©wte gfwarai BELLEFONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest and Beat Paper PUBLISHED IN CENTRE COUNTY. Internal-Revenue Taxation. STEECH OF HON. ANDREW G. CURTIN, OF PENNSYLVANIA, IN THE IIOUHE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Tuesday, June 27, 1882. The House being in Committeo of the Whole on the Htale of the Union, uiui having under consideration the bill (H. K. No. 561)8) to reduce internal-re venue taxation— Mr. Curtin said : Mr. Speaker: If this Congress at its assemblage had approached an empty Treasury 1 cannot out feel that its ac tion might have met with the much more hearty approbation of the people who sent us here. We would have been compelled to legislate in the direction ol economy, and would have endeavored to originate measures by which the Treasury would have been supplied so as to maintain the national faith and pay the necessary expenses of the Gov ernment. It would, no doubt, have been the general sentiment as well as the disposition of the members of the House to have so legislated in the inter est of economy as to reduce the expen ses of the Government; and, really, it seems to me that it would he better for the country and its future, and more creditable in the legislative action of Congress, for us to ecdaavor, aB far as possible, to retrench and lighten the burdens now resting upoa a lax-paying people. We have legislated lavishly from a full Treasury. We have provided for the erection of court-houses and post offices where such conveniences may have been needed, but I fear they were in many instances pas;ed by combina tions in this House, where there was no actual necessity for them. We have been liberal, and it might not be unjust to say lavish in appropriations for the improvement of river navigation to facilitate internal commerce and the improvement of harbors for the better accommodation of our foreign commerce We were invited to a full Treasury when we came here, and we seem by our ac tions to have accepted the invitation. WHAT REI.IEF IS OFFERED TO INDUSTRY ? When the session commenced it was expected by the people that a large re duction would he made to relieve the people from the burdens of internal taxation, and thus afford a measure of relief to the productive interests and industries of the country. In the hill presented to the House from the Com mittee on Ways and Means I now ask what measure of relief is afforded to those who produced ? I presume the bill under consideration is to pass as it comes from the committee under tje inexorable will of the majority, trainee, disciplined, and ready for action, it was certainly anticipated before the intro duction of this bill, and it is even not unjust to say that it was promised that there would be actual relief to the in dustrial interests of tire country and to the pursuits of productive labor. The bill now about to become a law has offered a broad field for discussion in this House, and no doubt many of the speeches made were intended for home consumption, and will find their way into districts represented Ly gen tlemen on this floor. The Democrats stoutly contend for large reductions, and many of them for the repeal of all the war taxes, the entire abrogation of the internal-revenue system and with it the four or five thousand public oflicers who find their means of support in the continuance of the system. The hill on passage does afford relief to the poeple in relieving them from tho tax on matches that nobody seriously felt and which is scarcely appreciable, for, as was repeatedly stated on this floor, es pecially by the distinguished gentleman who stands at the head of the Ways and Means Committee, that relief was to bo afforded to the producer, and as the tax on matches is the only relief which is offered by the bill; not much in that di rection has been accomplished. ARBITRARY AND OI'I'RESSIVE TAX I.Att'S. Early in the session the gentleman from Missouri [Mr. Hatch| introduced a bill to relieve tho onerous taxation from which the tobacco interests of his con stituents suffered. He represented that the law as it then existed rested op pressively upon a large portion of his constituency, and ' is presentation was so clear and the justice of his demand so impressed the House that he came within seven votes of the two-thirds necessary to have the bill taken up out of order and passed ; and yet of the number of amendments offered to this bill, directed to the relief of that inter est by that gentleman and others, not one of them was accepted by the ma jority. Gentlemen had changed their views and political considerations had affec ted their judgement and their consci ence and the force of discipline made the majority solid in the /louse with very rare exceptions. I voted for every amendment offered to the bill to give relief from that oppressive tax and the manner of its collection, and I cannot but be of opinion that this bill when passed will afford no relief to that indus try without that provision in it. I will not pretend