8Y RP. GRAY MEEK. EE ECS Ink Slings. ~—This is the hay-day of the farmer. —Mr. CLEVELAND is still fishing, but not for suckers. — Have the mosquitoes on Buzzard's bey silver bills ? : —The present Secretary of Agricul- ture is doing the weather up brown. —There are times when one wants to be left alone, but not when he holds a full house. —To-morrow the trout fishing season | will end and, oh | the glorious possibili- ties that go with it. : —The River League promises to be an interesting association of ball clubs, if it doesn’t immerse itself in debt. —Mr. PORTER has resigned as Super- intendent of the Census. His army of clerks are still at work however. —An exchange remarks that ham- mocks are beginning to come down. A surecign that there are too many in them. — According to Prof. DRUMMOND, of Chicago, coming men are to have weak- er ‘‘Jegs and more development of head. Perhaps the great scientist has the “tip’’ that liquor will be cheaper in the future. —The man wko forgets the friends of the days when he was struggling for the position of affluence which he now holds, is no more worthy the esteem of honest people than the wretch who disgraces the mother who gave him birth. —Indiana is pushing herself to the front in more ways than one. Not con- tent with having the biggest show on earth, on Monday night she had a prize fight in which SoLLEY SmiTH knocked JoENNY GRIFFEN out in four rounds, and won the feather weight championship of the world. —The increasing resort of mobs to lynch law is assuming an alarming as- pect throughout the country and it seems that the cool headed careful man is being displaced by a quick tempered, impassionate populace which stops at nothing until its mad frenzy has been worked off on the life of some unfortu- nate. -—If Emperor WILLIAM of Germany, should visit the United States this sea- son he would find thousands of his form- er subjects living in comfort and ease, far removed from the distressing con- scription of Germany and not disturbed by Army bills. Every one of them are indepent enough now to feel no abash at inviting their former ruler to have ‘‘ein glass beer.” —The dreadful holocaust at the ‘World’s Fair made many sad hearts in the White City during the week. It would have been remarkable indeed had there not been some fatality where so much of enterprise and so many peo- ple were gathered togethered, but such an awful scene, as Monday’s fire must have been, will dampen the gayety o the Fair for some time. —The tide of depressed business is beginning to turn and as the gold is now daily being shipped hither from England and our grain is beginning to be demanded abroad there is little doubt that business will pick up ere long. Though much is supposed to depend on the coming session of Congress it will be found that no matter what its resuits there will be a general picking up in trade soon. —1It has been a cause of worderment that so few girls are taught cooking, sewing, house keeping and the like ac- complishments when it is known there are not near enough millionaires and princes to go around. Many a girl would far rather die a spinster than soil her hands with work, and the hard work- ing, sensible young man of to-day, who is destined to be rich ere long, lets her severely alone. ~The Pall Mall Gazette recently published a description of the royal coach in which ANDREW CARNEGIE and friends are touring through Scot. land. ‘With its solid gold mountings and gold mounted harness the Gazette calls it the ‘‘resplendent vehicle” * * * of the “Democrat Triumphant.” We wonder if it has a ‘heavily charged electric wire around the box to keep the hands of the poor people off, —The pen of thoughtless writers is busy defaming the character of gallant Rear Admiral TrYon of the English navy, whose ill fated Victoria went to the bottom of the Meditterranian, two weeks since, with over. four hundred souls aboard. Such censure of the dead is to be deplored for it is folly to think that the distinguished officer was to blame for the catastrophe. He did not maneuver the ships with the intention of running down his own boat and had his’ command for such an evolution, even under the circumstances, been ex- ecuted with that dispatch which he had every reason to expect of his subordi- nates there would not be ‘the mourning ' in the English navy that there is to- day. