or emer Ink Slings. — Without honest registration Ballot Reform is but a mockery and a delusion, —Notice of a birthday party at the White House the other day revived the drooping public interest in Baby Mc- KEk. —Thanks to her bungling congress- men, the new Philadelphia will have to get along for awhile yet with the old | Mint. —The summary treatment of the Mafia assassins at New Orleans was a sort of Sicilian Vespers in the American style. —The promising buds that are wait- ing to throw their pink mantle over the Delaware orchards at the first call of gentle spring, preclude the evil prophecy of the peach pessimist. —Treasurer HusToN says that the government treasury vaults are insecure, but what difference does that make since the Billion Dollar Congress has left STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Adnaquy 9vIg Ln i V& “2S - 16 16¢ VOL. 36. NO. 11. Irregular Justice. The lynching of eleven Italians who | had rendered themselves obnoxious to an exasperated populace, which occur- | red last Saturday in New Orleans, was ‘the most extraordinary case of irregu- lar justice that this country has ever seen. The victims of this outburst of public wrath were criminals who as | members of an association of assassins "had committed a succession of murders. ' It is said that within a few years as many as thirty offences of this kind nothing in them that requires security ? were perpetrated by these murderous —The dispatch which Mr. BLAINE sent to the Governor of Louisiana on the Mafia lynching was a little too im- | Italians, chiefly upon people of their own race. When at last an attempt was made petuous to be creditable to a first-class di- | to bring them to justice they murdered plomatist, and may cause him to do some undignified hedging. I the chief of police of New Orleans who had assumed the duty of suppressing — Ballot Reform that won't interfere their lawlessness, A number of them too much with the registry-padder, the were arrested for this crime and upon repeater and the personator, 1s the kind | that the Republican legislators at Har- | them, risburg prefer for prudential reasons in- | volving party interests. | —The maple sap wends its capillary way to the outward branches with accelerated flow this Spring, impelled by the encouragement it has received from McKINLEY'S putting it among the protected products of the land. —A robin, a song-sparrow and a blue- bird vocalizing on the same apple tree on Saint PATRICK'S day, gave Winter a gentle notice that he has no business to be lounging in the lap of Spring and should be ashamed of such unseemly dalliance. —-Since we have had a Billion Dollar Congress the millionaire will be consid- ed a common sort of pecuniary indivi- dual and will soon give place to the! billionaire. The course of the money | power in this great Republic is onward and upward. f -—Saint PATRICK'S day this year was unusually fine, and yet if there wasev- er a time when the good Saint had rea- | son to be blusterous on his natal day it | was this year in view of the ugly mess which the factious leaders have mada of | the Irish cause. —Queen VICTORIA is in mortal terror | at the prospect of another visit from the | Shah of Persia, that rare old oriental potentate whose personal habits are such | that when he leaves a royal residence | where he has been lodged the service ofa | corps of house-cleaners is indispensable, i —The California U. S. Senatorship, in place of Senator HEARST, deceased, is a question of a few hundred thousand dollars judiciously used where it will do the most good, which may be regarded as being quite cheap, considering that ‘millionaires will compete for the, prize. —The condemned murderer at! ‘Wilkesbarre says that he would go out of the world in a happier frame of mind if the Sheriff would allow him to | salutary lesson that, although corrupt- assist in building the scaffold upon | ed or terrorized juries may acquit them, which he is to swing. There 1s no ac- | they are not secure against the ven- counting for the sources of some peo- | ple’s happiness. --Last Monday completed the six weeks covered by the forecast of the ground-hog, and the wintry manner in which that period came to an end vin- dicated the weather-wisdom of the as- tute animal and rebuked the gibes of | those who presumed to criticise its me- teorological lore. — When Senator PEFFER, of Kansas saw how the Republicans were getting away with the surplus: he prudently concluded to draw as much of his pay in advance as he could get hold of before the treasury became entirely