Ink Slings, —New York’s request of congress to appropriate $250,000 for her Grant monument is another illustration of her monumental meanness. i — President HARRISON'S refusal to en- gage in baby kissing at Pittsburg may have been for thereason that the McKee kid has given him a surfeit of the baby business. —Nobody will charge INGALLS with | having plagiarized his Gettysburg ora- tion.. Tt bore marks of its’ paternity that couldn’t be attributed to AAssir-’ LON, —The census taking is getting along pleasantly notwithstanding PorTzr’s intention of making it, disagreeable to the people. He had, however, to revise his intention. —The mention of W. U. HENSEL as a compromise Democratic nominee for Governor is suggestive of a campaign whose brilliancy would be a sufficient warrant for its success. —The rowdy students who painted Harvard red in celebration of a baseball victory over Yale, will find blue the pre- vailing color by the time the faculty shall get through with them. —There is an evident intention on the part of the Republican leaders to work the rebel flag asa supplement to the bloody shirt, the old garment of gory hue having lost its efficacy 4s a politi- cal factor. —The Philadelphia Press expects that the party managed by Quay will carry Delaware at the next election. The domain of “the Blue Hen’s Chick- ens’ is small, but not small enough to surrender to such a party. —The New York census enumerator who committed suicide at the end of his first day’s work must have been dis- couraged with his job. Probably he couldn’t stand the indignation of the old maids whose ages he wanted to find out. | —dJune has so far behaved in a man- ner that by comp rison should make the skittish maiden May ashamed of her unbecoming conduct. But, then, there is no telling how soon June may kick over the traces. —It is remarkable how the fancy of men who have grown rich through mo- nopoly runs in the direction of establish- ing charitable and literary institutions. Is it a way they have of trying to com- pensate the public for having fleeced it? —The census men should be in com- plete possession of their senses. It will greatly aid them in the performance of their duty, particularly when they come in contact with people whose senses are deficient as to the purpose of the census. —1It is to be hoped that the lady teach- er who shall draw the’ Philadelphia Press prize and get the trip to Europe, will not bring discredit upon the Amer- can educational system while abroad by marrying a German baron or an Italian count. —The chairmanship of the Republi- can National Committee will’ not be changed. © As the head manager of the Republican party, the fellow who got away with $260,000 of the Pennsylva- nia State funds is the right man in the right place. —The Bucks county farmer, who, in reply to the query from Washington : “What effect des the tariff have on your welfare?’ replied, “It raises h—I11," gave a pretty good description of the crop which tariff taxation is producing in the farming districts. —The Republicans are not only satis- fied with the Quay rule asit now exists, but they show a desire to have it perpet- uated by nominating the Boss’s son Dick for the Legisleture with scarcely a ripple of opposition. They seem to think that they can’t have too much of a bad thing. —About the time the Germuns are relenting in their persecution of the American hog the French government has determined to lay an embargo on the pork of this country. This is an unkind cut from a sister Republic, but the French may point to the illiberal character of the American tariff as a rea- son for their proscription of our swine, —1It has been observed that in the orations delivered at Gettysburg the MEADE of praise is seldom given to the General under whose command the Un- ion soldiers won the battle which made that locality celebrated. The average Gettysburg orator talks as if GRANT, SHERIDAN or SHERMAN commanded on that and every other battle field ofthe rebellion. LE —1It is a circumstance well worthy of making a note of, thatthe Louisiana Lottery, notwithstanding that it has at its head two such ex-rebels as Ju- BAL EARLY and BEAUREGARD, is a Re. publican machine, chartered by a Re- publican carpet bag legislature during the reconstruc#ion period when the incursion of Northern scallawags belonging to the party of “high moral ideas” tempor- arily suspended honest government in the South. VOL. 35. A Forecuast of the Gubernatorial Nominations. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Record, who has been giving some at- tention to the contest for the nomina- tion for Governor on both the Demb- cratic and Republican sides,and has at. tempted an analysis of the result, gives his view of the situation as it ap’ pears at present. ‘ Of the 204 delegates who will com- pose the Republican State convention, 62 have been instructed for DELAMATER, 20 for Hasminas, 15 for StoNEg, 22 scat- tering, 22 not instructed but ‘claimed for DELAMATER, and 63 not yet elected. The choice will depend upon the votes of 103 delegates. Of this number Duramares has 62 sure and his friends claim for him 22 more, making, in all, 84 of those elected. On the other side the opposition marshal 57 sure against him. Putting the Philadelphia dele- gates down for Hastings, there will he 24 left to be disposed of, and to make his nomination. DELAMATER must get 19 of them, which the correspondent thinks he can not do. If the fight was left in this situation he would be de- feated. But if Quay really wants his man nominated “he can go into the Philadelphia delegation and get the necessary number to put DELAMATER through,” for the Philadelphia dele- gates are for Hastings merely theoreti- cally. Of the contest for the Democratic nomination the correspondent thinks that the situation at this time is favor- able to Ex-Governor Pattison. He says: “Mr. WaLLace wrapped him- gelf into fancied security so long that he has lost the adyantage which he once had, and the friends of Mr. Par- TION appear to have more basis than is usual in such claims tor their confi- dent assertion that their candidate, to use the vernacular of the turf, has taken the pole away from his competi- tor.” There is, however, an appearance of bias on the#pasrt of the correspond- ent which may warp the correctness of his view. He gives the following fig- ures as showing the relative strength of the candidates with the delegates al- ready “elected: For Pavrison, 117; Warrace 93; Rickerrs 8. Of the 154 yet to be elected, he makes the follow- ing estimate: For Partrison 47; WaL LACE 53 ; Brack 10 ; doubtful 44. The votes of 187 will be necessary to nomi. nate, for the making up of which num- ber the above showing gives Pattison 164 and WALLACE 146. If the above calculation is correct Mr. WarLLace will have to get a much larger pro- portion of the 44 doubtful delegates than the ex-Governor to secure his nomination. But in estimating the re. liability of this forecast, as between Warrace and Parrisox, it should be understood that the Record inclines toward the latter in its preference. tne TT Democratic Regard for an Honest , Leader. { Ex-President CLEVELAND continues in a wonderful manner to maintain his hold on the esteem and confidence of the members of his party. There is no parallel in the case of any other ex- President except Jackson. Almost every party movement is subjected to the test of its relation to Mr. Creve LaNp. Thus in Pennsylvania Demo: cratic sentiment will not be satisfied until it is assured that the candidates for Governor are friendly to the recog- nized leader of the Democracy, and wherever there is a gathering of Dem- ocratic people the expression of the oc- casion is not considered complete with- out some word from the great represen- tative of the Democratic principle of tariff reform. . Even up in Vermont where the Democrats have had very little en- couragement to be demonstrative, their State Convention showed its high re- gard for the ex President by declaring that the campaign of this year shall be fought on the lines laid down by Mr. CLEVELAND two years ago, and in their platform they “submit to our “people the contrast offered by the “present life of our great fellow * citizen—at work at his desk—mag- “nificent in his private capacity—a “ Democrat in everything — GirovER # CLeyeLAND—to the spectacle offered “by the holder of the presidential of- * fice, as he day by day does the will of “the corrupt ex-treasurer of the State ‘ ot Pennsylvania.” . —R. B. HAYES, who retired from the fraudulently obtained = Presidency a comparatively poor man, is said to be now worth a million of dollars. His | ehickens must have laid golden eggs. A Reminiscent Sentiment. Thursday of last week was a great day in Richmond, Va., the occasion being the unveiling of a monument to Lee. Large numbers of people from aJl parts of the South assembled there to participate in the demonstration in honor of the great military chieftain of the late rebellion, and among them were many suryivors of the confederate armies. As a matter of course this oc- casion has been severely criticised