Ink Slings. —CLEVELAND'S advent injthe Windy city caused quite a breeze. —The sole leather trust ought to be a last-ing affair with $130,000,000 backing. --Old mother nature is almost as backward with her Spring work as the State Legislature. — Bellefonte councils having voted them theright of way cows will con- tinue having bull-y times on our streets. —If there is anything in a name SAMUEL SMILES, the newly appointed nurse at the cottage hospital, in Philips- burg, should have a very beneficial ef- fect on patients in that institution. — Philadelphia newspapers want the coroner’s office done away with and we suppose it’s all because they don’t like New Yorkers to see how many people are dying otf ennui in the poky old Quaker city. —Statistics inform us that we wear out four million dollars worth of shoes every year. It would be interesting to know what percentage of this enor- mous purchase of foot-wear is made by the Walking Delegates of the land. —The World’s Fair has opened and from the general manifestation of satis- {action on the part of those who have been there already, Chicago’s blow about the work she has been doing has not been all wind by any means. —There are those who want to call Chicago ‘Queen of the May.” This is a free country and every one is at liberty to express himself as he chooses, but who ever heard of a big footed old ham like Chicago posing asa May queen. —It was remarked the other evening, as an old Methodist brother of a some- what shady character took communion at the Quarterly Love Feast : “Why I didn’t know he took com- munion.”’ “I guess he takes anything he gets his hands on’’—was the response of one who knew the communicant a trifle better. —The gold bugs of the country will have one thing to talk about at least when they meet in convention in Chi- cago next month. They can condole with one another for the set back Mr. CARLISLE gave their selfish and un- statesmanlike attempt to force the gov- ernment to buy their gold with bonds. —The lack of sympathy for the strik- ing New York hotel waiters is possibly a revenge-ful turn on the part of the public. If the waiters are kept as long in suspense as hungry guests of the ho- tels which they serve usually are, per- haps they will learn a good lesson by the wait they are having for an adjust- ment. —The Hon. Dox M. DICKINSON, of Michigan, has been appointed govern- ment director of the Union Pacific raijl- road, a position which would netLhim the handsome (?) sum of three hundred and fifty dollars per annum. The prominent Michigander would be a veritable Mich- igoose to diddle his time away with such a job. —The snap game which the Revoln- tionists are trying to play on the Span- ish government in Cuba savors very much of GARzA-ism, but with all the pooh poohing of Spain about the in- signficauce of the uprising, she might lose that valuable chain of islands as easily as she did this big one that we're occupying. —The defeated Georgia Populist Gubernatorial candidate, Tom Warso:r, has declared his intention of making a platform that will please every-one. From the way he was turned down last Fall it might not be out of place to sug- gest a cross beam, a trap and a noose as the most probable kind that would suit his following. —And now the Philadelphia waiters have gona on a strike. “What fools these mortals be.” They declare they won’t work unless they can have whiskers. No one wants their ¢whisk- ers” we're sure, but from the number of hairs found in tha butter and soup down there sometimes, we're lead to in- fer that the waiters must grow tired of them themselves or else they are often seized with generous spasms which Ais. tribute their hirsute appendages broad cast. —If some of those Wall street bank- ers who are trying to squeeze the gov- ernment into issuing bonds so they can gobble them up at a good fat rate in- stead of helping it out of the present strained condition by’ turning their horded gold into the Treasury in ex- change for the paper certificates, which ere as much legal tender as the yellow metal, would have been along the route of the Liberty bell, from Philadelphia to Chicago, last week, mayhaps they would have learned alecson in the duties of citizenship that would have made them open their selfish hearts. XN The Opening of the Columbian Fair. Atter the brilliant preliminary of the the fact that this Republic at last has a navy of which the American people can be proud, the great Columbian Fair was opened this week under auspices which promise to make it one of the greatest eventsin the world’s unhalting progress to the highest stage of civili- zation. The effort which led up to this consummation has been sustained for the past two years by the uniting energy and irrepressible enterprise of the most energetic and enterprising city in the world, Chicago having fully proved that the confidence which com- mitted to her the honor and duty of preparing and managing the memorial demonstration in honor of the great discovery, and the immortal discoverer, wag not misplaced. But the trophies of this achievement are not limited tothe credit of Chicago, alone. All sections of one common country have contributed to the sum total of the glories of this triumph of civilization. The general government has been liberal in its assistance, and there is not a State or a city in this broad land, that will not have done its share in