8Y P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Crinolines promise quite a bustle in the feminine world, —Let everything keep Lent but your | umbrella and your quarters. —There can be no doubt that Con- gress is nearing its end, but what has it finished ? —If HARRISON had begun appoint. ing Democrats to Federal offices four years sooner, it is hard to conjecture what would have been the status of things to-day. —The Populists must have control of the Kansas rail-roads too. Under a late ruling by the companies in the Sun- flower State ministers must pay full fare if they want to ride. —Scientists are still at sea a3 to how many volts of electricity are required to put a man’s light out. It is not likely that they will find out from any of their subjects either. —-S1. VALENTINE will have his day next Tuesday and in view of the fact that GEORGE WASHINGTON was never sainted, old PATRICK will be the next patron to have his inning. —1TIt has just leaked out that Mr. Frick built that high fence around the Homestead mills last summer to keep his striking employes from stealing the hams out of the pig iron in stock. —1Tt is really amusing to hear Repub- licans talking about political BURCH- ARDS now. ’Tis true that a BURCHARD figured as a cause of their defeat in 1884, but the Lord knows no one man effected the land-shide of ’92. —1If the Quaker City police don’t look a little out some of the audacious thieves down there will be carrying them off and be holding them for a ransom.— Who do you think would offer it, the City or the speak-easy proprietors ? --With Governor FLowkR after La- bor Commissioner PECK and a congres- sional committee determined to oust JoHNNY DAVENPORT they might in- deed be looking for the intervention of the hand that tempers the winds to the shorn lamb. — American industries are something to be proud of. Just think of it even the little honey bees turned out $20,- 000,000 worth of products last year. Tn the language of tke street urchin they’te “hot stuff,” especially the busi- ness end of them. —The hosts of newspaper correspon- dents who are embarking for Hawaii should remember that ‘‘discretion is the better part of valor,” for if the natives should run them into the sea they will have a long, damp walk ere they reach the sunny climes of California. —Queen LILIUAKALANI evidently has a much longer head than the aver- age newspaper man gives her credit with possessing. If her monarchy had lasted she would never have had to face a $150,000,000 pension bill so long as she kept her standing army down to sixty men. "Tis a pity that a man’s good points are never discernible until after his de mise, political or otherwise. President HARRISON has won more praise by his appointment of Judge JACKSON to the supreme bench, as L. Q. C. LAMAR’S successor than he did in all rest of his experience as head of our government. —Representative TuBss, of Missouri, has jumped at the conclusion that we want the Sandwich Islands and has presented a measure, in Congress, tavor- ing their annexation. If Uncle Sam acts favorably on it and we get into trouble with any foreign powers over the matter, we’ll launch the Missouri congressman along with our naval tubs and let him fight it out. —General BaLriNeToN BoorH, the head of the Salvation Army in America, is in Omaha, Neb., carrying on a great revival. In a recent interview he ex- pressed his desire of colonizing chris- tians in this country as they have done, with such good results, in Europe. If the General has any doubts as to the most effective methods of colonization we would refer him to the ex-Republi- can campaign managers. —MATTHEW STANLEY QUAY has in- deed turned a reformer. Not content with laboring for the Sunday closing of the World's Fair he has even gone so far as to let the Inquirer undertake the work of reform in the Quaker City. In its Sunday issue it actually said: “In two weeks there is to be an election for Councilmen. If better and cheaper gas is wanted vote only for the best men, regardless of party.” —Never fail to take the advice of a man who doesn’t practice what he preaches, forit is invariably the case that bitter experience has made him wise in the course he aims to point out for you, and weakness of purpose alone has made it impossible for him to keep on it himself. The drunkard, though he continues in his bacchanalian orgies ani knows his life is lost, will always; tell you to leave alcoholic drinks alore. 0, 2 %, IF STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. % VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA., FEB. 10, 1893. NO. 6. Improvement of the New Ballot Sys- tem. The Australian ballot, adopted in a number of States with various modifi- cations, has fully vindicated the excel lence of its main features. It has thrown around the right of suffrage a protection which it never had before, It has limited the opportunity of those who would coerce volers, or corrupt them. It has removed most of the in- fluences which heretofore have, to a large extent, perverted the expression of the people at the polls. These good results have been effect ed in most of the States which have adopted the reformed ballot system, with consequences which proved that the purer and less affected by improper influences the