Y P. GRAY Ink Slings. Out {rom the ranks of the G. 0. P. Braink has gone for naught Than through fear of the presidential bee Since its feet were getting hot. —A liberal use of bier always makes a fat undertaker. -. BLAINE is off the track, but it can- not be said to have been caused by a yolL 3% STATE RIGHTS AN BELLEFONTE, PA., FEBRUARY 12, 1892. A D FEDERAL UNION. Tz NO. 6. mis-placed switch. —Oauat in Nebraska they had a very appropriate use for the slang phrase “git THAYER” last week. —PFree coinage is one issue. Free sil- Literally speaking the masses favor the latter for practice. —The Louisiana lottery is up the GROVER'S visit seems to have had a wonderful effect upon the Gulf state. ver another. flue, —The retailers now Philadelphia have admitted all classes of merchants except those who"retail shirts. --One way to secure rapid transit is to call on a young woman whose near sighted father takes you for a book agent. > —The Louisiana lottery might have had a last Grand Drawing of QUAY’s They 4re out in BLAINE delegates. the cold now. —HARRISON’S cabinet mysterious a piece of political furniture as that used by the average spiritualist and magician. —Dave HivrL should have been on exhibition at the New York pouitry show last week. Heseems to be ‘cock of the walk’’ over that way just now. —If the politica! bee was only a poi- sonous insect how much of trials and tribulations we would all be spared and what a truthful people we would be. —Since BLAINE's withdrawal it is quite the appropriate thing for the MILLIKEN’S name as a possible presidential candi- Republican to date. —They talk of the air of cultured and refined Boston, but what makes it any different than that which we Penn- Is it the pork, or sylvanians breathe ? is it the baked beans? --Some green goods men were arrest- ed in the Quaker city last week, and the only evidence of guilt—but an excep- tionally good one—found upon them, was a verdant Kentuckian. —If some of our good farmers, who are going to have sale this spring, would only get a bold of Death’s old reaper and sell it with their goods what sun- shine and happiness we would all enjoy. —The New Jersey legislator who sui- cided, while delirious with grip, evident- ly intended to wash himself clean of all political sin before he entered the next world for he took a whole stream of water. —Woburn, Massachusetts, high school girls are kicking because they are re- quired to discard their corsets before en- gymnastic exercises. they imagine they can’t be staid with- tering out them. —BLAINE'S poor health is supposed to have been the cause of his refu:al to be a candidate for a presidential nomina- tiod. His action will undoubtedly have a very salutary effect on BENNY'S physi- cal temperament. --Six Yale students, with their young lady companions, broke through the ice while skating on Lake Whitney, on, Sunday, and were given a good cold bath. It was slightly different from immersions of the the bachanalian ¢Dickie’’ club. —CARNEGIE'S recent sermon on ‘‘the Gospel of Wealth’ must have had its foundation on the scriptural verse “and at the end I say unto you it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of God.” —Japanese workmen all wear the name of their employer printed across the gable end of their trousers. Such ad- vertising schemes wouldn’t work in America, for every time a fellow would be cheated it is altogether probable that he would manifest his contempt for the wily tradesman’s name by sizing it up by the foot. —A superstitious old man down in Lycoming county has procured a hang- man's rope to cure his wife of fits. He thinks if he ties it around her neck the If he would tie the other end around his own neck and then crawl over the limb of a tree, about ten feet from the ground, we think he would be cured,and so would his wife. trouble will cease, —A New England syndicate will put a powerful search light on the top of Mt. Washington and make a summer They might turn itto good use in keeping track of the rapidly declining republican majorities But then the rising “Yanks” enough in their convictions of tariff re- form to not make it necessary for them to desert the g. 0. p. between days. resort of the place. down that way. generations of in session in is about as suggest Perhaps strong It Was Hollow Pretense. It 1s well not to be premature in mak- ing up your mind that people are hon- est, simply because they say they are. Along during the latter part of De- cember and the first week in January, when it became apparent that both houses of the New York