ot a. on.” Ink Slings. me. —«Man wants little hare below” —He has it, when the plumber, coal and gas men go. —A spirited parodox is the whiskey trust, for though rum goes up, run down it must. —Oh, its nice to see the G. O. P., in the bleeding Sunflower State ; being knock-ed out by Populists, in a manner up to date. —An opportunity for some Legisla- tor to immortalize himself lies in the in- troduction of a bill to tax bachelors tor the support of old maids. --When furnishing the amount nec- essary to meet the pension demands Raum always fails to say anything about his own propensities. —If you feel funny laugh. It you don’t feel that way just look at the fel- low who has slipped up on the ice and thinks no one has seen him. —United States would be the gainer in the annexation of Canada in more ways than one. Canadian money bas more silver in a dollar than ours has. — Fashionable women are beginning to wear night caps again. = They have been out of style a long time with the fair sex, but men have indulged in theirs right along. —The messages of the governors of all the States advise legislation for road improvement. Ostensibly for the good of the farming classes, but eventually for their own glory. —It required one Populist vote to elect StepaEN D. WHITE to the United States Senate from California and a legislator from Mr. WHITE'S own home, Tos Angeles, pressed the button. —TIt will keep the old ground hog scratching to get out of his hole by next Thursday. He is frozen in deep- er than he has been for fifty years and if he wants to keep his hand in on the weather he’ll have to “get a wiggle —In giving a sketch of the late JAY GouLD an exchange remarks that ‘he began life a bare-foot boy.” It isal- together probable that he did and we are of the opinion that the rest of us were attired in the same way when we began. —Mrs. M. M. ANDERSON has been elected sergeant-at-arms of the Arkansas house of representatives. And it wiil now be in order for the wives of the legislators to go down to Little Rock to keep their spouses out of the hands of the fair official. —HARRIET BEECHER STowE is eighty-one years old, and is still quite vigorous in mind and body. We fancy if she had seen someof the companies, that have produced the dramitization of her great work the poor old lady would have been dead long ere this. —-In view of the fact that all the great men who have died recently have dropped off just after eating dinner we have concluded todispense with that part of our day’s routine. It is purely a matter of precaution not so much for your sake, kind reader, as for the plumber. —When the old woman’s party meets in convention in Washington it had better look out for itself or that strag- gling Republican horde will ‘“hcok’’ on- to it. It is not likely that the G. O. P. would make any immediate gain by such a fusion, but if the thing was kept up long enough there can be little doubt that there would be a material increase of one sort or other. —The old women who think the country’s only salvation is in allowing them to vote are going to hold their convention in Washington soon. It would do them no good if they were given a vote in Pennsylvania because so many of them would vote for them- selves that under the BAKER system they would never poll enough togeta candidate on the ticket. --According to the census of 1890 there are living just 1,212,705 soldiers, sailors and widows of soldiers and sail- ors, who were enlisted in the civil war. AG Gx © i 2, Ah 4 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. "VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA., JAN. 27, 1893. NO. 4. The Right Man in the Right Place. If there is anything prospectively connected with the incoming national administration that especially gives promise of benefit to the country ard success to that administration, it is Mr. CLEVELAND'S selection of a Secretary of the Treasury. Johan G. CARLISLE at the head of the Treasury Department will in every sense of the phrase, be “the right man in the right place.” There could not be a better 1ndication of Mr. CLEVELAND'S determination to secure the most essential element of success in his management of the gov- ernment than his selection of so com- petent an officer to direct the financial department and to aesist in correcting the disordered condition of the finances and reforming an injurious and oppres- sive tariff system. Mr. CLEVELAND'S presidential term will be judged as having been a success or otherwise by the extent to which he will be able to carry out his programme of tariff reform. He is fully conscious of this fact. He knows thatthe duty es- pecially imposed upon his administra tion is the rectification of revenue abuses and the reduction of tariff taxa- tion, and he is wisely preparing him- self with the instrumentalities necessary for the successtul performance of this duty, first among which isa compe- tent Secretary of the Treasury. And what an ideal head of the Treasury Department Jouy G. Caruisie will be. In the entire range of contemporary American statesmanship it may be safely said that his equal .can- uot be found in the qualities necessary for that position. Mr. CLEVELAND hag made the strongest possible bid for the success of revenue and tariff reform by the character of his selection of a Secretary of the Treasury. Ia