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA., JULY 14, 1893. NO. 27. After the Repeal of the Sherman Act, What ? Its a very easy matter to allow other people to do our thinking. Its a very common occurrence to join in with the crowd and pretend to believe just as others think they do. And this is about the situation with ninth-tenths of the persons who are demanding the repeal of the SHERMAN act, without either knowing or thinking what its effect may be. We doubt if one man in twenty has ever considered what effects the stop- ping ot silver coinage in this country may have. We are confident that not one in twenty knows ; and yet almost every man you meet now is certain that all that is necessary to cure our supposed business, and finarcial, ills is to repeal the SHERMAN act, and stop making and using silver dollars or silver certificates. Ask the first ten men you meet who favor this policy, how itis going to help our condition, and nine of them will tell you plainly they do not know ; the tenth, who is possibly some “know it all” or probably a money-lender who desires to see a scarcity of money, that the rate of interest may be high, will begin to tell you about ‘‘restoring con- fidence,” the necessity of a ‘‘gold basis,” and the importance of keeping ourselves solid with the financial fan- cies of Europe. If the repeal of the SHERMAN act, without any additional legislation on the Silver question, means anything it means to make money scarce by stop- ping the issue of silver certificates—a certificate that every one recognizes as money and that purchases just as much of anything needed, or pays just as much of an indebtedness, as does a gold coin of the same amount—and how making money scarce in this country will improve business, restore confidence or benefit our condition, is a mystery that our limited financial knowledge fails to comprehend. It is possible that new or additional financial legislation is needed. But is the repeal of the SHERMAN act—a re- peal that would virtually demoaitize silver, and discredit over one-halt of the money now in the hands of the people—all that is required ? This is the question that thinking men of the country should now con- sider. It isa grave question, effecting every business interest and one that will have to be determined as soon as Congress meets in August, and the representatives who are to act for the people on this subject should know what the desire of the people is— what their needs require and what their wants demand. It is very plain what legislation, the bankers and money-lenders of the country want. It is equally certain that a most desperate effort is to be made to continue and increase the bonded indebtedness of the country, but whether Congress will fall into the financial trap, that is already set, is a matter that is not so certain. With congressmen who desire to act for the best interests of the people and the country, as well as with the people themselves, the important question now ig, ‘‘After the repeal of the SHER- MAN act, what ?”’ A Time for Silence. We make it as a suggestion only that it would be the sensible thing for the Republican press, particularly of this State, to lay low and “sagt nicht” about the executive clemency that has recently been extended by the Govern- ors of Illinois and New York. It is hardly to their interests to stir up pub- lic feeling on the subject of pardons. Their party made its record at Harris burg on this question, several years ago, when its financial manager, Mr. theZpenitentiary. Its leaders and boss- es have had their pledges out ever since BarpsLEY refused to “squeal,” at the time of his conviction, that he should be pardoned as soon as a Republican past and out of respect for the pledges of their leaders it might be the proper thing to temper their sentiments on this subject with unabated silence. —And now the court is going to step in and stop those interesting little conflabs which the Governor of South Carolina is supposed to have oceasional- ly with the Governor of North Carolina. KEemBLE, wag standing in the shadow of Governor is elected. In view of the . Pension Hypocrisy. The Republican papers are begin- ning to get excited over the manner in which improper nan.es are being dropped from the pension rolls. Among them is the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph, which has worked itself into a terrible passion about the ontrage of “crippled veterans and needy widows calling for their dole on the regular disbursing day, only to be met with the announcement that they have been sus: pended.” It denounces this as ‘‘barbaric cru. elty,” and so it would be if there was any truth in the case as put by the Pittsburg paper. But the names that have been dropped have received that treatment because they had no just claim to be on the pension roll. have been noremovals from the list ex- cept for proper cause. Investigation has