rete. crm. Es ame meeeeereeeeen Demortali Waldman BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —-The festive “bum” should manifest a decided interest 1n the question of bet- ter roads. —ZEvery man who utters a profane word in the presence of a child breaks the law of God and of man. —Did you ever hear of a fish doing any labor, yet it is the profession of ofakirs’’ to ‘work’ “suckers.” —Many of the would be sports who had their first .course, at Gloucester, never reached the time for desert. —Talk about DAN McGINTY, why his drop wasn’t “in it,” with the one DarLzELL teok on Wednesday. -—Some Sarsaparilla might help ‘that tired feeling’’ with which JoHN DAL- ZELL’S boom is undoubtedly suffering. —Lent is over, but as yet very few of the nickels and dimes, which we gener- ously(?) parted with, have been return- ——By virtue of a right,known only to the trade, unsold *‘Easter novelties’ be- come ‘‘Summer goods’ just as soon as Easter is over. —American powder mills act very much in the same capacity to residents in their localities, as'do bomb throwers, to the Czar of Russia. —1It will not be near as hard a mat- ter to find quarters, at Chicago, next year, as it will be to scrape enough quarters together to get there. ——Mrs. LELAND STANFORD is sel- dom seen, in California, except with a vestibule train nearly three hundred feet long. Its her train of cars, how- ever. —What do our dear Republican friends intend doing with the move- ment, of the colored people of the Unit- ed States, to ran FreEp Douarass for president. —You had better lie, to prove that you are telling the truth, than let your wife have the last word in the argu- ment. Itis establishing a bad prece- dent if you don’t. —There was more genuine christian- ity in church last Sunday than there has been for many an Easter service. The rain made spring hats and gowns a matter of secondary importance. — Why do we look pityingly on the poor, uncivilized Indians dancing them- selves to death, when the ball-room of society has come to be a feeder for grave-yards and a play house for ghosts. —The utilized power of Niagra Falls’ is to startle the world with its stupen- dous force, but if half the energy ex- pended on the domestic water-fall could be utilized in another way we fear Ni- agara would have a dangerous rival. —Hustling newspaper reporters are keeping HARRISON'S nervous system in a highly strained condition, with their daily reports of Mr. BLAINE'S probable candidacy. You need not fear, BEN- JAMIN, since MATHEW has been taken into your confldence. — SAM JoNEs says” ‘GrevER will be the next president and he hasn’t made half as big a break as he did when he roared out from his pulpit in condemna- tion of the decolette dress: ‘If the Al- mighty had intended woman to gn half naked He would have put feathers on her.” —The nearest New Yorkers can get to completing the GRANT monument is to banquet themselves. How they expect to accomplish anything, by gorg- ing themselves with DELMONICO’S deli- cacies, is a question which no one will answer, unless by eating they hope to become dyspeptic cranks, and enough cranks wil! surely make the thing go faster than it now moves. —The scheme to stock the mountains of Schuylkill county with New Zealand rabbits should be promptly squelched, as it would only be a matter of a few years until that county, and no doubt many of the surrounding ones, would be compelled to offer bounties for their scalps. They are keeping the farmers of Southern California poor, and rob the sheep of their pasture, so rapidly are they increasing. —There is one thing certain and that is : the origin of the bill to allow wo- men to vote at all State elections, in New York, can not be traced to Dave Hire, He has always declared himself a woman hater and consequently would hardly have the gall to have the women franchised, with the hope that they would ever vote for him. It sounds more like a GRrovER-FRANKIE and RurH measure. — Over-production is the cause of the depressed condition of the iron trade, and it is brought about because the de- mand does not meet the supply. THis state of affairs can justly be ascribed to the existence of a high protective tariff, which encourages the building of far more furnaces than the necessities of the country demand. Better run fewer fur- naces all of the time than half the num- ber Lalf of the time. om ._ —— EE —————— rr EJ ; STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 37. NO. 16. The