CI nnn BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —To have riches is one thing. To get them another. — Next week the preachers—the Lord help the chickens. —Take every thing you can get, but be careful you don’t get in jail during the process. —There is a very appreciable differ- ence between snow the same day and “the next day’ snow. —A Legislative act of 1887 did away with all existing fence laws which probably accounts for QUAY’s running at large yet. It is not strange that such a blizzard should Lave been arranged for Grover’s Inaugural day when his election was signalized hy a snow storm. —There is but one thing for the Democracy to do--Administer the gov- ernment on the lines which the Chicago convention laid down for it. —Next Friday will be a day of fete, on the gcod “ould imerald Isle;” the sham-rock and shillalab will both be out, yet down will go the Irish “smile.” - Hon. JonN G. CARLISLE finds himself to-day in a position very simi- lar to that occupied by ALEXANDER HaMiLTON when he was called to res- cue the country from bankruptcy. _—Tt is now & question in the minds of many as to whether uncle JERRY Rusk’s weather was real weather or not. After we see what Mr. MORTON will do for us we will be the better able - to decide. —They say that it is bad form to dance at an inaugural ball. It is bard- ly as bad form as one would undoubtly get trying to trip the light fantastic on a 300x100 ft floor on which there are us- ually ten thousand or more people. ~-In Congress looking after the inter- ests of constituents usually means send- ing them a few packages of stale garden seeds. In the State Legislature looking after the constituents interests means sending them SMULLS’ legislative hand- book. — What with a new firm of pension claim agents in which Mr. Bussey and Corporal TANNER have formed a co- partnership the new Democratic Com- missioner, who ever he may be, will have to be on the alert lest the turned out Republican ‘rascals’ get more bums on the list. —Should Bellefonte Democracy re- joice? A Democratic Mayor in a Re- publican town, a Democratic Sheriff, a Democratic Governor in a Republican commonwealth, a Democratic Congress, a Democratic Senate and a Democratic President. Well we should say so. —Mr. HARRISON ought to be able to make both ends meet on twenty-five thousand dollars a year, the salary he will receive for lectures on law at tha LeLanDp Stanrorp University, in Cal- ifornia. It is half as good, from a financial stand point, to be a college pro- fessor as it is to be President. — While we are heartily in favor of the measure to close the polls at four o'clock instead of seven, yet their is a great ridiculousness in the argument which its framer advanced in its favor: tthe returns can then be ascertained without sitting up all night.” Asif the “sitting up” is at all compulsory when a fellow has a bed at his disposal. —-Ifone was able to believe with BERNHARDT, the queen of tragedy, in the transmigration of souls, he would find very little difficulty in discovering Mr. CLEVELAND'S key to success. His amazing knack of saying the right thing at the right time seems to be the transmigratory agent between him and the hearts of the people. The iraugu- ral is his latest triumph. —In airing his views as to whether women should propose. WARD McAr- LISTER, the leader of the New York ¢400,” loftily says: “If a woman asked mae to kiss her I should decline to do so. I have, in fact, had more than one such experience, etc.”” But the social swell of the great metropolis certainly does not hope to produce such irrelevant matter with which to refute Mr. HENRY LaA- BOUCHERE, the English journalist, who thinks “women should propose” unless be informs the reading public what part of the women’s anatomy he was asked to kiss, —-There always basbeen and doubt- less there always will be two distinct classes of Democrats. The one made up of those who stick to their party through thick and thin, who swallow their - dis- likes and work for the common purpose and who are Democrats at all times and under all conditions. To the other class belong the ones who identify’ them- 1 selves with the party only when it suits them and when they see some personal gain in store, who are Democrats as long as they are truckled to ‘and only when things are done as they think they should be, The offices are soon to be filled. deserves them ?° To which class do you belong ? Which class of Democrats | i in his great message of 1887. Aemacrn A Al 2 di VW. 5 > 2, 22) STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. I ~ VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA.,, MARCH 10, 1893. NO. 10. Approved by Its Results. Two elections have heen held under the BAKER ballot law and the general result has been such as to commend the new system as an improvement on the old. At the first trial last fall the people required considerable instruc- tion to familiarize them with the prop- er method of handling these new 1n-. struments of suffrage, but they readily learned how to use them, a compara- tively few mistakes having been made. Their educution in this matter was so far advanced that, as a general thing, they required no further instruction to enable them to intelligently and suc- cessfully manipulate the ballots at the February election. The general effects of the new sys- tem have been beneficial, although some amendments to the law are still needed. No one can help but appre: ciate the greater freedom it gives to the class of