making the Columbian Expo- gition the crowning glory of the nine- teenth century. Nor has the world at large been backward in rendering its tribute of homage to the memory of him whose voyage of discovery doub- led the known area of the globe and brought a new world within the knowl. edge and influence of the old. Every land within the limits of civilization has taken a part in the Columbian demonstration, represented by the high- est achievemeats of its skill and labor, and the best products of its intellectual development,” and the most typical ex- emplifications of ite manhogd and womanhood. Never before was there such a symposium of the higher quali: ties of man’s nature and the highest at- tainments of human capacity. It was therefore infinitely appropri- ate that an occasion of such vast signif: jcance in the evolution of modern civil- ization should be initiated with impos- ing ceremonies, such as attended the opening of the Columbian Fair on Mon- day. It was in keeping with the mag. nitude and dignity of the event that the Chief Magistrate of the Republic should be the leading personage in the proceedings which proclaimed that the great Exposition was open for the world’s attendance, and that America was ready to extend her hospitality to all the people of the earth who might come and participate in this universal tribute to the genius of Columbus. The greatest result of his discovery was the epringing of this Republic into exist- ence, the furnishing of a foothold for a coign of vantage from which free- dom shall eventually extend to every land. The American Republic is the beneficient fruitage of the discovery of this western world, and, as its repre. sentative, the President of the United States opened this wonderful exhibit of what has been accomplished by a free people who have never been made to share the fruits of their labor as a trib- ute to the exactions of tyranny, but who have been stimulated in their de- velopment by benignant institutions that have secured an equality of rights to every class of citizens. Truly the most distinguishing feat- ure of the Chicago Fair is that which associates it with the wonderful ad vancement that has been made by the American people under the influence of a free government. All these mighty achievements of untrammeled enter prise aud intelligent labor are mainly the offspring of the liberty which our people enjoy. Other and older nations have given exhibits of the fruits of their enlightenment and enterprise, in the torm of World's fairs, to which they invited the contributions of other lands, but their achievements in this respect were the culmination of centu- | ries of development. It has been re. | served for this young nation, a mere { juvenile among the sisterhood of na- | tionalitiet, to show by the complete: | ness and magnitude of her exhibition, surpassing the efforts of all other na- | tions, what her free institutions and the equality of her Jaws have done for . her material evolution and the prosper- "ity and welfare of her people. "The part taken by President CLevs. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. naval review, which accentuated the | human liberty, which should serve as {LAND in the opening ceremonies on | Monday was especially becoming as performed by a Democratic President. (As the Columbian Exposition in a marked degree emphasizes the fact that we are again a thoroughly united peo- ple, it would have been unsuitable for the chief personage in the opening cer- emonies to have been the representa: tive of a sectional party. Sectionalism in this Republic of ours is a thing of the past. It was kept up too long by a political party for a political advan: tage, but its death-knell was rang when the North and the West and the South each coutributed a due share to tbe election of a President who can claim that the tenure of his office is based upon majorities contributed by every section of the Union. Upon this truly Democratic and non-sectional President developed the duty of opening the Ex- position to which the people of the United States, no longer divided by sectional antagonism, have invited the people of the world to come and partic- ipate in doing honor to the discoverer of America. Bay State Acquisition. Nothing could be more gratifying to Democrats than the election of a mem- ber of their party in the Seventh Massachusetts Congressional district to fill the vacancy caused by the resigna- tion of Regresentative Lopge recently elected to the United States Senate. The district has always been Republi: can and had the questionable distinc: tion of being last represented by Con- gressman Lopae, the author of the Force bill. The Democrats had made frequent gallant but unsuccessful ef- forts to capture it. Mr. Lobcr being hard pushed in last year’s campaign, he having pulled through by a reduced majority. His subsequent election ta the United States Senate, as a reward for his Force bill service occasioned the special election last week, which resulted in the success of the Demo: cratic candidate. The person by whom this triumph has been achieved, leading the Demo- crats to victory for the first time in the Seventh Massachusetts Congressional district, is Dr. WiLLiaM EVERETT, son of Eowarp EvERETT the great orator and scholar who was among the founders of the Republican party. Dr. Evererr represents the best intelligence and morality