> ~— Wp ss — HIE, BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. — There is scarcely a doubt as to how this Republican Legislatnre will wig- wag on the U. S. Senatorial question. ’—The DELAMATERS have prudently concluded that it is better to compro- mise with their creditors than to go to the penitentiary. — With three opposition Governors in Nebraska it isn’t probable that the remarks that pass between them are of the Carolina character. —In reducing the wages of some of his railroad men it is probably Jay GouLDp’s intention to give practical en- forcement to his “one coat’ theory. —-Governor RusseLL, of Massachu- setts, can use either hand in writing. One hand, however, was enough to en- able him give the people of his State the unusual benefit of a Democra- tic governor’s message. —QUAY has put so much force in his bill that there is ground for the suspi- cion that he wants to force his party to abandon a project which he is smart enough to know would subject it to ir- retrivable defeat. —The Philadelphia Press mears well, but it has underrated the size of the job it has undertaken in trying to overthrow Cameronism whose tap-root has grown deep into the subsoil of Pennsylvania Republicanism. —1It can scarcely be believed that Montana isso great a state that two Leg- islatures in session at the same time are required to make its laws. But the leg- islative necessities of the wild West are not to be gauged by those of the tamer East. —Senator QuAY’s new Xorce Bill is an improvement on LoDGE’s in that it provides not merely a bayonet behind every ballot but & whole park of artil- lery. If we are to have tbat sort of thing there should be no half wayjmeas- ure about it. —Opposition newspapers should not be too critical in commenting upon the unsatisfactory statement of the finances of the State in Governor BEAVERS message. The Governor gave the best that could be shown under Republican financial management. —Unfortunete as the present Indian difficulty unquestionably is, it is never- theless a perfect windfall to the dime novelist, who will draw from it many an incident with which to keep alive in the youthful American mind the blood- thirsty desire to exterminate the Red- skins. —Senator SQUIRE of the new state of ‘Washington is said to be rich enough to spend $250 a day and not feel it. It is a noticeable circumstance that man who “ave the means of paying spot cash for what they get have no difficulty in getting the office of United States Sen- ator in the new states. —Joux D. ROCKEFELLER, the Stand- ard Oil magnate, in a recent court pro- ceeding testified that he couldn’t swear to his exact fortune by at least ten or twelve millions. How strongly con- trasted his situation is with that of the man who isn’t able to swear as to where he is going to get the next square meal. —The English Minister has stolen a march on BLAINE by bringing the Behring Sea dispute into the United States Supreme Court. Probably itis his intention to bind the Jingo Secre- tary over to keep the place and let the British lion’s tail alone. This would certainly be better than going to war about a lot of sealskins. --The fellow who has been terrifying the women of Astoria, N. Y., by catch- ing and kissing them, has been appre- hended and is languishing in jail. We are not lawyer enough to know what punishment the law provides for forci- ble osculation. Is it high enough in the scale of offenses to be considered a rape of the lips ? —There is a report that the German government is going to make a mono- poly of the Koch lymph and ped- dle it out to unfortunate consumptives at so muck per ounce. For downright heartlessness this would not be any worse than was the intention of making a tax on quinine one the blessings of the Me- Kinley tariff bill. —1If it be true that the fish daily eaten by a seal almost equals its own weight, for the promotion of the fishery interest it would be a public benefit to exter- minate the seals even if future genera- tions of women should be deprived of the glory of wearing seal-skin sacques. This is a feature of the Behring Sea question that should not be overlooked. --The House has passed a resolution to appoint a committee to investigate the charge that a Silver Pool composed of Members and Senators had been formed to make a profit out of the pas- sage of the Silver Bill. It is hardly to be believed that the committee will stir up that pool to any considerable depth, or with any intention of reaching the mud at the bottom. ST er \ 8 A CITICELAL 7D yy STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. LL BELLEFONTE, PA., JANUARY 16, 1891. NO. 2. The Jingo Secretary. Secretary BLAINE, after all his blus- ter in the Behring Sea difficulty, is shifting around to the position taken by Secretary Bavarp on the same question, The latter statesman took no stock in the assumption that the sea in question was a “closed sea” which we had purchased from Russia along with Alaska, and into which no other nation had a right to intrude. Mr. BAYARD saw that such a position was untenable, and lize a sensible and practical statesman he did not attempt or pretend to hold what couldn't be held. The position he took, however, was that if everybody hunted seals ina sea in which, from i‘s open character, everybody had a right to huat them, they wouldn't last three years, and therefore he proposed that the United States, England, Germany, Russia