Demoraiic atone 8Y P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. __On the 17th Mr. QUAY’S - represen- tatives, at Harrisburg, will meet to do his bidding. : — Forsyth, Missouri, is fifty years vld and never has had a church. What a peaceable community it must be out there. No choir fights, festivals or starving preacbers. —The men of these United States chewed eighty-five tons of tobacco last year. The woman will hold up their hands in holy horror— at least till the chewin’ gum statistics come in. —Hexry Canor Longe will succeed Senator DAwEs as United States Senator from Massachusetts. Thank the Lord, the wrong party will be in power to en- dorse his infamous Force measure. —Chicago wants a gigantic pavilion elephant and it is likely to get it. We are of the opinion that again the Windy city gets through with the Fairshe will have had all of the pachyderm kind she cares to handle. ' —The five WALLIS boys, of Princeton Ky, who played highwaymen, the other night, and ‘held up” a friend— “just te see him run’’--found him quite a handful. They were all carved to mince meat and are hardly expected to recover. —Philadelphia Democrats and their friends did honor to the memory of “Old Hickory”? on Tuesday night at their Jackson day dinner. Though it is reasonable to suppose that ‘old rye” came in for his share of the glory ere the night waned. — With the prospect of paying $150, 000,000 out for pensions during this year it behooves tax payers in general, to make special supplication to the God of War. Ignominious as it may seem ’tis better for us to turn tail than end is bankruptey. —Philadelphians are making a much fuss over the possible advent of electricity for street rail-ways as if the Quaker city had never known what wires are. Her councilmen at least can’t answer, *‘not guilty”, to the charge of acquaintance with them. -—TIt is said that Hon. Jerry SIMPSON, the Kansas congressman, is being con- stantly importuned, by letter writers, to save the country. It is evident that his * correspondents do nct appreciate the sacrifice he is making in behalf of the sheep by not wearing socks this cold weather. —Jack RoBinsoN, the Deleware county Republican leader is evidently effected with a dose of swelled head. Not content with having been a State Senator and Representative in Congress, both at the same time, he now imagines he can knock out QUAY for a seatinthe upper house of Congress. —The present cold snap has revived the hopes of the “is it cold enough for you” fiend, and his invariable saluta- tion meets about the same blue response, on the face of the half frozen pedestrian, as met the fellow who last fall saluted his Republican friends with, “Well, how does it suit you ?”’ —The acquittal of Dr. BRriaes isa practical admission from the Presbyte- rian church that the time for harmo- nious co-operation in the ministry has come. The Church at lurge, would do a far nobler and effective work if de- nominations would forget their creeds in one united effort for the suppression of sin. —Forty years ago Boston had more newspapers than she has to:day. The falling off may be ascribed to the cu- pidity with which the wsthetic Boston- ese devour the contents of things an- tique. They find more pleasure in read- ing of their ancestry, in files ot papers almost a half century old, than they do in following the prize fights, elopements, murders, scandals, toot and base ball news which fill modern journals. —One would have thought that the recent uncovering ot the Panama caral scandal in France and its unpleasant as- soziation that attached to our lower ‘house of Congress would have sufficed for some time to come. But, even be- fore there is time for an investigation it rushes right in and begins agitating a great ship canal from the great lakes to New York. Possibly this old scheme is being resuscitated as a counter irritant. -—The country sympathizes with Hon, JAMES G, BLAINE in this his hour of seeming fatal illness. After having suf- fered more misfortune in his latter days than man is usually called upon to bear he is nearing the end of an illustrious and wonderful career. One of the great. est statesman who has ever honored the Republican party with his support— certainly the most vindictive and crafty politician ; he can die with: the con. sciousness that though the dream’ of his life was never realized, his magnetic in- fluence on the political kListory of. our country will bea’ living ‘monument to his memory while that of presidents, whom he made, will be cherished only as creatures of his political success. er \ AH CNET RD \ » 1 y <> < Ox 2 il &, VN “, A STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. iG b= NOY. 38, BELLEFONTE, PA., JAN. 13, 1893. NO. 2. An Obsequious Body. Never before did the majority in the Pennsylvania Legislature show such ready and implicit obedience to boss power as at the two short meetings it has held of the present session. They appear to have gotten together for no other purpose than to obey Quay’s orders, and when they shall have re- elected bim Senator they will regard themselves as having accomplished the chief object of their legislative duty. In the organization, particularly of the House, the only objective point was the Senatorial interest of the boss. Even the Philadelphia henchmen, who brought the Legislature such a large force of QUAY supporters, bad to yield their claim to the speakership, and