i BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. — Eiffel Tower stockings are now the rage among the ladies. What is their altitude ? —A tariffon beans, as is proposed by the McKinley bill, is thé next thing to tarifing the atmosphere. —The farmers are not counting v.ry largely on the wealth with which Mec- Kinley’s corn law is going to fill their cornucopias. —Having pictures of their swell din- ners taken by flash-light is getting to be the fashion among people whose heads are emptier than theirstomachs. —-The New York Sun claims that for itself, “Democracy is good enough polit- ical reform.” But it never fails to be- tray Democracy when it has the chance. — Farmers in Bucks county who for years cheerfully submitted to tariff rob- bery are now making a big fuss because SHELLENBERGER got away with a little of their money. —The carpet manufacturers who see raination in the increased wool duties’ of the McKinley bill, are now becoming convinced that they wasted their ‘fat” in the campaign of 88. —The term ‘kangaroo’ is not inap- plicable to the Australian ballot system. It has developed strength enough in its hind legs to kick the boodler and bull- dozer out of Rhode Island. —The enemies of CLEVELAND are giv- ing themselves much trouble about his increasing weight. It may be to them an unpleasant premonition of the way GROVER it going to smash them in 1892. —The new tariff proposes to tax cot- ton-seed oil in order to give a monopoly to Chicago parties who are furnishing a defrauded public with alleged lard fried from the dirtiest portions of the hog’s anatomy.’ -.-The sheriffs of Kansas are enjoying a boom that is having the effect of expand- ing with smiles the faces of those fortu- nate officials,and elongating with frowns the countenances of the luckless grangers. —One a.week during the past year is the record of the woolen factories knocked out in Pailadeiphia by the be- nign policy of taxing the materials they must have to work with. This is called protection. —With BrAiNe suggesting Pan- American free trade, and the Republi- can congress tarifing the raw materials of South America, such contradictory political economy must have a bewilder- ing effect upon the Spanish American mind. —There is reason to believe that the BLAINEs, the SHERMANS, the QUAYS and others of that ilk who have thriven in official places, regard with a sort of amused curiosity the humble pecuniary results of SAM RANDALL'S long public service. —INGALLS says that “the purifica- tion of politics is an iridescent dream.” But the Kansas farmers, who propuse to purify the politics of their state by turning INGALLS out of office, will make the purification more of a fact than a dream. —What nonsense it is for the Press to call upon DELAMATER to stand up and answer the charges made against him by Ex-Senator EMERY, as if his answer, whatever it might be, would af- tect the action of that organ toward him in ‘case of his nomination. It will be remembered that the Press once said that QUAY should be in ths peni- tentiary, and yet no paper is more sub- servient to QUAY’s rule. —Mr. ANDREW CARNEGIE has written an article for the New York 7ribune showing how young men may win for. tune. He might have added to the in- "terest and truth of his article by stating that if the aspiring young man can get the government to increase his profits by the assistance of a tariff that will give him monopolistic advantages, it will greatly facilitate the acquire- ment of his fortune. Mr, CARNEGIE can speak from personal experience. worsan The dependent pension bill will increase the total of pension expenses to $161,000,000 a year, or 39 per cent. of the entire government expenditure. Tt: 1873 Garrieip said that $28,000, 000 should be the maximum of pension appropriations. Bat the maximum of Republican expenditure of public money iz something that is susceptible of un- limited expansion. : In looking overthe New York Sun since the final result of thé Rhode Island election we fail to see its accus- tomed swash about the Australian bal lot system injuring the Democratic par- ty. That unprincipled sheet has exer- cised its malevolent ingenuity to the fullest extent in misrepresenting ballot reforuy a= being inimical to Democratic Islani pletely knockel it out. success, but Rhode has com- 0 AEL 72 y “2 y y SAD » Helpman; STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 39. Death of Samuel J. Randall. The death of Hon. SaMver J. Ray. paLL, which occurred last Sanday morning, was not unexpected, for his health had been in an impaired con dition for several years, and during the past winter he was in such a reduced state physically that his death at any moment would not have occasioned surprise. The deceased will long be remem- bered in political history as an able and faithful representative of the peo- ple in the halls of congress. That he had the entire confidence of his con- stituents was shown by the long period during which he represented them, he having been elected to congress in 1863 and continued in the ser- vice of the same constituency until the time of his death. Ie was a man of incorruptible integrity and strong convictions, a combination of charac- teristics that enabled him to represent his district and his party with con- spicuous fidelity and honor. His ac- complishments as a publicspeaker were not of the first order, but he had such a strong personality that he easily took the position of leader and held it until hig party left him behind in its move- ment toward the reformation of a de- tective and oppressive tariff system. The conservatism of Mr. RANDALL'S disposition caused him to halt while the party moved on, and hence he lost his leadership, but without losing the respect of his party associates who could not doubt the honesty although they had reason to question the cor- rectness of his tariff views. But what- ever difference of opinion thzre may have been on that point, there could be no question aé to Mr. Ranpary’s high character as 4 man, his great ability as . 