to offer to this House the various acts of Congress on the taxation of tobacco and its means of collection that have been reiterated over and over again and are well understood, but will confine myself to a presenta tion of the various laws and their op pressive features as briefly as possible. The dealer in tobacco who is licensed pays an annual fee of $25. The farmer who produces the tobacco can sell to him, out only by the hale or hogshead. There is a fictitious retail dealer in leaf tobacco, so called, but there is none in fact, and the proviso of the statute is a delusion, for tho very conclusive reason that the law which pretends to license him to deal in leaf-tobacco by retail jfixea the tax and license he is required to pay so High that it is impossible for -any one to follow the business. For ex ample, be is required to pay a license of SSOO, and for every dollar's worth of to bacco he deals in over SI,OOO he is re quired to pay fifty cents to the Govern ment. Of course no one can afford to follow a business in which he is requir ed to pay one-half of its proceeds as a tax, and it follows asa logical sequence that there are no retail dealers in leaf tobacco; and therefore no one of that class fixed by the law to whom the pro ducer can sell in quaintities less than a hogshead. , This must necessarily prove oppress ive to small farmers who do not raise a hogshead of tobacco. There is a pre tense in the bill now under considera tion that the small producer may lie re lieved by a reduction of the license of the dealer in leaf-tobacco to $250, and requiring him to pay thirty cents on every dollar's worth of tobacco he sells over $1,000; but this of course is quite as much a prohibition to retail dealers as the provision in the law it is intend ed to repeal, for no one can afford to pay a license of $250 and then pay thir ty cents on each dollar of the proceeds of his business for all he sells above SI,OOO worth. So in this respect the bill is simply a deception, unworthy of our Government, and was drawn in ig norance of the law or was designed for the continued oppression of that class of the people of the United States who are producers of tobacco in small quanti ties. THE TAVCATUERER AND THE TOBACCO TAX 1 I notice that in June, 1880, Congress passed a law permitting putties who paid a license of $5 to buy leal-tobacco by retail to the amount of 25,000 pounds per annum, and to such licensed deal ers the farmer was allowed to sell his tabacco in any quantity provided he raised it on his farm or received it as , rent from tenants, but even this trifling boon to the small farmers and produ cers is taken away by the bill under consideration. Mr. Speaker, 1 will present a case which might readily occur, and it shall not be located in the South, where the production of iobacco is one of the great staple industries, nor will 1 draw this question geographically. 1 suppose that a farmer in Lancaster county, Pennsyl vania, where the tobacco crop this year is estimated at $4,000,000, may choose to cultivate four acres of ground which he owns and where he lives. From one acre he may produce potatoes, from another turnips, from a third corn, and from the fourth tobacco. Jhe sweat ot his lace falls upon all alike from the I time he puts the seed in theground until ] his crop is matured and mother earth renders back to him the reward of his labor, The crop raised by this man, except that upon one acre, is as free as the air he breathes. Beneficent Providence gives to all alike the earlier and th later rains,with tha warmth necessary \to give produc tive earth ull the stimulants which will reward his labor. All tlfie employments of nature, the applianc ?s, care, atten tion, and work, come to till that he has placed in the earth in full! confidence of return. The man is no iloubt a good citizen—for the people | o f Lancaster county are generally law-abiding and industrious—and pays all'bis dues to ho Government and honestly disciinr gesjill other personal and I relative ob ligations. He takes the prvjduct of the three ao.'es in corn and jiitatoes and turnips anJ sells them he can get the best ma*, -ct the pro ceeds to the support <>V r '®iself umi his dependants, hut the '/jßduct of the acre of tobacco he dare At sell except to the licensed agents of this Govern ment. -•* The Federal power of this great peo ple, having its seat in this capital, with all its appliances and appointments, watches that tobacco as it grows and unfolds its leaves and is prepared for the harvest in its maturity, and through its agencies, its collectors, its licensed dealers, its privileged class declares that as to that production he is not a free man, and that he shall sell ami sell on ly where this central Government di rects, and by and through the agents it has licensed. can conceive of no reason why the iron hand of this Gov ernment should belaid upon that acre and its production while it does not rest upon the other three; nor why, accord- i ding to our great living policy of right