People were “Boss.” It is up-hill work for the Republi- can press of the state, but still they work at it with an earnestness becom- ing a better cause, to have the public believe that the action of the Demo- cratic state convention was the work of a “boss” and that its proceedings are simply the registered will of a factional dictator. To people who are bent on deceiving themselves, as well as others, it would be a waste of time to call their atten- tion to the fact that a large majority of the delegates, comprising that conven- tion, acted under absolute and positive instructions from the counties and dis- tricts they represented, and that under the circumstances, with three-fourths of the members of that body, tied up by the plainest and most unequivocal instructions, it would have been an ut- ter impossibility for any one, or any faction, to have controled its sentiment, bossed its actions,or dictated its doings. Some of these papers, aided by the personal organ of a few disgruntled Democrats, have been giving to Mr. HARRITY, a greater prominence,and as- cribing to him a much more effective influence in shaping the work of the convention, than facts warrant or his efforts justify. In place of being cred- ited with the power of dictating its ac- tions, or of being entitled to the henor its satisfactory proceedings must bring, Mr. HarriTy is simply to be commend- ed for having the good sense to see and the good judgment to recognize, the Democratic sentiment of the state, and in stead of attempting to change or stem it, to fall in “with the current and swim with the crowd.” All of the Mr. Harriry’sin the state combined, working together and doing their utmost, could not have changed the general results of that convention in a single instance. A bossed convention is a convention wherein the will of the people, it is called to represent, is set aside and the dictum of a leader substituted: where public sentiment is treated as naught and the wishes of aring or leader be- comes its controling power. Was this the case in the convention of the 13th ? What did the Democrat- ic voters of the state ask that they did not get? What did they desire that | was not conceded them ? The Democratic sentiment of the state demanded that GroveErR CLEVE- LAND be recognized as its first choice for nominee for President,—this was done most earnestly and unanimously. It demanded the indorsement of the conservative and careful administra tion of Governor ParTisoN, and the convention heeded its desires and spoke in no uncertain tones in commendation of it. Ii required of its representatives a renewal of its faith in the Democratic doctrine of tariff reform, and this was done. It demanded that responsible and representative Démocrats, who recog: nized the sentiment of the Democratic voters, be named as delegates at large to voice their wishes at Chicago, and these were given them, What wish, of the party was not heeded? What purpose was wot recog- nized? What intent was not carried out? And if the Democratic people, through their own representatives, se- cured what they wanted and demand- ed, where is the evidence of “bossism”’ or the ignominy that requires the will of the people to become subservient to the dictates of an indvidual? Had the convention refused to recog: nize the well known and practically unanimous feeling of the Democratic people of the state, as did the Repub- lican convention of three’ years ago, when at the dictates of a “*boss” GEORGE W. DeLaMATER was made his party's nominee, in spite of the fact that nine- tenths of that party demanded another, it would have been evidence of ‘boss ism.” But it did not: « It simply obey- ed the wiil of the Democratic people and if doig this is “wearing a collar’ ! or submitting to a “boss,” the Demo- cratic voters will sustain such action, at all times, and will have reason to be | proud of the result. —— The WATCHMAN office is turning out better work than ever. Bring in your printing and let us make an esti- mate on it for you. An Object Lesson. We do not know whether, in addi- i tion to puiting up his thousands for the | benefit of the Republican party and the continuation of the “protective’’ doc- trines of that organization, Mr. Ax- pREW CARNEGIE will take the stump for {it or not, in the coming campaign. He should, however, for if there is one liv- | ing man outside of a fat office, or a ! solitary firm not favored with & gov- | erment contract, who is reaping the | benefits of the success of that party, it | is ANDREW CARNEGIE, and partners, It has not been very many gears | since that firm started in business, with less capital than itsincomein a day,now figures up. Under our system of class protection, it has flourished, until the the head of the firm can build castles in Scotland, by country residences in the suburbs of London, own his brown stone front on fifth avenue, N. Y., a palatial residence in Pittsburg, and the Lord only knows how many other homes and places of resort, build and endow libraries, parade his charities and roll in the luxuries that riches se- cure; while other members of the firm retire from business at the age of forty-five, loaded down with wealth and seek the quiet of old English castles, in which to while away the time and spend the money, our system of pro- tection has secured them, at the ex- pense of those whose labor has pro- duced what they had to sell, as well ag of those who were compelled to pur- chase the output of their mills and shops. If any object lesson would teach peo- ple the wrong, and unfairness of the sytem of protection to which the Re- publican party is so closely wedded, that of the condition of the CARNEGIE proprietors, and of the CARNEGIE work- ingmen, should. With the head of their firmenjoying the luxuries of four residences, either one of which cost a greater sum of money and contains more comforts and luxuries, than the combined cost and comforts of all the homes, owned or occupied by his thousands of employ- ees ; with an other member of the firm —a Mr. Paipps—able to purchase and occupy one of the most expensive -su- burban residences in the neighborhood of London; and an other retiring from business at the age of forty-five, with a competency that promises all the ease and luxuries that money can secure, for the balance of life; compared with | the condition of their workingmen, with their comfortless homes, coarse living, and want of every luxury and many of the necessities of life, shows the blistering wrong that somewhere exists in our system of government, as interpreted and enforced by the Repub- lican party. If the “protection” that has been given to ANDREW CARNEGIE and part- ners, as well as to other firms and spe- cial industries, and that hasmade them millionaires and enabled then to live like nabobs, benefitted the masses, who are their employees, why is the condi- tion of this later class worse to-day, than it was years ago ? Surely we have had protection long enough to show to the working people, that it is a system, that in no way bet- ters their condition. To-day, while Mr. CarNecIE and his partners, who started in life as poor as any of them— but not as workingmen—are rolling in wealth, and enjoy more of this world's goods than they can use or know what to do with, those who have toiled and sweat, ached and worried ‘neath the unending labors of an ordinary life time, are as poor if not poorer, than when they began. i And it isthe doctrine of “protection” that has done it. It has protected the employer at the expenze of the employ- | ee, and as a result the one to-day is the | possessor ol fabulous wealth while the other is but little better than a pauper or elave. And so it will go on as long | as we tax one class of our people for | the benefit of an other. i . —— The Republicans of Tioga coun- | ty honored themselves by nonunating for representative, at Harrisburg, the . Hon. Jerome B. NiLes and discredited | their motives, in Mr. Niugs' selection, {by virtually instructing him to vote for Quay, for United States Senator. Tt "is uot honest purposes that secures "such results. BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 22, 1892. Doing fis Work, The McKINLEY bill seems to be get- tingin its work in good style. Which seems to be to increase the prices of all the necessaries of life, and to re- duce the wages of those compelled to pay for these necessaries out of the earnings of their reduced wages. Since that bill went into operation we have not had the pleasure of record- ing a single instance in which the wages paid to laborers has been in- creased. Scarcely a week that we have not noticed the stoppage of some industry that threw men out of em- ployment, or the order of some employ- er to further reduce the prices paid to workingmen. This week is no excep- tion to the rule. From Pheenixville the word comes that the Phoenix Iron Company’s works has suspended operation in