Ink Slings. — HARRISON and reciprocity, goes for about ag much as REID and labor. — Philadelphia ito have a college for undertakers. This is nota “stiff.” —Presidential possibilities; like WArcuMAN’S of the 60s, are back num- bers. —A serious, .accident occurred in ‘Washington on Monday. There was & quorum in the House. —STEVENSON never favored secession and he has proven it, but STEVE ELK- INs has never denied having been a guerilla. : WATTERSON is all right. His ideas areall right ; and they’ll make HARRI- soN ‘dead easy’’ for the tariff reform guns to pepper. W -—Thus far this has been a year of un- precedented . horrors. ~ Flood, famine, fire, railroad wrecks and protection have: reigned supreme and caused nearly every family to feel their sting. -—Talking about old spoons, why the Indianopolis one, that is 220 years old, isn’t “in it” with the one ADAM and Eve had while, the sinning dame was fooling him into stealing the apple. —1If the scion of your houshold is beginning to come in, and go to bed without being told, every evening before eight o'clock, buy him a dozen packs of fire crackers on the 4thand ask ‘no questions. So Daa iw af —Mr.. QUAY sarcastically remarks: “I suppose the office’ holders ' will ‘elect Mr. HARRISON.” MAT. must know what an army of them there is, for only last week he offered to bet $10,000 that they’d do it. $08 J —The recent down pour of rain all over the country can be ascribed to the over flowing, of ‘‘the storm tossed sea of life’" caused’ by ‘the precipitation of so many sweet girl and handsome young men graduates... Hh —“There'is a scriptural phrase about a fool and his money being soon parted in which WHITELAW REID might find food for thought after the campaign is over. MorToN has been reflecting over it for some time. —The Republican National Committe® has secured a CAMP-BELL which will try to “tinkle” theirstrayed sheep into the high protection fold. There are lots of them however, who sare past following a bell weather of that party. ren 5 —UTurn out the Scabs,”” though not as euphonious as Dr. BURCHARD'S “Rum, Romanism and Rebellion,” pro- mises to be quite as much ‘of a “Jonah” to REID as the dead divine’s alliterated campaign cry was to.the retired ex-Sec- retary of State. ; : —Just a score of years ago WHITE- LAW REID bolted the Republican tick- et because he thought it was not good enough for him. This fall he will find out that thousands of good Republicans have followed the example he set for them so long ago. —If PHIL ARMOUR and a few of the other Chicago pork packers would only drive the hotel keepers of the Windy city into their sausage machines the ‘World’s Fair visitors would be spared the ignominy of stopping in pig styes, i. e. in establishments operated by hogs. —One couldn’t blame the Cincinnati hotel keepers if they should practice the same extortion on the Prohibitionists that the Chicago fellows did on the Dem= ocrats, for their excuse would be much more plausible. Itis not to be thought that the 1,200 Adam’s ale representatives will patronize the bars as liberally as did the 30,000 exponents of Democracy. —The battle ship Texas, which was launched at Norfolk, on Tuesday, has grown out of style in the five years it was building. Itis the most formida- ble boat Uncle Sam owns and perhaps, for its size, the strongest ship afloat, yet we'll either have to call a halt to Ameri- can inventive ingenuity or .find some way of building a navy ina night if its boats are to be modern men of war. —CLEVELAND and STEVENSON will be elected not because they are intellect~ ually sSronger than Mr. HARRISON and Mz. REID, but because they are the ex- ponents of Democratic principles upon which the weal of the nation dépends. Principles so diverse from the ‘plutocra- tic, tax extorting doctrines of Republi-- canism that the masses see in them their only refuge from the oppression of war tariffs. 3 ‘ —Republican legislation * has kept high, protection fences about CARNE- c1e’s Homestead iron furnaces, ever since they were built, but it remains for the: iron” autocrat himself to build pro- tection fences of another sort and charge them with deadly electric currents Jlosave his protected plants from the violence which his oppressed workmen ‘threaten . Republican follies have made it pos- sible for him to amass millions, but they cannot protect’ him'' from the | fury of a people who are just’ beginning to see with which party, their intsrests are pooled. ’ STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. "vor. 87. An Object Lesson for Laborers.’ While Mr. CarNEcit rests in the shade of Cowarth Park, at his High- land summer retreat in Scotland, and ‘his partner Mr. Puirrs revels im the luxuries of Knebworth Castle and en- joys the society of English noblemen, the managers of their works at Home- - |'stead, this State, are building fortifica- ‘|'tions around and laying hot-water pipes through their mills, preparatory to a seige ‘with their workingmen whose wages are to suffer another re- duction on the first of July. With Carnecie and Pareps itis a question of greater profits, that they may make more liberal contributions to the Republican campaign fund and lavish more = money. on European homes and European luxuries. With ‘their men it is a question of bread and butter for their families and the gim- man beings can exist upon. : And Carnrcie & Pripps will win, They belong to the favored class. Around. everything they produce or ‘manufacture the government throws its protecting arms. By taxing com- petition it enables them to charge American purchasers just such prices ag they see proper‘to ask, and at the same time leaves them free to employ their, labor where they can get if cheapest, .or to force their workingmen ‘at the point of a hot-water nozzle, either to accept such rate of wages as they may dictate or starve. 1059 For this policy of government— Republicans call it protection— a | policy that enriches the employer and enslayes the employee; the men, whom CArNEGIE & PHIPPS are preparing to force into the acceptance of a still fur- ther reduction of the beggarly wages now paid them, have voted and hur- rahed every: time au opportunity. has been offered them. 5 Qo They Lave 'gone'to the polls pretend- ing to believe that the “protection’” that enables these nabobs to squander mill- lions among the aristocracy of the Old World, and to live in princely elegance among the tilled snobs of Europe, also, protects them. They can see their error now if they will look at ‘the port holes, that guards. their own works and threatens their own lives, if they refuse to submit to the reduced scale of wages that has been arranged for them. They have carried banners, em- blazoned with mottoes setting forth the beauties and benefits of “protection,” and they will now have an opportunity of experiencing both, at the mouth of a hot water nozzle or submissive ly accept less wages for their blise ering work, and less food and fewer comforts for themselves and families. Ob, the beauties, and benefits of “protection ;'” what a slice our working. man men are getting from it! —— Pittsburg iron manufacturers who profit by Republican protection are getting themselves in shape to stand the fat-frying process, for the benefit of the Republican campaign fund. They are contemplating a re- duction of the wages of their working- men of from 20 to 60 per cent. Calls Quay Down. Immediately after the result of the Chicago Convention was made known, Senator Quay, in’ order to regain’ his political standing with his party, and to appear as favoring the election of Harrison, published broad cast that he would wager $10,000, on his’ re‘elec: tion, It now, looks as if Mr. Quay will have to “putup orshut up.” A. B. BirriNas, of Chicago, who is owner of the street rail-ways of Memphis, is out in a card ‘offering to bet $20,000 that CLEVELAND will be elected, and that he will carry New York, Illinois and Wisconsin, by large pluralities. He has telegraphed Senator Quay, but 80 far has not received a reply, and this offer until he either comes to the front with the money or backs down completely. - BiuniNes-certainly don't know Quay, and is evidently ignorant with their corruption and betting funds, four years ago, has gone under, or he ; would not fool-his-time away.trying to get a wager out of him. While. there 18 no chance for a bet, there is some satisfaction however, in seeing a bluf. fer like Quay called down, | plest and cheapest necessaries that hu- says he will continue to telegraph him" ot the fact that the Keystone bank: , that furnished him and Waiwamaxer BELLEFONTE, PA., JULY 1, 1892. Exactly the Kind of a Hatr-pin He Is. A Collosal Mistake, The Republican press is finding it’ an up hill job to have their readers be- lieve that the position of the Demo- cratic party on the tariff question is for absolute ‘free trade,” and at the same time convince them, that this position is not right, or not what they want. The masses have tasted a little of the benefits of tariff reform inthe cheapened sugars that sweeten their tea, and the farmers as a class, have experienced the’ result of reduced tariff