The Democrat. FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1890. THE deepest part of tho ocean is prob ably the spot where McGinty went down. DURING 1889, 68,255,000bu5he1s of Pitts burgh coal were sent out to Cincinnati and Louisville. 41 A VIGOROUS foreign policy in power," and th e new Republic in Brazil still un recognized. Great times these. THIS and all other Rcpuliean Ad ministrations have great appreciation for the soldier's services— when lie lias been a Republican. CONGRESS is thoroughly awakened. A bill is to be passed immediately to pre vent members from being swindled out of their saleries. Strike a Congressman's pocket and liis loyalty of duty comes to the surface at once. IN view of the fact that there is likely to be no ice obtainable from our rivers and lakes for next summer's supply, it is in order for Congress to put a heavy duty on Canadian ice to develop the infant in dustry of making ice by artificial means. FARMERS in parts of Kansas are mak ing fuel of corn ; miners in Illinois and Pennsylvania are starving for want of be ing allowed to mine coal which could be shipped to Kansas anil traded for corn, hut the monopolistic owners forbid. Is it any wonder we have anarchists ? TIIK color line is undoubtedly drawn in Northern as well as Southern communi ties.—Philadelphia Prcse. Right yon ate; but what Republican newspaper has the courage to say so dur ing political campaigns?— HarrMurg Pa triot. CnicAGo is to have the finest Alansonic temple in the world. The cost of the building will he $2,500.000. The inten tion is to build a towering structure of unique design that will far overtop any •of the tall buildings iu the vicinity. The lower thii u- will ho constructed with a view to leasing them for a huge European hf** MUCH interest is attached to the meeting of the non-partisan It-male temperance advocates, to he held in Philadelphia next week. A lively time is expected, us sev eral of the prominent women have ex pressed their intention to declare them selves in a very emphatic manner, and when woman says she lias something to declare, tin country looks on with due PENNSYLVANIA wants to take rank it seems ar> the fir.-t State in the number of divorces this year. In Philadelphia ou Saturday twt n ty-seven divorces were granted in the courts. Applicants for divorces are as relatively numerous in the country, and can gel divorces as readily as in the city or even Chicago. Where will this thing em', unless there are more stiict requirements in the matter of granting divorces ? APPRECIATING our situation several papers are advocating the dredging of tnc rivers about this place. It is certainly true that many tiings are done bv the national government that are far less praiseworthy. One thing is sure—we Shall be subject to inundations unless either the rive: s are dredged or the level of the place raised : and in our present condition we are hardly able to d-> either. The people here are willing to do what they can, but it is to be hoped that the Pennsylvania representatives in Congress will lend their encouragement!, to the proposal for Congressional aid. A TARIFF org an congratulates Mr. Wana maker upon his recovery of $500,000 as his share of the $0,000,000 which the de cision of the Supreme Court will compel the Treasury to repay to importers of rib bons. It says "the half-million of dol lars belongs to hint, and we arc glad he is going to get the money." This is con spicuously untrue. The money belongs —or aught to belong—to the customers of Mr. Wanamaker aud of the other mer chants who added the duty to the price of the ribbon in making their prices. But under our tariff laws it is always the consumer who is taxed and robbed. ACCORDINO to n reportjust published by the bureau of statistics, the United B'ates imported from Brazil $00,000,000 worth of goods in 1889, of which $45,- 000,000 was coffee, $2,200,000 hides, $7.