BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings, —Opportunities are golden and that is the reason so few of us ever get any. —There is usually a time worn ex- pression on the face of an eight day clock. —To be a man at all times should be the ambition of every member of the male sex. —The man with his pocket full of “rocks” is licensed to fire as many of them as he wants to at us. —It is rumored that old Sor and the boot blacks are going to form a Trust for the control of shines. —The returns from Vermont are not calenlated to send many thrills of delight through McKINLEY’S bosom. —The fellow who tries to make a VOL. 37. % 2 afchmang STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NO. 35. A Word With the Farmer. You are a farmer. Possibly a Republican farmer who believes in protection. If so, you are exactly the man this item was written for. Your wheat is protected (?) by a Re- publican tariff to the extent of 10 cents cloak of his religion generally finds it to thin to make even a decent gauze shirt. —We have not yet seen that any of the monopolist organs have denounced the original striker, MARCO Boz ZARIs. --The Republican party in Arkansas seems to be like GILRoY’s kite. With- out head or tail it has flown clear out of sight. —If decay and rottenness germinate cholera bacillus then the G. O. P. had better be run into quarantine imme- diately. : - —CorBErT, DixoN and McAv- LIFFE should be put on. exhibition along with the rest of the bull dogs at the next National bench show. —Pension commissioner Raum will undoubtedly busy himself with hunting up new beneficiaries while the Grand Army encamps at Washington. —BENJAMIN'S letter of acceptance was an exceeding lengthy document, but it wasn’t as long as his tail of woe will be, after the whole thing is over. --BLAINE’S determination to make but a couple of five minute speeches for HARRISON shows that he understands the folly of wasting time on a lost cause. —Of the Workmen now employed in the CARNEGIE mills, at Homestead, eight tenths are American born where the same per cent. was of foreign birth before the strike. —The World: thinks that it is un- necessary to establish a quarantine for Philadelphia. It must deem denizens of the Quaker City too slow to catch even the cholera. —It is every Democrat's duty to work for the success of his party this fall. - The crisis has come and America de- mands of her sons that government which will heal her diseased systems and restore her prosperity. —Mr, Peck should have been on hand at Columbus last fall when Gov. CAMPBELL called upon Maj. McKix- LEY to present one workingman’s name whose wages had been raised in conse- quence of the latter's bill. —You cannot be too careful about what you eat and drink at this time of the year. The system is run down and the decay of fall is beginning. It be- hooves every one to lend a helping hand to the health of the community. ~—Republican papers are proud be- cause HARRISON has declared a twenty day quarantine against cholera and in order to look after official business has been compelled to cut short a proposed pleasure trip. Wouldn't they have about the same grounds for gratification every time he signs his pay roll. —Ifyou don’t believe that Ameri- cans enjoy freedom in every sense of the word the last vestige of doubt will be removed when we tell you that one week our President sits in the car which during the following one is used by cur boss slugger. Imagine CHAR- LEY MircHELL riding in a car which Victoria had honored. —In the death of Hon. DANIEL DouGHERTY America has lost her great- est orator and the Democratic party a man whose unimpeachable judgment and ability has weilded a mighty in- fluence over the masses in more than one crisis. His infant dreams of ora- tory found their fulfilment in the mas- ter work of his later years. --The New Jersey man, who is going to court to obtain possession of a shark which another fellew caught after he had wounded it, may unwittingly open up an avenue for some juicy tales for coming generations. If he wins his case a fish story registration office will have to be opened, in every community, where anglers can record the number of big ones that escaped after they were hooked. —The harvest moon is now sailing serenely though the heavens and the unengaged summer girl is beaming into its full orb with a longing that isal- most desperate. Such a moon, with such ! a1 opportunity, will not appear again : for four years and she knows if she does not reap her harvest now by the next | time leap year comes around she will j have been relegated to the musty shades of antiquity. : per bushel. Y our barley, potatoes, wool and eggs are also among the list of protected articles. And yet do you prosper because of good prices? Your wheat is worth 75 cents a bushel, From fifteen to thirty cents less than it has ever been knowa to sell for. Your barley brings no better price than it did when ajtariff on farm pro. ducts was unheard of. Your wool is worth less than it was a few years ago when it was upon: the free list, and your potatoes bring a reasonable price: only because of a short crop. How then does the tariff benefit you? : Every thing you buy, that is’ manu- factured by machinery, is dearer than it was before this tariff bill was enact. ed into law, Your farm