by the Republican press which would like to have it regarded as an outcropping of the old rebellions spirit. People of sense will not allow this Southern de- monstration to give them any uneasiness. There was nothing in the proceedings at Richmond that made them dis- loyal or unpatriotic, they having no other object than to pay a tribute to Southern valor, something of which men of all sections of the country have reason to be proud. If the Southern soldiers hadn’t been so brave there would not have been so aruch honor and glory to the Union soldiers for having eventually conquered them. The erection of a monument to Lge was the expression of a sentiment hon- orable to those who erected it. Men who fought as bravely as they did, no matter what their canse was,are not the ones to be ashamed of their leader or afraid to pay a proper tribute to his memory,and brave and generous men of the North respect them for it. The con- federate flags that were displayed at the unveiling of the monument appeared merely as reminiscences harmlessly in- separable from such an occasion; but the Stars and Stripes predominated as the flag of the Union to which the South- ern people are as firmly and loyally at- tached as are the people of any other section... A Republican Judge on State Rights The declaration of Judge Ewixe, of tiie Allegheny county court, that he would not recognize the binding force of the decision of the Supreme Conrt of the United States that a package of liquor, spirituous or malt, can be sent from one State into another to be sold, is a bold stand for a Republican Judge to take in defense of State rights. It is evidently the opinion of the learned Judge that the States have a right to establish laws for the regula- lation of their internal affairs which no United States court has a constitutional right to annul. His position is a re- bellion against the centralizing tenden- cy which has set-in so strongly under the legislative and executive manage- ment of his own party. Maybe this Allegheny Judge is right. Maybe the United States Supreme Court has no right to dictate what the State laws shall be, but his position antagonizes the drift of Republican doctrine and policy. . An Appropriation for the West Branch: Congressman MoCorMIck, of the Lycoming District, did a little work for “bunkam’ when he offered an amend- ment to the River and Harbor bill for the improvement of the West Branch of the Susquehanna, representing that embankments for the restraining of the waters of that stream were necessary to prevent overflows, and asking the gov- ernment to apply some of the “sur- plus” to such improvement. It isn’t likely that any of the public money will be directed to this purpose, but in asking it to be done Congress- man McCormick probably intends to impress his constituents with tiie be- lief that he is looking after their in- terests, But as River and Harbor bills are now made up, we really can’t see why the West Branch should not come in for a part of the superfluous cash as well as some other streams that, as channels of commerce, are of no more importance than it is; although the practice of spending money on streams that are not navigable is con- trary to the legitimate object of riv- er and harbor appropriations. : At all events the West Branch is as much en- titled fo have some of the public mon- ey expended on it as was the Kiske winetas for which Congressman Waite got an appropriation through a Riv- er and Harbor’ bill a few years ago; and it has been a joke ever since. Con- gressman McCormick may not intend his proposition as a joke, but the Ap- propriation Committee arc likely tolook at it in that light. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., JUNE 6, 1890. the Confederate General Roserr E.. Constitutional Law, The “original package’ decision of the Supreme Court of the United States has stirred up the cranks and zealots who think they know more about constitutional law than the Supreme Judges, and who, if they were on the beuch, weuld decide questions of law according to the bias of their personal opinions and prejudices. One of this class,a meddlesome Methodist preacher, gome days ago undertook to overhaul Justice MiLLer for the “original pack- age” decision, criticising the action of the court on high moral grounds. The Justice took enough notice of the im- pertinent critic to lay him out by the following reply : Many people like you, I think, have the idea that the supreme court is only bound in its de- cisions by the views which they may have of abstract moral