— nH — Ink Slings. Down the hill went the bad youngster’s sled, Skimming over the ice. Aman and two women went heels over head; That certainly was nice. But the climax was reached at the foot of the hill, And with it a “song and dance,” When the youngster’s papa midst a loud ha ha Smote the seat of his prodigal’s pants. —The colo(g)nial days are gone. Every thing is from the extract now-a- days. —HARRISON can easily squar2 up to Chili without being afraid that he is getting something ¢bigger’n himself.” —The fifty-second Congress is already beginning to retrench, but its too late. The billion dollars must all flow out be- fore the treasury will begin to fill up! again. —-From the length of time that war clouds have been hovering over Europe one would think that they scarcely know what a sun shine means over there, —1It is in order for some one to invent a snow making machine. A little am- monium solution in DYRENFORTH'S “rain maker’’ might have the desired effect. — JACK the Slasher” has at last been caught by the New York police and he is not, as some supposed him to be, a political heeler keeping his hand in for the next campaign. — When church choirs experience so much difficulty in effecting a harmon- ious organization why don’t the pastors install their bands of hope, to make mu- sic for the services, —The Chilean spies who were dis- covered making mapes of the Pacific slope and its harbors are doubtless mak- ing tracks by this time. The map bus- iness never was profitable. —Adj. General McCLELLAND might have the N. G. P. try an overland march to Chili. We venture to say that they would be in plenty of time for any battle that may be fought. —Three hundred young women in the Baltimore, Md., Normal School have discarded their corsets and gar- ters to adopt the “dress reform’ system. The Delsartian idea is all right if it does encourage looseness in the fair sex: —About the only people who seem happy over the prospect of a war with Chili are the pension sharks. If the poor little dissension torn, shoe-string of South America can’t do anything else she can make pensioners for Uncle Sam. —TIt would be a good thing for astron- omers to make their charts of the heav- ens before the Chili troubles begin, for there will be so many luminosities soar- ing heavenward when we get at ‘em that it will be extremely difficult to lo- cate all the new stars. —A Boston judge has decided that lithographs of females in pink tight are not immoral, The Bostonese evidently intend encouraging every opportunity of studying, even if it be only the sym- metry and beauties of nature as depict- ed on gorgeous show bills. —1In spite of the “Philadelphia old ‘Women’s shocked society’”” the mana- gers of the Academy of Fine Arts will hang pictures of nudity in art. Ifthe modest old ladies of the Quaker city must go to the Academy they will have to put up with fhe fig leaf clothing. —BARDSLEY is growing tired of his confinement at Cherry Hill and will probably “toot” when the congressional committee comes to investigate the Keystone and Spring Garden bank trou- bles. There is one thing certain if JOHN “‘toots’’ some others wili scoot. — While hunting and fishing at the beautiful Louisana home of JuosErH JEP- FERSON, the great comedian, Mr. CrevELAND will play Mikado of JE¥- PERSON'S wonderful Japanese room. It is a marvel of oriental luxury and beauty but Dana should be there to take the role of Pooh-bah. —An exchange remarks that: “Washington scems to be the seat of the Chili war.” Wedon’t care what place may appear to them as the centre of the struggle, but we do know that the real seat is in Mr. EGan’s trousers and if it had been kicked right well the unpleas- antness would have been over long ago. —“Wizard” Ebpison’s scheme to electrocute Chili’s army by killing them with a stream from a powerful electric hose is quite a novel one indeed, but quite in accord with the wendertul nie- chanisms of the great electrician. There is one thing the water battery would do any how. It would wash the dirt off the ‘greasers” and then perhaps they’d die of exhaustion. —-The play “the Paymaster” which was produced in Lock Haven. on Mon- day night, was minus “the terrific dive” scene. Just before the time forits en- actment the tank sprung a leak and the water all ran out. Oar sister town could surely have supplied the show people with a natural “tank” which would have filled the requirements, But we fear it would have bankrupted the YOY IV STATE RIGH | VOL. 857 Not the Bonanza it Promised To