Bera Wald By P. GRAY MEEK. as Ink Slings. — Mississippi valley stock is being well watered, —About all we got from the China- man was fan-tan. --Anomalous English : A hen sits all the w hile she sets and lies when she tries to lay. —The cigarette smoker slowly, but surely, blows rings for the chain which fastens him to his coffin. —A strange thing happened at the Brooklyn Handicap, on Monday, and the fellows who didn’t win lost ~The waters of discontent falling all over the land predicate a glorious vic- tory for Democracy in the fall. —Another good man gone wrong. BE. S. Lacy, comptroller of the cur- rency, will become a Chicago bank "president. —Georgia has tacked up another of the finger boards which is to point out the way to the White House for GROVER. —-The western farmers are engaged in casting their bread upon the waters. It will hardly return with the next flood however. —The free silver craze is [affecting most of our public officials. That is, they want lots of it for as little work as they can get in. ——Judging from the number of peo- ple we meet who have seen better days one might infer that everyone has been rich at some time. —Great Britain now says she wes tcloseupon war’ with us regarding the Behring sea trouble. It is easy to blow when the danger is past. --HARRIsON would have had a dou- ble distilled dose of vertigo had he been at the Brooklyn Handicap, on Monday. Dark horses are ominous. —A hard straddle for Second Term.— The Chinese Exclusion bill, the ; Metho- dist church, the Pacific slope and the western Free Silver States; —CorE J. Snapp, the “Prince of Swindlers” is “up” for ten years in the Minnesota prison. There isn’t much in a name after all. —Young Americas’ greatest incen- tive to become incorrigible lies in the fact that, in Sunday school books, all the good little boys die young. —DAvE HILL is out for free silver, but it doesn’t make much difference what he is after as no; one is caring much what DAVE does just now. —The cheek of the Deleware peach will be radiant in an unwonted blush this year because Jack Frost did not nip the limbs from which it will spring. —A Philipsburg man named Goob- RUM had his companion arrested the other day for being drunk. Was it any wonder the poor fellow got full with such a chum, —The whaleback promises to revolu- tionize maritime commerce, and do the same thing for our commercial interests at sea that it has for years accomplished in the country school house. —If any of your friends seem in- clined to depart unto another world, ad- vise them to wait until the big New England granite strike is off, for then their resting place can be marked at less expense. —Harrisburg thinks she ought to have a boulevard and a movement is on foot to lay oneout. A grave yard for some of her political sore heads would be a far more profitable investment for the city. —.An exchange remarks that the first guns of the campaign were fired at Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Tuesday, when the Republican League of American colleges was formed. We would rather think that they were sons of guns. —The Lycoming county man who rode into the court house on horse- back, when going to settleup an estate of which he was administrator, evi- dently wanted to have his charg-er ready when he settled with the prothonotary. —What a multiplexity of sins the poor old stars and stripes are forced to cover, yet on the 4th they will unfurl with a grander sweep and a more om- nipotent power than the Republic which gave them birth ever dream- ed of. —The minister who wants a vacation at the expense of his flock is now begin- ning to affect a cough and complains of t‘that tired feeling,” when every mem- ber of his congregation has had regular weekly attacks of the latter complaint gince his return from last summer's tour. ~—TIt must be either Colonel CLEVE- LAND or Colonel CARLISLE. Kentucky has endorsed them both. As they win their rank down there by the amount of bourbon they can cover up, we are in doubt as to which of the gentlemen in- volved can lay claim to the honor. Per- ‘haps honors are ‘‘easy.”’ Dena %, I] dl 4 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. é TANS VOL. 37. BELLEFONTE, PA, MAY 20,1892. NO. 20. The Census Frauds. The fraudulent character of the re- cent census, and its uniciiability as a collection of facts relati: g to the popula- tion, business and general resources of the country, have been manifested in various ways. Scarcely had it been published before gross inac uracies in the enumeration were apparent. This was caused, in some measure, by the incapacity of enumecrators, but was largely due to a partisan design. New York, the great Democratic city of the Union, was counted short, with no oth- er object than to diminish the basis of her representation. There is no rea: son to doubt that the opposite purpose swelled the enumeration of Republican cities and localities. Convincing evidence of the fraud practiced is shown in the numerous ar- rests of persons who had been employ- ed in the work of taking the census, on grounds that will surely result in their conviction. A number of such arrests have been made in Philadelphia, and there are others in other localities. In that city outrageous liberties were tak- en in swelling the figures that repre gent the extent and value of her manu- factures and productive resources. It is the great Republican city—the