I a SOB oe =o + - Demorwalic atc 8Y P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —This will not be a Republican year in Pennsylvania if the Democrats are alive to their opportunity. —GLADSTONE must be feeling the ef- fect of his years since he can no longer chop down a tree to sharpen his appe- tite for breakfast. —TEke Republican State convention made the usual fair promises to the farmers in its platform, but declined to put a farmer on its ticket. —This year the peach crop has been a failure on account of it being so enor- mous. The producers are disgusted with the small prices they are getting. —Prohibitionist NEAL Dow wants the rumsellers of Maine to be punished at the whipping post. After forty years of prohibition is it possible that there are any rumsellers in Maine ? —Senator CAMERON is set down as worth $6,000,000. This is the qualifi- cation which so admirably adapts our senior Senator to a place in the collec- tion of millionaires known as the Unit- ed States Senate. —There is nothing slow about the climate of these great United States. To keep up with it the thermometer has to hustle. Thus, in Iowa, last week, it jumped in a few hours from 90 degrees down to 85. --Political experts are hopelessly en- deavoring to discover the meaning of the Silver resolution in the Republican State platform. They pronounce it to be a curious but entirely incomprehensi- ble “What Is It?” —A Lieutenant Governor at the head of a Quay State Committee, dele- gated to assist in electing a Quay ticket with the usual Quay methods, is a striking illustration of the Republican idea of civil service reform. --Tt is proposed to consolidate all the farmers’ associations, societies and alli- ances in Kansas into one big syndicate. This would be a more gigantic combine than any of which the farmers have so bitterly and justly complained. —Pearl buttons are more heavily tar- iffed than any other article on the Me- Kinley schedule, and just, to show how this tax has encouraged American labor, the officials of the Auburn (N. Y.) pri- son have set the convicts to work mak- ing pearl buttons. —Indjana bad a lynching Saturday night, and Ohio militia have been put under arms to prevent the hanging of the Columbus Grove bank robber and murderer. It no longer becomes the Republican editor to point to the South as the land of lawlessness. —The well-heeled WILLIAM ASTOR is described as “a portly gentleman of some 50 years whose hair has been whit- ened by time’s frosty touch.” It cer- tainly hasn’t been whitened by the care which results {from not knowing where the next meal is to come from. —A broadcloth coat that had been measured for President ANDREW JACK- soN, and returned because it did not fit, sold for $350. How different this gar- ment was from the illustrious personage for whom it was made, who was never a misfit in any position he ever occupied. —Governor CAMPBELL is sick in bed, but 1t was that sort of preliminary that preceded the election of Governor HoADpLY some years ago. Still, we don’t believe Governor CAMPBELL fan- cies being in bed at this juncture. But after the election it will be McKINLEY that will be on his back. —The President, in one of his New York speeches, spoke of ‘‘the great mer- cy of God” that gave us big crops and crop failures in Europe. It was quite a concession for Mr. HARRISON to give Providence the credit. It is a wonder that he didn’t claim that it was §due to the McKinley bill. —A colored preacher in Kentucky has made himself very popular with his congregation by declaring that Adam was a colored man and that the fruit with which he was tempted was a wa- termelon and not an apple. He might make kimsell still mace salid with kis people by maintaining that the first ani- mal created was a possum. —The Republican State convention adopted a resolution calling for §the re- peal of all State mercantile taxes. Is this intended as a radical preventive of mercantile taxes being stolen gby future BarDsLEYs? Wouldn't the cure be more effective if the “grand old party” were prevented from putting men of the Bardsley stripe into office ? —Mr. HENRY CLEWS, of New York, an Englishman who came over to this country a few years ago and went into stock jobbing on a small scale, claims that he did a business of one billion of dollars last year. This shows how rap- idly the United States is becoming a billion dollar country for some people. But, notwithstanding the blessing of a McKinley tariff, for the average work- ingman itis scarcely a hundred dollar country. Good' STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNIOlD VOL. 36. BELLEFONTE, PA., AUGUST 28, 1891. NO. 33. Works Beget Popularity and Popularity Is Public Confidence. During the last session of the Legis- lature applications for appropriations of different amounts were received from nearly all of the State's benefici- aries, and among them that of the Pennsylvania State College for $150, 000, which sum 1t needed for the com- pletion of a line of work already begun at that institution. Inasmuch as the College had received quite liberal ap- propriations from the preceding Legis- lature, and, further,because the Pattison administration in '85 had placed a negative upon granting money to it, this bill excited more than usual inter- est when it went before the committee on appropriations. Several districts throughout the State, in which institutions