legislature would be Democratic, and the power of re-apportioning the state would be in the hands of the Democrats, there were no words too strong for Republican papers to use in expressing their con- demnation of partisan apportionments or political gerrymanders. Even the President of the United States and the Governor elect of Ohio, joined in the windy pretense of demanding just and fair apportionments, and the public was left under the impression that so far at least, as the Republicans had the power, the States to be re-districted would be divided in accordance with the intent of the Constitution and the spirit of the law, rather than the needs or contingencies of partisan demands. It is scarcely a month since this professed desire for honesty and fair dealing in the matter of apportioning States was made, and the only state under the control and domination of the party, whose representatives were so voluble about just apportionments, when New York became Democratic, has just exemplified the Republican A Question. There is no question that public sen- timent is against the multiplication of naturalizations, and were it left to popular approval, so strong is the feel- ing against the hordes of Hungarians, Italians and other foreigners that are crowding our own workingmen out of places and employment, we doubt if any more naturalizations would be granted at all. It is this sentiment that has secured for Judge Furst the favorable com: ment, that bas been accorded him, for refusing to naturalize an Italian at our last term of court because he did not know the requirements of the consti tution. At first thought people will be in- clined to think the Judge was right, but after reflection many will doubt whether there 13 a much danger to the public welfare and the rights of the people,from the enforcement of our too liberal naturalization law, as from the recognition of the power of the courts, to add requirements too or take provi- sions from, the statutes of the country, as their wishes may desire or prejudices dictate. The constituticn of the Uuited States empowers congress to make a “Uhni- idea of fairness and honesty in this | matter. It is Ohio. On Saturday last, the newspapers informed us that the Republican majority in the Legislature | 1ad agreed upon a congresvioaal appor- form rule of naturalization.” It has done so by enacting a law which male a residence of five years within the United States, one of which shall be within the State in which applica- i tion for naturalization is made, and tionment bill, that would give to the | Democrats four of the twenty-one con- i gressmen to which titled. in a pinch, about 420,000 Republi. cans, in Ohio; so that the Re publican idea of fairness, of ‘houesty, of decency and of right, is to allow each hundred thousand Democrats ONE representative in congress and give each hundred thousand Republi- cans, FOUR. ihe infamous apportionment that has disgraced Pennsylvavia for years, and the Democratic division of Ohio, which is to be changed by the measure now in the course of passage, and which the Republicans so vehemently denounced as villianous are respecta- ble,honest and just, in comparison wich the iniquitous bill that is proposed to be forced upon the people and the state of Ohio. And yet, after all the prating that was done in President that state is en- | the renouncing, under oath, of all alle- giance to any foreign prine:, potentate or power, the required qualification for citizenship. Now if Judge Furst can add to these qualifications the one requiring that There are 400,000 Democrats and, HarrIsoN’s message; in governor Mc- KinvLeys inaugural and in the Repub- lican papers about the necessity and honor of being fair 1a this work, does anyone hear a word from either of these sources, in opposition to the fla. grant outrage that is about to be per- petrated ? The Warcaman stated at the time that there was no honesty in these pro- fessions; that veither Harrison, Mo- KiNLEY nor the Republican press of the country, cared a bob-ee how wrong or disfranchising a gerrymander might be, only so the Reputlican party bene- fited by it, and the present situation— their silent acqniescense in the enaet-. ment of the most villianous measure that ever disgraced the statutes of any state, or disfranchised any people—is the evidence of the truth of that state- ment, ————————— Seldom have the public and private lecturers, on the folly of danc- ing, an opportunity to score a point on their side such as the sudden death of Miss KaTHARINE SHAW will occasion ; but the believers in the other side of the question will receive it in a philos- ophical manner, for heart failure is not a monopoly of the ball room, and the beautiful Miss Shaw might have met the same fate had she been at home sleeping,as she did while promenading alter a waltz at the reception given by the Pittshurg club. —~The editors of the Clearfield Spirit,who toll some unpleasant things about lawyer McKeNprick formerly of that town, and were sued for libel, stood trial last week, and were acquit ted easily. We congratulate Messrs Savace and SHort, on the result o: their trial, and are glad to know there is one county in the State, in which the jurors have the good sense to re- cognize that when the troth is publish ed for the public good, there is no grounds for a libel suit. the applicants shall be able to read and understand the constitution of the United States, an other Judge can re- guire that Le shall know the ten com- mandments or be familiar with the teachings of the shorter catechism, while qualifications as his crankiness or the public clamor might demand, and so | 8 1 : : 1 ! on throngh the entire list of the thous- | ands of Judges scaitered over this broad land, and before whom these ap- | plicauts must appear. With every court there would he a | new or dilferent qualification, and the uniformity required by the constitu- ton would simply be abolished by the will of the Judges. If the conits have the authority to adl such qualifications as they see proper to one law,why may they not do | go toall ? And whereis there any safety | for any citizen or security for any in- | | ' 3 : ; terest whea such a rale is recognized ? Whether it is not “better to bear the ills we have” in the shape of too lax laws upon certain matters, until they can be changed or modified, to suit ex- isting circumstances, than to recognize the right, or applaud the disposition of our courts, to exercise a power to male,as weli as to execute the laws,is a question for thoughtful peopl to think seriously over. ————— -—Last Saturday’sissue of the York Gazette was one of the best specimens of an enterprising,inland.country daily, we have ever seen. In addition to all the other news afloat, 1t had a condens- ed history of York and its newspaper, and articles from most of the leading newspaper men of the country, as well as from a half a dozen or more of the most prominent politicians about Washington. It was an issue that will always be an honor to the staid old town in which it is published. A Big Howl Over a Small Transaction. The Republican papers are glorify- ing as much over the confirmation by the senate of a post master up at El mira, as if their party had won «. sweeping vi~tory, They have the senate and why they should howl so loud over doing what they had the votes, the disposition and the power to do, is as mysterious to us as it seems elating to them. When a Republican body like the United States senate gets so ran down at the heel, that it is considered an ex- traordinary event t) agree upon the ap pointmert of a third-class postmaster. to the common ind, it woull appear as about time to make a change in its membership and political complexion. This is about all we cansee in the El- mira result. another can add such cthan Where Blaine's Letter Pats Them. The letter of S.cretary BLAINE stat ing that he will not be a candidate for President and that his name will not be before the Minneapolis convention, leaves Senator Quay and his followers in the political soup up to their chin. It was under the cloak of support ing the Secretary of State, who is un- doubtedly popular with the Republican voters of Pennsylvania, that the Junior Senator hoped to secure such a dele- gation as he could trade and trafic as best suited his purpose. It was under the banner of BLaiNg that he hoped to carry on his own campaign for re-elec- tion, and now that this opportunity is denied him, we are anxious to see what scheme he will rescrt to to keep himself out of the issue, for by keeping himself out, is his only hope of suc- cess. Among Republicans, patronage is greater than principle. Itis the slo- gan that calls forth their every energy ; the toot-horn that calls them to parti- san work as does the dinner bell the farmer to his meals. Without it the party has no more energy than a suck- ling calf without milk, and its leaders are as helpless as a revivalist without a hell. It is this fact that has troubled Quay and drove him to adopt the BraiNg side in the presidential contest. He had lost the patronage and without