————— SAT AGI 10.5 A om R.A AE Date Dewostalic BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. -—Young America now blames the black eye which he got for “fudgin’ at marbles on “practicin’ for our foot-ball team.” —The wife of our President is dead. The whole country, aye, even the world, mourns the loss of so amiable an American wife and mother. —Can it be that there has been a combine between Jupiter Pluvius and the Prohibitionists to show Pennsylva- nians the necessity of taking water? —Do not run the risk of disfranchis- ing yourself, by cutting your ticket. Vote it straight. Then you need not fear lest your vote will not be counted. —Within the last forty years the Re- publican party has changed its name four times. On November 8th it will change again, when its new name will be “mud.” —GiILroY's kite is supposed to have flew pretty high, but Mr. GILROy’S majority in the mayoralty fight in New York will establish a new comparison for things that fly high. —Now that the CooLEY and DALTON gangs of robbers have ceased to terrorize the communities in which they reigned supreme, why not all unite to wipe out that Robber tariff monster, parasitic on the farmer and laborer, — According to the figures of a Bos- ton writer, there are 1,800,000,000 souls in heaven, against a population of 175,- 000,000,000, in the infernal regions. It is not likely that his figures will be verified until PECK gets down there to look the matter up. —Farmer’s Institutes are beginning to absorb the attention of our State's husbandmen, and many a farmer lies conscience smitten on a sleepless pillow, as phantoms, of a yard stick paling into insignificance beside the giant(?)corn ear he husked and told about at the gather- ing, dance before his troubled vision. —If the money, which protected monopolists contribute to campaign funds, for the purchase of votes was giv- en to the voters in the form of decent wages, States would have fewer costly militia-striker encounters and the Rep- publican party less trouble in making workingmen believe that protection raises wages. —.With General SIcKLEs working tooth and nail for his election and hav- ing enlisted the support of Judge JoHN C. REA, ex-commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic and a life long Republican, we cannot see how veterans can do anything else than vote for CLEVELAND and rebuke the perni- cious and dishonorable pension methods of RauM. Protection has been a veil of decep- tion which hung between the farmer and workingman and prosperity. Rot- tening, by the life blood of men who have died while demanding the fulfill- ment of promises ot ‘steady employ- ment at higher wages,” the false fabric will fallon Nov., 8th, when the people of this broad land will avenge such human sacrifices on the altar of a robber tariff system. —Mr. EAN has been heard from. The country at large must be at once surprised and delighted that our min- ister to Chili has a name which it is possible to besmirch. A few more day’s eompanionship with DAVE MARTIN will make his conscience as invulner- able to such shots as McVEAGH pepper- elit with, as his nerve was to the cries: ttresign,”’ of the country which he dis- graced during the Chilian affair. —Don’t thing because your daddy is a Republican, and because your daddy’s: daddy was a Republican, that you are compelled to lumber along in the ruts of oppression. The conduct of the gov- ernment may have been guod enough for them but look you, whither it is drifting. Upon the young men of the land isits future founded. See it as sagacious young New Englanders have seea it. Scions of prominent Republican faumi- lies, who have kicked loose from the coat tails of their daddies and dared to call the party of their ancestors to account for the depleted treasury, the pension scandals and a tarift that makes the poor man poorer and the rich man richer. —Mr. BLAINE'S review of the politi- cal situation in the United States, which appears in this month’s issue of the North American Review, is certainly the most extraordinary embodiment of Republi- can inconsistencies which has been giv. en to the public during the campaign. In upholding the most liberal pension system he uses the tollowing effective sentence: “Surely the binding up of the wounds of a past war is more merci- ful and honorable work than preparing the country for a new one,” yet with the same swipe of his pen he endorses the infamous Force bill plank, in the Republican platform, and all the ne- farious means Republicans are using to keep the North and the South apart. elma; 8) SOVTE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 317. BELLEFONTE, PA., OCT. 28, 1892, NO. 42. Should Waken Up Soon. Itis possible that political bigotry and intolerable and unexplainable pol: itical prejudices may keep some farmers in the Republican ranks, but if so they certainly should be few and far be- tween. There is no class of citizens in this wide country, who, in proportion to what they buy, pay as much of the tariff duties as does the farmer; nor is there any class of persons, be they cap- italists or professionalists, mechanics or laborers, who derive as little of the ben- fits of this kind of legislation, as does he. He is not only taxed to increase the profits of manufactures and dealers and professedly to furnish labor to oth- ers, but he is taxed in order to restrict his own markets and reduce