Brana Wat BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. -—Nothing likes to be bossed. Un- less it be the bovines. —1If the leather trust is a go, the Lord help our poor soles. —- War clouds are again hovering over Europe. Is this a chestnut, —4Money talks’’—There are lots ot office hunters waiting for its call. —Governor TILLMAN, of South Caro- lina, has a job worth having now. —Economy is said tobe wealth, but how is the man to get rich who has nothing to economize. —1It is quite evident that Uncle JER- RY RUsk didn’t leave very good weath- er recipes for his successor. —There was a fisherman for every trout on Saturday, but alas, there was not a trout for every fisherman. —The grand naval review of Hamp- ton Roads will bea success. Everything backed by water is sure of coming out all right. — ALEXANDRE, the boy king ofServia, got ahead of the regents with a coolness that would have done credit to “Young America.” --Eggs ought to be cheap down about Hampton Roads just now, with each one of those big ships ‘layin to” sever- al times a day, —1f women expect the right to vote they must give up the hope of wearing hoops, for how in the world could they all get to the polls 1n one day ? —The Philadelphia Times is a great paper, but it didn’t find out the real reason why men don’t go to church. It is because they are not christians. —The dynamite industry of the Unit- ed States amounts to about $6,000,000, yet when it comes down to blowing, it will size up with any others we have. ~-Par Ean is still down in Chili. Why don’t he come home? If his suc- cessor is not soon named we will have no honor to uphold at the Chilian court. . —Some paople are already expressing the fear of not being able to drink the Chicago water, while at the Fair There is no use fussing about it there will be lots of other stuff to drink. —Anotker novelty could be intrc- duced nicely in the shape of a souvenir spoon. Something in the shape of a re- minder of a “spoon,” don’t you know! A miniature of her pa’s foot for a bowl, for instance. —The House ran away with speaker pro tem TEWKSBURY one day last week. It is a pity thers was not some wooden man in the chair at the time, and then there wouldn't have been much loss if it had never come back again. —The experience of a proof reader on a newspaper advertising patent medi- cines verifies the statement made by Prince HERBERT VON BISMARCK, that “when cne reads a medical book be im- agines he has all the maladies described therein.” — Wonder what Holy JoHN WANNA- MAKER will think when he hears that ANra)NY BuvaN, ona of his postmas- ters, traveled all the way from Mohawk Hill, N. Y., to Philadelphia, to buy “green goods?” Mr. WANNAMAKER has laid himself open to censure for en- couraging such green institutions as the Mohawk Hill postmaster must be. —The Union League, posing as the organization of perfect Americans, who above all others? are capable of realizing the elevating influences of Nineteenth century enlightenment, has just refused to admit THEODORE SELIG- MAN to membership because heis a Jew, Such an action is a disgrace to the Lea. gue and it will live to be ashamed of it. —Commissioner BLoUNT’S action in ordering the stars and stripes hauled down from the government buildings of Hawaii, at Honolulu, has been seen through many colored glasses by differ- ent writers ot the country. But since he is to treat with that government re- garding annexation he must necessarily recognize it before he can begin the per- formance of his mission, -—The anti-Catholic societies, which are springing up all over the West, known as the American Protective As- sociation, or “A. P. Aism” for short, would be well named if the A. P. Aism was contracted to ape-ism. Surely there can be no men of intelligence members of an organization that has for its one purpose the persecution of a certain class ot people simply because they pro- fess the Catholic religion. —In the sentence of the Dowager Duchess of Sutherland, MARY CaARro- LINE, to imprisonment in the Holloway prison, London, for a term of six weeks and to pay $1000 fine for contempt of court, FRANCIS JEUNE, president of the court of probate, has established a prece- dent for the high flying nobility of Eng- land to tremble at. When it comes to matters of justice the English law rec- ognizes no distinction between prince and peasant. