Denna fatima ~STH0 BY RP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The cold weather has tke grip on the people : —4Time will heal every breach’ — Not so with breeches. —The message sounds very much like GROVER CLEVELAND. —-It seems like hauling coal to New- castle to bring wind-mills to Belle- fonte. ; —CQCongress re-convened on Monday. It did not filea bond that it meant business, however. — Congress will take more time with the WiLson bill than it did with Mr. SHERMAN’S measure. -—It only remains to be found what childishness some men can display when they are elected to councils. —Notwithstanding the general bowl the WiLsoN bili seems to have sent up the New Englanders are approving it. —Tt is the pension agent, and not the veteran who shouldered the gun, who nine times out of ten takes issue with Commissioner LocHREN’S rulings. --The next day we celebrate will be Christmas. Darn your stockings and save your pennies so that when it comes you can take on a little good cheer. —The man who goes through the world poking ridicule at all progressive measures seldom leaves much expense for funeral carriages when he dies. --It is thought that cigarettes will have to suffer when the new revenue schedule is made up and ’twere better that they should do it than so many of eur young men. —Weare waiting to hear some Re- publican blame the failure of N.J. ScHLoss & Co , the New York clothing dealers, on tke possible enactment of the new WILsoN bill, —And now Dr. McGLYNN wants to be minister to Italy. There isa chance that he wants to get back to Rome so he can flaunt the toga of Ambassador in the face of the pope. —That poor man STEVENS, every one seems to have it in for him. Bat is it any wonder? A fellow who would try to pull a colored woman off her throne deserves to be under a cloud, —The college athletic season being ended the scions of many American families will settle down to a faw week’s study before they will haveto goin training for the spring base ball season. —-If the great game of foot-ball eontinues in popularity Thanksgiving will soon be a day when every parent will have reason to thank the Lord that a son was not killed while chasing the pig skin. —The city of Chicopee, Mass, which had been prohibitionally dry un- til last Tuesday eould not stand the strain any longer and went back to li- cense. The cold weather more than likely had something to do with it. —Mr. VAN ALEN has’proven himself to be more of a man than his calumnia- tors thought him to have been, but it is too had that such men should be hound- ed by partisan harpies when there is a possibility of their being of use to their country. —A McKeesport saloon keeper buried his wife the other day and instead of hir- ing carriages for her funeral he chartered a train of trolley cars. Science has made rapid progress and revolutionized most everything, but the same old road leads to heaven. —We Democrats are surely hard hearted fellows. There are only so fow of us, you know, and now that we are in we're going to run everything to the devil. After we get the governmental train there we will quietly dump the Republicans off and run her back again to the station she started from in 1888. — Gov. Leweiling, of Kansas, did not get as much fun as he wanted out of the silver question nor his long looked for opportunity to ride ‘‘bridle deep in blood,’ so just for the sake of keeping his name in print he now declares that at one time he was a tramp. We. are not suprised at all to hear that he be- longed to the festive order of bums ag ene time, for he isstill of a very bum or- der as far as qualification for the digni- fied office of Governor is concerned. —The silly twaddle of Republican bigots that the Democrats are going to run the country to destruction savors more of idiocy than any thing else. Is isa positive fact that there are and always have been more Democrats in the land than Republi- can, hence the foolish idea that we would conspire to ruin ourselves. Ever since the war the G. O. P. has imagined that it has a first mortgaze on these United States and it is about time its members become disillusioned. Deniocrats bave put up with rotten legislation long enough ani intend to take ahand in game themselves. Democratic legisla- tion will be popular because it is made by and for the majority. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 38. BELLEFONTE, PA., DEC. 8, 1898. NO. 48. All Interests and Sections Considered. Those who examine the new Demo- cratic tariff bill intelligently and with. out prejudice, will not fail to observe and appreciate the pains taken and conscientious disposition of the com- mittee in doing the work it bad in hand, If there was a consideration which above ewery other it seemed to have kept in view, it was to do equal justice between the various in- terests involved, to avoid unduly effect- ing any for the advantage of others, and to so constrain their action as to give as little disturbance as possible to legitimate conditions of industry. It has evinced a solicitude to so graduate the change in the woolen schedule that those interested in thal leading north- ern manufacture may experience but comparatively little derangement