that what is he worth to Republi- canism or Republicans ? Now he has lost the BLAINE cover and the query is: what wi'l he do? Without patronage or a cover for his own political depravity, will the Republicans, of a great state like Penn- | sylvania, cling to this deformed and | debauched political god longer? And | this is just the question that is troub !leing them. There is no doubt about | what they would do if Quay could con- { trol the appointments, but he can’t and | the fear of loosing their grip on the fat places of the land, or the unpleasant duty of supporting an administration for which they have a sickening dis- gust, is the dilemma in which Mr, Brarne’s letter has put his friends in this state, and it has placed Mr. Quay in a worse one. ep ————" ——- Lehigh county has only eight Democratic candidates, seeking the congressional nomination at this time. A county with so many statesmea to Downfalls, From the Clearfield Republican. The county of Allegheny seems to bave an excess of political downfalls lately. Mayors of Allegheny city are under arrest charged with the cheapest kind of embezzlement, next Collector Warmcastle is thrown overboard for general crookedness, and now we have the knockout of the Postmaster and his assistant, of Allegheny city, en route to the penitentiary. Who the next man will be no one knows. Well, they have too many Republicans in Allegheny, anyhow, for safety. Characteristic Democratic Honesty. From the Phila. Record The New York Democrats have ar- ranged an apportionment bill which will give them nineteen State Senators and the Republicans thirteen, while in the Assembly they will have seventy- three and the Republicans fifty-five, a majority on joint ballot of twenty-four. This is more than fair. A state that gives 50,000 Democratic majority is en- titled to a corresponding majority in the Legislature. The Republicans for years past by their last gerrymander have made it it necessary for the Dem- ocrats to have at least that majority to elect a Demcecratic legislature, The Only Issue. From the Harrisburg Patriot, Senator Vest says taritf reform must be the supreme issue with the Democra- cy the coming campaign. He says: “In 1888, when Mr. Gorman and the late William L. Scott came to the St. Louis convention with a cut and dried platform containing the old straddle of 1884, approved, as they stated, by Mr, Cleveland, the convention repudiated the movement and I heartily endorsed its action. Not even Mr. Cleveland’s name was potent enough to pull down the flag which he had himself placed at the masthead. It floats there to-day and will never be furled until the war taxes which the Republican party pro- mised to remove upon the return of peace have been taken from the statute books.” rt ———] A Very Mid Warniog. From the Pittsburg Dispatch. The report of the Surveyor of Customs on the corruption of the New York Cus- tom House inspectors is a ducument of | startling frankness. Tt charges the gen- eral prevalence of receiving br'bes and gratuities, a large amount of inefficiency and concludes with recommending re- moval on the latter ground owing to the difficulty of proving the corruption. This report bears out charges which have been made in the press at times | heretofore; afid which huve been whisted down the wind as the product of mug- { wamp or partisan malice. This official the square yard, is not to be found any- where else in the state, and the new | | : yd ' cided action on the part of the adminis- state chairman who is a resident of it cin show hisability as a harmonizer, by satisfying eight aspirants with one office, . Won’t Stand Comparison. tent of a Republican legislature in Ohio, to disfranchise the Democracy of that state, is the honorable and manly ac- tion of the Damocracic legislature of licans of that state full representation every vote they have. With a Demo- cratic majority of over 50,000 in the will give that party but five of a ma- jority in the Senate, and an excess of but eighteen in the House. This,when compared with the greedy, villianous work of the Republicans of Ohio, who are rushing through their legislature a bill that will secure them seventeen out of twenty-one congressmen, is a showing so fair for the Democracy, that it should shut the mouths effect- ually of Republicans blatherers about Democratic gerrymanders. When the Democrats obtained con- trol of the Senate and House in New York, through the decision of the su- into our ears, day and night,from every conceivablesource,that the purpose was to make the state