doing a professedly similar work are located, sent petitions against the granting of more money to the State College, and members of the House of Representa- tives made bitter speeches against it, all of which seemed but to in- crease the public interest, and as a result the House sub-committee and the entire Senate committee on appro- priations, visited the Institution, ex: amining every detail of its work and organization. So flattering were the reports they carried back to Harris burg, that a general curiosity party was made up, and many of the persons an- tagonistic to the College visited it with the express purpose of finding flaws in its work, but so surprised were they that they returned converts to the idea that the Pennsylvania State College is an institution of which this grand commonwealth can justly feel proud. The result was that its bill passed the Senate without a dissenting vote, and the House with but few votes against it, and the Goyernor, seeing the confi- dence it had inspired in the Legislature, could not but affix his signature. Most of our readers are well ac quainted with the College, its beautiful buildings, ground and location, as well as with the fact that it has developed into one of the leading technical insti- tutions of the country. Nevertheless it has determined to push other lines of work to the front, and is now making a strenuous effort to extend, improve and create a greater interest in its course in Agriculture. To this end there has lately been issued a pamph- let showing the facilities and methods of instruction, with the course of study in agriculture at the institution. The subjects are taught in the field, garden, orchard, vineyard, green-house, cream- ery and laboraiories, as well as in the class-room. Fifteen hours a week are given to classroom exercises, and ten hours to practicams. There is a four years course of study, which is com- plete both from a practical and scien- tific standpoint. The course trains young men for the largest possibilities in agriculture and for the highest du- ties of citizenship. Besides the regular course of instruction, arrangements have beea made to give an extended course oflectures on strictly agricultural subjects during the winter months, be- ginning January 7, 1892. They will be of a wholly practical character and as serviceable to adults as to youth. The lectures will ;be open to all who desire to enroll themselves as attend- auts, and no examination or fee will be required for admission. A Disadvantage. In these days in Pennsylvanit it is a disadvantage for a politician and candi- date to be 100 well known as a hench- man of the bosses. MyLIN's case is an illustration. He had the friendship and the preference of both Quay and CaMeron, and they could easily have nominated him if they had said the word. He has served in the Senate for vears, where he has taken his crders from the bosses with obedience and submissiveness. But these qualities, while endearing him to the managers, made him in 1891 ineligible before the people of the State Quay. rejected him as unsuitable in the present junc. ture, because so well known a hench- man would have been objectionable to the majority of voters in their present temper. Greece would serve better to conceal the directing hand of the manager, So it is (tree instead of MrywriN, but the purpose is the same. ——TF'ine job work of ever discription | at the WarTcaMAN Office. Imposing on the Chinese. The latest advices from China since the beginning of the riots in that coun- try in which the Christian missionaries suffered, agree in the statement that the disturbances were precipitated by members of secret societies, whose ob- ject was to embroil the Chinese govern- ment with foreign nations in the hope that a rebellion would thus have some chance of success. All the civilized governments are in possession of the facts. And yet England and Germany are manacing China, notwithstanding the fact that her governmentis doing all it can to suppress the riots and protect the missionaries. The Eng- lish and Germans could not adopt a more effective way to aid the rebellion, and it would almost look asif their purpose is to increase the confusion so that they may take advantage of it. It would not be the first instance of China being made the victim of the grasping and avaricious disposition of Europeans. It is remembered that Eogland—Christian England from which so many missionaries are sent— went] to war with China and at the mouth of the cannon forced her to admit English opium into her ports. The Chinese government had made every effort to prevent the spread of the deadly opium habit among its people, but the English were largely interested in the production of opium in India and did not hesitate to use force in opening a market for the deadly drug among the Chinese. The interference of the English and Germans in the present instance has no doubt a grasp- ing commercial purpose. —1It is stated thatin Chicago one of the big merchants gives $25,000 per year 1n charitable enterprises, and at the same time his employes are kept on This conduct is sim- ilar to that of tariff philanthropists of the Carnegie order, who furnish public libraries and employ the Pinkerton force to keep down their workmen when th: want mere pay. starvation wages. A Speech from Jerry Simpson. JERRY SI1MP30N, the sockless mem- ber of Congress