BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. High on the shelf of political fame, Lies the plumed Knight with no one to blame: But himself. Down from the soft piney woods of Maine, Iswafted a spring zephyr a balm for Bex’s pain, “Jim's ill health.” —Perhaps INGALLS is after a pen- sion. —If the coal trust pans out as such things usually do there will indeed be black diamonds in Pennsylvania. —Poor CarnNor! Poor HARRISON ! Why don’t you meet half way and harri-kari for the sins of your followers. — Tis sad to see February scoring off into a thing of the past so rapidly, for women always talk less in this month than in any other of the twelve. —The HiLLITEs popped champaigne to celebrate Washington’s birthday and their exuberance of spirits gave the CLEVELAND followers a decidedly real pain. —How slight a difference between the phrases: on the rail, and on a rail, with their accompaniments car and tar. Yet how quickly one discerns between the two kinds of riding. —New York friends of Senator HILL, boast that be has succeeded in accomp- lishipg every thing he has undertaken. The¥ ought to get him to try his hand at completing the GRANT monument. —HELL bent on election ! is the way a slight mistake of the artist might have made the streamers, at Albany, last Monday; and between the right and the wrong there would have been small difference. — With a coal trust and seventy cent dollars the workingman could surely congratulate (?) himself that he enjoyed the benefits of so liberal and elastic con- stitutions as direct our State and Nation- al proceedings. —Secretary FosTER, has given mor- tal offense to the Prohibitionists of the country,by going to Europe on a Spree. To the credit of the government of which he is such a prominent official, he was off it when he landed at Liverpool. --Economy, Pa., boasts of a $3,000 pig pen. We have'nt heard how much the Nebraska gubernatorial mansion cost, but we’ll venture the assertion that TaAYERr's usurped home was a deal more expensive than the bragged sty of the Economites. — Lancaster furnishes the latest war- ning to people who are in the habit of visiting lawyers offices. SAM’L Youna went into one down there on Tuesday last, and in less than a half hour was car- ried out dead, from heart disease. Moral keep away from them. —Though pregnant with municipal rottenness the great and generpus heart of Philadelphia rose with one mighty throb to freight her white winged an- gel of mercy, with the lavish offerings of a truly American people, to starving souls in famine stricken Russia. : —The scarcity of pedagogues in the far west is probably because of the fail- ure of their attempts to teach the young idea how to shoot. ‘Western brats us- ually are better in this oneline than any of their tender foot instructors, and that is where they get the drop on them. --It is in order for some one to write a touching little poem on The Hero of Johnstown’’ as so many rattle brained papers are calling General HAsTINGs. If wearing top boots through the muddy streets of flooded Johnstown made a hero of our DAW, then glory is indeed cheap. —Ncow that the epidemic is nearly over we can see ‘ar more meaning in the article le which the French prefix be- fore Grippo than we did when the dis- ease first became prevalent. If we put a y toit, in the English, we have a most composite definition of the measly little affliction. —If ELKINS was a guerilla how can Congress consistently deny ex-confeder- ate officers the right to defend their country’s honor, when the man who would make the bullets for them to shoot, is said to have been a member of the most dishonorable and cruel organi- zation in the rebel service. --If he only had definite assurance that they would all Leas popular as ht- tle RurH, GROVER could get rich by having more babies and entering them in the “most popular baby’ contests which are being held all over the coun- try. Rurn’s‘latest triumph is her ac- quistion of a valuable piece of California real estate in a contest with Baby Mec- Ken. —Prominent Philadelphinns objected to sending RunoLPH BLANKENBURG, as agent of their relief stores to the starv- ing Russians, because he was not a na- tive born American, This is truly a case o! straining at a gnat and swallow- ing a camel, and if you would see the proof of our assertion look at the lapels of their coats,or into their store windows, for the emblem of green, on the 17th of next month. Democralic , > STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Zo) Ce ~ ¢ VOL. 