machinery and implements, your clothing, blank- ets and carpets, in fact everything you must have for your farm, your house or your family, except sugar —an article the tariff does not touch —costs you more than they did before this bill went into effect. And every- thing you have to sell brings less than it did prior to that date. Is paying more for what you must buy,and taking less for what you have to sell, benefiting you ? And yet this is exactly the situation you find yourself in to-day, under a tariff system that you are told protects the products of your farm, asit does the output of the manufacturer's mill. The honest God’s truth is, no tariff that can be conceived will ever protect your products or inerease - their price, It would be impossible to make a pro- tective tariff that would add one cent to the price of a bushel of wheat or a farthing to the value of a car load of potatoes. It is the rankest deception and the most unblushing fraud, when you a> told that it will do so. You raise more wheat and other farm products in this country than our people can use. The supply is greater than the demand. The priceis always less here than in any other part of the world. Consequently no one would think of shipping wheat or potatoes to a country that raised more than it need- ed. : For this reason you have no com- petitors to shut out, aud protactive tar- iffs, which are made for that purpose, are of no use to you. What you want and need is 8 mark- et—a demand for what you have to sell. Our own country takes what it needs, but it don’t need all. Other countries could take all you have to spare. There are plenty of govern- ments that do not raise one tenth part of what they need. They would take our surplus if we would take their goods in exchange. This the tarift you impose upon suchjarticles as they would bring to us, prevents, and the result is, that in place of making a market and a demand for what you have to sell, the “protection” you are asked to vote for, only hems you in and makes you take just what you can get in a coun- try that has more than it needs of that which you furnish. This is the reason your wheat is worth but 75 cents per bushel. It is the result of the restricted trade that a protective tariff is intended to create. ——It was entirely unnecessary for Mr. HARRISON to write & five. column letter to show that he would accept the Republican nomination. His course before, and the actions of his friends at Minneapolis, was all the as- surance any one would want to con- vince them that he was not only will. ing, but was terribly anxious to get it. His letter, therefore, in place of being one of acceptance, is simply the plea of a politician, and the personal efforts of a hungry office holder to hang onto the position he now fills. ——The WArcamAN office is turning out better work than ever.” Bring in your printing and let us make an esti- mate on it for you. BELLEFONTE, PA., SEPT. 9, 1892. A Waste of Time and Efforts. The efforts of Republican newspa- pers, to produce figures, to prove that under the operations of the McKINLEY bill the wages of workingmen have ad- vanced, as was promised, seems to us a foolish and useless undertaking. If they are corret in their assertions, there is no people, any where, better situated to know it, than the workingmen them- selves; and if they aie not correct, all the figuresithey can put together, and all the assurances they can give, from this to the election, will not convince a single laborer that what they allege is true. Hap-hazzard statistics, secured from interested parties and juggled with by designing politicians, is not the evi- dence that convinces workingmen of good times and increased wages. The condition of their flour chests, their meat barrels, their clothes closets and their store accounts, is more positive proof to them, than any theories or re- ports that can be produced. If it were true that their wages had been increased, by the McKinLey bill, there would be no reason to tell them 80, in order to convince them. They would know it of themselves; they would have every evidence of the fact. Every pay-day would prove it, and the increased {comforts their families wonld enjoy,iwould be witness to the fact. What folly then, for Republican pa- pers and speakers, to waste time in trying to prove, that which furnishes its own proof if true, and if not true, that which no figures thatcan be placed together, will convince those for whom they are intended of their correctness and reliability. Surely this work is a waste of time and efforts. Has His Eyes Opened, “Private” DarLzeLy, who has been heard in nearly every campaign since the war closed hurrahing for the flag, and bellowing about the duty of the soldier to stand by the Republi- can party, has had his eyes open- ed to a thing or to, and is not nearly so flag crazy as he once was, nor has he ' the same sweet words’ of affectionate { praise for the treatment the old soldier receives at the hands of Republicans. Experience has taught Private DaL- ZELL something, and cold facts have chilled his ardor to no small extent. He wanted an office, and when he ‘came to ask for it be learned, as he says, “that Republican love for the soldier is everywhere a sham and a le.” The other fellow who never had been a soldier, never wanted to be and never would be one, got the office, and Pri- vate DALzZELL got the pclitical mitten, and was left to console his dissappoint- ed hopes in the satisfaction the publi- cation’ of the following card gave him “I want it distinctly understood I am Private Dalzell no longer. I have been ground to pieces by that name. This love for a soldier is always and everywhere a sham and a lie. A fat pocketbook goes farther in a convertion than a good record as a private. - “I am done with 1t. I hold any, man my enemy who ever calls me Private again, Good-bye, ‘Private.’ Henceforth I am plain *Dalzell, of Ohio.” Wouldn't be Much of a Loss. The State newspapers for the past week have been discussing the possi- bility of a failure on tbe part of the contractor to furnish all the election booths needed in time for the Noyem- ber election. They argue that because there has been but ten thousand, of the twenty-three thousand needed, sup- plied up to this time, there may be a shortage on election day and conse- quently a failure to hold elections as the Baker law requires. While we have no confidence in the law as it is, and believe that just as fair and honest elections were held un- der the old, as will be under the new law, we have no fear that it will not receive a fair trial, or that any of the necessary paraphernalia will not be ready and on hand in due time. There is too much money in the job for the contractors to give it a ghost of a show of falling, and even if they should, and this ring-cursed Quay- ridden State be disfranchised for onge, we don’t see that there wonld much cause for crying over the result, AR EAE ~~Poor BENJAMIN is getting badly rattled. To think that a deacon in a Presbyterian church would so far for- get himself as to send out his letter of acceptance on Sunday, then for fear of blue stocking vengeance recalled until Monday. No Dodging the Force Bill Issue Now. As was hoped by the Democrats, and feared by Republicans, President Harrison, has had the courage to come out squarely, in his letter of acceptance, in favor of a force bill, and in place of their being any doubt as to the posi tion of the Republican party on this question, its candidate brings it up to the scratch and forces it to stand or fall in defense of this infamous and liberty destroying measure. The courage that actuated Mr. Har- RISON to this position is at least deserv- ing of a little credit. It leaves no doubt as to what the policy of his party will be if successful, and no ex- cuse for those who are opposed to such revolutionary - ideas, for supporting that party under the plea that the force bill is not an issue in the campaign. To be sure Mr. Harrison does not speak of the measure as a force bill, None ot his party,who favor the provi sion of the Lodge act, do. They call it an election bill—a non-partisan meas. ure—to secure “free elections and a fair count,” It is under this guise, that the peo- ple are to be robbed of their rights to vote and hold elections, and that the entire machinery at the polls is to be placed under the control of Federal election officers, backed when Federal | needs demand with Federal soldiers. Under its provisions, the Federal Judges, who are the creatures of a par- tisan President, appoints, not only the Judges and inspectors of elections, but officials to make the registration, and marshalls and deputies to stand at the polls and see that only those whom these appointed registrars place upon the list, are allowed to vote. From their decision or the work of these partisan boards,there is no appeal for the people whomay be wronged. Their poweris ab- solute and their determinations final. No matter how many qualified voters they desire to disfranchise, they can do it by neglecting or refusing to register them; no matter what the result of the election may be, they count up the vote and return it to suit their own pur: poses, and the state courts are power- less to stay any wrong they may com- mit, or prevent any fraud they may ‘perpetrate. And these election officers, named for the people by a partisan court, need not be residents of the election districts or county over which their authority extends. They may be sent from any part of the congressional dis- trict, and are amenable only to the power that sendsthem. At their back stands the United States army, required to respond to any call that the mar shalls of elections, may make on it, * And this is called a measure to in- sure “free and fair election.” It is the Republican idea of securing non-partisan election boards and an honest count. It is the proposition of the party in power, to take charge of our elections and perpetuate its power by doing as Czar REED boasted in his Pittsburg speech they would do, ‘control the elections, count up the vote and make out the returns to suit themselves.” If the people are ready for this kind of work, are willing to relinqu ish all right to hold their own elections and havea voice in the selection of their officiale, the elections in November: will tell. H ArrISON’s success means the pas- | sage and enforcement of the Force bill and a death blow to the rights and liberties of the American citizen. Leaning on a Weak Reed. It is said that Prarr has been placated and the Republicans now as: sert that they will carry New York without a