the role which Secretary Car LisLe will perform history will repeat itselt on lines similar to those upon which Secretary Rosert J. WALKER acted in the administration of Presi- dent PoLk. At that time there was oc- casion for bringing the then existing tariff down to a revenue basis, and it was to the financial genius of the man who in his boyhood was a scholar in our old Bellefonte Academy that the country was indebted for that Demo- cratic revenue tariff which ‘would have remained to-day as the chief fea- ture of the fiscal policy of the govern- ment if the intervening episode of the rebellion had not required a higher tariff as a war measure, the necessity for which has longsince passed away. Senator CaruisLE has been called upon to act the same part to the CLEVELAND administration that Ro- BERT J, WALKER acted in the adminis- tion of James K. Pork. A similar task is presented in the readjustment of our tariff laws, and judging from his splendid abilities it may be confidently expected that he will perform it equal- ly ae well as did the illustrious author of the Democratic revenue tariff of 1846. Why Do This Thus ? Adjutant General GREENLAND'S re- port of the expense of the State Guard at Homestead, shows that the transporta- tion of troops amounted to $57,373,60 while the Commissary and ‘Quarter- master’s expenses combined footed up but $49,512.44. When we remember the number of men and horses that were called into service, and the month after month that subsistence was re- quired for them, the fact that the trans- portation, to and from Homestead, cost a greater sum than their supplies, and equipments did during all the time they were on duly is’ one of the results of There are 870,888 pensioners of the, civ- il war. There are 426,083 applications waiting disposal. ‘Just 84,266 more people who want pensions than there are soldiers, sailors, or their widows liv- | ing. What kind of government fosters such open robbery any-bow? that memorable campaign, that seems strange to us who know but little of the management of the State Guard | and less of the system of railroad char- ges for public services. Were the trans portation eharges high? The Com. | missary and Quarter-masters expendit- — While congratulating California on’ the selection of STEPHEN D. WHITE to the United States Senate the Evening Herald, of Philadelphia, charges the Golden State with being the chief of- fender it diluting the intellectual capac: ' ity of the Senate. The Herald is all right in encouraging the election of abie men like WHITE, but if States will erris it not better for them to send millionaires without brains, than moderately poor men of known mental short coming, as Pennsylvania is doing. They are less “dangerous, ures low ? or is there some part of the Homestead expenses vot incladed in the report? Which is it? I. Annie Wilson, the nineteen year old wite of an ‘Enghsh ‘rascal, landed in New York, Sunday, from Antwerp, - Germany; where she head been deserted. ‘Annie was the first female stow-a-way to cross the Atlantic and thinks her stolen ride a most cn- an American joyable one. She is girl. Phillips Brooks. We involuntarily measure the great ness of a man by the good he has done for humanity, but when it comes to summing up a character as broad as the late Pririps Brooks no man is able to measure the greatness thereof, for he was one that helped others by all that he did, and said, and was. Bishop Brooks unconsciously outlin- ed hisown career in a passage he wrote a year ago on Masson’s ‘“‘Life of Mil- ton :"’'—*‘Great is he whoin some spe- cial location, as a soldier, a governor, a scientist, does good and helpful work for fellowmen. Greater still is he who, doing good work in his special occupation, carries within his devotion to it a human nature so rich and true that it breaks through his profession and claims the love and honor of his fellowmen, simply and purely as a man. His is the life which some true human eye discerns, and some loving and grateful hand makes the subject ofa picture to which all men enthu- siastically turn,” for he was not only a distinguished preacher, but a “twelve sided man.” He arrested at- tention from the beginning of his mia- istry, in a little hamlet in Virginia, composed of poor whites and negros, while yet a student at the Theological Seminary, and held it by his remark- able gifts which were controlled until the end of his lite by great simplicity and a warm and earnest devotional life. PriLips Brooks, the greatest preach- er of the Kpiscopal church and one of the foremost preachers of the world was one of the few men who nuever surrenderel to the party what was meant ior mankind. His large heartedness recoguized the good work done by all the churches and if ever one person took up the fences of religious separation and laid who made more of Christianity and of what all Christians hold share than hedid of sect. Just in the prime of his noble lifeand at a time of great confusion in thought and great doubt over in common fundamental spiritual conceptions Bishop Brooks can ill be spared. For the men who can compell the suspension of business in Wall street on week days in order that the brokers and tankers might bear their noou-day sermons as PHILLIPS BROOKS did three years ago in New York city and as he did every Lenten season