be content with a clerkship and a few posters and folders, because il bet- ter suited Quax’s purpose to difterent- ly dispose of the speakership. This abject submission, however, in point of subserviency did not equal the alertness with which the Quay programme was carried out in the seat- ing of Anprews. Legislative prece- dent, the constitution, the law, com- mon sense and common decency were all violated by the manner in which the claimant was hurried into the seat that did not belong to him. The Chiet Clerk, who owes his place to the favor of Quay, was the direct iustru- ment in the perpetration of this out- rage, backed by the supple and subser- vient Boyer who is playing the distin- guished role of chief whipperin and head henchman of his Senatorial mas- ter. And what is there to justify this ag- gregation of compliant tools in, these high-handed proceedings ? Surely they cannot be encouraged to such a course by the fact that the Republican vote in the State last fall; suffered a most decided cut. Nor have they the assurance that if the question were left to a vote of the rank aud file of their party Quay's candidacy would not be condemned. The majority in the Legislature have entered upon a course which not only makes their sapport of a corrupt and unscrupulous boss the more coniemptible, but is also calculat- ed to weaken their party, for which latter circumstance they are entitled to the thanks of the Democrats. Unlooked for Church Dissension. The startling intelligence of a threat. ened disruption in the Catholic church, in America, which bas just come to light through grave charges preferred against Rev. MIcHAEL AvGus” TINE Corrigan, Archbishop of New York, by Most Rev. JomN IRELAND, Archbishop of St. Paul, has aroused more than a passing interest in both press and public. The general impres- sion that in the Catholic church there was 80 perfect a centralization of pow- er that such a difference, as that which has arisen between these two eminent American prelates, seemed a practical impossibility to those who koow the church only by its harmonious exterior, This trouble which has just come to light, arises from the aspirations of both of the principles tor the new American Cardinalate, which itis said will be conferred at the approaching ju- bilee. But the seeds of the antagonism between these two leaders of the Amer- ican hierarchy were germinated nearly five years ago, when Cardinal GiBBoNs and Archbishop IRELAND united against archbishop CorricaN in his representa. tion to the Vatican on the question of ex-communicating the Knights of La. bor. The surprising part of the whole dif- ficulty is the openness with which the one prelate charges the other with treachery and it can end only in the downfall and possible punishmeunt of one of them, Coming, as it does, just on the eve of the great jubilee it au- gure ill for the anticipations of the church in America. RS ——The fact that EnwArRD MurprHY, Jr., received eighty-five of the ninety votes cast, in the Democratic caucus beld at Albany, Tuesday night, for U. Empire state, ——For the first time in her history 4 Democratiz nominee for president a ghare of her vctwe, HARRISON re- geived nin2 and CLEVELAND four, Rainbow Chasing. The House committee of congress, which has been appointed to investi-, gate the condition of the Treasury and ascertain if possible whether there will be funds to meet the necessities of the government until the Fifty-third con- gress will have been organized, has be. gun its work, but from present indica: tions the time will be thrown away. For when the investigation is finished it is altogether probable that neither the committee nor congress will know any more about the condition of the Treasury than is to be learned from Sec- retary Foster’s annual report, made in December. The new method of book-keeping which Las been introduced in the treas- ury department during the present ad- ministration is an enigma to everyone. While it is generally known that mon- ey has been pouring out with a greater flow that it bas been going in, Secreta- ry Foster’s books show that there is a balance in the Treasury. How much no one knows, nor is he disposed to have them find out. Just what Mr. Foster's determination to hide its true condition from the congressional investigation committee finds its incentive in, is a matter of general ia- terest at this time. There is but one conclusion for one to arrive at and it is, that Mr. HaARrRI- sox and his appointees have fully de- termined that the country shall not know of the extravagant expenditure of public funds until after the close of his administration. As to what has become of the $130,000,000 surplus, in thie Treasury when his administration came into power, only the record of such continuous recklessness and prof- ligacy of partisan officials like Raum will remain to tell of the avenue through which it escaped. The expenses of the government are now far in excesss of its revenue and just what is to be done is a ques. tion which the next congress will have to baltle with, The investigation which is now going on will more than likely end in mere investigation and no ene will be the wiser. Republicans are hound to cover up the evidence of their guilt and all the committees in christendom can’t find them out until the advent of Democracy turns them out. ——The first number of the Will: iamsport Zlmes, the new mid-day daily