doubt. It seems to us that we have an indistinct recollection that Mr. PraTT, once upon a time, under- took to carry New York for another fellow—one Fasserr. The return ta bles in none of the political Almanacs give any evidence that that undertak- ing proved a success, nor does aay documentary evidence show that Prarr and Fasserr, combined, carried that State. Possibly Mr. P's power, for a man he hates and despises, will prove greater than his efforts for a candidate of his’ own choosing, and i t i possibly —very possibly it may not. | At least if we were a Republican we to bet any money on the victory that is to come out of PLatt's placation. wouldn't make fool enough of ourself | quence if the Northwest were safe for Balancing the Paradoxes. From the New York World. No acrobat on a tightrope ever had a more ticklish task before him than have the champious of McKinleyism in balancing the paradoxes of Protec- tion. . Their chief organ in this city is busy in trying to prove : 1." That putting a tax on an article cheapens it to consumers, 2. That cheapening the product en- ables the manufacturer to increase or to “maintain wages. 3. That the cost of food can be re duced to workingmen, while the farm- er gets higher prices for his products on account of a tariff on foodstuffs which constitute the main part of out ex- porte. 4. That the foreigners really pay the duty, though Mr. McKinley, in the kindness of his heart, taxes them only $180,000,000 a year towards the ex- penses of the Government, It is a very nice piece of tight-rope balancing which the defenders of tax- lng a nation into prosperity have un- dertaken. EE AIRE Points With Pride to thejHigh Wages. “ar From the,Goshén (N. Y ) Republican. ~~~ Mr. Procter points with pride to the high wages paid in his Vermont fac- tory, which are the lowest market rate, for in the event that his work- men kick, he knows perfectly that under our blessed tariff he can tele- graph and in a few weeks fill their places with the pauper marble cutters of Europe, for whose coming our thoughtful tariff makers have left wide open the gates of Castle Garden. Taxes on all the American working- man uses—and plenty, liberal taxes— but free trade in all foreign pauper labor, save the Chinaman, have been the making of Redfield Proctor, An- drew Carnegie and two hundred thou- saad other tarift pets, who, in the name of American high - wages, have ab- sorbed into their pocket-books about 70 per cent. of all the wealth of the United States. ITER Ballots vs. Bullets, From the Texas Siftings. The Republicans are very fond of calling for troops to settle every ques- tion. Their party was born in war ; it obtained power through war: it has squirrels. i voir at Dunmore. epidemic at Cressona. Spawls from the Keystone, —Seranton will soon cremate garbage. — —The woods of Pennsylvania swarm with —Lester Brady was drowned -in the reser. —A fresh outbreak of diphtheria has oa- curred in Chester. Lv —5..G. Whitaker has; been, appointed poste master at Felix, Pa. There is no abatement of the typhoid fever —Eastern Pennsylvania farmers 1eport a poor cloverseed harvest. —A handsome soldiers’ monument was un" veiled at Mahanov City Monday, —Thomas k luck and William Riegel, es- caped from the Doylestown Jail. —Williem N. Dennis, an Erie ‘bookkeeper, hanged himself because of illness. —Frederick Yensen, who was wanted for a dozen burglaries, was captured in Allentown, —Little George Miller died from effects of being run over by a street sprinkler at Myers. town. —The annual State Sabbath School Associa« tion will meet at Lancaster from September 20 to 22. —Berks County fair, which opened Tuesday, was rich in fine exhibits and pretty country lasses. ! —Isaac Docollo fell 80 feet from a railroad trestle at Conewago and was picked up fatally hurt. —Rev. A. W. Spooner startled his Altoona congregation by calling Adam and Ave Anar- chists. —All the larger cities in the State are being especially cleansed in anticipation of the cholera. —Charles Saxton, a Pennsylvania Railrcad brakeman, was killed at Sunbury, Monday morning. —Safe robbers have been working the gener- al stores of Cumberland, Perry _and Franklin counties. —Ardmore citizens are circulating a petition asking that that town be not incorporated. into | a borough. —Scores of Dauphin County farmers have fitted their homes with ingenious burglar alarm bells. : —Austin McMichael, of Philadelphia, was run over by a train near Reading, on Saturday, and killed. —Lockjaw Friday killed Philip Roberts, of Carnarvon, who had been struck on the head with a stone. —A little son of Mrs. Elizabeth Snyder, Hol« lidaysburg, Lycoming County, was cremated in a burning barn. i —An Allegheny County Coroner’s jury rece ommends a State law to prohibit the sale of Flobert rifles. —Brush Mountain, near Altoona, is likely ta be selected as a national weather, observatory and signal site. —The body of Jacob W. Rose, a farmer, was found in the road near Johnstown, he having been murdered. —Every street in Pittsburg was yesterday sprinkled with a solution of copperas, in antics jpation of the cholera. — Christian Endeavor Societies held thejp 5 nual convention at Millersville, Lancaster county, Monday. { —Falling asleep upon the railroad track, James Coogan, who lived near Pottsville, was lived by war, and