- 500,000 rubber and nearly $5,000,000 sugar. We exported less than one-sixth this amount, or a little over $9,000,000 of which $4,000,000 was bread stuffs, and SOOO,OOO provisions, the two being about one-half of the total, while mineral oil furnished nearly $1,000,000 more. Brazil limited her purchases to $9,000,000 worth, because she found she could buy manu factured products cheaper elsewhere. Surely both countries might profit by en larging our manufactured exports in this case. The Pan-American should grapple this. The same is true of our trade with other South American countries. WE are citizens of a magnificent coun try. It lias a great history anil it has a greater future. The Democratic parly be'ongs to no one corner of it, but it thrives in every State ami Territory. It be lieves that the sectional Republican party is pursuing a sectional policy, but it has never stooped to the baseness of accus ing half of the American people of being hired by foreign nations to bestray the interests of their native land, though Re publican policy has that effect. It has jDcvei lost sight of the fact that the na tion is greater than par'y, and it has never confused party loyalty with loyalty to the nation. The Democratic party is the party of one united country, whose children will differ in regard to this or that piece of legislation, but will be abso lutely united in their love of their native land. WUKItli NICKEL. COMES FROM. How it iH Mined and Prepared Tor the A uteri can Market. In the Copper Cliff mine, near Sud bury, Canada, it is said, more nickel is being produced titan the entire market of the word calls for at current prices. A little branch railway off the main line of the Canadian raciflc railway, four ntiies iu lentil, leads out to the mine, which opens into the face of a crag of the blown, oxidized Laurentiau rock, characteristic of this region. The miners arc now at work at a depth of about 300 feet below the surface. As fast as the nickel and copperbearing rock is hoisted out it is broken up and piled upon long beds or ricks of pine wood, to be calcined, or roasted, for tie purpose of driving out the sulphur which it contains. The roasting process is of the nature of lime kilning or charcoal burning. Each great bed of ore requires from one to two months to roast. When roasted the rock goes to the principal smelter, a powerful blast furnace, ''jacketed" —in mining phrase—willi running water, to enable it to sustain the great heat requisite to reduce the crude, obdurate mineral into fluidity. The dross of molten mass is first al lowed to flow off, and afterward the nearly pure nickel and copper, blended together in an alloy called the '"mat," or matte, is drawn off at the base of the furnace vats into barrow pots and wheel ed away, still liquid and fiery hot, to cool in the yard of the smelter. The mat contains about 70 per cent, of nickel, the remaining 30 per cent, copper. When cool, the conical pot loaves of mat can easily be cracked in pieces by mcuus of heavy hammers. The frag ments are then packed in laurels and shipped to Swansea-in Wales and to Ger mauy, where the two constituent metals are separated and refined by secret pro cesses which are very jealously guarded by the mauufacttiters. So jealously is the secret kept that no cue in America litis yet been able to learn the process, idlhouuh one young metallurgist spent three years at Swansea, working as a common laborer in the factories in order to procure it. At present there are pro duced daily at. the copper cliff mine about nutty pit loaves of mat, each weighing near 450 pounds, an output which yielded an aggregate of more than 4,000 tons of nickel uveal - . TO MAKK M KUHY over. The cubic is u great in veil ion. It en ablest New York to sneeze as soon as the influenza gppeared in London.— Milwaukee News. St. Peter—What is your cla m for recognition and admittance? Newly Arrived Spirit—ln life I was never guilty of confessing to any annoy ance from a woman's high bonnet in a theatre. St. Peter—Angelic man! ileie is a check for a front seat.— Pittsburgh Bulletin. A good tiling can lie carried 100 far. A Huston man, who had been told that lie \vi s about to die, asked the doctor tor his hill, saving that lie did not wish to depart Imm his life-long rule. " Pay as you go."— Hume Sentinel. Inquisitive Citizen—What's the mutter with tlie man ? Been run over by a rail road train ? Ambulance Surgeon—Worse than that, lie was caught among the women in a bargain rush at Seller's. — Philadelphia Inquirer. " You shouldn't have taken ' No ' for an answer so readily, Charley," said his more experienced friend. " Don't you understand that a girl's ' No ' often means ! Yes ? " " She didn't say ' No.' Jack," re sponded Charley, utterly without hope. •' She said ' Naw.' " — Boston Beacon. Some men have to die to head a proces sion.—Atchison Globe. There is usually a good deal of back talk when two women get together to discuss the bustle.