shown how the bounty of the gov- ernment has been abused by dishonored claimants, and it is in such instances that the work of elimination has been made to apply. This is required as much for the protection of the govera- ment as for the interest of those wor- thy soldiers to whom pensions are just ly due. In cases of glaring fraud names have been positively expunged from the rolls but in many instance: there has been merely suspension of payment until suspicious circumstances connected with them can be fully investigated. Is not this perfectly justifiable where so much fraud has been practiced? When pensions have been granted for such disabilities as corns and baldness is it not proper for the authorities to inquire whether the corns were contrac- ted in the military service of the country, and whether the claimant lost his hair in defence of the old flag? The ingenuity of the pension agents has succeeded in smuggling names on the pension rolls for almost any and every reason, and it is likely wo be shown that in almost ‘every instance the suspensions furnish proper subjects for inquiry. Most of these claims no if not fraudulent ; but where they are not so found the payment of the gov- ernment bounty will go on. The party that is responsible for the outrageous imposition practiced upon the government under the cover of pensions, naturally resorts to the expe- dient of exciting pity for “crippled sol- diers and needy widows,’ when its only object is to maintain a corrupt system of plunder for a political purpose ; but theintention of Democratic pension re- form is not to deprive worthy pension- ers of a dollar that is due them from the gratitude of their country, but rather to shield their interests against fraudulent claimants, and to protect the public treasury from being robbed. ATR ERA RLS, A Change of Situations Changes the Howl, A year ago the country was full of calamity howlers. It is full of them to- day. It always will be full of them. But the fanny thing about the calamity ‘howling business is to hear the crowd, ing and damning every body who made a complaint, turn in now and vie with each other in their efforts to have peo- ple believe the country, and all that be- longs to it, is going to the devil head- long. In this line ot political effort it is difficult to distinguish an every day Republican from a Kansas Populist or a Chicago Anarchist. Each have the same gloomy grievances to cry over and each see the same dire distress in the distant fature. And yet the country still seems safe and our people go about with their bellies full and their ‘backs covered, Is it not the loss of power, rather than the business con: dition of the country, that has pro. duced. the pessimism that is now so rampant? ——If there is any basis for the uni- versal belief that the actual value of a dollar is fixed by its purchasing power, we would like to know what sense ! there is in the blather now about | “cheap money,” “68.cent dollars,” or | 8 “depreciated currency.” There never | was a time in the history of this { country when a dollar would purchase, as much of that which is for sale, as does the dollar of to day, and yet we hear of a “cheap” and “depreciated” currency. Surely our old beliefs are “wrong or the present financial theories “of some people are considerably off. There | “mand for a different basis doubt will be found to be insufficient, that less than a year ago was denounc- "Until we can use or sell this over-sup expect but the billious business condi: 1 A Mistake in the Diagnosis. After all might not the financial physicians who are prescribing a change of laws regulating the currency, as the proper remedy for business and finan: cial ills we now seem to suffer, be mis- taken in their diagnosis of the case ? That prices are low, that business is down at the heel, that men are out of employment, that large industries are run at a loss or closed down, and that the general outlook for prosperity or better times is gloomy and unpromising, is true ; but might this condition not result from an over-gorged market,more than from any lack of confidence in the dollars of our daddies, or any other, dollars that the government stamp is found upon or that is used as money ? We have yet to see the first silver dollar,—or the *68 cent dollar” as eastern advocates of a “gold basis” money call them,—that will not pur- chase just as much wheat, iron, lum- ber, ore, coal, wool, leather, or any other article that is needed by manu. facturers or required by the people, as does a dollar in gold. We have yet to find the first man, woman, child, corporation, company or firm that refuses to accept, for a full hundred cents, any dollar that the gov- ernment has provided for the people, whether paper or coin, for any com- modity they have to sell. ~ With money that every dollar has an equal purchasing, or debt paying, value, and with every manufacturer, mechanic, merchant, farmer and work- ingman, willing to receive it for that which he has to place upon the mar- ket, we cannot understand why an in- teligent people, such as we profess to be, should be led to believe that the depressed condition of business and the supposed gloomy outlook ahead of us, should be chargeable to a “depreciated currency.’ : Tous the difficulty seems more like Mr. Harrison's Can't’ From the N. Y. World. The letter of ex-President Harrison to the Republican Club Convention simply showed his blind. persistence in the Bourbonish belief that the people can be fooled at any time. Mr. Harrison wrote with the true Pecksniffian twang : I think I ma i sai the a, Bt oe onsgtessing present business. situation to suggest any Freal gain to the country as the result of the nauguration of Democratic policies: The ex-President, of course, knows that thers has been no time for the in. auguration Democratic policies, except in the executive office. "We are living and business is suffering under the laws passed and the conditions created and bequeathed by the Republican party, with Mr. Harrison’s active assistance. Was confidence impaired by our loss of Treasury gold? Mr. Harrison re- ceived from the Democratic Adminis- tration nearly $100,000,000 above the legal reserve, and lost it all. Have gold exports weakened the fl- nances of the country? Under Mr. Harrison's administration there was a net loss to the country of $122,000,000. Have the compulsory purchase of siver bullion on a falling market and the 1ssuing of Treasury notes redeemable in gold alarmed foreign investors and poral ye credits here? This has been one under a Republican law signed by Mr. Harrison. Has the wrecking of trusts added to financial distress and business uncer- tainty ? The trusts were fostered by Republican laws and enjoyed immunity under Mr. Harrison’s Attorney General. It will be time enough to talk of the failure of Democratic policies when they have been put into law and tried. Up to the present moment the only practicable Democratic policy has been to stop the holes made in the ship of state by the scuttlers who were driven out on the 4th of March, ItTaxed the People AL Right But Didn't Save the Industry. From the Baltimore Sun. Under the McKinley act block or ‘pig tin’ is now subject to a duty of four cents per pound. It was one of the fal- lacies of the Republican majority that passed the McKinley law that by the st of July, 1893, the Harney Peak mines of Dakota and the Temescal mines of California would give us all the block tin required in the tinplate a want of outside markets, than a de- jransay, and for making those tin al- for our money. We have an over-gorged country ; a greater supply of everything we eat, wear or need, that we can use or sell. Our wheat bins are bursting with a supply of grain that we cannot eat ; our furnaces, factories and mills are crowded with their own out puts that we cannot find use for ; our supply ‘is such that it the production of wheat, of raw materials that go into manufac- tories, of iron, machinery, implements, etc. was stopped for an entire year, there would be no famine for any of these commodities. It is not so much a “depreciated currency’ as it is a stagnated com- merce—a clogged up business liver, that is causing the afflictions so many interests compl ain of. It is buyers, for that which we have to sell, that we want ; a demand for that which we are prepared to supply, that we need. A different kind of money will not change the situation. If every silver and every paper dollar in the country was replaced with a gold coin of equal denomination, it would not make men eat more wheat ; or buy and use more of any of the articles for which there is now such seeming limited demand. What is needed is a market. We have stimulated the out-put of our manufactories with protective legisla: tion, and by the operations of these same laws restricted the sale of that which they produced, to our own peo- ple and country, until we are gorged and bursting with our own products. ply; or until we can find a country that will furnish a market. for that which we cannot use ourselves, what can we tion we are now experiencing. ——It is said that some people are getting mad because General Dovuk- 'HovoskY Governor of Siberia, who is {traveling through the United States just. now, is