a BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. «~The cheapest letter carrier is the postage stamp. —The Legislators are getting tired. They have decided to adjourn on June 1st. — Kaiser BILL promises to be quite as much of a “Jonah” to the Germans as his Army bill. ~-One’s conscience is a great thing. Without it we would all be liable to ar- rest nearly every day. —President MANUEL GONZALES, of Mexico, has made a dead sure thing of it this time. Hedied on Monday. —Secretary CARLISLE might have found many golden eagles for his reserve fund had he been in Lancaster on Wednesday. —Candidates are getting the cold shoulder at Washington, but they will be able to stand that better than the ras- cals will stand the ax. —The quashing of the indictments against the DELEMATERS, by the Craw- ford county court, is about on a par with the ANDREWS —HI1GBEE affair. —Governor PENNOYER, of Oregon, is one of those ‘‘smarties” who imagines he’s doing a great thing when parading his smartness (?) before the public. ~-The $100,000,000 gold reserve is all back in the Treasury, so we suppose the Wall street bankers will now find time to attend to their own business a little better than they did last week. —The ‘rubbing in” process is being vigorously worked on Mr. STEVENS. The appointment of Mr. BLOUNT as his successor as minister to the Hawaiian islands will be the last drop in his cup of bitterness. ~—Why the daily press should con- tinue the publication of Harrisburg news under the caption: ‘Doings at the Capital” when nothing has been done there this term, is a question we take concern in propounding. «To have the courage of your con- victions means that you are neither a demagogue nor a hypocrite. If you believe a thing is right don’t hesitate to say so. Many an honest endeavor has failed for want of one approving word: —-The Chinese Registration law is in effect now and we have yet to hear of an arrest for non-compliance with the measure on the part of the pig tailed celestials. In their own language. Melican man findee belly hard job to catchee us. —There is something radically wrong some where. With one doctor for every six hundred inhabitants in the United States there ought surely to be a larger percentage of deaths than there are. It is evident that some of the M. D s. have broken faith with the undertakers. —What so many papers are kicking up for because JoHN RUSKIN is to be made Poet Laureate of England we are ata loss to know. Surely it don’t make much differenee to us who writes the boss English poetry so long as the author of Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay lives. —The World’s Fair has now heen open nearly two weeks and yet things are not in a fair way to be seen. Packing boxes, muddy roads and many other in- conveniences add to the annoyance of visitors. The fakirs were ready the day GROVER pressed the button however. —The failure of the German Reich- stag to pass the army bill has occasion- ed Emperor WILLIAM to make another speech. Like most of his former utter- ings it is wonderfully full of braggado- cio, but will hardly have the effect of scaring the Reichstag into a reconsidera- tion. ~—1If the minister’s and church con- gregations throughout the land would manifest as much interest in suppressing Sunday desecrations at home they would find the business far more profitable to their own communities than this con- tinual harping about closing the World's Fair on the Sabbath. —From the condition things seem to have been in in the Chemical National bank, of Chicago, which went under on Tuesday with liabilities amounting to $900,000 there can be no doub’ that more H, S than anything else was gen- erated in the institution. Chemicals are usually pretty combustible any how. —The man who invested his surplus in Columbian souvenir half dollars some time ago, thinking that he would go to the Fair on the premium they would bring about now, is beginning to dust off his last summer’s garments and un- doubtedly is consoling himself with the idea that the Fair won’t be half as big as it was cracked up to be. —Chicago will very likely find her- self in a great big hole when the Fair comes to a close. The daily expense of the big show agzregates $45,000, which will require daiiy paid admissions to the number of at least 150,000. Such a number will not materialize for some time, but it is altogether likely that the Windy city will blow the whole thing up and float her on wind if necessary. Republican Opposition to an Ho rest Ballot. The political depravity of the pres- ent Republican State Legislature is shown by its treatment of the ballot law. Evident defects in that law ma- terially interfere with its producing the benefits that were expected of it. The evil consequences of these defects mani- fested themselves at both elections which have been held under the Bak- ER enactment, notably in the manner in which the names of candidates have been marked in groups on the ballots, instead of singly, and in the looseness allowed in permitting outsiders to as- sist alleged incompetent voters in pre- paring cheir ballots. It may be justly charged that the Republican leaders did not want a bal- lot law that would insure fair and hon- est elections. There can be no doubt that the defects in the law, as it was passed, were intentional on the part of the Legislature that passed it. Com- pelled by public sentiment to enact some measure of reform in regard to the ballot, the disposition of