37. BELLEFONTE, PA., FEBRUARY 26, 1892. NO. 8. Will Investigate the Reading Combine. Attorney General HexserL addressed a letter to President McLeop, of the Philadelphia & Reading railroad sys- tem, on Tuesday, in which he appoint- ed Thursday, March 3rd, as thedate and the Supreme Court chamber, at Harrisburg, as the place, when and where a legal inquiry will bejmade in- to the recent combination between the Reading, Jersey Centra! and Lehigh Valley roads. Possibly no transaction of late years has aroused greater interest than the consolidation of these three lines of railroads for the joint purpose of pro- curing exclusive control of the anthra- cite coal regions and for che formation of ‘a more dangerous competitor to the Pensylvania system. As first looked at by our people it presented the aspect of a gigantic coal trust,but the new organization promptly promised a reduction of the present rates instead of the anticipated increase. It is certainly plausible that one man- agement should conduct the traffic on a much more economical plan}?than three, but the question here presents itself : will the Reading company be able to pay the promised 7 per cent. dividends to the Jersey] Central and Lehigh Valley stockholders and keep up its own dividends without squeezing coal buyers? It argues that it} can readily do this through the decreased expense of management, though neither of the “gobbled” lines have ever] been able to pay more than 4} per cent while conducted individually. As to the truth of this statement time alone will tell. It is the matter of the Constituiiog: ality of the arrangement that has de- maaded an examination of all the cir- cumstances connected with it, and it is in deference to this demand, that Attor- ney General HeNsgL has called the in- vestigation that will be made on the 3rd of next month. While the Reading claims that its lines never were rivals of the Lehigh Valley or the Jersey Central it seems very strange that two distinctively sep- arate corporations should tap the re- sources of the same region and carry it to the seaboard without com petition. The Lehigh Valley has been under obligations to the Reading for tracks into Philadelphia just as the latter has been indebted to the Jersey Central forits New York terminus, ‘but the existing relation between them hus never preclnded the possibility ot healthy competition. What the out come will be cannot be told. Ifit appears from che facts brought out, and the leases which have been called for by the State au- | thorities, that the deal is nothing but a pooling of interests to secure abso- late control of our greatest field of mineral wealth, for the sole purpose of enriching a few at the expense the many, such process through the courts as will put a stop to the combination, will doubtless be begun at once. While on the the other hand, if the facts show that the people of the State are to be benefitted by a reduction in the price of coal and better carrying facilities on the part of these lines, through this consolidation, it will be allowed tostand and receive the God- speed of every citizen of the common- wealth. Under any circumstancei the people know that their interests will be cared for. Governor Parrisox and his legal adviser have faltered in no duty yet. They will not 10 this, Doing the Best They Can. We have the following evidence from the Philadelphia Record, that there is life and “push’ in the citizens of that usually dormant -place, al- though the general beliet is to the con- trary. The facts as given, while they do not show that the city has reached that degree of haste that requires rapid transit, prove that those of its citizens who are awake are willing to put their “shoulder to the wheel” their public vehicles to make the best time possible. In this case at least they show a willinguess to do the best they ean to keep things moving, for which they are to be congratulated. The Record says : Twobalky mules hitched to a rag dray caus- ed a commotion at the corner of Fifth and Market streets yesterday afterncon, and fally thirty of the populace pushed the wagon on the stapid animals’ heels for half a block. | constitutional and assist : : wrongs perpetrated upoa the people by A Change of Power and a Lack of Principle. Facts are beginning to prove, that it is not so much a matter of principle with the leaders of the two tactions 1n ‘New York, as it is a question of power to enforce their wishes. Eight years ago the delegation from that state was instructed to cast its vote