of the Bay State, but has lett the Republican party because he found it antagomzing the intelligence and | morality of which he is 80 conspicuous a representative. In allying himself | with the Democrats he has the asso- ciation of the ApaMEs the QUINCEY'S and the RusseLLs, who in the better days of Republicanism were the shin- ing lights of that party in their State, ‘bat who have been forced into the Democratic ranks by the various abominations which have been en- grafted upon the policy of the Republi- can party. Massachusetts, with its superior education, has always been held up as an exemplification of the fact that intelligence gravitated to the Republican ranks, but it is certainly an evidence of its degeneracy when its best intelligence separates from it, and allies itself with the Democracy. —If ever a lie was given to the public it was the statement sent out from Washington, on Monday morning, by some irresponsible news maker that the death of captain GirserT C. WiLtse, of the United States navy, was occa’ sioned by a broken heart because ot the hauling down of the stars and stripes from the Hawaiian government build- ings in Honolulu. Such silly twaddle will hardly deceive anyone into believ- ing that Commissioner BrLouNt acted in any other than the right way in his proceeding and it is hardly probable that the attempts of the sore Republi- can press to make political capital out of this last lie will amount to anything more than emphasizing its discomfit. By changing one word in a fa- miliar pugilistic expression we have a very good description of the old Liber ty bell. Slightly disfigured and not in the ring. ——1If you want printing of any de. | scription the WATCHMAN office is the place to have it done. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 5, 1893. VY \ Asda) ©, : Awakening at Last. Notwithstanding the glaring wrongs that were being perpetrated upon the government and the disgrace being brought upon that honorable organiza tion, the Grand Army of the Republic, by pension sharks, bounty jumpers coffee coolers and even those who per jure themselves that they might live at public expense and off the glory of others, it was believed that the Grand Army either did not care to put forth its claim to the esteem of our people or free itself from the parasites which have been sucking its life blood. The time has come, however, when itis begin ning to awaken from the sleep which threatened its final dissolution. This backward drift of the organiza- tion has been seen with alarm. Those who have its interests at heart and who still hold dear the associations of those who merit the honored title of veteran are awakening to the disgrace and ignominy being brought upon them, by their failure to act towards purging the pension roll and making it the roll of honor that it should be and one time was. The ousting of the Raums, TANNERS, and like political spoilsmen has had its effect already in the Pension Bureau. The new Commissioner Judge Loon: REN, assumed the duties of hisoffice, on iast Tuesday, and ic is understood that his policy, which has been approved by the president, will be to make a clean sweep of all the officials of the pension office who have any voice in determin- ing action upon pension cash or con- struction of pension laws. This action when carried out will bring the system down to a fair and square start. The unworthy pensioners will be weeded out and the roll will then appear as it did when no dishonored names ap- peared on it. E The best evidence of the determina- tion of the Grand Army to place itself right before the people and perpetuate its honorable organization, is seen in its efforts to free itself of the great horde of hangers-on who are trying to shelter themselves under the blue coat and brass button, The following excerpts from an editon ial in the Grand Army Gazelle gives a | fair idea of what it hopes will be ac- complished. “The Gazette's editor long ago called attention in an article on “The Roll of Honor” to the fact that there were numberless frauds on the pension rolls, and manfully took the ground that these should be eliminated and the pen- sion list be made again what it was at first, and what the patriotic people of America intended it should be—a Rol! of Houor. The most drastic measures could not be severe enough for that purpose. In this purifying process every com- rade can be enlisted who has given honorable service in his country’s hour of need. And it is as much a patriotic duty. Tf you know of a person receiv- ing pension in your town who is not honorably entitled to it by service.in the field, send the name to the new Pension Commissioner for investigation. There will be some starthng revela- tions in the next two or three years, we are convinced. We have some evi dence already which will be prepared for the new Commissioner of Pensions. If fraud cannot be proven, then the pension will still be paid. ; If fraud can be proven it cannot be too quickly proven, and the pension should cease. Every dollar paid in fraud is wick- edly stolen, not alone from the patient tax-payers, but from the deserving vet: erans. Strike, comrades, while the iron is hot, and if it should sear some bogus claimants so as to leave'a mark by which they may be known of all men, there will beno cause for regret.” ——— Three more vetoes have been recorded by Governor ParrisoN. The