voters who formerly were sub- jected to undue influencein the exer- cise of they right of suffrage. There can be no intimidation practiced when the sruffragist can go into the polling booth and make up his ballot unwatch- ed and undisturbed. This feature should be appreciated by every freeman, and it should be particularly appre- ciable to Democrats, for the cause of Democracy is sure to be promoted by an uncoerced and untrammeled ballot. . No one could help observing at the last general election that Democratic gains were made 1n every State which had adopted the Australian system. This was particularly noticeable in New York and Indiana, both of which under the old unguarded method might hase been carried against CLEVELAND by Re- publican intimidation and pecuniary corruption, as was the case four years previous. In our own State the gen- eral reduction ot the Republican ma- jority, outside of Philadelphia, was largely attributable to the effect of the new ballot ‘system. The recent Feb- ruary election was marked by signal Democratic successes in many locali- ties in the State, notably in Pittsburgh, and these results were, in a great measure, due to the protection’ of the suffrage that is afforded by the new ballot law. : In Philadelphia, however, the com- plete control which the Republican machine exercises over that city, ma- terially interfered with the proper working ot the new ballot system at the recent municipal eleciion. Police interference at the polls, the intrusion of rounders and heelers into the voting booths, and even tne carrying away of ballot-boxes without the ballots hav- ing been counted, were some of the irregularities that attended the Febra- ary election in that city. Provision must be made for the complete sup- pression and punishment of such vio- lations of the ballot law, and also amendments mus: be made that will remedy obvious defects in the BAKER bill, as recommended by the Governor. With our election law perfected so as to meet every requirement of a fair and hovest ballot system, the friends of good government, and particularly the Democratic party, will have reason to be satisfied. Ee —————— Cleveland’s Inaugural. The Inaugural address of President CLEVELAND, although pot a direct dec- laration of policy, isa political deliv. erance whose implications are of the greatest importance. For example it does not outline the course he intends to take on the currency question) but when he declared that nothing is more vital to the welfare of the nation than a sound eurrency he makes it manifest that his efforts will be directed to a cor- rection of that unsoundness which ex- ists in the relations of gold and silver resulting from an oversupply of the latter metal through compulsory gov. ernment purchases, necessarily depre- ciating its monetary capacity. The silver question as it has been left by the timidity or incompetency of the expired Republican administration re mains in a condition that is adverse to sound currency and as President CLevELAND says, ‘defies the inexor- able laws of finance and trade.” The tone of the Inaugural leaves no uncertainty as tn the President’s ad- hesion to the tariff reform doctrines with’ which he electrified the country cognizes the fact that the voters have He re: sustained that doctrine, and havere pudiated the policy of ‘‘protection for protections sake,” and there is clearly vigible in his expressions a determina- tion to do his utmost to destroy the broods of trusts and monopolies and all the kindred evils which are ‘‘the unwholesome progeny of the paternal- 18m’’ engendered by protective tariffs. It was represented before the election and has been repeated since, that Mr, CLEVELAND has receded from his ori- ginal tariff reform position and had greatly modified his tariff views. But the fact is that he was greatly mis-rep- resented on the tariff question. He never advocated free trade. His ob- ject from the first was to reduce those excessive duties which make a high tariff an injury rather than a benefit to industry, and to entirely remove taxa- tion from raw material needed in in- dustrial operations ; and this continues to be the extent of his purpose on the tariff question. The term “tariff re- form” sufficiently expresses his object. With a tariff for revenue only he sees a sufficient protection to industry inci- dentally provided by a constitutional method. Another important issue that will have to be met by Mr. CLEVELAND will be the reform of the pension abuses, and in this. matter he no doubt will have the assistance of the Democratic congress. The tone of the Inaugural, as could well be expected, and as'the people had a right to expect, is averse to a “wild and reckless pension expendi- ture which overleaped the bounds of grateful recognition of patriotic ser- vice.” In its general expression President CLEvELAND'S Inaugural is a hopeful and assuring deliverance. The Great Administrative Change. The government is in entirely differ- ent hands to-day from what it was at the last issue of the Warcaman. New men are at its head and other principles, | than those which have long and iujur- iously prevailed, will govern its policy. With the inauguration of GROVER CLEVELAND a new epoch has been com- wenced in governmental methods; a new leaf has been turned over in the management of the affairs which in. volve the welfare, prosperity and liber- ty of the people. The power thus in- vested in new Presidential hands has an auxiliary advantage, wuich it had not