taxation, in the ‘cheapening of the binder twine, they use for harvesting, and as they have been assiduously and persistently ‘taught ‘that, these’ were the results jof a “free trade’ policy, it is not to be wondered af, that the hor- ror they once bad for these words has vanished and’ they have no care now whether you call it “free trade” or any other name, they are for the policy that cheapens the necessities they are com- pelled to buy.. : : And just here is where the Republi- can campaign liars: have made their mistake. They have made no dis- crimination between tariff reform and absolute free trade. When Morrison presented his hort- zontal tariff bill in Congress, years ago, it was denounced as a British ‘free trade’ measure.’ When ' president CLEVELAND issued his famous tariff ‘message a few years later he was as- ‘sailed on all sides as'a rank “free trad- er.” And when Mirts offered to the country a bill that would have lifted ‘the burden of tariff taxation from the shoulders of the ‘masses, and at the same time left every industry and in- terest with ample protection, it was de- cried as “free trade” in ‘the most of fensive form, : In fact, every effort to reduce ex- tortionate,and unnecessary protective duties in the interest of the consumer, ' has been so bitterly ‘denounced by the Republican advocates of protection, as attempts at “free trade,” that the masses have become doubttul if there is any middle ground on this question, and haye lost all fear, that even a radi- cal policy that would wipe out all pro- tection, would either’ injure them or the country. For this situation and feeling the Republican press is alone responsible. If it wakens up some day and finds the American public clamoriag for free trade, and arrayed against protec- tion, either incidental or otherwise, it can claim for itself the credit of educa: ting that public to believe that reduc: ing unnecessary taxation, was enforc- ing free trade, and that lessening the prices of the necessaries of lite, was a policy bought with “British gold.” ——— RA g —Is Quax’s memory failing ? Sure ly he has not forgotten that the Phila- delphia city Treasury is not now avail- able, that BARDSLEY 1s in the peniten- tiary, and that the Keystone bank is busted. And yet he offers to bet $10, 000 on Harrison's election, just as if these resources were still at his dis- posal. S——— Timely Warning. It will be a long time, we imagine, before Chicago gets another Democrat-. ic National Convention. It should be a long time before it gets another Con vention of any kind, unless the fools of the country conclude 10 hold a conclave of some kind or other, vhen there will be no question that the proper place for them to meet will be in Chicago. People who want to be fleeced at ‘any turn; who delight in paying exorbi- tant hotel bills for most inferior hotel. accomodations; who admire insolence along with the service they pay for, and dirt with everything they eat, tonch. or look at, will go there in crowds, but the wise man will steer clear of it, and he who wants decent accomodations will seek them elsewhere than among the inhospitable, theiving, ill- kept and insolent hostleries of that city. ; As a finger board pointiug to the treatment that will be accorded, and the extortionate rates that will be charged visitors to the Exposition, the action of the hotel-keepers of that city during therecent Convention, may serve the good purpose, of warning the pub lic, of the robbery that awaits it if they are entrusted with furnishing accom- modations. No man who regards his own comfort, or has any care for the condition of his finances will risk Chi. cago hotel accommodations for a sin gle day during that show, { toral votes to the Democratic. nomi- Let the Good Work Go On. an While we do not feel that it is either politic or ‘politically’ profitable to count t00 much on the professions of Repub- licans: who are declaring themselves for CreveELAND and the Democratic ticket, it is at least a hopeful and en- couraging sign to know that all over the country, good and influential men are severing their connection with the Republican organization and are tak- ing: the stump for tariff reform and the freedom of elections. So decided "is public sentiment in Kansas, against a.continuation of Har: 'RIsoN rule; that ex-Senator INGALLS, declares it impossible for him to carry that State, and warns his Republican friends, that if they would succeed, they must do it without its electoral vote. ! . TrurstoN, of Nebraska, who led the Republican, delegation at Minne: apolis and