bills providing for a commission to io- vestigate the necessity of establishing a State printing office and also for a commission to ascertain the number of unnaturalized citizens in State charita: ble institutions both met a negative swipe of his pen. Because, as he says, both are unnecessary, as the former will be satisfactorily reported by. the joint committee of both houses already appointed and the latter is a daty of the State Board of Public Charities. The third bill of which the Governor disapproved was the one providing for the appropriation of enough funds to pay postage on the Legislative Record. May the New Management Succeed. From the Doylestown Daily Democrat. The Reading railroad is now in new hands ; McLeod has stepped down and out and Mr. Harris takes his place as president and receiver, The public will await with interest the steps to be taken to put the company on its feet’ and all honest friends of the road and company will wish the new management success. The interests are too vast and too valu- able to allow it to fall into the hands of ‘“pluckers” on the one side or foreclosers on the other. The first duty of the new president will be to find out how deep the road is in debt, and, if not hope- lessly insolvent, the business reputation of President Harris will inspire ho pe that he may pull it through. A Rich Sight for Sore Eyes. From the Lebanon Report. Armed men from nine nations march. ing peacefully like brothers in the streets of the foremost city of the land of freedom is a sight for the immortals. Nowhere else on the face of the globe were such a spectacle possible. War of conquest would certainly seem to be over. International disputes may rea. sonably be hoped to be settled by an international court of arbitration. If human blood must flow in the future it will more likely be only by rebellion or revolution against the oppression or corruption of a degenerate government, Nepotism No Go With Carlisle. From the Easton Argus. Relationship to Vice President Ste- venson did not save Henry Gassaway from the official axe. Friends brought to Secretary Carlisle's notice that Gas. saway and Mr. Stevenson had married sisters. The secretary had however re. ceived previous notice that the clerk was incompetent and negligent. That settled it and the clerk will have to look for another job. This is not the first time that the adwministration has expressed the determination to conduct the gov- ernment affairs in a business manner and not as means of providing snaps for the kinsmen of the men at its head. A RSET EIA Make it a Roll of Honor. From the Philadelphia Record. £9 Very soon the organization known as the Grand Army of the Republic will come to the parting of the ways. It will then have to decide whether it shall continue to exist as an appendage of the pension claim agents, or shall stand fast for the good name and fame of the citizen soldiery in the civil war. Already there are signs of revolt among the genuine veterans against the ex- isting pension system, which, they are determined, shall once again be made a roll of honor. ASE RRR. Would That We All Could Live Up to Such a Motto. From the Philadelphia Ledger. He gains avietory who can, Curbing his Raselons strong, Say bravely to his fellow man, “Forgive me ; I was wrong.” No caste he sacrifices when Pride's crooked path he leaves, And owns his fault with tongue or pen— A triumph he achieves. Thank You ; Editor Frysinger, From the Delaware Uounty Democrat, Chester, The Philadelphia Record intimates that Senator P. Gray Meek, of Belle- fonte, might have the position of naval officer or surveyor of the port of Phila- delphia if he wanted it. Mr. M., prob. ably is not an applicant for either office, but we cheerfully attest that a better or worthier Democrat cannot be found. A Different Thing. From the Brooklyn Eagle. Securing a point of an island for use as a coaling station for the United States is a different thing from declaring a pro- tectorate, raising the flag and forcing a treaty of annexation. The former act is not-very different from buying a shed on the mainland under which coal may be stored until ships need it and call for | it. ; Taking His “Booze” With Him, From the Philadelphia Evening Herald. It was Hamlet who said : “There is. something after death,” and a Kentucky Colonel named Bramble must have had this in mind when he thoughtfully pro- vided in his last hours for his burial in a stone coffin filled with whiskey. The Mugwumps Succeed. From the New York Advertiser, The Mugwumps who were declared by Mr. Cleveland to be ‘the most clam- orous office beggars in politics” have nevertheless succeeded where good, old- fashioned, copper-bottomed, self-re: specting Democrats have failed. He is a Democrat. From the Steubenville, Ohio, Gazette. With a Secretary of the Treasury having the nerve to resist the demands of Wall street, the people will contirue to have confidence in the Financial sta- bility of Uncle Samuel. lo And the Pocket.Book Also. From the Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Wearied applicants for office. are realizing the truth of Soloman’s asser- tion, “Hope deferred maketh the heart sick.” Spawls from the Keystone, —A plank crushed the skull of Adam Zeller, a Lebanon car builder. —The fire in the Potts Mine at Locust Dale has been extinguished. —Lehigh County got 235 {iquor licenses, of which Allentown