oe BY PRP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Tke infant tin industry is likely to die in borning. —The people didn’t agree with Jay GoULD’s opinion that one suit of clothes is enough. —The report of the firing of the Illi nois CANNON was sweet music in the ears of decent citizens. —It may begin to dawn upon chair- man BRowN that as a party leader he is not a howling success. —We shall soon have with us Gov- ernor BEAVER as a distinguished but very private citizen. — With all the county offices occupied by Democrats the Court House will soon be in its normal condition. —It isn’t an “iridescent dream’ this time, Mr. INGALLS. To you it must appear positively hideous, ~The farmers of the West seemed to have devoted last election day to the strengthening of their fences. —“The cause is looking up,” said a tariff organ. Yes, very much asa fel- low looks up who is on his back. —~Governor ParrisoN will certainly remind the Republican Legislature that their party promised ballot reform. —dJudging from the way his party went down it must have been the Me- Ginty tune that Mr. BAINE was whistling, —Democrats and other patriotic eiti- zens are unanimous in the opinion that in no former year was there such an oc- casion for Thanksgiving. —The interference of a Democratic Judge in Clinton county against a Dem- ocratic candidate for congress injudicious, to say the least of it. was —Secretary NoBLE boasts of the early completion of the census. It would be better if he could brag of its being thoroughly and correctly done. —Although DELAMATER wasn't able to grasp the governorship he holds on with a firm grip to the State funds un- lawfully deposited in his bank. —There are indications of an insur- rection in the Republican party against the re-election of CAMERON to the U. S. Senate. After all, DoN may have wast- ed that $100,000. —Since the Independents have found it so easy to unhorse QUAY, it wouldn’t be surprising if they should be encour- aged to tackle CAMERON next. —It wasn’t thankfulness for the result of the election that inspired Mr. HARRI- soN’s Thanksgiving proclamation. But all the same, the people have great rea- son to be thankful. —BLAINE can have the Republican nomination for President is 1892 if he wants it. Bat it is probable that such a train of circumstances will transpire in the meantime that he will not want it. —The Democratic rooster has proved himself to be such a tough old bird that no one would think of using him for Thanksgiving purposes, although his crow is calculated to inspire thankful- ness. —The Republican newspapers should not trouble themselves about the person- nel of Governor PATTISON’S cabinet. They can be assured that an honest Gov- ernor will have none but honest men around him. —The teaching of politics has been introduced into the New Jersey com- mon schools. This year Pennsylvania was a big political school in which the bosses learned something that they never knew before. » —After the glorious political victory the people cared very little as to how the fight between the Wall street buils and bears should terminate. If those ani- mals should exterminate each other it would be a good riddance of obnoxious beasts. —An exchange remarks: “With a Democratic Governor and a Republican Legislature some very good laws ought to get on the statute books at the coming session.” But they would be much better if both Governor and Legislature were Democratic. —While'most of the Republican con- gressmen who rendered themselves ob- noxious by their revolutionary methods were subjected to slaughter, the author of the Force bill managed to Loner on the breastworks. It is to be regretted that he didn’t fall outside of them. “In re-electing Mr. BRECKENRIDGE to ‘the seat in the present congress from which he was outrageously ejected, and «also to the next congress, his constituents doubly vindicated him. There was no feature of the recent glorious election more gratifying than this. —Since QUAY and the other Republi- can bosses have been so emphatically bounced the dazed journals of that par- ty begin to show a. reviving interest in politics by commenting upon the bouncing of McMULLIN and MONROE by the Philadelphia Democratic com- mittee. Bul thereis no similarity in these two kinds of bouncings. OL yy’ 2, Ny @ = hd re NOL. 35. Mr. Blaine Again. In their dire distress the Republican papers are turning to JAMES G. BLAINE as a leader for 1892, probably on a plat- form to reform the McKinley law. James G. no doubt would be equal to that bit of political gymnastics. The Pittsburgh Gazette says it could cheer- fully