right. But we are as much sworn to decide according to the constitution of the United States as you are bound by your conscience to a fuith in the Bible, which you profess to follow. If my views of the true meaning of the constitution of the United States, in a question before me as a judge of one of the courts of the country, should compel mb to differ from the whole world,I slyuld do it courageously. On this question Justice MiLLur takes exactly the position that justified the Dred Scott decision over which the critics of Chief Justice Taney raised such a howl ‘during the time of the slavery agitation. A decision of the United States Supreme Court should not be a matter of sentiment or of ah- stract morals, but it should be an ex- pression of what ie the law under the constitution. The “original package” and Dred Scott decieions were noth- ing more nor less than that. Pr — Mr. Georee W. Cuirps has come into possession of many rare ar- ticles of bricabrac and curious relics, among them being the harp of Tom Moore, the celebrated Irish poet, which he kindly lent to the Scotch-Irish congress recently held in Pittsburg. Tligremarkable instrument exhibited there was an object of great interest, but it was somewhat out of place on that occasion and in that company, for it was a striotly Celtic harp and be- longed to and was played by a poet who would have scorned to be considered a Scotch-Irishman, Tow Moore, who sang of Tara's halls and was a thor- ough Catholic, had no sympathy for the Scotch Presbyterians of Ulster from whom came the people known as Scotch-Irish in this tountry who have added such splendid material to the population of the Great Republic. Emam CTT A Thrifty Set. A remarkable specimen of fine work has been developed in Bedford county in which the official to whom was committed the business of selecting the census enumerators, showed his fine Roman hand. There were 36 positions to be filled in the county and there were 300 applicants, to each of whom the dispenser of this special pap confi- dentially intimated that it would be well to purchase a fountain pen for which he was agent fora New York firm: This was taken by the applicants as a delicate hint that they would find the pen useful in taking the census, and they each bought one. All but the thirty-six who got the places now find the fountain pens dead stock on their hands. The same game was played in Erie county, and there is rea- scu to believe that there was an exten- sive understanding between the fellows who had the giving out of the census appointments and the manufacturers of the fountain pens. Truly the Repub- lican party managers are a thrifty set. DE — ——The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad management has been guilty of an arbitrary and unjustifiable act in giving the conductors in its employ the alternative of either quitting the Broth: erhood to which they belong, or quitting the service of the company. This is in line with the despotic policy which some time ago compelled the other Philadelphia and Reading employes to abandon the labor organizations with which they wereconnected. Itisobvious- ly the intention of this company to bring its men completely under its control and leave them no choice in any ques- tiou in which their rights and the com: pany’s interest may antagonize. So far it has been quite successtul in es- tablishing its system of industrial serf- tom, An Erroneous Idea. In was thought by some that the meeting of the Republican National Executive Committee, which was to have taken place some weeks ago, was delayed on account of dissatisfaction with its chairman, M. 8. Quay, on the part of the more decent element of the party, and that a movement was on foot to have him resign. This was al- together a mistake and was attributing too much to a sense of decency which imagination erroneously pictured as still lingering in the ‘management of the party. The meeting not only came off, but was held at Quay’s private residencein Washington, and wound up with a sumptuous feast at Quay’s dinner ta- ble. Dorsey was there, and so were Crarkson and the rest of the gang com- posing the Executive Committee, and, with their legs under the Boss's well- loaded table, they no doubt laughed at the report that he would be compelled to resign the chairmanship of the Na- tional Committee on acconnt ot such a trifle as the undenied charge that he had rifled the State treasury of Pennsylva- nia and committed other acts of public and private rascality. The Executive Committee had an elegant time, and