BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. --The man who minds his own busi- ness always finds it a paying venture. —Strange as it may seem it is only by constant strikes that the blacksmith prospers. —1It is not half so much “what will Congress do ?”’ as it is what won’t Con- gress do ? — The Emperor of Germany seems to have about as much as he can do in | minding his Biz. — With every additional decision in favor of the Reading combine the black diamond market takes a jump. —Mayor GOURLEY is making it hot for houses of ill fame in the Smoky city. | Some oneis bound to get burnt. ——Tt is generally supposed that when all eyes are turned on a young man he is getting along well. This rule does not apply to bank clerks. —Nearly every newspaper in the country has had something mean to say of the late JAY Gourp. Beautiful evi- dence of the fact that a dead man can’t shoot. —-Congress is in session. From now until March 4th Republican members will work for their country instead of for the spoils which have so long been their incentive. —The French cabinet seems about as ‘mysterious as that of the average spir- itualist, which fact probably accounts for the fear and trembling with which French politicians enter it. —In the death of JAY GouLD the country bas lost a man whose name has been a household word, yet in a sence which no lover of mankind will care to ape. His first thought was self. After that he had none. —Two Southern medical students fought a duel on Sansom street, in Phil- adelphia, on Monday. Contrary to the usual termination of such “affairs hon- orable’’ blood was drawn from the leg of one of the duelists. —ZRepublican papers are beginning to cast about for leaders for their headless party. It is a dead case of the tail wag" ging the dog now and unless something is done pretty scon the caudal appen- dage of the G. O. P. will be worn out before a head is found. —Supt. PorTER has recommended that the census department be made a permanent bureau. And we are sure it would have plenty of work keeping track ofthe immigrants who are flock- ing hither, but some other man than Mr. PorTER will run it. —The man who introduced English sparrows into this country died at Pat- terson, New Jersey, last week. Poor misguided mortal. Thinking that he was doing his country inestimable good he established a pest which has brought him condemnation from every quarter. ~The original Uncle Tom’s cabin, at Chopin Station, La., has been torn down to be placed on exhibition at the ‘World’s Fair. There are a great many log cabins which were up on poles before the election which might prove interest- ing reminiscences of a day that is gone to Republican visitors to the big show, —Massachusetts is being made the butt ot a joke which reflects rather un- favorably on the proverbial intelligence of the ‘‘Yank.” The late election re- turns show that a larger percentage of voters was disfranchised in the Bay state because of inability to make out their ballots than in any other state in the Union, but those who are laughing at this supposed evidence of New Eng- land illiteracy forget that in Massachu- setts a man is required to be able to read and write before he can exercise the franchise. —The success which women are meet- ing with in their various vocations, in competion with men, will soon begin to have its effect in the number of mar- riage ceremonies performed. In tele- graphy, stenography, reportorial, ar- chitectural, sales and in fact rearly every position occupied by man, other than those requiring manual strength, woman has proved herself his equal and in many instances his superior. Their sagacity, conscientious application and natural affability are having their effect every-where and men will be forced to marry ere long or do something to check the progressive American women. —If Mayor GourLEY, cf Pittsburg, thought he was doing a wise stroke when he raided the houses of ill-repute in the Smoky city he must certainly be classed among the most short sighted | individuals who have ever presided over & municipal government. As it was the police of that city had every house under their surveillance and could look after them. Now it must inevitably te different. Such places will be kept up no matter what the precaution against them and it is better, by tar, tbat it be under the eyes of the law than one of those ‘on the quiet” houses where so many lives are wrecked. cratic h » Keystone, Fh pee] Salts Sly. itself Arkins at Shenaa > —Burglars looted the jewelry store of Isaac | { 1 | | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 27. BELLEFONTE, PA., DEC. 9, 1892. NO. 48. The Evil Still Lives. | Now that the great newspapers and preachers of the country have waken. ‘ed upto the wickedness, and wrongs | of the means used, and methods resort Led to by Jay GouLp, to amass wealth, lit is to be hoped that the warfare against these evils will be carried on, whether those who resort to them be i living or dead. Itis only since death removed all fear of the Wall streets wizzard’s power, that either the press or I the pulpit found courage to denounce the methods he used or the ends he aimed at. Some way or other it seems to us that these teachers of the people, and protectors of public morals, have been a long time in discovering the great wrongs they see so plainly now, since he who committed them can neither reply