the price of his own products, at the same time that it increases the price of all that he is compelled to buy. . The protective system; is one that robs him at both ends. It increases the price of everything he purchases, and by preventing a demand for his wheat from countries that under other conditions would take itand pay in- creased prices for it, it restricts his market to an over supplied country and secures him a fair price only when crops fail and he has nothing to sell. With a tarift of 25 cents a bushel on wheat, and the farmer able to sell it for but 70 cents; with a duty of ten dollars per head on imported cattle, and stall fed beeves selling at 3% and 4 ceuts per pound on foot ; with a tax ranging from 5 to 30 cents per pound on wool, and that article selling for less than it did when there was no tariff on it; with a duty of 15 cents per bushel on corn, and the farmer unable to get more than 50 cents for what he has to sell, and with every article of food, he buys, every stitch of clothing he wears, and every implement he uses, gone up in prices, he ought to see, and must be political- ly blind if he does not see that a tariff in no way protects him, and that it on- ly adds to his expenees,” while by its restrictive policy, it decreases his in- come, How long would the manufacturers, or any other class or business interest in the country, submit to a policy that would tax them for the benefit of the farmer ? How long would they sup- port a party that enforced a policy that restricted their markets and decreased the value of the out-put of their mills, to enrich the farmer or anybody else ? And yet this is what the Republi: can party asks the farmers to do for the manufacturers, because these manu- facturers put up the “boodle’’ to corrupt elections and continue that party in power. Surely the farmer is notso blind that he cannot see, or so heedless of his own interests that he will not learn. If heis not, what hope can there be for a party that has fooled, and robbed, and taxed him as the Republican par- ty has done? ° A Serious Matter for Farmers. If there are to be no fences main- tained in Centre county, how long will it be until theirs and expose their tracks to tres the rail-roads take down pass, through every farm they run and along every public road they touch ? It must be remembered thata law that makes cattle, off of their owners premises, trespassers, will make them trespassers the moment they stray upon a railroad track. What safety is there for any farmer, or for any. man owning acow ora horse, in case he can be held liable for the damages that would be caused by his stock getting upoa the railroad track and causing a wreck? , And that is just the situation they will be in, if there are to be no fences main- tained in Centre county. Both Dare and Hayiuton are opposed to repealing the law, that does away with fences and makes every man a trespasser if his cow gets upon a railroad track, or steps upon the property of some one else. ATES, ——The only place that the work- iigmen find that their wages have been increasel, by a Republican turiff, is in the Republican papers or at Republican meetinze, Neither pay-day nor their * pockets know anything atout it. Where the Burden Falls. It must be a consoling thought to the advocates of a Republican tariff that the ricn man’s wife, who wears silks and satins, enjoys the comforts of seal skin | sacques, adorns herself with silk laces and diamonds, sleeps under fine blank- ets, bathes in the attar of roses and an- noints herself with oil of lavendar, pays no increase of tariff duties, for any of these luxuries, while the fami- lies of the workingmen and farmers that wear common alpacas with cotton trimmings and ordinary woolen goods, occasionally buys an imitation seal skin sacque, sleep under common blankets, use simple chinaware on their tables, eat rice attimes, use castor oil when necessary and are least able to pay tariff taxes, are bled to the extent of over 100 per cent by the increased duties impos- ed by the McKiNLEY bill. While it exempts from its grind- ing demands, the luxuries and adorn- ments used and purchased only by the rich, it also adds to the wealth of the few by increasing the price of that which, as manufacturers, they have for sale. The perpetuation of this iniquitous system is the beginning and end of Re- public hopes. If that party is con- tinued in power, the rich will continue to wear their furs and furbelous, their fineries and fripperies, without the pay- ment of increased tariff taxes, while the poor man’s nose will be kept to the tarift grind-stone until it is ground to a point, or he is made sharp enough to see the idiot he is making of himself in'voting for a system that impoverish- es himself and family to enrich others, who care nothing for him or those who are dear to him, A Good Congressman. " One name upon the Democratic ticket that every Democrat in the dis- trict will be gratified to vote for, is that of Hon. Geo F. Kriss our candi- date for congress. There is no dis- puting the fact that Mr. Krisss is one of the most caretul, considerate and obliging, representatives the district has ever had, While congress was in ses: sion he was at his post of duty all the time. There was nothing that any constituent desired from any of the de- partments that he would not interest himself to obtain for them. There was no