and equality he should not be at liberty to cultivate and sell the product of the soil where he pleases. And as our Gov ernment, which is an emanation lrom the people, should le parental, we dis turb this harmony and that generous quality by an espionage searching as are the laws to which I have alluded, and the citizen who discharges the duties imposed by such laws becomes as dis tasteful and odious tut was the tithe gatherer in England, the gaugor, ex cise man, and agent in Ireland, and tl 0 oppressive exactions made by the far mers of the revenue from the Christian people of the provinces of Europe dom inated by the Turk. IS VICE l-RUAMZRD IN IHIH.IC REVENUE? It is said that tobacco is a luxury. That is no reason for discrimination and for an unjust and odious tax. There are thousands of luxuries that are not tax ed. The cereals and meat maintain life, and that is about all that • is given to labor. Wealth can purchase luxuries, and most of the luxuries can only be enjoyed by the wealthy who can pur chase them. There can certainly be no seriuus objection to the purchase or the use ot the luxuries of life in addition to the necessities which sustain it, provid ed you do not interfere with the growth and progress of the country; and the man who raices his acre of to bacco and the man who toila from morn ing till evening has a right to scface himself at the close of the day with the use of tobacco as those who have means have thoright to the enjoyment of the luxuries which they purchase where they please, produce at their pleasure, and buy and sell without the interposition by this Government of a middle man, or being subjected to im position of licensed agencies of tho Government. Many productions of the earth may be considered luxuries quite as much if not more than tobacoo, and all these remain without taxation or the intervention of the Government or its agencies. Mr. Cox, of New York. Perfumery, Mr. Curtm. Ah, yes ; I believe the lax is taken off perfumery in this bill. 1 do not know whether the Committee of Ways and Means, tlial incubated so long before proposing this bill, compos ed of so tunny of the leading and expe rienced members of this body, would consider peffumery a luxury, and I would therefore leave that to the credit of the committee: but, sir, suppose to bacco should be considered a luxury and not a necessary of life, and for the present we take whisky and malt beve rages as luxuries. If their use is a vice and immoral and tending to corrupt and debase all who use them, is it any reason why this Government should re lievo such immorality or cure such vices by the imposition of unjust and discrim inating taxation, and thus raise money to defray the expenses of the Govern ment and afford opportunities for lavish appropriations from a plethoric Treasu ry, and fail to tax otlipr vices quite as common ami more injurious and de moralizing in their practices? It is not in harmony with our history and traditions ; it is not consistent with the principles of equality which under lie our structure of government; it is legislation lor a class;-it is affording special privileges; it is favoring monopo ly ; it is unjust, discriminating, and unequal in its operation, and it employs bonis of public olliceis who could be dispensed with if the tax on tlie.se ar ticles were equal. It is a department of the Government from its great funda mental principles. It is an abnegation of the great sentimt n of equality wbic 1 prevai'ed when our Government was formed, and enters into all its actions when it makes demands from tiie pco pie for its support, si i 111f. i> orriirssioN in section.*i. laws. Tobacco is a staple production in n large portion of thin country; and I presented it ca<; winch might occur and no doubt does occur in Lancaster coun ty s-o a9 to be north of the belt and so that it might be made clear to mv friend the distinguised gentleman who so ably represents the Lancaster constituency. The law, so unjust, so discriminating and partial,Jhas not been administered in Pennsylvania. The freemen of that State are not accustomed to such rigid exac tions. Faithful to the Government, they desire above all blessings just laws , equally administered, unmanacled free dom of person. The less the tax-gath erer and agents oi the Government the better; and it the many, the very many painful instances of oppression and I wrong practiced south ol tlie belt in the I collection of the tobacco tax should be transferred or attempted to he trans ferred to Pennsylvania, I would scarce ly expect them to forget their natural rights, their training in life, their fideli ty to the Government and obedience to its laws, to reason them into passive submission. It would certainly bo a painful expe rience to the freeman of my State, and would cause him to be restive from the time he put the seed in the ground un til it grew to maturity, and after all his toil to feel, as it unfolded and generous nature giving it her assistance, that it was constantly watched hy officers