in Boston and at the same time be hum- ble and devout servants of their Mas- ter are not many in this generation. ——Massachusetts Legislators will soon vote on a proposiiion to amend the Constitution of the Bay State so as to make her elections of a State ticket biennial instead of annual as they have always been. The general unset tled condition of things political and the annoyance incident to yearly elec- tions should appeal to the better judg- ment of the Legislators in this matter. Ouly machine politicians and spoils- men see anything but unsatisfactory results in putting State issues before the people every year. ——The action of the District Con- vention of the U. M. W. of A,, in ses- sion at Lilly last week, in endorsing a petition praying that Governor PaTTI- soNappoint Honorable Davip,L. Kress, of Clearfield county, one of the judges to appoint a member of the examining board of mine inspectors, is a high tes- timonial of the esteem in which Judge Kress is held by the workers of the Clearfield region. ' In him they recog- nize a friend of labor and at the same time a man who traly fulfills the mandate : “the judiciary should be be- yond reproach.” The price of steel rails for, 1893 has been fixed at twenty-nine dollars per ton by the leading American mills. The English product ¢annot be sold at home under twenty dollars aton. The { McKisLey bill makes us pay a tariff of | thirteen dollars and forty-four cents per | ton to protect home industry. Now our curiosity is aronsed to know why we should pay tribute to American monop- ~olists even when there is no chance of i foreign product coming in’ competition. AT ———— There will be a short crop. of spring chickens unless the hens tegin laying pretty soon, them low it was the liberal churchmany They Will be Disappointed. Those who are anxious to see misun- understandings and contentions arise among the trininphant Democracy, are likely to be disappointed with the out- come of the recent United States Senato- rial election in New York, which they hoped would be a rock upon which the Democrats of that State would split, They thought they saw in it an unavoid- able rupture between the President-elect and the controlling Democratic leaders of the State. It is true that Mr. CLEVELAND had his views on the Senatorial questions, but they were views that were expressed without any disposition on his part to personally interfere in the matter. On the other hand the preponderance of Democratic sentiment in the State, as expressed by the the action of the ma- jority of the Legislature, differed on this question with the President-elect, as it bad a right to differ, resulting in the election of a senator who in every particular fills the Democratic bill, and who in all respects may be depended upon to sustain the Democratic causes. It is difficult to see how even the most ingenuous ill-wishers of Democ- racy can extract from this situation the hope that a difficulty will spring up between President CLEVELAND and the New York State leaders similar to the GaRrFIELD-CONKLING contention. The President will be so strongly backed by the sentiments of the party at large, which will take the liveliest interest in the success of his reform policies, that the New York leaders, who are shrewd politicians, are not likely to put themselves in a position of antagonism. They have gained their point in State politics, with such advantage for future effect as they evi: dently aimed at, and prudence will lead them to refrain from carrying their op- position into the field of national poli- tics, which is the President's legiti- mate domain. In the difficulty which CoNkLING had with GARFIELD, the Sen- ator’s excessive personal vanity was the chief motive of his conduct, but the New York Democratic politicians, who differed with Mr. CLEVELAND in the Senatorial question, are of too po- litical a disposition to be influenced in their future action by the weakness that made CoNkLING the enemy of GAR- FIELD, What Might Have Been. The Anxprews-Higey affair in the Legislature recalls the gubernatorial campaign of 1890, and with it the re- flection of what might have been had the result of that Fall's election been just the reverse of what it was. If GEORGE WALLACE DELAMATER had been chosen governor of the Pennsylva- nia there is every reason to believe that the Meadville bank scandal would never have startled the country and given to light the corruptioa in which a man who aspired to the highest hon- or within the gilt of the State, was plunged. Aside from that it is just as reasonable to suppose that WiLLiay H. ANDrEWS, his campaign general, would have fallen into gome of the many snaps with which the G. O. P. was ac- customed to reward its successful work- ers, and would have been dispensing patronage now, instead of occupying the ignominious position for which he has lately displayed the requisite asi- nine qualifications. The present situation simply goes to show how soon a man whose usefulness is gone is dropped by his constituents. If Mr. ANDREWS was of any earthly use to his party there would be a decid- ed'change in the tenor of the articles which leading Republican papers are publishing daily about him, If his vote was an absolute necessity to make a Republican house the Republican press would not beslow in heaping the abuse, now