eternally and forever Democratic by a gerrymander that would throw all other efforts in this line in the shade. The falsity of this charge is proven, hy the more than fair measure that is now being consid- ered and which in all probability will become a law, It shows that when the Democrats have the power, they have also the manliness, to do the fair thing by their opponents,and that it is not upon the gerrymander of districts orthe disfranchisement of citizens, but upon the good sense of the voter and citizen, that they rely for success. iu both branches of the Legislature, for . of a libel upon Senator Quay. state, the proposed new apportionment | preme courtofthatstate, it was dinned the free and untrameled action of the report shows that part of the public serv- ice to be in as bad a condition as was ev- er alleged from outside sources,and is an emphatic demonstration of the results of the spoils policy. Such a document will require very de- tration and warns it that something more is required of its control of the public service than to use it as a machine for the renomination of President Harri- | son. In pleasing contrast with the dirty in- | | i New York, in presenting an appor- tionment bill, that gives to the Repub- | Re —————————— A Republican Paper's View of it. From the Philadelphia North American, The records of judicial proceedings in this commonwealth probably do not contain a parallel or precedent for the extraordinary charge and sentence with which Judge Wickham declared his sense of the gravity of the offense com- witted by two gentlemen who as editor “and as proprietor of a little-known pa- per—the Beaver Star —were convicted It is particularly unfortunate that such an unheard-of penalty for an of- fense of this character should come from the neighborhood in which Mr. Quay lives, and in which he is supposed to control the political fortunes of every public office, elective or otherwise. If it be true as asserted, that the prosecu- ting attorneys, the jury, and the judge were all of one political faith, that also is unfortunate. These things are to be regretted, for the case Mr. Quay was one where the absence of the possibility of suspicion cf partisan prejudice would have added to the force of his vindica- tion, which was certain in any event. But the criticism of the punishment 1n- flicted upcn these erring and possibly contumacious citizens will not be meas- ured by any political standard. To send these men to jail for six months is a monstrous thing to attempt to do, and we do not believe there is a respectable newspapar in Pennsylvania that would undertake to defend such a sentence. There has been times when ! such a thing would have lifted a com- munity into rebellion, as was the crude method of popular assertion of protest . against severity which runs beyond the bounds of justice. Weare a more com- placent p_ople now, but it is against every idea of American fair play and American independenca to permit judi- cial penalties to be governed by person- al feeling, The Beaver Star is a Democratic newspaper, and the North American has nothing of affiliation with its poli- tics or the political opinions of Mr. John A. Mellon and Mr. W. H. Porter, who have conducted it. But the North American has no excuses for sycophan- cy or for vindictiveness. —— Spawls from the Keystone, —Harrisburg still expectsa fine new Read- ing Railroad station. — Counterfeit Bland dollars are defrauding South Bethlehemites. —Burglars got the cash from the railroad ticket office at Dillsburg. —Lancaster has abolished school for colored children. —The Stoney .Run well in Berks county shows oil at a depth of 660 feet. —Congressman Beltzhoover is confined to his home at Carlisle with the grip. its separate —Catasauqua expects [to] have ” new water works with flllers, at a cost of $33,000. —Thenew city of Hazelton will Zhave a re- venue of $53,5000 from liquor !icenses. —Several of the largest stores in McKees- port were victimized Saturday by shoplifters- —Beart Smith's life was crushed; out between mine cars at Bear Ridge Colliery, Shenan- doah. There are many new applicants for space in the Pennsylvania exhibit at the World's Fair. —Reading’s second batch of $75,000 in city bonds will command 2 percent. premium or better. —A burglar alarm and a gun} hustled thieves out of C. P. MecClure's store at Newport. —Sons of America will preseat ZflagsZand Bibles to Allentown schools on Washington's birthday. —Motorman Jacob} Fink was badly shocked and burned by a live wireon the Lebanon electric road. —Jumping