— Boston Courier. "You are about to marry, George ? " •' It is a fact my boy." " I'ermit me to congratulate you'. Of course, she is the sweetest girl in the world ? " " Well, I should say so." " Beautiful in form and face? ' " You bet! " " Angelic in disposition ?" "You're talking." " Worth her weight in gold or dia monds ? " " Gold or diamonds! Why, man, here in January she is worth her weight in coal! " — Boston Cornier. " The saloon," he solemnly drawled, "is the house that Jagg built, — Buffalo Courier. Best place to hold the World's Fair— right around tlie waist.— Boston Herald. Mother—You don't seem tired for a young lady who attended a dancing party iast night ? Jennie—lt was a plumbers' ball, you know, and everything went so slowly • that one could not get tired.— Boston Her ald The Flood Commission meets in Phila delphia this week, and the full report of the expenditures will be presented. It is also intimated that this will be the occa sion of presenting that manifesto of Gov ernor Heaver'B which is expected to make mince meat of General Hastings.—Pitts burgh Dispatch. THE PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH. Tlieir Program in This State —Some Notable Characteristics. New York World. It is now 172 years since the Quaker Assembly of Pennsylvania ordered that none but English-speaking immigrants should be the subjects of naturalization. Not satisfied with the workings of this law the same body provided, a few years later, that every foreigner to the English government arriving after the passage of the act should pay a duty of forty shil lings, atui swear allegiance to Great Brit ain and the province. These and other measures discouraging the prospective immigrants who fell within their scope, were all aimed at tiic Germans, who, for some reason or other, seemed possessed of a wild ambition to land on the west ern shore of Delaware. Prior to the year 1727 more than 50.000 of tbeni were snugly established in the Quaker pro vince. In spite of severe laws more were coming by every ship, and the followers of Penn were greatly disturbed in spirit at the invasion. Strange things have come to pass since then. The Quaker lias vanished. There remains nothing to tell the story of his former greatness but the quaint old bury ing-ground on Arch street and a dozeu faded shad-belly coals, heirlooms in as many Philadelphia garrets. He perished in no great tumult of arms, nor by the march of any pestileucc. He was neither indolent nor lacking insbewdncss ; he did not starve to death, nor did the Germans so much as crowd him. lie died simply because he was too good to live—a melan choly warning which has not been lost upon bis successors in Pennsylvania poli tics. But the proscribed German stolidly bided his time. He came, paid his duty, and stayed. He took possession of the rich farms along the Susquehanna, the Lehigh aud Juniata, and filled the glrur ious valleys which lead down to the rivers. He began to have things his own way. and when the new ordet was established, after the Revolution, lie held in his hands the political power of the great Stale which lie Itnd turned iniou garden where the Gods might dwell. The most timorous Quaker, fearful of German ascendency, eon (1 scarcely have had a prevision of the complete triumph attained by his Teu tonic rival at the beginning of the present century. The Quaker was already little more than a memory ; the German the potent fact of the social aud political order. But lo! when the victor proclaim ed his conquest it. was in a strange ton-ue :he no longer thought nor felt as a German. The fatherlaud wits not be yond seas, but here. Germany and nil its interests and family ties, was no more to him than it was to Patrick. He had be come a Pennsylvania Dutchman. The Teutonic immigrant brought with him to Pennsylvania only the limited vocabulary of a German peasaut nearly 200 yiurs ago. His pronunciation of the native tongue was often inaccurate, of the English worse, and the deviation from the vernacular lias increased with every generation until all semblance of the original is in many eases lost. " Topper." meaning hurry : ••fat." forward " n on er," underfatlish," done ot' finished, are a few examples of many words not eisily accounted for. Neither a German nor an Englishman would make much ot •" eoombera."' The former would say kartoffel, the latter potato. Bui our Pennsylvania Dutchman examines the tuber, and, after much smelling and tast ing decides that it is a berry. "If it isn't a berry ves dcr deihinker is it ? " satd one of them to me the other day, and "coom bera," be calls it, doubtless led to bis word, in spite of my friend's