totheir denunciations nor make reparation for injuries he inflict’ ed. While Jay Gourp lived none of. them had the courage to say aught against him, but Jay GouLp dead, si- lent and powerless, is the target for abuse unstinted and denunciations un- ending. ; It is right and proper that the les- sons, a life that had the aims his had should be to the public, should be im- pressed in the most forcible way upon that public mind, but how much betters how much more honest, and how much more corageous, would it have been in both press and preacher, had they shown the wrongs Jay GouLp was guil- ty of while he lived and was commit- ting them. As was Jay Gourp,—grasping, avaricious, unscupulous, designing,—so are tens of thousands of others to-day, who are just as greedy of great wealth, Seeking Consolation. After all it is hardly worth the pow- der the Republicans are expending in their effort to get up a war between President CLEVELAND and Tammany. Even should such a stale of affairs as they are predicting occur, how would they, as a party be benefited? The late election proves that New York is not necessary to Democratic success in the future. The growing west is the country that has usurped the position of the Empire state in that respect. New York Democrats may quarrel and contend as much as they please here- after. It will disturb no ones nerves, for fear of the effect on the general political results. This is a situation of affairs that the Republicans have possibly ov- er looked. Another fact they seem to fail to comprehend, is, that the more trouble and difterences there are between New York Democrats, the greater the majority the party always has in that state. It is a queer condition of affairs that secures better results, for the party, where there is war among its followers, than whea peace and harmony exist. But such isthe factin New York. From time immemorial the Democrats have always had greater success when their campaign began with a contest among themselves. Going back but a few years furnishes abundant proof of this. In 1884 Tammany did all it could tq prevent the nomination of Mr. CLEVE- LAND, and for some time after he was placed upon the ticket refused to give bim the endorsement, that as the par- ty's candidate, he was entitled too. It turned in for him later and he carried and striving to obtain it in the same dishonest way, as did he. Every ex- | change mart in the great cities is full of these financial highwaymen. Wall street teems with them ; the vicinity of Chest- nut and Third street is peopled by them ; every town of any size over the entire country has them by scores, and every community is cursed with ' them. They are Joy GouLbs in me- thods, Jay GourLps in efforts, Jay GouLps in purposes and Joy GouLps in avariciousness. It is to these living Joy GouLps that the great moral efforts of these late day retormers should be turned. The dead can neither be reformed nor bettered. The living may be. The masoleum that holds the shriveled and inanimate form of Jay GouLp holds that and | that only. The aims that actuated: him ; the ways he followed ; the pur- poses he pursued ; the greed that gave birth to all the ambition that burned within him, are still left to create oth. er GomLps and curse the life that is cont oled by them. It is against the efforts for great wealth and the purposes to secure it, by any means, within human power that do not lead direct to the peniten- tiary, that the teachings of the press and pulpit should be directed ; against the lax ideas we have of violated mor- als in our haste to get rich; the syc- ophancy we show to the possessors ot large wealth ; the power that money is allowed to wield, and the spirit of spec- ulation and stock gambling that ofler opportunities of acquiring money with- out furnishing an equivalent, that should be the texts of the sermons, that now have as their subject the lifeless clay of the dead railway mag- nate and millioniare. It is the living, growing, evils of the day that should be held up to the exe- cration of the public. The dead can do no harm, and hence the folly of de- nouncing that which the grave has claimed. Jay GouLDp is past wrong to any one. It isthe living Jay GouLps; the methods of those, who, while less successful are as full of evil, and viciousness, and greed, as was he, that veeds the attention of both press and pulpit. Have they the courage to attack fin- ancial pirates who are not chilled by the hand of death ? ——Congress met on Monday last and the first thing it found necessary to do, was to present a bill authorizing a government loan of $75,000.000 to make good the treasury deficit made by the Republican party’s profligacy during the past four years. Itis said to be “blessed to give,” but if the giving power of the outgoing administration had been) considerably curtailed, it would have been a blessed thing for the country, the state. In 1888 the party was unanimous for his re-nomination and united in his support and the result of the election showed his defeat. At the same time Gov. HiLL was made the nominee of the party for governor, af- ter a bitter contest and during the cam- paign failed to receive the earnest sup- port of a large faction of the party workers and yet he was elected by a large majority. Two years later Gov. : FLowkr succeeded in getting the nomi- nation over the protests of many of the most