who has been the ' recogniz: ced head of the party in his State for years, sorrowfully admits that the high tariff and force bill policy of the pres- eat administration has so demoralized Republicanism in Nebraska, that the chaaces are more than even that the party will loose that State at the com- ing election, : Wovroorr, who is the present United ‘States Senator and Republican mouth peice, for his party, from Colorado, declares that there is no chance or bope of HARRISON carrying that state, and that while it will not give jts elec- nees, it is justas certain to withhold them from ‘the Republican candidates. From other parts of the country, news of Republican workers, announe- ing themselves for the Democratic can- .didates, comes with unexpected rapidi- ty and in ‘unlooked for numbers. In a single town in Connecticut— | Wausegan—five of the heretofore most adtive Republican workers, J. THoMAS Sarre, JouN MoStay, Isaac WHiITE- HEAD, Rost BLy and Samuer CoLLins, have come out openly and are working for CLEVELAND. In this same town 40 Republicans have joined the Demo- cratic club that organized on Saturday night last. In Putnam N. W, Kgn- | NEDY, & former active Republican is making speeches for CLEVELAND and in Plainfield, in the same State, F. F. Mo~TeorNEY, J. P. Werks, Hox. WeLcome H. BRowNING and CHARLES SANDERS are among the CLEVELAND converts. : Out in Indiana, a State that HagrzI- 80N must carry if he is to win, ex- Attorney General Drrano WiLLiam- soN, a former influential and ac- tive Republican, publishesa card announcing his determination to support CLEVELAND and tariff reform, In Logansport, on Saturday night, Dr. J. H. BaxTA, a well known and lead- ing Republican, attended the Demo- cratic ratification meeting and made a rattling speech declaring his purpose to not only vote but to work earnestly for the success of the Democratic ticket. At Worthington, Dr. H. H. McCaBE, a life long Republican, who made ‘a vigorous canvass for Harrison four years ago, announced his deser- tion . from the Republican party. He denounced the Force bill and said that the war ended with Ler's surrender. At Covington, one of the features of the evening was a forcible and eloquent speech by J. A. STONE, a colored man from Missouri, who is a student in a college there, in which he set forth the reasons why he had deserted the Republican party; and one by C., M. earned defeat. Berry, editor of the Veedersburg News, an independent paper, in which | he announced himself squarely in line | with the Democratic party henceforth. | {And so it is all around. From every | section the same kind of reports and from every election district the same | kind of returns. And yet with all these sentiments in its favor; with’ indisputable facts and conditions aiding them, there is neith- ! er surety of success, nor eafety for the | Democracy in anything but their own earnest, persevering, determined work; in perfect organizations, harmonious action and united efforts. It 18 all right enough to keep the ball rolling, ‘but the rank and file of the party must keep up to it. ~—GLADSTONE has hopes of becoming a peer in the Enghsh parliament. are all ‘the equals of VICTORIA over here. We | NO. 26. From the Port Allegheny Reporter, . ;. The Tribune says of the . candidate of its party, that he is “a President who has faithfully executed all its policies’. ‘Yes, that’s what is the matter with Mr. Harrison. That is why he has richly - He has faithfully execnt- ed the Republican policy of squandering the surplus, voting subsidies, increasing taxes at home and ‘removing them abroad. - He has faithfully executed its policy of looting the public service for spoils and bestowing offices upon rela- tives, friends and supporters. He' has faithfully executed its policy of 'protect- ing its rascals and rewarding its corrup- ‘tionists.’ He faithfully executed his part of the ‘plan to pass a force bill. ‘Mr. Harrison has been too faithful by half to the behests of his party. He will go down with it in November. yy HR AS FEST TG, Only Sins by Proxy. .From the 8t. Louis Post-Dispatch, The President is a good man an elder. He will not -do wrong unless itis abso- lutely necessary to save a righteous cause, Because of this necessity he em- ployed his friend Dudley to divide the floaters in blocks of five and instruct them touching their duties as citizens. But Dudley is no longer his friend, while the necessity is greater than ever. Indiana is more doubtful than ‘in 1888, because notwithstanding his good ‘in- tentions the ‘President has created a large