of the Federal Government, and thut he I was restrained in the sale ol the produc tion of the soil; that Federal officials and agencies surrounded him ; that the tax-gatherers were also after him; that he would he arrested for the sale of the smallest particle excep , in the direction that the Government indicated; ami that lie would he dragged from his home to the Federal courts, perhaps far distant and visited with pains and penalties and the expenditure ofmoney for the sale of the production of the soil which he was trained to believe was as free as the labor of his life. Gentlemen from the South and West who represent constituencies largely interested and occupied in the production of this staple have oli'ered to this House in the long discussion to which this bill has been subjected in stances of wrong and oppression which it is not improper to denounce as cases of wrong and oppression, il not tyranny, from which they should he relieved. Jl may be that these taxes were necessary when the Government was in need and the Treasury empty. It is possible that the Governmeht may have been wrong in the supposition that those who pro duce tobacco are alone to be watched, but there was no rational excuse, no apology bearing the semblance of just ice that warranted the studied inven tion of inost arbitrary and oppressive laws to punish or control the political action ot a large clement of Southern industry. 1 simply repeat the truth of history when 1 say that this wantonly oppressive law was conceived and long administered in the South mainly to coerce the political action of the help less citizen, and it has left a record of vindictive oppression by corrupt or reckless partisan officers that is an in effaceable reproach upon the boasted Republic of the world. J>uring the discussion on this floor the distinguished gentleman from New York | Mr. Hewitt) at every phase of that discussion asked that alcohol used in mechanical industries, in the arte, and in medicines should be relieved from the burden of taxation ; and he brought to the advocacy of his amend rnents unanswerable arguments, but, like all the amendments for oppressed industries, they were rejected by the majority of thjs House. Can it be pos sible, Mr. Speaker, that this is one of the remnants of that terrible war through which we passed ? Can there still linger with the majority of this House a disposition to punish and to inflict that punishment by the exercise of the power of taxation? If so, it is inconsistent with our recent history and not in harmony with the Govern ment or institutions of fhe country. If it is not so, why is it that the mnjority of this House so stubbornly adheres to the unjust and oppressive legislation which w.a now (Attempt to repeal or modify. TIIE SACRED OBLIGATION TO PA* IfttNglOVS. As I understand it, the relief afforded to the people of the United States in the hill now about to pass is about $17,- 000.000, and it ip admitted that the sur plus revenue for this year will be about $135,000,000, or an average of £)} un necessarily wrung from each adult ma|o citizen in the country, already heavily burdened by municipal, county, and State taxation. This is a small reduc tion. It is not the reduotion that was anticipated or expected or demanded I y the people. We stand still in the I resence of a great danger to the future of this country. We excite a desire to take from tlio public Treasury. If we leave this amount of money unappro priated, appropriations are demanded. We have given liberally to all those who have made demands without inquiring too closely into their justice.' We have given $100,000,000 to pensions, but that, sir, could not he refused. The Forty fifth Congress, by solemn enactment, acknowledged a debt duo to the sol diers of the Republic and accompanied it with u promise to pay. The amount has been ascertained this year, and this Congress did no more than to accept the obligation and redeem the promise made by the United States; and as the mew to whom the promise was made are growing old and are most of them poor, and as the debt lias been due a long time, it is our duty to pay it as promptly as possible and to give ali the necessary appliances tor the speedy settlement of their claims. It is too lute toqiieslion the wisdom or the justice of that law. It is on our statute books, tho debt is acknowledged, and you might as well go before the Ameri can people and attempt to repeal the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the Constitution of the United •States, which contains the lessons ar.d logic of the war, or you might a;; well expect the passage of a bill to restore the wages of* the members ol this House, either of which would be quite impossi ble. The legislation of this Government must be in ttie spirit of even-handed justice to all interests; labor demands nothing more; it will be. content with nothing loss; ami we are offering it a stone by this bill wjien it asks us for j bread. We should legislate ( rtl e uni ty of all interests, for all legitimate pursuits and interests are in harmony ; and that is what this body has persist ently refu-ed to do by rejecting all amendments designed to ailord lelief to the most important but b-u-t favored industrial class. Not being a member of any committee charged with t'ae I preparation ot business lor the conside ration of the 11r.u.