applicable to ANDREWS, on Mr. Higsy, the lawfully elected mem- ber (rom Crawford county. But as it is the large Republican majority in the House and the rankling sore of having had the gubernatorial chair taken from them fires Republicans to vent their spleen on the poli‘ical corpse who is at the merey of his ungrateful party. Not becau-e his ambition to nsurp another's place is too disgraceful tor his party, but because he failed to inflict on the people a man they did not want for ZOVErnor. Thus it is that WILLIAM ANDREWS finds himself a despised political beg- gar at the doors of the Houee of Repre- sentatives. Where the Danger Lies. From the Philadelphia Record. The amount of negotiable securities of the United States held by foreigners is probably over $900,000,000. This is the peril of the present financial sit- uation. The holders of these securities will continue to send them back, and to draw upon our stock of gold to pay for them, as long as the danger shall hang over the country that it may be- come unable to maintain its vast issues of silver dollars and silver certificates, at par with gold. Every day that we continue to pile up bar silver, against which we issue silver certificates, the danger of the situation will be increas- ed. Gold goes out of the country quite as fast as the silver certificates are issued from the Treasury. It would require no gift of prophecy to foretell the end of such finaunciering. For His Country’s Good Alone He Worked. From the Clearfield Republican. Samuel Randall, after a life of useful- ness and honor, died very poor. His Administratrix filed her account two weeks ago in Philadelphia, showing his entire estate to be only $780.94. His physician’s bill was $1,190.15, and the undertaker’s charges were $56.65. He left a shining record of integrity and patriotism, but unfortunately it would not pay doctor bills. ETT Figuring on Futures. From the Watsontown Record and Star. Though the war of 1812 has been over eighty years there are still 165 sur- vivors of that struggle living. Thesuc- cess of those old soldiers in marrying pretty young girls is shown by the fact that 665 of them lett widows who still live and draw pensions. If this propor- tion should hold trus the year 1940 will see 100,000 widows drawing pensions on account of the civil ‘war. Young Leaders Wanted, From the New York Recorder. If the old, discredited crowd of spav- ined war-horses are not retired the re- sult will be a counter organization that will bury them too deep for resurrection. We want young leaders tor the cam- paigns of the future, not ancient fossils whose smirched records are so many millstones hung around thé party’s neck to drag it down into the waters of defeat once more. Major Halford’s Accomplishments. From the Kansas City Star. President Harrison has conferred up- on his private secretary, Elijuh W. i Halford the desirable appointment of pay- : master in the regular army, with therank of major. It is virtuaily a life position, with emoluments quite commensurate with its responsibilities. It advances to an honorable station a native of Indiana and one of the most artistic whistlers in America. An Insult to Uncle Sam. From the Minneapolis Tribune. Get your gun! The President of Venezuela gave a State ball on New Year's eve and omitted to invite the American Consul. Our Consul had purchased a dress suit for the occasion and has, therefore suffered great humil- iation and expense. A Complimentary(?)Vote for Mutchler. From the Easton Sentinal. : Senator Rapsher, of Carbon county, voted for Mr. William Mutchler for United States senator last Tuesday at Harrisburg. From his reported condi- tion at the time it would not have been surprising if he had voted for John Bar- leycorn. The Election of Senators. From the Boston Globe—Dem. The New York World thinks the the United States Senate is distinctly deteriorating. Well, as soon as the people are given the privilege of direct- ly electing their own Senate it will ‘come up to its old time grade again, A Silly Phrase. From the Louisville Western Recorder. That ‘heart failure’ has become a farce. Heart disease can killas can lung disease. But, of course, a man cannot die until his’ heart ceases to act. The papers might as well say he died for lack of breath. AL SUH RATTAN, Some One Will be Well Greased. From the Montrose Democrat. The farmers and 'dairymen of the State are preparing for a bitter fight which will be made in the Legislature this winter by the oleomargarine men to repeal the oleomargarine law passed in 1885. Do You Hear, Mr, Hill ? From the ‘DuBois Express. Says Colonel Henry Watterson pro- phetically : © “The next Democratic nominee for President of the United Stutes must not bail from the State of New York. ETE IS TREO AR The People Will Down It. From the Wiiliamsport Republican. The combine to put up the price of whiskey cannot by that method change the flow of the liquor, Spawls from the Keystone, —Smallpox at Hamburg is abating. —George Durr was instantly killed by a train at 8teelton. —Jack Frost has shut down many flour mills in Berks County. —At Washington, Pa., there will be no col- lege cane rush this year. -. —While at Indianapolie, Harry Pierson of Meadville, dropped dead. —An explosion of powder at Annville blew off one Thomas Brua’s legs. i —To run the Schuylkill