in addition to enjoying themselves at the chairman’s bountiful board, did some important business in cutting ont work for the present Congress, directing that it should pass a Federal Election law whereby the elections could be controll- ed by the party in power, and enact other legislation that would strengthen the Republican hold on the govern. ment. The idea of Quav’s resigning the chairmanship! The “grand old party” couldn't get on without him. Sm —— ——Mr. Georce D. Herserr has taken editorial control of the Evening Herald, the only avowedly Democratic newspaper in Philadelphia,and is mak- ing it the medium of excellent Demo- craticdoctrine and the vehicle of trench- ant political expression. Mr. HegperT is an experienced and vigorous” writer, and in addition to this essential quality he has scarcely an equal in the knowl- edge of Pennsylvania politics and ac- quaintance with the people who com- pose the Pennsylvama Democracy. This, aside from his editorial ability, makes nim a power as the jhead of a Democratic journal. We predict suc- cess for him in the responsible position he has assumed and which he is so ca- pable of filling. —— They Will Sit Down on It, It appears that the members of the Ways and Means committee of the House, irrespective of party, agreed to sit down on the Farmers’ Alliance gov- ernment ware-house bill. They con- cluded to do this in the interest of com- mon sense and for the discouragement of demagogy. There are a set of “pro- fessional” farmers, who have no agri- cultural interest whatever, but have taken up the farmers’ cause for what they may be able to make out of it, politically and otherwise. [tis these fellows who are urging upon Congress most extravagant and nonsensical schemes for the relief of the depressed condition of the agriculturists. Butin comparison with others this ware- house bill takes the cake for unparal? led and unmitigated foolishness. It is seldom that the members of a legis- lative committee of opposite parties agree upon any point, but with re- gard to the ware-house bill there was a commendable consensus of opinion that it was a mischievous scheme in- tended to be worked by designing dem- agoges. When Mirrs and McKixn- LEY unite in thinking so it must be about the correet conclusion. The Republican primary elec- tions held last Saturday had a decided Hastings complexion, his friends claim- ing that he carried one delegate in Perry,two in Lebanon, two in Dauphin, and one, perhaps two, in Huntingdon. StoNE may get one in Huntingdon, and two of the Dauphin delegates may go for DerayaTer. The sixteen delegates from Allegheny will go for MoNTooTH as first choice, but the Hastings claim is that when they settle down to mak- ing a nomination as between Hasrinas and DsLAMATER, they will go for the young warrior of Centre county. It looks encouraging for Da~nr, but the way the cat shal! jump is a matter that will be determined by the Boss. Spawls from the Keystone, —Armed with a pitchfork Mrs. Elwood Shaf- fer, of Pike county, drove away six tramps from her barn. —A box of 150 snakes was recently shipped to New York over the Honesville branch of the Erie Road. —Frank Tener, aged 21 years, was drowned in the Susquehanna River near Harrisburg on Saturday night. —The delinquent taxpayers of Bristol have been somewhat rufilgd by the publication of their names by the City Sehool Board. —A company is about to be organized in Berks county for the culture of sisal grass, used in the manufacture of cordage and ropes. —Henry Hall, of Mercer, who recently re- ceived renomination for the Legislature, is making an active canvass for the Speaker's chair. —The farmers of Berks county are complain- ing abont the ravages of the Hessian fly and the appearance of rust on the wheat. All crops look backward. —A “pet” snake owned by Albert Carsell, of Scranton, entwined itself around the neck of the baby as it slept in the cradle. It was dis- lodged with difficulty. —The body of John Hagan was found float- ing in the Susquehanna River at Pittston on Sunday. He was drowned on Tuesday at Scranton while bathing. —Alfred Weibel, a widower, committed sui- cide at Copley, it is believed, because of a quar- rel he had with a married woman with whom he had been intimate, —Miss Laura Ott feli down a well at South- ampton, Bucks county, a days few ago. She trod on a trap door and it gave away. She was rescued after a good ducking. —Orders have heen issued for the resump- tion of work on full time at all of the Reading collieries in the Mount Carmel district. A dozen