BY =. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —In speaking of ‘marriage obse- quies,” our little neighbor, the Daily News, imparts too fanereal an aspact to matrimony. —1Tt is hardly worth while to consid- er the question of ballot reform in thig state until itis known what QUAY will allow the Legislature to do on that sub- ject. — Whatever opinions may be enter- tained concerning the character of the season that is about closing, it will be generally admitted that it wasn’t a (n)ice winter. —It is hardly probable that his friends could persuade MAT QUAY to take the gubernatorial nomination himself for the purpose of vindicating his reputation. —1In denying the farmers of the west untaxed twine the Republican party is doing much toward the preparation of the rope by which it will be hung high- er than Haman. — Mrs. HARRISON during her recent visit to their sestion greatly pleased the people of the South, but what section can be said to be favorably impressed by Mr. HARRISON ? —Good ST. PATRICK maintained his well established reputation on Monday by bringing us a stormy day. But if he wasn’t a little blusterous he wouldn’t be a true Irishman. —CQastle Garden is literally lousy with Hungarians whom the industrial princes are bringing over to illustrate the benefit that “protection” confers upon American labor. —The robin is adding his tenor to the soprano of the song-sparrow and the al- to of the blue bird, and soon the bull- frog will be demanding attention as the bass-singer of the vernal choir. —The farmer may possibly pay with more cheerfulness the tariff tax on his clothing and other necessaries when he learns that a paternal government has protected his hens from the competition of foreign fowls, —In allowing himself to get so big- headed as to believe that he could get along without BISMARCK, the young Emperor of Germany will in time dic- cover that he didn’t know as much as his grandfather. —In neglecting to invite the United States to the Berlin labor conference Emperor WILLIAM may have been influenced by feelings that are yet af- fected by the asperities of the recent pork controversy. —A Western paper says, ‘buying your wife an Easter bonnet is not going to do much toward getting you into heaven.” That is so, but, then, it may do a great deal in preventing a sheol of a time at home. —Itis said that the women of Cin- cinnati are all broken up over the repre-' sentation that they toe-in when they walk ; but we are sure that most women would prefer this pedal defect to the amplitude of the Chicago foot. —1It is well to observe JEFFERSON'S birthday, but when it is seen how the free institutions which he did so much in helping to establish are being abused, some may be led to doubt whether such a man as JEFFERSON was ever born. —Julia Ward Howe is said to be the best Greek scholar of her sex in this country. But there are lots of farmers’ wives in Centre county who can beat her making pies, which in point of material importance is of more account than Greek. —-After the beneficent effects of free hides on the shoe and leather industry,by which it has been made the most flour- ishing in the country, the reimposition of a duty on foreign hides by the Mec- Kinley bill must have been prompt- ed by nothing but unadulterated high- tariff ‘‘cussedness.” —4«Qur Democratic friends make a free-trader out of Senator ALLISON about once a year,” remarks a Republi- can paper. Oh, no, itis the Republican granger voters of Towa who are recon- structing the Senator's tariff views. It will require the exprassio n of but one more election to complete the job. —Nothing lately has been heard of the ten-dollar certificates which QUAY and DupLey devised for the re- plenishmert of the Republican cam- paign boodle fund. They would be found very serviceable in the approach- ing congressional elections should there * be a deficiency of fat fried out of the manufacturers. “~The leniency with which the scoun- drels of the Squeers soldiers’ orphans schools syndicate were treated by the au- STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 35. BELLEFONTE, PA.. MARCH 21, 1890. NO. 12. Naval and Military Tyranny. With the light of recent develop- ments brought out by official investi- gation, itis not difficult to see why service in the navy and army of the United States is not popular with those who compose the under stratum in those branches of the public defense. Desertions from the army areoccurring to such an extent that it is difficult to maintain the complement of our small military establishment, while it is no- torious that Americans are disin- clined to enlist in the navy, and that consequently our naval ships are in a great measure manned by foreigners who have no natural feeling for our flag. The reason for this disinclination to serve their country in the capacity of soldiers and sailors was markedly disclosed in a recent inquiry into the conduct of an officer of the navy who was charged with tyranical and abusive treatment of the men under his com- mand. But it doesn’t require investi- gation to divulge the existence of such a state of affairs in both the navy and the army. The officers —particularly those of the lower grades—have always had the reputation of being unreason- able and tyranical martinets, who abuse their authority by abusing the men under them. This accounts very reasonably for the numerous desertions from the army and the