BY P. GRAY MEEK. rr rete Ink Slings. ~—4Up to snuff’—The old man’s ‘nose. Dr. GRAVES evidently wanted to find out what’s in his name. —KEELEY is to have a day at the Fair and won't there be a glorious re- union of ex-red noses. —Some one has said that this is an age of philosophy, but the trouble seems to be that philosophers are at a discount. —Bermuda onions came up for their share of the tariff discussion the other day. We had supposed that they were strong enough to take care of them- selves. —Dear, oh dear. Those Nihilists are going to kill the Czar again, but as long as they are determined to do it he is an excellent risk for life insurance com- panies. —Dr. GRAVES worn out by persecu- tion sought shelter from his pursuers in the grave. It is quite likely they wont follow him there to try fastening the crime of murdering Mrs. BARNABY upon him. —Foot-ball bullies are getting them- selves in shape to have their heads brok- en this fall. Itseems wonderful that young men train themselves up for a sport which annually maims scores of ther “or life. — Washington is being over run with the medical profession this week. Twelve hundred doctors are there in conference and the chances are that the undertakers of the capitol city will reap a harvest accordingly. ~—A Norristown woman who had: $685 in bank drew it out and hid it in one of her bureau drawers. It did not stay there long for some one promptly stole it. She has less confidence in her drawers now than she previously had. —Continental Europe is again brist-- ling up for a fight which will undoubt- edly end in wind. From the number of humps Russia, France, Italy, Austria and Germany get in their backs they should be known in history as drome- daria. —Mr. CARNEGIE has at last permit- ted himself to be interviewed and he wound up a three column talk with a Pittsburg Dispatch correspondent, on Tuesday afternoon, in New York, with : “With the spring I am sanguine we shall see better times.” ANDREW, were’'nt you making too great a concession for good Republican uses ? —The character song, that found such favor on the stage during the last sea- son, entitled “the ‘man that broke the bank at Monte Carlo,” will be laid on the shelf now for a young woman has gone one better than the man in the song and actually did break the bank at the famous French gaming resort. She won $300,000 in an hour last Satur day. x —This talk of introducing a bill in Congress fo pension all government em- ployees who have been in the service twenty years, and provide for the wid- ows and orphans of government em- ployees who die in the service, is surely nothing but talk. No reasonable mem- ber of Congress could bring himself to believe that the public will countenance any such measure. —How do you like it by this time Mr. “calamity howler” and Mr. “I told you so ?”’ Every departm ent of the . Homestead mills resumed Monday morning, and reports from many sections indicate a general resumption in all branches of trade, Stocks are looking up and it won’t be long until the Re- publicans will be looking down— their noses. —Poor old EMIN PAsHA, like the cat must have nine lives. ‘We never hear of him any more unless he has been figuring in a death fight, and according to reports has always come out under- dog. His latest death has been more disastrous than usual, however, as the cannibals have eaten him now. This cannibal story is probably only an ad- ditional advertiser for the sale of his obituaries. —-It is said, that when BEN. FRANKLIN wanted to start a newspaper his mother tried to dissuade him because there were already two newspapers in America. Of course Mrs. Franklin was’nt successful in her attempt to dampen BENJAMIN'S ardor for fame in journalism, but if lat- er day mothers had even made the at- tempt that she did there would not be fo many of us half starved editors in the land to-day. —‘“Gone Democratic’’ and ‘‘gone to the devil,” are favorite, and almost syn- onymous expressions, by which Repub- licans accredit the financial depression We are passing through as eminating from Democratic success last fall, There is one thing quite certain, we won’t deny that the country has “gone Democratic’ and we'll assure the opposition that if it goes to the latter they won’t find 1t much hotter there than we intend mak- ing it for them ere long. EAE an Le @ ~~ \ N A y & te wee > Temacraticodatdman y' / & yy dh VY y V v STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. 2. VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA., SEP. 8, 1893. NO. 385. Jmmeasurable Gall. One should think that in view of the intelligence of the people of Pennsylva- nia the Republican State Convention would have been ashamed to say that “swiftly upon the heels of Democratic success in 1892 has followed unprece- dented national distress.” That in making this assertion the Convention was indulging in deliberate deception, was shown by a preceding expression, placed first in order on ac- count of its more urgent necessity, in which the House of Representatives is lauded for its ‘patriotism’ in voting for the repeal of the SHERMAN act, and the State's representatives in the Sen- ate are urged to be equally patriotic in their action against a measure gwhich has proved to be so injurious in its ef- fects. Here was an open acknowledge- ment that there was something else at work that produced the “unprecedent- ed financial distress” which it said had tollowed “swiftly upon the heels of Democratic success in 1892. If this legacy from the Harrison administration was not baleful in its effects, why was this Republican Con- vention so urgent and emphatic in asking that it be removed as a cause of financial disturbance and business pros- tration ? After showing its hand in this way in regard to a measure that originated with 1ts own party, it is evi- dent to the simplest understanding that it was playing a game when it put the blame for the present troubles upon a Democratic administration, that has had scarcely time to warm the seat of power, and no opportunity yet given it to incur the responsibility of adminis tration, The good sense of the people was held at a mighty low estimate if the Convention expected them to swallow the following stuff in regard to the ef fect of the success of the Democrats at the last election : “A ruinous fallin the price of farm and oth- A Damaging Reflection. The repeal of the SmErRMAN silver purchasing law is a Democratic meas ure. It has been undertaken at the earnest instance of a Democratic Presi- dent, and its object is the annulment of a financial policy proposed by a Re- publican leader of the highest emi- cence, passed by a Republican Con- gress, and signed by a Republican President. It is generally recognized as having been attended by injurious consequences, Admittedly a Republican measure, and maintained as such by a Republi- can administration, which up to its very last hour refused to repudiate it, the State Convention of that party had something extremely awkward im- posed upon it when it was constrained to “demand the immediate and uncon- ditional repeal’ of one of its own party measures, and to declare the action of the Democratic House of Representa- tives in voting for the repeal of the SuerMAN law as being a “patriotic ac- tion.” It was hardly to be expected that so soon after the accession of the Demo- crats to power their opponents would be compelled to pay such tribute to measures they have adopted for the res- toration of a sound financial condition, and for the rescue of the country frcm the ruinous effect of a Republican act of legislation. which a State Convention cast such a reflection upon the action of its own party, by implication stigmatizing it 28 having been injurious and unpatriotic. If it is commendable conduct, if it is an act of patriotism, for the present Congress to “promptly and uncondi- tionally” repeal the SHERMAN law, as it is declared to be by the Republican State Convention, how are we to char- acterize the conduct and action of the Republican Congress that passed that There was never a case in |- act, and the Republican President who | “er products and manufactures, the closing of ! “workshops, factories, and mills; the redue- : “tion of wages of labor, the discharge of work- “ingmen from employment, the cessation of “railroad extension and diminution in traffic, “bankruptcy and the suspension of banks, are “today the only monuments of their triumph.” When the attention of the people is thus called to this lamentable state of affairs, they are incited to look for the causes that have produced such results, and what do they find? They find un- repealed Republican laws, which ox: tend into a Democratic administration, | still exerting a malign influence upon ‘pled with the dangerous legacy left the financial and economic situation. | They find that the only agencies which | up to this period of the new adminis- same as the Republicans left them when they weat out of power. They find Republican tariff laws as yet un- disturbed, and no change in the finaa- cial measures that regulate and affect monetary conditions, they remaining just as the Republicans handed them over to their successors, and will re- main so until a Democratic Congress can get in its work. In short when the people look for the causes