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 21, 1898. NO. 16. Hauling Down the American Flag. The Republican newspapers and politicians are trying to make capital out of the fact that Commissioner BLouNT has directed that the Ameri can flag, which the provisional govern- ment in Hawaii had assumed to cover their proceedings, should be taken down. Some very cheap clap-trap is indulged in concerning this transac: tion, it being represented as an iondig- nity to the flag. There is evidently an intention to work upon the patriotic sentiment of the people with an effect something hike that produced by the expression of General Dix: “If any man hauls down the American flag shoot him on the spot.” Bat the American people are endowed with a large amount of practical sense and are able to discriminate between hauling down the American flag where it had aright to be, and taking it down from an equivoc:l position in which it had been placed by parties who had wo right to put it there. Ia the Senate last week a Republi can Senator offered a resolution in- quiring by what authority the Ameri can flag had been hauled down in Hawaii ? The resolution had a pa- triotic look and was replete with the spread-eagle sentiment. But it was greatly shorn of its clap-trap element by an ameadment offered by a Demo- cratic Seaator inquiring by what au thority the American flag had veen | raised in Hawaii ? This certainly | would be the more proper subject of | inquiry. If that flag had been raised | in that locality by the direction of the American government, 0 haul itdown | would certainly be an indignity and an offense. But it was not run up by aay such authority. Certain parties assumed to use that flag to cover rev olutionary proceedings, without tne knowledge or consent of the United | States government. It certainly was a very great’ assumption to use it for such a purpose. Ordinarily considered, it was an abuse of our flag. It is true, they claimed that they got under iis cover with the ultimate object of being annexed to the Uaited Suates, but it was for the government of the United States to determine whether the an- nexation of the isla: ds was desirable or not, and if it should determine in the negative, what else is there to be done than to direct that the flay, which was put up without aathority, should be taken down. Its employment for a purpose in which the United States government was not consulted, and in | fact had no knowledge of unul after the act, was nothing short of unwar- ranted presumption. Whether the anuexation of the is- lands would be an advautage to this country is an open question. Every- body has a right to his opinion oa the subject. The HarrisoN administra: tion hurriedly moved for annexation without inquiring into the facts. Com- missioner BLOUNT was seal out to in: quire into ali the circumstances con: nected with the question. By his di- rection the American flag, which had been used by parties unauthorized by our government, has been taken down, and it is premature to express an opinion in regard to this matter uatil he has reported. In the meantime the people may rest assured that Ameri- can rights will be protected in Hawaii, and that the islands will not be al- lowed 10 fall into the hands ot any other power. ——The Philadelphia Press says in its Monday's issue: ‘Representative Foour, of Union County, ina Harris- burg letter to his paper, the Lewisburg Saturday News, says it is talked straight out in loud tones that Sena- tor CAMERON is to be succeeded in the Senate by ex-State Treasurer HENRY K. Boyer. Some of General Goins friends have also said that he is to be a candidate, so that the campaign has got an early start.” Representative Focrr had better al- low his constituents to remain in blissful ignorance of any successor to Senator CAMERON or he will not be around when a successor is to be elected. Cam - ErRON and Quay are both vindictive. er ——— —Statistics and the condition of the State asylums for the insane show conclusively that lunacy is on the in- crease in Pennsylvania. What can be the cause of such a condition of affairs? Surely the newspapers are not to blame. Extend the Investigation. The Repablican Senators. were un- able to get iu their work on Senator Roach, of North Dakota, who they think is too impure a man to be allow- ed a seat in the same chamber which containg such an aggregation of Re- publican honesty and pusity as they constitute. Lf upon re-assembling at the next session ‘taey ineist upon overhauling Senator Roacm it might be well to let the inquiry go on. But it should be made sufficiently broad and comprehensive to in- clude the antecedents of a number of Republican Senators: There would be no equity in inquir- ing into the case of Roacm and leave the smirched characters on the Repub- lican side go uninvestigated. Quay’s case, for instauce, would furnish ample employment to an investigating