in their future operations. It has been careful that the change in regard to sugar shall be gradual in its effect upon that great southern interests. In the face of these two prominent instances in which equal care is shown for the two sections, the high tariff howlers, who have indulged in eo many falsehoods about the Democratic tariff policy, say that the WiLsoN bill displays a sectional preference for the South, They charge that a greater cut has been made in the duties on woolens than in those on cotton goods» because, as they put it, cotton is a southern staple and cotton fabrics are being largely manufactured in the Southern States, the reckless carpers ignoring the fact that where that sec- tion has one cotton factory New En- gland has a dozen that will have the benefit of the provision which is charg" ged as being Democratic discrimination in favor of a Southern interests, The Wirson bill is blamed for sectional hostility to the North in taking the tariff from wool, yet Texas produces more wool than any other State in the Union. Similar censure is indulged in concerning the removal ot the lum. ber duty, as if the forest products of the South, greater in variety of timber than those of the North, vast proportions, are uot equally af- ected. The same may be said of iron ore and coal which are as much the product of Alabama, Tennessee, West Virginia and other parts of the Sonth as they are of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and other northern states. There is vo product of any importance, equally belonging to the two sections, that is not equally treat- ed, and no interest peculiar to one sec- tion has received any special favors, The Philadelphia Press, it is true, makes the charge that peanuts, which are a Southern growth, are protected by the WiLsox bill, while peas, a leg- uminous production of the North, are not accorded tariff coddling; but this is running captiousness into the ground, and the charge savors eo strongly of peanut politics as to be unworthy of serious consideration. and growing to When the honest examiner looks for nothing but the facts connected with the new tariff bill he cannot avoid being convinced that in framing it the committee accorded the most impar- tial treatment to the interests of all sections. If there have been sacrifices, they have been more in appearance than in reality, or have been equalized, and in the end will be for the general good. In framing that great feature of the bill, the free list, raw material of every section—iron and coal in the North and in the South ; wool in Texas as well as in Ohio; lumber whether produced in the forests of Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee, or in those of Maine, Wisconsin aod Penn- sylania; Salt alike evaporated from the ealine springs of New York and Michigan, from the lagoons along the Gulf of Mexice all, irrespective of sec tion or locality, are equally deprived of what the McKINLEY ITES call protec: tion to raw materials but which the Democratic tariff reformers consider a hindrance to manufacturing industry, the removal of which will be of incal- culable advantage to those lines of in- dustrial production which have been handicapped by an idiotic tax on the materials essential to their operations. As a whole the WiLsox tariff bill ie a fair ard honest endeavor to avoid undue preference for any section or in- terest. and to prevent any class from erjoyingan advantage that is not ac- corded to others, keeping in view the raising of revenue while not ignoring the benefit which industry may derive from incidental protection. A Just and Equitable Measure. Io contradiction to the howling of high tariff taxers and ‘protection’ mongers generally, the WiLson tariff bill presents itself to the honest judg- ment ot the people as a just and equi- table measure of reform. It will elimi- nate, as far as possible, those features which make the present system pecu- liarly promotive of class interests, apportioning with greater equality the benefits to be derived from a tariff, which should be the object chiefly observed in resorting to such a measure of public policy. The McKiNLEY-ites, in their pro- fessed interest for the welfare of the working people, have admitted that the gauge by which the necessity for protection is to be measured is the difference detween the price of labor ia this country and in Europe. There is not a single provision of the WiLsoN bill in regard to manufactured goods that does not more than cover this didference. The duties it provides are amply sufficient in every class of man- ufacture to stand as a barrier against the cheaper labor of foreign countries. They will serve this purpose without being as high as McKiINLEY's, the excess of the Republican duties being ouly intended to provide for the pillage of monopolistic “combines.” The average of the WiLson duties is infinitely higher than the average 8 per cent. which WasniNeToN and the other early fattiers ot the Republic considered enough for the protection of the “infant industries” when they [i is much higher Henry Cray, the father of the protective system, held to be sufficient to shield American manu- factures from foreign competition