support Mr. BLaINg in 1892, but feels sure he will not be a candidate. Bat it should not be so sure of that. But speaking of Mr, BraiNe Senator BrackBurNy of Kentucky has at last opened his lips as to that memorable interview between BraiNg and the Sen- ate finance committee on the McKin- ley bill, of which an inkling got out during the fate canvass. The Senator would not unburden himself until the returns were ail in, as he did not care to embarrass Mr. BraINe's efforts on the stump by disclosing anything tak- ing plece in the committee room. This showed a nice sense of honor, but now he tells the whole story. It appears that Messrs. BLACKBURN, Hark of Maine, and ALLisoN of Iowa, the two latter Mr. BraINe's Republi- can co-workers, being in consultation in commitcee just after the McKinley bill passed the house, Mr. BLAINE dropped in on them on department business, A casual mention of the McKinley bill had the effect that a spark has on gunpowder. Mr. BLAINE exploded with tremendous violence. Turning on his two party associates, he thundered : This bill is an infamy and an outrage. It is civilized people. Go on with it and it will car- ry our party to perdition. Senator BLackBurNy was interested, of course, an{ in spite ol the shock, he managed to get in a leading question, which caused a second explosion, more violent than the first. He thus de- scribes what followed : : “I wish you were in the Senate,” I said, “to announce.yourself in such terms.” Lai w were,” he answered. “If so, I would stamp it under my feet and spit upon it,” and then, advancing toward Senators Alli- son and Hale, he snapped his finger in the face of each alternately and with rising inflection said: “Go on with your drivelling idiocy and see to what destruction it will lead the Repub- lican party. Pass this bill, and in ’92 there will not be a man in all the party so beggared as to accept your nomination for the presi dency.” This was followed by a pitiless analy- sis of the bill, which Mr BLACKBURN finally interrupted by reminding him that a bounty of two cents a pound was to be paid *‘to protect the American in- dustry of boring a hole in a maple tree and boiling the sap.” This followed, as Senator BLACKBURN tells it : This was the first he had heard of it and he seemed hardly able to credit what I told. “It isn’t true,” he said. Allison and Hale confirmed me. “I suppose this was done at the solicitation of Morrill and Edmunds?” he inquired. Mr. Allison replied in the affirmative. “It is a good sample of the breadth of their statesman- ship,” said the secretary. : Mr. BraiNg’s new silk hat was on the table before him, and as he reach- ed this point he rose to the full gravity flat with a tremendous blow of his clenched fist he seized the wreck thus produced and dashed it against the wall of the committee room, from which it rebounded in a condition comparable to nothing unless it be the present con- dition of the Republican party. Is it the revelation of this incident that is turning the attention of the Re- publican party to Mr. Brain as a life preserver, who knows all about casting anchors to the windward ? Severe but Just Criticism. The regrettable circumstance of the defeat of Hon. Mortimer Erviorr is deprecated by the Philadelphia Record in the following severe paragraph : “The Democrats lose the Congress- man in the Sixteenth district through the disgraceful treachery of the Demo- racy of Clinton county. Clinton gave Mr. Hopkins a majority of over 300, when 1t should have given Mr. Erriorr over 600. This recreancy is made ! more glaring by the fact that Clinton | county was the first to indorse Mr. | Buuiorr, as. well as the first to strike him down at a time when the tide ‘throughout ‘the country was ranning strongly in favor of Democracy. Brrr ort was beyond all compare the abler and the better man. He would have given the Sixteenth district honor in the Federal legislature, His defeat is one of the shameful episodes of the late contest. It was a blow under the fifth rib from an unexpected hand.” a wd 0 the most shameful measure ever proposed toa: of the situation, and smashing the hat , ® CATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Reasons for Believing That the Census Was Doctored. It has been announced by a census bulletin that the population of the United States, as shown by Porter's count, is 62,480,540. The population in 1880 was 50,155,783, so that it ap- pears that the increase in the ten years intervening between that time and 1890 has been 12,324,757, the percentage of increase being 25.57. In 1870 the pop- ulation was 