Be. It must be a source of very little gratification for Governor McKINLEY to see the pet measure upon which he spent 80 much of his time, during the sessions of the fifty-first congress, being attacked in the first decisive move by the fifty-second. One year of McKix- LEYISM seems to be about all the coun- try can stand. Tastead of the greatly increased pro- duction of commodities we find a de- cided decrease, and the out-put in pig ron alone for 1891 fell 1,331,028 tons short of that for 1890. In the face of the fact, that 1891 was one of the most prolific years our country has ever known, and that high tariff and reci- procity promised so much, but two of our staple exports show an increase over the preceding year. Wheat and wheat flour, both enormously stimula- ted by the Russian famine and the par- tial failure of crops in France and Ger- many, are the only evidences of advan- ced exports under the operations of the McKinney billy and to credit their in- crease to the Ohio Governor's measure is far beyond the daring of the wildest protectionist: Out of the 321 members, in the fifly- first Congress, 176 were Republicans, while but 87 in the 324 now in session at Washington, are representatives of the g. 0. p. This is one of the most forcible tariff arguments that can well be present:d. When the very back- bone of Republicanism was the issue when the rich (?)fruits of a Republican; adminirtration of affairs were held up to the people as an incentive to con- tinue that administration; when all the power of the fat, sizzied from the protected plutocrats of the land, was brought to bear upon the army of iloat- ing voters, 10 be found in every district: Even then they lost 8) members of the lower house. Did Mr. McKiNLey then render his party aud his country a service which it may justly appreciaie and on ac count of which it may herald bim the champion of American industries? Harvard and Yale are to have an inter-University debate on: “Re- solved that a college education uafits a If they propose giving a farce debate, on the question man for business.” chosen, they will have an elegant op- portunity to display their oratory aad make lots of fun for .their audience, bat if they are really in earnest the al- firmative side has won already. For if there be men in these two leading American Universities who are foolish enough to think that a good education is a disadvantage to anyone their place is in an asylam. The question is far more ridiculous and nonsensical than was the ove “Resolved that a man with a silk hat is a greater nuisance to gocicty than a woman with bangs,” taken by a State College literary so- ciety. RusseLn, Sage has the following views on the subject and the affirma- tive might do well to quote him: “The boy who is wanted in the business world of to-day must be educated. If his parents cannot afford to give hima high school or coilege education, he mast learn to study without the aid of a teacher, in the early morning before business begins, and in the evenings, after business hours. It can no longer be truthfully said that an education is out of anyone's reach. The main thing is the beginning. Don’t be in a hurry to get away from your school books. ‘fhe cares and responsibilities of business life will come soon enough. Go to school as long 4s you can, and, remember, every hour spent in study in your youth will be worth money to you in after life. Read good books—the Bible ahove all. Make yourself acquainted with his- tory. Study the progress of nations and the careers of men who have made nations great. If you have no library of your own join one of the numerous ‘associations to be found in all eities, where good, healthful books may be obtained. Study religion, science, statecraft’and history. Learn to read intelligently so that you may turn to practical use in after life the reading of your youth, Be sure you begin right. Do not waste time in reading trashy books." manager if he had undertaken to fill it. ——Subscribe for the Warorman. Is the Pinkerton Charter Constitu- tional ? Congressman WarsoN, of Georgia, has offered a resolution to the Commit- tee on Judiciary to investigate the PinkurToN Detective Agency, and to examine its charter, methods and pur- poses. It is a well known fact that this great criminal hunting organization has, in many instances, become a men- ace to American citizenship, and the fact that co great an army of armed men, under the control of private par- ties, exists in the United States to-day has arcused universal