measure the party favored but he was ready to vote and work for. There was no legislation for the benefit of the people that he did not conscientiously and earnestly support. Such a repre. sentative every Democrat and eyery other good citizen should take a pride in supporting, and we predict for him a vote in this county that will make him feel that his worth as a representative is appreciated, and his acts, while in congress, are fully and warmly en- doraed. Exactly So. When Governor McKINLEY defined Protection as being “a wall between the American laborer and pauper la bor,” he had evidently been consider- ing the condition of affairs at Home: stead. There it is a wall—a high, strong, lightening-topped, wall—that shuts American labor from the protected works within and protects the “pauper labor” that Carxeeie & Co. have hired at reduced wages to take the place of their former American work- men. Great is McKinnyism! Great is the protection it offers to the “pau- per labor” that will accept the rates of wages “protected” nabobs, see pro- per to pay! -—Mr. W. F. Smita, the Democra- tic nominee for Prothonotary, is now making one of the most successful canvasses of the county ‘that has ever been made. Wherever he goes he meets hosts § of friends and when he leaves a community he has more friends to sweil his majority then he had when entering it. The reason is, that when people be- come acquainted with him, they feel that he will make a safe, polite and competent, official ; that he is just the kind of a man and citizen that is want- ed in the important place for which he is an aspirant, aud that the best thing they can do for the county and the courtis to elect him by an overwhelming majority. ——TFine job work of ever discription at the Warcaman Office. ’ How They Protect Welshmen at the Expense of American Consumers. { While the Republican advocates of protection talk of protecting American | industries, their party goes on legisla- | ting in the interast of a few special fav- | orites, without asking whether it is in the interest of our own people or not. : Through its tin-tariff legislation it sim- | ply robbed the consumers of this coun- | try, during the year 1891, to the extent of $4,629,750 for the sole benefit of Welsh manufacturers, and of $10,000,- 000 more for the benefit of a few Amer- ican experimental tin plate plants. When the McKINLEY bill was pend- ing in Congress and it became known that the measure would be enacted in- to law, American importers of tin- plate began to purchase in Wales, in increased quantities 1n order to avoid the additional tariff tax. Welsh man- ufacturers took advantage of the de- mand and put the prices up, so that on the increased price of tin imported, from the date the demand began until the MoKinLey bill went into effect, it amounted to $4,629,750. Egery cent of this went into the pockets of Welsh manufacturers. It was a snuggsum in addition to former profits. The measure that accomplished this end, “protected” no one in America, for their was no such industry ito pro- tect. It simply robbed the American consumer, of this money for the benefit of Welsh manufacturers, and added $10,000,000 as duty, which the people, who purchased this tin, paid, and which went into the treasury of the general government along with the other tariff taxes imposed. I: may not have been intended to have worked this way, but all the same it did so, and while our people have paid already $14,000,000 of dol- lars for the special protection of Amer- ican tin-plate factories, all that we have in this country eannot make enough in a year to supply the demand for a single weeks and the few that are run- ning are ownad by Welsh capital, operated ‘by Welsh workmen, use Welsh plate; coat it with imported tia. and then call it the product of an “American industry.” We first tax our people to benefit the Welsh manufacturers, in Wales. We continue that tax for the benefit of Welsh workmen, who emigrate to take advantage of the benefits Republican tariff laws secures them. A Scurvy Trick that will Fool but Few. The condition of the Republican par- ty is truly deplorable. Its hopelessness and helplessness drivesit to that extent that all honorable means to create a sentiment in its favor have been aban- doned, and “boodle” and trickery alone are now relied upon for whatever suc- cess its party leaders hope for. When boodle and bribery fails, trickery, no matter how palpable and disreputable, is resorted to in the hope of stemming the current of public opinion that is go strongly running against it. Its latest efforts is one of the scurviest that any party has everresorted to. Itisto hire Republicans to attend meetings, where they are not known, and after the speeches are over get up and announce that they have always been Democrats, but that they have got their eyes opened politically and will hereafter vote the Republican ticket. These peo- ple, under assumed names, are then pub. lished as converts and paraded before the public as evidence that men are flocking to the Republican standard, in order to induce disgusted and discour- aged members of that party to come back to its ranks. lisa cheaptrick ; a disreputable trick; a scurvey attempt to fool the public ; but since it has been uncovered and ex posed in New York, it only shows the hopelessness of the cause and the help lessness of a party that is required