great high tariff city par excellence, that rolls up big majorities for the tariff even in her municipal election, and 1t was deemed necessary to show, by the cen- sus, how the tariff had boomed her in- dustries. She was to be made the es- pecial object lesson of the beauties and blessings of the McKinley bill, of course with an intended bearing upon the next Presid ential election. So zealous were PorTER'S census takers in making a big exhibit of the value of Philadel- phia’s manufactured products that they included in it the millions of coin made in the United States mint. For this undue zeal some of them are now under arrest, and itis to be boped that they will be properly pun- shed, 7 ? TTI RATT It Had to Pay Republican Debts. The appropriations by the present House of Representatives look large, and to the thoughtless may expose that body to the charge of an undue expen- diture of the public money, but an ex- amination of the circumstances under which they were made will show that they were unavoidable. Most of the money appropriated was required to meet liabilities imposed by the extravagance of the previous Con- gress. Obligations had been made, binding the government, which had to be met, and could only be met by the action of the present House. The acts requiring expenditures, authorizing sub sidies, bounties, expenses for public buildings and other items of outlay, were on the statute books, and these im positions of debt could not be evad- ed: Without the co-operation of a Republican Senate and executive, which it could not have, the Demo- cratic House was unable to repeal the extravagant legislation of those who had fastened the obligations of expense upon the Treasury. These are the reasons why a Demo. cratic House of Representatives, when ithad to meet the duty of providing the means of running the governmental machinery, found it absolutely neces- gary to appropriate more money than it otherwise would have done. The lavishness of its predecessors put upon its shoulders a burden it was forced to bear. It had to pay debts contracted by the Billion Dollar Congress, having neither the right nor the power to re- pudiate them. SEE SBE IE ——The recent outrages perpetrated upon young women, traveling alone in English rail-way carriages, brings up the oft discussed subject of railroad oc- commodations in Europe, and the less said about them the better for the companies. It is well known that English carriages, especially, have long been the objects of condemnation owing to the isolated and unprotected condition of their occupants. man traveling alone is entirely shut off | from other passengers and consequent: ly cannot appeal to them for the pro- tection which her helpless condition too often demands. S————————— | ——1If you want printing of any de- "scription the WarcuMAN office is the plaee to have it done. A wo Mr. Harrison and the Chinese. President Harrison has gotten him- gelf into difficulty by his hasty signing of the Chinese Exclusion bill. There are grave reasons why the Chinese should be exclud=d, but it was not on account of such reasons that the Pres- ident put his name to the bill. His motives were of a lower order. They were based on personal interest and had a close connection with his ambi- tion for a second term. The Pacific States, some halfsedozen in number, which are most affected by Chinese immigration, would give their elector- al votes to no second term aspirant who should decline to sign an act to keep out the . Mongolians. As it is, Mr. Harrison's hold on those States is quite insecure in consequence of his adverse position on the silver coinage question, This has put his Pacific fences in a rather dilapidated condition, and in order to strengthen them, he displayed unusual alacrity,in signing the anti-Chinese bill. Wether this will have any effect in his favor on the other side of the Rock- les is doubtful, for in that region they are "decidedly unfavorable to him on another question; but his signature, so hastily attached to the Exclusion bill, has excited the indignation of the Methodists, as expressed at the Oma- ha conference. That great church has missions in China, about the success and safety of which they are solicituoue, and fearing that the policy of the Ex- clusion bill would exasperate the Chi- nese to the extent of driving the mis- gionaries out of their country, the Con- ference,immediately upon hearing of the passage of the bill, joined in a petition to the President to veto it. But Mr. Harrison didn’t give that petition time to reach him before he acted. His name was attached to the anti-Chinese act immediately upon its passage, and the good Methodist brethren had noth- ing left for them to do; in the matter, but to denounce him for what seemed to them an illiberal and improper ex- ecutive act done with unseemly haste. What will it profit Benjamin, even should he gain the Pacific States, but, in doing it, get the Methodist church down on him? AAT, — Senator CAMERON isn't saying much, but in the matter of o pposition to HARRISON he is sawing wood with great vigor and effectiveness. TIC AR R——— Republican Tribulations. The wide spread discontent in the Republican party is shown in various ways, but in nothing more clearly than in the various plans put forth forchang- ing the methods of party nominations. The bosses are becoming more offen- give every day and the aim of all com- plainants