and Japan should enter ints a joint agree ment for the protection and perpetua- tion of the seal fisheries. The other nations concerned readily assented, and the question was in this situation when Mr. Bavarp went out of office. Then Mr. Brae came along, blus- teringly asserting the ‘closed sea” theory and rejecting any arrangement with the other interested nations. The English government ignored the Blaine claim that thc northern end of the Pacific Ocean was the private pro- perty of the United States, subject to being “closed” against all other na- tions, and intimated that it would fizht before it wouldsubmitto English sailors and sealers being excluded from it. This is the English answer to the jingo claim of the Secretary of State, who, after a sufficient time for reflec- tion, replies that all the evidence is in favor of the “closed sea” theory, but that our government does not assert that theory, and never did, and that the question is susceptible of amicable adjustment. Now, if Mr. BLaiNe really believes that Behring Sea belongs exclusively to the United States, which is the gist of the “closed saa’ theory, he is repre- hensibie in yielding an inch in this controversy. But he is no more con- vinced of the tenability of sach a claim than Mr. Bavarp was, and all the fuss he has been making was mere- ly to create the appearance of extraor- dinary zeal in maintaining American rights. It is one of Mr. BraiNe's characteristic displays of Jingoism. Those who are interested in the infamous Force Bill, regarding it as a party measure of the first importance, are not disposed to let it give up the ghost. It was made to give way last week to the Silver Bill, but it is be- lieved that that measure will be dis- posed of in the Senate this week, and an effort will be made to get the Force measure off the side-track upon which 1t was placed to get it out of the road of financial business. Those who are respopsible for it are pertinacious in their purpose, and as it is regarded as indispensable to future Republican suc- cess it need surprise no one to see further efforts made to pass it. S————— Delamater Charged With Embezzle- ment. The financial complications in which GEORGE W. DELAMATER finds himself involved followed hard upon the politi- cal disaster that overwhelmed him at the late election. His business failure seems to be complete in its disastrous character, the liabilities being far be- beyond the capacity to pay, In addi- tion to this collapse the DELAMATERS composing the banking firm have been arrested on the charge of embezzle- ment brought against them by the out- going Commissioners of Crawford county who allege that the firm re- ceived deposits from the County Treas- urer amounting to upwards of $30,000, they knowing themselves insolvent at the time, and which amount has been lost in the wreck of the bank. This charge is of a criminal character and together with the conduct of Grorce W. Dgramater in Philadelphia in raising money on worthiess checks about the time of his failure, gives a shade of dishonesty to the circum- stances of the disaster which has over- taken him. The developments that have been made since DELAMATER'S financial collapse give the people of the State great reason to be satisfied with the result of the election that pre- vented such a man from being their Governor: The Great Democratic Anniversary. The anniversary of the battle of | New Orleans, which occurs on the 8th | of January, is one of the greatest and | most time-honored Democratic festivals | and is usually celebrated all over the | country by Democrats who are strong | in the faith. It being associated with | one of the most brilliant military vie- | tories in American history, the fact that the hero of that victory was the staunchest champion of Democra- cy gives the anniversary additional in- terest to patriotic Democrats. This year it was more generally observed than ever before, for this year the Dam- ocracy of the country have, had great- er reason than ever before to rejoice over the triumphs of the political principles of which ANDREW JAcKsoN was the great exponent. Among the demonstrations on the 8th inst., the one that exceeded all others in notorjety and brilliancy was that of the Young Men's Democratic Association of Philadelphia whose banquet al the Academy of Music in that city drew together distinguished Democrats from all parts of the Union to celebrate the Jacksonian anniver- sary in connection with recent Demo- cratic victories, and give expression to Democratic sentiments. GROVER CLEVELAND was the principal guest. His presence was greeted with more than usual enthusiasm and his address emphasized the doctrines which give him the front rank among contempora- neous Democratic leaders. Pennsyl- Governor-elect, Roserr E. ParrisoN, was a conspicuous guest, as vania's were also such prominent Democrats as Bavarp, of Delaware, BRECKIN- of Xentucky, RusseLL, of Massachusetts, and others. It was in every respect a glorious tribute to the RIDGI, memory and principles of the great Democratic chief whose staunch char- acteristics won for him the title of Old Hickory. ————————— Senator Wallace’s Financial Condition, The report that was sent out to the ef- fect that the assignees of Hon. WirLiam A. WaLnace were unable to furnish bonds and consequently the property of that gentleman would be forced to a gale that would leave