to resort to such means, to secure it a shadow of hope. ‘When you see in a Republican paper an account of recent conversions to Re- publican faith, you will understand how it is, who they are, and what they amount to. ——He would certainly be a sweet scented Democrat whe would vote for M. S. Quay for United States senator, and yet, that is exactly what the in- dividual who votes for either HaMir- Tox or DALE doer. A vote for either of these candidates is a vote direct for QUAY. Blarneying That Doesn't Blarney. From the Philadeiphia Record. The manufacture of blarney is an Irish art, and Irishmen fully under- stand the value of it. As a political argument it is thrown away upon them. They are not to be captured by a species of blandishment the insincer- ity of which they know better than any one can tell them. In diverting cam- paign oratory from the tariff, the Force bill aud wildcat banking to Irish-Americanism Mr. Blaine has given a humorous turn to political dis- cussion without helping the Republi- can candidates. Perhaps he did not intend to help them. It is an insult to the Irish under- standing to ask Irishmen to vote one way or the other way onthe tariff question because Englishmen think one way or the other upon that ques- tion. Are [rishmen expected to vote upon an issue affecting this conntry so that they may help themselves and help us to good government, or so that they may please or displease the peo- ple in some other country? Who is Responsible ? From the Williamsport Sun. Governor Campbell has riddled to rags the Republican pretension to the sole championship of “honest money.” “They have made all the money there has been for thirty years,” he said,” and if any of it is dishonest it is theirs.” Yes, the 60-ceat silver dollars piled in huge useless heaps in the treasury are Republican money. The treasury notes now issuing at the rate ot over $50,000,000 a year, ex- pressly redeemable under the law in these same 60-cent silver dollars, are Republican money. This cheap currency, which is driy- ing gold out of the country and threat- ening the nation with a silver basis, is Republican money. There never was a Democratic dol- lar said Governor Campbell, that was not worth 100 cents. And there never will be one of any other sort. A Great Catch. From an Unknown Exchange. At last the Republicans have a con- vert to offset Gresham and MacYeagh. He is none other than “Mike MeDon- ald, the notorious boss and sport “of Chicago, who is now out on bail on the charge of offering a bribe to a Chicago Justice. It is a great cateh; for “Mike” is the king bee of Western, gamblers, owns dozene of saloons and sporting-houses and is easily a mil- lionaire. With the “Dave” Martins in the East and the “Mike” McDon- alds in the West putting in their best licks for Harrison, what matters it if such fellows as Walter Q. Gresham, Wayne MacVeagh, Charles W. Bartol, William F. Thorne, Jacob D. Cox and scores of men of like calibre refuse to longer support him ? Getting Their Eyes Opened. From the Atchison (Kan.) Patriot The farmers are fast getting their eyes opened to the fraudulent character of the protective tariff, so far as they are concerned. Republican farmers have year after year voted for protective tar- iffs, taking the promise, of the speakers or organs, that it was for their benefit as being true. But year after year they find that the products of their industry have been growing lower in price, and that their farms were depreciating in value. Meantime they noticed that the protected manufacturer was accum- ulating vast sums of money through the tariff that engendered trusts and moanop- olies, and the farmer began to look into the tariff question. He has been inves- tigating it and he will give his verdict on the 8th of November. A few of the Evils. From the Mifflinburg Times. Facts are stubborn things. The Me- Kinley tariff has raised no man’s wages. 1t has increased every man’s expenses. It continues to increase the cost of liv- ing. It robs the people and gives their money to certain favored manufacturers and the manufacturers have paid and are willing to pay millions cf dollars to keep up the policy of fraud and extor- tion the bill represents. How foolish is that voter who votes for a centinu- ance of this Tariff tax ! How To Do It Right. Irom the Pottsville Chronicle. The simplest rule for voting the blanket ballot on the 8th of November is for each voter to look for the word Democrat and wherever that word oc- curs put a cross in the little space fol- lowing it. Itis theonly way to put down trusts and monopolies, to ease the burden of taxation and to assure the running of the country for the peo- ple and not for the demagogues. S—————————— The Climate Alone Was American. From the Lancaster Intelligencer A banner of “American tin” swung over Major McKinley when he made his great tariff speech at Philadelphia. It seers that this article was meade at Norristown out of imported plates dip- ped in imported tin by imported work- men, The climate surrounding the works was American. Spawls from the Keystone, —Allentown makes tramps break stones for the street. —Belva Lockwood isat Homestead coaxing peace to appear. —The body of Theophilus Lewis was found in a lime kiln at Strassburg. —The Board of Pardons held a special meet ing in Harrisburg Monday. —Erie thinks of building a hospital] exclu- sively for diphtheria