3 - . . a legislator, and his eminent service as a public official. - Sem — According to an estimate that is considered reasonable there are 3000 “gpealk-easies” in Philadelphia doing a liquor business that is none the less lively because it is in a measure secret. The evolution of the “speak-easy” in that city is said to be due to an. insuf- ficiency in the number of licensed drinking places necessary to satisfy the: g pla y y popular thirs:. The McKinley Bill as an Object Lesson. What kind of opposition the Demo- crats in the House will present to the McKinley tariff abomination is a mat- ter of interest. By some it is believed that it would be well for the minority of the Ways and Means committee to present an opposition bill, and it issug- gested that the Mills bill would answer the purpose. It could not be expected that this would be passed, buat it would express the Democratic opposition to the obnoxious McKinley measure. It is the belief of others, however, that the better policy of the Democrats would be to present no bill, but to fight those parts of the Republican bill which they could hope to have strick en out with Republican assistance. The hide tax and the increase of du- ties on wool and other raw materials necessary for manufactures, present such vulnerable points. Mr. McMiLLey, the leading Demo- cat on the Ways ani Means Commit- tee, says that it ie not yet definitely de- cided whether there will or will not be a Democratic bill presented as the re- port of the minority, although it is pos- sible that later it might become appa- rent that it would be best to have a bill. Continuing the subject further, he said : “Our minority report is complete and in the hands of Mr. Carlisle, subject to some change as to phraseology. It makes a vigorous assault upon the McKinley bill, the most outrageous bill, in my opinion, that was ever produced. I haven't the language at command in which to express my honest convictions of it. Will it pass the house you ask? Not if we can help it, and there is a strong possibility that we may. We eertainly shall not aid them by offering | amendments, and in that way purify their bill. | “The fact is that while we shall do all in our | power to defeat this measure, it would be one | of the best things that could possibly happen ! to the Democracy if it should become a law ' just as it is to-day. We would have no diffi- culty in electing our candidates for sore years to come. There is no telling, however, what will beeome of the bill before it gets through the two houses The probability is McKinley himself will not know it when it becomes a law. . The appearance of the McKinley bill before the House will certainly oc- casion some very instructive tariff dis- cussion, and its passage will furnish an object lesson that will greatly advance education on the subject of tariff reform. An Unreasonable Complaint. Mr Hexry Cuaruis Lea, of Phila- -delphia, is unreasonable in the com- plaint he makes in an open letter he has written to President Harrisox about the favors which the President confers npon MATTHEW STANLEY QUAY. After stating that Quay has been pub- licly charged with raiding the Pennsyl- vania State treasury and committing other flagrant acts of dishonesty, which have not been denied, Mr. Lea says to Mr. Harrison that “vour close con- nection with him has rendered tbe scandal national, and by accepting his man, Mr. WANAMAKER, a8 a member of your cabinet, you assumed responsibili- ty for both of them.” The Philadelphia complainantshould be ashamed to be blubbering about this matter at this late date. While he was giving his support to HARRISON in 1888, doing all he could to aid his elec- tion, he fully understood the methods that Quay was employing to elect the Republican candidate.. He had suffi- cient. intelligence to know that the Pennsylvania corruptionist would not have been put at the head of the na- tional committee if it had not been in- tended that the party should have the advantage or his methods, and be furth- er knew of the fat frying that was go- ing on under the management of Wax- AMAKER. Yet, notwithstanding this knowledge, he cheerfully and zealously gave his support to the candidate. who was being made the beneficiary of this corruption. Does it now become Mr. Liza to make a fuss about the favors which Mr. IH AR- RISON is showing Quay and WANAMAK- Er? Could he have expected anything else, and is he not himself to some ex- tent responsible for that which is now the subject of his complaint ? AT S— Ingenious but Dishonest. The Republicans ot the lower house of congress scored another victory by managing to steal another Democratic seat, the article stolen belonging to congressman Wis, of the Richmond, (Va.) district. The excuse ior the theft was that a number of negro voter® who intended to vote for Wisg's op- ponent got so late to the polls that they