a 3 LIV fH, BY PP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The winter of 1890 is as completely played out as is McGINTY who was one of its most prominent characters. —The picture of FRANKLIN appears on the 1-cent stamp probably as aremind- er that his common sense never de- spised the value of common cents. —Poor old BLAIR, with his scheme of making literary characters of the South- ern “coons,” stands a chance of being voted a bore by his senatorial colleagues. —New York is certainly reduced to extremities when Ler feelings about the loss of the World's Fair are vented in sar- castic flings at the size of Chicago feet. —The big mouths which the swollen Mississippi and Ohio are presenting, show the effect which FoRAKER’S ex- ample has had even upon the rivers of the western country. —SAm JoNES has admitted to a friend that what he is particularly after is the big round silver dollar. There has al- ways been a strong suspicion that Sam evangelized for revenue only. —The proposition to lay a duty of five cents a dozen on imported eggs is merely a tariff cackle the purport of which every farmer of ordinary dis- -cernment will easily understand. —The zeal with which Republican papers are pushing W. L. Scorr into view as a political Boss is a laugha- ble attempt to create the impression that the Democrats of Pennsylvania have a QUAY. —S1. MATTHIAS made something of ‘a spurt this season in creating ice where he found none, but his work was very incomplete, and as a weather prophet ‘he doesn’t stand much ahead of either GREELY or thggroundhog. —Chicago has always been charged with entertaining a desire for the owner- ship of the earth, but it looks as if that small portion of it known as the ‘World’s Fair will be more than the am- bitious city will be able to conveniently manage. —The Pottsville Journal thinks it a big thing that WANAMAKER, who enter- -ed public life without any political ex- perience, is now the leader of the cabi- net. But it isn’t so big a thing when you come to consider the kind of cabinet it is. —The virtue of the Republican Leg- islature of North Dakota would yield to the seduction of the Louisiana Lottery if the circumstance that the eyes of the whole country have been directed to the intended crim. con. didn’t operate as a restraint. —1t is said that President HARRISON is alarmed at the way his understrappers are flinging away the surplus. Butt what else could he have expected ? Didn’t these understrappers work to have him elected in order to be able to fling away the surplus ? —Senator SANDFORD is entittled to the cake as a projector of government paternalism. Probably his project to have the government lend money at 1 and 2 per cent is intended to relieve the western farmers who have been 1m- poverished by taritt taxation. —Public buildings erected at the ex- pense of the government promise to spring up as plentifully as skating rinks did a few years ago. With the prevailing disposition to get rid of the surplus no town of any size should be without a government building. ---After all the Democratic congress- men-elect, whose elections are contested, have been unseated, it may be expected that the House will go on with such in- cidental and subordinate business as leg- islation. As promotive of party interest there seems to be method in Tom REED’S despotic madness. — What did the editor of the Daily News mean when in denying the cor- rectness of a statement published about ANDREWS, hesaid that it was ‘‘a plain and direct fabrication of the truth.” If it was that,why did he say that it wasn’t true ? We are afraid there is something crooked in our young friend's vocab- ulary. —The spring elections in Towa and New York indicate that the winter term of the tariff reform schools was numerously attended by scholars who made rapid advancement in their studies. The schools will be kept open all sum- mer, with a review of lessons in the be- gining of November. GROVER CLEVE- - LAND General Superintendent. —The pious Postmaster General is going to establish in connection with his Bethany Sunday School an institu tion for the training of deacons. Isn't it remarkable that the man who can’t appreciate the injury the country hes sustained from his corruption of a Presi- dential election, should think that it is suffering for want of well trained deacons ? VOL. 35. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Ballot Reform To Be Juggled With. The sudden conversion of Republican papers and politicians in this State to a something that shoald be looked upon with suspicion. The true sentiment of the leaders and their echoing organs legislature when an Australian ballot bill was contemptuously rejected. How is their change of expression on this subject to be accounted for? Why is it that the leading organs and guber- natorial candidates are proclaiming their friendship for a reformed ballot system ? The reason is apparent. There has been such a general demand for ballot reform in consequence of the evi- dent abuses in the last Presidential election, that the Republican leaders deem it wise torecognize the sentiment; but while they shall pretend to yield to it, their purpose is to subject the question to a jugglery similar to that which they used in the treatment of Prohibition. As a Governorand State legislature are to be elected next fall it would not be safe for the Republican manipula- tors