comment as to the constitutionality of its charter. "Tis true that the PINKERTON men are almost invaluable in terreting out the criminals, whom our clumsy police law would never reach and, at times, their effective services have saved thousands of dollars, in property, from the depre- dations of mobbing strikers; but when we are brought face to face with the fact that the services of these men are to be purchased by anyone, we then be- gin to realize the dangers of the organi. zation. The past ten years of labor dissen- sions have furnished many glaring il- lnstrations of the over-zealous work of these hired officers and the most alarm- ‘ing feature of the organization is that it far out-numbers the standing army of our country. With 25,000 enlisted men Maj. Gen, ScHorIELD would hard: ly feel warranted in making an attack upon the united forces of thePINKgRTON Agency, which numbers 35,000, especi- ally since their keenness and daring is s0 well known, Is to allow an armed force, large enough to complete- it constitntional ly wipe out the standing army. to be controlled and maintained by private parties? An organization whose ser- vices are at any one’s disposal for stipu lated sums. For the Grand Jurors. Warcnmax contained some good advice for the geutlemen who will assemble in the Court House, in the capacity of Grand Jurors next Monday. Itis in regard to the propused improvement of the Court House aud the expense which will consequently be entailed upon the Last week's issue of the county if their report is favorable. Graud Jurors, your action next week will be final, as to whether the oli Court House is to be fixed up—and stl be an old Court House—even though the tax-payers have been fore- or whether it is to remain as it is uatil the county is again out of debt and then, if there be a necessity for it, build a | new building which will be a credit to the county. If you report favorably the improvements will be made, so be careful that you appreciate the wants of the tax-payers. President Harrison has held back his message, on the Chilean mat- ter, which was to have gone to Con- gress on Wednesday. His purpose in witholding an expression of his views is in order that he may have more time to consider the least indignity of- fered our government. It is to be hoped that when the message does come it will urge Congress to prompt action in the matter. For while there can be no honor attached to warring with a coun- try like Chili, vet there is far less in allowing a little fifth rate power to ride over us as she has done. Meanwhile the Chilians might come to the conclusion that they have been decidedly hasty in their course and the long looked for apoligy appear. It is known that Minister MoNNT is exert- ting every effort t» conciliate our gov- ernment and it might be possible that an amicableand honorable settlemert of the atlair can yet be made. —— The Harrisburg Patriot will be at a loss for editorial matter election of Wrignr and Harrrry. For the past two months it has been devoting pages to vituperative attacks upon these gentlemen, and also upon the administration, but now that they have been chosen to the offices they sought it will be rather hard for the Capital sheet to train down to the right kind of work. since the ——Get your job work done at the WarcaMaN office. TS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., JANUARY 22 1892. NO. 3. Curiosity and Religion. Christianity, in the world, is divided into twenty-three principal sects or de- nominations, each observing a differ ent creed, and carrying on religious worship i. their ow;n prefered manner. Man isnaturally religious, and if he is ignorant of the true God, he must make to himself false ones. He is surrounded by dangers and difficulties ; he seesthe mighty powers of nature at work all around, pregnant to him with hope and and fear, and yet inscrutable in their working, and beyond his con- trol. Hence arises the feeling of de- pendence upon something more power- ful than himself—the very germ of re- ligion. 