County Alms-house this year $67,000 has been appropriated. —The body of Mrs. Margaret Mumna was found close to the railroad track near Mt. Joy. —Monday the Edgar Thomson Steel Works, at Braddock, returned to steel rail manufac: ture. —Sixty cases of diphtheria are reported from upper Bucks County, 30 being around Doyles” town. —Annie Wisenell awoke in bed in York to find by her side her mcther, Susan BE. Wise- nall, dead. —Mayor Merritt, of Reading, has begun hearing arguments for and against the trolley ordinance. —Frank E. Place, a Philadelphia and Read- ing freight conductor, was crushed to death at Norristown. —While fox hunting, Simon Stroup, of Oriental, Juniata county, accidentally shot himself to death. —Two young men and a girl at different times, each had a leg broken Friday while coasting in Pottsville. —Major John D. Worman has stirred up the Democratic societies of Pennsylvania with a vigorous circular. —At Wilmerding, the Westinghouse Air- brake Company has forbidden employes to ac- cept borough offices. —Colonel James Young has just had27 miles of fence upon his famous Middletown farms painted white. —The first arrested of the alleged Home- stead prisoners, Robert F. Beatty, was put on trial Tuesday morning. —While Samuel Miller, of Mechanicsburg, was at church, his wife hung herself to the rafters of their dwelling. —At Uniontown, a company is organizing with $25,000 capital stock to purchase the old Warren Glass Works. ~—Lehigh Valley Brakeman Elmer Thorn- ton had both legs cut oft by a Lehigh and Hudson train at Easton. —The cost of maintaining troops at Home- stead as officially computed, was $434,818,39, which the State must pay. —Chester N Farr, of Philadel phia, has been secured to audit the accounts of ex-Treasurer Obold, of Reading, for $600. —Having but recently gone from Philadel- phia to the mines at Pottsville, W. E. Stevens was fatally crushed by a car. —With his skull and one arm fractured by a collision, Elmer Mayberry, of Schuylkill Haven, a fireman, may survive. —The Republican committee, of Carbon County, have elected George M. Davies, a wealthy contractor, as chairman. —Seventy bogus names, it is alleged, have been found on the registry list on Republi- can election division of Pittsburg. —President-elecl Cl eveland, by request sent a porwrait of himself to the Sigma Chi frater- nity at Bucknell University, Lewisburg. — With $150 and a gold watch, stolen from his boarding master, in his pocket, Michael Mulaskie fled from Gillerton with his sweet. heart. —Although once convicted, Joe and Sam Lewis were Friday acquitted at Lancaster of the charge of torturing Larry Reynolds to get his money. —It has prastically been decided that the bondsmen of ex-Treasurer Oboiil, of Reading, will have to make good the deficiency of near 1y $19,000. —The city of Lancaster will appeal from the decision of the 8 ipreme Justice McPher- son, by which it would have to pay $120,000 to the county. —The 7-year-old Committoe en Revision of the Constitution of the Reformed Church in the United States is in session at Lancaster for final action. —The office of 3uperintendent Donnelly, of the Lehigh and New Jersey divisions of the Lehigh Railroad, is to be removed from Perth Amboy to Easton. —A fine of $100 and. a year’s imprisonment were the penalties inflicted upon J. K. Blat’ tenburger, hotel man of Duncannon, for tam pering with a jury. —Learning that her lover in Austria had married another girl, Esther Hobrand, 23 years old, of Braddock, drowned herself in the Monongahela River. —After 12 years’ exile, ThomasS. Ambrose, indicted for embezatement while District Court clerk at Cincinnati, has returned and surrendered himself. - —At Beaver Falls, the grinders at the American Ax and Too} Works have been noti- fied that a sweep ing. reduction is to be made in their wages February 1. A strike is threat- ened. —At Rochester, Pa., Rev. T.B. Anderson has been installed pastor of the First Presby- terian Church; which has been without a pas- tor since Rev. J. Bausman was removed. from the pastorate. —The Pittsburg police authorities. have been requested by officials of the Austrian Government to suppress the Amerikanskoe Slovenske Noviny, a Hungarian weekly paper, issued there, — In her first suit for damages for the death of her husband, Mrs, W. McKinney, of Leban- on, got a verdict of $1500.. She appealed and got only $500, and her third trial ended Satur. day and she got nothing. Members of the Ladies Auxiliaries ‘of the World's Fair of Lebanon. Dauphin, Berks and Lancaster Counties met. at Lebanon and permanently organized and seleeted Mrs Hor- ace Brock, of that city, president. At Indiana, Pa., John B. Mosely was lodg- ed in jail Monday, charged with burglary. Saturday night the safe in the office’ of the McCreary Coke Company, ab Graceton, was blown open and between §600 and §700 in cash, about $100 wortly of ‘postage stamps and {we gold watches were stolen. — At Washington, Pa., the Western Union Tel- egraph linemen were tried last week for break- ing the Sabbath by repairing the line on that day, were convicted Monday and sentenced to pay a fine of § and costs. The Justice's decision states that the work in regard to the wires was necessary, but that other work, such as digging trenches, was done, that might have'beer) dane at another time,