to go into the contest in an atti- tude of opposition to a measure so gen- erally demanded by the people, which they would certainly be in it the im- pression created by the Legislature's ad- verse action onthe Australian ballot bill were not counteracted by present pro- fessions of friendship for that measure. The voters must therefore be subjected to the usual process of Republican de- ception. Consequently the organs have broken out with a suspicious unanimity in support of ballot reform, and even Mar Quay’s special selection for Governor, Mr. DALAMATER, has had the part assigned him of discanting before a Republican club on the neces- sity of reforming the ballot. Coming from such 8 quarter isn’t there scme- thing in the transparency of the decep- tion that is calculated to tickle the pop- ular sense of humor? general demand for ballot reform has been met and averted by deceptive promises, and the Governor and State Legislature have been secured, the leaders, who so ingeniously and effec tively juggled with Prohibition, would have no difficulty in being equally suc- cessful in juggling with the ballot reform question. An exchange,of the oposite par- ty, says that no Republican favors re- duction of the tariff beyond the real protection line, and that Congress is of the same mind. But where is the real protection line? Was an average of 47 per cent. duties, as proposed by the Mills bill, high enough to reach it? Would free raw materials, which this congress will be forced to grant, be up to the protection line, although when proposed by the Democrats it was denounced as free trade ? The Camera Again Directed Toward Quay. It woul2 be injustice to our readers to withhold from them the further exposi- tion of the crookedness of MAT QUAY’S public life, made by the New York World from authentic sources, which we give on an inside page of this issue of the WarcamaN. The person who is inculpated in the misdeeds thus ex- posed is the leading political character of our State, who, through his control of the Republican party, controls the State government and exercises powers which affect the interests of every citi- zen. Tt is due the people thus affected that to them should be made known the character of the man who by the most disreputable means has gained so large a measure of political control and pub- lin power. They should know to the fullest extent what kind of a man this Boss is to whom has been comm’ tted supreme authority in dictating the legislative policy, in selecting the execu- ti-e officers and manipulating the funds in the treasury of the great State | of Pennsylvania. (Party attachment and prejudice have ! disenabled many good and honest Re- | publicans from comprehending the true | character of this Boss. To them is "particularly due a thorough ventilation of his disreputable career. If after such an exposure as is being made they continue to maintain him in his place of power, it will then appear that there is no hope for partisans who have allowed themselves to degenerate into blind political fanatics. | favorable regard for ballot reform’ is | i was expressed at the last session of the | | HasTINGS. _ After thedangerto the party|f.om the f Disregarded Preference. It is not surprising that the Repub- licans of Cambria county are not sat- isfied with the way things were fixed in that county for Deramarer. Every evidence exists of a strong prepon- derance of popular feeling among the rank and file of the party in favor of It was shown mn the big blow-out that was given to the General in recognition of his eminent services at the time of the flood, and, in the face of this preference so strongly dis played, that the delegates of the county should be secured for another man by the tricky management of a few of Quay’s local henchmen, is making maby of the Cambria Republicans swear, and it is beginning to be em- phatically declared by some of them that the delegates will have to vote for the man who, if not exactly first in war and first in peace, is certainly first in the heartsof the Conemaugh Repub- licans. A prominent member of the party from Johnstown is reported to have made the remark in Pittsburg the other day, that if the party in Cambria county thought it necessary they would call new primaries and instruct for Hastines,but that such a course wasn’t necessary, as the delegates already chosen would yield to the indisputable preference of their constituents. This is all very pretty to talk about, but when the convention shall assem- ble it will be found that the preference to which these delegates will yield will be the preference of the Boss. EE ST ——The school book supply in this State is entirely in the hands of a syn- dicate which fixes prices to suit its idea of whatshould be its profits. The propo- sition that the State should furnish the school books is alarming this trust, and | the members are reported to be arrang- ing to ‘pool their interests” in opposi- tion to such a measure. The States engaging in the book husiness and sup- plying the needs of the schools is not the most eommendable thing it could do, but probably this sort of paternal- ism will have to be resorted to as the only protection against the robbery of the school bock syndicate. Eiffel to Be Eclipsed. It has been suggested that something that would beat the Eiffel tower as an attraction should signalize the Ameri- can