hima complete bankrupt, appears to have been erro- neous, if it was not actually prompted by malice. The bond of the assignees has been accepted and was approved by Judge Furst last Saturday and or- dered to be filed. The inventory shows assets amounting to nearly a million of dollars in value, overlappiag his lia- bilities by more than $300,000. There will be no such forced sale as would drive the Senator to the wall, and with the relief that attends a judiciously managed assignment the Senator will come out of the difficulty solvent, al- though considerably reduced in pecuni- ary circumstances. Farmer Taccarr is the man with whom the Republican opponents of Cameron would like to defeat the senior Senator. He is a good Repub- lican and therefore should not be ob- jectionable on the score of politics. Moreover he belongs to the agricultur- al persuasion and therefore |should be acceptable to the granger element in the Republican party. It would be a great compliment to the farmers to have Dox's seat filled by a man who has hayseed in his hair. But the chance of Farmer TacearT beating CaMERON is mighty slim. It can scarcely be cli ssed among the remote possibilities. Dox has a mortgage on this Republican Legislature, as he and his father have had on many previous ones, and he will foreclose it when the time comes for his re-election. ——The Alliance people of Kansas are likely to concentrate upon Judge PEFFER, editor of the Kansas Farmer at Topeka, as the candidate with whom they propose to beat INGALLs in the contest for the United {States Senate. They can do it it they are determined in their purpose. There are 165 mem- bers of the two houses, 83 being the | number necessary to elect a senator. The Alliance party hasa total strength of 92, the Republicans 64, and the Democrats 9. From this situation it would seem that there is a strong pro- bability that INcaLL's candidacy will | turn out to be nothing but an “irides- ! cent dream,” A New Monopoly That Will Affect the Farmers. So soon after the passage of a tariff bill that was represented to be protec- tive to the interest of the farmers, it looks bad to see the formation of a Trust to control the output of harvest machinery for the entire country. The first official act of the American Har- vester Company of Illinois, a consoli- dation of the eighteen harvester com- panies of the United States, with headquarters in Chicago,will be to dis- charge about 10,000 employes whose services are rendered unnecessary by the consolidation of eighteen separate and distinct companies into one mon- opoly. Ten million dollars per annum is expected to be saved in wages alone through this consolidation. But while this profit is made by the Trust through the discharge of this large number of workmen, the farmers can- not expect a corresponding decrease in the price of machinery, for the very purpose of the consolidation is to break down competition, if not to increase the prices. This new monopoly, which will cantrol the output of the harvesting machinery of the entire United States, and a large European trade, has a cap- ital of $35,000,000. A Chicago paper interviewed Secre- tary Rusk about the newly-formed reaper and mower trast, and the farm- ers’ candidate for the Presidency talk- ed with a good deal of heat about this combination against the farmers. “I had an opportunity to take some stock in the combination,” he is represented in the interview as saying, “and know what inducements were offered.” He added : An investigation will show that this same combination is now selling or offering to sell machinery in Russia and Australia and other wheat-growing countries at a lower figure than they do in this country. This won’t do and I need not offer any argument to] prove the weight sr truth of the assertion. The first thing thie farmer will do when he is acquaint- ed witfl these facts will be to make a howl against trusts and protection that does not pro- tect: Whether justly or not he will charge it to the Repuhlican party. Iam as certain as I can be of anything that this mower and reaper trust will cost the Republican party hundreds of thousands of votes at the next Presidential election unless it takes a firm stand against it and trusts in general. Well, the farmer is bound to find out that the agricultural implement makers sell their goods cheaper in Russia and Australia whose wheat keeps down the price of American wheat, than they sell them to "the American farmers who have been voting to keep up the tariff for the benefit of the manufacturers. If they won’t believe Democratic speakers or the representation of Damocratic our- nals, they wlll aot refuse to believe so eminent a Republican and farmer as Secretary Rusk. was written the to thank a wo- Since the above farmers have reason man for preventing their robbery by a heartless monopoly. It was a woman's hand that strangled the American Harvester Company, the name that was assumed by the mammoth Trust that, with a capital of $35,000,000, was preparing to monopolize the production and sale of the most indispensable and costliest of agricultural implements. This wo- man is Mrs. McCormick, of Chicago, the widow of the great reaper wmanu- facturer, whose son, Cyrus H., was president of the trust. Mrs. McCor- MICK was always opposed to the trust. She is the heaviest stockholder in the McCormick Reaper Company, and takes great pride in the mammoth