mines are affected by the order. —J. I". Fasnacht, of Lancaster, aged 19 years, went swimming in the Conestoga near Rocky Springs Sunday, and wasattackkd with cramps and drowned. His body was recovered. —Keyner Kemmerling, of Greensburg, cut his throat one day recently in the presence of his room-mate, whom he covered with a re- volver while the self-murder was executed. —The body of Authur Davis, 10 years; was found floating in the Susquehanna River near Berwick. Young Davis was drowned at Ed- wardsville during a heavy rain-storm last week. —The members of the General Synod of the Reformed Church, in session at Lebanon,made an excursion to the Cornwall ore hills and Mount Gretna as the guests of Robert H. Coleman. —James Martin, of Reading, employed as a brakeman on the Schuylkill Valley branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad, had both legs cut off by a pusher at Phoenixville on Tuesday evening, —Warrants have been issued at Reading for the arrest of the young men who assaulted and insulted Mrs. Henry and Mr. Feranda Trump just outside of that city recently while returning from a drive. —John M. Whittaker, a carpenter employed in Horsham township, fell dead on Monday night after indulging in a “stag dance” with some friends. He was 50 years old, and for- merly lived in Philadelphia. —The New Jersey State Monument Commis- sioners are at Gettysburg inspecting their memorials in accordance with an act of Assem- bly donating $1000 yearly to defray expenses of im provements and repairs. —George W. Hall was committed to jail at Williamsport to answer for the death of Jacob Konkle, of Montoursville, whom he struck on the head with a fence rail two weeks ago and who died on Saturday night. —Oliver G. .Mangle, of Wilmingtom, Del., formerly a waiter at the Fountain House, Doylestown, was arrested there on the charge of atlempting to produce an abortion by the administration of poisonous drug. —For fifteen years past an old lady has eall- ed every year at the office of Alderman Barr, of ‘Lancaster, to secure a flag to put on the grave of her son, a soldier whose body is buri- ed in a country cemetery outside the city. —Deputy United States Marshal Baring, of Wilkesbarre, captured Richard @. Folk at Sunbury on Saturday in the act of swindling victims by the ‘‘green-goods’’ game. In_de- fault of $2560 bail Folk was committed to jail. —M. J. Kline, a merchant and assistant postmaster of Ashland, Northampton county, has’ disappeared, and his store was seized by the :Sheriff Monday and sold to pay claims of $6000 made against him by fellow mer- chants. —Mrs. Morris Kirkpatrick, sister-in-law of Attorney General Kirkpatrick, who was marri- ed three weeks ago, died suddenly at Easton Saturday night of inflammation of the bowels. She contracted the illness while on her wedd- ing tour. —Richard G. Folk, of Lykens, has been ar- rested at Sunbury by a United States Marshal and held in $2500 bail for passing counterfeit money. He admitted that he lived off the proceeds of counterfeiting for the past eight years. —Mrs. H. M. Morse, of Allegheny, died from the effects of Paris Green, taken with suicidal intent because of jealousy of her husband caused by an alleged flirtation with a young woman at Beaver Falls, with whose mother he boarded. —A farmers’ picnic was given at the grove near Wernersville last week under the au- spices of the Grangers of Berks county. Speech- es were made by State Senator Girard C. Brown, of York county, and W. M. Benninger, of Northampton county. ~The 143d annual Synod of the Lutheran Ministerium began at Bethlehem last Friday. The synod embraces 167 clergymen and 410 congregations with a membership of 120,000 people. The session was attended by 400 clerical and lay delegates. —Frank Adams, a farmer of Greenwich township, went down a fifty-foot embankment with his six-horse team. The horses fell in a heap, with the wagonload of stone on top; but, singularly enough, were only slightly injured. Adams escaped with slight bruises. —Charles Silverman, of Leechburg, the first man in the State to test the original package question, appealed to Judge Acheson, of the United States Court, for his discharge, but that Judge remanded him to be tried in the Arm- strong Cirenit Court under Pennsylvania law. —James Shaughnessy, aged 25 years, who has been in jail at Wilkesbarre since January last for abusing his wife, was released a few days ago, He went to his home and was re- fused admittance. He stepped out on the sidewalk, drew a revolver and shot himself fatally in the abdomen.