World's Fair of 1892. It looks a. if Chicago has got hold of an idea which it carried out will beat the lofty French structure and put it completely in the shade as a marvel and a show. The scheme is to put the entire exposition under one roof covering a space of 193 acres. Thebuilding itself would consti- tute the greatest curiosity and attrac tion connected with the Fair. It would exceed in extent any structure ever put up, as it would be four times bigger than any exposition building the world has ever seen. The cost of this pavil- lion of iron,steel and glass,as estimated, would be $5,868,000, or $36,204 per acre. Every department of the exhi- btion would be within itsenclosure and under its shelter. According to the plan offered a huge steel tower, capable of holding eight elevators and supporting the whole roof, is to be erected in the center of the circle 3000 feet in diameter. From the top of this tower, 1100 feet high, steel cables are to be run-out to the circumference. On these cables the root is to be laid. The outer wall around the circumference is to be of brick. The idea of the construction of such a building is simplicity itself, as can be readily seen. It is quite plain that the idea is that of & huge tent in which corrugated iron and glass shall play the part of canvas. The roof on the central circle from the tower would be 700 feet above the heads of the visi- tors on the floor. Surrounding the tow- er an amphitheatre, larger than the Coliseum, could be arranged, in which spectacles on a grand scale might be produced before:half a million specta- tors. The tower, it is suggested, might be extended 500 feet above the roof, thus beating the Eiffel Tower by an eighth of a mile. This is a magnificent scheme involv- ing a conception worthy of the wild and windy West. All that will be necessary to make it a halcyon and vociferous success isa liberal appropria- tion trom the government, to be repeat- ed as the necessities of the enterprise may require. . BELLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 14, 1890. NO. 11. Claiming Too Much for Him. A journalistic admirer of President HARRISON, in reviewing the first year of his administration, just past, claims too much—entirely too much—as hav- ing been achieved by that functionary. It is claimed that Mr. Harrison “has sustained and strengthened the Ameri- can protective system.” How he has done this is not clearly set forth, but is left to the imagination of the reader. There should be a more specific de- scription of the strengthening plaster which the President has clapped on the back of the rotten old system of tariff taxation. To the discerning observer it would appear that when half of the Republican manufacturers of New England are clamoring for aremoval of the tariff duties which are “protecting” raw materials, and the farmers of the West, irrespective of party,are moving en masse against the*protection” which increases the cost of their business and of their daily living, there hasn’t been much strengthening of the American protective system during the first year of the Harrison administration. Another big achievement accredited to the initial year of HARRISON'S term is the Pan American conference, which is alleged to have ‘“‘set in motion plans for increasing trade relations between the nations of this continent.” Nothing could be clearer than that the Pan American affair, except as an interna- tional junket, is a dismal failure, and that the delegates will go home thor- oughly convinced that so far as trade relations with the United States are concerned they are not likely to be in- creased. so long as they have to encoun- ter the obstruction of a high tariff. ¥ Liberal With the Sarplus. The work of reducing ‘he surplus goes merrily on, the hughslices applied to pensions not interfering in the least with liberal donations for the erection of government buildings in all the towns of any size in the United States. We obgerve that Scranton has been made jubilant by the doubling up of the government's generosity. Seventy- five thousand dollars was at first grant ed for the erection of the desired build- ing, but this being considered too in- significant a pull, the sum was increas- ed to $250,000,and the Scrantonians are happy 1n the conviction that the sur- plus is being managed by the most liberal set of fellows that ever handled the public cash. Applicants for license to sell li- quor didn’t have any difficulty in Perry county this year in getting what they applied for. The presiding judge hand- ed the whole business over to the as- sociate judges, and as one of them was an applicant for the right to retail the ardent, there wasn’t the slightest hitch in the harmony of the proceedings. There were noremonstrances and every" body who asked for it was granted a license. There was certainly a novelty in seeing a court license one half of itself to engage in the liquor business. But when the Vice President of the United States can be connected with a whisky shop, why shouldn’t a com- mon Pennsylvania associate judge en- joy the same privilege ? A Reluctant Convert. There is evident uneasiness in Re- publican quarters concerning the transition which the tariff views of Senator ArLrisoN, of Iowa, are reported to be going through. There seems to be good grounds for the belief that he isn’t as high a tariff man as he was be- fore the