the Re- publicans being opposed to ballot re- form, they made the law as defective as possible. Its weakness as a preventative of fraudulent voting is observable at every point where the original draft of the BAKER bill was departed from with the evident purpose of weakening the reformatory character of the law. These manifest defects induced the friends of ballot reform at the present gession, to offer amendments that would furnish a perfect safegnard against fraudulent voting. They pro- posed to amend the defective enact. ment by prohibiting the marking of the candidates on the ballots in groups, which has led to so much confusion and misunderstanding in counting the votes, and also by provisions that would prevent improper assistance of alleged illiterate and incompetent vot- ers. Nothing could be more necessary for the carrying out of the true and honest intention of the law than amendments such as these. Buthow have the Re- publicans met this proposition? They have answered this demand for honest elections by an entirely different kind of amendment that would convert the voting booths into places where bar. gains and sales between purchasable voters and their purchasers could be secretly and safely consummated. The law, as they would amend it. would en- able any voter to call in any outsider he might select, to see how he marked his ballot, under the claim that he re- quired assistance. It would facilitate the consummation of bribery by bring- ing the briber into the booth to assure himselfthat the voter he had purchased had performed his part of the bargain. It would in short afford greater facility for the corruption of voters than exist- ed under the old law, for formerly the briber could only go to the window with his purchased voter and look over his shoulder while he handed in his ballot without being positively certain that it was the one he gave him, ‘but under this proposed Republican amend- went of the ballot law he could go in- to the booth with his man, see that he marked the names of the ‘candidates according to contract, and there could be no mistake or doubt asito the vote. It would be the very perfection of a system conducive to electoral corrup- tion. Nothing could furnish a more thor- ough reflex of ‘the animus of the Re- publican leaders in regard to ballot re- form than their proposed amendment of theelection law. Their preference is shown to be clearly on the side of bal- lot corruption. What other object than that could there be in Senator Frinw's amendment which provides for the utmost latitude in allowing outsiders to go into the voting booths and assist voters in preparing their bal- lots? What other object conld there be in allowing this to be done without challenge and without the restraint of an oath that such assistance is necessa- ry ? What other than a corrupt purpose is to be implied from that provision of the FriNy amendment which omits anything like punishment for a voter to falsely declare to a judge of election that he was unable to read or mark his ballot and therefore needed assistance? Such provisions as these embraced in the FLINN amendment could have no other object than to defeat the hon- STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. est intentions of the Baker law and to open the elections to the influence of fraud and corruption. It can not be said that this evil intention is merely the proposition of the person oppos- ing the amendment, unauthorizea by the sentiment of the party. The fact that it received the yote of every Re- publican Senator, except that of Sena- tor BAKER, the author of the BAKER bill, clearly demonstrates the fact that the party is committed to the mainte- nauce of electoral corruption. ET ———— The Cause of the Delay. When the present session of the State Legislature opened in January the good people of Philadelphia, who have long been saffering from the pillage of the Pablic Buildings Commission, pre- pared to rid themselves of that inflic- tion by getting the Lagislature to abol- ish the Commission. They confidently believed that their united action in bringing to the attention of the law- makers the grievance from which they were suffering, would speedily bring about the relief that they sought, by discharging the unfaithful public serv- ants from the trust they were abus- ing. With the assurance that so just a demand would meet with the ready compliance of the Legislature, they locked forward to a speedy termination of the career of reckless expenditure and extravagance that had made the City Hall the most expensive building in the world, costing over seventeen millions of dollars without being com- pleted. Philadelphia had reason to believe that its movement for relief from the City Hall robbery would be followed by prompt action on the part of the Legislature by the passage of the bill to abolish the Building Commission. Is it not a Republican city. always roll- ing up the biggest kind of a majority in the interest of the party? Is it not a Republican Legislature, to which the city has contributed a very large share of its membership? It was reasonable to expect that when a Republican city, by the almost unani- mous voice of its people, asked a Re- public Legislature to pass a measure of | such vital importance to its tax-payers, there would be no hesitation, but the legislation asked for wonld be prompt- ly given. BELLEFONTE, PA. But such has not been the treatment | which Philadelphia's demand for re- lief