in were really infants. than that which our own markets. Itvis higher than the average duties of the tariff of 1846 under which our manufactures made their greatest advance, and which a Republican House of Representatives, under Speaker Bangs, in 1857, assisted in reducing, as being unnecessarily high; and it is higher than the average of the Republican tariff that was adopted as a war measure, which was found to be amply sufficient for the purposes of both revenue and protec. ed if the Republican politicians had not discovered a political advantage in enlisting protected monopoly 1n the interest of their party by giving it un- limited tariff plunder. The WiLsoN bill is a revenue meas: ure affording adequate protection in- cidentally., It its reduction of daties seems large it does not appear so by comparison with former tariffs which answered all the reasonable purposes of protection, but by comparing it with the McKINLEY enactment whose provi- sions have been an invitation to a spec- ial class of tariff beneficiaries to subject the American people to general spolia- tion. The Democratic tariff will be found to be an ample fulfillment of the Democratic promise of tariff reform. Distressed ‘Tariff Organs. Of all the unhappy Republican news- papers that are wailing over the WiL- gon tariff bill none can equal the distress that has overtaken the Phila- delphia Press on account of the ruin that will follow in the train of this Democratic tariff, which it regards as having been devised for no other pur- pose than to paralyze our industries and throw our working people out of employment, and which it stigmatizes as a measure intended to benefit Eng- lish manufacturers, who, it says, are jubilant over what their Democratic triends in the United States are doing in their behalf. Inconsistency, however, may be detected in the wails of the Press, although for years it has been declar- ing free trade, with ao attendant sacrifice of industrial interests, was the purpose of the Democrats, it now says of the WiLsoN bill that ‘fit is much more extreme and drastic io its de- structive features than has been ex: pected.” How wuch truth and sin- cerity there was in the ‘free trade” charges of the Press appears in its assertion that a tariff which maintains average duties of 30 percent. is worse toan it had looked tor. We are sorry for the unhappy Me- tion, and would not have been increas- | Kizimy journals, but we cannot see that anything can be done to relieve their distress in this ‘emergency. The Democrats are going to pass their tarift bill, They promised the people that they would reform the tariff by cutting out those features which have enabled a favored class to plunder everybody else, and which, while im- posing an unnecessary and obnoxious burden of taxation on the general mass of citizens, have also impeded and impaired the general industries. By a magnificent majority of their votes the people told the Democratic party to go ahead with its promised reform, and it is going ahead. The tariff organs probably thought that local Republican victories gained on State issues this fall would scare the Democrats from their reform pur- pose; that the WiLsoN committee would be so frightened that it would throw its bill into the waste basket, and that even GROVER CLEVELAND would undergo such abashmeut as to attune the notes of his message to the high tariff music of the McKINLEY ites. Nothing could been more absurd than such an impression, there being no beter proof of that fact than the promptness with which the Ways and Means committee have prepared and published the bill by which the abuses and iniquities of the McKINLEY sys- tem will be corrected ; and this will be followed by its prompt passage by a Democratic Congress, and prompt sig- nature by a Democratic President. The President's Message. The Message ot President CLEVE: LAND to the Filty-third Congress, the full text of which we give our readers this week, is a document which was expected with a greater degree of iuter- est than has preceded the appearance of any emanation frum the executive brauch of the government since the war. This waslargely due to the ab- sorbing character of the tariff reform question to which it was believed that | a large portion of the Message would be devoted ; but in treating this sub- ject the President has not deemed it | expedient to do more than to reaffirm | his long maintained position as to the necessity for relieving the people of the burden of unnecessary tariff taxes, aud his frequent previous insistance that the necessaries of life should be espec- ially the objects of such relief. Grover CLEVELAND made his great tariff reform deliverance in bis first administration. He bravely risked bis He political existence upon its merits. saw it fought out toa triumphant con- clusion before the great tribunal of the people, and the reformation of the tariff baviog been enjoined upon Con-) gress by the popular decree, the Presi- dent deemed it unnecessary to enter further into the discussion of the subject than to briefly allude to the general benefits that will accrue from a redaction of an excessive tariff, and to urge a faithful performance of the duty