received 69. —Prohibitionists of Somerset County nomi- nated C. D. Spangler for Judge. —Three hundred cart loads of mud were taken from a Reading reservoir. —The State Editorial Association will have an outing at Reading on June 16. —Falling 40 feet from a coal breaker, al Wilkesbarre, J. J. Brown was killed. —Rain postponed Arbor Day exercises Sat- urday at Harrisburg for one week. —A mule fatally kicked Oliver Goodman driver boy in a Pottsville colliery. —Easton’s Mayor and Councils are spatting over the appointment of policemen. —Hugh MacGrillas, of Norristown, was cut to pieces by a train at Valley Forge. —Shut-downs for repairs throw out of work 3000 colliers in and near Pottsville. —The wages of miners in the Schuylkill re- gion have been reduced one per cent. —D. H. Levan has been appointed Superin - tendent of the Minersville Coal Company: —The Philadelphia syndicate took posses - sion of the East Reading Eleetric Railway. —Diphtheria has closed the schools in the Heckschersville Valley, above Minersville. —Lancaster Colliery, at Shamokin, has been purchased by Detroit and Buffalo capitalists. —Mrs. Theresa Hafer, who lived alone in Reading, died under strange circumstance. —Murderer Petro Buccieri every day goes through a mimic hanging in his Reading jail cell. —Railroad miners in con vention at Pitts- burg decided not to ask for an advance of wages. —A census of Johnstown shows the popula- tion to be 36,000—an increase of 6000 since the flood. —Cigarmakers in Lenison’s union factory at Wilkesbarre struck for a 10 per cent. increase in pay. Refused 50 cents advance in wages, Lancas- ter union bricklayers and hodcarriers have struck, —The Council of Birdsboro has offered a re- ward for the capture of the fire fiends of that town. —A Pottsville man hasinvented a stove to be used by the National Guard to eook their rations. —With official ceremonies ex.Common Coun- cilman John M. Peck, of Chester was buried on Tuesday. —There is a plan at Homestead to reunite the Amalgamated Association and the Finish- ers’ Union. —Ex-Banker F. V. Rockafellow 1s so sick his trial for embezzlement at Wilkesbarre was postponed —Editor J. W. Yocum, of the“ Columbia Spy,” has begun the publication of the “Columbia Daily Times.” ~—A quarrel over cards resulted in two Ital. ians badly stabbing James Smith, of Maudtown near Hazleton. —Igooring warning, two Ttalian miners at Scranton entered a coal chamber and were killed by the blast. —For the killing of Edward Tills in self-de - fense, Daniel Rowlands, Wilkesbarre, was sent 0 prison for a yeer. —FEaston Conference of the East Pennsylva- nia Synod of the Lutheran Church is in ses- sion at Stroudsburg. ) —Farmers are planting corn upon the aban - dened roadbed of the Reading, Lancaster and Baltimore Railroad. —The centennial of the German Reformed Church in America was celebrated Sunday in all the Lancaster churches. —Convicted of two charges of forgery, J. J_ McCarty, a Lackawanna County. lawyer, will to-day go to prison for a y ear. —Six collieries of the Reading Company, at Shenandoah, closed Monday indefinitely, making 3000 employes id le. —Tax Collector Lewis A. Rex, of Washing" ton township, Lehigh County, was bound by three men and robbed of $637. —The “Pennsy’s” news express crashed in- to a freight train Friday morning at Glen Man- or, wrecking the engine and cabin. —Sulphur fumes from Orr, Painter & Co.’s stove works at Reading prostrated Charles A. Malsberger and John Moyer, workmen. —The awarding of the conlract to build a school house in Pottsville not to the lowest bidder, C. H. Knelly, has aroused strife. — At the State Pharmaceutical examination in Harrisburg Saturday, 300 young men and one girl applied for druggists’ certificates. —The supposed body of Bell, the colored murderer, of Steelton, proves to be that ‘of Charles H. Preston, drowned while drunk. —Daniel Ebersole, & drammer, was arrested in Chambersburg, charged with embezzling about $300 from Connelly & Hartman, of Lan- caster. A ~The United Pipe: Line Company gets the right of way by eminent domain through Luzerne: County by Judge Woodward's de- cision. —On his way to a Philadelphia hospital, Jolin Doabrish, a young Pole of Shamokin, disap- peared in his escort’s absence and cannot be found. —-City Solicitor Burns, of Scranton, has been charged with pocketing the rental of a house which belongs to the city and Councils are in- vestigating. tH —Two miles below where she had jumped into the Schuylkill a fortnight’ ago, the body of Kate Leinbach, of Leesport, was recovered, Sunday. ! 4 —Employes banqueted 0. FE. McClellan, of Harrisburg, a retiring superintendent of ‘the Pennsylvania Railroad, and ‘gave him me- mentos' in silver plate. ! —Charged with having had criminal rela- tions with 11-year-old Annie Bailey, William Pettigrew, of Norristown, who is 65 years old was arrested Tuesday. = * : —Ex-City Treasurer Obold, of Reading, has sued M. E. Geiger, A. J. Fink, W. W. Werner and William Call to recover $8000 loaned them during his incumbeney in office. —The same ambulance carried John and Thomas Krebs frcm the Bear Valley shaft, near Shamokin, they having been badly hurt at different points in the ‘mihe at the same time. ! : —A hot fight for superintendent of the Wil liamsport schools is waging between Superin- tendent Trauseau, present incumbent, and Charles Il.ose, Lycoming County School S8u- perintendent.