reluctance of American sailors to enlist in the naval service. Men in whom have been in- stilled the spirit and independence that belong to the citizens of a free country, will not tamely submit to domineering and oppressive treatment at the hands of those who are over them, whether in military or in civil life. This is particularly . offensive when the tyrant is some petty military dude who imagines that his shoulder-straps elevate him so much above the com- mon material of the service that it is entitled to receive from him no better treatment than that commonly accord- ed to dogs. The result of such conduct on the part of army and navy officers ap- pears in its more serious aspect in the almost entire absence of Americans from the lower personnel ot the navy. In consequence the bulk of our na- val force consists of foreigners of the lowest class, and it is easy to see how the honor and safety of the nation would fare under such cir- cumstances should our ships, man- ned by men who have no inborn inter- est in the flag, be brought into conflict with a foreign enemy. Since we are getting a new navy such condi- tions should be brought about as would attract to it that class of native sea- men who in times past emblazoned the history of American seamanship with deeds of undying fame. The flag, hal- lowed by the achievements of gallant Yankee tars under DECATUR, PERRY, BAINBRIDGE, STEWART and FARRIGUT, should not be left to the guardianship of foreign sailors. But that it is being left in that plight is in a great measure due to the offensive conduct of too many of our naval officers. A" A Notable Anniversary. Thursday of last week the Philadel phia Times celebrated the fifteenth an- niversary of the date of its establish- ment, and it was able to do so with a proud consciousness of the high degree of prominence and prosperity it has at- tained. We all remember the first ap- pearance of the neat and sprightly journal which fifteen years ago emerg: ed above the dead level of journalistic dullness in the metropolis of our State, and inaugurated a new era in journal- ism in that quarter. It has energeti- cally and intelligently maintained the character it then assumed, and has set an example which has exerted a great influence in placing the Philadelphia newspapers amony the brighest and ablest of the land. Without assuming a distinctive po- litical position the Times has done some excellent political work, rendering a service that has told for the general in- terest of the country, and on many oc: thorities may have had much to doin | encouraging the outrages perpetrated in ! Philadelphia almshouses and institu ions for the blind. Ifit was permissible wo Do-the-boys in the orphans schools, what was more natural than the infer- ence that the blind boys could be done in the same way ? cacions its efforts were attended with brilliant success in battling with local abuses, political and other kinds. In the present contest for tariff reform, ballot reform and civil service reform, the three leading principles of industri al and political progress, the Times is in the forefront of the fight. Republican Tariff Revision. The new tariff bill which the Ways and Means committee have been in- gaged all winter in framing, will soon be ready to be presented to the House, and what its rates of taxation will be on necessaries and unnecessaries is an open secret among those in ‘Washing- ton who are interested in it. There will be no relief from the tariff burden on the raw material of wool which has al- most crushed the life out of the woolen industry, the bill being framed in the special interest of the gentle shepherds of Ohio, regardless of the welfare of the woolen manufacturers and the necessi- ties of the wearers of woolen clothing: Keeping Ohio in the Republican line is mighty expensive to the people of the United States. The duty on steel rails will be fixed at about $13 per ton. The Mills bill put the duty at about the same figure, but this raised a howl of “free trade’ that sounded from one end of the country to the other. Perhaps such an ‘“ap- proach to free trade” is entirely admis- sible when the tariff is being tinkered by “its friends.” But, the fact is, it was shown to the committee that $8 or $10 per ton would afford ample protec: tion, and it was even admitted that steel rails are manufactured as cheaply in this country as in England, yet the committee has concluded that. the $13 per ton duty would not firnish too large a margin within which the steel combines might plunder their cus- tomers. The bill is going to be very liberal with the farmers whose dissatisfaction with their share of the benefits of “pro- tection” is becoming alarmingly evi dent to the supporters of the tariff sys- tem. A heavy duty on beans and peas is expeeted to placate the grangers who are getting mad about being compelled to pay a double price for their clothing and other articles of domestic use. A stiff duty clapped on barley is de- signed to mollify feelings that have been exasperated by the protected bind- ertwine robbery. An off-set to the gouge which every farmer is subjected to through highly tariffed lumber, salt, hardware and tinplate, is intended to be furnished by a duty on hay and po- tatoes. A trinmphant cackle is to be excited in the barnyard by a 5 cents per dozen tariff on eggs, and it isdpro- posed to complete the farmer's reconcili- ation to being robbed