com- mittee, The charges published against him by the New York World, which have not been refuted by him, are of suuch greater magnitude than those that are brought against Roacm, and are such as would not be unworthy the attention of a committee looking for smirched Senatorial characters. And then there is the HippLe MircHELL case. It will be remember- ed that when the Republican Senator from Oregon got into the Senate he made his advent into that body under considerable of a cloud. There was more or less suspicion connected with the fact that when he went to Oregon | he found it expedient t> change his name from [liepLe to MircdeLt by which latter coznomen he nas been known since he has been in the Senate. [It Roacm is to be investigated why nou HippLe® MircHELL also an overhauling 2 Sen- ator CHANDLER, of New Hampshire, is one has been shooting off his mouth very violently against Senator RoacH, an ii wasn'ta bad suggestion cwually thrown out by a give who Seaator VORHER-, of Indiana, that it the over- hauling of past records is to be the | order of business in department. woald be a sabject tor an investizating committee that woa'd not be unfruitfal of damazing develop ments, the Senate, CHANDLER'S management of the navy | i which a fabulous price is asked when | there is mucn cheaper land in the When the Senate meets again, if | the microscope of inquiry is to be turn: el on Senator RoacH, let that instra- ment of minute investization be aso tocussed on Quay, HiepLe MiTcHELL, CHANDLER and some otner Republi- can Senators who might he mentioned. An Important Tribunal. The Behring Sea Arbitration, which is now in progress at the French capi- | consent to using the larger portion of tol, is a tribunal whose proceedings are attracting much attention. The parties to the controversy are of no less dignity and importance than the United States government, on the one side, and government of Great Britain on the other, and the point in contro versy is the exclusive right of the United States to control the seal fish. ery in the Behring sea. Thais right is claimed by our government as having accrued to it when it purchased the rights of the Russians in those waters. The contention of the English is that Russia in selling Alaska would not convey the control of an adjoining body of water which she never pos- gessed. Those who will look at the map will see that the Behring Sea compises a large portion of the northern part of the Pacific ocean, and that the nation which as- pires to 1ts exclusive ownership puts in a very big claim. However, this is a matter which the great international lawyers will have to argue before the arbitration now in session in Paris. There is no doubt that the United States has substantial grounds upon which to base its conten- tion, and whatever may be in it will te brought out by its able counsel, which includes some of the best legal talent of our country. And there is alsa no doubt that if the English had a claim similar to that which this country be- lieves it has derived from its Alaskan purchase, they would insist upon hav- ing the fullest advantage of it. Oue of the leading characteristics of the Eng lish government is its grasping dispos- ion. It never relinquishes an ad- vantage, and in this particular the Un- ited States should be equally tena- cious. The matter, however, has been submitted to arbitration, and both governments have bound themselves to abides by the awarl. phians, who wanted to make too much out of it, will have themselves entirely ‘being antiquated and not of sufficient | pose just as well, {the appropriation in purchasing the | struction of the new Mint is delayed, They Wanted Too Much. There is no doubt that the Govern: ment needs a new Mint, the one that is now making the coin of the country capacity for the purpose of such an es- tablishment. = And there can scarcely be a question that the new Mint should be located in Philadelphia where ‘the coining has always been done, and there being. no good reason why it should be removed tosome other place. But it looks as if greed and bad man: agement on the part of citizens of that city, who have been managing the new Mint enterprise, have defeated the object for which tney have been aiming. : Alter much effort on the part of their Congressmen the bill authorizing the building of a new Mint was passed, and an amount of money for its con- struction was appropriated. The ap- propriation, with the amount accruing from the sale of the old Mint. site, should have been sufficient: for the erection of the new structure, if man. aged with judgment and reasonable’ economy. Bat immediately upon the