in- stitution founded by her husband. She demanded that the McCormick com- pany withdraw. It withdrew and the trust went to smash. The farmers of the country are indebted to Mrs. Mo- Cormick for a valuable service in their interest. The employees of the Pennsyl- vania Steel Works at Steelton have been notified that after the first of Feb- ruary their wages will be reduced 8 or 10 per cent, or to the point where they were before the advance in November, 1889. This is another example of the way in which the McKinley tariff does not give the promised increase of wages to the workingmen, But there is no question that it has ‘ncreased the prices of articles necessary for the dai- ly living of the working people, They Don’t Like an Honest Ballot. Republican Governer Hovey, of In- diana, entertains no liking for the new reform ballot law of that State, and there is a good reason for his an- tipathy. At the last election it gave the Democrats an easy victory by in- terfering with the purchasing power of the blocks-of-five system of corruption. He therefore in his message attacks the election law in its vital feature, the provision which requires all ballots to be printed by the State and prohi- bits the voter from writing on the ballot, or putting guishing mark upon it. names up- any distin- This provi- sion is intended to secure secrecy, and secrecy interferes with the work of the briber and the bulldozer. As an ex- tinguisher of the Dudley and Dorsey practices it naturally excites the enmi- ty of the Indiana Republican leaders. The Indianapolis Sentinel claims to have information that the Rzpublican managers depend upon the supreme court to set aside this provision of the election law before the election of 1892. If this be done the doors will be thrown wide open forthe bribing of vot- ers, and Dudleyism will again flourish in Indiana. More Bayonets. The junior Senator from Pennsylva- nia has introduced a bill in the Senate which he intends as a substitute for the original Lodge bayonet bill. Tt differs somewhat in its details from the original, but in the matter of force it 1s even more stringent and consequently more objectionable. The following is the section in which the bayonet makes its repulsive appearance : When itshall appear to the satisfaction of the President of the United Stated that (in any locality) the provisions of this law cannot otherwise be executed, it shall be his dnty, and he is hereby empowered, to suspend there the writ ot habeas corpus and to employ the armed forces of the United States, naval and military, for the enforcement and for the pro- tection of the officers whose duties are herein provided for. There are various surmises as the Quay's object in introducing this meas- ure. He was known to be opposed to the Lodge Bill as inexpedient and mis- chievous, and therefore it is the opin- ion of the radicals that he wishes to make, by the extreme provisions of this bill, the idea of military force at the elections so odious as to cause it to be abandoned entirely. There are others who think that, finding himself losing favor with President HarrisoN, he aims at restoring himself to the good graces of the head dispenser of official patronage by introducing a force measure exactly suited to the Harrison taste. But it is difficult to understand the motive of so wily a politician as Quay. —— During the month of December last there were granted by the pension bureau 9,521 increase cases, 3,599 or- jiginal invalid cases, and 5,182 cases under the dependent pension act of June last. The pension agents’ fees in these cases amount to $236,985. At this rate the fees of these agents would amount annually to $2,843,820. When it is considered that the pension agent renders no legitimate service that the ex-soldier could not perform for him- self, the waste and iniquity of this an- nual swindle carried on uuder protec- tion of the laws, is at once apparent. An Extra Session Possible. It wouldn't be surprising if there should be an extra session of the Fifty- second congress following upon the heels of the Fifty-first, which is so far behind with its work that it may not be able to get through by the 4th of March. There are scarcely 40 work- ing days remaining for the present cou- gress and not one of the appropriation bills has yet passed the Senate. The Silver question is to be settled and there is a strong desire to have the Subsidy Bill passed. These are mat- ters that will take time, and if the lead- ers should be determined to ‘make an- other effort to pass the Force Bill there would be but little if any time left for such legislation as is necessary for the actual running of the government. In such an event the Democratic House would have to be called together to supply the deficient action of the pre sent Congress. If the Republicans wish to prevent an extra session they can do so by devoting the balance of the time to such business as is actually needed. Spawls from the Keystone, —E ie city is terrorized by thieves. —A Pittsburg couple eloped on skates. —A child was born ona train just: outside of Pittsburg. —A $10,000 ice machine is being ereeted in a Pottsville brewery. —The tax rate in Berks county has been fixed at 214 mills. —The tax-rate in Lancaster county is fixed at 2 mills. —A new township.in Berks county is to be known as “Cleveland.” —The daughter of an Easton hotel keeper baked 6723 pies during 