of the Lumber city, has reached our desk and sizes up to our anticipations of it. It is a twenty-eight column four page journal well filled with general and local news and bids fair to ably fill the sphere into which it has been launched. Under the editorial direc- tion of Jorn F. MEGI1NNEss thatdepart- ment will surely be carefully looked af. ter, while NewroN S. BamLey wili en: deavor to make it a leader in its local columns. Though its appzarance can- not be compared with that of its con joined partner, the Philadelphia Z'imes, we trust that when the vexatious prob- lems incident to the inception of such an enterprise have been solved the two will appear hand in hand as syno- nyms of perfection in modern journal- ism. The Philadelphia Times Alma- nac for 1893 is out, and a careful ex- amination of its contents shows it to be a most valuable publication of the kind. Like the paper it represents, it geeks to be correct and furnishes infor- mation that all classes of people need daily. Its matter is condensed. into such space that the busiest man has ample time to find and read what he wants, and taken as a whole, it isa rec ord of facts and events so concise and containing so much that everybody needs, that we do not wonder that the demand for it is past all precedent. —If the papers and statesmen (?) who are jumping into president CLEVELAND because he merely expressed an opinion ‘on the New York senatorial question "knew as much about what they are do S. Senator seems like conclusive evi. | dence that he suits the people of the | ing as Mr. CLEVELAND does they would more than likely keep their mouths shut. —1It is not likely that a controversy | between a banana peel and a strip of icy 4s a state Michizan, cn. Mon lay, gave | pavement would’ result in much satis- faction to tha pedestrian who had ex- perienced the downing properties of each. The Conduct of the Electoral College, In view ot the fact that the electors of the forty-four States of the Union have just completed the work for which they were chosen, on the 8th of last November, it might be interesting to know just how the electoral college is conducted. The constitution demands the selec- tion of President by electors. Each State being entitled to as many electors as it has senators and representatives in congress. These electors in most of the States are chosen by the delegates to State conventions from the several congressional districts of the State which they represent, and the choice is afterwards ratified by the different par- ty conventions, at which time the elec- tors-at-large—one for each senator in congress to which the State may be en- titled—are chosen. The people vote di- rect for the individual electors, thus making it possible to elect all electors of one party or any faction thereof. Congress has fixed the time for the elec. tors, who have been chosen to repre- sent a State, to meet and cast their bal- lot for President. Formerly they did their work on the first Wednesday in December. It was under the old law that the electoral votes were cast for Mr. CLEVELAND, in 1884, but a new law fixing the date on the second Monday in January was passed by the Forty- ninth congress and approved by CLeve- LAND in February, 1887. In abeyance of it they met last Monday in the capi: tole of their respective States and voted by ballot for President. After the bal- lots were taken the electors of each State signed three copies or records of their actions, one of which they sent to the president of the senate, by mail, another they sent him by a special messenger, and the third was given to the United States judge of the district in which the respective electors met. After all this red tapein the States, the two houses of congress meet in joint session, on the second Wednesday in February to publicly count and declare the result of the vote. “No eenator or representative or per- son holding an office of trust or profit under the United States shall be an elector.” This is the way in which we chose our president, the electoral college hav- ing been adopted as a recognition of the eupremacy of the State, rather than of the people. The system has grown old with many other sach institutions of our government and the question of- ten arises as to its present efficacy. It is a much mooted subject. Some writers holding that the electoral col- lege is the only judicious way of con- ducting the election for president, be- cauge it makes the ballot less of a weapon, while others maintain that the present system is not ouly faulty— as evidenced by the fraudulent election of Mr. Haves, in 1876—bat that it is also a practical disfranchisement of thousands of our voters. This latter class of thinkers is being augmented every day by men who are unable to see the reason why the 452,264 Demo- crats, who voted in Pennsylvania last fall, should be disfranchised by a sys- tem which gives them no voice in the election of president, and why the wish of members of either party, in a | State in which their party is in the mi- nority, should be similarly disrespected. The system which has been adopted in Michigan, that is to have each con- gressional district elect its own elector, aims to give a more liberal recogni- tion to the voice of ‘the people, while at the same time it adheres to the doc trine, that the general government is the creature of the State, and not' the representative of the people as