favorable action of Congress in this matter an extravagant ambition mani- fested itselt on the part of Philadelphia to have the building located in the most populous and expensive section of the city where ground could not be purchased except at exorbitaut prices. The parties who agreed to sell their properties for this parpose asked eo much for them that most of the ap- propriation would have been consum: ed in purchasing the site. The loca- tion having been secured by negotia- tions of a. decidedly speculative char- acter, Secretary CarLISLE was asked to approve of the transaction, his approv- al being necessary belore the work could go on. But the Secretary with. holds his assent. He can not see the vecessity of building a mint on the most expensive ground in the city. He looks upon such an establishment as a mere coin factory, and believes that it would be an unjustifiable ‘waste of money to put a factory on ground for suburbs which would answer the pur- Sach. misuse of the public money might be expected of an extravagant Republican adminis- tration, but it would be entirely out of place under Democratic management. The Secretary would not be doing his duty to the government if he should site for the building, and if the con- or should entirely fail, the Philad.l- to blame for the failure. will Not Be a Candidate. We notice that a number of our ex- changes insist on making State Senator MarkLEY, of Montgomery county, a candidate for the Democratic nomina- tion for State Treasurer. This woald be an excellent political movement it it could be accomplished. * Or. MargLEY is one of the most popular Democrats in eastern Pennsylvania and his ex- cellent record as a Representative and Senator, his high character and person. al maguetism, would make him an exceedingly strong candidate, but un: fortunately Dr. MARKLEY is not an as’ pirant for the position, nor could he be induced to accept the nomination were it tendered him unanimously. The WarcamaN is authorized to say that under no consideration will he allow the use of his name in this connection, ——Epwin BoorH, the greatest of American tragedians, is lying at the point of aeath at the player's club in New York city. Stricken with par- alysis it is feared that he will not re- cover. Mr. Boon is quite old and has not been the same man since his stage, companion, LAWRENCE BARRETT, died 80 suddenly two years ago. In the event of his death the stage will be left with but one really notable tragedian, Mr. Henry Iiving, and the indications point to the conclusion that 1t will be a long time before his equal will appear. ——Governor PATTISON on Tuesday , appointed Prof. N. C. Schaeffer, of the Kutztown Normal school, to succeed De. WALLER, as State Superintendent of pablic instruction. The Next Removal in Oraer. From the New York Times. rhe The American flag haviig been re. moved from the Government buildings at Honolulu and the marines of the Boston having been removed from the streets of the town to the vessel where they belong, the next removal in order would seem to be ‘that of Minister Stevens, who ordered ‘the flag to be raised over a foreign Government and called upow the marines to keep it in place. There ‘is much ground for the opinion that the whole socailed rev olution in Hawaii and the ‘setting up of the provisional Governmeat, as well as the unautherized protectorate, were due to Mr. Stevens, and it is almost certain that a different attitade. on his part would have prevented the whole complication. According to the latest reports he is stilf playing the part of a mischiefmaker, and he should be re- called. As a persistent promoter of annexation he should no longer have even a nominal official relation to our Government. : They Can Well Afford to Keep Quiet. From the Doylestown: Intelligencer, The New Jersey Legislature is a trifle “worse than the Pennsylvania Legislature. The former is Democrat. ic and its especial sin is of direct and wilful commission in the passage of the infamous race track bill, The Legis- latare of Pennsylvania is Republican and its principal neglect is in the mat- ter of apportionment. ~ The : laws re. quire this duty to be performed, but it is not, and the majority party mast bear the larger share ot responsibility. Political dishonors are pretty even. There have been worse things actually accomplished by Democrate in New Jerseyv—and some of them have gone to jail for their doings—but the Repub- hican legislators of Pennsylvania who helped put Andrews in a seat in the Legislature to which he was not elect ed have no room to eriticise their neighbors of Jersey who have commi- ted mcre notable