-e, I have waited lor j seven months the action ol the Com ; niittee of Ways anil Means with the ex pectation that a bill would be offered j giving reasonable and just relief to all j interests now oppressively taxed and j that would largely reduce the surplus jin the Treasury ; hut the measure now before us caused me no little surpii e ] because of its failure to meet the most pressing necessities of the eountiy. I have been connected all my life with the indu-tiial interests of the people of my State, and at times, in the discharge of official duties, have had somewhat to do with the promotion ol the prosperity and happiness of our great producing population ; and I mu t say that this measure will be justly and greatly disappointing to the intelligent people of all pursuits, and must di-turb rather than trunquiiize existing cias disputes. Recognizing the k-w meri torious features of the hill, I sec them unjustly overbalanced by errors of omission and coinmi-ion, and the meas ure as a whole being an unjust dici imi nation against the producing interests -f the country, I must oppose it.- piss age. RELIEVING CAI'ITAI., NOT INUl'sTliV. This bill reduces the income of the Government, as I hare said, about sl7- OtHJJHK). True, the tax on matches is, taken oil', whatever it amounts to. The bill removes the tax on patent medi cines, and 1 am not sure that in reach ing for luxuries thai injure and in tax ing those which please the appetite the poor man might not, in many instance.-, be as well off if this tax were retained, for patent med.cincs as otten injure as they give relief. The hill takes the tax off bank checks, banking capital, and bank deposits, perfumery, Ac. I am not here to question the wis.lon ol this, nor am I here to complain ol any relief that may be given to any of tin- inter ests or business pursuits ol the people of this country ; hut 1 do say, sir, as it is just and right to declare, that there is no substantial change or modification of existing laws in the bill now upon passage which oilers any relief to the producers or to the labor of this country. If we are to reduce the income of tlis Government so as to compel its econom ical administration, then we should make our relief fall upon all classes alike. There should be no partiality in our legislation; there should be no discrimination against the industries of any c|aep of our people. We should as far as possible, reduce the expenses of the Government, and take special care to reduce the revenues of the Govern ment in such manner as to afford the greatest measure of relief to the one great fountain of our wealth, the indus trial classes. Removing taxes on bank checks, bank deposits, perfumery, Ac., does not relieve industry. It does afford needed relief to capital, for some of the war taxes on capital are needlessly op pressive now, but the supreme want of the country to-day is tiie utmost relief from taxation on the necessaries of life, or the luxuries which have become nec essaires hy habits, which enter into the daily consumption of our industries . The whole wealth, the honor, the hope of the Republic are in the producing classes. They are the source of our prosperity in peace and our safety in war, and the first duty of the Govern ment is to be generously just to our in dustrieii j|i the reduction of needless taxes. OCR DANGEROUS f.ENVR4I.UCP IVE4I.TIJ. It must not be forgotten, Mr. Speak or, tliut the centralized wealth and the money power, the incorporated capital of the country, with vast ppr-cial privi leges, cannot he contemplated without grave apprehensions for the future. That powerful class, and the immense in terest they represent, are ever heard on this floor, and it has required the most stubborn struggles between the law makers of the people and the law-mak ers of privileged plasses to gain any measure of justice for the Government. They are ever present in and about the department of authority. They are felt in the executive, the judicial, and the 'egislative channels of power, while the industrial classes are unheard and un felt snye as brave men plead their cause in the face of Rggreaaive, organized, and often vindictive combination! 