swamped. The western granger is not the man that is going to be left. —I[t is unreasonable for Secretary Rusk to be angry with the Germans for not allowing the importation of Ameri- can pork, for isn’t it one of the cardinal doctrines of the party to which he be- longs that it is a nation’s duty to erect barriers that will keep out the produc- tions of other nations ? —Rev. McQUEARY, an Episcopal clergyman of Canton, Ohio, has been found guilty of heresy by an ecclesias- their trial last week the jury acquitted It was generally believed that the jury had been bribed, and under the circumstances the outraged and in- dignant populace saw no other way of enforcing the demands of justice and protecting the community against or- ganized assassination than by taking the law”in their own hands. Upon due uotice given an orderly crowd ‘assembled at one of the most public places in the city, deliberately marched to the prison from which tae acquitted criminals had not yet been released, and, after forcing their way into it, cooi.y proceeded to carry out their pur- pose by shooting and hanging the of- fenders whom the defective machinery of the law was about to liberate. Under any other circumstances these proceedings would have been most reprehensible, but the situation in which the community of New Or leans found itself upon the acquittal of undoubted assassins took from this bloody enforcement of lynch law much that otherwise would have been | indefensible. Assassination was vin: | dicated in the courts. An associa | tion of murderers were assured,so far as the failure of justice could assure them, that they could continue their crimes without fear of punishment. There was no safety for any citizen who might be brought under the ban of their displeas- ure. It was a terrible situation for a | community to be in—a problem of danger and terror that could be solved only by action as violent, irregular and bloody as was the evil it proposed to suppress. The Mafia, rejoicing over their exemption from punishment, and believing themselves to be beyond the law’s restraint, would have continued the perpetration of their murderous deeds. But the deadly process of Judge Lynch has taught them the geance of an exasperated populace that will not hesitate in an extreme emer- gency to take the law in their own hands. We do not believe that the jury which acquitted the Mafia assassins were bought. It is more reasonable to believe that fear of the vengeance of the murderous gang restrained them from rendering the verdict which the evident guilt of the offenders demand- ed. For the safety of the community the moh had to do the work of justice which an intimidated jury had not the nerve todo. It was a terrible expe- dient, but the fearful circumstance of organized assassination endangering the safety of the citizens and paralys- ing the machinery of the law required the application of a remedy as dread- ful as it was irregular, but which, no doubt, will be effective. There is a sentimentality that in- veighs against such proceedings. Re- gular justice stands aghast at the invo- cation of irregular violence for the treatment of offenders; but when law fails to secure public safety the court of Judge Lynch is the only tribunal tical court. If this offense were punish- able by burning at the stake, as it was in the good old times, the heretical Ohio preacher wouldn't take the matter as coolly as he no doubt does. ——ANDREW JACKSON was horn in March, a month which, like Old Hick- ary, is distingnished for its force of char- acter. The fact of March being his natal month may have had something todo with the way he marched his politi- cal enemies out of office, a Jacksonian example which should be followed by his Democratic presidential successors. that can furnish the protection which | society has a right to claim, ——The Grangers' Tax Bill was be- | fore the House this week and was ; made the subject of lively discussion, t It is being cut and carved to such an extent that if it gets through at all it will be difficult for its originators to recognize it. Itisto be hoped, how- ever, that a bill of some kind will be passed that will secure a more just | against fraud. "equalization of the tax burden. Imperfect Ballot Reform. The old Republican ring which so long has ruled and corrupted the poli- tics of Maine, making the political condition in that State the synonym of political debauchery, are greatly rejoic- ed over the defeat of the ballot reform bill in the State Legislature. Congress- man BouTeLLe’s Bangor Whig calls it | “a grand