and widely affecting outrages. : Brought About by Republican Bad Management. From the New York Sum. We fear thut the United States would not make as favorable a show in a re- view of the carrying vess:ls of the com- mercial countries of the world as’ it will ‘make next week in the naval review in our waters. It is not to our credit that the two best steamships in the Atlantic trade owned by an American, company were built in a British shipyard, or that wa have not any steamships bn the, Pa. cific that are superior to those of the British line between Vancouver and Hong Kong. Ttis to our discredit that our country controls a less proportion of the carrying trade of the world (apart from the coasting and lacustrine trade) than it controlled sixty or seventy or eighty years ago. Surely we ought not to rest satisfied as long as our commercial fleet upon the high seas issmaller, not only than that of England or of Germany, but also than | that of France, of ltalv, or Holland. ———————— America for Americans. From the Williamsport Times: Judge Magee, in commenting upon the petition for a saloon for Hunga- | rians in Braddock, significantly remark- ed that the court had not yet been asked to license an American to keep a saloon for Americans. The Judge saw at a glance the tendency of the re- quest made of the coart, which must be als» seen by every person conver- gant with the clanishness of foreign residents in our cities. Separate sa loons would prove most powerful fac- tors in preventing that assimilation of foreign elements into. American citiz: enshin, hy affordieg places where for- eigners might congregate and perhaps plot and plan. Think of such dens bein labelled: “Hungarian saloon,” “Polish saloon,” “Bohemian saloon,” etc. The dangers possible behind such signa cause shudders at the thought of them, id AEE —————— Won’t We Be in Clover. From the Lebanon Star. Another member of President Cleve. land’s cabinet knows ‘‘wbat we are here for,” the Hon. Hoke Smith, of Georgia, Secretary of the Interior. Sec- retary Smith is said to have remarked that he will not consider the work of reform ended until eyery Republican in his department has been removed. The Petition Business Overdone. From the Atlanta (Ga.) Journal. The petition business is greatls over- done anyway. We doubt if a single important office has been or will be awarded at Washington on a petition. Usually very little attention is paid to petitions, for the good reason that the appointing power understands how little they mean. BI TTIIR Dedicated to the Philadelphia Press from a Republican Contemporary. From the Williamsport Republican, We fail to see the occasion for any tuss over the fact that our flag does not now float over the capitol of Hawaii. No one who does not love that flag pulled it down. No one who does not love that flag dare pull it down, Spawls from the Keystone, or? —In fall of éoal in Ashland colllery, Tobia Miller, of Logust Gap, met death, —Montour county's new jail, which cost $2800, is- ready to embrace prisoners.” | 7 ~ —Tén year-old James Sweeny fell 50 feet on an Oneida slope and was fatally injured. ; =There are in the Willliamsport boom ready to be sawed 130,000,000 feet of logs. —Work has been begun on the Reading trol. ley system, and cars may be running by June —Survivors of Allen’ Infantry, of the First Defenders, banqueted in Allentown Tuesday, —Controller Gourley, of Pittsburg, has be- gun an audit of that city for the past ten years, —The Pennsylvania Typographical Union met and was banqueted of Harrisborg Tues- day. 2 —Berks county school teachers complain that farm laborers are better paid tham them- selves. $0 1d -~William Miller, afarm lad in Peachbottom township, York county, was crushed: to death by a field roller.’ —Bessie Hoffecker, of Birdsboro, may die ag’ the result of a fall through a straw house en a Nantmeal farm. —To capture a retreating Italian sv Schuyl- kill Haven, Constable; Jobn Butz shot him through the arm. —A log jomped from a mountain slide on Tim Gray’s Ran, Lycoming county; and: killed Washington Teamer. ~A.grand jary at Easton recommended the’ building of a free bridge over the Delaware: River-to Philipsburg. ad | —Hurrying te meet hie $rain, John L.. Sny der, an:aged mail carrier at Riegelsville, sank dead when he reached the station. —Allentown liguor licenses will expire Tires day and the town will go dry until the last of’ the week, when new licenses will be granted. — In the case «fithe State against the Poti ville Iron and Steel Company, Judge McPhers son, of - Harrisburg, directed the company to pay $2835. ! ih —Weary of collecting road taxes at New