gathering up statistics {about our manufactories. There is no luse getting ruffled over such a little ithing as that. If the Geoeral wants pointers on anything this is the place Ito get them and he knew it else he would not be here, Of course the pro: | duction of tin is an exception. ~The days are getting shorter, yet we continue to get in as much work as usual. oys 80 largely used as solder and in many different ways in other industries. The imposition of the duty of four cents per pound on imported block tin on the 1st of July, 1893, was to protect our own tin mines. Those mines have never beun able to pay the cost of the production of tin and are now shut down. But the duty on block tin is now operative. An article of necessity and a raw material of many industries is thus made more expensive, with the inevitable result of raising the price or injuring the quality of many wares used by the poor. Last year 44,000,000 pounds were imported. The tax of four cents a pound would mean an increase of taxation of $1,760,000 on that im- portation, To June 1st of this year the importation was 51,855,679 pounds, the increase being due to a desire on the position of the tax July. 1. The Me- Kinley act continually brings us new evils.” Not the Kind of Work that Creates a Hurrah. From the Pittsburg Post. As a grand high executioner Post- master-General Bissell doesn’t begin to compare with the saintly Wanamaker. In the first four months of the present administration Mr. Bissell has appointed on removals 8,226 fourth-class postmas- ters. During the corresponding period of 1880 Mr. Wanamaker appointed 7,460 on removals, or more than two to one compared with the moderation of the Cleveland administration. We are not applauding this moderation with any marked degree of enthusiasm.’ Mr. Bissell could have swung his axe with a great deal more vigor in ‘the interest of good government and the Democracy. > ERR Saas All Have An Equal Interest. From the Clearfield Spirit. : : The man who ‘expects to see the country go to the devil entirely should bear in mind that the Democrats are as much concerned in the welfare of the country as are the cranks who eternally howl that the Democrats are not to be trusted. Besides there are something like 400,000 more of the former between Atlantic and the Pacific and as a e each one has as much at stake as has his Republican neighbor. Ro ———————————— The Ungrateful People ot Kansas. From the Lawrence Journal. { It is said. that Ex-Senator Ingalls is having more fun and and makin more money than he ever aid before, and that he is well satisfied to live in private life. In his joy at being out of public life he is in close touch, with the people of Kansas, Almost without exception they are pleased to have him there. ~~ Eternal Vigilance the Price of a Har- vest. From thé Bradford. Massachusetts is paying 200 men $100, 000 to kill moths this summer. That's pretty near as seductive a job as our grandfathers used to tell about when they talked of hiring a lazy man to watch the bees off the buck wheat. part of Importers to anticipate the im- | t Spawls from the Keystone, —Wilkesbarre business men have organized to combat burglars. 4 —Reading people are fighting a pest house where there is smallpox. =A Scranton man claims to have been re. lieved of a 78-foot. tapeworm. —Senator Quay and others will mark the site of old Fort MacIntosh, at Beaver. —Nearly 300 coke ovens in the Greensburg region stopped operations last week. —Tents for the various regimental encamp ments are being shipped from Harrisburg. —Tunkhannock borough pays for twenty- one fire plugs a yearly rental of $15 each, or $315. —A Jersey cow owned in Liberty township Tioga county, gives fifty pounds of milk a day. —Mine owners at Wilkesbarre are trying te * check a disease that is killing scores of mules. —John Lougherty, an alleged Philadelphia preacher, is in Norristown jail for being drunk. —Joseph W Blanche, of Johnstown, at. tempted suicide on Monday by cutting his throat. —The Fourth Regiment, the Governor's Troop and Battery C, of Pottstown, will en- camp at Columbia. —Coal mining at Antrim, Tioga county, is very dull, the miners averaging only about one day per week. —Brakeman John Moran, of the Lehigh Valley road, fell between cars at Penn Haven and was mangled to death. —Manufacturers and laborers are both yielding points to settle the iron wage dispute : in Western Pennsylvania. —Daniel Lorah and Jacob Schmehl are in jail at Reading to answer for the wrecking of the Neversink electric ear. —The Mahanoy Plane Railway, owned by the Philadelphia and Reading, has stopped operations for several