38,558,371, the increase be- tween that time and 1880 having been 11,697,412, or a percentage of 30.08. Previous to 1860 the decennial in- crease had ranged between 32.67 per -| cent. and 36.39 per cent., a degree of uniformity that was rather remarkable. During the ten years from 1860 to 1870, however on account of the war during that decade the rate of increase tell to 22.63 per cent, or less than two- thirds of the rate during the previous decade. If the rate of increase before the war had been maintained since 1860 the population of the United States would have been about 42,000,000 in 1870, 56,000,000 in 1880, and 74,500,000 in 1890, If the Porter census is correct it show a decided decline from the per- centage of increase that had previous. ly prevailed with remarkable uniformi- ty from the beginning of the govern- ment. This has occurred notwith- standing an unusually large immigra- tion. It is more likely that Porter is not correct and that this apparent de- clive comes from defective enumeration. That able Republican paper the Pittsburg Dispatch, finds it difficult to divest itself of the impress that the cen- sus has been doctored for political effect. It believes that there are certain fea tures of the census ‘hat bear their own conclusion on their face. The percen- tage of growth as now stated, of 24.57, is admitted by Mr. Porter to be dis p- pointing ; but be excuses it on the ground of the inaccuracies in the cen- | “54 party. sus of 1870, which he alleges “was grossly deficient” and makes compari- sons valueless. This excuse of Mr. PorreR’s calls for two comments. In the first place, it does not make com parison valueless; but it only requires us to exclude the census of 1870 as a basis for the comparisons. Thus, the population by the census of 1860 was 31,443,321; and by that of 1880 it was 50,155,783. Here we have an in- crease of 56 per cent in two decades, one-fifth of which period was occupied by a war which not only checked the natural and acquired growth of popu- lation, but actually increased the de- truction of life ; and yet in contrast to this we are called upon to contemplate an increase of _but 24 per cent in the most prosperous and productive decade the country has ever known. Not only does Mr. PortER’s remark? on the census of 1870 fail to prohibit comparisons, but it actually makes them the more telling. If, as Mr. Pox- TER alleges, that census was grossly de- ficient, then the ratios of increase for the proceding decade must be too small. The ratio of total increase in the 60's as given hy the official figures, is 22.63, while the ratio of natural increase is 13 per cent. on Mr. Porter's allegation that the inaccuracies make compari son impossible it is natural to suppose that the real ratio of total growth would be 26 or 27 per cent ; while the ratio of natural increase or excess of births over deaths would be 17 or 18, the percentage of immigration being fixed by the statistics of the immigra- tion officers. But see where this leads! Mr. PorTer's own statement would have us believe not only that the ratio of growth of this country was less than in a decade of which four years were occupied by a deso- lating war; but that in a decade in which prosperty and developement were the rule, and immigration was greater than ever before, the natural increase has been less than in a decade during four years of which increase of population was checked by civil war, It is certainly much easier to be- lieve from what has been before raid that the census was negligently and inadequately taken, than that the or der of nature has been changed in this way. But in view of the curious al- terations which have taken place at various stages of the census proceed: ings and the accusation of political juggling, sorne peculiar things aj pear. Thus, in view of the fame which has x . . growing sections of the country, show BELLEFONTE. PA., NOVEMBER 14, 1890. NO. 45. been given to the development of the | iron and coal regions of Alabama, Ten- | nessee and Georgia, it is somewhat | stunning to find that the ratios of | growth for those States are but 19.45, ! 