as a unit, for the candidate of its choice, Grover CLEVELAND. In that delegation were three prominent lead- ers of the Tammany Hall Damocracy, FrLrows, CockrAN and Grapy. [hey, as was the organization to which they belonged, were opposed to his nomina- tion. They believed the districts they represented were opposed to him, and so oelieving, raised the; question of fhe power of a State Convention to in- struct district delegates,that,as a body, it had no voice in selecting. They in- sisted in ‘most eloquent and forcible speeches, that as they were the repre- sentatives of districts, and not the creatures of a convention, that their duty was to obey the wishes of their constituents, and not the dictum of a state; that the only binding force a Unit rule adopted by a state conven- tion had was upon the delegates-at- large, who were selected by the con- vention, as rep-esentatives of the State. This was their position then. The shoe is now on the other foot. At that time Tammany was the under dog in the fight. Now it dominates New York politics, and in the conven- tion held in that State on Tuesday last, the same leaders, who but eight years ago 80 eloquently plead for the right- ful privilege of voicing the sentiment of the districts they represented, came to the front and because they had the power, attempied totieevery district in the state to the candidate of their choice, and to stifle the voice ot those who did not agree with them, through the operations of this same unit rale. That the other element of the party, u.at sought to be benefited by this un- democratic idea, eight years ago, will complain because of the present at- tempt to enforce it against them, we nave not the least doubt. It is the way men have of doing things, and shows the inconsistency of partisans, when circumstances change the situation. Tammany Hall, after its fight against the unit rule in 1884, should be asham- ed to seek strength and secure united action under it now. The CreEvenLaNxp Democrats of that state, alter their efforts to enforce it then should be men enough’to accept it now without a word of complaint, Consistency demands this of both. —It don’s help the Patriot's fight, on a Democratic State administration, a particle, to furaish as their chief en- dorsers the opinions of Republican newspapers. On questions of the en- forcement of Constitutional provisions, the people have long since discovered that these journals are as insincere as hypocritical, and while our Harrisburg contemporary may parade its own in- tegrity and independence 1n matters of this kind,to ite heart's content, there is a general public opinion that there is more of personal malevolence in ils ef- forts than desire t> see the right suc- ceed. They Deceive ‘No One. It is a curious circamstance that while the Republican press of the State bas for eighteen years sustained a Re- publican legislature in its refusal to en- act necessary legislation enforcing the provisions of section 7, of article XVII of the constitution, it should so sudden- ly waken up now to the necessity of a Democratic Governor, seeing that the 4th section of the same article is not violated by the Reading railroad deal. It we belonged to a party that has had absolute control of all the legislation of the State,since the new Coastitution and had, daring all that time, failed to have its provisions enforced, as against corporates discrim- ination, we would say but little about obligations and the went ino effect, a failure to recognize them. But then some people have a gall that recoznizes no consistency and a desire to deceive, though no one is tooled except themselves. ——There is considerabl: rapidity in the growth of the belief that both “Mr.” Hint and “Mr.” CLEVELAND have laid themselves on the shelf for the present. 4grouble that putting it in operation A Wroug Way of Doing It. A Naw Castle telegram to the Pitts- burg Post under date of 21st inst, states that: “The Prohfbitionists and Farmers’ Alliance men in this,county,by combinations,succeeded, on Tuesday night, in electing seven judges of election who will fill their offices in defiance of the Baker ballot law. This wilt bring up a test as;to the constitutionality of the law. These seven judges are backed by a strong fund and the crystalizad sentiment of the com mun- ity, and will carry out the plan, even if they go to prison for it. So far as desiring to have the con- stitutionality of the Baker ballot law tested the Lawrence county Prohibi- tionists are eatirely in the right