number of individual disappoint- ments, If righteousness needed thejsup- port of crime ‘then it needs'it in still | greater degree in 1892. «The situation is very perplexing. An Insolvent Policy. From the Louisville Courier-J. curt The news from Washington shows that with the retirement ‘of Mr. Blaine from the Cabinet the President has abandoned reciprocity and substituted relation. In so far as reciprocity isa success it is a surrender of protection ; in the day of its collapse the American people are asked to substitute tor it re- taliation, and to declare commercial warfare against the best customers of the American farmers. Fora man of busi- ness to adopt such a policy would mean bankruptey. «If Mr, Harrison is per- mitted to pursue this policy unchecked it will assuredly drive our people to na- tional bankruptey. : Taxation Enslaves. From the Des Moines Leader. Taxation, now as ever, enslaves the people. It is freedom, not - protection, they want, The enemies within our gates are those who need the most watching: ‘Protection’ has ever been the shibboleth of the oppressor. But his protection is of the same kind the stock- raiser gives his hogs. “Get off our backs and leave us alone,” is the cry of the people to-day: And the people will be eard. NC Don’t do a Refrigerator Business, From the N. Y. World. Tammany Hall has been prompt to blazon the Cleveland and Stevenson ticket upon its outer walls in a great traneparency. Those estimable Repub- lican newspapers that have been count- ing upon a coolness in Tammany Hell have here their answer. Tammany is “a Democrat,” and it doesn’t keep its politics on ice. A EE RS BA ARS ST TE Its Politico--Geographical Location. From the New York World. In its present shape the Republican party is bounded on the north by the Great Lakes, on the south by the Solid South, on the east by Tariff Reform and on the west by the Farmers’ Alli- ance and the Silver States. Itisin no sense of the word a national party. Not Even Cause for a Cheer. From the Northampton Democrat: It is now two weeks since the nomin- ation of Hsrrison and Reid, and their names at the present writing inspire about as much enthusiasm amongst Rep- ublican voters as an Egyptian mummy of two thousand years ago does among the present generation of denizens in the valley of the ancient Nile. EE ——, A Thought for Sunday. From the Garrison (Tex.) Signal. There are to many people wanting governmental support. This: Govern- ment was not established to guarantee prosperity to anybody,. but to ‘protect them in their rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” leaving them free to earn prosperity by their own ex- rtions. The Poor Pay the Bills, From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It is a mistaken beliet that the rich manufacturers contribute to Republican campaign funds. These contributions come from deduetions from wages made ! The work- ' in the form of reductions. ingman pays the freight, I ———— ——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. : —— —— “CLEVELAND is a platform in | himself.” EL EEN - Bam Lr : Spawls from the Keystone, —State Fair will likely. be held in Lancaster” thisifall. anil Cini Hae 7 —The widow of the late Ario Pardes, of Hazleton, is dead. a 5 —Lancaster’s Central Labor’ Union’ has de- nounced Whitelaw Reid. fiat - —Board of Pardds wetist Harrisburg Wed- | nesday and heard four cases. —The Huckleberry crop on the mount of Pennsylvania will be a failure. * na 3 he —The Umbrella Trust has clinched the sale of the Lancaster site for a big plant, [ 70 weet —Lanecaster’s bookbinding eontracts are be- ing investigated. Jobbing is'alleged. —Michael Ryan. of Nanticoke, was run | down and killed by a train at Renovo, —John H. Zacharias fell from a third story window at Reading and was’ uninjurad. » |. —A five foot vein of coal was struck Tuesday atthe York farm eolliery near Pottsville.. —A snake 10 feet and 11 inches long” was killed by John Snyder, of Wessnersville. —Nine pupils were graduated from’ the North Wales High School Tuesday evening. —Patrick Bright, of Philadelphia, while vis- iting in Reading last Friday was sunstruck. —An Allentown High School girl received a horse and carriage for a Commencement pres- Sar. Er ——. i. —Sister Mary Hildaberth, the’ murdered charity nurse, of Reading, was buried Mon" day. a fi Not content with one wife, Harrison Daniels married another and is now in jail at Allen town. ; 2 orgs —Owing to the scarcity of men, women are making a considerable part of the hay near Allentown. hap a —The Evangelical property, near Lebanon