14.35 and 18.95 respectively, or less | than in Massachusetts and Connecticut, | where it was supposed that no especial | increase was taking place in manufac. | tures, while agriculture has been retro- | ading. Texas, which has been re- | jorted time and again to be one of the @ ratio of increase of 40 per cent, while the ratios for the Dakotas, Colcrado, Idaho and Washington, which occupy a somewhat similar position, ran from 111 to 365 per cent. It is a pecnliar feature of this census that Democratic and doubtful States increase at a less ratio than was expected ; while strong- ly Republican States, with few excep- tions, exceed expectations. ——The Democrats have the hanor of sending to congress the first full blooded Greek that was ever in that body. LroNmas M. MiLLer, the Democratic congressman-elect from Oshkosh, Wis., is a full-blooded Greek. Miller is not a Hellenic name, and Mr. Miter does not know his pa- tronymic, neither does he speak the language of his ancestors. He was a waif picked up upon the battlefield of Misislonghi in 1824, and takes hie name from his preserver and benefac- tor, Colonel J. P. MILLER, of Vermont. An Extra Session. It seems to be the general opinion at Washington that the President,as soon as he returns from Indiana, will call congress to meet in extraordinary ses- sion. Ever since the regular session closed rumors to this effect have been flying, but it was thought that the President had givent up the idea on account of the opposition to it of the prominent members of the Republican The only object of the extra session, if there shall be one called, will be to pass the infamous force bill. The Presi- dent is very anxious to have this meas. ure become a law and he is afraid that at the regular session there will be no time for the force bill, as considera- ble time will probaly be taken up by the consideration of an apportionment bill based upon Porter's incorrect cen- sus. However valuable the force bill may be to the Republican party the Presi- dent will find it beyond his ability to induce the people to believe that the passage of this act is such an extraor- dinary matter as to require the calling, together of congress in extra session. If Mr. Harrison persists in his intention to call an extra session the people will hold him strictly accountable for such action, but in all likelihood Mr. Hag- RISON has learned something from the late election that will prevent him from being rash in the matter of an extra session. Properly Put. “Many people think newspaper men are persistent dunners,says an exchange. By the way of comparison, let us sup- pose that a farmer raises, 1,000 bush- els of wheat a year, and sells it out to one thousand persons in all parts of the country, a great portion of them saying; 'I will hand you the dollar in a short time.” The farmer doesn’t want to be small and says, ‘All right.” Soon the 1,000 bushels are gone, but he has nothing to show for it and he then realizes that he has fritterec. away his whole crop, and that its value to him is due in a thousand driblets; conse- quently he is seriously injured in his business because his debtors, each ow- ing him a dollar, treat it as a small matter and think it would not help him much. Continuing this kind of business year in and year out, as the publisher does, how long would he stand 1t? A moment's thought would convince any man that a publisher has cause for persistent dunning.” A scheme is now on foot in var- ious parts of the State for naming the country roads and numbering the farm houses as are houses in the city,putting up sign boards at the corners, and, in fact, making it very easy to find a given point in the rural districts. This will be very convenient for those who An Important License Decision. The following opinion filed by Chief Justice Paxson in the case of GEORGE E- Sparrow vs. Mercer county will be interesting reading to liquor dealers and temperance people: This was a writ of alternative mandamus di- rected to the president judge, S. S. Mehone, of the court of quarter sessions of Mercer county, requiring him to show cause why he should not grant a license to sell liquors at re- tail to George E. Sparrow. To this writ the court made a full returning, giving reasons for refusing the license. The court says: It would have been suffi- cient for the learned judge to have returned that he has considered the petitions and re- monstrance and that in the exercise of his dis- cretion he has refused to license. His return is very full and he has placed upon the record all the facts bearing upon the application. We have decided repeatedly, in language too plain to be misunderstood, that the grant- ing of a license to sell by retait resis in the sound discretion of the court below. This dis- cretion, however, is a legal discretion, to be exercised wisely and not arbitrarily. A judge who refuses all applications for license, unless for canse shown, errs as widely as the judge who grants all applieations. To refuse a license because in the mind of the judge there isa belief that