but just how the defiance of the law is go- ing to make that test isa matter that to many is not clear. Before assuming their duties 84s judges these seven men will be requir- ed to take an oath binding themselves t) see that the provisions of the new election law are faithfully enforced. b To refuse to do so after being sworn will simply commit perjury on their part in place of raising any question as to the constitutionality of the eleciton law. If this matter is to be brought before the courts at all it should come not mixed with side issues, and if there is any possible process by which a lower court decision could be secured so that it can properly be carried to the Su- preme court, it should be done at once, and not wait until after the expense of baying;booths, boxes and railings has bzen entailed upon the public. There may be some question as to whether the new law is in strict accord with the spirit of the. constitution, but there is none whatever as to the ex- pense it will entail and the trouble, and vexation, and disappointment it is sure to bring. These later, we believe, will far outweigh all the benefits that can be hoped to be obtained through the enforcement of the measure. But if we are to suffer the expense and go through the interminable turmoil and will entail before its constitutionality can be determined, it would be much better to drop the idea of testing the matter before the Supreme court and add to it such amendments as would make it ‘hat the public was led to believe it was at the time of its enact- ment; a real reform ballot law. ——As it seems to be absolutely ! necessary to their proper condition, that New York Democrats have a fizht every four years, there is consola- tion to outsiders in the fact, that the one going on now between the two fac- tions was started in time to be fought out before the contest with the Repub- licans begins, From the heat to which it has already gotten, both par- ties shonld have enough of it long be- fore the candidate for president is nom- inated and should be warmed up to a sufficient degree to make the hottest fight against the common enemy that that State has ever witnessed. Offers ‘Them the Opportunity. The resignation of Mayor WyMAN, of Allegheny, wili tarnish the prohibi- tionists and other opponents of the new ballot law, the opportunity they seek of getting a Supreme Court decision as to the Constitutionality of the act. The law goes into effect on the first of March. The election of a successor to Mayor Wyyan will probably take place early in that month and must be held under the new act. Outof it there should be no trouble in prepar- ing a case and getting the lower court decision, through which the whole matter can be brought before the Su- preme conrt in time for a final decision from that body before- the State has gone to the expense of securing booths, rails, ete. If the people who are talking so volubly about the unconstitutionality of an Act that not one in ten of them hus read and that not one in a hundred wouldfully understand after reading,and are in dead down earrest about knock- ing it out because some of its provisions interfere with the supposed constitu. tional rights of citizens, this will be their opportunity. Lf they are in earn. est let them start their case with the flrat election that will be held under its provisions. —1If you ‘want printing of any de- scription the WaATcHMAN office is the place to have it done. So Say We All of Us. From the New York World. What's the matter with a bill to re- peal the duty on tin-plate? There was DOt & worse Or a more oppressive Swin- dle than that enacted in the McKinley tariff. It touches a thousand people where binding-twine touches one. Why should not a Democratic House promptly pass a bill to repeal it? A Wooden Man Would be Stronger. + ht ed Ln From the Clearfield Republican. The Cleveland Press, in alluding to Blaine’s withdrawal, says : “The g. 0. p. could run Blaine in effigy and get more votes for him in that shape than it seems likely to poll for the hero of Paddy Egan’s war candidate.” This Press man is evidently mad at ‘the government,” and expected an office from Blaine. S——— Washington’s Birthday and What it Commemorates. Inasmuch as we have just celebrated the 101st festival in commemoration of Washington's birthday we thought it might be interesting to the readers to the Warcaman to know that the cus- tom is just 101 years old. While we celebrate it simply because it was the birthday of the father of his country, yet the following list of events, from the fourteenth century to the present time, will show that historically it was noted before George was ever thought of. 1381.