by tariff taxes on all the essential necessaries of life by putting a duty of 25 cents per bushel on apples. All this is a poor tribute to the in- telligence of a class of people who these tariff mongers ought to know are fully aware that the agricultural abundance of this country needs no protection against foreign competition. ——Those who are in a situation to know say that the proposed farmers’ encampment at Mt. Gretna, Lebanon county, is not of granger origin, but has had its inception outside of that or: ganization. It may be a good move- ment, with an entirely unobjectional object, but it is claimed that it is not fair to the Grangers to represent it as emanating from a disagreement among them in regard to the William’s Grove exhibition. The latter has been a great success, surpassing in its results any- thing of the kind in the country. There are complaints that it has been in too large a measure the source of personal profit. All such enterprises are liable to such an incident, and it is likely that the Gretna project has something of that kind in view. Wallace at Home. Ex-Senator WALLACE returned to "his home in Clearfield last week from his European visit which was con- tinued during the past winter. Upon arriving in New York some six weeks ago he did not go immediately home, but went to California to attend to in- terests with which Europesn parties are connected. There are reports that he is prepared to take an active part in the State contest this year, and it is said that he does not conceal his intention of being a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor. There can be no question about his Democracy, and as a political or- ganizer he has no superior. Under no other standard bearer could the De- mocracy make a livelier or more ag- gressive fight although there are oth- ers who would make equally accepta- ble candidates. Abuses in Charitable Institutions. Some terrible revelations have re- cently been made concerning abuses practiced in charitable institutions in Philadelphia. The exposure of the ill treatment of inmates of the leading almshouse of thes city by the Inquirer, within the past year, has not been so long ago that it is forgotten. It excited public indignation and was the subject of condemnation at the time, but un- fortunately it was not followed by the corrective action which the turpitude of the case demanded. We now have revolting disclosures of abuses in the management of the Pennsylvania Institntion for the In- struction of the Blind, at Philadelphia, one of the charities supported by the State, involving carelesseess, if not posi- tive dishonesty,in some of the]managers, and in one instance criminal conduct of a peculiarly repulsive character. There is something unspeakably revolting mn the thought that the helpless blind, who are supposed to be com- mitted to the charitable care of the State, should be subjected to an un- mentionable outrage by an attendant whose duty it should have been to treat them with the greatest tenderness. But it isn’t surprising that such a state of affairs should exist when it is considered with what indifference lax- ness in the management of our charita- ble institutions is regarded. When the abuses practiced in the Squeer’s syndi- cate soldiers’ orphans schools {were brought to light it required the greatest effort to bring the attention of the State authorities to them, and corrective measures were attended with the most disgraceful delay. And even after they stood exposed in all their enormity, it was proposed to erect a monument to the memory of the officer under whose official maladministration they were allowed to occur. Under such circumn- stances the public should be prepared for such disclosures as have been made cdlicerning the management of the Pennsylvania Institution for the In- struction of the Blind. ——The Lock Haven Democrat is publishing the New York World's ex- pose of Boss Quax's rascality in instal- ments. As a continued story it makes interesting reading. Will the people of Pennsylvania allow the Boss to contin- ue furnishing indefinitely material for such narratives ? Democratic Doctrine from a Republi- can Source. The Philadelphia Telegraph should have no difficulty in seeing that it be- longs tothe wrong party. Its expressions concerning the leading measures of of its party's policy are antagoaistic to them. This is particularly the case in regard to its economic measures, which are far from meeting the Tele graph’s approval. It does no‘ hesitate to say that ‘‘there is no apparent earn- est or sincere effort” to pass the bills for the suppression of trusts that are before the present Congress. It can’t believejthat a Congress that will main- tain a monopoly'tariff can entertain any serious intention of putting down mo- nopoly embodied in the form of trusts. “If Congress were in earnest,” it says, “if it really wished to abolish trusts, it “gould do it, in nearly all cases, by “the very simplest and easiest means. “ Trusts generally are created and main- “ tained by excessive duties, which kill “ foreign competition.” Nothing could be truer than this, and it exactly expresses the Democratic plan of getting rid of trusts. Remove tha source from which they are nour- ished and they necessarily die. The Republican congress prolongs their existence by continuing the nourish- ment. The Telegraph expresses a great truth in the following paragraph : Protection is a good thing only when it is the servant of the people; it is one of the worst of things when it becomes their master and seis up great monopolies to plunder them. It is then not protection, but aggression; and it should be dealt with accordingly. Congress can get rid of nine-tenths of the trusts if it chooses to do so. It would take no greater ef- fort to do it than by taking away their means of life—the duties which shut out foreign com- petition and enable them to absolutely control our markets. This is a new sentiment as coming from a Republican source. Bat it is one with which the public has been familiarized through the great tariff reform message of GROVER CLEVELAND. Complaint from an Unusual Quarter. The Philadelphia Inquirer sets up a helpless cry for Congress to do more work. That body has been in session for more than three months and has done nothing of consequence in the way of legislation. The Inquirer, re- cognizing the fact that, as both branches are controlled by the Repub- licans, there exists no ground of excuse on account of interference by the opposition, which has been effect- ually forestalled, declares that the re- sponsibility for this inactivity must be borne by its party. When Speaker Reep adopted his des-- potic methods, disregarding the prece dents of a eentury and ignoring customs sanctioned by the constitution; the Re- publican papers exalted in his course, justifying the revolutionary proceedings by the assertion that it was intended to expedite business which the minori- ty had no right to retard by fillibus- tering tactics. They claimed that the unusual and arbitrary action of the Speaker wasin theinterest of legislation, which would be injured by partisan ob- struction. But the Speaker has had his way for the last three months and such organs asthe Inquirer, which are capable of seeing where the responsibil ity rests, are making complaint about Congress not doing any work. Bat it is doing all that was intended to be effected by ReED's despotic meas- ures. By a complete suppression of any opposition that could have been offered by the minority, they are seat- ing Republican contestants over the claims of Democrats clearly elected; they are debarring opposition to pen- sion, government building and other raids on the treasury, and will protect frotw interference their de- sign to continue the benefits of a monopoly tariff to the moneyed ben- eficiaries who contributed the means that brought the Republican party again into power. These were the ob- jects of Speaker REED's revolutiorary po- sition, and theylare being accomplished ;- but as to legitimate legislation, bene- ficial to the general interests of the people, that wasn’t included in the de- sign. The funeral of Apa Harr, the Lycoming county centenarian, whose death we noticed last week, took place in the Lutheran cemetery near Mont- gomery, and the pall bearers were six grandsons of the deceased. In the services the choir sang “I would Not Live Alway,” which of course was not intended as a reflection upon the old gentleman for having hung on to life so tenaciously. An Offensive Proposition. The Republican scheme of making a negro State out of portions of the In- dian Territory and Oklahoma isn’t of a character that is calculated to secure the approval of white Americans. The latter can't be expected to approve of handing any of the national domain over to the exclusive control of negroes, however much it may suit the designs of Republican politicians. The country is broad enough for the colored people to take their chances along with the whites, which they have a right to do anywhere within its limits, but neither their interest nor that of the whites would be promoted by setting up a Hayti or San Domingo in any part of our common territory. There is an affront to the American people in the proposition to create a Statethatshould be under the exclusive control of any particular race, particularly an inferior race. EC SETS A Question of Interest. We are the freest Free Traders under the sun among ourselves, but with outsiders we are Protectionists and propose to remain so while it is our interest to do it.—Philadelphia Tele- graph. But with important industries, such as the woolen, declining under a blighting tax on raw materials; with our farmers becoming poorer from the effects of oppressive economic regula- tions, and all other classes suffering from tariff taxation on the necessaries of life; and with our carrying trade on the ocean almost obliterated by the nonintercourse policy of our tariff sys tem, we would ask the Telegraph whether it is any longer “our interest todo it 2” —The Kansas farmers Lad better stop whimpering and prepare to do the right kind of voting. Spawls from the Keystone. —Qaay’s son, Dick, is slated for the: Legis- ture. —Sam Losch is boomed for congress in Schuylkill county. —The Mount Gretna Farmers’ exhibition will open about August 17. —Chester county is having a serious time over the high license question. —Luzerne county has forty-five reli gious de- nominations within its borders. —Four girls and forty-eight men attended a South Easton dance a few nights ago. —Dr. Daniel Prizer, of Lionville, Chester county, has seven foxes penned for a run: —An Altoona horse received two 1300-voit: shocks fron a broken wire and was unhurt. . —For selling liquor in the guise of patent medicine a merchant at Beaver has been