Ben- ton, Dauphin county, Supervisor W. B. Reed’ has disappeared afterwriting a note intima< ting suicide. Bh —A thirtebn: pouad stone was hurled a quar-- ter of a mile by a Hast at Cornwall, and iterash- ed througirH. Bi. shirk’s house, wrecking con- siderable furniture; ae 2410 Go ¥ —A majority of the commissioners appointed to investigate have reported against a change in the boundary line betwéen Lackawanna and Susquehanna counvies. : —The convention of the State Typegraphicay Unions, as. Harrisburg, Tuesday, indorsed George Chance, of Philadelphia, for Public Printer at Washington. —For asserting that Expressraamm Henry Becker would serve beer to anyone for a dol- lar, Judge White, Allegheny, has been sued for slander to the.twae of $10,000. —There sre still 21 cases of smsall-pox in Reading and the Board of Health will inves. tigate the charge that one physician is respon- sible for the'sp read of the disease. —The Presbyterian congregation of Clarion has secured:$10,500 toward she erection of their contemplated rew church building. Of this sum seventeen persons contributed $500 each. —Charters were Tuesday granted to the Mc- Keesport and Braddock Passenger Railway Company, eapital §50,000. and the Bradford Chemical Company, of Bradford, capital $50,000. ; —A-“jutant General Greenland issued an or~ der Friday honorably disebarging- First Lieu- tenant J R. Fell and First Lieutenant Thom- as D. MeGlathery, both of the Firs§ Regiment Philadelphia | —Somerset county will celebrate the cen~ tenary of its organization on April 17, 1895: On September 12.of the sam> year the town of Somerset, formerly called Brunerstown; was selected as the county seat. —A quantity of Elk county timber wilibe in the fore:try exhibir atthe World’s Fair. Com- missioner J P. K Hall, of Rideway, has been actively engaged in procuring specimens of all woods that grow in that county. A bachelor of 35, living on Eleventh street, Erie, dreamed the other night that be had a wife and seven children. Next morning a basket with.a baby in it was found on his frent -door-sten. And now he’s afraid to go into the back yara for fear the wife and the other six .children may turn up, too. —There are now more white pine logs afloat this spring than for many years,. says the: ‘Clearfield Republican. 'Tt is stated that twenty: million feet of pine were cut and put 'in’ last i winter for Williamsport parties. Twelve mil- lion feet were-put in on Mosquit> creek. The timber tracts on that stream were. cleared: of timber this winter, and the drive this spring will be the: last: made on that stream, —Considerable excitement prevails at Wilkesbarre over revelations: concerning the condition. of affairs at the Danville Insane Asy- ‘lum. The institution is'only large emough to.aceommodate 700 people when taxed to its full eapacity, says the Wilkesbarre Loader, yet at the present time there are 1,200 patients ‘being cared for there. Many of them are compelled to sleep on the floors and undergo other hardships. The result will be that many of them will have: to be turnediaway. —The Cooley family have again separated, s1ys the Uniontown &tandard. After the trage- diesin which some of its ‘members figured during the past year the family reunited after a long separation. For years Lute Cooley had worked at his little shoe shop. in Faivehance, bat lived apart from. his wife and ehildren, who made theirhome on the little: patch of ground out on the Smithfield road. After the death of Frank and: Jack the home piace was disposed of, and the family came to town to maka their home with Lute, All was well for a while, but in afew days the trouble in the household became so extensive that Mrs. Cooly and the girls and the little boy left and took u» their residence in Monkey . Row, on the east side of the creek. ~The Wilkesharre Revord has this early 1 “worm” story : A Polish. woman named Mary Yutsko, ‘of Turkey Hill, Plymouth, had a thrilling ‘experience with a black snake on Sunday last: She had been out walking with her three year old child and was: passing on herreturn home through a narrow strip. of woods near her home. The child complaiged of being tired and the two sat down upoa the ground. They had been seated but, 8 mos ment when the mother was horrified to see a great snake entwining itself about the child's body. She hastily picked up a branch from a tree and attacked the reptile, when it sprang at her and coiled itself around her waist and arm. Her shrieks attracted (he attention of two young men from a near-by house, ‘and they cama to her assistance and killed ‘the reptile. It was ablackenskq and nearly seven feet in length.