victory,” exultingly declaring that “this is the third time we have opposed the Kangaroo system and in each instance our position has been handsomely vindicated.” There is no other State in which Republicanism is so strongly entrench- ed as in the State of Brave and REED, and in no other State is the proposi- tion to have fair and honest elections more openly condemned and opposed by the party leaders. In fact in the recent contest in the Legislature they grounded their opposition to Ballot Re- form on the assertion that it would in- jure the Republican party. It is not unjust to believe that the sentiment of the Republican leaders in Pennsylvania on this subject is similar to that of the Maine managers. We have evidence of this in the manner in which the ballot reform que-tion was treated in the last Legislature. The proposition of the Australian system was denied a hearing and ignominious- ly rejected. Since the contemptuous treatment it then received the people have been heard from, and in conse- quence there is a show of zeal on the part of the present Republican Legisla- ture for Ballot Reform, but as there is reason to believe that the Penunsylva- nia lewders are as fully assurel as are those of Maine that fair and honest conducted ander the Aus- stems would reduce Republi elections tralian sy can mijo 8, there is ground for the appreliension that the ballot reform bill which a Peansvivania Republican Leg- islature wounld pass would be found defective in very essential features. It would be reform with the larg lest possible omission of the safe-guards Without honest regis- ¢ tration, which would be secured by a "constitutional convention, much of the accustomed election rascality could go (on under such an Australian ballot law as is now before the Legislature. Local Self-Government, The chief objection to the new Road law as proposed by the commis: sion bill is the centralizing of au- thority in a county engineer. To many this seems like the creation of a needless office, involving expense that is not necessary, while others apore- hend that it would become the subject of party scramble, and that road en- gineers would be elected more on ac- count of their capacity for political en- gineering than for the reason of their scientific knowledge of road making. There probably is too much ground for such a fear. And yet it is impos- sible to get the kind of roads this age requires and the public interest de- mands without a more scientific 8ys- tem of road making than has obtain- ed in the past, But the strongest objection to taking the roads out of the control of the townships springs from a very natural feeling. It is founded upon the senti- ment of local self-government, a senti- ment that lies at the base of popular institutions. The people of the rural districts ever since Pennsylvania has been a commonwealth have been in the habit of making and repairing the roads through the agency of their own township authority, and whether . they have doue the work skillfully or not, whether it has been to their advantage or not, they would surrender that pow- er very reluctantly. But even the most conservative com- prehend the necessity of becter roads, and it will be for the wisdoin of the Legislature to effect such compromises in the Road law as will improve the system of road making without too great a conflict with local authority and too great a shock to the sentiment of local self-government. ” I'he last was the first“billion dol- lar congress’’since the war ;s0 called be- cause it appropriated a billion dollars. The people will not forget the “billion dollar congress’ very soon, and it will besome time before they again allow all branches of the government to pass into the hands of the “billion dollar party." BELLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 20, 1891. The Funeral Scandals. Accounts from Washington repre- sent that it took $232,000 of the pub- lic money to bury three recently de- ceased United States Senators. This method of stealing should be stopped, but it.seems impossible to stop such Republican practices. These funerals of Senators and Congressmen are littie better than drunken, gambling orgies, alike disgraceful to the country and to the persons who take part in them. The funeral of the late Senator Hearst is a good sample of the swin- dle perpetrated on the Government in this line. A long train of Puliman cars crossed the continent loaded with political dead-beats and other friends of the Senator, who were provided with wine, cards, and all other appli- ances that favored