explanation, through a foggy recollection of bis re mote ancestors, who named it die gruud birne, the ground pear. With words de noting hesitancy or doubt the Pennsyl vania Dutchman is well provided from over the Rhine, but when he wishes to express the idea of certainty, promptness or quickness of perception he is obliged to use the language of his Anglo-Saxon neighbor, from whom he learned about all he knows of these qualities. To the same source also does he go for his profanity, once be became really ugly. But that proves nothing one way or the other. The English is after all, the only language in which a man can swear and get anything like satisfaction. The prov erb which bids us beware the fury of the patient man is a good one to remember in dealing with him, for he is slow to wiatli. lie is essentially a peasant; in its original and least offensive meaning a boor. He has no word denoting courtesy. In good will and friendliness he abounds: of tne little social amenities and court grades which add so much to the life of alt other people he knows nothing. For example: Although it may lie stated as a generalization that all of them can speak English, association with them is likely to prove embarrassing if you do not know tbeir language. You may be an invited guest at their house, but all conversation among themselves will be in their own native Dutch, without any translation or apologies to you. And they are great talkers. It would seem impossible for rudeness to go farther ; yet no offense lias been Intend ed, and they would not comprehend your indignation if expressed. Of course they do not neglect you, >iud will tulk much to you. But every com ment not particularly addressed to you will be in their own language. They will argue and dispute among themselves with great voluoility upon the subject in hand, but no matter how deeply you may be interested in the matter you will have too guess at what they are saying. You become indignant and feel like picking up your hat and leaving, but that would be a great mistake if it is at all near a meal time. You will never get a better dinner than they serve to the farm hands every day of the year. Stay to dinner or supper and you will forgive them every thing. Talk about your French cooks—hum bug ! Leaving out tjie one item of beef, which they boil, roast or fry until it is as dry, flat and tasteless as a chip, the Penn sylvania Dutch women are the best cooks in the world. If the beef is unsatisfac tory you can have a slice of fried ham that would almost convert a vegetarian : potatoes will be whipped into a mountain of savory cream . the big Lima beans will disolve at the touch of the tongue ; the corn, tomatoes, asparagus—ail things that ever grew in garden or in field—have lost not one hrenth of their fresh and dainty flavor. The bread is as light and white as new-fallen snow, the butter was churned yesterday and the preserves and jellies are miracles of delicious sweetness. At such a feast you forget your bodily imitations, but cat as if you are a spirit that occupies all space and can never he filled. IMPROVEMENTSONKAILItOAI) STREET A Whole ot New Structure* That Will Make a Fine Appearance. A three story brick business block is to be erected by Mr. Tlios. E. Howe on the corner of Railroad and Jackson streets. It will front about 100 feet on Railroad street and extend back nearly the same distance to the alley. On the opposite corner of Railroad and Jackson streets the Turners will erect a fine building, equipped with all the hest and latest improvements known to the Turners' science. In the spring Mrs. Oswald will have her new building oti the corner of Clinton and Railroad streets cased with brick. Is is also said that before long a fine new structure wil occupy the other corner of Clinton and Railroad streets, now oc cupied by Bostert's feed store. Ail these improvements together with the two fine new blocks now being com pleted on Railroad street, will make it quite a business center as wed as one of tl:e best looking streets in the city. I).iatli ola Former Resident of tin; County in Mexico—i Valuable Milling Pio|,erty Awaiting it Claimant. Some t me since Postmaster Uaumerre. ceivcl u letter from Charles C. Thomp son. of Chiton, Durango, Mexico, request hint to notify the ueirs of Newton Lloyd of the death of that person on December Otli. 1889. The letter state,! that Lloyd hail owned a valuable mining property in the State ■ f Durango, and that unless some steps were taken soon to claim die cstaict