has met with at Harrisburg. From the very moment the PENrose bill made its appearance in the Legislature, it met with opposition, to some extent there was open hostility, and this has been supplemented by the most skillful arts of secret antagonism. Delay has attended the bill through every stage of its slow progress. If it does pass, it will be at the very heel of the session, when every consideration for the inter- est of Philadelphia, and regard for the just demand of her outraged people, should not have allowed the passage of the bill to have been delayed an hour longer than was necessary for the usual process of enactment. But the secret of the dereliction in this case is to be found in the fact that the Republican leaders of Philadelphia have not been in earnest in the move: ment for legislation that would termi- nate the City Hall robbery. The Com- mission, with its patronage and its pull on the city treasury, has been a power- ful factor in the politics of Philadelphia, which the machine managers would greatly miss in the manipulation of the city elections and could not afford to lose. There is no computing how much of the seventeen millions of dol- lars reported to have been spent oa the City Hall were used in influencing the city elections and maintaining the po- litical control of the machine. No one pretends to believe that all of these millions were actually expended upon the building, but that at least a third of it went to the various interests that demanded a share in 80 large a stake. [tis idle to believe that the politicians didn’t get tlieir share, and that a good. ly portion of it was not used in the Re- publican interest, in the city as well as in the State at large. This may be ac cepted as the reason why a Republican Legislature is so reluctant about killing the goose that laid such golden eggs for the grand old party. —1If you want printing of any de- scription the WATCHMAN office is the place to have it done. | action was taken for no reason involv- ing his standing as a citizen, and char- a8 a prominent Republican, was among % MAY 12. 1 Republican Jew-Baiting. A disposition to persecute;the Jews does not appear to be confined to some of the despotic countries of Europe. The liveral sentiment of the world has been shocked by the harsh treatment to which those people have been treated in Russia, and even in more enlight- ened Germany ; but it would seem jthat there is a disposition among a certain class in this country to imitate in this respect the best example of Earopean despotism. We refer to the action of the Union League of New York, which by_its re- jection of the application of young Mr. SELIGMAN for membership, shows that it is animated by the same unreasona- bie prejudice that has prompted the Russian and German Jew-baiting. The SELIGMAN case was a peculiarly flagrant outrage, The victim in this case of persecution was a young man of intel- ligence and respectability, belonging to one of the leading Jewish families of New York. There could be no objec tion as to his personal character. He was a good citizen, and bore himself honorably in all his relations with his fellow men. His father, one of the most prominent bankers of the city, had been among the founders of the League, and had contributed liberally to its support. There was every reason why this young man should have been admitted to the membership of this or- ganization, if an excellent character and respectability were to be considered as recommendatiors, But the majority of the Republican organization to which he applied for admission thought otherwise. A pre. dominant element in its composition preferred to imitate the example of the Kuropean despots who are persecuting the Jews, and, prompted by the illiber- ality and prejudice that are at the bot- tom of all race persecution, they reject- ed Mr. SELiGMAN’s application. This acter as a man, but because, as some of the members were heard to declare, they didn’t want any more “d—d Jews" to be admitted to their membership. So great an indignity as this has been followed by its natural consequen- ces. The elder Mr. SeLiamaN, who, the tounders of the League and liberal in his contributions, has withdrawn from the organization. Many other wealthy Jewish citizens who have acted with the Republican party, haye very properly become offended and have severed their Jong standing polit- ical associations, Prominent among them are the three Hess brothers, consti- tuting a strong business firm, who were leading Jewish Republicans, but who | find themselves compelled to withdraw from a party which has entered upon a course of Jew-baiting in imitation of the despots of Europe. They have de- clared their determination to act here- after with the Democratic party which treats all classes as having an equality of rights, and persecutes no people or denomination on account of their race and religion. ——Beginning with next Wednes- day morning the Willliamsport Times will be published as an evening paper. Since its inception, last January, it has occupied a field peculiarly its own, in that it was a mid-day paper. The move was entirely experimental and now after four months’ trial the pub- lishers of the Zimes find itimpracticable to continue further publication at such an hour. The Times has amply ful. filled the hopes of its publishers and has become a notable element in the sphere of Lycoming journalism. As an evening paper it will undoubtedly be more of a success than it was in its original field as a uoon-day publication. ——We were somewhat surprised to see two such able journals as the York Gazette and Philadelphia Record ad- vising the Republicans to nominate CHARLES Eyory SymitH, editor of the Philadelphia Press, as their candidate for governor in 94. Surprised at their even dreaming that Quay would let a Press man run on his ticket for any- thing, Of course if Mr. Smit could get on the ticket ‘unbeknownst’ to Maraew StaNtey Q. it would be a good thing for the Democratic candidate. ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. 893. cymang NO. 19. Close the Gates Against Them, From the Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. In connection with the sensational announcement that an overwhelming tidal wave of Russian immigration is about to sweep across the Atlantic and flood our country from end to end of the coast, it must be noted that the cholera reports from Southeastern Eu. rope are slowly but steadily growing more alarming, We donot want to be drowned out by a deluge of undesira- ble immigration, and some sort of pro- tective measures should be provided ' against such a danger. That, however though a serious matter, is one we can afford to deal with deliberately. We must do something about it, and that right soon; but we can take time enough to consider what is the best thing to do under the circumstances. The cholera danger 18 more imminent and more instantly alarming. We cannot afford to wait an instant in do. ing all that can possibly be done to stop immigration that bears with itany chance of exposure to this fell visita tion. We should not trust to quaran- tine protection after the immigrants reach our doors. We should stop the movement at its outset; should pre. vent emigrants in the cholera infected districts from coming to this country at all. An ounce of prevention before they start will be worth a pound of cure after they get here. een Why Make Such a Bugaboo Out of Nothing ? From the Mercer Press. The United States still has more gold than England, the greatest commercial nation of Europe. It has more gold than any other nation in the world ex. cept France. With $740,000,000 worth of the yellow metal in the country, ac cording to Treasury estimates, it is ab- surd to assert that the exports of gold now going on threaten the national prosperity. The wealth of the United States was never so great as it is to-day. The credit of the American Republic remains the best credit in existence. The United States is the only country that ever sold its 2 per cent. bonds at par. The resources at the command of the United States government are practically unlimited. There is no reason why any American citizen should be disturbed by the clamor of alarmists, m———— To Pay Judges for the Work They Do. From the Clearfield Republican. As the law now stands all the Presi- dent Judges throughout the State re- ceive a salary of $4,000, no difference whether the county has 25,000 or 70,- 000 population. In some counties there are less than four weeks Court while in others there are as many months and the salary the same. On Wednesday the House passed a bill adding $1,000 to present salary in all counties where the population exceeds 50,000 population. This is equity and we are surprised that this discrimination has not been made long ago. en ——— And You Are Boosting Him too Broth- er Savage. From the Clearfield Public Spirit. The newspapers of the land pretend to ridicule such fools as Ward McAllis- ter of the celebrated 400, but it is nev- ertheless true tnat they are eternally keeping him before the public, thus making him important, Treat him as he deserves and ere a year the people would forget that such a man as Ward McAllister ever existed. ea sree] Rebuked by the Press of His Own Party. From the Pittsburg Dispatch. As a humorist and after-dinner ora- tor Chauncey Depew is almost always a success, but as a serious critic of statesmanship he can be a miserable failure, as witnesses his bitter and illogi- cal tirade against this administration’s financial policy. : Not Doing a Thank You Business. From the Philadelphia Press. The killing of the Niles bill yesterday was a good thing, but the tact tbat the same House killed it that denied Phila- delphin rapid transit shows that there was no boodle behind 1t. There is limit to this Legislature. It will not do harm for nothing. The Tables Might Turn Some Day, From the Pittsburg Post. There is no chance for the passage at this session of the legislature of the re- solutions for a constitutional amend- ment giving women the right to vote. The members are only having fun at the expense of the nerves of the dear girls. TA, Will do What's Right. From the Altoona Times. The Indians, or a great many of them, at least, are likely to remain the wards of the nation for a long time to come. Itis tobe hoped that under Democratic rule their rights will bere spected., The Acme of Honor. From the Cincinnati Gazette. The proud American citizen who has received an invitation to the World's Fair opening ceremonies should ask for nothing more to complete his happiness { Spawls from the Keystone, —A street car kilied Elmer Goldsmith, a Chester lad. —Lehigh county Republicans will hold their convention August 26th. —An 80,000,000 gallon reservoir will be erect- ed at Indian Run, Pottsville. —Reading’s smallpox cases are now all con- ficed to St. Joseph's Hospital. ! —Bap#ists from all over Easterf.'Pennsylva- nia