all depart ments excepting two, throwing over 1,000 men out of employment. The papers on Monday tell us that SeyrerT Bros’. rolling mills at Seyfert, and Gibralter, Berks county,employiag 350 men will shut down indefinitely, af- ter this week, owing to the depression in the iron business. A telegram, from Reading, under date of the 18th, tates, that ‘the Reading iron works’ large mill and puddling de- partment will resume operations to- morrow. Two hundred men will go to work. The puddlers who received $3.75 per ton heretofore will resume at $3.40. The mill had stopped for re- pairs.” And so it goes. In one column of Republican papers we read their re- joicing over an increase of population, mostly imported cheap labor, since the McKinLEY bill went into effect, aver- aging a million and a half a year. In another the news of suspensions of in- dustries or the reduction of wages. In an other, that CarNEcIE, PHipps or some other tariff protected nabob, is buying barouial castles in Scotland, or suburban residences near London, and spending American money in Europe as though it grew on trees and was to be had for the gathering. And the MoKinuey bill is still in operation. 0, ye laborers! Open your eyes and see. —It is not often that a party gets more than it wants, but when the Re- publican convention tops out the load that its organization is to carry, with Benjamin HARRISON, its going to take humping all round to keep the rickety- screeching-old machine {rom sticking in the political mire. If ever a party was sure of getting what it didn’t want, it is the Republican party with the certainty it has of being compelled to accept HARRISON as its candidate. Nothing To Boast Of. The Philadelphia Press boastfully asserts that ‘the United States has “added 3,000,000 people—a pretty siz- “able nation—to its consumers since “ the McKinley tariff was passed.” Possibly it has. If so, two of these three millions of people, are working- men, who have come from European governments, to farther cheapen the price of labor oradd to the great army of unemployed men who are to be found in every section of our country. The balance are women and children. Just why an increase of population of this kind should ;be a matter to re joice over or boast of, no one_bat pro- | tected employers who know that it will lessen ile rate of wages they must pay, can understand. Surely the wage-earner who was.induced to vote for HARRISON because he favored a pro- tective tariff such as the McKinley bill secures, will see nothing to gladden his heart, or brighten his future prospects, in the fact, that in addition to increas- ing the price of every necessary of life, it has, in the two years, brought three millions of . cheap laborers to oar shores, to crowd him out of employ- ment, or to still further reduce the pit. tance he receives for his day's toil. —— Gen. ALGER, it is stated, bas concluded not to be a candidate for nomination for President, and will so announce to his friends in a short time. This news would reach all his sup- porters, if made some morning! while at the glass arranging his toilet. Indications of Minneapolis. From the Chicago Times. _ The indications ¢ re that the Repub- lican National Convention is going to see what it doesc’t want and take it tor lack of anything elze. Sensible Views, From the Boston Globe. “I don’t believe in attacking our own people,” says Ex-Secretary Whit- ney, “when they differ from you as to individaals and candidates.” These are wise words and should be taken to heart by the Democratic party just at this time. Let us fight our enemies and not our friends. He Was Only Fooling. From the Westmoreland Democrat. A number of astute Republican or- gans are overhauling Senator Walcott, of Colorado, for referring to Mr. Harri- son as ‘‘a great statesman,” in his recent free silver speech. The organs suspect that Walcott was speaking ironically, and they are no doubt right. No sane man would entertain the idea for 8 mo- ment of applying that term, to Benja- min Harrison, in dead earnest. It Can Stand It if the People Can. From the Williamsport Sun. The facts brought out in the investi- gation of the conduct of Pension Com- missioner Raum are so scandalous that the entire country stands amazed that a man of his calibre should be allowed to retain his office. But it must be remembered that an administration that can stand a Dudley and an Elkins cannot be squeamish when it comes to keeping a Raum in one of