dead-heads require, In the Hearst funeral so much did Senator SANForD, an old friend of the deceased, become shocked at the con- duct of the alleged mourners the train was carrying at public expense, thathe cut loose his car, refusing to travel with [a party of poker-playing and wine drinking dead-heads, supposed to be mourning for a dead friend, but, in- stead, were only making a pleasure trip to California at the government expense. Can not such disgraceful proceedings be stopped ? It Senators and Members of Congress have not a sufficient sense of shame to put an end to it,the people will call them to account in tones that will not be misunderstood. RRC IL Governor Parrisox’s lead in genuine ballot reform for Pennsylvania is well set forth in an article elsewhere printed from the New York World, which discloses a clear knowledge of the situation in the State. The Re- publicans are dealing in elaborate plans of humbug, just about as they did on" prohibition. A constitutional convention, not next year, but this year, is the one way to secure ballot reform so that it may apply to the P residential elect’on of 1892. A Fool Joke. A protectionist pa er, remarking on the abolishment of sugar duties by the McKinley law, which will go into ef- fect on the first of April, claims that then the price of suzar to the house- keeper will decline from two to two and a half cents a pound. Tt exulting- ly remarks: “There is no fool joke about this. Famiiies who have been paying a dollar for fourteen to fifteen pounds, will get twenty to twenty-two pounds for the same money.” fn view of the tact that the removal of the sugar duty will enable families to get their sugar at a cheaper price, what sort of a “fool joke” does this protection paper indulge in when it claims that a tarift isn’t a tax ? It is the old story. The strik- ers in the Coanellsville coke region,who some months ago resorted to a strike for the purpose of securing higher wages, realize that they are defeated and are willing to resume work at the old rates; but their victorious ermploy- ers will not be satisfied with {this and insist on a reduction. Even with the blessing and assistance of a ‘protec- tive’ tariff labor can’t hold 1ts own against the exactions of capital. La- bor shonld not be in this plight with the McKinley tariff in full operation. The bulletin of the population of Pennsylvania, by counties shows that in twelve counties the population fell off since 1830 from 12 in Fulton to 3,603 in Wayne, away up in the north- eastern corner of the State. Crawford, in the northwestern corner, fell off 3, 233 and Clarion 3,526. In six coun- ties the increase was less than 1,000 in each. The increase in Pennsylvania was about a million, the largest per- centage being in the anthracite and bituminous coal regions. Daring the heat of the senator- ial contest in the Illinois Legislature, which lasted through many weeks and happily ended in the election of Gener- al PALMER, it was suggested to him that a little money would smooth his election and make it certain and ' speedy. “I don't intend to go to hell by "the way of the United States Senate,” was the response of the grand old man. The Test of Sincerity in Ballot Reform. The Baker Ballot Bill is the only one that the Republican majority will al- low to pass through the Legislature. They want it to be distinctly under- stood that it is a Republican ballot bill which will not admit of any Democratic amendment, and they have assumed a Czar Reed attitude in their determina. tion to drive it through. It is offen- sively announced that the minority have no right to claim an interest in 1t and should keep hands off. But the Baker Bill isdevoid of some of the most essential features of true Ballot Reform. It doesn’t provide for absolute secrecy, without which there can not be absolutely fair and honest elections, and no mere statute can pro- vide for such secrecy without a consti- tutional provision that will dispense with the numbering of the ballots, The Baker Bill is also defective in that it does not provide for the im- provement of the present system of registration. It does not meet the evil of the tax-paying qualification which has developed a means of fraud in the large cities, even extending into the country, which would seriously eoun- teract the benefit of an Australian Jaw. Ballot Reform, such as will thor- oughly protect the elections against traud, bribery and intimidation, can be secured only by a convention that will furnish the necessary constitutional safe-gnards. A statute may answer as