on a freight train at , Bethlehem , to his death. —Five-year-old Albert Cawley brushed his clothes againsta stove, and may; die of the burns, at Easton. —A wicked man calling jhimself],C. B. Ara, nold has been victimizing confiding milliners near Penfield, Pa. —Lydia Shantz ‘Henry Yerger and Mrs. Susan Millard are mysteriously missing; from their homes 1n Reading. —Applejack Distiller G.. W. Spangler, of Albany township, has been held in $500 bail for violating the Revenue laws. '—Congressmaya John B, Robinson's Deleware County Ledger came out yesterday as a thor- oughbred “Independent.” —The overdrafts on the Chicora (Butler county) bank amount to $13,000, leaving poor prospects for depositors. —The Dubs faction retook the [Akron Evangelical Church by force and held a quar- terly conference there Saturday. —Four more Sundaynewsdealers were? con- victed and fined $25 each in Pittsburg Friday They will appeal to the Supreme Court. —At Denver, Lancaster county, Mrs. |Sophia Weinhold and her daughter, Mrs. Susan Shrimp, died of grip-pnenmonia within eight hours. —Charles Ross, a thief who broke jail while serving a four-year sentence at Lowell, Mass,, has just been canght at the Easton Alms- house. —Journeyman bricklayers and plactereia of Easton, South Easton and Philipsburg ask for nine-hour days at 30 cents an hour after May 1. —Last week's new wells in the McDonald oil field kept market prices down unexpected- | ly. This field's daily rans averaged 101,432 ! barrels. | —Allegheny relatives of William McKeblip, who has for twenty-four years been a pauper, have at last found,’him out and cared for | hiro. | broken in July 1890, has just been’'sent home i from Pittsburg to "Westmoreland county, able to walk. —Miner Charles Sule, whose? back was —Cumberland county Poor Directors will be arraigned this week for neglect of duty in leaving little Joe Diller, a baundout hoy, to he flogged to death. —William Powell Davis, who was killed by a train at Bethlehem, was warned by his wife not to go out that morning, as she felt that he was going to die. 8 —Tize East Pennsylvania Conference of the Dubbsfaction of the Ivangelical Association will meet, 120 strong at Lebanon on February 18, Bishop Dubbs presiding. —It is believed that William Meredith, | the colored boy who recently died suddenly at Mt. Holly Springs, was a victim of a bullet fired at hen-roost thieves. —The Westmoreland County Court bas or- dered the McClure Coke Company to place an inspector in every mine instead of assigning an inspector to three mines. —A surgical operation to release the eyelid from the ball of the eye resulted fatally to George Cooper's 3-year-old daughter Coopers. burg. She was born blind in that eye. —Captain Mercer and Detective Gumbert are suspended from the Pittsburg police force. They quarreled and the captain knock- ed the detective down with a blackjack. —Both of Eliza Secally’s arms, run over by car wheels, had tobe amputated near the shoulders, at Allentown. Each hand wore its mitten and rings until after the amputation. —Carnegie is said to be about ready to use in his biggest steel mills, at Braddock and Homestead, the fuel gas plan in which ex- Gov. Beaver and Gen. Hastings are interested —Many old canal boatmen, portage, rail road and forwarding men from various parts of the State will attend the Boatmen’s Reunion at Newport, Perry county, February 18 and 19. —Savage and Short editors of the Public Spirit, were Saturday acquitted , at Clearfield, of libeling ex-District Attorney J. F. McKen- rick, whom they had charged wich taking il- legal fees. —Officer Banknecht, of the Reading police, is glad he is alive after arresting a disturbing woman. She threw a lamp at his head, at- tacked him with a knife and made the arresta really interesting affair. —Creek §Catholics of seven Pennsylvania towns, New York City, Streator, Tlls., Brooklyn and Passaic, N. J,, have united their 40,600 membership in a monster beneficial order toaid widows, widowers and orphans. —The farmers of Washington county ara taking issue with the sportsmen of that logal- ity who have offered rewards for the scalps of owls and hawks. The farmers want these birds preserved because of their value in kills ing destructive little animals. «Chas. Pietri, Jr, of Erie, supposed to have died of poison administered by his wife, was buried Saturday. At the open grave Mis: Pietrie londly declared her innocense befora heaven ; nevertheless she and Dr. Howard a Buffala are under police surveillance. Willlam Davis missed his hold and fell under |.