which the people imposed upon Coagress when they confided the work of tarift reform *‘to the hands of those who are solemnly pledged to its ac- complishment.” Next to what he would have to say about the tariff, the President's treat- ment of the Hawaiian question excited the largest degree of anxious anticipa- tion. As was to be expected, the de clarations of the Message on this sub- ject are based upon the conviction that the power of this government, had been abused by its representative to the Hawaiian government, who made himself a participant in the conspiracy by which the constituted government of the islands was overthrown, and assisted in bringing about such a revo- lution by the employment of an armed force of the United States, irregular and unwarranted proceedings which require our government “to undo the wrong that has been done by those re- presenting us, and to restore as far as practicable the status existing at the time of our forcible intervention.” In addition to these leading subjects which occupy the more prominent points of interest, the Message furnishes an extensive and exhaustive view of public affairs, as well those that are included in our foreign relations as those which relate to matters of donies- tic interest, all of which are present ed with Mr, CLevELAND'S usual earnest A Poser for Those Lewisburg Saints? From the Pittsburg Times. Since the foot ball team which bears the name of Pittsburg was not to find occasion for thanksgiving in the score of the game yesterday, it i8 consoling that they were beaten in a clean, manly game by a lot of hardy young Pennsylvanians. There is no college more strictly Pennsylvanian in birth, spirit and atténdance than the State College, which has grown up among the Bellefonte hills from a small be- gioning as an agricultural school. Its students come chiefly from Pennsyl- vania farme, and representing the strong, composite type of Pennsylvania manhood, the mingled blood of the sturdy German 'and the enterprising Scotch and Irish. That's the stufl that makes strong men and good foot | ball players, solidity coupled with activity and animated with never say- die courage. The men who win, in larger contests for weightier stakes than those of the foot ball field, are those who learn to keep their eye on the ball and their face to the goal, re- gardless of an occasional sprain or a bat on the nose. That's Pittsburg fashion and Pennsylvania fashion, and there are costlier schools to learn it in than the foot ball field. Let us have foot ball clean and manly, without brutality, by all means, but deliver us from a generation of mollycoddles, even at the expense of an occasional bloody nose. Discretion the Better Part of Valor. From the Philadelphia Evening Herald. Tae Morocco episode is not drawing 10 a close. The Sulian has managed to pacity his Ritfs—not to mention the riff raft which is also nis—by means ot large promises of things to come, and this, together with the presence of 25, 000 Spanish soldiers, has induced the hostile tribes around Melilla to think fighting decidedly bad form. Bat his Sultanic majesty has yet to settie with Spain. Indemnity in the shape of money may be asked, but as the Mor- occian ruler is not overstocked with good golden shekels, he may have to sign a deed uiviag away some broad acres of his coast, But in so doing tie interference of other European powers interested in Mediterranean te.ritory and the diplomacy of acquiring it may be drawn inty the matter. The "Riffs have eaten much of the meat from the bone, but while the bone remains there will be plenty of jackals around it. Souvenirs That Didn't Pay. From the Easton Argus. Contrary to the expectations of the World's Fair commissioners thesonven- ir Columbian coins did not prove to be extraordinarily popular. There is a general sentiment for souvenirs of some great event, but the commission- ers overestimated that sentiment when they supposed that the people were willing to buy, 5.000,000 coins at one dollar apiece when their face value was only halt that amount and their bullion value considerably less. Itis not sur- prising that many of these coins were never taken from the United States treasury, that many have been return- ed for redemption, and that steps are being taken looking towards their re- coinage. Profit By This, vir. Gramley. From the Scottdale Independent. One of the noticeable things regarding a county institute program is the small amount of time allotted teachers to ask questions or discuss subjects. The en- ure time almost is given to instructors who say & great many things—some- times good, sometimes bad— but not one of them may touch on the point most interesting wo some of the teachers. Nearly every teacher has some special point he would like instructions on, but has no opportanity. More time should be given the teachers that they might bring up such matters, and a great deal more practical good wold result to the schools. Fine theories and instructions are all right, but don’t al ways meet the wants of the teachers. / Der's a Lock on De Chicken Coop Deoah. From the Milton Reeccrd. The laurels upon the brow of Prof. Garner, the ‘“monkey-sharp,” are in danger. Prof. Asger