it would revert to the mining com pany in whose employ he was at the time of his death. Inquire developed the fact that he was a son of Evan Lloyd, and born and raised about two and a half miles lrom Ebensburg. flis parents are dead, but a sister-in-law, Mrs. Benjamin Lloyd, whose husband, a brother 01 Newton's, has been dead for some years, resides near that place. There are also some rel atives living near Paddy's Run, Ohio. Steps are being taken to enter a claim on behalf of the relatives, for the estate. In telligence had been received before of the death of Lloyd but no mention had been made of the property awaiting a claimant. Tli* (irent Take of Siberia. By far the deepest lake in the world is Lake Baikal, in Siberia, which is in every way comparable to the great Canadian lakes as regards size ; for, while its area of 9,000 square miles makes it about equal to Erie in superficial extent, its enormous depth of between 4,000 and 4,- 500 feet makes the volume of its waters al most equal to that of Lake Superior. Al though its surface is 1,800 feet above the sen level, its bottom is nearly 3,000 feet below it. The Caspian lake or seas, as it is usually called, has a depth in its southern basin of over 8,000 feet. Lake Muggoire 2,800 feet deep, Lake Como nearly 2,000 feet, and Lago-di-Garda, an other Italian lake has a depth in certain places of 1,700 feet. Lake Coustance is over 1,000 feet deep, and Huron and Michigan reach depths of 000 and 1,000 feet. A (iood Suggestion Uraddock Daily News. After the Hood at Johnstown, Capt. Jones, who was one of the first to reach the stricken city with supplies and help, strongly advised that the rivers be deep ened and widened, or that the town he filled up, or both, as the only way in which they could avoid 'lie floods with which Johnstown Ims always hail to con tend against. The impoverished town was unable to do this, nor is it likely to be able to do this for years to come, if ever, and li.cy will continue to lie drowned out nt intervals, and the national government should step in and do this work, which, perhaps, might cost several hundred thousand dollars, and it would be doing a more desetving work than some that it does do. A dispatch from the Curator of the -Mu seum of Egyptian Antiquities at Boolak informs the public that the tomb of Cleo patra has been discovered. There are those who did not know that this interest ing shrine bad been lost, but the general verdict will lie that its identification is cause for widespread satisfaction. Cleo patra's tomb offers a -Mecca for the erotic novelist. Of all the women who have come thundering down the ages Cleo patra is the most picturesque. Were she alive to-day she could make a very satis factory lecture engagement. NORTH OF COUNTY ITEMS. Register and Recorder Blair is laid up with the grippe. A local institute will be held at Bt. Augustine to-day. Deputy Treasurer M. I). Bearer has been siek for several days. Some of Ebensburg'* principal -troits are axle deep with mud. The road from Ehensburg to Curr.dl town in well nigh impassable. Nobody ever saw the like or wntiis lo see it again. The County Commissioners on Monday reappointed 1). A. McGpugh as clerk anil Jesse S. Bolsiugcr as janitor for the Court House for the ensuing year. Mr. W. C. Scro'th, ot Ihe Eagle Motel, Carrolltown, is recovering from a severe attack of neuralgia which confined him to his bed fro.n Saturday to Tues lay at noon. The entire amount of the county loan of $50,000 lias been taken by the Johns* 'own Savings Bank at par. The bonds, whtcli arc being printed in Philadelphia, bear 4 per cent, interest and will lie is sued as soon as they arrive. Hou. John 'l. Griffith, of Kane, who was in Ehenbuig at the death of his father. ex-Sheriff Griffith, was taken suddenly sick on Monday with influenza and was too ill to attend his father's funeral on Tuesday. In Court on Monday, District Attorney Fenlon asked permission to enter roAle prosequi* in several cares of prosecution for illegal liquor sclliug, held over from last court. Judge Johngton refused to permit the prosecution to lie discontinued. Mrs. Ellen Jane Luther, wifeo' Edward Luther, of Altoona, died at the residence of her brother-ia-law, Cosmas D. Burns, in Altoona, on Tuesday, from con sumption. Her remains were taken to St. Augustine on Wednesday and were iuterred in the Catholic cemetery at that place on Thursdr.y. Johnstow. ' Petition. | Lancaster Intelligencer. The local flood committee of Johns town ! ave determined to petition to Con ' gross for a half million to he used iu ' dredging and improving the Coneimiiigh I and Bionycreik. iii the time ail flood ' damages have been repaired and all nee i e-.