of the present state of affairs, they see them springing from no other source than Republican laws and policies upon the operations of which Democratic legis tion has not yet bad time to call a halt. Such beiog the fact, as presented to the plain understanding of the peoples there is an immeasurable amount of gall in the declaration of the Republi- can State Convention, that the Demo- crats, who have been in power but a few mcnths, are responsible for condi- tions that could have no other origin than in the policy and management of a party that had long control of the gov- ernment, and up to six months ago ex- clusively exercised the law making power. —The opposition is having a great care about CLEVELAND'S physical con- dition. Its latest bugaboo is that he has cancer and has had most of his jaw cut off, and that perhaps he will die soon. Ere he dies, dear Republican alarmists, you will have had occasion to talk your jaws off explaining how it was that notwithstanding your cries of ‘the coun- try is going to the dogs" it has recover- ed from the awful blistering of Repub- lican thieves and is once more the land of plenty and prosperity it was when CLEVELAND left it in 1889. ———— —— People talk of hard times yet base ball games, picnics and all kinde of amusements haye been patronized this year as never before, | that the course adopted at President tration could affect business, are the | signed it; and what is to be thought of | the patriotism of a party, whose admin- ! istration declined to remove such a! cauge of financial disturbance, and was willing to go out of power with a work | of its own creation threatening the prosperity of the country, and seem- ingly well pleased with the prospect of its embarrassing their successors in the government, even at the risk of finan- cial ruin? The Democrats have manfully grap- them by their predecessors; but when their opponents are forced to declare CLEVELAND'S instance for the repeal of the SHERMAN act is “patriotic,” the ad- mission thus wrung for them is a dam- aging reflection upon their own party. ——The Democratic State Conven- tion meets in Harrisburg on Tuesday the 19th to nominate candidates for Supreme Judge, and State Treasurer. From present indications SAMUEL Gus- TINE THOMPSON of Philadelphia, who was appointed to the position by Goy- ercor Parrison last Spring, will be named for Judge of Supreme Court and either J. HENRY CocHRAN, of Williams- port; Caas. W. RaymonD, of Dauphin county ; ex-Senator HanNmBanL K. SLoan, of Indiana county; JonN Kunns, of Greensburg; Frank C. Os- BOURN, of Pittsburg; Captain WiLL 1aMs, of Oil City ; or JorN L. McoKinN- NEY, of Titusville, will be chosen for State Treasurer. The delegates from this county to the Convention are: J. H. Eskringe, of Philipsburg; Ww. Worr, of Centre Hall ; Jorn Hoy Jr., of Jacksonville, and R. F. Hunter and Geo. T. BusH of Bellefonte . ——1It is beginning to dawn on the Republicans of the county that after all there is not the chance of defeating the Democratic nominee for sheriff, they hoped for. They find that Mr. Conpo is well known to the busioess men all over the county as one of the most obliging, gentlemanly and relia- ble, men they have ever dealt with; that his competency is beyond question and that his character is. without re- proach. He is just the kind of a man who will make a considerate and care ful sheriff, and the kind of a candidate ‘the Democrats of the county will take pride iu giving their warmest support. ~——The Democrat who fails to reg. ister to-day, may find trouble in voting for the winning candidates in Novem- ber, Democratic Tariff Action, It is not likely that the present extra session of Congress will have anything to do with tariff legislation. It was called together for a different purpose, and in all probability will confine itself to the object for which it was spe- cially convened. It will have done enough if it shall annul injurious Re- publican monetary measures, and put the country on a safe financial basis. But there are evidences of prepars- tions being made for much needed ac- tion on the tariff in the regular session that will begin in December. It is said that the Ways and Means com- mittee will go right on with the work of formulating a reform tariff bill, to be reported when Congress shall regu- larly assemble. To assist it in an in- telligent and effective performance of this duty, it will give brief hearings to those whose interests are involved in its proceedings. These hearings will be different from those given when the Republican committee was engaged in converting the tariff into a monopoly measure. » The representatives