are fn session at Pottsville. —Heary Shenk will con kruet the Carnegie Library building, Pittsburg, for £617,630. —Many insane patients will be taken from the Harrisburg asylum to alms houses. —Burglars stole many valuables from the house of George Smith, near Birdsboro. —Berks county farmers are three weeks behind with work, owing to rain and cold. —The National Convention of the American True Ivorites met Tuesday in Scranton. — While chopping wood at Lebanon. Rev. A. M. Hackman cut his own head dangerously. —A pocketbook, containing $1200, was’ los, by Wiiliam Q. Bunting, a-Bristol potato deal’ er. —Business reverses led A. J. Hain, a Re- publican politician of Reading, to drown him- self. —By the explosion of a torch in the Steel works at Steelton, John Biouk was fatally burned. —Susan Hinks, whose dead child was found in a cesspool ai Shenandoah, is oa trial for in- fanticide. —An epidemic of scarlet fever is feared at Boyerstown. Four children of Charles Lit chy are ill. —About 300 workmen at! Carnegie’s Du- quesne mill will suffer a 20 per cent. cut in wages to morrow. —Arraigned in the Huntingdon court for forging a check for $275, Edward L. Hackett pleaded guilty. —Exceptions were filed in Lancaster by rel- atives to the report of auditors in the Thad- deus Stevens will case. —An unseen locomotive, at Reading, crush- ed the skull of Frank Foose, a Philadelphia and Reading fireman. —MTr. and Mrs. Peter Bovee, of Williamsport on Saturday celebrated the 60th anniversary of their wedding. —Over 300 Royal Arcaneum delegates were in Williamsport to attend the Grand Council meeting Wednesday. —Major John Lockhart, Superintendent of Public Buildings and grounds, is critically ill at his Harrisburg home. —Ex-Speaker Lawrence, who was striken with apoplexy at Harrisburg on Sunday, is improved in condition. —Paige Lee, who killed Charles Carter, over a game of cards, pleaded guilty to manslaugh ter in the Clearfield Court. —The scaffold upon which Pietro Buccieri will be hanged in Reading will be borrowed from Schuylkill County. —Millionaire James B. Scott, of Pittsburg, was arrested for refusing to allow a sanitary officer to inspect his cellar. —The First National Bank capital $50,000 was organized at Newport, Perry county, with Dr. James B. Ely president. —The elopement of Emily Mauer and Web- ster Michael, of Reading, has resulted in eight family lawsuits in two weeks. —Dr. M, L. Wenger, of Reading, has been sued by the Reading Board of Health for not reporting a smallpox case. —Murderer Pietro Buccieri, of Reading, has resolved again to appeal to the Board of Par- dons on the ground of insanity. —George Becker, aged twelve years, was struck by a passenger train and fatally injur- ed near .wahanoy City Monday. —John Brennan, of Heckscherville, while carrying a stick of dynamite, struck it against a rock, and is now minus an arm. —Employers of the Pottsville Iron and Steel Company, of Pottsville, on Monday lengthened work days to 10 hours. —Berks County has gone to Governor Patti- son in protest against the removal of insane patients from ths Harrisburg Asylum. —Pittsburg has raised a popular subserip- tion fuud of nearly $4000 to boom the Smoky City when World's Fair visitors tarry there. —The freight trains on the Pennsylvania Railroad, at Glen Loch, were piled up in a wreck and all tracks were blocked for hours. —The 20 Chinaman in the Dauphin-Leban- ont district registered Friday after being prom. ised that they would not be photographed. —Charles Hoover wags so badly injured in a fight wish William Yeagle and Frank Ogden, of Cascade, Lycoming County, that he has died. —There is so much fighting over the recent election for County Superintendent of Somer - set that the Governor will likely ba asked to intertere, —8ix cows owned by Mr. Taylor, of Robe - sonia, were killed by order of the State Veter ~ inary Surgeon, as they were victims of pleuro- pneumonia —A euabiz chunk of anthracite coal, the di- mensions of which are five feet, was sent from Pottsville by the Reading Company to the World's Fair. —I. Warren Jacobs, the Waynesburg ornithol- ogist, will exhibit 132 difforent kinds, or 550 birds’ eggs, at the World’s Fair. All are Penn- sylvania eggs. —Swatara Creek has weakened the new railroad bridge at Hummelstown so that Mid- dletown and Hummelstown trains did not ru for several days. . —Joe Hilbart, who was captured near Boy- erstown, is allegad to have been a partner of the notorious “Butler John" and a leader of a gang of theives, —Frederick Kuhloff, of Lancaster, had Con- ran Dagen arrested for robbing his house. Dagen was acquitted, and now sues Kuhloff for $5000 damages. —The Reformed Churches of the Lehigh Valley will celebrate their centennial anni- versary with a big jubilee at the Allentown Fair grounds on June 17. —Henry J. Fox and Louis Mueller, of Phil- adelphia, told a Pittsburg reporter that they | are trying to buy 1000 acres of gas and oil land in West Virginia. —Messrs. O’Hail and Hunter, of the Univers- sity of Pennsylvania, won in the competitive examination for resident physician in the Al- legheny General Hospital, Pittsburg. —QCongressman Erdman, of the Berks-Le- high district, has named Michael J. McDer- mott, of Allentown, as West Point cadet, and Levi F. Mogel, of Reading, as alternate. —Charters ' were Friday granted to the Priceburg Electric Light Company, Lacka- wanna county, capital $20,000; Architectural Publishing Company, of Williamsport, capital $5000.