were unable to vote. This in substance was the ground upon which Mr. Wise was deprived of his seat. Ths differed but little from the process by which the other southern Democrats were unseat- ed, which consisted in the committee estimating the number of male negroes in the contested districts and count- ing them as having voted for the Re- publican contestants. Since Mr. RaNpALL'S death we have seen at least a dozen pictures of him in as many different newspapers and no two of them Jooked alike. From these presentments of Mr. RaN- DALL's appearance there is necessarily great confusion in the public mind asto what kind of a looking man Mr. Rax- DALL Was. - EE SS ET ® Sticking To the Rotten Boss. “There are no more independent Re- publicans anywhere than those of Law- rence county. ‘They read all the vile things that the New York World and Pittsburgh Clronicle Telegraph are say- ing about Senator Quay and Mr. DeLa- MATER and went to their primary elec- tion on Saturday and elected Delama- ter delegates to the state convention by a majority of over 1,500. Such’ things are to be expected.” The above was said by the Altoona Tribune, and the way it was said would seem to indicate the belief that the swallowing of such a dirty dose of Quayism by the Republicans of Law- rence county was a commendable act. Nothing could afford more convincing evidence of the utter depravity of Penn- sylvania Republicanism than is fur- nished by such incidents. The stronger the proof of Quay's complete rotten- ness, the closer his party sticks to him. It is well that it is'so. It will hasten the overthrow of a political domination that has done so much to injure the reputation and damage the ‘political 'in- terests of the State. It was feared that someching might turn up that would prevent QuAv's nominating ‘DeLAMA- tir, and thus delay the defeat that is so righteously due the corrupt old par- ty; but there is a most encouraging likelihood of his putting his man on the ticket. & BELLEFONTE, PA. APRIL 18, 1890. Evasions of the Liquor Laws. The appearance of the ‘“speak-easy” among the places that supply liquor to the thirsty, is something that is now interesting those who are giving their attention to the liquor question. The “speak-easy” originated in the extreme prohibition states of Kansas and Iowa, having been evolved from the suppress- ed thirst of those localities. It has made its appearance in all places where attempts have been made by | operation of law to prevent the public sale and use of liquor. Judge Furst has testified that*‘speak-easies”’ have become very numerous in Huntingdon county, where for three years the coart has re- | fused to grant liquor licenses. They have also beeen develop- ed in places where licenses have been granted under the high-license law. This is particularly the case in Pittsburg and Philadelphia, the growth of the illicit drinking places being at- tributed to the confinement of the legal liquor traffic within too narrow bounds by the existing law. It is claim- ed that there are too few saloons for the public accommodation—hence the ‘“speak-easies.”” This circumstance shows the difficulty of -regulating and restraining the traffic in ardent spirits by any laws that the ingenuity of man can devise. Even the Philadelphia Press protests against placing hides among the tariffed articles. Free trade in hides has acted with such splendid ef- feet upon all associated interests that even such a champion of tariff robbery as the Press is abashed at the proposi- tion of taking hides off the free list. The Jersey Plan. The ballot reform bill that has pass- ed the New Jersey House of Represen- tatives has features that recom- megd it to those who object to certain features of the regular Austra- lian system. Gov. Hiv, for example,is opposed to the regulation which pro- vides the voter with an official ballot, excluding him from the use of any other. The Governor thinks that this is too much of a restraint upon the voter's choice. The New Jersey bill allows him to supply himself with ballots before he comes to the polls, hut previous to his entering the booth where he can se- cretly make up his ticket, he is sup- plied by a sworn election officer with another set of ballots. He can then choose for himself,secretly and without interference or molestation, the ballots he wishes to vote. All the protection from undue influence that is contem- plated by ballot reform is provided by. this plan, and it avoids the objection to the voter's being limited to the ballots furnished by the election officers. The New Jersey bill also provides that none except those in the act of voting shall be allowed to come with- in a hundred feet of the polling booths. A New Democratic State. The Democrats have reason to be pleased with the effect of the Aus tra- lian. method of voting in Rhode Is'and, which has resulted in giving them the legislature and governor of that State. Such a result is an unus- ual thing in a State whose working- men for many years were largely dis- franchised, and the peculiarity . of whose election laws made its govern- ment an aristocratic one. The adop- tion of ballot reform has changed this st ate of affairs. At the election last week the Dem- ocratic State ticket had 1500 more votes than the Republican, but as the State constitution requires a majority over all, the prohibition and scattering votes were sufficiently large to prevent the Democrats from having the neces- sary