held. —Warren county grangers will push the can-- didacy of Farmer Samuels for the Legislature. —Chester people are engaged in picking out eligible sites for their new: public build- ings. —Jacob Fisher, of Kutztown, the oldest resi- dent ol Berks county, celebrated his 99th birth-- day. —The Westinghouse Company of Pittsburg has an order for 11,000 air-brakes for a Western railroad. —The Lumberman’s Exchange at. Williams- port has decided to advance : prices on hem- lock lumber. —The disputed ownership.of a $25 heifer cost: the contestants $370 to decide it in Schuylkill county Courts. —A smoke-consuming engine with a noise: less exhaust is being builtat Pittsburg to be used in Brazil. —Emma Keller read im a. Pittsburg paper: that she was wanted by the police and she sur» rendered herself. —Five colored men summoned as witnesses - to Ebensburg could not: obtain entertainment at any of the hotels. —There were only twenty-three remonstrans ces against 470 liquor-license applicants in Lackawanna county. —Dr.F. A. Tickardt; of ‘Bethlehem, for: the. past sixty years a praeticing physician is dead . at the age of 84 years. —A needle swallowed a year since. by Josie Fabian, aged 9 years, of Bristol, was.cut from her side last Friday. Plumstead township, Bucks coungy , contains forty persons whe have passed the allotted three score and ten years. —An alleged diseovery of gold and . silver: has been made om the farm of Jeremiah Stauf< fer at Wooddale, Fayette county. . ~The Grand Jury at Norristown has recom- mended that tzamps be employed at break-- ing stone or other useful.employment. —A special meeting of the City School Board- has been called to arrange for the bnilding of: two new school-houses that will cost $60,000. —There is acontest over the. estate of Nich- olas Seidel, of Alsace, Berks county, a. raving: maniac who spent fifty years. ehained to.the floor of an owt house. —After having shared the meat at the sup- per table John Ryan, of Hyde Park, picked.up the ham bone that was left and nearly kitled. his brother-in-law with it. —A man, registering as William Slaughter® put his team up at a West: Chester - hotel, and after taking a meal at the. place disappeared. and has net been heard ofsince. : —Some Port Clinton. young men tried to ake advantage of the sleighing re cently. and made atrip to Orwigsburg. They. had to carry the sleigh back te Port Clinten.. —Christopher Schwartz, a prominent baker of Allentown, has brought suit for $00. dama- ges against Elmer Berchard, who is. alledged: to have said that Schyeartz sold stale bread,. —Being caught by a train on a railroad bridge John 8. Reddinger,of. Tatesville,Bedford coun- ty, chose the alternative of jumping to the ground, seventy-five feet below, and.was kill ed by the fall. —During a. drunken, row: between. twenty Hungarians at Coplay on Saturday one. of: the party had his nose. broken, several received serious stab wounds and two children were in, jured by being knocked down. . —The attorney for-the prosecution in a. case on trial at Ebensburg referred to.the defendant as “the liar in €ambria county,” and the remark. excited no undue attention from the Judge or members of; the Bar. —The body of John Criswell, aged 65 years, a resident of Waynesboro, was found early Monday. morning near his kitchen doer. He had been, to.church the night before, and his family thought he had’ been in bed through the night. —Abouh six. weeks ago. Ellen Strange, a col- ored girl, aged, 24 years, disappeared: from her home in Middletown, and. nothing was heard of her till Saturday when her dead body was found in the Swatara.Creek, at Port Royal , near Middletown. —On Thursday a Hungarian of Milnesville put up his wife, furniture and a cow at auction . The bidding was spirited between a lot of the woman’s admirers, one.of the. number finally captured the lot for $32.. The purchaser says heis well satisfied with his bargain. ~The funerel of ex-Congressman Samuel Calvin took place at Holidaysburg on Saturday, snd was attended by many people of that place and from a distance. Mr. Calvin had been a School Director for forty years, and | 1000 school ehildren attended his funeral. — Mrs. Hannah Davis, colored, died at the residence of her son, near Lincoln University, one day this week af the age of 93 years. She was the mother of twelve chlldren, and lived to see seventy-four grandehildren, sixty-six great-grand children and three great-great- grand children. —William Memmert, a barber of Nazarath, was given a hearing before United States Com- missioner Kilpatrack at Easton for sending obscene letters through the mails to the wife of Erskine Walter, a rival in business. He was held in $1500 bail to appear in the United States Court at Philadelphia. 2 —John Huzzard, a well-known farser of Kimberton, Chester county, was cut in two by an engine on the Pickering Valley Road at Phoenixville. He had started across the track as trains were approaching on the Reading and the Pickering Valley Roads, and, being deaf, did not hear the whistle. ~The Pennsylvania State Peultry Associa- tion met at Harrisburg in the rooms of the State Board of Agricullirs and effected a reg- ular organization b wiopting a constitution and by-laws and electing the foliowing officers for 1890; President, M. 8, Sprout, Carlisle; Vice- President, I. C.B. Sands, Pottsville ; Secretary N. G. Temple, Paoopson, aud Treasurer, H. W. Vohle, Pailadelphia,