eight years ago, in the fact that it will be aided by concurrent majorities in both branches of Congress, thus af- fording conaitions that will enable a full enforcement of Democratic doc- trines and principles. In the incident of the change of ad- ministrations from one party to anoth- er—the transferring of a vast govern- mental responsibility, as illustrated on the Fourth of this month by the induc- tion of one President and the retirement of another, there was presented a sight worthy of the world’s attention, aad the admiration of all who appreciate the advantages and blessings of popu- lar government. It was marked by an entire absence of the disorder which too frequently characterizes the change of administrative authority under oth- er forms of government less stable and well-poised than this great Republic is proving itself to be. The change took place with the willing consent of all the people, and with general good wish- es for the official success of the distin guished man upon whom has been again imposed the weighty responsi: bility of administration. The transfer of power was not backed by bayonets, excepting a small military force con- sisting chiefly of citizens: soldiers and used merely 2s an ornamental feature of the occasion, the demonstration con- sisted of citizens who had come frcm every section of the country to witness the installation of the chief magistrate whom their free ballots had elected. There is every reason to believe that the new President, whose inauguration was marked by suzh peaceful and or- derly incidents, will in the fullest man- ner meet the expectations of the great party that called him to the head of the government. He is by no means an untried incumbent. Ie is not an experimental President, He has been there before and enunciated those Democratic principles and those meas- ures of reform, which although inter- rupted by an: unfortunate Republican interval, are bound to be carried out by Grover CreveLalp, assisted by a Democratic house and genate, Railroads as the Destructive Agents in Our Forests. There can be no denying the fact that the vast domain of virgin timber, which twenty years ago was thought would supply the demands of our coun- try forever, are disappearing with alarming rapidity. The woodman’s ax has played its part well and to-day the great pine forests of Georgia, Maine and the region of the Great Lakes tell of its devastating power. Well may the Forestry Commissioners of the dit- ferent States busy themselves in trying to find some effective way to replace the timber that has been laid waste within the last quarter of a century, for at the present rate ‘at which lum. bering is being carried on it will be but a very short time until the last of our eak, our chestnut, ash, walnut, pine and other wood forests has been seen. The great stretches of cleared land, the thousands of acres of sentinel like stumps, and the bald mountain knobs, that greet the eye of the traveler on all sides, and the great timber rafts which float our rivers, trom bank to bank, in the spring, all warn us that the time will soon be here when some other material than wood will have to meet the builders’ wants. It is not surpris. ing that the supply will not hold out long under the present enormous de: mand, for unless succored nothing could stand such a continous drain. Arbor day has been suggested as the remedy needed and 'tis true its proper observance does some good but it is ouly oue of the three huudred, or more days in a year on which the wood man is at work cutting away what others are try ingto build up. Not only will the time when our forests have all been felled find us in desperate straits for a substitute for wood, but it will also find the flora and fauna of our country materially changed. Streams will not befound where our aucestors fished, | cyclones will lay waste communities "that never feared storms when blessed ! with the protection of forest surround: ings ; droughts will be or far more fre- quent occurrence and climatic changes will have so changed the seasons that a new basis upon which to cast our almanacs will have become a necessity. |" Bat forgetting what will be the con- dition of affairs when that time shall ‘come, our curiosity is naturally arous- ed to know where are forests are going to aod what are the principal 'agents of their consumption. You say, building, and we answer yes, Itor the phenomenal growth of our | large cities and the ‘‘boom towns” of the west and south, that spring up in a night, lick up the wood: ed districts like wild fire, but their are other agents at work. Ooes which have heretofore received very little at- tention—the railroads. In looking over the last report of the Peonsylvania railroad company we find that there has been used in repairs and renewals 1,724,367 ties in this state and New Jersey and as each tie contains within a fraction of 45 ft, board measure, it will be readily seen that the one rail-road, in these two stutes alone, has consumed nearly 56,- 000,000 feet of the best timber. Mostly oak. Inthe United States there are one hundred and sixty thousand miles of railroad. Each mile con- taining about 27,00 ties. The life of a tie being placed at ten years there must be a renewal of one-tenth of all those jn use every year, which means that 43,200,000 ties or 1,944,000,000 feet of the best timber that can be pro- cured is consumed by our rail-roads annually,’ With such a consumption already and the miles of road yearly increasing