a whole. '“— Philadelphia is at last to’ have a rival. A corporation of Friends will coon lay out a Quaker city in Oregon. However, the rivalry will exist in name only, for while the big Pennsylvania town continues in her ways of wicked- ness and governmental corruption her name-sake on the Pacific will be ¢char- acterized by everything thatis right eons. Churches are to displace saloons and statesmen, ward-heelers.. We fan: cy that when they come to vote cut there there won't be twenty five thous and Democrats disfranchised ‘beesause their taxes have not been paid while their more opulent brethren gorge themselves at Jackson day feasts either. This Will Give Some One a Pane. From the New York Times. It is reported in the trade journals that the manufacturers of window glass have completed the plan of a kind of trust, and that they have sought dili- gently to devise a scheme that will not expose them to prosecution under the anti-trust law. It cannot be that they fear any attempt on the part of the present administration to enforce this statute. Probably they expect that Mr. Cleveland's Attorney General will cause their scheme to be inspected. If it provides for a suppression of com- petition in prices they have not evaded the terms of the law, and they may expect such a reduction of the tariff duties on window glass as will inter- fere with the success of their project. It is Altogether Probable, From the Philadelphia Evening Herald. A good deal of fuss is in progress over the pending United States Senato- rial election in New York. Some say that the President-elect went beyond his province in expressing his views on the Senatorial subject. Others say that Ed Murphy is not the right kind of a man for United States Senator. This is a free country and everybody has the privilege of his views, and no- body has a right to suppress anybody’s opinion. But as much as sentiments may vary and conflict on the New York Senatorial question, there is no possi- bility of ignoring or eradicating the fact that the next United States Sena- tor from the State will be a Democrat. A Eong Abused Commission. From the New York World. : Officers of the army do not seem to be eager to act as Indian agents under the law of last July. They are no doubt convinced of the necessity of charging eoldiers with this: duty, but they are unwilling to serve as the sub- ordinates of civil officers who have heretofore shown their fitness for car- ing for the Indians by sending cut agents who robbed and starved the na- tion’s wards. The act should be so amended that the Indian agents will be transferred to the care of the army. Centre County Needs More of it Too. From the Kansas City Star. There is getting to be too mueh fool- ishness about the courts, anyway. Smart lawyers are continually taking advantage of the law to shield open violaters of the law and Judges permit it. A lot of sensible men, who don’t know a mandamus from & nebular hypothesis, should be elected judges, with instructions to laugh at the shy- stering practitioners when they tried to shield “well-known criminals.” A lit- tle more justice and a littleTess law is needed in the courts of the country. EAS SA. “Good Riddance of Bad Rubbish.” From the Western Press, Mercer, Pa. The official footing of the returns in the late election point very clearly to the decadence of the Republican party, In New York, Ohio, Indiana, Wiscon- sin and Kansas Mr. Harrison got fewer votes in 1892 than hedid in 1888. In Wisconsin his 1892 vote fell 6,200 below his 1888 vote and in California for the same years there was a falling off of 7,- 060. Two of a Kind. From the Wilkesbarre Union Leader. Mr. Cleveland is a great puzzle to the Republicans. His courage and common sense make him conspicuous- ly great, but the Republicans deny his greatness, and talk of his luck and his ponderosity and all that eort of thing. If Lincoln was great then Cleveland is great, for their leading characteristics are decidedly similar. A Frank Republican View of It. From the Huntingdon Semi-Weekly News. The Republican House of Represen- tatives made a very bad beginning in not opening the session of Legislature with prayer, and in giving ex-State Chairman Andrews the seat that be- longs to Wilbur P. Higby. In all fair- ness the Republican members should undo the action of the chief clerk and let Mr. Higby 1n. All Wheels Will Fly Ere Long. From the Columbia Herald. The anoouncement of the establigh- ment of a new tin-plate mill at Balti. more is hardly in harmony with the theory of the Republican organs which affect to believe that no new industries will thrive during the administration of Mr. Cleveland. Hence-forth Let us Arbitrate. From the Providence Journal. : It cost about a million dollars a day to carry on the war for four years, but it cost halt a million dollars a day for- ever to ‘provide for the pension list. Peace has her triumphs as well as war, but they are more expensive. They Want a Moses for that Wilderness. From the Lebanon Report. i What the Republican party needs! is a blunt and honest Cleveland who will protest against the election of an unfit man a United States Senator (rom Pennsylvania, : Spawls from the Keystone, —Williamsport has decided to build a City Hall for $70.000 —Coyle’s Maryland Cavalry held a reunion at Gettysburg. —Reading police are waging a systematie- war upon tramps. * —Braford Democrats will nominate J. M. McClure