from Kansas, was at the farmers’ gathering at Mt. Gretna, on Friday, and made a speech. The people were so anxious to hear him that they could not wait for the band to play ; so the Kansas man arose and “pitched in.”” His listeners were dis- appointed, but rather admired his picturesque style. Here's the sub- stance of his little speech, as reported : 1 don’t belong to any party, said he. I want the party to belong to me. If I don’t find such a party, I intend to start one. 1 take no stock in the G. O.P. Those letters once stood for Grand Old Party. Now they mean Great on Promises. Well, when our people selected a Congress- man, last fall, eight of us farmers went up. Only one man wore a collar. They stood us in a row like a lot of crows, and then tried to pick out the white one. if the Alliance were to die to-day, it would go down in history as a great movement. We removed INcauLs. He is a first rate fellow in some respects, but he hasn’t any more heart than you can make out of brains. They told me not long ago that if I went down into Arkansas I'd be mobbed. It I was sure of that I'd go. Ithink a mobbing might be the making of the pup. They ask us how we are goicg to arrange our Sub-Treasury. We don’t intend to make the details. Congress has got to think them out. There is nothing very profound in these remarks. If JERRY isto be judg- ed by this effort no onecan believe that he is going to make much of a statesman, or that he will equal Cray in eloquence or JEFFERSON in political sagacity ; and yet it can’t be denied that he made a good hit in what he said about the G. O. P. ——1In the campaign that is now be- ginning to warm np in Ohio, the voters of that State, when they bring them" selves to a calm consideration of the issue, will remember that it was JAMES G. Brain who said that candidate McKiviey's bill ‘‘would not open a market for a single barrel of pork or bushel of wheat, The population of Ohio is largely agricultural. ——1t is announced that some of the legislation for which the Farmers’ Al- liance of Texas is responsible will di- vert trade from Galveston to New Or- leans. After awhile the farmers of the whole country will awake to the fact that it doesn’t pay to follow the lead of demagogues. It isto be hoped this will happen before muchigharm is done. : The Tin Plate Deception. The National Provisioner, a New York journal which is acknowledged to speak for the provision dealers, butchers, grocers, and the various can- ning industries, has been investigating the tin-plate question in behalf of the interests which it represents. The Provisioner bad: been in receipt of information from a firm in Philadel- phia stating that they were engaged in the manufacture of tin plate. These letters were published in the Provision er and their publication brought forth numerous epistles from parties advis- ing a more thorough investigation of the subject. A representative of the Provisioner accordingly went to Phila- delphia and last Tuesday he asked per- mission of the firm in question to in. spect its tin-plate works. Such per- mission was not given, but from the questions propounded by the Provis- ioner representative and hesitatingly answered by the spokesman of the firm,. it was plainly demonstrated that the establishment was not a tin-plate works in the proper acceptance of the term. These alleged American tin-plate works, whenever they are investigated, turn out to be thorough frauds. It is impossible for them to nse American tin, for there is no American tin. The iron plates are imported, the tin by which these plates are coated is also imported, and so are the Welsh work- men by whom. this work is done. The increased tariff on tin-plate makes this a very profitable business to the pro- prietors, but it adds little to American industry, and the American consumer has to pay an increased price for an article of extensive and indispensable use. ——The principal accusation against the Chinese is that they refuse to be- come citizens. It is charged that they come here, make alittle money and re- turn to their native land to spend it. Thesame is true of the bulk of the | Italians and Hungarians who come { here as laborers: They do not bring their families with them. They have no thought of becoming citizens and as soon as they have accumulated a little surplus give place to new hordes. Why not exclide them also ? What They Should Do. The Hon. E. C. WHEELER, of Tip- ton, Ia., who has always voted the Re- publican ticket, authorized the publi- cation in his home paper of this an- nouncement : “[ will tell you what I intend doing on election day. I will rise early, take a bath, shave myself with unusual care, put on my best suit of clothes, and before the sun is an bour high I am going to the polls, pick out the longest Democratic ticket I can find and vote it from top to bot- tom, and wish it were longer.” This Iowa Republican will set an example which might with profit be followed by Republicans of Pennsyl- vania. When asked to vote a ticket, the election of which would endorse the corrupt management of the party bosses, the best thing they could do for their own reputations and the credit of the State would be to shave themselves with unusual care, put on their best suits of clothes, and go to the polls and vote the Democratic State ticket. By so doing they would show that they repudiate the Bosses and the BARDSLEYS. The