for which’ the Bowmanites are fighting, is worth $250,000. to vi { —A buzz machine in a silk mill at/ Pottse ville burst Saturday, seriously injuring Wile liam Higgins. . faba « £ su JODADIH: —The Lehigh Valley [edical, Ass istion will hold its twelfth annual meeting af Bethle- . hem, July 7. ; oY ae rs —An insane Polander, .Joseph Polouski, drove a spike in a tree at Pittstown and hang: ed himself upon it. a : —The heaviest man in Berks county, Phils ip O’Bold, who weighed 400 potinds, was buried at: Bernville Saturday. Ee 38 ; —A day's work for conductors ‘and ‘motor men on Laricastel street cars will hereafter be 12 instead of 18 hours, BE At ALD —John Fraunfelter, a brakeman, was thrown from a shute 25 feet high at Bangor and was dangerously hurt. : 3 or —The employes of the ‘Catasauqua Rolling Mills will be subjected to a reduction of 15 per cent. after July 1. —Martin Smith, of No. 1520 Harebell street, Lancaster, had his leg crushed * by’ having it caught bétween cars, © 110 SHO —While Michael Malick was sleeping Satur.’ day nightburglars entered his bsdroom, at’ Shamokin, and stole $300. : —A rifle’ was ‘accidentally discharged by, James Anderson, a Lancaster boy, Saturday night, and he was fatally shot, ~~" —Vivid lightning and a damaging rain storm : made things unpleasant Saturday morning in the Schuylkill Valley. ron —Officers and a posse of farmers are still: on the hunt for the negro who. attacked the Ty- son girls near West Chester. 103) 1 ¢ i ~The Harrisburg Railway, which has been ' doing an electric line business on a horse lina charter, will be investigated. i 1 £ —While shooting at a mark Hardy Germer:’ aged 13 years, of Harrisburg, was accidentally" shot by William Taylor a companion. ! —For cutting Davis E. Quinn's heart out last winter, Harry Shaw, of Pottsville, was yes- terday sent to prison for eight years. ; — Running against his mother, who carried a bucket full of hot water, Harry Snyder, a Reading lad, was dangerously scalded. —Despondency, caused by lack of employ- ment, caused Harry 8. Cole to kill himself with poison in the Easton Cemetery. —The “Pennsy” is dickering for the 12,000 tons menthly output of coal from the Stoddard & Sidney collieries near Mahanoy city. —“What’s in a Kiss?” was the subject of a delightful essay read by Miss Mary Powell at the Scranton High School commencement. —The 3usquehsnna and Columbia Iron Companies at Lancaster have refused to sign the old wage scale, and a strike is imminent. —In attempting ts escape a shower, A. A. Lesher tried to swim across a dam at Shoe- maker as a short cut home, and was drowned —On an out-line to which was attached 300 fish hooks, Martin Leisenring and two other men of Allentown caught 93 eels in one night,’ ~In a freight train collision on the Pennsyl« vania Railroad near Huntingdon last Friday, two locomotives and 18 cars were demolished. —Confidential bookkeeper John R. Niblo was arrested at Rochester for the alleged embezzlement of $200 from Lester Oatman his) employer. —So bitter is the waifare between the rival Marshland and Wolf Steamboat Companies on the Susquehanna at Wilkesbarre that a Wolf steamer purposely ran down one of the en- emy’s craft. —8amuel D. Brown, who on May 19. robbed the Woodbury (Bedford County) post office of $350, was captured near the scene of the rob- bery Saturday. —The funeral of the late Rev. Dr. C. F. Mec. Cauley, of Reading, who for 49 years was in. the ministry of the Reformed Church, took place Monday morning. r . —William Page, Mineral Point, Cambria county, had his brother George arrested for entertaining friends atthe former's home in the absence of the owner. } —Nowwithstanding that Delegate A. M. High, ‘of Reading, was the “original” Blaine man in this state, he said last Friday he was now in the Harrison procession. —A Percheron stallion that cost $2500, and was owned by a company of Schuylkill connty farmers, nas been sold at auction at Hamburg,’ for $265 to recover the animal's board bill, and a lawsuit will follow, —Pittsburg’s National Prohibition delegates think that W. T. Demorest, of New York, will be nominated at Cincinnati for President, and A. A. Stevens of Tyrone, Pa, or Benjamin Hilljer, of Georgia; for Vice President. | —GeorgeS. Good & Co., of Lock Hayen, | have been awarded the contract for construct. , ing four miles of railroad between Mahaffey ! and La Jose, Clearfield county. It is intended to connect the - Patton coal field 8: on Chest Creek with the Beech Creek Railroad. —A horse kicked John Angstadt at Kurtz. town, and he may not recover, ~~ ° :