for Mayor. —Reading is to have a new National: Bank with a capital of $200,000. —Twenty inches of snow didn't stop the trolly cars in Bethlehem. —A big shoe factory is about to remove from Allentown to Port Carbon. —Widower Albert Jacobs, of Johnstown, Mon- day attempted to kill himself. —The repeal of the Sherman act is demand- ed by Boston's Stock Exchange. —There are five cases of smallpox at Home- wood, an Allegheny County village. —An express train killed Valerio Jarmino, a railroad employe, near Harrisburg: —Robert Tomlinson was almost cut in two by a train at Wrightsville, York eounty. —District Knights of Labor met in Reading Sunday to transact important business. —To constructa town hall, Mount Joy, Lan- caster County, decided to borrow $10 000. —A live deer was the trophy that Lancaster county marksmen shot for at Engleside. —A train ran over John Filder, a Phi'adel- phia and Reading brakeman, at Gilderton. —Atter falling from a freight car near Read- ing, Lucian Matthias died in a few hours. —Rival electric railway companies are fight - ing for the possession of Marietta’s streets. —Captain Frank O'Brien, a tipstave at Pitts- burg, dropped dead in a crowded street car. —About 1000 tons of ice are shipped daily. from East Mahanoy Junction to Philadelphia —Workmen at the Homestead mill do-not : yet know if the new scale of wages is-in effec —All departments of the Reading Iron Com pany, at Reading, resumed operations Monday- ~—Two railway cars collided in State street Harrisburg, and Motorman Clifinger was in- jured. —In a mine chute at Buck Ridge, near Shamokin, Jesse Bamford had his neck broken. —The Lackawanna County Clerks have had their tax statistics returned four times for cor rection. —Accused of using the mails illegally, Max Reese,a Shenandoah business man, was ar rested. —From injuries received a week ago.in a mine, Charles Corrigan Tuesday expired at Ashland. —While picking eoal along the Reading tracks at Reading, 7-year-old George Shade was killed. —The Philadeiphia and Reading Company has ordered 1000 tons of ice tobe stored in Williamsport. —The State Democratic Committee will meet at Harrisburg, January 18, to elect chairman and secretary. —Staggering intoa hotel at Shamokin, Reese Watkins, a well-known citizen, dropped to the floor and expired. { —The Slate Fish Commission met at'Scran- ton and decided to fit up a hatchery to exhi- bit at the World's Fair. —Hugh Dempsey, the K. of L. leader at Pitisburg, was tried Monday for complicity in the Homestead poisoning. —A splendid team of horses owned bp John Marks, of fremont, was horribly gashed in the stable by an unknown fiend. —The Mahanoy City, Shenandoah, Girard- villeand Ashland Street Railway will be begum, January 15, to extend six miles. —The Braddock Wire Works, of Rittsburg has set its 75 employes at work again after a five weeks’ shut down for repairs. —A bright, handsome, Independent Demo- cratic daily newspaper called “The Times” is now issued at noon at Williamsport. —The smaiipox epidemic at Homewcod was only in the mind of a policeman who will be discharged for circulating the rumor. —Shot through a coal shute and buried for two nours under the coal, Charles Edmunds, of Brookside Colliery, was rescued alive. —The end of a quarrel s&' Connellsville, be- {ween Samuel Heffley and Ross Balsley was the almost fatal stabbing of the latter. —A blast of dynamite at Lancaster fired a shower of small rocks through the windows of a Franklin and Marshall College building. —Chester county Commissioners refuse to pay Jury Commissioner L. B. King, on the ground that his bill for $475 is exorbitant. —Peach yellows and plant diseases will oc~ cupy the time ot the State Horticultural As- sociation meeting at: Harrisburg, January 18, —The Atlantic express upset a delivery wa. gon, horses and driver atthe Walnut street crossing, Harrisburg, hurting only the wagon - —Berks County Agricultural Society Satur. day elected James McGowan president, and re- elected Secretary Cyrus Fox for the 18th time. —Chinamen of Luzerne County held a se- cret meeting and resolved not to register or have their photographs taken for Uncle Sam. —John Brown, William O. Boyle and Patrick Cummings are on trial at Pottsville, charged with committing many robberies im that seca tion. —The trial of Isaac Rosenweig, indicted with Harris Blank for the murder of Peddler Jacob Marks, last March, has begumat Tunkhans nock. { a4 —Superintendent George Creighton, of the Sarbury division of the Pennsylvania Rail. road has had a serious fall off the Sunbury sta- tion steps. —Matthew Kayle, ‘of ‘Mauch Chunk, was found unconscious in New York city suflering with pneumonia, the resalt of starvation and exposure. —James Slumming, whe from papers found is supposed to have had friends at Freeland, Luzerne county, died worth many thousand in Trinidad. —In attempting to assist in shifting freight cars at Carlisle, Passenger Conductor William Givler, of the Philadelphia, Harrisburg and Pittsburg Railroad, slipped and had a leg amputated, : —According to the verdict of a Board of Viewers, the Lancaster and Columbia Electric Railway will ‘pay the’ Lancaster and Susque- hanna Turnpike Company $25,000 for space cn the turnpike." f A —To escapes collision with a runaway car near Mahanoy Junction, John Fiedler jumped from his engine, but the runaway car was switched upon the track where he alighted, cutting him to pieces,