the
civil service of the country ever since
180H ( aiul that they are yet as far
from any substantial reform a- when
they began, this part of the message
may In- considered a- mere cant and
hypocrisy. Mr. Hayes i always great
on civil service reform in the intervals
between the elections, hut never fails j
to lay aside his pretended convictions
when partian success demands the
tiscof official patronage. His plati
tudes upou this subject therefore go
for nothing. The shameless interfer
ence of the administration in the late
elections throughout the North, not
only by the active personal efforts of
< ahiuct and other high officials, hut
by the use of the thousands of dollars
wrung from the pay of their needy
de|H-udeU|s, is sufficient to convince
any unprejudiced |tcr*uuof the hollow
dishonesty of these professions of re
form. They w ill excite only contempt
and ridicule. When civil service
reform eoinr-s.it will IK- when some
man of a different stamp occupies the
W liite Houe.
HERE i- the Radical idea of u na
tion. -j ll<s| with a big "N," given in
the I /-mar- S'ntiiirf, Republican or
gau advocating the third term Grant
movement :
The North. lli old Free alone
represent tbe National will, an I alone
hare lire right to dictate the National
policy. The twice conquered slave
.Mates have nn more rqstil lot voice in
their local affairs or in National affairs
than have the convicts in the penilen
itarv to control their prison* or their
States ill which they are located l.'t
it never he forgotten that reln-llion is
conquered territory, and that its inhab
itants are prisoners of war on parole.
This i the doctrine of the Stalwarts, as
tKildiy proclaimed by the glorilied /.<tch
<'handler, n* held by (irant, and as un
flinching!)! promulgated by the .Va/tsr/.
Trimmers, time servers and dough
faces may not like this open, undis
guised proclamation of these ultimate
and naked truths, hut they are tine all
the same, aud the only logics? outcome
of the present political situation.
THE Republican*. South, are claim
ing a Southern nominee tor Yice-
Presidenl. and put forward Joshua
Hill, of Georgia, Postmaster-General
Key and Horace Mayunrd, of Ten
nessee, a* suitable men to represent
litem. They ought not to forget the
claims of Wells, Packard ami Kel
logg, of Ixntisiana, ami other thieves
who served them so in the
Presidential Steal. They eertainlv
would le very proper men to put on
the ticket with John Sherman, and
might even give tone and significance
to the Grant boom.
TIIE brutal jiolicy of the (irant ad
ministration towards the South, one
would stlppoe could not commend
the General very strongly to that peo
ple for a third term. Indeed it might
satisfy most any simpleton (hat the
claim set up by the stalwarts that
Grant pussrssca great (Mipularity with
the ex-Confederates, and could make
an election by Southern v tes, is nil
; I it mb. Yet some affect to 1 relieve it,
and urge this as. an inducement for
I his nomination.
THE Kellogg investigation in New
Orleans has developed the usual num
ber of liars, who swear Imek nnd for
ward just as the rase demands accord
ing to pay. They are mostly in the
employ of the custom house by ap
pointment of the Fraud and Sherman
on Kellogg recommendations.
A committee of the School Board of
Norristown met on Monday and exam
ined witnesses relative to the treatment
of a pupil in tbe public schools named
laiuisf). Murr, who died not long sinoe.
It was charged that the boy had betm
roughly treated by his teacher, Mra.
K tinssy, Jut prior to hi* death. Ruob
was, however, not proven, and the lad
was exonerated.
I.niilsluiiu Election.
I.AROK IIEUik K\T|< '.IINS TIIIIOI i.HOI T
TUB STATE—A 1(1 IKT KI.ECTIOV
Neh Ohi.eak*, I'ec. 2. —The election
ill thin city passed off quietly. A Very
light vote wai polled—probably less
than twu thirds. The "ring" ticket in
thin parish wan generally elected.
Special dispatches from all telegraph
station* in the State show heavv llerno
cratic gain*. There rejcirta, giving an
estimate in eleven country parishes,
claim a I 'emocretic gain of 12.1 <K>. fxim
pared with the Ileuiocratic count of
IB7fi, the name parishes gave Hayes
I,IXIO majority. All the dispatches nay
that the election passed ofl quietly, ami
moat oi thein re|>ort the negroe* voting
the I leuiocratic ticket and for the Con
elitution.
GENERAL NEWS.
An oil well of recent diaooverv in the
noitliern field*, the h rnrk aaya, yield*
"ij'.i barrel* per hour.
The heaviest fall of inn* in the State
thus lar was ai Meadviile. where twelve
inches fell la*l week.
' 'f the ton of poultry eaten in Phil
adelphia on Thanksgiving day, Indiana
county sent .17,000 pounds.
hrancie Murphy, the temperance re
vivalist, is again in Pittsburg. This
time there is no enthusiasm over him.