weeks: —The troubles between the parochial and the public schools of Butler County have end~ ed in the closing of the former. ~—Milton €ampbell, a drug clerk of Bethle- hem, was found in his room at Muncy nearly dead from inhaling chloroform. —After being a commissioned officer for 27 years, E. Z. Strine, of York, has resigned the captaincy of Company A, Eighth Regiment. —John McCrory, of Fayette City, aged 70 was found dead in bed Sunday morning on the steamer Horace, of which he was engineer. —Easton is to have a new High School build- ing and the Board of Control has awarded the contract to Horn, Steinmetz & Co. for $62,417. —Suit has been brought at Wilkesbarre by Anthony Ford te oust Mine Inspector Edward Roderick, on the ground that he holds the office illegally. . —Captain Alex. Rodgers, of the Fourth Unit- ed States cavalry, has been detailed to assist Governor Pattison in inspecting the national guard encampment. —At Johnstown Sunday evening, Albert Leckey, one of the prominent citizens of the place, was thrown from his carriage and his brains were dashed’ out. —The condition of the Edinboro Norma School, of which Professor Benedict, ‘late of Towanda, is principals. is reported to be very prosperous, notwithstanding ihe factional spir- it which has existed among its managers. —Martin 8. Eichelberger, a prominent at- torney, died in York on Monday, aged 57. He left a large estate, which: lie managed judi- ciously. He was prominently identified with the industries of York, and'was a heavy prop- erty holder there and elsewhere, —A Scranton locomotive has beaten the world’s record for speed. Engine No: 41, which was manufactured by the Dickson Com- pany, of that city, recently ran a mile in the extraordinary short space of twenty-five sec- onds, which means a speed of 144 miles an hour, —A party of harvesters at work on the Engle farm, near Palmyrs, Pa., Monday discovered under a stack of grain the body of a man who had undoubtedly been murdered. The corpse bore two ugly bullet wounds and two deep stabs. The coat belonging:to the suit on the body was found fully three miles away. —George Pricketts, fifty years, of Mount : Union, Huntingdon county, was shot and in stantly killed by Alfred Kloss, also a resident of Mount Union. Both were men of families and the causeleading to the murder was the al- leged intimacy of Pricketts with Kloss” wife. The hooting occurred at Lucy furnace, just across the line in Mifflin county. Superintendent of Public Instruction Rev. Dr. Nathan C. Schaeffer ‘delivered an address on “The Reformed Church Centennial, Her Education and Her Schools,” at the fourth an" nual reunion of the Reformed churches of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia held at Williams Grove, yesterday, ‘Ex-Representative W. Rush Gillan, of Cham+' bersburg presided. '—At the annual commencement of Muhlen- berg College, Allentown, the degree of doctor of music was conferred upon Rey. J. F. Ohl, '71, of Quakertown. Since his ordination in - 1874 Rev. Ohl has been pastor of a charge at Quakertown. He is ‘a thorough student of chureh music and has published many works = and articles on the subject. —While the wages are still 1 per cent. below the basis, yet the average of $2.46 per ton is 2 per cent. above what was received by the men at last pay-day, says the Pottsville Republican The coal trade remains in an unsatisfactory state. The Reading Company is evidently holding itsown, for but recently they have started a number of" their largest operations which had been suspended fn early springs due to the dull trade. —According to the new Justice's fee bill Jus. tices can charge for oath and: information 50 cents; transoript 50 cents : entering discontine uance of assault and battery cases, 50 cents; entering action, 25 cents; summons or sub- peens, 25 cents, with 10 cents for each addi- tional name ; return of summons, 25 cents ; en” tering satisfaction, 15 cents ; execution, 30 cents; return of proceedings on certiorari or appeal, $1; receiving or paying over where the amount is over $100, $1 per hundred: —The Legislatare passed a law which de- clares that the State Superintendent of In, struction may grant permanent State teachers certificates to graduates of recognized literary ‘and scientific colleges. There is one statute needed still more. It is ‘an act repealing alt laws which compel the frequent examination and re-examination of teachers. A teacher who is engaged constantly in his profession has no more néed for continually renewed sertificates than a lawyer or doctor has for a yearly diploma with the attendant torture of answering questions, LE Fe]