majority. Under such circum- stances the election of State officers goes to the legislature. The Demo- crats having succeeded also in electing a majority of the legislature, their elec- tion of Governor and other State of- ficers according to the constitutional requirement has likewise been ensured. Little Rhody may now be safely count- ed in the column of Democratic States, for the new election law protects her workingmen from the bulldozing in. fluence of their wealthy employers. She may be considered a newly acquir- ed Democratic State that’ will set off the Republican (heft of Montana, NO. 16. Financially Distressed Farmers. | The great number of failures that have recently occurred among the | farmers of Montgomery, Bucks, Ches- ter, Berks, Lancaster and other coun- | ties of Rastern Pennsylvania in which | the agricultural population has always hitherto had the reputation of being | peculiarly prosperous, is attracting | widespread attention. The judgment | docket of the Berks county courtis be- ing rapidly filled with claims against farmers who until ‘recently were con- sidered as among the county's most substantial and prosperous citizens. During the week succeeling the lst of the present month over 200 judgments were entered against farmers on the Lancaster county docket, and failures were numerous. Among the assign- G AMBER, of Manor township, liabilities $39,000, assets, $7,000; Jacos H. Hos- TETTER, of same township, liabilities, $42,500, assets $27,000; Danien E. PEIFER, of East Hempfield, liabilities $13,564, assets about the same. A number of executions were issued against others, involving the sale of their property by the Sheriff. About the same state of affairs exists in the the other couaties we have mentioned. This situation has excited alarm in that section to. the extent of inciting a call for a meeting which is in- tended to be preliminary to the formation of an organization of farm- ers in Montgomery, Bucks and Chester counties, the object of which will be to discover how they may be re- lieved from their present distressed fi- nancial condition. This meeting was held at Norristown this we: k, with the ultimate purpose of holding a mass meeting in June where prominent speakers will be on hand to tell the farmers what it is that is ailing them. It is scarcely necessary for us in this connection to repeat our oft ex- pressed opinion that the war®ariff, which taxes everything that is includ- ed in the list of necessaries, is chiefly responsible for the depressed condition of the farming business. Thejclaim that the farmer is benefited by the home market which the tariff is alleg- ed to secure for him, is very pointedly refuted by the fact that this agricul- tural depression exists in districts where the tariff should be particularly effica- cious in furnishing him a remuner- ative home market, if there is any- thing in that claim. ——Discussion on the McKinley tariff bill will be cut short by the des- potic ruling of the congressional czar. He won't allow the bill to be subjected to dissection, for the operation would show up its manifold defects. But this should not grieve the Democrats. They should rather be pleased that their: opponents will pass a measure that will put them in such good shape for a thorough beating at the elections that are to come. It is such measures as this tariff bill that are hastening and intensifying the disgust ‘of the people with the entire system of tariff rob- bery. Untruthful Gush. Joux C. NEw, until recently the leading Republican organist in Indiana, is the Consul-Geeneral of the Harrison administration in London. Some weeks ago he was one of the guests at ‘a Ma- sonic banquet in the English capital | and among the other gush he got off with the intention of tickling his Eng- lish hearers, was the following, which is as absurd as it is untrue: “If England ever got into difficulty, America would rally to the support of the old mother country, for the English-speaking people domi- nated the world. There was not in the United States a well-thinking man who did not believe in the integrity of Great Britain, and who was not in favor of maintaining the ascendancy of Great Britain in those parts that she claimed.” Now the truth is that if England should get into a tight with any enemy whatever, nothing wounld afford nine- tenths of the American people more pleasure than to see her well whipped. They would rejoice over it with exceed- ing great joy. . The Americans are but human beings, and very humanly they remember with bitterness how the English rejoiced over the prospect of the Republic being destroyed by the rebellion. That will not: be forgotten in many years. ——The circus’ began on Wednesday with the introduction of the McKinley bill in the House, ments made were those of BexyaminT. | spawls from the Keystone. —Navigation wasopened on the Pennsylva- nia Canal last Friday. —Edward Love was killed by lightning near Tremont on Wednesday night. —Murderer Bartholomew was buried at Weaverville on Monday. —Executions far $2206 have been issued against Samuel Tinsman, proprietor of the Scott House, Reading. —Dull times in the miningregion arouud Scranton have disheartened the miners, and many are emigrating.. —A Ballot Reform Club, having for its ob- ject theadoption of the Australian system of voting, has been organizad at Reading. —There is considerble excitement at Hughesville, Luzerne county. Ata depth of 350 feet a fine rich