influential Democrats of the state, and made his contest with hun- dreds of them lukewarm towards him, and yet his majority run away up to 50.000. This year, everybody remem- bers how Tammany started in at Chi- cago against Mr. CLEVELAND and what the result of the contest there and at home was. With these reminders within easy reach of any one who wants to know just what effect a fight, among New York Democrats, produces, we would imagine that the Republicans would build their hopes on something that panned out better for them, thau a Democratic war in the Empire State. About any such trouble the Democrats of the country are not the least con- cerned. If however, it isany gratification to disconsolate and discouraged Republi- cans to believe that there 1s going to be hair-pulling and tommy-hawking and all kinds of sanguinary conflicts, be- tween the working Democrats of New York and the President, whom they aided so greatly in securing the victory that the entire country rejoices over, let them draw on their imaginations to the fullest extent, and be as happy over their belief as possible. The country will lose nothing by it. The Democ- racy have no care or concern for it. Mr. CrLeveranp or Tammany knows or cares nothing about it ; and if there is any consolation, at all, to Republi caes, in rehashing such stuff and hop- ing for such results, they are entirely weicome to ali they can get out of it. ———— President HARRISON, in his nine column message to Congress, laments that his Force bill suggestions could not be submitted to a non-partisan commission, for approval or rejection. If Mr. President Harrison would but think for a moment, he would remem- ber that no later than the 8th of No- vember last, an entirely non-partican commission passed upon the merits of his suggestions, on this question, and the majority against them was some- where in the neighborhood of six hun- dred thousand. ~——TFine job work of ever discription at the WarcamaN Office. aa A. dss tse Not Profitable for Republicans. It is possible that the Republican party may succeed in securing the Uaited States senators from Kansas, Montana and Idaho, through the ques- tionable methods they are adopting in those States. But should they do so, how much better would they be off ? These three senators will give that party a probable majority of one in the United States Senate, and place up- on its shoulders the responsibility of endorsing or defeating such legislation as the Democrats stand pledged to give the people. Can the Republican party, without power to enact or enforce a single measure, afford to occupy a position that makes it responsible for the fail- ure of any expected or promised legis- lation, and puts it in the position of scape-goat for any cowardice or treachery there may be in the Demo- cratic party ? We know there are Democrats scat. tered all over the country, who would rejoice could the responsibility of gov- ernmental affairs, be divided between the two parties in this way, during the next four years. To them it would seem an easier task to go before the people and place the responsibility, ot any failure there may be in fulfilling public expectations, upon the opposi- tion of a Repnblican Senate, than to stand boldly upon Democratic grounds and defend a Democratic policy until time and experience proves it a suc. cess or failure. This, however, is the hope only of those who have doubts of their own ability to fulfill their pro mises ; a cowards way of evading res ponsibilities he is afraid to meet. With the masses of the Democracy it 18 otherwise. They want the coun- try to have just what it was promised. They have no fear of results, or doubts as to the consequences. They have faith that a Democratic policy will re- store prosperity and that Democratic economy will bring relief to the people. They are willing to meet the respon’ sibility success brings, and for these rea- soos hope that Republican trickery and rascality will not eucceed in prevent. ing their having the full controll of every department of the general gov- ernment, and the power to enforce a Democratic policy to the fullest ex. tect. ———————— The Message. We would like to give the President's message, which was read in Congress on Tuesday last, not because of any particular interest it has for the pub- lic, but as a matter of record, if its un- usual length—occupying over nine col- umns solid nonpareil type— did not prevent. When we say that is a petu- lant lamentation over the repudiation of Republican ideas, with the usual ref. erences to department reports, our readers can have an opinion of what they miss by our failure to give it space. As a public document it will reflect no credit on Mr. HARRISON as a man or a President. It is an unmanly, whining, Lalf threatening acceptance of the pec- ple’s will, and all over and all through its dreary dryness the petulant disap- pointment of the defeated candidate is observable. It showsthat heis nota big enough man to accept defeat in a manly way, and that is about all there is in it when boiled down. Sensible Mr. Harrity. It is reported, on what seems to be good authority, that Mr. HarriTY has announced his determination not to accept any position under the new ad- ministration, that might be tendered, or bis friends demand for, him. In his case this is a sensible conclusion. His magnificent management of the