'Twas this feeling of depend- ence, in man, which gave the Romish church its wonderful pawer before the fall of the empire and 'twas this{feeling which brought the innumerable con- verts to Catholicism and made the spiritual far more powerful than the temporal rulers, Butwhen the Roman Empire had been overthrown and the Goths and Vandals swooped down from the north to plunder and pillage the rich cities of Italy and southern Eu. rope the only thing possible for the Papacy to do was to charm them into the Church also. It was at this period that all the pomp and splendor of the Roman Cath- olic church was introduced into its services. And it was not long until the wild, nntutored nations from the north, had been captivated by its beauty and gradually gathered under the control of the church, Curiosity led {them on and their inherent dependence held them captives. There is another kind of curiosity however, which stands in very close relation to tlie relizion of several of our churches, and that it is which leads unprincipled people into the dif- erent houses of God where professions of faith ave being made. Their incen | tive 13 not that simple ignorance which ‘affected those barbarians of ancient times, nor the gaping wonder {which led them on to Christ, but it is a self- willed, malicious curiosity which must L gamble out of which Wall street wculd "the funeral of Senator Wilson the cost, be satisfied at the risk of their own souls, Itis with a feeling of deep regret | that we notice the growing tendency— among both young andjold—to jattend religious services from the mere want of some place to spend their time and | of something to talk about. We need | 20 no further thav the sacred precincts | } | of one of oir home churches to find | Lea : | many of this kind and, be it to our | I shame, ti ber is eve the io- | ed to pay almost enough for a new one, | PINS BWRNOPIS ever On the In crease. Hypocrisy doth not merit the con- tempt which is inspired by the [action | of those, whose only charm the church | coutains is in the sincere—though at! times wild—protestations of the re- pentant sinuver. A Doycott on Prospective Women Phy, sicians. The male students of one of the medi- cal schools of St. Louis, have gained considerable noteriety, and much cen- sure from the public, by a recent move- ment to remove women from the courses of instruction. They have decided— woman’s sphere is at home, where they will allow her, we presume, the privil- edge of spending her time, if bread and butter she needs, at the lucrative and soul-inspiring wash-tub, if sewers and teachers are not needed 'in her commu- nity. The school bas always admitted women to all its classes, but this year the boys determined to reconstruct mat- ters and began boycotting the girls with the purpose of driving them from the institution. However the Dean of the faculty did not appreciate the move- ment and expelled every student who did not formally take his name from the petition. This subject of individual rights has been so thoroughly discussed by the great minds of to-day that merely to mention the threadbare question seems useless ; but when sixteen boys, in that part of the west, where they look for greater liberality, quicker insight and fewer conventional restrictions take such a stand against higher education and the opportunity of self-support for women, we conclude the wrongis all in home training, for had their mothers and sis- ters, who possibly are now sacrificing every comfort that their boys may be fitted for life, taught them good common Sense, we would not bear this old story of woman’s inability and unfitness for | {# { nothing more appetizing for the be- professional life. A Plea tor Free Silver. “We hear the foolish cry that it is Wall street which would suffer by free coinage. How silly this when we re- member that the profits of Wall street are made by the fluctuations of the market, and that the change from a stable standard of value to a fluctuating and uncertain one, such as the silver ring proposes, would throw the entire business of the country into a kind of make its millions, its tens of millions, yes, its hundreds. The farmers, the business men, the working people, the widows and the orphans in our Con- gressional districts, would simply lose what Wall street would make.” —Rep- resentative M. D, Harter, of Ohio. re — A Judge to be Honored. From the New York Sun. Judge Gordon deserves the thanks of all American citizens, whether by birth or adoption, in refusing to naturalize applicants whose ideas of the Govern- ment they were ready to swear fealty to were as vague as a beetle’'s ideas of originailsin. It is well known that the average Judge the country through is neither as considerate as Judge Gor- don nor as watehful of the rights of those who are citizens, In New York that whole batch of ignorant appli- cants would doubtless be now enjoying the delights of citizenship, if not made a municipal officer, — Meeting the Issue. From the