—Death of David II. of Scot- land, son of the immortal Robert Bruce. 1609.— Death of Ferdinand I., Grand Duke of Tuscany. 1630.—This was the first occasion of a public thanksgiving in Massachusetts. The date had already been appointed for a season of general fasting, but, un- fortunately, provisions ran very low in February. No cargoes had arrived for a long time. Our forefathers appre- hended little difficalty, however, in keeping the prescribed fast. On the morning of the day a ship appeared in the harbor laden with food. It was unanimously decided to change the fast day to a feast day. 1644. —Charles I. convened a special Parliament of 44 Lords and 118 Com- moners at Oxford. 1674.—Jean Chapelain died. He was a literary protege of the great Car- dinal and a man of some talent. He first attracted Richelien’s attention through a preface to the ‘Adonis of Marini, which the priestly “bel esprit” affected to admire. Chapelain was one of the original members of the Acade- mie Francaise. New 1717.—Great snowstorm in England, with snow six feet deep in | Boston. ‘ruary 20, continued for two days. Snow commenced to fall Feb- 1731.—Death of Frederick Ruysch, a celebrated Duch anatomist. 1732.—George Waghington was born at Bridge's Creek, Va. 1744.—Great naval engagement off Toulon between the combinded French and Spanish fleets under Admiral De Court against the British fleet under Admirals Matthews and Rowley. The Spanish ship Poder was burned. Brit- ish loss, 92 killed and 185 wounded. 1746.—Death of William Conston, Director of painting and sculpture in the French Academy. 1770.—A mob attacked the house of one Richardson in Boston, who had attempted to remove a mark set against the house of a patriot named Lille, who had contravened the non-importa- tion law. Richardson fired on the crowd and killed Christopher Snider, eleven years old. The boy’s name is recorded in the prints of the time as the first martyr to American liberty. 1780.—An ox roasted whole on the frozen Schuylkill at Philadelphia. Ice 17 inches thick. 1782.—1Island of Montserrat surrend- ered by the French under Count de Grasse. 1787.—Assemply of France. 1797.—French descended on Wales. 1806.— Death of James Barry,a well- koown Irish painter. His master- piece was an allegorical series for the Society of Arts in London. 1810.——Death of Charles Brockden Brown, an American author. 1811.—The British ships Cerberus and Active captured twenty-two vessels from Otranto with provisions and troops. 1812.—Ogdensburg, N. Y., attacked by the Eritish and Indians under Fraz- er and McDonnell. Folsythe in com- mand, compelled to evacuate. The British took 12 cannon, 1400 stands of arms, 300 tents and all the boat:. The Americans lost 27 men, the British 64. 1814.—Blucher defeated by the French, under Boyer, at Mery. The former fired the town and fled. 1816.—Death of Adam Ferguson, the famous Scotch writer. In 1778 be was sent to America as secretary of the mission for effecting a reconciliation. 1835.—Death of Jane Jarmon in Wodesborough, N. C., aged 105. 1841.—Disastrous land slide in Com- mune of Gregaro, Italy. One hundred and thirteen lives logt- Reggio Calabria nearly destroyed by an earthquake. 1855.—%an pended payment, notables of Francisco banks sus- Panic ensued. Spawls from the Keystone, —Pitisburg l.as an epidemic of runaway husbands. —Three men were injured in a riot at Sun. bury Monday. —No more semi-monthly pay for Hazleton region miners. —York industries shipped 311 car loads of freight last week. —Pittsburg’s Coal Exchange has condemned Senator Frye’s bill. —Christian Temperance women,in Reading, want to stop Sunday cars. —World’s Fair Executive Commissioner Whitman is ill at Harrisburg. —Burglars were scared away while trying to rob the Post Office at Carlisle. —Berks county has just 450 applicants for license, ten less than last year: —Work has been resumed on the Hazleton Lofty branch of the Reading R.R. —Top-rock fatally crushed Teddy O’Brien at Waddell’s Colliery, near Wilkesbarre. —-The new State insane Hospital,at Werners- ville, willl accommodate 1250 patients. —The Pennsylvania Chatauqua will raise funds by means of a stereopticon show, —The Unioh Baptist church, Pittsburg, has burned on its altar its $2500 mortgage. —Having hacked his throat with a knife’ George Allen, of Steelton, bled to death. —Roof-rock fell and killed Miner