of monopolistic interests were the ones that had the ear of that committee. The people who had to bear the burden of taxation were not invited to attend these bearings, which were prolonged until every pampered trust had put in its petition for tariff favors. The Democratic committee will hear briefly what all interests may have to say on the subject, and will then frame a bill in no special interest, but with the object of giving the largest benefit to the largest number of people. The duty it will assume will be sim- plified by its determination to carry out the plain Democratic plan of tariff reform. There 18 no design of free trade, but the intention is to relieve the peoplesof nunecessary tarift taxation. This ean be done by reducing the heavy duties imposed by Republican tariff laws in the interest of favored beneficiaries. The bringing of such duties down to a revenue basis will be , sufficient for this purpose, and in ac- cordance with the Democratic policy of reforming a tariff system that is une- qual in its benefits. To this doubtless will be added the placing of certain raw materials upon the free list, so that the industries may have the ad- vantage of them, exempt from taxation that increases their cost. This is an outline of what may be expected of Democratic action on the tariff, and there is nothing in it but what will inure to the general benefit of the people. ——— —“We take pleasure in commending the “manner in which the present board of coun- “ty commissioners have improved the grounds “in front of the Court House, and the work “thus commenced we hope will be continued “by renewing the walks all around the yard in “front of the Court House.—From the report of “the last Grand Jury. Democrats when your officials are thus complimented you have reason to be proud of them. See to it that they are their own successors. ——It ever there was a careful, con- scientious office holder in Centre county W. GaLer Morrison is that man. For four years he has been Re- corder of Deeds, and his incumbency has been a source of gratification to the Democratic party and the many Republicans who put him there. He is an aspirant for re-election and de- serves your support. He must be his own successor and every Democrat in the county should work to that end. ——There is not a man on the Dem- ocratic ticket who is not the peer of any candidate nominated by either the Prohibitionists or Republicansin mor- als, intellect, sobriety, and general fit- ness for the positious they are candi- dates for. In addition to being just as good men in every other respect they are Democrats and, as such, deserve the earnest support of every Democratic voter in the county. —-%A careful, industrious citi- zen whom everybody likes” is an expression we heard relating ' to Jorn P. Conpo, Democratic candidate for sheriff. Tt is true. Vote for him. ——You owe a duty to your country and that duty isto vote. In order that you may perform this duty without trouble see that you are registered to- day. It is your last opportunity. Another Fraud in the Pension System. From the New York Evening Post. The demoralization caused by the pension craze is illustrated by a re- cent incident in Boston. A business man, well-to-do in purse and vigorous in body, who already carried a consid- erable amount of life insurance applied for $10,000 more. The medical examiner found nothing whatever to indicate any disease, past or present, and his investigation was almost con- cluded when the doctor asked the question : “Have you ever been a pensioner?” Thereupon the applicant stammered and at last owned up that he was drawing a pension of $12 a month. Further inquiries drew from him “a tangled series of admissions that he had never really suffered any injury or illness entitling him to a pension, but he had made out some sort of a case of nervous shock or deterioration, at the instigation of a pension agent, and had taken his $12 a month from the United States government, rich man though he was, on the principle that “they all do it.” The company very promptly refused to grant him insurance, on the ground that a man who had perjured himself to get $12 a month from the federal treasury was capable of cheating an insurance company if he got a chance and consequently was not a good risk. More than one life insurance company now puts the query about pensions on the list of questions which applicants must answer, and this man is not the only individual who will find that he has forfeited the chance of getting a large policy to which his physical condition entitles him by fraudulently obtaining a petty pension to which he has no just claim. Facts