the most important offices of the government. The present investigation has brought forth enough facts in relation to the mismanagement of the pension bureau to condemn Raum and the administra- tion that upholds him 1n the eyes of all honest people. In Good Shape for Good Work. From tlie Pittsburg Post. It is observable that no Democratic State convention has so far given its Chicago delegates cast iron instructions. In Massachusetts, Minnesota, South Dakota, Rhode Island. Pennsylvania and Nebraska, sending 144 delegates to. the Chicago convention, there have been strong expressions in favor of Mr. Cleveland, and in New York, sending 72 delegates, Senator Hill has been en- dorsed, but there is a general concur- rence that the delegates should not be instructed. Hence the Chicago conven- tion will be a deliberative body, with pro- bably two-thirds of its membership in favor of Cleveland’s nomination. They will take counsel of each other and de- termine what is for the best. Hoggishness Intensified. From and unknown Exchange. At the State eleetion in November last the Democratic candidate for Gov- ernor in New York had a plurality of 50,000; the Republican candidate in Ohio had a plurality of 22,000. The Democrats elected a majority of the members of the Legislature in the former State and the Republicans in the latter. A Congressional appor- tionment bill has been prepared by the Democratic members of the New York General Assembly. Under its provi- sions 16 districts will be Democratic, 15 Republican and 3 doubtful. The Republican members of the Ohio Leg- islature have likewise framed a Con- gressional apportionment bill. It makes 16 of the districts of that State Re- publican and 5 Democratic. The stu- dent of current politics hasin the action of the leading parties in these two great States a very clear insight as to where the swine is to be found in pub- lic affairs. The proposed New York apportionment is not only a fair but a very liberal one. That in Ohio is both a disgrace and an outrage. ov Did Good Work. Froni the N. Y. World. The Pennsylvania Democratic. State Convention acted wisely. Most of its members preferred the nomination of Grover Cleveland, and expressed that preference plainly in a resolutton. But they dechned to bind their delegates by instructions, leaving them free to con- sult and deliberate in the National Con- vention with their fellow-delegates from other States. Tuis is the proper attitude to be tak- en by all Democrats. It is particular ly appropriate for the Democrats of Pennsylvania, who realize that in Gov. Pattison the party has a candidate sho would make an admirable leader in case the National Convention should find it unwise to nominate any citizen of the State of New York. The platform adopted is sound. It favors the “gold and silver coinage of the Constitution’ and “a currency con- vertible with sueh coinage without loss,” and it also asserts that tariff re. form is the paramount issue, and that the country should be “relieved from unnecessary and unjust taxation and enjoy the benefit of tree raw materials.” This is a long step away from the old traditions of Pennsylvania and is most encouraging. The Democracy of Pennsylvania is evidently under wise Jeadership. . Spawls from the Keystone, —A stocking factory is building at Tower City. —The Columbia County Jail does mot con- tain a prisoner. ‘ —Burglars looted the safe cf the Vulcan Ircn Company, at Wilkesbarre. —Patrick Kenney fell upon the street at Williamsport and is now insane. —A new bridge 390 feet long is to span the Lehigh River at Hokendauqua. —In a runaway John S. Metzer, of Lancaster. received injuries that may be fatal. —Mayor Nichols, of Wilkesbarre, is making a war on the speak-easies of his town. —The April criminal docket of the Lancas- ter Court is the smallest in nineteen years, —Michael O'Toole, of Pittsburg, jumped in. to the Monongahela Riverand drowned him* self. —A drug in the medicine she was taking for rheumatism killed Mrs. Mary Teufel, of Al- toona. —A golden wedding was celebrated on Sat- urday by Mr. and Mrs. William Cooner, at Watsontown, —Allentown has begun suit against the Western Union Telegraph Company for the tax on poles. —Reading Councils appropriated $400,000 in one lump, with which to make the city wheels “go round.” —Mrs. Catherine Schlabach, of Easton, after failing to bleed herself to death drank lauda- num and died. —A Pennsylvania train, at Fishback, Schuy- kill county, ran