Phila. Times, Rodney A. Mercur, of Bradford county, has announced himself as a candidate for the Republican nomina- tion for Senator in the Bradford and Wyoming district, and with his, an- nouncement he makes the public dec- laration that he is opposed to the reelec- tion of Quay to the United States Sen- ate. This was a bold and manly acton the part of Mr.Mercur. The people can thus have an opportunity of deciding, by accepting or rejecting his aspirations, whether they desire the eleetion of Qnay to another term in the Senate, sna r——— Pampered Senatorial Appetites. From the Phila. Record. A delve into the archives of Senate luxuries has found that funerals are among the most expensive of all. For exclusive of the undertaker’s bill, was $2020.58—the meals alone being $845. 58; so that, allowing twenty Senatorial wourners in the party, each was com- pelled to eat $42 worth of provender. This, however, was a cheap funeral. The interment of Senator Iearst cost the people not less than $20,000. On the whole there would seem to be reaved fellow Senators than the obse- quies of one of their number. Oem Encouragement fur Denjamin, From the Lock Haven Democrat. President Harrison has so much Chili business on his hands vow that we really fear that Mr. Blaine will eir- camvent him and get the nomination. Confound those Chilians—why couldn't they have waited until the political kettle was doue boiling. With putting on and off his uniform, spitting on his hands, drawing his sword and saying to himself tete d' armee, we apprehend that our President may get behind in the great political struggle with his arch enemy, Mr. Blaine. It is hard for aman to fight a mighty war and achieve a presidential nomination at the same time. But for the encour- agement of the grandson of his grand- father we would remark that the thing is not an impossibility. Lincoln did it. Why not Harrison 2 Spur up, Benjamin! Spar ap! How They Look Upon It. From the Evening Telegraph, Phila. Our late esteemed neighbors in Chili are said to look on the possibility of a war with the United States with much unconcern, not to say joyfulness. We are assured that the rank and file of the people are aching in their little stomachs to have a bout with the Yan: kees, and that any action on the part of the authorities which savors of apolo- ¢y would be met with great popular disapproval. Itis extremely probable that this statement of the case is near- ly an accurate one. Whatever wit and caution in a time of such international extremity President Montt and his ad- visers may be possessed of is to all ap- pearances not participated in by the people. The ignorant cut-throat char- acter of the lower classes in South America is to blame for all this inter nal strife and revolution that have be- come so peculiar to the Spanish Amer- ican Republics. Such a set of people are not fit to rule themselves. Repub: lican government in such an incompe- tent civilization is a misfortune. If these semi-savages want to fight it would seem as if they ought to be ac- commodated. It would be a pity though, for good United States soldiers to dirty their hands at such a job. It would be cheaper aud a sight pleasant- er to hire a few regiments in Peru to Spawis from the Keystone, * —A brick famine menaces Reading building industries. —The State Horticultural Association met at York on Wednesday. —Hazleton still wants to get out of Luzerne county and run a county of her own. —Dangerous curves are being taken out of the Neversink Mountain Railroad at Reading —Dairyman F. W. Hoopes was hurled sixty feet by a train at a York crossing. He may die. —Cofrode & Saylor will erect a new steel plant at Reading with a capacity of 400 tons a day. —Lancaster citizens meet to-night to demand that none but Americans be employed on city work. —The Moravians’ 152-year-old church near Milton Grove, Lancaster county, has just been torn down. —A decision of Judge Reeder frees South Bethlehem from paying $10,000 damages in opening streets. —Rev. Dr. C. K. Nelson, of Bethlehem will be consecrated as Bishop of Georgia on Wash- ington’s Birthday. —The icy sidewalk got a victim in the per- son of Miss Alice Kern, of Bath,who died from * injuries Monday. —Firas were lighted at the Catasaqua Man- ufacturing Company’s Mill B Monday, after 6 months idleness. —Berks Republicans have adopted a new set of governing rules and made Matthew Rhoda president. —John A. Rigg, chairman of Reading Coun- cils’ Finance Committee was stricken with paralysis