rumors of war, and Sun over and killed: it cannot comprehend any discussion which 18 not to end in a fight. During Harrison’s administration, we have been threatened with war with Chili, war with Italy, war with England, and we have had a labor war in three States. The Republican policy which is behind all these troubles leads directly to the Force Bill, which is in- tended to give the Federal troops con- trol of the elections, not only in the South, but in all the States. Without a war, without troops, without a Force Bill, the Republican party hasno rea- son to live, .and it is going to die hard. That Pension Record. From the Pittsburg Post. President Cleveland signed more pen- sion bills than did all his predecessors. Under President Cleveland 1,825 pen- gion bills became laws. In the twenty- four years of Republican administration preceding Cleveland 1.610 pension bills poond, showing 215 more under Cleve- and than during the terms of all his Republican predecessors. It is true Cleveland vetoed many private pension bills that had been lobbied through Congress—in all 524—but he did this after close examination of each ease and to save the pension list from becoming 4 roll of dishonor. The Hole is Safe. From the Tunkhannock Democrat. The “net cash balance for July” is reported by the Treasury at $27,000,- 000, of which over $14,000,000 is small change of limited legal tender over $12, 000,000 is the standing losn without interest to ‘‘pet’’ national banks. So that on July 30 there was no cash balance of available funds in the Treas- ury. Take away the small change and there is nothing but the hole left where the Cleveland surplus used to be. A Mathematical Query. From the St. Louis Republic. If in ten years of high tariff more mortgages are filed in ‘Kansas than there are inhabited houses in the State how long will "it be before the high tariff will be, “reformed by its friends.” A RE B——— How it Goes in Ohio. Will some g. 0. p. organ of Ohio lease state why the people of this Sate should be taxed two cents ‘a ound on tin to give employment to orty-two Welshmen up at Youngs- town ? Win the West. From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. . The bickerings between the factions in New York would be of small conse- Jleveland. Hence it must be made safe by a thorough’ campaign of education. —The Grand Lodge of the United States of ‘the Order of Seven Wise Men; will convene at | Lancaster, Tuesday. —The store of James Zollenger, in Toboyne * Perry county, was entered by robbers; who ses cured $325 from the safe. —Gas escaped in his room at a Chambers . burg hotel and John Eshleman will not recov « er from the inhalations. —At a Sunday School convention in Read- ing Saturday 400 schools with a membership o! 45,000 were representated. ‘ : —Philip Wolf,jaged 12 years, of Shenandoah, was badly hurt and had his eye sight de« stroyed by an explosion (Monday. —An epidemic of a dangerous skin disease has attacked every oneiof the 400 inmates of : the Scranton Home for the Friendless. —Congressman Frank KE. Beltzhoover, of Carlisle will be the speaker at the Perry coun ty Fair on “Democratic Day,” September 16. —Being thrown from an overturned load of straw at Chinchilla, Lackswanna County, Wid Hall was buried and received fatal injuries. —While George Kennedy was trying to kiss Mrs. L. Achinson in her/home at Seranton, the woman’s husband slashed him with a razor. —Contractor Gaynor, of Pottsville, will be gin operations on the 18-mile extension of the Williamsport and North Branch Railroad in a week. —Having fallen through a trap door in the kitchen floor, John F. Kleinhaus, Manheim township, Lancaster County, was picked up dead. —Pennsylvania live stock and coal trains wrecked beth of their engines in collision near South Fork and killed W. A. Ferguson, brakeman. —Philadelphia and Reading car shops at Schuylkill Haven are working 14 hours a day in order to turn out sufficient coal cars for the great traffic. : —The car in which Thomas Johnson, a cir. cus man was riding to Pottsville, was derailed and in trying to escape injury, Johnson leaped and cracked his skull. —Horseman Edward Johnson, of Pittsburg, was almost killed near Reading by} the derails ment of Cook & Whitby ciréus train car in which he was riding. bw —Twelve-year-old Frank Ray ran in front of Willie Blaine’s revolver while the latter shot at a mark in Sunbury. He was shot in the [I stomach and may die. y —“Farmer” Adams said the detectives scared him into confessing that lie piled the ties cn the Pennsylvania Railroad track at Enon and then shot himself. —Creditors of the strange Reading 'Lancas- ter and Baltimore Railroad met at Adamstown Saturday and discussed the purchase of the franchise, assuming the §20,000 debt. —A thief with $200 in his jacket was caps tured in a cornfield near Norristown. His name is Adam Snyder, and the money was tak- : en from J. R. Shoemaker, of Plymouth. —Rey. Father Kassalko and Frank Pucker, editors of the Zednota, of Hazelton, were Satur- 1 day fined $200 each and sent to jail for a month for libcling P. V. Rovaninek, of Pittsburg. —The promotion of Trainmaster M. C. Blaine of Pottsville, to a position in Philadelphia with the Reading Company has resulted in the pro- motion of Dispatcher Bowers, of Reading, to Blaine's old place. 1