A monument will I*. erected by Ifeno
Poat, li. A.!'.. of Wil|jam<port, to the
deceased soldiers and sailor* of l.ycom
ing county.
' 'n WHnnly afternoon Peter Mul
vey, of Cascade township, l.ycoming
county, fell dead in Wilhamsporl, (
be irt disease.
The attempt of St. .lulien to beat bis
own time, 2.121, it is announced irmii
San I ram.isco, has been indefinitely
postponed.
Miss Alders was declared bv the
School I'rectors of Fist |i*er township,
Allegheny county, as not having been
legally elected u teacher. >hr Hied
ami got a year a salary.
It is rejairted that the Imperial Gov
ernnw iil is e(al>lisinng a resetrsul Itl.-
• **i men in Canada, composed of militia
st the Hominion, for active service at
liotuc or abroad, il te<|tiired.
A party of t'itnton county hunters
ba<l fourteen deer strung up in the
woods at the head of itakei'a run. An
other tuny returned to l/n-lt Haven
Thursday night with nine de^.
The Meihodut Kpiacopal church at
Ciiristiansburg, Shelby county, Ky..was
destroyed by wind on Friday, causing a
los of *1 mill. M.uiy other building*,
fences, etc., in that s-cllou were dam
aged.
It is said that St, I,oui* merchant*
ami capitalists will subscribe £l,l**l i *l
to carry out a proposition to make Port
Itoyal, S. a great exporting and itn
porting |Kint for the \\ est ond South
The case of the (simmonwnalth
against the Standard 'til Company, now
pending in Clarion county, will be call
ed on Monday. Pecemlier 15. A motion
for a further |x>t[ionenient of the case
was refused.
Potter county has an empty jail.
There were so few rase* to be tried, and
they so unim|>orlant, at the time tor
the last session of Court in that county. '
that they were allowed to go over until
the next term.
Another Northwestern exploring par
tv ha* arrived at Winnipeg. Ibis time
with most favorable report* of the
country north of Fort Carle ton. L.ike
other* they pronounce the di*|>o*ition
of the Indian* to be very friendly.
I trad ford county butter i* now thirty
five cent* a pound, and se/bral week*
ago it could have licen bought at fifteen
rent*. The (oral paper* attribute the
rise to a severe drought now prevailing
in that and adjacent counties.
The Atlantic and tireal Weatern Hail
way will be sold in Akron, <., on the
t'lth of .Isnusry under foreclosure pro
reeding*. The lishilitic* of the rosd
sre about s?•' 000.000. It i* expected
that it will sell for about filO.tM 10.000.
The revision of the Bible now in prog
ress is expected to entail an expense of
about frJOO.OOO before the first copy is
printed, notwithstanding the fact that
the Committee of lievission get nothing
for their labor* except their traveling
expense*.
At the annual banquet of the Gener
al Meade Veteran Asaociation, of Car
lisle. on Wednesday evening, initiatory
*tej* were taken looking to the ercc
j lion of an equestrian statue to the Iste
I General Meade. It la proposed to erect
the statue on one of the government
reservation* in Washington. !. C. The
\rmy of the Potomac is requested to
lake charge of the movement.
The record of failures reported in
■ New York city for the monih of No,
vemher shows thirty-two, with total
liabilities of ftiA7,fi24, and aaseta #20.-
J Til. Compared with the month of
November, 1878, the present exhibit i*
very flattering, a* the former month
j hsd fifty six failure* and groaa liabili
j ties of |I,4TI|9M.
At half-past three o'clock Saturday
morning Are broke out in the Grand
Opera House, on Adelaide street, Tor
onto, Ontario, and in a few minute* the
rear part of the building, from the
box office to the extreme outer walla,
wa in flames. The firemen worked
well, hut a heavy gale was blowing, and
in an hour and a half the whole in
terior of the building wee destroyed.
five student* of Allegheny College,
Meadviile, have been suspended lor
basing. The *u*|iended onea and
their sympathiser* went in procession
I through the street* of Megdville on
WwinwUy, preceded by a bras- hand
an'l carrying banner* bearing inscrip
tion* the reverse of compilimentary to
the faculty.
The immense fly-wheel driven by a
powerful engine u-e<] in the rail mill of
the J'enriKylrania steel work, at Har
risbtirg, weighing between 60 and 70
ton*, on Thursday, burst with aloud re
port, creating terror and consternation
for several minute.. Fortunately no
; one wan hurt i-ave a man named '.harle*
I'owers, a lew* machinist in that de
nartment, who received slight injuries
try being scalded on the arm.
A tornado, with rain, pa*ed over
I-ouisville, Ky„ early Friday morning
in a northeasterly direction, destroying
some -mall building* and unroofing
others. The Laval Crystal spring I'is
tillery warehouse, in the l'rownstown
• üburb, was demolished. Much harm
was done to monuments, shrubbery,
conservatories and nurseries around
Cave Mill, and Germantown suburb t>uv
tained considerable damage.