a temporary and partial expedient, and as such will no doubt be supported by the Democratic members and senators notwithstanding its inherent defects, but the vital measure in this question is presented in Mr. WaERRY'S bill for a constitutional convention, and ic will be upon that point that the sincerity of the Republicans in regard to Ballot Reform will be tested. They Raked It. The total expenses of the four year’s of CLevELAND'S administration were $1,039,565,000. When he went out of office there was a surplus of over a hundred million dollars in the treasury. The two years’ appropriations of the Reed congress amounted to $1,006,270,- 471. Iu not only won the unenviable title of “the billion dollar congress,” but 1t went out of power with the sur- plus used up and the treasury entirely empty. Thereckless extravagance of “the bil- lion dollar congress” reminds a con- temporary of a case that happened in the California Legislature some years ago. There was a bill before it relating to an increase of salaries and the question was raised whether the treas- ury was in a condition to:stand the in- creased expense. In the midst of the discussion one of the members excused himself for a few minutes and when he returned said : “Mr. Speaker, I have just seen the Treasurer and he tells me there is $475,654.49 in the State trea- sury and I move that we rake it.” The Reed congress found a large sur- plus left in the treasury by the Cleve- land administration and they raked it, So completely did they rake it that there isn’t a dollar left. —-The New York Tribune is capable of deriving happiness from a most sin- gular and remarkable source. It pos- itively chuckles. over the fact that the: last congress so completely drained the treasury that the Democrats of the next congress will be embarrassed in carrying on the business of govern. ment. It actually says: “The recent | Congress began its work with a large swr- plus to be distributed, and that exists: no longer. There 1s not offered to the Democrats next Winter as pleasant an alternative as some of them now im- agine.” Itis true, that large surplus exists no longer, but the party whose profligacy squandered it should be ashamed of their conduct instead of bragging about it and making merry over it. ——TIt is likely that the Hearst fu- hauling of the whole practice of con- gressional funerals, which are expen- sive as well ae pretentious, and al- ways accompanied by some disgrace- ful performance on the part of some one. In the private palace car of the congressional funeral train there ie lit- tle more solemnity than is exhibited by a lot of sports off for a high-toned * prize fight. neral scandal will lead to a lively over | Spawls from the Keystone. | —Lancaster counly cattle have pleuro-pneu- { monia again. —Anvother Pittsburg check-raiser has learned how to make $25 look like 8500 in cash. —There were Hibernian banquets at Lancas- ter and Chester in honor of St. Patrick. —Miss Alice Francis,of Reading, committed suicide by hanging while her mother was at church. —A Corry physician has retired on the strength of having received $16,000 in back pensions. —Fred. Wier, a Lawrence county farmer, was frozen to death during the storm Saturday | morning. —A new school-house at Bethlehem has | been named after the late State Superintend- ent Higbee. —Samuel Cook, a resident of €entralia, while working in the Morris ridge colliery, was kill- ed by a rush of coal. —The family of John Mayerman, of Morris- ville, ate canned salmon the other day and was nearly poisoned. —Sick and unattended for four days in his miners’ hut at Ashland, Isaac Jones, single, was found dying Saturday. — Rachel Price officiated at the funeral of Dr. Thomas L Allen Monday in the Friends’ meeting-house, Langhorne. —Simon Yeager,ex Clerk of the C unty Com- missioners, has sued the county of Lycoming for $829.10 for extra work done. —A switching engine at Thorndale, near Coatesville, killed Milkman George Swischer and his horse on last Sunday. —Isaac Jones, Mine Inspector at Ashland, was locked in hig room five days without food, and is likely to die from the results, —Pittsburg has 44,461 buildings, of which 36,943 are dwellings, valued at $57, 179,350, and 7518 business houses, worth $24,135,975. —It is announced that Republicans in the State Senate have tacitly agreed to defeat the House amendments to the Brooks law. —The Fost Office at New Millford, Susaue- hanna county, was broken into and $3 0 worth of stamps and a sum of money carried away, - —A forman of the Bethlehem Iron Works, at. Bethlehem, has