this agency will soon have taken rank with that of greatest de- structive powers, The best evidence ‘of the growing scarcity of available timber for making railroad ties is to be found in the prices paid for them now as compared with those when the road was being built. To-day the [Pennsyl vania rail-road company is paying from seventy to seventy-five cents for ties that were a drug on the market in 1850 at eighteen to twenty cents. What is to be done to save our forests ? is the question everyone asks, and though practical answers come from every quarter there is no con- certed effort to put them to work. —The rattle of a drum is a kind of sheep’s head bay. A Bug for Cleveland’s Ear. From the New York World. President Cleveland is about to make several diplomatic and other ap- pointments of much importance. In accordance with custom these ap- pointments will be of men who hold the principles of the party iu power and arein sympathy with purpo- seg of the Administration, is is not only right, but itis icde able to success. Under goveriiffient by a par- ty, power must be commensurate with responsibility. Democrats will therefore in due time succeed Republicans as representatives to foreign governments and at the head of the chief executive offices. But it is not enough that the new officials be Democrats. They should be men of high character and good re- pute, and, so far as is possible, of special capacity for the duty to be re- quired of them. ; President Cleveland will be sustain- ed by his party and by the, country in honoring in the breach rather than in the observance the custom of giving important offices to mere. politicians out of a job. The honor of the coun- try and the credit of the Administra- tion are of too much consequence to be imperilled simply to satisfy the needs of men who have become wont- ed to living at the public expense. President Cleveland has sound con- victions on this subject, and the full courage of them. We shall look for a high grade of appointments under the new Administration. Country and Its Exi- Our Growing ' gencies. From the Williamsport Times. A conception of the growth of this country is difficult to comprehend. Sometimes, however, events occur tht help give an idea of its growth, ad vancement and national wealth, When a person of fiity, knowing how the peo- pling, at first, of Illinois, Indiana, and adjoining states was attendad with such privations and difficulties, reads, that in those well filled states, farmers are se'ling out to go west where land is plenty, a conception of growth and ad- vancement is conceived. A resident in Illnois, in the vicinity where the exodus is taking place, won: ders “how long it will be before states like Obio, Indiana and Illinois will be as badly off as New England in the matter of “abandoned farms?’ The exodus from Illinois would seem to indicate the inevitable approach of such a condition of things in the older of the western states. When there is no longer a ‘far west’’ —so far asthe term applies to uninhabited localities —10 emigrate to, there may come a reaction which will populate the aban- doned farms farther east and restore agricultural lands to something like their old time value.” Not a Place-Seeker Among Them. ; From the Kansas City Star. Almost every man who has gone in- to Mr. Cleveland's Cabinet has made a personal sacrifice in the way of giving up a position of greater profit and more certain tenure than attaches to a place in the President’s official household. Judge Gresham relinquishes a life place on the bench ; Mr. Carlisle va- cated a seat in the Senate which he had a certain promise of retaining for an indefinite period ; Mr. Lamont leaves a business which afford’s him a very large income ; Bissell and Olney will each of them be forced to abandon a legal practice which bringe in a | handsome revenue and so on. In every case the office has sought the man, and the call in each instance was responded to in the interest of patri- otism and of able government. The Watchman is One of the Latter Kind. From the Louisvilie,Courier-Journal. There are three kinds of newspapers in the world—the organ-grinding news- paper, the free-lance newspaper and the newspaper that, seeking to avoid the extremes of servility and reckless- nees represented by the two former, aims first of all to print the truth for truth’s. sake—fairly, fully, disinter- estedly—and having done so, fit ils ratiocinations, not to some precon- ceived opinion or imaginary line of consistency, but to the real tacts of the case in hand. After Quay’s Style of Doing It. From the Pittsburg Post. Presideat Hippolyte of Hayti is the dandy political boss. According to the constitution of the black republic, there must be a congress, and hence an elec tion occasionally. But Hippolyte has no notion of having his power curtailed by a congress, and so wheaever there is an election be sets up the candidates in all the districts, and sees that they are elected, too. This was the case a tew days ago, and he carried things through a little more successfully than some other bosses we have heard of, They Will Be Remmanned Soon, From the Pittsburg Dispatch. Tammany came and went, yet strange to tell the Department offices still stand in Washington, | Spawls from the Keystone, —Bogus money is offered for sale at Bristol. —Erie city is building a $65,000 water _ works, —O0. 