deposit of anthracite coal has been found. —Judge Swartz, of Montgomery county, at Norristown belivered an opinion that Consta- bles elected in February, 1889, ware elected for three years. —David McKenna, of Slatington, a promi- nent slate manufacturer, was struck on the head in his quarry Tuesday bya decending box and fatally injured. —The body of Enos Winters, the hermit of the Schuylkill, who has been missing since February 13, was found ia Stony Creek, near Norristown, Monday. —The police of Reading have succeeded in breaking up a gang of youthful thieves by arresting the ringleaders. Warrants are out for the remainder of the gang. —Several improvements, including eleetrie lights, are to be made at Mount Gretna before the division encampment of the National Guards will be held there next July. —Henry Maltzberg, of Reading, has been ap= pointed Special Agent by. the Census Superig- ‘tendent for the collection of mortgage statis- ties in Berks and Lehigh counties. ® There is a bitter feeling growing up in Pheenixville against the Huns. Over 1000 have colonized there and have driven American laborers away from the iron mills. —The deepening of the Port Clinton tunnel on the main line of the Reading Railroad, will be commenced soon. When finished the largest cars will be able to pass through. —The large woolen-mill of the Conshohocken Worsted Mills Company, at Norristown, has been sold to Seth B. Stitt, of Philadelphia, for $125,000, by James Moir, assignee of the com- pany.. —Word has been received at Easton an- nouncing the death in England of Richard Griffith Bachelor, worbh several millions, which will go to his relatives, nearly all of whom live at Easton. —William H. Wattles, who has been under arrest at Buffalo charged with bigamy, was turned over to the Sheriff from Warren on a- requisition from the Governor of Pennsylvania yesterday. ! —Three boys, named James Kern, Richard Corcoran and Daniel Comisky, who ran away from Phenixville, were captured on a coal train at Reading on Sunday night and sent back home. : ~The great demand for potatoes in the West has sent the speculators up thé country, and - the farmers of the northern portions of Berks . and Lehigh counties have inostly’ disposed ‘of their surplus stocks. ’ —The bricklayers of Phoenixville are on a. strike because they were compelled to work ten hours a day for $2.50 alongside of brieklay- ers from Pittsburg—on a special job—who. got 84.50 for nine honrs. —The committee making arrangements for celebrating the centennial of Easton has de: cided to give a banquet to all the organizations in the parade, and also to furnish each division with a band of musie. ——About 10 per cent. more of the coke ovens in the Connellsville region will close down next Monday on account of a lack of orders. The suspension of operations will. throw 1200 men out of employment. —Frank G. Klohr, aged 25, attempted to commit suicide by drowning himself in the Schuylkill River at Reading on Sunday -even- ing. He was rescued in an unconscious con- dition and taken to the hospital. — After a stormy session of several hours the Young Republicans of Lancaster have decided that the club-room shall be open. on Sunday from 1 o'clock in the afternoon until 10 o)glock in the evening, but games are prohibited on that day. 2 0h —Fred M. Hans, a merchant tailor of Easton, became despondent over the loss of “his wife who died several weeks ago, and hung him- self Friday night in the attic of his residence, which is but a short distance from. where Bar- tholomew was executed on Wednesday. —The Society for the Prevention of ‘Cruelty to Animals is following up the participants in a cock fight which took place on last Saturday night in Deleware county just beyond the county line. Michael Hennessey, Michael Neeson and Timothy Murray are now in the Media jail. : —The women of Bennett Square are. work= ing with heart and soul to abolish the saloons in that place. They have started a subsecripe tion to buy out a hotel and make 1t a tempens ance place, and have already $2800 subseribed, ‘Prohibition Bread” and “Prohibition Bonnets* are in great demand. —The Receiver of the defunct Schuylkill Valley Mutual Fire Insurance Company has begun proceedings against a number of poliew- holders for unpaid assessments, for which he holds their premium notes. There is aboud #5000 due by persons living in Bucks, Berks, Lehigh, Dauphin and Northampton counties. —Miss Emma Bach, of Allentown, was rob- bed of her pocketbook, containing $3, on =a train between Easton and Bethlehem, on last Thursday evening, by a young fellow whom she supposed was trying to “mash” her. He sat down beside her and tried to start a con= versation, but she gave him to understand he wasa’t wanted. —Gilbort Shive, wholesale broom dealer, of Easton, was taken with scarlet fever on Mon= day, was on the mend Friday, became uncon- scious Friday evening, aud remained in that condition until noon Saturday, when he dieg. Immediately afterward his body became blacks His three children are also down with the dis- ease, one of them being dangerously sick. —The Reading Prison Inspectors have noti- fied the Young Men's Christian, Association that that organization will be no longer permit- ted to hold services in the county prison, No reason is assigned for this action, but as the recent exposure of looseness in prison diseip- line was made through these meetings proba- bly it will not, he necessary to lookjfarther,