over and mortally injured Antonio Little. —Deafened by measels 20 years ago,.8: B. M. Sleeger, Grothe, of York, has suddenly recov- ered his hearing. —Mary Morgan, of Pleasant Hill, Lehigh County, was fined 56 cents and costs for sland- ering Horatio Bickel. —Four uniformed Polish guards have for 36 hours watched the “Tomb of Christ” in the Po- lish Church at Reading. —Ail the uniforms to be wornby Lehigh Valley Railroad employes will be made this spring in Allentown. —Capitalists of Sunbury are combining to build a $125,000 bridge across the Susquehan- na River at that town. —Two Pottsville men who are yetat large, beat Thomas Griffith, of Port Carbon so badly that he is likely to die. ~The Philadelphia and: Reading has begun anew colliery at Preston, Schuylkill county, that will employ 500 men. —The week just ended, notwithstanding the McKinley law, was the dullest ever known in the iron trade in Pittsburg. —The Pennsylvania Railroad is looking over a route for a road up the Lehigh Valley from Easton to Mauch Chunk. . —A paddler, Myer Schenich, of Reading, disappeared mysteriously in the Lebanon Val- ley and foul play is feared. —The Americus Club, of Pottsville, will purchase a voting booth to teach the town how to ballot the Baker way, —A rare Indian poison pot was found by Jonas DeTurk on the Roudenbush farm; Cur win township, Berks County. —A petition to the Board of Pardons is bein g eirculated in Clinton County, to-save the neck of Murderer Cleary, of Renovo. —Three children of Wilson Peifer, of Cross Kill Mills, Lebanon, county, have died of scarlet fever within two weeks. —Saturday the Reading began to ship all the Lehigh Valley coal to Easton by rail, thus making idle dozens of canal boats. —Rev. W. W. Ferris has yielded the pulplt of the Olivet Baptist Church at Pottsville to Rev. J. W. Brambes, of Philadelphia. —Brakeman Harry Edelman, of ‘Allentown was knocked off a passing train on the Pexcio® men Railroad ard fatally injured. —After an exciting chase, John and Abra- ham Welsh, of Mt. Joy, were captured: with John Keener’s stolen horse in Lancaster. —During the absence of the family of Dom. inick Kennedy, at Middleport, a thief entered the house and stole a sewing machine. —The test case in the Evangelical war, ‘which is to decide 25 similar cases in this ‘State, was begun yesterday. in Allentown. —At the Petticoffer-Leavy wedding at } Wom- elsdorf the banquet table was adorned with china, every piece of which is 300 years old. —Oscar B. Groff was Saturday elected lieu- tenant-colonel of the Second Regiment, Uni form Rank, Knights of Pythias, atLancas’ ‘ter. —Liquor licenses give Schuylkill County this year arevenus of $99,275, of whieh Shen- andoah gets over $10,000 and Pottsville over $7000. —Three horses hitched toa wagon-load of hay ran away near Allentown during a brisk wind storm, and the hay was entirely blown away. —W. C. Erskive, a prominent lawyer, of Pittsburg was attacked by foospads Saturday robbed of $1000 in cash and his valuables are badly beaten. —The debt created by the erection of Santee Hall, at the Bethany Orphans Home, Womels- dorf, has been canceled by the generosity of woman societies. —A deep gash across the abdomen and a stab in the arm was the eondition in which Harry Frederick, of York, emerged from a fight with a companion. —Ata religious service in the Swingle Re" formed Chureh, Harrisburg, a whole family congisting of father, mother and eight child. dren were uunited with the ehurch. —Imagining that he and his family were “hewitched,” Jefferson Moyer sold his farm at Holtlesville, Lehigh County, and moved to Bethlehem to escape the evil spirits. —A trip around the world on a bicycle that required eleven months has just been complet- ed by George D. Mitchell, son of ex-United States Senator John I Mitchell, of Tioga County. — Titus Dellieker and Franklin Deysker, of Boyertown, were Saturday arrested charged with being implicated inthe railriding of Pro- fessor Zuler. All told, nine people have heen seized for this offense. —Although a theatrical manager for four years, during which time 300 ‘performances have been given at his Opera Housé'in''Mon- ongahela City, William Lewis has’ hever seen a single act played. } —Major John D. Worman, secretary of the Democratic: Societies of Pennsylvania estab- lished headquarters for the campaign will be in Harrisburg on Wednesday, and that Presi- dent Chauncey F. Black is preparing litera ture tosend out to the clubs.