-arv safeguards established it will preh ; aliiy be admitted that money would have ' been minlr h\ abandoning the site of j Johnsti -vn, and bui'ding homes for tlie | survivors somewhere else in that region. I The dredging of these stream , if under j taken at all, is wmk f the Slate r.nlier | Mian the general Government, for the lain! ] drained by the streams and to be bene j fitted by their improvement is all in ! Pennsylvania, and the State could hardly j furnish a more perfect hiding-place for a j half million dollars. The Johnstown j survivors have been eousiilerately and I liberally trca'e l by the State and | country, lint those wiip jmw form I the population of the olaec seetn !to feel it their mission in life to scramble for all that '.here is the least | chance of getting They seem toleel that they have about exhausted the patience of the State, and the surplus wealth of Uncle Sam naturally tempts them to ap ply for this half million from the National Treasury. It is an illustration of the evil of a surplus. The dam no longer t ireat eus the new town is built further from the water, aud if Johnstown is still inse cure it would pay better to buy it out than to sink money in the effort to con trol those mountain livers with their steep rocky beds. Kiliier State or nation could tind many better places for tbe expenditure of money and Johns town can only claim special con sideration because of her terrible misfor tune. That very plea, however, should argue against the petition for dredging. Why do anything to encourage the settle men! and repopulation of so dangerous a valley, a valley where the people ban be come so trained to floods that they retired to the second stoiies of their houses with out alarm on the day of the disaster ? Millions spent on those river channels can only modify, not remove, the cvil 4 In other paitsof the State it might tiay very well to take expensive precautions against floods, but when a tnan under takes to change the face of nature be should carefully note its expression, and in Cambria county it is certainly forbid ding. liloomtng in January. carrolltown News. Air. J. A. Caldwell, publisher of the new country atlas, who made a brief but pleasant call nt this office on Tuesday, informed us that lie picked a uumbcr of pansy blossoms—enough for several boquets, from the St. Lawrence Hotel flower garden, on Monday of the present week. The fact of pansies in bloom on the sixtli day of January on the summit of the Allegheny mountains, knocks the Westmoreland county poach blossom story out in the first round. llrury Ceorge's Trip to Australia. in his paper the Standard Henry George gives the following itinerary of his trip across the country, while on his way to Austratia: " 1 expect to leave New York oil Jan. 32d j to lecture at Bradford, Pa., on the 23d; at Denver, Col., on the 27th and 28th; Los Angeles, Cal., on January 31st and February Ist: to reach San Francisco Feb ruary 4th, and to sail for Sidney on Feb ruary Bth. Where Men can ami Should be Found. At 173 Main street, every Sunday after noon, a large number of men gather to sing and enjoy short talks by young men. To-morrow afternoon Rev. A. W. Con nor, the recently-installed pastor of the Christian Church will address the meet ing, and every young man iu the city will find a welcome. The singing will probably be of an unusually fine character. IN IKON Nl> STEKt. OUR COUNTRY NOW LEADS THE WOULD. Scientific American. The United Stntcs may now lie said to be independent of other countries both in the minim.' of its ores for steel and iron % and also in the manufacture of Ihe fin ished product. Heretofore it has been & asserted and believed that tins country • ; could not furnish the required ores for steel, and resort ImS been had to imported ores: but the great demand for this im portant mineral t.as stimulated tievv re searches arid efforts which nave been crowned with success. The Hake Superior region, for example, lias been so greatly developed that the larger proportion of the supply now comes from that source. '• , j Tee output of Superior ore for 1889 is staled to have been seven millions of f " tons, and the estimate for 1890 is nine mil lions of tons, of which three millions have already been sold at nn advance of 75 cents to $1.35 per ton above last year's rates. It