ballot is kept, the larger the Democratic majorities are, and the more fully the principles of Democra- cy are vindicated and enforced. It cannot be doubted that to the reformed method of voting much of the Demo- cratic success at the last election was due, and that it was a powerful factor in securing the election of CLEVELAND and in solving the problem of tariff re- form. With the new safeguards to the secrecy and purity of the ballot in New York and Indiana the agencies which carried those States for HARRI- soN in 1888 were powerless at the last election. Pennsylvania has a modification of the Australian system. It had its first trial at the last election, and while its good points were clearly dem- onstrated, some deficiencies were al- so manifested. The defects in the law were pointed out at the time of its pas- sage; they proved themselves to be such when the system was put into practical operation, and the Governor in his last message recommended the correction of such defects in the elec- tion law as were made apparent at its first test in November. A bill for this purpose has been in troduced in the Legislature, the pro- visions of which, if passed, will make an election law as perfect as it can be made under the new system. It re quires that the mark indicating the choice of the voter shall be put oppo- site each candidate he shall vote for. The method practiced last fall in using but one mark to include an entire group, led to frequent errors; besides it interferes with those who wish to split their tickets. The aew bill also provides for greater safeguards in the cases of those who require assistance in marking their tickets, They must make oath that they require such as- sistance, and the parties who may be called in to render it must be sworn that they will perform that service in good faith and with no fraudulent in- tention. The name of the assistant is to be endorsed in the ballot to fix bis responsibility in case there has been any crooked business in the transac- tion. These are the principal amendments and if the bill imbodying them is adopted, it will make our elections as safe against fraud, corruption and im- proper influences as elections can be made. What ‘the Country Members” Will Do. The Philadelphia Record makes pub- lic a report which it claims is current to the effect that the ‘country mem- bers” of the State Legislature will be made the cat’s-paws by which the Philadelphia Public Buildings Com- mission will be pulled out of the fire. Such an expression is altogether un- warranted at this stage of the proceed- ings and whatever the out come may be the Record can make up its mind right now that the “country members” will have voted just as the majority of the Philadelphia members did. If the members from Philadelphia, who are supposed to represent the sentiment of their Districts, vote against the disso: presumptuous for those from other parts of the State to step in and say how a thing, which they know noth- ing about, should be ran. If the Commission is continued it will be simply because a majority of the Philadelphia members vote that way, and the very fact that they have done that will be face evidence, at least, that their people wanted it continued. [t Philadelphians can’t trust their own representatives they should not expect thcee from other Districts to make up for the short-comings of the men they | have sent to look after their interests. lution of the Commission it would bey President Harrison’s prise. Agreeable Sar- President Harrison certainly treated the American people to a pleasant and gratifying surprise in going outside of his party for a successor to the late Supreme Justice Lamar, who was a Democrat, and, in consequene of his having been such, propriety required that his place should be filled by a Democrat, under the conditions now existing in the political apportionment of the Supreme Court. But the proprieties are not always re- garded in the exercise of the appoint ing power, and President HARRISON particularly has shown a disregard for them in some of his past appointments. He fairly won the reputation of being a close partisan, and it was reasonably expected that at the heel of his admin- istration, regardless of the better right of his successor to make the appoint ment, he would embrace with avidity the chance of putting another Repub- lican on the Supreme bench. But he has not done 80; he has not availed himself of this partisan opportunity, and hence the very great and pleasant surprise he has given the people in his appointment of Judge JAcksoN ; hence the thanks that are due him for his liberality and fair-mindedness in this particular case. But even the best acts will arouse the carpings of habiwal fault-finders. The President is condemned for this excellent appointment by some of the Republican mossbacks who can’t ap preciate a high-minded and wron-parti. san action and are disgruntled because Mr. Harrison did not do so improper a thing as to hurry through the ap- poiniment of a Republican Justice at the close of his administration. Such partisan fau't-finders would be better satisfied it every seat in the United States Supreme bench was filled by a red-hot Republican put there for the especial purpose of making partisan decisions. There are