late campaign has given him a reputation and standing, with the Democracy of the country, that no position Mr. CLEVE: LAND has at his disposal, could add a particle to in the way of honor or re- spect. The positions he holls at home, and which would have to be given up were he to enter the government ser- vice, are worth double the amount in | salaries that any cabinet position pays. | . | So that under the circumstances, Mr. Harriry's determination, to stick to what he has, is neither to be wondered at nor questioned. The fact however that heis big enough to refuse a posi- tion, that nine tenths ot the biggest men of the country are aching to have | placed at their disposal, shows the size of the man and gives additional ; reason for Pennsylvania Democrats be- ing proud of him, Won't Steal It This Time. From the Philadelphia Times. It’s hardly worth the trouble and | crookedness exhibited by defeated part- | isans in a number of the new Western | States to steal United States Senators by ' , manipulating the returns of legislators, It won’tiwin, and political theives would | —There are 8500 enlisted men in the Penr- sylvania National Guard.’ i —General William Lilly, Congressman-at- large elect, is rapidly recovering. i i —Peter Miller, aged 12, was kicked to death { by a mule at Bethlehem Tuesday. | —The remains of ex-Judge Reilly were tak. | en to Pottsville Friday and interred. | | —Temperance Orator Francis ur phy will ' try to rec’aim Pittsburg’s fallen woman. | —Injuries received by being struck by a train in Chester killed James Hamilton. —A derrick in a colliery at Mahaney City fell upon Harry Lattimore, crushing him. —Half the cases that will be tried in the ehigh Court in January will be for divorce. —Albert Utranza, a ‘Reading Railroad em- i | | do well to make a virtue of necessity i ploye, was killed on the tracks at Cressona. and stop the game. The new Senate will be Democratic, theft or no theft inthe new Western States. There will be not less than 42 | straight Democrats in the body if they | shall lose all that is visibly in danger, and every Senator of the People’s faith, with the possible exception of Stewart of Nevada, will vote with the Demo- crats on every vital issue. It’s quite probable that the Democrats will have 44 straight outs in the Senate, which with the Vice President, would give them a majority against the field ; but they will have a reserve of not less than 3 votes among the Populist Sena- tors, and an additional reserve of sever- dl among those classed as Republicans, The Republican leaders don’t specially want the Senate, and there are a few Senators classed as Republicans who won’t stand any semblance of crooked- ness in the admission of new Senators. Theft of Senatorships won’t pay this season. The men who are trying to steal seats in the Senate are so hedged about by unsympathetic Republicans and Populists that they can’t win. The* Senate will, therefore, be Democratic on all party issues, and on the chief issues of tariff reform and Force Bill legisla- tion it will be largely Democratic. Don’t try to steal the Senate—it can’t be done this time. Pruning the Pension Roll From the Chenango Union. Worthy veterans need have no fear that such scrutiny will work against them, for no one would take from or abridge the bounty due to their patriot- ism and valor. On the contrary the movement will be to their advantage, and, as Mr. Cleveland has truly said, tend to “make the pension list a roll of It is doubtless true that a care- ful examination will show that the honor.” names of many thousands are on the list who are not entitled to any pension whatever, but have peen kept there for unworthy purposes or through neglect, Such revision would doubtless decrease the pension appropriation. The Pension Fraud. = From the Toledo Bee. Now the nsion business has to a large extent fallen into the hands of the lobbyist and the speculator. The raid upon the Treasury by these harpies has been a shameless one under the hypo- critical pretext of patriotism. The pen- runing. sion list demands vigorous Men sound in body and limbs, deserters, sneaks and others who are bleeding the Treasury like leeches and receiving pen- sions to which they are not entitled should be cut off and none but the de- serving veteran retained. A Machine that Worked Well. From the New York Sun. The most striking incident that has been afforded in this State of the power of the machine in politics is the fact that of Mr. Edward under the leadership Murphy, Jr., the Democratic organiza- tion carried New York for the Hon. Grover Cleveland hy nearly fifty thous- and majority, notwithstanding the cir- cumstance that the Hon. Grover Cleve- land was not the first choice of the New Yerk Democracy for President. Entirely Credible. From tha Louisville Courier-Journal. ‘Why should any one doubt the stories of the apparently fabulous number of ducks and snipes shot by Mr. Cleveland? Hasn’t he broken all sorts of records, and is anything which he is reported to have done with the bullet more improb- able than was what he is known to have done with the ballot ? The Rothschilds Trust. From the New York Herald. The usual purpose of trust is to raise prices by restricting production, but the basic idea of Rothschilds’ proposed in- ternational silver trust was to keep up values by creating an artificial demand. Like the bootstrap