voters of Iowa expressed them- selves as they did at the poles last fall, with a continuation of asimilar expres- sion this spring. The organs of the monopoly system contend that he is as much ot a tariff man as he ever was, and the Senator himself declares that he isn't faltering in his attachment to the principle of tariff robbery, but be- tween the lines of his declaration ap- pear evidences of his alarm, as a a politician, at the new posture the Towa farmers are assuming on the tariff question. Mr. ALLISON naturally feels a great interest in his seat in the Senate, and the close shave he has just made in retaining it will have an effect in modifying his economic views. We expect to see,at no very distant day, the Republican politicians of the west tumbling over to the side of tariff re- form, and there are indications that Arrison will be among the first to flop. Learning a Dear Lesson. The farmers of Kansas are in a bad way. Notwithstanding the fertility of their soil and the advantage of markets alleged to have been created by the existing tariff, they find their business unremunerative and themselves greatly distressed by debt. Mortgages are their chief affliction, and on account of the distress arising therefrom they are ssking their State Legislature to pass a law that will prohibit the foreclosare of these mortgages as they become due. It is not probable that the Legislature can be induced to attempt to in- terfere with the payment of regularly contracted debts. It hasn't the consti- tutional power to do anything of that kind, even it were disposed to do it. The farmers of Kansas must grin and bear the hardship of their situa. tion, which, however, should set them to thinking whether they have been do- ing the wisest thing in voting for a tariff which has made their living un- necessarily dear and incidentally com- pelled them to mortgage their farms. A Lady Granger Talks. The address delivered by a lady granger before the Centre Grange, which we publish in another part of our paper this week, is good and inter- esting reading. It is but recently that the men who till the soil have organ- ized for self-improvement, self-assertion and self-defence. That they are being loyally backed by the women who are their helpmates in their useful and honorable calling, is sufficiently dem- onstrated by the words of the lady who delivered the address we allude to. She speaks quite lucidly and forcibly of the relation of the grange to the finan- cial, educational, social and political movements of the day. Edacation is as necessary to the farmers #8 to any other class that participate in the work required by our human existence, With the great scientific developments in the field of agriculture, the time is éoming when to be a successful farmer it’ will be necessary to be one of the mdst in-4 tellligent of men. Therefore the fair lecturer did not err in putting educa- grange. She was about right in saying that grangers should maintain their “politi- cal preferences, it being inexpedient to discard their party attachments, other-. wise their organization would eventual ly become a political machine support- ing aspecial and aggressive interest. But it would be but common prudence: for them to watch the policies of parties and observe how they affect the wel. fare of the agricultural people. Such prudence would dictate to farmers that when a party is disposed to place the burden of taxation upon their business rather then upon incorporated capital —when the leading feature ofits policy is to increase the cost of what the far- ‘mer requires for his household and business uses in order that the profits of industrial capital may be enhancel —in short, when its rule of action fol- lows the maxim that “the farmer pays for all’—then it is not only the interest, but it is the duty of the grangers in- dividually, if not as an organization, to assume an attitude of hostility to. that party. : Grotesque if Not Conclusive. The good town of York advances a very singular reason why it should have its share in the general raid on the federal treasury. It wants a government build- ing very badly. Such buildings are being supplied to other towns with a lavish hand regardless of what may become of the surplus, and wkile such favors are being distributed, a liberal pull on the treasury should not be denied to the town in which “sat the Continental Congress during the gloomy years of of 1777-78; in which “the articles of confederation were completed and adopted by Congress; where “Lafay- ette came to support the commander- in-chief,” etc, etc. Such close associa- tions with a purer and more patriotic period in our country's history are rath- er grotesquely advanced as a reason why York should have a chance while the looting of the treasury is going on at the hands of the Republican surplus extinguishers. ~——A duty on eggs won't compen: sate the farmers for the general tariff robbery from which they suffer. Spawls from the Keystone, —IEckley B. Coxe will not run for Congress. —MecKeesport iron-workers rioted over a keg of beer. —It costs more to build in Pittsburg than in other cities. —Lycoming county prisoners 110.80 last year: earned $13- —All Berks county prisoners will be photo- graphed in the future. —A separate school is demanded for Ches- ter’s colored children. —Seranton liquor dealers have begun a war against illegitimate