also some Democrats who | are not exactly pleased with President | HaRrrIsoN's proceedings in this matter. Probably it would have been more cor: rect to have handed over to a Demo- cratic President the appointment of a Democrat to the Supreme Court, but in choosing Judge Jackson for that ex- alted position Mr. HarrisoN made so excellent a selection that in our opin- ion there 18 no room for the fault find- er to get in his ill-natured strictures. The President selected an excellent Jadge, a man of the purest personal character, a Democrat whom Presi- dent CLEVELAND had previously ap- pointed to a Judgeship, and what bet- ter could he have done? ——The present tax collector S. D. Ray aspires to re-election. He has not complied with the law with regard to settling the duplicate. Elect some one who will. Vote for Huga TayLor one of the most energetic young men in our town, Hazleton wants to be a county- seat and has cropped off bits of Luz- erne and adjoining counties to make a district for itself. The Plain-dealer ad- mits that the taxes would be high for a while but the increased valuation about Hazleton would make up for that. The would-be-county will be called Hazle, but we fear its only a witch-hazle that is goading the pro- jectors on. ——Council pas Pasner run in Se inter- ests of private concerns and individuals jong enough. Vote for SecHLER. Vote for Kirg. Vote for Busa. They are the people’s candidates ‘and are not tied down by obligations to anyone. If ice jams were as palatable as they are dangerous, humanity would find little trouble in putting up enough provender now to do for several sea: 80N8. —— Let Bellefonters’ live under a Democratic mayor, a Democratic sheriff, a Democratic governor and a Demo- cratic prositeny Vote for MEYER. On Tataday 4 the U. S. Senate re- fused to consider the repeal of the SaEr- MAN silver bill by a vote of 42 to 23. —1t looks very much as though old BorEAs is trying to corner the ice market. Hawaiian Annexation. Since the last issue of the WartcH- MAN, when we gave our preliminary views on the Hawaiian question, events ir connection with this emergent issue have rapidly advanced. The delega- tion from Hawaii, invested with the right to offer us the sovereignty of the islands, were then on their way to make the momentous presentation, their intention having been telegraph- ed ahead. They are now in the na- tional capital ; they have opened their headquarters and are ready for busi- ness ; the flag of their provisional gov- ernment has been unfurled to the breeze in the capital city of this Repub- lic, and they announce upon what terms they are willing to give Uncle Sam the exclusive ownership of the fairest gems that stud the bosom of the Pacific. Their terms are easy and very flat- tering to the American government, They want to be a part of the Repub- lic. They desire association with no other powers. They offer to us the exclusive sovereignty of the most de- sirable islands that lie in the commer- cial highway between the shores of Asia and America. It is for the Unit ed States government to determine whether it shall accept the maguifi cent offer, and it is hardly possible that it will be declined. In our opin- ion the annexation of the Sandwich Islands to the United States is mani- fest destiny, to be followed in due time by the acquisition of Canada and Ca- ba. The wings of the American eagle are adjustable to a broader spread. As to the particular method by which the ownership of Hawaii shall be aquired, that is something to be settled by the wisdom of our states men. As the question has been sprung in the expiring moments of the Harrison administration, it will have to be exclusively determined by Presi dent CLEVELAND and the Democratic | cabinet and the Congress that will have control of affairs under his administra- tion. It can be left to their determina. tion with full assurance that American honor and interests in the case will not suffer at their hands. There ap- pears to be no other alternative than direct annexation, but whether as a State or a Territory is a reserved ques- tion. There are grave objections to a protectorate, as it would not invest our government with the sovereignty that would give it effective control of the islands. The Hawaiian delegation ex- press a preference for such a govern- ment under the United States as is ex- ercised over the District of Columbia, their object being to avoid the poly- glot suffrage which a State or Terri- torial form of government would con- fer upon the hybrid races that com- pose the larger portion of the popula- tion. We last week alluded to the agricul- tural, commercial and strategic advan- tage of the possession of these islands. But the great object of their acquisi- tion is to prevent England from get- ting them. It is fortunate indeed that this question was not preciptated when our navy was in the low condition in which Republican mismanagement had placed it. A Democratic admin- istration put new life into it, and it is due to the policy inaugurated by Sec- retary WHITNEY, under President CLEVELAND, that we now have a navy strong enough to make arrogant old England restrain her disposition to in- terfere with our annexation of islands that are of the first importance to our Pacific commerce and