been discharged for demand- ing money from workmen whom he engaged. —As a baseball bat is not a deadly weapon, Boyd Gillmore, who killed his uncle Stewart: near Altoona, has been set free by J udge Dean. —Through trains from Pailadelphia and: Pittsbarg to, Bedford, yill be put on this sum- mer to revive interest in Bedford as a summers resort, —G. Martin Riot, a.wealthy farmer, was ar-- rested on Tuesday at Ebensburg for mailing a letter addressed to the Louisiana Lottery: Company. —About 100 young men of Pottstown have organized a World's fair club, the object of which is to secure to each member a trip to’ the fair In 1883. —Mine John Meyer, of Freylertown, caught rides on shifting Lehigh Valley trains at Al- lentown, ‘ell, was run over, had bth legs cut off and died. —A farm at Pithole which was bought some years ago during the oi. excitement by Chicas co speculators for $1,500,000, was sold recently at a tax sale for $100. —Several carloads of telegrams, papers and records were shipped from the Lehigh Valley Railroad office to a papér-mill Saturday. It was the decennial clearimz out. —Little 4-year-old Sallie Jennings, of Bush- kill, Monroe county, caught fire, at her moth- er’s kitchen stove, and burned to death while her mother hung out clothes. —Ildward Kinney, of Girardville, clerk at the County Almshouse, Pottsville, has left for- Seattle. His accounts areall right, but friends believe him: to be deranged. —Isaac Stover, aged 70, 0f Ephrata township, , was found dead in bed by the side of his wife. He had retired in excellent health, but died. in his sleep from heart disease. —Robert Kane, who was in jail at Atlantic City charged with stealing from Mrs. Anna: Burns Hogan, of Norristown, died in the jail from an attack of delirinm tremens. —The 12 and 13-year-old sons of Frank Price, . a Barren Hill, Backs county man, read dime novels and started West the other day. The- father caught them at Hellertown. —Ira W. Moe and J. C. Stagg, an Eastoll. lamp firm, feft that tewn suddenly and noth- ing of their whereabouts. A number of per- sons are out of pocket in consequence. —Conspiracy and false pretense are alleged against Forst & Greenlee, Titusville oil Pro- ducers, who sold for $35,000 a well with crack. ed casing to the Midland Oil Company. ~The 16-year-old daughter of Daniel Stoop, of Shamokin, was abducted last Wednesday night, and it is believed she was carried off in: order to secnre money from her father: Within the past ten days Mrs Jerry Copelin,. oft Decatur township, Clearfield county, gave birth to four children atonce, and Mrs. Snyde of New Washington, gave birth to triplets. —George W. Moss, the Wilkesbarre wife murdere, asked the Sheriffto allow him to assist in the erection of the scaffold on which he is to be hung. His wishes were refused. —James McCullough, a farmer of Collins, Lancaster county, was killed Friday« moaning in his woods by a tree falling on hima, He was 73 yoar’s old, and leaves a wife and five ehil- dren. —Conductor Fickerson, of the Pittsburg and Western Railroad, confesses that he engineer- ed many thousand dollars worth. o ffreight rob beries near Foxburg, Pa. Seven accomplices- have been arrested, and others have fled. —J. Wright Gregory, convictadin this State of breaking into a post office, has been. pardons ed by the President, and John Emmet, Jr., of Maryland, fined $591 for violating postal laws, has had his fine remitted at the same hand. - —A committee of the local organization of the Junior Order of United American Mechans ics called on the Mayor of Pittsburg and tried to induce him to issue am: order prohibiting the carryiug of the flag of Ireland in the St. Patrick’s day parade. —~John Leahy, who was suspected of being: ! the man who, with a companion, attempted to, | rob the residence of Samuel Kreider, at Leban- on, by passing themselves off as census takers, and who shot Mrs. Kreider, was arrested and lodged in jail. His companion is still at large. | —John and Joseph Rothgaber, brothers. | convicted of robbing the St. Charles hotel, | Lebanon, were sentenced by Judge McPher- | son to eight yeara each in the Eastern peniten. ; tiary. Jacob Schall, convicted of robbing the | Annville depot and breaking jail, wag, sentene- { ed to ten years. —At Lancaster Herman Peters, an electric | light man, was stopped on the street early in : the morning by three strangers, who knocked ' him down and gave him a bad beating, no pro- vocation whatever having beem given. Dur ing the last few weeks a number of similay outrages have been committed there,