seems to be to dislodge them, and vest in the hands of the people the power which the so-called leaders now wield. This is a commendable desire, but it is not clear that some of the drastic measures proposed would ac- complish the purpose. The Philadelphia Press in, a recent is’ sue, proposes the adoption of the Craw- ford county system for making State, 88 well as county, nominations. Expe- rience does not justify the confidence in that plan which the Press professes. On the contrary it is a matter of histo- ry that where the Crawford county sys- tem of nominating pervades the bosses are in complete control. The fact ig that energy, persistence and zeal al- ways win in politics and whatever sys- tem of nominating is adopted the pro- fessional politicians will be on top when the votes are counted. The Crawford county system of vot- ing is troublesome and under the Bak- er ballot bill will be expensive as well. Of course the expense should not be considered, for the reason that nothing is too dear that contributes to improve- ment in politics. But the trouble is a serious objection, for when the matter is brought to the test it will be discov- ered that only the politicians are wil- ling to trust it, The truth is that one system of nominating is just about as good as another, if fraud is kept out, and whatever the methods employed the people can win over the bosses only by giving the same time, at'eation and ef- fort to the worle which is sure to be ex- pended on the other side. SE ECT —TFina Job work of ever discription at the WazoamaN Office. Secretary Noble's Ignorance (?) The latest suspicious development in the Pension office investigation was the refusal of the Secretary of the In- terior, to exhibit certain letters to the committee the other day. The letters were a part of the correspondence upon which was based the dismissal of cer- tain officials who were inimical to Commissioner Ravn, and Mr. Secre- tary NosLe predicated his action on the doubtful premises that. removal from office of public officials by the heads of departments is a constitutional prerogative and the public has nothing vo do with it. Of course the Secretary of the In- terior ought to know better if he doesn’t. The office of Secretary of the Interior as well as that of Pension Commissioner was created by Act of Congress and not by the Constitution, and the removal of subordinates is a function conveyed by legislation. Every intelligent layman who has read the Constitution, and most citizens have, are aware of this fact and for a lawyer and an Executive officer to be ignorant of it is a crime. Indeed we can’t bring ourselves to the opinion that Secretary NosLe is so derelict and disqualified. It is obvivous that the Secretary had some other reason for refusing the Committee a glimpse at the corres- pondence and, as Representative ENLOE remarked, it was no doubt for the pur- pose of hiding damaging facts from those charged with the investigation. Every public official from the Presi- dent down seems to have an interest in shielding Commissioner Raum from punishment, and this subterfuge of the Secretary of the Interior is about the thinnest excuse that has yet been of- fered in his behalf. The truth is it is too thin. Investigating Wanamaker. Postmaster General WANAMAKER i8 undergoing the crucial test of a Con- gressional investigation on charges of grossly violating the civil service law. There is evidence that he has retained 1n office officials who have not only violated that law, but who have ren- dered themselves amenable to punish- ment for violation of the common law of the land. The Baltimore postoffice furnishes a case in point. It is im- possible that Mr. WaNaMaKER did not know and sanction the conduct of sub- ordinatesin that office who have dis- played an unlawful and pernicious «ac- tivity in working primaries, manipula- ting conventions, and even tampering with ballot boxes. It 18 preposterous to believe that the Postmaster General was ignorant of what his subordinates were doing in oe of the most impor- tant post offices under his jurisdic. tion, and if he was ignorant of it he is chargeable with a want of vigilance in the performance of his duty. The issue of the Presidential campaign that is now athand has been supplied by the campaign of four years ago. Tariff reform is a question that has as much vitality in it now as it had hen. In fact its vitality has been intensified by the experience which the country has had of the iniquity of the monopoly tariff devised by Mo- KinLEY and passed by the Billion Dol- lar Congress. Tariff reform will be again to the front, and there is a pro- bability that the battle will be fought by the Democrats under the same leader. -—1If there is anything that should make Mr. Braixe wish to prove to the American people that he is physically sound enough to make a Presidential ran, it is the talk which RusseLu Har- risoN bas indulged in about the condi- tion of nis mind and body, represent- ing that he is run down physically ard impaired mentally. It BraiNe does uot resent this by allowing his name to be brought out aca candidate, it is because HarrrsoN has got him under cow. amt seman ——The chances are that the Penn- sylvania delegation to the Minneapolis convention will be practically a unit against Harrison. If Brame is in the field the vote will be cast for him, and if he isn't it will goto whomsoever Quay chooses