indispensable for the protection of our coast border- ing that great ocean. ———Newspaper piracy has come to be such a common thing with the press of our country that when a real ly good article appears, the reader hesi- tates to give credit to the editor whose journal publishes "it, for the simple reason that in the next column his eyes might fall on an article which he has read before in another paper to which credit is not given. This thing ot appropriating the work of others is bringing our newspaper standard to a very unreliable state. —- Statistics show that the average life of a lawyer is 52.1 years or just 4.8 years longer than that of a mechanic. This is because the disciples of BLack- sToNE have such a fat thing of it, The Sherman Act Should be. Repealed. From the New York World. There are the strongest business rea- sons for a repeal of the Sherman act. It is a measure ot unnecessary taxa- tion. The Treasary is compelled to pay out nearly $2,000,000 each month for silver which it does not want. This is a monstrous wrong upon the taxpay- ers for the sole benefit of the silver- mine owners. It1s a losing investment. Since the compulsory purchase of silver began in 1878 the Government has bought 418,- 401,497 ounces st a cost of $432 372.- 907. The present market value of this silver is only $351,457,257, represent- ing a loss of $80,915,650. It is reducing the United States aloe of the great industrial and com- mercial nations to a cheap-silver basis. Gold is steadily flowing out of the country and being hoarded in Europe. The *‘tree gold” in our Treasury—the amount above the reserve fund for the redemption ot greenbacks—is only $8,000,000. This is a danger-signal which no prudent business man can disregard. It has failed of its avowed purpose. It has not sustained but rather depress- ed the price of silver. It has not made money more plentiful in the pockets of those who have no acceptable equiva- lent of labor or product. Include Chewing Gum and Let’er Pass. From the Philadelphia Times. The bill to prohibit the manufacture and sale of cigarettes in Pennsylvania, which has passed the House ot Repre- sentatives with only eighteen votes, is about the most violent piece of sum ptu- ary legislation attempted in this Com- monwealth during the present century. As it was introduced by a Democrat, who presumaoly believes in personal liberty, the bill was generally regarded as a joke, a burlesque of the meddle some enactments that camber the stat- ute books otso many States. The vote in the House would indicate that the members still take this view of it, siuce there must be more than eighteen men who recoguize its absurdity, But the joke has now been carried far enough and it will be necessary for the Senate to put an end to it. Perhaps an easy way to do this would be by amend- ments extending the prohibition to pipes, chewing tobacco, peppermint drops and various other things more or less obnoxious. It the Legislature is going to regulate conduct, it should not stop at half-way measures. Senatorial Inequalities, From the Phila. Record. There were not as many votes polled in the State of Nevada at the recent Presidential election 2s were polled in the Twenty-sixth ward of Philadelphia Yet this inconsequential rabble of halt- starved mountaineers have been put in a position to balance the weight of five million people in Pennsylvania by the votes of their two Senators! This is the outcome of the policy of dilution which has sought to keep control of the Government by weakening the au- thority of populous States, and filling the Senate with political titmice and the Electoral College with obedient puppets. The disgraceful squabbles that are going on in the election of Senators by the Legislatures in some of these mountain fastuesses show that they are turning against the party that is responsible for them, and furnishing a new proof that the devil sometimes gets burned with his own fire. It Doesn't Enter the Hawaiin Question. From the Philadelphia Evening Herald. The Richmond 7%mes says it has al- ways “regarded the Monroe doctrine as the most preposterous proposition that ever emanated from a sensible man.” The value of that doctrine de- pends entirely upon the strength which the United States may have to enforce it. Itit can’t be backed by sufficient power it is certainly preposterous. But we believe that Uuncle Sam has the requisite muscle. His Sins Have Found Him Out. From the York Gazetfe. The people who saw Senator Mat- thew Stanley Quay at Harrisburg Tues- day, were amazed as they look upon him. The Senator has grown thin, cadaverous and week, and a sickly pal- lor overspreads his face. He looks like: a dying man. Put to a Profitable Use. From the Louisville Courier Journal. Should we annex Hawaii we can perhaps, turn an honest penny by hir- ing out the Queen's army of sixty men to serve in the chorus of some comic- opera company. When He Takes a Step Everything Goes, From the Brookville Jeffersonian Democrat. Governor Hogg, of Texas, evidently does not belong tothe “razor back” breed. Heis 39 years of age and | weighs 375 pounds. —1If you want printing of any de- scription the Warcamax office is the | place to have it done, Spawls from the Keystone, —Small-pox has broken out at Werner ville. —Bcthlehem