groggeries. Prisoners in the West Chester jail are fed for less than nine cents a day. —The fruit buds in the vicinityx of Reading have been destroyed by the recent eold snap. —An almost miraculous visitation of rats is said to prevail at Maiden Creek, near Reading. —Frank Lovejoy, of Lancaster, has been sued for the amount of his wedding flower bill. —West Chester boys turned on a hydrant and converted a pavement into. a toboggan slide. —Two colored letter carriers at Carlisle have been removed to make room for Quay men. —Execution was issued at Lancaster on Wed nesday against Hiram Horting, farmer, for $4100. —An 18-year-old office-boy at Lansfield elop- ed with and married a girl even younger than himself. —An Indian girl living with a Darby family can trounce any boy in the town who makes fun of her. —Harrisburg rejoices in the posession of a quintet of kittens joined together like the Si- amese Twins. —The natural gas supply at Leechburg was not sufficient to keep the natives warm during the cold snap. —The Morton Chronicle suggests a conven- tion of the Road Supervisors of: the State to discuss the roads. —Thousands of dollars are being lost by the operators in the Butler oil field’ because the bad roads impede work. —Allen Foster has brought suit against. Mec- Keesport borough for $400 bounty due him on a war time enlistment. —Suit for damages to his: wagon will be brought by a Chester man against the owners of a badly kept:turnpike.. —Chester Councils decline: to appropriate any moneys for the proposed* Booming of the clty, as it was not authorized’ by law. —While a piano was being lowered from a window at Lancaster-tlie rope broke and the piano fell but was only slightly damaged —Ex-President Cleveland ‘and Governor Hill of New York, are to be invited to attend the Democratic State Convention at Scranton. —A boarder at a:Media-hotel, who is always calling for cheese, was on Sunday presented with a whole one by the proprietor of the house. —John Atkins, of East Whitefield, Chester county, paid his yearly subscription to a West Chesior paper ‘last week for the sixty-first me.. —Without food or drink for five: weeks was the experience of: a dog which was locked up in'an empty house at Uwchlan, Chester: coun- ty. ; ~The observation taken at the- York Signal Station shows that: Thursday of last week was ‘the coldest night:since the: blizzard: of two. |years ago. tion among the leading objects of the |: ‘ , Treasury Gilkihson, Quay’s chief henchman {in Bucks county, will shortly establish an or- ~ It is said that Second Comptroller of the gan at Doylestown. —Clement Hughes, of Joanna, is suffering from a disease which prevents him: from tak- ing nourishment of any kind, and it is feared that he will starve to death.. —An agreement has been: made between the Commissioners and Directors of the Poor of Carlisle and. the Sheriff by which all tramps will be put to work hereafter. —Mrs. Campbell, of Manor, near Greens: burg, left her bed during the night recently and shot herself dead, after elimbing to the bottom of a well near the house. ~—The Knights of Labor and other trade or- ganizations of" Reading favor the Australian system of voting, and will select candidates who are favorably inclined to that method. —The females on a Pennsville farm were very busy cne day last week. The farmer's wife presented him with an heir, and the same day nine lambs and two calves were born. —The Squeers soldiers” orphans’ syndicate is opposing the candidacy of €.L. Kauffman for Senatorial nomination as well as the candida- cy of others who refuse to defend the syndi- cate before the Legislature. ~The last week was the biggest one in the history of the Pittsburg division of the Penn- sylvania Railroad. The total number of cars passing through Johnstown was 23,623, which strung together would make a line 179 miles long. —Rev. J. M. Deitzler, of Annville, pulled from his pocket a $10 bill recently and threw it into the fire, under the impression that it was a slip of paper sontaining the numbers of the hymns he had, that day, announced from the pulpit. —A quiet-looking woman entered the Pitts- burg Ofp.era House during the performance a few days agoand dragged a man from his seat peside a young girl to whom he had been very attentive. The girl stayed alone until the performance was finished. —A party of unemployed workmen march- ed through Scranton a few days ago, and vis- iting a newspaper office protested because highway contractors would not displace Hun- garians and give them work. —Patrick Fahey, of Kennet Square, met with a serious accident whereby he broke his skull, He was splitting wood with a wedge and maul, when the wedge flew back striking him on the head and crushing in the bone. He is now in a eritical condition. —Nearly 300 families of miners at Scranton have applied for relief in consequence of the hard times. The proprietors of Zruth, with the assistance of merchants and others, are giving a barrel of flour to each family, and a Central Relief Committee has been appointed. —Frank Hanson, a young German, about 19 years old, was committed to prison at Norrise town on Saturday after confessing to having committed an aggravated assault upon Gertie Simons, a little girl less than 7 years old. Han- son worked for Simons, the father of the child, and during the absence of the latter on busis ness, committed the brutal outrage.