A Mt^rlreesbor. Tennessee, special
•us nine prisoner* escaped from the
jail at that place on Wednesday night
by crawling through holes which they
had previously cut in the tuck wall of
their cell, reaching the gtound from
the second story by means of pipe*
leading t • water tank* in tbe jail yard.
Among them weie West Smithy,
charged w ill, murder in the first degree ;
Keck Slaughter, already sentenced to
lour years imprisonment for arson, and
awaiting trial on other indictment* ;
Witharn Adkin-, charge*] with hor
stealing, and Tun t'iiarlton, with lor
gerv.
The cong'egation in the Lutheran
church at Waynesboro, on Tuesday, be
i ame panic stricken at the breaking of
a bench, and a rush was made for the
doors. A number were mimed, and
among l hnu were the following: Mrs.
Weagly. arm 'Token and otherwise in
jured: Ifev. Mr. Richardson.of "-miili
burg. Md.. trampled upon and injur
ed; Mr. -hank, of Muitthshurg, ain
broken ; Mtles I'oitisr, Hlk>uM<t bone
and several rib* broken ; Mrs. Mer-atid
two son*, severely injure*l; Rev. W. < .
' bren, of llagerstowii, badly f ruis-d :
Henry 0. Fink, seriously hurt ; a Jady.
name unknown, wis :aken to the hot. I.
where she now lie. in a critical condi
tion. The sad affair has created intense
excitement in the village. Ihe dam
age to the church i* estimated t f'snt.
It i* upon the solemn asseveration of
the K slama/OO iin-. Hr th ,1 *ti" penile
of Michigan are obliged to swallow tho
following cow story : < n tbe farm of 1,
1 . Humphrey, just east of Kslstnuoo,
!• *0 UnUM-d w.-11, the depth of than
i thirty five fe-t. iin Muuday of ls-t
week one of Mr. Humphrey's cow- w-o*
uil-sed, (In the Tuesday following
-•me one was attracted to the old Well
t>y the sound of splashing water. There
.it the bottom stool the oow looking
wist lolly up. An armful of hay w*.
' thrown down to the anima', which ate
ravenously, All the people in the sur
rounding country gathered at the well
*nd, rigging u ptilly arrangement, soon
drew the cow up. She walk*-*] with dif
ficulty at first, toil in an houi or so Inn
bered up enough to trot <HPI< ■ the pas
ture.
The I.rant Itoom.
tfiii lb** IV*ton Vl*rM.
It is a pitiful exhibition to see leaders
of the Republican party—men who
have t>een elevate*! to re-pon-ibie pn*i
tions by the suffrages ol their fellow cit
izens—yielding to rhe fwnir or the prej
udice which makes tieneral tirsnt Hie
one man who can -s\e the oountrv. It
i* a painful evidence of di-tru-t ot our
institutions—Hits intimation that the
country i not safe unless the unwritten
law of tbe land which limits a Tresident
to two terms te viola tod. These oart v
leader* who feel so confident in an
nouncing the name of their caudidste a
year in advsnoc. believe that it is s pop
ular impulse, whose force they •re sag*
ctous enough to leoogtuse, So dnnWi,
tieneral tlrant is ■ vert |<opular man.
A* the man who hrntigWthc war to an
end, be was and is. a very popular hero.
He lia- retained a large measure of pub- *
lie admiration, notwithstanding tbe
mistake* of hi* admtiri-lrafinn. but
the idea that he would be the stronge-i
candidate to present to tbe people. • r
that he could or would make a "strong
(internment" in the sense in which the
phrase i* used nowadays, seems to us
equally ab-urd. In the first place, it is
evident that the Republican party can
not hope to carry the country next year
unless it is united ami able to attract
to It* aid a Urge share of the imle|,end
enl voters. It must i-e remember*d
that these latter were driven out of the
party by the faults and scandals ><f
I'res.ident Grant'* administration. Is it
likely that they will t>e attracted back
by not only promising a rejietitlon of
"Oranttera" in the i aitonaf admim*ira
lion, hut by the additional mistake of
endeavori-g to give a president a third
term J We recognise tbe tor*<e of the
Grant "boon," but it doe* not represent
the whole party ; and. if it should bo
■ successful in carrying the convention
t>y the aid of a "idid South" there
delegates representing no electoral
| votes—the IVinoerat* would hsve *n
excellent opportunity. If the Hemo
' crats oontinue to blumler, the Republi
can candidate will be elected, whoever
■ lie may lie -. Nit the people are tire*] of *
' section*' strife, and tbe iMmocrala can
1 assume an attitude and present a candi
date which will give them at least an
even ehnoe for victory. And nothing
, oontribiiti-a mote to the preparation of
f! the public mind for * lb-roocratic *uc- .
I oe*stit than the "boom ' for (1 an loin
i 1 third teruj.
NO. VX