276 applicants in Cambria County, 183 got liquor licenses. —President Cleveland shook hands with nearly a thousand persons Tuesday. —In a colliery at Williamstown, William Temple was killed by a fall of coal. —A 1ush of coal in a colliery near Mahanoy City fatally crushed John Strichler. —About 15,000 trout were distributed in tne tributaries of Hay Creek, Berks County. —Farmers in the vicinity ot Harrisburg say this latest snow augurs a great fruit crop. — Every taxpayer in Bristol will be asked to sign a petition to have the town sewered. —Robert Love, a wealthy farmer, who lived near Greensburg, was run down by a train. —Pupils of an Alabama ladies college, Tues- day presented the President witha silk ban- ner. —A dinky locomotive at Braddock was wrecked, killing the engineer, William Mec- Donald. —Richard Sloan, temporarily insane, shot himself dead in the street Tuesday in Pitts- burg. —By falling from the balcony of a hotel at Meadville, Philip H. Kinney's back was broken. ; —On trial at Bradford for the murder of his mother, Ralph Grossmire endeavors to prove an alibi. : —Allegheny County is $20,000 richer in con- sequence of the oleomargarine fines imposed there recently. —Lotter Brothers, . of Pottstown, have re-: ceived an order to build 12 boilers, each 150 horse-power. —There are 18 cases of varioloid in one block in Reading, and all school children will be vaccinated. —Accused of being one of a gang of notorious thieves, Harry Ludwig, of Wernersville, was locked in jail. —A sled upon which four boys were coast- ing struck aud dangerously hurt Mrs. Sarah Alspach, Reading. —Rev. Dr.John Fox, of Allegheny City has accepted the call to the Second Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn. —A vote taken in Lycoming County shows the people to be overwhelmingly opposed to compulsory education. —The ticket receipt of the inauguration ball footed up $40,000—enough to pay the expenses of the inauguration. —A Clearfield lumberman, Simon Flynn, will run 35,000,000 feet of logs down the Susque- hanna River to the saw mills. —At a meeting of the Seranton CouncilTues day night City Engineer Edward F. Blewitt was dismissed for neglect of duty. : —Sydney Young, thought to be one of the thieves who robbed an Easton bank of $400 has been arrested in Washington, —The snow storm Saturday extended over the State and many roads in the Schuylki¥ and Lehigh Valleys were choked. —Ex Postmaster General Wanamaker called Tuesday, paid his respects to the President and bade him an official good bye. —Mayor John A. Fritchey Tuesday night de. feated R. B. Ziegler, for chairman of the Har- risburg Democratic City Committee. —Becoming!suddenly insane, Mary Gallag - her,a domestic in the home of Dr. Kotz Easton Tuesday, tried to burn the house. —A highwayman stabbed William Prescott onthe streetin Shamokin, but disappeared before robbing his slightly injured vietim. —The wages of all the employes of the Philadelphia Bridge Works, at Pottstown will be reduced from 6 to 15 per cent. next week. —In attempting to catch a train at York, Uriah Howard, a section foreman of the Balti- more and Lehigh Railroad, fell and broke a leg. . —Itis believed that Pinkerton Detective Ford, who unraveled the Hometead poison plot, was also poisoned by beer which he drank there. —Delaware County Commissioners are being attacked because they gave a bridge contract to a firm whose bid was $1800 higher than the lowest. —For selling beer without a license, John Smend was sentenced Tuesday at Norristown to pay a fine of $500 and go to prison for three months. —All the Democrats of the Pennsylvania delegation in Congress, except Beltzhoover Sibley and Reilly, Tuesday called on the Pres” ident. —George Chance, of Philadelpha, has been indcrsed by a large number of the members of the Legislature for Public Printer at Wash- ington. —John Wolf shot and wounded Mrs. Shen- dan Savage, and then attempted to take his own life. at Tarentum, Pa., because she refus- to elope with him. Because stickers were used election offi- cers refused to count any of the votes cast for F. Ream, candidate for Burgess of ¢ ashing- tonville, Montour County. / A new trial was ‘refused in Pittiburg to Master Workman H. F. Dempsey, who was convicted of complicity in the attempt to poi- son Hometead con-union workmen. ' —The Homestead Relief Committee has ise sued a notice to the public that no more money is needed for the sufferers by the strike. The total amount received was 5,350. 4 —An auctioneer at Bristol Tuesday sold out a gypsy camp disposing of many wagons, 40 blankets, 50 quilts, 200 towels, 25 coats 35 pair of trousers, 50 vests and many guns, revolvers, and razors. —~Theodore Roosevelt delivered an address in the hall of the House at Harrisburg Tues- day night in favor of civil cervice as against the spoils system. He had a large and appar= ently interested audience. —Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Freeman, of Lakewood, N. J., dined Monday night at the White H use with the President and Mrs. Cleveland, the only other guests being Mrs. Cleveland's mother, and her husband. —Perhaps the most remarkable electric ‘street railway bridge in the country, its road- way being 155 feet high and 85) feet long, or 90 feet higher than the roadway of the Brook" Jyn Bridge! has been opened a Pittsburg. —THe State Board of Hea'th met at Har- rishurg, Pennsylvania, and decided to se- cure the co-operation’ of all the States and municipalities on the route of travel be- tween Europe and Chicago to guard agaiost cholera and also to take the fullest precaution to exclude the disease from. the State. i