has set its heel crossings. upon grade —Dick inson College will erect a new $25,000 building. —Cars crushed to death Michael Vernato at Milnersville. —Painters in Reading demand 25 cents more wages a day. —All the Clear Spring Colliery hands are on a strike at Pittston. —The Girard estate will build a $75,050 mine dam at Girardville. —There is an ice flood in the West Branch of the Susquehanna River. —Rev. Covert’s endeavor to indict cfficers of Solon, at Pittsburg, flunked. —Thieves stole 400 cigars from Samuel Gunter’s store, at Shenandoah. —An ordinance is pending in Williamsport Councils to abolish street fakirs. —Owing to dull marketthe Birdsboro Nail Works closed Saturday temporarily. —Struck by a train, George Die, expired at his home at Marysville, York County. —A prominent Ashland politician, Valentine Depner, died in bed Monday morning. —Bristol will borrow money to construct sewers as a means to prevent typhoid. —Jeremiah Roth was re-elected president of the Lehigh County Agricultural Soeicty. —Jack Clifford, the Homestead siriker on trial for murder, will try to prove an alibi. —Four of Reuben Smith's children, at Eas- ton, have died of diphtheria in nine days. —Tec a shortage of natural gas is attributed a great many pneumonia deaths in Pittsburg. —Jacch Mumma, a Hanover recluse, aged 74 who has lived secluded in a cellar since 1847, is dead. —Lytle Colliery, on the New Minersville Branch, near Pottsville, has resumed oper- ations. —The coal mine near West Newton in which Jacob Newton was lost is burning like.a furnace. —While waiking on the railroad track near Christiana, Joseph Beckman was run down by a train. —The Vigilant Fire Company, of York, cel- ebrated the 113th anniversary of its organai_ zation. —Francis Murphy, the temperance apostle proposes a big church forall workingmen in Pittsburg. —Water from the city’s trench undermined and wrecked a new house of William Shode at Reading. —Cyrus T. Fox, of Reading, will have charge of Pennsylvania's display of fruit at the World’s Fair. —Commissioner Bowes, of Schuylkill Coun- ty, surcharged $1500 by auditors, has appealed to the Court. —A red hot hook seared a hole through the hand of Jacob Billet, employed atthe York rolling mill. —Elijah Dillon is in Berks County Jail ac cused of breaking the rib of Ed ward Gautz's 3 year-old-child. —Lehigh county auditors Friday began an investigation of the accounts of the County Commissioners: —Injuries sustained by falliug from the roof of Allentown hotel resulted fatally to Annie Adams, a servant. —Safe robbers got $100 and other booty in Joel Wenger & Son’s office, at Brownstone, Lancaster County. —The baby of Mrs. Morris Yosty, Lebanon nearly died from drinking ammonia given to it by an older child. —Gum boots caused blood poisonin the leg- of Mrs. Daley’s little son, at Pittsburg and am - putation is a necessity. —For embezzling $5000 of the Wilk esbarre Deposit and Savings Bank, Charles Voight goes to jail for 15 months. —A conference of the Pennsylvania State Woman Suffrage Association will be held at Harrisburg, February, 28. —Smallpox has broken out at Wernersville and Millmont, in addition to the farming di s. tricts in Western Berks. —Sixteen-year-old Emil Wagner, of Phila delphia, a Nazareth Military School truant, has been captured in Allentown. —The new Lalance.Grosjean bar and sheet iron plant at Harrisburg, employing hands, began business on Saturday. —Bishop Esher told Reading friends that he will shortly go to Japan, to organize the first Evangelical Conference there, —Mrs. Hannah Leib, mother of Carriage- maker George C. Leib, of Ashland, was found dead in bed Monday morning. —The coal monument 50 feet high built for the World's Fair by the Lehigh Valley Com pany, at Shenandoah, is completed. —The Pennsylvania i.ines west have order- ed 1000 gendolas to be delivered by May 1, to be used in the coal and coke traffic. —Twenty-eight dozen quail have been taken to Washington County from Tennessee, and will be released for breeding purposes. —The Philadelphia and’ Reading Company, will be sinking a new shaft near Minersville the output of which will be very great. —W. H. Dech, of Lincoln, Neb., the reeently defeated Populist candidate for Congress, who attempted suicide, was a former Allentown man, —All the mines of the Delaware Lacka- wanna and Western Company, employing 13,000 hands, were put upon on eight hours a day. —In a eollision of coal trains om the Dela- ware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, at Ninevah, Engineer Andrew Histed was killed. —Suit will be brought against the bondsmen of ex-Treasurer Obold, of Reading, to recover the deficit amounting to several thousand dollars. —Tom Brown, accused of the murder of an other negro named Robinson, at Ebcrvale, has been arrested at Niagara Falls and taken to Wilkesbarre. : —County Treasurer Pepper, of Pottsville wants that part of the Auditor's report set aside which charges him with the Court House commissions. —Stricken with paralysis and unable to call for help, Hotelkeeper W. A. Eby, of Shamokin was frozen to death within sight of his home Sunday night. —At the same shaft and in the same manner but at different times Friday Thomas Moran and John Thomas, driver boys in Wilkesbarre mine, were fatally squeezed.