Government has finished the publication af the first series of the “Records of the Civil War,” consist- ing of sixty-five volumes; and two more series are yet to follow. Un- less the officials having this matter in charge shall expedite their work the first generation of descendants of the men who fought in the war of the re- bellion will have passed away before the latest events of the conflict shall have been officially chronicled. ——MIiLLER Purvis, lecturer for the Alliance in Ohio, and a life-long Re- publican, says that fully 50,000 Re- publicans of that State believe ‘a tariff for revenue is all anybody should ask,” and that fully half of them will vote for CAMPBELL as against MOKINLEY. Certainly the wool-growers among the Ohio Republicans have ample cause to rue the day that McKinley “protec tion” fell as a blight upon their cheep: folds, A Charge That Does Not Fit.. An effort is being made to show that GtrovER CLEVELAND has grown rich in public life, after the manner of James G. BLAINE, JouN SHERMAN and other thrifty statesmen who had no other means of accumulating except through the chances offered by their public po- sitions. A scurrilous article is going the rounds of the Republican papers in which it is said that “plain people would like to know" how Mr, CLEvVE- LAND became possessed of a magnifi- cent residence in New York, a valuable sea-side cottage, and other property, un- less by dishonest means. JEANNETTE GILDER, of the Century Magazine, who knows as much about the private af- fairs of the CLEVELANDS as any other person, says in a letter to the Boston Transcript, a Republican paper : In the first place, let me say to these puz- zled “plain people” that Mr. CLEVELAND does not own a house in New York. He rents a house in New York, and his landlord is Mr. Hesry G. Marquanp. He did buy “a coltage by the sea,” but it is not an expensive cottage. Every reporter who has been to Gray Gables knows that good taste, rather than meney, has made the place attractive. It does not com- pare in costliness to Mr. JEFFErsoN's place, for instance. Then everybody in New York also knows that while the CLEvELANDS live com- fortably and hospitably, they do not live ex- pengively or ostentatiously. Either of the partners in his law firm lives equally well. For people in their position, the CLEVELANDS can hardly be considered rich, notwithstand- ing the fact that to Mr. CLEVELAND'S savings and earnings as a lawyer since his retirement, in one of the most successful firms in New York, may be added the inherited fortune of his wife. To attack Mr. CLEVELAND as 8 man who has made a private snap out of a public trust is as ludicrous as it is false. His ene- mies, if they want to hurt him, must get hold of acharge that they can sustain better than they can this one. Mr. CLEVELAND'S statesmanship is not of the thrifty character that has made BraiNe and SHERMAN million. aires. ——The New York Would acts very foolishly in repeating its suggestion that Grover CLEVELAND should run for Governor of New York to test his strength in that State. It would be no test at all. The people wouldn't want to have good Presidential ma- terial wasted on a governorship. There are thousands who would vote for CLeveLanD for President, but would not favor his being pat in a position that would be a descent from the high place he filled so well at the head of the government. Assumed Happiness. Now that the Republicans have placed their State ticket in the field there is an attempt by the party organs to make believe that everybody is happy and positively, overflowing with enthusiasm for Gree and MorRISON:. The Boss says he 18 satisfied, but would have preferred Price as his. candidate for State Treasurer. Pricn's friends have not yet been heard from, but the party organs jamp to the con- clusion that they also are contented and enthusiastic. But all this loyeliness is merely as- sumed. It will be remembered that in the convention three of the five dele- gates from Berks county were opposed to GREGG, and yet we are assured: that everybody is satisfied and ecthusiastic. Certainly, the candidate who canuot secure his own delegation is not over- whelmingly popular at home, and yet we are calmly assured that Berks county voters of all political faiths are fairly gushing for the opportunity to vote for General GREGG. Notwithstanding the Republican or- gans are all harping upon the same strain, there is nothing like enthusiasm in the Republican ranks and the party is far from being harmonious. The political bosses and the bread and but. ter dependents are satisfied. But with these the satisfaction ends. The masses see that the ticket bears the stamp of M. S. Quay and no .candi- dates thus marked can win in Penn- sylvania this year. It should be remembered that under the new law providing for the registration of voters, any citizen whose name has been omitted must make per- sonal application to the registration assessors to have the error corrected. Now, don’t read this, throw it aside, and when you realize a month hence that you have not been registered, de- clare that you didn’t know the law had been changed, Only a few days yet remain in which this matter can be ate | tended to, Spawls from the Keystone, —Three counties report potato-“rot.” —Secarlet fever is epidemic at Hamburg. —Three of a West Hazlelon family died in a day. —A Lebanon policeman was: fined for prae fanity. —Three new market houses are in prospect for Lebanon. —A Hughesville man was: robbed of $400 while at church. —Thieves mowed a Germyn meadow at night and took the hay, —D. K. Yolton has been appointed Postmass ter at Candor, —St. Stephen’s day was- celebrated by the Poles at Shenandoah. —An Allentown man getidock-jaw and died from crushed fingers. —A MecConnellsville maw. broke his neck carrying a keg of beer... —An 80-year-old Emaus man: got fatal gan grene while cutting a corn. - —A Greensburg man was wi ys way to get a marriage license. | : —Six furnaces are out of blast in Lebanon, and the others are stacking their iron. —Twenty persons were converted: at the anti Bowmanite camp meeting last week. —Northampton’s medical soeiely reports that the county’s health is very good. —Otto Meyer, an AHentewn butcher, was seriously injured in a runaway. accident, —The Prohibition: State Convention will meet at Harrisburg and name a State ticket. —Isaac Stilts, of Royer’s Ford,.was killed by falling from a freight . car while handling pig= iron. —Isaac Bryson, of Chester county, was shot by his 9-year old son in the arm. and badiy hurt. —The Cornwall Anthracite furnrce- went out of blast last week owing:to depression in the iron trade. —Crazy George Ehman attempted to commit suicide near Ashland by throwing himself une der a train. —A statue of Lord Baltimore, seven feet in height, for Calvert Hall, Baltimore, will be dedicated. —The 150th New. York Infantry Regiment at Gettysburg dedicated their granite monu. menton Culp’s Hill. . —A fall of twenty feet from an ice house re- sulted in fatal injuries to twelve-year-old Adam Kecnan, of Lebanon. —Reading’s coilleries, near Pottsville, have been operated more extensiveiy of late than for some months before. —Mrs. Klein and her three children were poisoned by dried beef at Mahanoy City, Two of the children may recover. —A colored campmeeting opened up at Stoverdale Saturday. Fred Douglass has pro- mised to be present this week. —The Cameron, Buck Ridge ani- Henry Clay collieries, near. Shamokin, were drowned out by the recent. heavy storms. —Mrs. Hannah Kersher, of Wayne township, Schuykill county, who is 77 years of age, works ed in the harvest field last week. Four Pinkerton dectectives from Philadel’ phia are guarding the Pottsville Steel and Iron Company’s mill, where a. strike is on, —Allegheny City has a.typhoid epidemic Fifty-six . cases have been taken to one hospital in two weeks from East street. —A great reunion of Reformed Church peo- ple is expected on Angnst 27, at Bethany Ors phan’s Home, Wormelsdorf, Berks county. ——DBenjamin Johnson was fatally injured on Saturday at the Danielsville slate quarry. near Allentown, by a box of slate falling upon him. —Littie Louis Rosser died from the effects of injuries received in being pushed against the school-house steps at Morea, Schuylkill county. —Simon Thomas, one of Shenandoah’s new- ly arrived European miners, aged twenty-sevs en, committed suicide by taking pure alcohol. —Charters were granted at Harrisburg to. the Quaker City Morocco Come pany of Philadelphia, with a capital stockof $100,000. —Mrs. Catharine Rothe, of Sha mokin, fell down a flight of stairs at the home of her daughter, Mrs. C. T. Waters, in Shenandoah and will die. —For maintaining an op:n and dangerous sewer in Altoona, Mayor Burchfield and severs al members of that city’s council have: heen arrested. —Wealthy John Carnahan, residing near Greensburg, does not believe in banks. He hid $4,000 in a chest. While in the field thieves carried off the money. —Matthew Bickel, a farmer near Williams sport, was bitten by a rattlesnake on Saturday He found the reptile in his feed bin, Itis thought he will recover. —Robert Naugh, of Plymouth, Pa., has de- serted his wife and run off with another woe man. He took with him all his savings, and leaves his family destitute. —The Cornwall and Lebanon Railroad will make inducements for the Stoverdale Camp- Meeting Assaciation to hold all its future meetings at Mount Gretoa. —Patience Hinke, a. 16 year-old, Pottsville girl, who eloped with William, Bender after he had betrayed her older sister, has been sent to jail on a charge of incorrigibifity. —Pelix Wasniski, aged 20; is dying at Moun Carmel from a blow witha baseball bat in the hands of Otto Schultz (who.is in jail) whila trying to separate two fighting players. —«J, F, Pettingiill, of Philadelphia,” got §30 trom thirty citizens of Pottstown on a cosopers ative purchasing scheme. Then he left his empty sachel at a hotel and departed. —The application for a new trial for Charles Cleary, the Renovo. youth who slew Qfficer Paul, was argued before Judge Mayer at Lock Haven. Cleary has been twice convicted of first degree muxder. — Sheriff Davis, of Irwin county, Kan., isin Bucks county armed with a warrant, in search of Benjamin Frantz, an alleged Mennonite preacher who is wanted for forgory and em- bezzlement. —Two castings, 85 and 150 tons in weigh t, were successfully cast in the ordnance works of the Bethlehem Iron Company's plant on Saturday. They will be used in the big steam hammer building, —The Pennsylvania Monument Comm isgion at Gettysburg approved the memorial of the Seventy-second Infantry and Hampton's Bat- | tery, and located the position for the Twenty « first Cavalry memorial on the Baltimore pike, near the Lightner house,