license should not be granted at all as a matter of policy,is to make law, not to administer it. In the case at hand the learned judge undoubtedly attached great weight to the remonstrances. The most that can be said is that they were of sufficient weight to convince him that the license was not a matter of public necessity. In the view we take of the law this was not an abuse of discretion. We are not called upon to say whether it was exercised wisely. The mandamus is refused. The views above expressed by Chief Justice Paxsovare in harmony with previous ones of our highest court, that the granting of licenses is a matter resting upon the discretion of the court as to whether they are of public neces- sity. Some over-zealous Democratic journals are already bringing RoBerT E. ParrisoN out for the Presidency. They are entirely too hasty and incon- siderate. Mr. Parison has been elect- ed the Democratic Governor of Penn- sylvania, but unfortunately Warngs, Republican, has been elected Lieuten- ant Governor. The nomination of the Democratic Governor for = President would mean the surrender ot the gov- ernor’s office to the Republican faction that was. so emphatically repudiated by the people at the polls. This wouldn't be keeping good faith: with the people who want four years of hon- est administration under a Democratic Governor. The Right Kind of a Congressman. One of the best and cleanest men who will go to the next congress as a new Democratic representative from Obio, is Hon. Micnagr D. HARTER. Although a manufacturer he has been opposed to the system of tarift taxation not only because it is unjust, bat also because he believes it to be injurious to employers as well as to the men. they employ. Hundreds of voters work in his establishment, and during his re- cent candidacy he addressed them in the followin® circular, which showed his honorable and liberal character : While it would be very gratifying to me to have your unanimous vote, I wish now, when Iam a candidate for office, to denounce the practice so often pursued of using intimida- tion or undue influence, by saying to you that no man’s wages or employment imany estab- lishment in sehich I have any voice or control shall depend upon how he votes. That is the proper talk. In the same circular Mr. Harter did not dis guise his opinions on the tariff ques- tion. He frankly declared : 1 think your wages would have been larger, your employment more regularand your liv- ing expenses smaller during the past twenty- two years,the time of the company’s exisience, had the Government limited ‘its tariff taxes to its needs for pensions, interest and current expenses. When men of such views and senti- meats are sent to congress there is rea- son to look for wiser and more bene- ficent tariff regulations. ~——1In regard to the State Legisla- ture, one hundred and thirty-six new members have been elected, 115 to the House and 21 to the Senate. But 4 of the old 25 even year Senators have been returned. The Republican’s ma- jority of 112 has been reduced to 50, and there are in consequence many surprises in store when the two houses get down to business next January. —The Democratic committee of Phil- adelphia has commenced the work of weeding the political traitors of that city out of the party. The trouble with this job is, that if fairly and honestly prose- cuted, there will be neither committee nor party left in Philadelphia when the want to visit their rural friends. work is completed. Spawls from the Keystone, —Chester county election expenses were $1443.30. —The Reading post office handled 586,186 letters last month. —A ghost at Stanton,near Wilkesbarre, stalks forth by daylight. —Pottstown’s new water basin has a eapacity of 5,000,600 gallons. —Allegheny Republicans had a Salt River parade on Friday night. —Republican defeat drove Frank Kraft, of | Mount Olivet, to suicide. —Scholars at the West Chester Normal School have been robbed. —Mrs. Mary Walters of Easton, has celebrat- ed her 100th birth day. —There are 553 scholars attending the West Chester Normal School. —A 13-year-old boy has been sent to prison for idleness in Norristown. —Delaware county farmers are holding their potatoes for a ruise in price. —Dr. King, of Lancaster, walked: out of the window in a somnambulistie fit. —Two men in Washington county killed ninety-four squirrels in two days. —Over 3000 men areemployed at the Altoona shops of the Pennsylvania Railroad. —General Alger will attend the eharity en- tertainment of McLean Post, of Reading, —The Randall Club of Pittsburg has already decided to attend Pattison’s