Tuesday. —Dr. B. H. Throop and wife, who built and occupied Scranton’s first house, have just en- joyed a golden wedding. s —Avoiding a passing engine, Wallace Wujal a Shamokin miner, stepped in front of a pas- senger train and died. —Mrs. Lucy Shiudle, of Grordonville, fell and caught by her eyelid and eyebrow on a meat hook in a smoke-house. —Aged William R. Haneuif, of Altoona, miss- ing for weeks, has been found dead on the ice of a pond near the city. —Robert J. Hennessy, tenor at St. Peter’s Church, Reading, becomes a member of the MeCaull Opera Company. —Relatives are contesting the will of the late Joel Texter, near Lebanon, who bequeath. ed $200,000 to former employes. —Women’s World’s Fair Committee for Berks county orgavized, on Wednesday , at the Reading Board of Trade rooms. ; —A section of the Standard’s pipe line was blown up with dynamite in Clinton county , and 1000 barrels of oil were lost. —The Reading Railroad is sending 1000 car- loads of coal to Philadelphia and 500 carloads to Buffalo via Williamsport every day. —Nicholas Hoefter, and wife of Catasauqua were interred in the same grave Tuesday. They died at the same time last Saturday. —Suit for $5000 for board and house hire has been brought agaiust the estate of the late Mahlon Miller, by Israel Miller, of Reading. —Nearly all of Berks county’s famous old thousand and two tuousand acre farms have recently been divided by their owners’ wills. —Eleven-year-old Michael Kushi, of Bethle- h:m's “Gold Gang,” has been arrested for snowballing Morris Glassowiki black and blue. —A stranger rushed into Peter Martin's sa- loon, Reading, and threw a bottle of expiosive liquid on the floor, doing great damage, then fled. —Boyertown people are moving again for the pardon of the convicted liquor dealers, Moser and Diebert, who sold in Montgomery county. —Young Albert Hackman, of Brunerville, has been brought back from Lebanon to Lan- caster charged with two forgeries aggregating £95. —George W. Clark, of Limestone, got a di- vorce in just nine minutes alter his case was called in Court, at Wiliiamsport. Desertion was proved. —Jazob Bau-man, President of the Farmers’ Bank, of Lancaster, for a quarter of a century, retired Monday his successor being his Son, J. W. Bausman, —Slatington childrenborrowed Captain Me - Dowell’s horse and rig,when the Captain wasn’t looking, and drove the horse over an embank- ment to death. —By a majority ¢f only three votes, the Moravian Church Council of Lititz, has reject- ed a proposition that women be allowed to vote in church matters, —Rev. Enoch Smith resigned from Salem Lutheran Church, Lancaster, for a lacz of funds and a Jack of English in the services among other reasons. —Rev. H. W. Tolson, of Port Carbon, will have a practical text, with illustrations. While he preached on Sunday night bur lars ran. sacked his residence. —At a special term of court in Harrisburg, in February, sixty-eight State tax cases, in- volving $300,000, will be tried, two of them be- ing against Philadelphia. —In attempting to mount mine cars that his companions sped down an incline at Mae hanoy City, Thomas McCarthy received fatal jnjuries ander the wheels. —~Convicted murderer Keck promises to cheat the gallows by starving himself in the Allentown jail. Meanwhile counsel are mov- ing to have anew trial for him. ~Christian Klitsch, aged 27, a Philadelphia barber, has been incarcerated at Pottsville for cruelly betraying Manie Stricker, an orphan not yet 15, whose love he had won. ~—A Methodist minister at Jermyn, Lackaw- anna county, has refused to hold union revival mecting with Episcopalians ‘because they uphold card-playing and dancing.” —Bowmanite Evangelicals Jacob Xnease, Jr., Jacob and Oscar Strauss and William Zim- m rman were convicted of disturbing their opponents’ meeting at New Mahoning. —A. L. Storm, of Bethlehem, denies that he planned to elope with Lizzie Litsch, whose brothers hai her arrested on suspicion. He declares he knows nothing of the affair. —Mrs. E. Wagner, of Erie, has written to the police of Dayton, O., asking for informa- tion as to her brother, A. D. Keeley, who was last heard of in that city 10 years ago. He is said to have tallen heir to a considerable for- tune. —A Pittsburg magistrate refused without a license to marryjBrakeman James Cochran and Florence, daughter of Iron Manufacturer De Hopper, of Cleveland, although Cochran go down and give them three or four square lickings, had rescued Miss De Hopper from a railway wreck years before he eloped with her, a