and Not Buncombe, Talk, From the Altoona Times. Does any one still claim that the period of business depression was brought about by a fear of Democratic reform of the tariff ? If that were the case why would we be recording the resumption of industries every day ? The truth of the matter is that it was not a fear of Democratic modification of the tariff but different other causes, chief among which was the purchase clause of the Sherman act, that have been responsible for the depression which is now nearing the end. This resumption of business is so general that it would be folly to deny that it hae a close counection with the passage in the house of representatives of the Wilson repeal bill. It is anotable fact that on Monday while our tele- graphic columns announced thatthe work of preparing the new tariff bill had been begun, they also stated that different industries, employing many men, had resumed operations. Now, admitting the logic of our Republican friends to be correct, instead of these industries resuming, there should be fresh additions to the list of shut downs The tariff scare never had any legs to stand on and it was always a gross imposition of the people. The reas- suring tone on business bears no trace of any apprehension on the subject of revenue reform, but is each dayim- proving in vitality, and in a short time. the panic will be a thing of the past. Rival Clowns in Harrisburg, From the Lancaster Intelligencer. It isno cause for surprise that Bar- num’s show in Harrisburg yesterday proved more attractive to the averge delegate than did the State Convention. 'I'ne morning session was delayed an hour in order to give the rural dele- gate an opportunity of witnessing the street parade of the *‘Greatest Show on Earth.” The preliminary activity of Senator Quay left nothing for the delegates to do except to formally meet and ratify in a perfunctory manner what he had done. He dictated the platform and nominations. Of course the delegates preferred to see Barnum’s show. Too Much Cotton. From the New York Advertiser. The Atlanta Constitution asserts that the South has $700,000,000 worth of products as the result of the season’s labor and no purchaser for them. This is probably true only in part. Butif the South would turn its attention to pro- ducing more of what the world wants and must have it would not be obliged to hunt so long for a customer. Their Organs Play the Dirge of Their Own Party. : From the Lebanon Star. Some, vears ago the Republican complaint was that the party had too few newspapers in New York City. There are more now, and the Demo- cratic’ majority increases with the Republican newspapers. By Comparison Bellefonte Must Be a Metropolis Too. From the Piladelphia Record. It costs ‘something to be a metropo- lis. The taxes levied in the city of New York for 1893 are $34,444,154, an increase of $1,562,849 over the taxation for 1892. ——1If you want printing of any de- scription the ‘WATCHMAN office is the place to have it done. Spawls from the Keystone, --A forest fire is destroying much timber near Tyrone. —Berks county bee growers say this is a poor heney year. —The new Hotel Norwood will be the most costly building in Lansdale. —Aged John Mason, of Norristown, fell into the canal Sunday and perished. —Judge Mayer of Clinton county, Saturday decided that water rent is not a tax. —DMichael Albert, an aged Bethlehemite, walked into the canal by mistake and drowned. —A bad case of neuralgia caused David Fournier, of Monongahela City, to hang him. self. _ —Four horses owned by John Todd, Lan- caster, were struck by an express train and killed. —Farmer Cromwell Woolston, near Bristol, shot an unknown thief who was stealing wat- ermelons. —DMaster Workman Powderly Saturday ad- dressed a big meeting of laboring men at Wilkesbarre. —Over 100,000 persons attended the Grang- ers’ convention at Williams Grove, which end- ed Sat urday. —Lievtenant G C. Foulk, who was found dead in a Japan college, was a native of Lane caster county. —There is talk of abandoning the Pennsyl- vania Telephone line between Harrisburg and Carlisle, —The Williamsport “Daily Times” has been purchased by A. L. Scholl, the former busi- ness manager. —As an experiment, Bristol schools will have but one session a day, lasting from § o’clock until noon. —Ex Republican State Chairman Reeder Saturday sued the Easton Transit Company for $1800 counsel fees. —All but $300 of the $11,0(0 stolen from Contractor Crage, in Potter County, by John Billy, has been recovered. ~ —Cuptain George W. Skinner will take charge of the Pension department of the Pitts. burg district on September 11. In mistake