t> deliver it. This isa time when the party boss can’t afford to temporize with his enemies and HarrisoX is the chief among tiem. | that Blaine is not in it. No Getting Used to Earthquakes, From the San Francisco Chronicle. It is a curious fact that the earth quake scare is the one danger to which we can never become accustomed by familiarity. The oftener we feel it the more we be- come demoralized. I cannot better il- lustrate this than by a story told me by Colonel Bailey Peyton, United States minister to Chili in 1852, and city attor- ney of San Francisco in 1856 To a party of friends in 1856 he said: “Boys, it’s of no use talking; we can be- come accustomed to all dangers, no mat- ter how imminent, by familiarity, ex- cept the danger of earthquakes. The more you feel ’em the more you don’t like ‘em, and the worse you hate em. I have heard the whistle of bullets and the roar of cannon in battle and never dodged. But my experience in Chili took the starch out of me. I had been but a few days in Santiago, the éapital of Chili, when I visited the leading store on the Plaza in that city. «While standing behind the counter in an instent, without any premonition, the proprietor and twenty clerks simul- taneonsly leaped the counter and rushed out of the front door. I looked at them in astonishment and said to myself, ‘Are they crazy ? What's the matter with them ? Slowly they returned to their places. I asked them what was the matter. They replied, ‘El temblor ! Didn’t you feel thetemblor?’ To me it was a trifle. Two weeks later was giv- ing a swell dinner to the diplomatic corps of Santiago. n the midst of it came a temblor, a very lively one, and every man of the party leaped from his seat and rushed for the door or the window. I said to myself, ‘Of all the cowards [ ever met with, these people exceed.” But, boys I hadn’t been in that country more than three months before no quarter-horse in Tennessee could beat me in a break for the front door when one of those tem- blors made his appearance. You can stand bullets and cannon balls, but the temblors will fetch you.” —————— We Looked for His Return—Even If it Had Been with an Organ, From the Phila. Evening Telegraph. Baron Fava landed on our shores yesterday in a humor to resume diplo- matic relations with this country where he so impolitely dropped them about a yearago. This government is pleased to welcome the Baron back to his post of duty, and the American people are united in the hope that nothing may ever again occur to cause Italy displea- gure. The New Orleans event was ag much deplored by the United States as by Italy, and one had as little part in causing it as the other. It was a com- mon mob affair, such as afflicts the American civilization in the South and West. It is induced at bottom by the evils of the jury system and the defects in State law and administration. It is fed and fattened by the excitable na- ture of the people ‘themselves. Baron Fava perhaps knows by this time that this is a Government made up of forty- four smaller Goyernments, each one with powers of its own. The Ameri: can system has about it a certain com- plexity confusing to strangers. The Baron can be excused for his faux-pas this once. It was an indiscretion that he will not be likely to commit again, and we are glad to see him back, So the World Says. From the New York World. Mr. Gorman is no longer a Presiden- tial possibility. He has himself stricken his name from the list of men available for the Democratic nomination, as hitherto printed in the World. He has spoken warmly in defense of Billion-Dollarism in Congress, The Democracy of the country is in no mood to nominate a Billion Dollar Democrat, or in any other way to countenance the reckless squandering of substance by which the Republicans have converted a great surplus into a rawning deficiency in order that the burdens of taxation might not be lifted from the backs of the people, Mr. Gorman is out of it. —————————————— They Should Oppose it at all Times, From the Altoona Times. It is probable that further desperate efforts will be made by the friends of tree silver coinage to pass such a meas ure through congress at this session. The majority of the Democrats in the house, although they are in favor of such a bill, have grasped the situation to such an extent, as to know that free silver coinage should rot be jected 58 an issue, into the presidential cam- paign. Therefore, they will oppase such a measure at present and thus, ! prevent its passage. A Sticker for Protectionists. From the Harrisburg Patriot. If one firm cao turn out 4,000 tons of tin plate a year before the passage of the McKinley bili and nineteen firms turn out only 2,600 tons in nine months after its passage, how much can forty firms turn out in the next two years? TICE A No Limit Game. ae ns From the Pittsburg Post. Harrison, it is said, will not allow his name to be presented to the con- vention unless he has further assurance The Presi dent's bluff about self-immolation is not likely to be called. Spawls from the Keystone, —Rev. Richard 8S. Smith, of Uniontown was found dead in bed. —The Schuylkill County editors will picnie at Valley Forge, May 26. —The cars on the Neversink Mountain Rail- road began running Monday. ~~ —Mubhlenberg College, Allentown, ‘will cele brate its 25th birthday, June 23. —Reading householders are complaining of dead catfish in their hydrant