0 almost boundless wealth. Nor are these influences any more nearly equal in the choice of our rulers I and law-makers. The first legislative ' office of tho nation is rapidly becoming n position that only the successful cap italist can attain, and our popular elect ions have become ton great degree sub ject to the baleful control of capita), re gardless of the merits of men and meas ures. The struggle for that absolute equality of legislation for all classes, rich and poor, great and small, that is demanded by the Government has been going on actively during the last score of years, and the growing power of the profiting classes over the industrial class | es is creating profound fretlulness, as is I now visible in every section of land. I am not hero to reflect in the least de- I gree the views of the aggrieved. The honest industry ol the country J rejects and abhors the destructive doc trines ol the commune, but it does de i mawd even-handed justice, absolute equality in the laws which impose the burdens of government, and the bill before the House is shamefully defect ive in its refusal ot relief to the produc ing classes. It is a false pretense of les sening the exactions upon one industry ; it will be accepted as another step in special legislation for the benefit ol Un privileged class that represents capital, and it must provoke deeper unrest and intensified opposition from the now se verely suffering laborof the land. J.ook out over the nation and learn what the gradual growth and almost insensible acceptance of this policy of legislation has produced, and you will not be amaz ed to hear the murmurs ol the people S coining up from every centre ot indus try. Never before in the more than hundred years of the Republic lias wealth been so vastly centralized as it is now. We can all remember when the mill- I ionaire was one ol the rarest creations ol j our Iree institutions; now they are coun j ted by scores in all our great financial j circles, and private fortunes are counted : not merely by millions, but by tens and | scores,and even by hundreds of milions. j liiis rapid and general centiahzation ol j wealth has not been created by product ive indus ry. It is very largely the crea tion ol reckless and unscrupulous cun rung alike in business and politics; I alike 10 demoralizing legitimate bus iness and demoralizing public legislation to serve the ends ol lieartless specula lion. Tne whole market values ot tbe country are to-day at the im-rcy ot cen tralized wealth: it can enlarge or re duce values at pleasure, and it does so tiy sudden convulsions in the channels ol speculation as often it can profit thereby. Let us not torget that here, as el-ewhere, where|wealth accumulates men decay, and the decay of industry must date the decline of all the power and grandeur of the Republic. .11 ST I.AIVS FOR I.AIiOR AM) CAI'ITAI. There must be just laws for labor aud capital, and mv earnest '-rote-i against t'i sb i 11, s foandi don it: fai ure to reduce the revenues enough, ami its almost ut ter failure to relieve industry with cap ital. And this disappointment is thrown upon our industrial people at a time when the harmony between la la r and capital that is absolutely cssi n tial to the prosperity of both is sadlv in j terruj led l.y strikes ami estrangruents |in many sections of the land. Labor ; ha as a rule been obedient to law in its \ contest tor increased compensation to i meet the increased co-t of living, and it I respects and obeys tl.e law because it i looks for just laws atl'ecting its interests, j It dem mils no favoritism, no class leg islation, no special privileges, but it wants the necessaries of life first reliev ed of oppressive taxation ami luxuries afterwards. A Slar Route Failure. | run (IRANI) JLRV I>() NUT KIND AN INDICT MENT LION TIIK NEW EVIDENCE. Washington, July 14. The pioceedings in the regular Star route cases to-day were of a dull and unimportant character. Some more evidence was taken and more papers submitted concerning the route liom Saguache to Lake City, Colorado, and then the court adjourned until Monday. The feature of the day was the entrance ot the grand jury anil their announce ment lb >t they had found no indict merit upon the new evidence presented to them. The Court seemed greatly surprised at the announcement. The grand jury was then discharged until ()ctober 9. When questioned relative to the ac tion of the grand jury upon the new evidence presented to then, Mr. Bliss said that his official position prevented him from giving any information upon that subject, lie had faithfully present ed the evidence in its best light, exam ining and cross-examining Mr. Walsh at length, and while he did not feel dis posed to criticise the motives which in tluenced thejury, in his opinion the evidence was amply sufficient to found a presentment upon, ltwasonly natural that wlu-re a United .States Senator was concerned thejury should require the most convincing proof before bringing in a presentment. He understood that the jury was largely Democratic iu its com position. From other sources it is re ported that thejury was thoroughly fa miliar with the connection between Sen ator Kellogg and Walsh, as shown in the testimony taken before theCongresional investigating committee before-any evi cence had been presented to tjiem. This is regarded as a peculiar circum stance, although it may perhaps he ex plained by the fact that at least two of tlye jurors were gentlemen of snnio pn litical notoriety and supposed to be