patients. : —Scarcity of water has closed Altoona laun« dries, and dirty linen is the rule. —The meeting of the Board of Pardons has been postponed until next week. ~—For telling fortunes in Reading, ‘““‘Ahmet, the Gypsy King,” repines in prison. —Frank M. Gormley and E. Payson Quiek of Philadelphia, are now notaries public. —Struck by an express train at Northumber- land, John Dawson lies near death’s door. —Governor Pattison has gone to Indiana to attend the Farmer's Institute in that county. —Thirty men were indicted at Pittsburg for stealing parts of the Monongahala River bed. —Falling before an approaching train at Win- ton, Mrs. Thomas Kane was ground to death. —Snow fell Monday for several minutes at Wilkesbarre, the first flakes there this season. —John 8. Hoffman hanged himself in Read- ing jail, but was cut down in time to save his life. —Schuylkill County’s €¢'ection booths will be minus guard rails, but ropes will be substitu- ted. —Moonshiners near Somerset fired their il. licit distillery and fled at the approach of offi- cers. —The Pennsylvania State Farmers’ Alliance and Industrial Union is in session at Williams- port. —A Republican mass meeting in Harrisburg was declared off on accourt of Mrs. Harrison's death, —A Coroner’s jury decided that aged Maria Dell, of McKeesport, was strangled and sand * bagged. —Pittsburg school directors refuse to per. mit an election booth to be erected in ona school house. —With a knife in his boot and a pistol in his pocket, C. A. Albert was jailed in Reading for illegal car-riding. —While driving to Harrisburg, Samuel Kauffman, a New Cumberland farmer, dropped dead in his wagon. —To escape arrest Mary Shellhorn, with a baby in her arms, leaped from a second story window in Pittsburg. —Chairman H. C. Frick offered to give his fair grounds at Mt. Pleasant to the public school of that place. —The new gang of outlaws at Uniontown tried to murder Tom Brown as he marched in the Columbus parade. —The Reformed Synod will meet at St. John’s Church, Lebanon, on the third Wed nesday of Octocer, 1893. —Tha Eastern Synod of the Reformed Church decided Monday to erect a theologica t seminary at Lancaster. —Ground was broken at Lofty, near Hazle- ton, by the Silver Brook Coal Company to find supposed coal deposits. i —A bullet intended evidently for a bird struck Mrs. Sarah Conrad, of Williamsport, in= flicting a serious wound. —In place of a cane rush Lehigh University students have what they call a “spree,” which is a series of athletic contests. —Four young men charged with stealing goods from Grocer Laub’s store, at Lowry's. now find lodging at the Easton jail. —The Board of Adjustment of the Brother- hood of Firemen, in session at Pittsburg, deny that wage changes are béing debated. —The Pittsburg cable car gripmen who ran down several Republican paraders were exon- erated from blame by the coroner's jury. —Stricken with heart disease, Captain J. Ne Vandover, of Eighth and Walnnt streets, Phil- adelphia, fell dead Monday at Harrisburg. ~The hero of 13 accidents, in which various bones were snapped, Enoch J. Jones, an aged Wilkesbarre miner, met death by a gas explo- sion. —One hundred and sixty delegates elected officers Monday at Schuylkill County's conven _ tion of Christian Endeavor societies at Shenan. doah. —Requisition papers were issued at Harris burg for Frank Walker, charged with larceny at Middletown. Walker is in jail at Hagers- town, Md, —A. D. Smith was appointed general super- intendent of the Cornwall and Lebanon Rail road, in place ‘of Ned Irish, who retires from ill health. : —With a deep gash cutin her head Mrs. Marie Dill was found unconscious in the srozd at McKeesport. She died soon afterward. She was murdered. —E. W. Ash, formerly trainmaster for the Cornwall and Lebanon Railroad, at Lebanon, has resigned to accept a position with the Reading Railroad. —Work on Shenandoah’s water works was interrupted Monday by an injunction, on the ground that the town’s financial condition wasn't satisfactory. —Rev. J. C. Heckman, Reading, asked the Presbyterian Synod to take the churches of that city from the control of the Lehigh Pres bytery, but was refused. —Four hundred men in Reading bought tickets to a prize fight that did not material- ize, and threaten vengeance because their money was not returned. —The opening session of the Decennial meeting of the Woman's Home Mission Syn- odical Society of Pennsylvania was held in Harrisburg Tuesday night. —Two Pennsylvania charters issued Mon- day: The Tionesta Water Supply Company, Forest County, capital $5000; York Mutual Building and Loan Association, capital $375,000. —An appeal has been filed in Dauphin Coun- ty Court by the receiver of the American Life Insurance Company, claiming that the recent tax settlement by State accountants was ille gal. —Saturday morning Mrs. Thomas Clulin, of Mt. Pleasant, Westmoreland county, was found dead in bed. She had retired on the evening previous in her usual health. Saturday morn- ing when she failed to appear the famiiy went to her room and found her cold in death. She was aged about 46 years. —A terrific accident occurred at Saltsburg, Westmoreland county, Monday, just before poon: Mr. Wilson one of the proprietors of the handle factory in that place, by some means had his right arm caught in a belt an so badly mangled and torn that it has to be amputated above the elbow. —————