for mullen leaf tea Mrs. John Hege, of Lancaster, gave her child a deadly dose and it may not recover. —The fire in Eureka coal mine, at Punxsu- tawney, is extinguished, and the bodies of the three fated men entombed were recovered. —Both legs having been cut off dy his train at Locust Summit, brakeman Edward Beni- gan, of the Philadelphia and Reading, died. —Pittsburg will send several big delega- tions of iron and steel makers to Congress to protest against changes in the darling tariff. —Driver-boy James T, Apgar, of Mauch Chunk, fell from a bridge at Raubsville while his canal boat was passing under, and was drowned. —Orders were issued from State headquar- ters Friday permitting the Philadelphia City Troop and the Naval Battalion to visit the World’s Fair this week. —The Carnegie Steel Company has leased Mrs. Lucy Carnegie’s big office building, about to be erecied in Pittsburg, for 200 years, at an annual rental of $37,500. —To decide whether a dog which bit a daughter of John Martin, near Lancaster, had hydrophobia, its brain has been sent to the University of Pennsylvania for an analysis. —Among the cases to be tried this week in the United States court at Williamsport are those against president Cowman and cashier Green, of the Defunct Muncy National bank. —In order that he might not be deprived of his cigar, Hugh Maxwell, sentenced to a year in the workhouse in Washington county , pleaded to go to the penitentiary, and he went. —A mysterious document is on file at the State Treasury which cannot be opened until July 4,2000. It gives notice of a certain sum deposited with the Girard Trust Company, Philadelphia, to the credit of the State, by a peculiar testator, who stipulated that the let- ter should not be opened until the year 2000. —The growth of the order of Odd Fell ows has been phenomenal. In 1830 there were 1,- 000 members; in 1840, 11,1666; 1850, 139 ,242 ; 1860, 149,250; 1870, 297,637; 1880, 440,783 ; 1890, 649,702, and at this time the membership is more than 800,000, There has been expended by them in all these years $30,000,000 for re- lief. Pennsylvania has 1,065 lodges at this time, with 166,113. —Peter Shearer, aged about 77 years, died at his home, neat Fritztown, Berks county, Friday. Deceased was the oldest member of the Berks county bar, but did not practice law for many years. He lived with his broth - er, Solomon Shearer, and devoted the later years of hig lite to the preparation of a book on algebra. He was a widely known mathe- matician and a deep student. —A land, or box tortoise found by George Williams, on the Hart farm near Milford, sa ys the Pike County Dispatch, gives an idea of the great age attained by reptiles of this species. Upon the shell were the name and date, “M- Brodhead, 1852,” the letters almost obliterated , 89 long ago were they made. The tortoise was found adjoining the Colonel Brodhead (now Van Auken) farm, and the presumption is that Mark Brodhead, now of Washington, D. C., was the youth who engraved the initials and the year it was done, on the shell. The tortoise was found within a few hundred yard s from where, no doubt, it was released over forty years ago. ‘ —Last spring John D. Osmiin, of Catasau- qua, trimmed a young grapevine and the branch began to bleed profusely. In order to stop the flow of sap he took a potato and in- serted the severed twig to it. The potato and vine both maintained life a id to-day the form. er has seven green sprouts greatly resembling green grapes upon it, and the sight is a pecu- liarly interesting one, says the Allentown City Item. A potato yielding grapes is a nov- elty and will be intently watched through out the ripening season. Mr. Osmun will sever the curiosity in the fall with the idea of plan t- ing it again in the spring and witness the va- riety of grapes it will bear next year. —Bucks county, which is ever prolific in freaks, now coms to the front with a new va- riety of cats. The honored founder of this tribe made her first recorded appearance one day last summer, when she strolled into the yard of Charles B. Livezy, of New Britain, while Mr, Livezy and his wife were sitting on the front porch, records the Democrat. The eat was black, but the most striking feature about her was that about four inches from the body the tail went back for a short distance and then turning went on straight again, mak- ing a zigzag. The cat gave birth to five kit- tens this spring. One of them had a tail near- ly twice the usual length, another had a nat- ural tail, while the other three had no tails at all to speak of. These latter will be carefully raised to start a breed of tailess cats in Bucks county.