inauguration. —Striking salesmen at Pittsburg have com- pelled employers to accede to their requests. —The plumbago mines at Byers, Chester county, are the most important in the country. —Pork is cheap in West Chester. A sow and fifteen little pigs sold for $11 on Saturday. —A spark frony an electric light is supposed to have caused a:fire in a’ Lancaster elothing house. —West Chester pioneers will shorly visit Congressman Jack Robinson at Media in a body. —Dr. Leyda, of Rittsburg refused to answer a summons because he was not paid in ad- vance. —Sheriff Miller, of Lehigh county, on: Satur- day sold six farms: and one slate quarry under execution. —Daniel Eberhard, of Lower Milford, Lehigh county, died just as he was about to sign his will. —Rev. J. C. Kunzman, of a Greensburg Luthern church, has been desposed for “offen- sive paatisanship.” —Valentine Epler, of Reading, whose neck was broken by a train, lived for several hours after the accident, —Frangott Wiedman, an old citizen of Aloona, committed suicide on Wednesday by blowlng out his brains. : —Mrs. Mary Walter, whose husband was at Valley Forge with Washington in 1777,.is one of Easton's livest residents. —George Lindsay, a brakeman of the Penn- sylvania Railroed, fell :rom his train at Wit- mer’s on Saturday and was killed. —Emanuel Shaffer, Commander of Robert Oldham Post, No. 527. G. A. R., of South Beth lehem, died, yesterday aged 47 years. —dJohn R. Schell's 10-year-old son Francis has mysterisusly disappeared from his home in Washington township,Berks county. —In a contest at Bristol tie other day a Bucks countain raade a hogshead of souere kraut in two hours and seven minutes. —The father of General McKitben, who died recently in Washington, still lives in Chambersburg, 94 years of age, and hale and hearty. —James Hess, 17 years old, was sentenced to one year in the Lehigh county jail for felon iously assaulting Beuiah Peters, a 12. year old girl. —Sciota, Monroe county, whose citizens de- pend on the tanneries for a living, will soon be deserted for a more eligible peint in Elk county. —The congregntion of the, eld. Menonite Church at Weaverland, Lancaster. county, is divided on the subject of having a pulpitin the church. —Typhoid fever has been epidemic in Eli« zabethtown, Lancaster county, and. vicinity the past month. Several people have died from the disease. —The thirty-nighth annual Teachers’ In- stitute was opened at Lancaster on Monday afternoon, with.an. enrollment of 603 teachers and 134 ex-teachers.. —Charlas Sudor, of Altoona, was. found dead on Sunday near the city. Several stabs in the neck indicate that he was either murdered or committed suicide.. —A ballot was cast at the election in Chester county upon. which every pame had been scratched except that of Mr. Michener, Prohi- bition candidate for Commissioner. —Emploxes of the Hamburg Rolling Miil, operated by the Pottswille Iron and Steel Company, have struck becanse of the refusal to pay for a.bar of iron. which was overweight. —Dr. J. Hunter Freas, who while demented wandered. away trom: his father’s home at Coventryville, was found wandering through the fields and has been sent to the asylum. —Church bells were rang on Sunday to sum-~ mon farmers to fight the fire in the timber on Mount Penn, near Reading, and it was late in the night before the course of the flames was ura ed. —At Port Royal on Monday a stock train erashed through and wrecked the signal tower. The operator eseaped by jumping, but the fireman of the train, George Longacre, was. killed. —The Pottsville Chronicle says that Mr. MeLeod’s election order was not heeded by some Reading Road bosses, who were openly compelling employes to vote the Delamater ticket. —A West Chester colored man became so much interested in a political discussion on Wednesday that he walked away without his crutches, that had been his constant ecompan- ions for years, —The post office at West Grove, Chester county, is worth $2500 per year, and a vote will be taken in the borough hall next Tues- day evening to ascertain the popular choice between the respectrve, candidates, —Baby Bessie Grace, of Thurlow, taddled, after her father Jast night when he left home "and got on the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad. A freight train struck her and cut offa leg and an arm. She died soon after the accident. . —While prospecting for rabbits in a field on the Middletown road, near the Chester Rual Cemetery, on Thursday, Calvert, a son of Robert Cardwell, of Chester, was caught by the blades of a mowing machine and terribly cut about both ankles,