water. —Governor Pattison will open the Pennsyl- vania Chautauqua at Mt. Gretna, July 13. —A train on the Lehigh Valley, at S8henan, doah, ran over and killed Edward Joyce. —A cow kicked Edwin Sweitzel, who lives near Easton, and his recovery is doubtful. —Robbers looted the Orw igsburg Station on the Lehigh Valley road to the extent of $261. —The Reading Iron’ Company will begin the erection of a new tube mill in a few days. —Mrs. Roger, of Slatington, gave her baby iodine by mistake and it died in a few hours. - —A brick wallfell upon three men at Lan. caster, of whom George McCue was badly in- jured. —William M. Lesher, of Shosmakersville, took chloroform with suicidal intent and slept to death. : —The Pennsylvania State Medical Society held its annual meeting in Harrisburg» Tuesday. —James Ready, an old miner at Kohinoor colliery, Shenandoah, was fatally injured by a fall of coal. —TFisherman in the northeastern counties are complaining of the unusaul scarcity of brook trout. —Pittsburgis tohave an exchange railway to connect all the street railways in that city and Allegheny. —The Match Trust is figuring to get con- trol of the factory at Pine Grove, which em# ploys 80 people. —A cyclone on Sunday evening did consider. able damage to buildings in the country sur- rounding Carlisle, —Both of Brakeman Frank Godey’s legs were amputated by a Philadelphia and Reade ing train at Reading. —The double funerai of Reuben Updegrove and his mother at Shaaesville, Berks county took place Saturday. —Playing hide and seek up a tree, Charles Borst, of Reading, fell 20 feet tothe ground and was seriously hurt: —Rwaing Council increased the tax rate from five io six mills and passed the free public bath ordinance. —The Archdeaconry of Reading cpened its an nual convention in St. John’s Episcopal Church, Ashland, Monday. —Miss Kate Levan, a 16-year-old girl, now carries all the mail between Pricetown and Fleetwood, Berks County. —The Northampton Democratic County @ommittee adopted ; resolutions protesting against the Reading combine. { —A heavy farm roller ran over Walter Jam- ison, a boy living at Quarryville, Lancaster county and he will not recover. —That much wanted young man, John Scheifle, who is charged with forging checks on a Reading bank, was seen Saturday. —Jacob Hilp, an ex-tramp, who is serving a five years’ sentence in the Easton jail for stab’ bing a man, is starving himself to death. _ —On a charge of forging the name of F. Harlacher, of Allentown, to a note for $400, J. G. Reifsnyder was arrested in Danville. —Rev. S. F. Forgens, who served during the war in Senator Quay’s fregiment, has been elected chaplain ot Huntingdon Reformatory. —Owing to the illness of George W. Dela- mater, his trial for alleged embezzlement at Meadville has been postponed until Septem- ber. —At the Federal Assembly of the United Presbyterians, which will begin in Allegheny City, May 25, there will be about 240 delegates present. —Monroe Scheffieer, of Ashland, has been appointed division superintendent of the Philadelphia and Reading colleries in that section. —The preliminary meetings of the Red Men were held in Reading Monday. The gen eral meeting of the State Council, began Wed- nesday. —Over 200,000 Penobscot salmon have been planted in the upper waters of the Del- aware River by the State Fish commission this season. —Nathan Biddall's horse ran away descend- ing a mountain at Shenandoah, hurling the driver, his wife and child to the ground and hurting them badly. —The body of Samuel Yeagle, a 17-year old boy, was found in the woods near Wa rrensville Lycoming County, and it is believed he acei® dentally shot himself. Seven suits for §1000 each were brought at Reading against [the Reverting Fund Assur, ance Association, because claims were not paid at the end of six years. — Doctors are puzzled over the case of Mrs. Benjamin Long, of Shoemakerville, who lost her voice in December last, and she has been unable to speak a word since. — President William Leuder, of the Penna. Sengerbund, announces that at the Seenger- fest to be held in Reading, July 25, there will be a chorus of 500 trained voices. —While adjusting a broken coupling of & passenger train at Penllyn, Bucks County, Engineer Charles Crocket was caught between cars and probably fatally squeezed. —TFlorence Smith was working in the wash tub at Springer’s Lancaster Brewery when the machinery was started, and before he could be rescued he had hisright leg broken. —The Adjutant General has issued an order tothe National Guard making their uniform regulations conform to those of the United States army with slight modifications. —These new Pennsylvania postmosters were appointed Monday : Nora Baxter, Nelson ; W- Hotchkiss, Starlight; J. G. Paiton, Stoops , W. E. Tyson, Vail ; A. T. Worthington, Edison. —The Grand Castle, Knights of the Golden Eagle, in convention at Chambersburg, Satur- day elected F. A. Harris, of Tyrone, grand chief, and C. 8. Wood, of Philadelphia, grand vice-chief. —John Rose committed suicide at Milton pecansa his home was to be sold on Saturday ‘The sale went on, with Rose's remains lying on the floor, unknown to auctioneer and pur- chasers who had collected outside. —The Reading Railroad Company has served notice that the cottages of the Stove. dale camp meeting grounds cannot be re- moved to Mount Gretna, this year and camp meatings will be held at:both places, vf i