Peter Sweet in Pyne Colliery, near Taylorville. —At the Otto Colliery, near Minersvil le, Benjamin Lewis was killed coupling cars. —The Reading Rolling Mill (Cofrode & Say- lor’s) has cut 650 men’s wages 10 per cent. —Miss Mary Brown was drowned ina wash- tub into which she fell in a fit, at Tarentum. —Margaret Mather admits that she is seek- ing a divorce from her husband at Pittsburg. —For selling cigars and candy on Sunday, Julius Strehlan has been fined at Johnstown. —The Lehigh Valley Railroad Easton shops arelikely to be moved to Bethlehem, it is said. —The restored Carnegie Free Library at Johnstown (cost $65,000) was rededicated last Sunday. —Jerome L. Boyer has been elected as the new president of Reading’s prosperous Board of Trade. —Lancaster’s new $75,000: public building is ready for the post office and revenue office furniture. —Organ Manufacturer Horace Lehr was married to Miss Irene Algur, at Easton, Mon- day night. —The great ice gorge in the Allegheny river at Parker has broken, after a part of the town was flooded. —Central Iron Works’ puddlers have re- sumed work, at Harrisburg; at the reduced wages, $3.50 a ton. —Further alarm has been caused by the set- t ling of the sarface over the Payne Colliery in Luzerne borough. —Wilkesbarre’s new postmaster, Mr. Land- messer, will retain Postmistress Bogert’s depu ty, Mr. Chapman. —Trackwalkers Toporo Antonio and Blan- chette Pietro were killed, by the Columbian express,near Latrobe. -—The Pennsylvania Railroad will tap the Hummelstown brownstone quarries with a spur from Middletown. —The Pennsylvania Railroad Company commenced work on the extension of its road to Scranton, on Monday. —There were three bold robberies of Al- toona houses while their ocetipants were at church on Sunday night. —Going under his locomotive, near Union- town, to tap asteam pipe, Engin eer Walter Glenn was fatally cooked. —The granite monument to the Adams county soldier dead, at G~ttysburg, was dedi- cated by the Post G. A. R. —An unexpected blast Saturday in a stone quarry near Reading seriously injured John Rumkeller and George Roth. —Lackawana county Judges won’t appoint Miners’ Examinin g Boards. this year, as the miners show so little interest. —The dzath wateh will stick elose to mur- derer Patrick Fitzpatrick until his execution on March 1, in the Pittsburg jail. —The East Lebanon Rolling Mill has shut down indefinitely, because She employes re- fused to accept a necessary reduction. —The Pennsyltvania Railroad is represented as having purchased $1,009,000 worth of prop- erty at and near Wilkesbarre recently. —Dr. C. K. Nelson, Bishop-elect of Georgia, preached his farewell sermon at the church of the Nativity, Bethlehem, Sunday. —The New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad’s block signal system from Mead- ville west will beginservice next Tuesday. —Nativity church vestry went South with Rev. Dr. C. K. Nelson, who was Wednesday formally ordained Bishop of Georgia, at Ate lant a. —Business on the Reading Railroad is so heavy thatthe 1500 employes in the Reading shops were asked to work last Monday, a holiday. —George Washington, a ninety-five year old: colored landmark of Stroudsburg, was buried: on the birthday anniversary of the Father of; his Country. —Receiver Emerson Collins has taken chaage of the suspended Muncy Bank, and will attempt to. fathom the mystery of the missing money. —Joseph: Stein was killed in the Bear Ridge Colliery near Shenandoah, and Napoleon Astra was rescued alive after being buried under a rush of coal. —Mrs. Barbara Long, of Lancaster, while temporarily insane, cut her throat with a butcher knite and gashed herself with a hatchet. She may recover. —Travel on the Reading Railroad was de- layed yesterday at Valley Forge by heavy iron girders bound for the Terminal in this city falling on the track from the cars. —While under treatment in the St. Luke's Hospital, South Bethlehem, for a crushed arm, Fireman William Burges was seized with a fatal attack of typhoid feven. —Twenty four thousand beer and pop bot- tles per year are saved or reseuwed from care. less persons or thieves by the Bottlers’ Pro- tective Association of Berks eounty. —Well-known Miss Kate Haws, of Johns- town, has disappeared and is believed to have eloped with a ycung friend whom she met while at St. Joseph's Academy, Greensburg. —Tramps attempted to wreck a train on the Reading and Columbia Railroad, near Lancaster, on ‘Saturday night. Ties were placed on ihe track, but were discovered and removed. N 4