elevator it looks easy, but it won’t work. What Cleveland Should Do. From the New York Recorder. Mr. Cleveland is coming back to us from Hog Island. The political hogs, it is to be hoped, will give him a rest. He should engage the services of a coup- le of good bull dogs. Latest Bulletin. From the Washington Post. Now that George Ticknor Curtis's flop been thoroughly poulticed it is thought he will be able to pull through has the four years more of Grover. An Opportunity Going to Seed. From the Lebanon Report. How Mr. Carnegie might relieve the reports of distress from Homestead by establishing another library in Scotland! Calamity Howling as a Mask, From the Allentown City Item. Itis not the fate of the country but the loss of the offices that is worrying the Republicans, —While jumping upon a Lehigh Valley freight train, at Allentown, John Conlon lost a leg. f —With eight pairs of trousers in his posses- sion Michael Halleran was arrested in Phoenix- ville. —Dr. J. B. Bissells, of Mahanoy City, wa seriously injured in a runaway accident Tues! day. —The Bessemer rail mill of the Bethlehem Iron Company has shut down for lack of or- ders. —At Pottsville, George Heister a non-union puddler, was badly beaten by supposed union men. —By a powder explosion in the Morse col- liery Jefferson Keating was dangerously burned. —For robbing the Frankford church, Meade Fulton, of Carlisle, was sent to prison for three years. —Five men were scalded with boiling beer at C. Bauerlein’s brewery, Millvale. All will recover. —Special district conference of the Ameri- can Baptist Missionary Upion is in session at Pittsburg. —The store of J. J. Nutt, at Lykens, Schuyl- kill county, was robbed of $400 worth of ‘gocds on Monday night. —James W. Lynn, an Easton lawyer, has te- come insane, and was Wednesday taken to the Norristown Asylum. —Pennsylvania manufactured 1,232,890,8¢9 cigars last fiscal year, nearly 100,000,000 in ex- cess of New York. —While shoveling coal in a docket at Hazel- ton mines, Robert Houser was drawn into the chute and smothered. —The Oliver Iron and steel Works, at Pitts~ burg, employing 1000 hands, closed Saturday owing to over-production. —The body of an aged and well-dressed min was found in an old barn pear Lewisburg, bé- longing to John A. Gundy. —A committee of citizens in Reading fé= commended the new system of house sewag, which will cost $675,000. —A committee of citizens of Reading hawe recommended a system of house sewage tha will cost the city $365,000. —Marriage must be a failure in Lehigh coun’ ty. About half the cases on the trial list for J&m uary term are for divorce. —Workmen who refuse to sign the scale og the Pottstown iron company’s works are r®¢ allowed to enter the mills. —In attempting to-board a moving train g4 Penn Haven, Patrick Garney fell under the wheels and was decapitated. —William Wallace, a brakeman, slipped om the ice at Oneida, and a train passed over his body. He died Tuesday. —With a rope twisted about his body Am~ thony Karnickl was hurled down a Mt. Car< mel coal chute and killed: —At the age of 99 years, Mrs. Sarah Kiple, of Seranton, and aunt of Artist E.A. Abbey, en~ joys a good pipe and tobacco. —An unknown man, about 65 years old, was killed on that Jersey Central Railroad near Easton Wednesday morning. —The funeral of George W. Hensel, father of Attorney General Hensel, was held at Quarry ville, Lancaster County, Saturday . —A bridge over the Schulkill at Birdsbore will be built by the Wilmington and Northern Railroad, one of the Reading's allies. —Petro Buccieri, the Reading Italian whe stabbed Sister Hildabertha to death, at Read- ing has been refused a new trial. —After three weeks of dreadful sufferings Annie Biliard, of Bethlehem, whose clothes ere burned off her, died on Monday. —Lancaster County Court refused a new érial to Samuel and Joseph Lewis, convicted of tor- turing Larry Reynolds to extract money. —While trying to quell a fight in the Ness chain works at York, Eben H. Saylor had his head fractured by one of the belligerents. —Benjamin Kneebler, charged with robbing Hoffman & Daval's office in Danville of $420 last January, was caught Friday in Potts. ville. —Secretary Cyrus T. Fox, of the State Hor- ticultural Association, is collecting fruit and vegetable data from all parts of Pen nsyl= vania. —Leyman Ulman, the leadin merchant of Titusville, committed suicide Tuesday morn- ing by shooting himself throngh the right temple. —Major John D. Worman, «cf the Adjutant General's Department, is an applicant for the position of Naval Officer at the port of Phila delphia. —The 13-year-old son of Rev. I. W. Cranmer of Reading, started West to kill Indians. He got as far as Shamokin and hunger drove him back home. —A baby boy born to Mrs. William Reitz, Washington township, Northumberland coun- ty, has been christened Clement Grover Cleveland Reitz. —Orders were issued from the Adjutant General's office Tuesday granting an honor- able discharge to Captain George D. Wiegner of Company B. Third Regiment —Resolutions were adopted by the Trade and Labor Council of Reading demanding that the Electric Railway Company pave with as- phalt blocks all the streets it occupies. —The first divorce case tried in open Court in Lehigh County in 10 years came to an end Wednes "ay, when a jury decided that Emma T. Bowman should be separated from her hus- band, Jacob H, Bowman ,