well informed upon such matters. It is also understood that nineteeen ol the twen ty-three jurors were opnosed to a pre sentment upon the evidence upon the final vote. The failure of the grand jury to pre sent anybody tor indictmeut on the al leged new testimony causes much un favorable comment. By some mysteri ous means, it is said, the grand jury room presented an array of information on the part of some of the jurors that quite astonished the government prose cutor and showed some judicious cram ntiug. — , m Two Indiana farmers quarreled about a wrench, and went to law. The costs of court and counsel fees have reached $1,700, both litigan's have mortgagi d t leir propei ty to taise the money, ar.d the case is tontinr d. Sound Views. UottCoH Coutdliipfn Plica Bdeccii. J here is much in tiio present condi tion of the country to mak" men think together, act togeth together, a to general and public matters; to bring ntcn toward e ich other who have thought apart in the ye*rs and data that are gone. Old party issue* have largely passed away—parsed away at least as dividing party lines. We are in a period of peace and prosperity. But let us never forget that p wperity often tests and tries the wisdom of nations arid men more, even, than adversit. The tendency i H to spending largely. The tendency in government is to pro fuse, perhaps lavish, appropriations of the public money. In the all'sirs of gov ernment and in the affairs of business, unless I greatly mistake the lesson, the need and the admonition of the hour is frugality, foresight and care. We have more need of the break than .steam in a good many ways just now. An "Almost" Shedding of bore. Wanliington C>rr<-|>otideiicc ltepiibllrrn. Nobody knew at the time how near we came to having bloodshed on the Door ol the House last week, Kobeson now says that he should have shot V hittliorne had he struck him. "I should have killed him if he had hit rne, he is reported as saying to Joe Jdackhurn. Lverybody expected to see Whitthorne strike Kobeson, as he stode toward him and charged him With lying. Had the space ov-r wiiich he was obliged to walk to reach Kobeson been shorter, he might not have been able to contiol his passion. Kobeson was aimed. He went to the House pre pared to befend himself. He knew Whitthorne's pas.-ionate nature, and hs knew that lie should kindle the passion. What woo d have happened bad Kobe son shot Whitthorne down there in the I area, before the whole House, we can I only conjeelure; Put there would have been more than one exchange of shots. A ci mot's irea£ ot lightning occurred j at the house ol Alexander Avery, Con terville, Ala. None ol the inmates were killed, hut the shoes o! each were destroyed Toe stroke foil on Miss •losie Avery's neck, and passing down the body threw the shoe from one loot with terrific force a great distance. Ihe shoes on the h*et of her mother were cut to pieces, while Mr. Logan, a guest, iiad his shoest ings torn com pletely out, the sole of one shoe wrenched oil and a hole torn in the other. IT is reported that the well known castor-oil plant, now generally u-ed in ornamental gardening, is fatal to in sect life. A single specimen placed in a io:'ii infested t.y thes is said to have ! caused tlie tormenting insects to disap pear with reniarkul'ie rapidity, their corpses being atterward tound 011 the floor. + A lawyer is about the ouiy man that ever niad any thing by opposing a wo man's w ill. Xew . f drcrfiscnienls. Bellefonte Enterprises i* t the Xrw V,ar Rvl/efonb I i I promises to develop Into the must prosperous of our in/mid tonus—enter i prise ajter enterprise is being started by the capital of our public spirited citizens. The C'AK WORKS are run nier/ to their full capacity, our (Ji.tss W OITKS ore opening with every show of succe-s, the STEM, WORKS will give on ploymcnt to 100 men, the NAII, WORKS, for whose success Gen. Hearer vouches, will shortly offer employment to hun dreds of people—all these public < nler prises will pid Bellefonte. In the van of prosperous ami wide-awake towns. Here, then, is room and place for lively, spirited and active young men. A mono the bcsl and mod successful business enterprises organized recently is the LAUGH AXL WELL FILL LI) FURNITURE ROOMS of R. R. SPA XGLER& CO., opposite the Rush House—nothing like it in the County. Jj visitors to Jlellefoutc will only take the trouble to call ut our Store, they will be surprised at the quality, style and prices of first-class Furniture. He are aiming to buy all goods direct ly from the manufacturers without the intervention if agents, so us to offer goods at bottom figures. ORE profit is sufficient. He propose to fill your homes with Parlor Suits, Bed Room Suits, Sofus, Odd Chairs, Tables, any- thing and everything in Furniture at | prices lower than yon can get in this County. We mean just what we say. Wc a/so offer the public the services of Mr. HENRY SWART/,, who has a thorough knowledge of the UNI)ERi fA KIXQ business, and who will keep on hand COf FINS, TRJMMIXGS,