1890. —The new Lehigh Valley station at. Allen- town will cost $125,000. —The Doylestown public schools have adopt- ed the saving-fund system.. —Mrs. Sarah Hall, of Johnsville, Bucks coun- ty, bas 104 living descendants. —Nineteen persons lost their lives by acci= dent in Warren county last year. —A 16-year-old girl secured a divorce in the Pittsburg Courts a few days ago. —Since the Factory Inspection law went into effect 2087 factories have been visited. —The Americus Club ot Reading will attend the inauguration of Governor Pattison. —The message of the Mayor of Allentown was longer than that of Governor Beaver. —A Kennett Square road machine company has refused to join a trust now forming. —DMrs. Ornauer. of York, who swaifowed car- bolic acid by mistake, died on last Thursday night. —Veterinary surgeons in session at Erie want more legislation enacted for their pro- tection. —Simon Clouser, of Shanesville, is the proud owner of a carriage tongue which is 125 years old.. —The Democratic Central Club, of Wilkes- barre, will attend Pattison’s inauguration 150 strong. —An expressman at Pittsburg was crushed to death by a piano. falling one him which he was moving. —The fees of constables and Justice of the Peace in Chester county Jast year amounted to nearly $40,000. —A gang of tramps near Lancaster formed a camp and had sentinels out to warn them in case of a raid. —The Altoona Tribune calls upon the Legis lature to take some step to diminish the tramp nuisance. —There were thirty-seven fires and alarms of fire in 1890 in Easton, and the total loss did not reach $2000. —Mrs. Sarah Keyser, of Macungie, received a pension of $17.0 and died three or four days afterward. —The first day’s deposits of seventy pupils in the Doylestown School Saving Fund amounted to $172. —The Reading Railroad authorities have or- dered that no brakeman shall be allowed to work upon an engine. —John Price, a colored man, of Bristol, is a candidate for the position of Messenger to Governor Pattison. —It is probable that the fight over t he Read- ing postmastership will be settled by the se- lection of a dark horse. —In the fight among tramps at Lebanon on Friday night William Hawkins, of Brooklyn, received fatal wounds. —The Young Men's Temperance Society of South Bethlehem has cleared $3500 on a bazar held to raise funds to build a hall. —In six years over $900) has been realized from an acre of stone and sand quarry at Mount limothy, near Doylestown. —Doylestown is becoming a great centre for mushroom culture, and the produet is. con~ signed to the New York markets. —A child at Allentown placed a piece of red paper in the window, and her act led to.the re- port that there was smallpox in the house. —Drillers for oil at Nockamixon, Bucks county, at a depth of 1360 feet, have passed through a nine-fcot vein of anthracite coal. —A drove of eleven pigs belonging to J. Cooper at Bensalem, were killed. by some one maliciously throwing them poisoned corn. —A Pittsburg charlatan advertises to cure drunkenness with the aid of the spirits and two or three applications of a harmless powder. —An Italian has been arrested in Rittsburg for swindling another. Hesold his daughter for $120, and then the young woman. fled with another more desirable suitor. —A Northampton county farmer who had some turkeys killed by degs has made a claim upon the School Board. for. damages because the Board receives the dog tax. —A cook employed at the house of ex-Judge Thomas Butler, of West Chester; suddenly be- came insane and threatened to.kill the mem. bers of the Judge's fam ily: —Professor Lovern, of Scranton, who had part of his book collection stolen from him a year ago, has just resovered: his property, and the thieves have been arrested. —Mrs. Susanna. Bolenger returned to her home in Doylestown recently, after an ab- sence of thirty years in tre far West, and she found most of her relatives dead, —William Canavan, a wealthy young man of Oakland, Lugerne county, was thrown from his sleigh on Friday night near his: home and killed, his neck having been broken. —An enraged cow, belonging to Daniel Kem. merer, of Alsace, broke both her hind legs by falling, and with the bones protruding through the fleshishe walked 500 yards. —John. Rhoads, Harry Keirn and Harry Barrett, of Newport, skated on the canal from: that place to Harrisburg on Thursday. The. distance is twenty-eight miles, and they cov erad it in four hours. ~The faneral of ex Sheriff John T. Simpson occurred at Doylestown on Wednesday. Simp-. son, who was a kinsman of General Grant, bore. a, remarkable resemblance to the greut soldier, and was known far:and wide as “General Grant.” —A tramp built a fire in Darby lock-up to keep from freezing, and early in the morning the cell canght fire and the door. had to be battered down by the citizens to save him from heing burned alive. —This is the centennial anniversary year of Trinity Lutheran Congregation at Reading, and the Teachers’ Association of the Sunday- school is contemplating the erection of a handsome Sunday-school memorial building on the site of Trinity Chapel. —Grant Vansickle, ayoung man from Cata- sauqua, was laken handcuffed by a Constable into the Catasauqua Rolling Mill on Thursday to get money to settle a case for which he was under arrest. Vansickle gave the officer the slip, severed the chains of the handcuffs with a pair of steam shears and made his escape,