is understood the entire pro duct will be taken by western iron men. Tins may make almost an ore famine here in the cast ; it is not believed the Cubat. ores can be supplied in sufficient quantity to meet the si eel demand of this •* region. There is ltope of steel ores in the Southern States. As for Spain, its whole product of seven and a half millions of tons is required for England, France, Bel gium, aud Germany. All these countries depend largely upon foreign impoilatioos tor the best steel ores. This country alone occupies the satisfactory position of possessing its own steel ore beds, Many ct the southern mines now worked, al- though yielding excellent ores for Iron, contain 100 much phosphorus for ' the best steel. It has, however, been as certained that by the adoption of the basic process, now extensively used in Eng land, the iions from most of the southern coke furnaces can be made to vield excel lent steel. Tiie introduction of the basic process is now in progress at the south and prospects for a large production of good steel in the near future are cheering. 11l addition Ui Hiis there are oilier mines . more recently opened that, are begiiin.ng M to furnish first-el ass steel ores. Ttie prices of iron and steel have ad vanced in Europe to a greater extent than ir. this e mutry, and consequently, except in lilting hack orders, there is at present li tie or .10 market tunc for Itie foreign production. Americans now have almost cxclii-ivc possession of the American market. Flits state of tiling's is likely to continue so long us high prices tire kept up , in Europe; but when a decline takes place, and English inn makers are wip ing to sell without profit, and their steamers return to the old practice bring ing over pig iion without charge as bal last. and rails for a tritte above nothing, it. is possible the r may work into the market again to a small extent. Tiie great piogrcss which lias been made in this country in mine develop ment and i:-: the manufacture of steel and irou will be evident when we consider that it is but little more than twin y j ears since the manufacture of steel rails was begun in this country. In 1807 our pro duct of steel rails was only 3.550 tons. In 1887 it was 3.355,090. or double quantity made in England. As to tig iroi., wean? now producing in aggiegutc about eight millions of tons a vein, all of ivbich we consume, and Enghiu 1* produces about the same, of which site exports much. In steel production the United States isc ahead of Great Britain, our production being about three and a half millions or tons per annum against three and a quar, ter millions fur England. As for iron our product is also much larger than that of tiie royal kingdom, ours being about two and a half millions of tons against one million eight hundred tl ousand tons English production. The advanced prices of iron and steel arc haying a bud effect upon the Brittisli ) ship builders, ana unless a lowering soon> comes, some of them will suffer loss om existing contracts. KNEELING AT A SPRING. Drink, fair maid, trom the spring that bubbles up. Make of your slender bands a dainty cup. And I, from those white hands, would rather drink, & Just as thoukneclcst on the mossy brink, Than taste ambrosia of fair Ganymede. Thou kneelest here—for what graca dost thou plead ? Wouldst thou somo forest god's affection win ? Or dost thou seek—Great ;seott! she's tumbled till mother of Harrison's Mistakes. / t Bedford Gazette. , & Somerset is shaken from centre to cir- x cumference over the tippointuient of Mr. C. P. Ilolderbattm, a Democrat, to a store keeper in the internal revenue service. The people are up in arms. They are de manding the resignations of Collector Warmcastle and Congressman Scull, and will probably tackle President Harrison when they get their blood up to tne necessary pitch. The fool killer is never around when*he is needed. Those Constables. Clearfield Republican. | We notice much debate in journals throughout the State about the election of Constables. Our Court settled the ques tion last year by swearing them in for three years, and took their bonds for that period. This is about what the Legisla. ture intended, but it was done in a bung, ling way. Up 10 its Pull Capacity. The rapidity witli which steel is now t made at the Cambria Iron Company's new mill is at present satisfying the expecta tions of those who constructed it. For the first time since it has been in use the new mill this week came up to its esti mated capacity.