Hamerik, direc- tor at the Peabody conservatory of music in Baltimore, says that chickens have a language, which he has partially mastered. Among other interesting ob- servations he says that chickens have a peculiar aversion to colored people. [t is probably for this reason that chickens in the south roostso high. Not only do chickens talk, according to tbe learned Professor, but they have little songs which they sing to while away the time. ‘Great is the study of comparative philol- ogy. Is it Cowardice to Proclaim One's Honor ? From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Van Alen thinks so well of his con- tribution to the Cleveland campaign fund and Cleveland thinks so well of Van Alen that the embryonic minister surprises the country by showing that his only reason for resigning the office 18 a deficiency in moral courage. To the list of his offenses which have been made public he now voluntarily adds moral cowardice. The country has ness, sincerity and ability. made a lucky escape. Spawls from the Keystone, —An anti-Prohibition league flourishes af Lebanon. — Pottsville people are sleighing on tem inches of snow. —Lightning strhck John Shaffer's house Uniontown Monday night. : —Falling from a roof in Reading, Paff met a speed, death. —After hiccoughing 12_gays, Edward near Lebanon, has recovered. —Internal revenue receipts at the Pittsburg office are largely decreasing. —The Lancaster Lodge of Elks Sunday held their annual memorial service. at Nafhanie 1 Erbe | —Joseph Gruver was found dead by his wife in his dining room at York. —Freight Conductor William Bercaw was fa- tally squeezed by cars at Giendon. —In attempting to mount a train, Joseph Smith, of Shenandoah, lost both legs. —In the anthracite coal regions four inches of snow covered the ground Sunday. ~—A Pennsylvania Railroad train at Newport ran over and killed Benjamin Kessler. —Dogs slaughtered 85 turkeys belonging to Josiah Slack and Mr. Reed near Bristol. —Rev. W. C. Davis has been installed pastor of the Minersville Congregational church. —At Mahonoy City Robert McGrue stopped in front of an electric car and was killed. —Reading isto have a sewerage pumping sta- tion, with a daily capacity of 5,000,000 gations. —A dispute over cards at Erie, Sunday night ended in Mike Lameri’s shooting Joria Laone dead. —Ex-District Attorney Davis’ son, Robert C., of Lancaster, has been appointed a cadet at West Point. —The fee grabbing case of five Chester po- liceman was in Court Monday, but no decision was reached. —John Lawler was fatally injured at Packer Colliery, Shenandoah, while attempting to mount a car. —Young Farmer Thomas Bush was arrested at Easton for the confessed raising of u check for $10.56 to $80.56. —A convention of Western Pennsylvania miners Tuesday resolved to accept 65 cents a ton for digging coal. —On the rolls of the Cumberland county Teachers’ Institute, which met Monday at Carlisle, were 238 names. - It was stated Monday that J. O. Johnson, who was recently lynched at Ottumwa, Ia. went there from Lancaster, —Miss Minnie Larrabee, of Susquehanna coanty, was arrested in Binghampton, N. Y. for stealing §32 from a friend. —On Monday the Philadelphia and Reading Company sh:pped 15,000 tons of eoal from the Pottsville region to Philadelphia. —Before he could capture Frank Chess, an Alles heny City burglar, the officer in pursuit shattered his hand with a bullet, —At Bennington, Blair county, in Lloyd’s coal mine, a 500-pound stone fell upon Joseph Stanalsky and crushed out his life. —It has practically bee. decided to have the entire National Guard of the State en- campment at Get ysburg next summer. —Stumbling on the stairs, Mrs, Sarah Me- Donald, Johnstown, fell upon the lamp she was carrying and was burned to death. —The Montgomery ciunty court Tuesday sent Charles Bendel, of Philadelphia, to the penitentiary for five years for burglarly. —Contrary to orders, the Lehigh Valley Company's mines in the Pottsviile region were operated Monday and will be to-day. —Over $18,000 was on Saturday paid to the 3100 employees of the Pennsylvania Steel Company at Steelton, for two weeks work. —Strikers drove off a few nov-union miners from the Snowden and Gastonville mines, near Pittsburg, and work was not resumed. —An incendiary’s work failed of its 1 urpose when his korosene fire, started in an unoceu- pied house in the heart of Reading, went out —With a double-barrelled shot-gun Farmer George Klinger blew his brains out at Hun- ter's near Ashland, and ended'a long siege of ill-health. —Jefferson Dietz, Clifton Heights, Delaware county, who sued for a divorce, was ordered to pay the costs and reimburse his wife for her counsel fees. —John Young, who recently drove a horse into.a freight train, killing it and smashing the buggy, was convicted at West Chester of malicious mischief. —While trying to avoid one train near New Freedom, York county, Luther Powell, of Oglesby, N. C., was struck and killed by an ex. press he did not see. —A big cave-in, due to underlying quick- sands, has compelled the shutting down of the iron ore mines of Breok Bros., in Providence, | Lancaster county. —Havingto pay more for its water supply than it agreed to, the Tilt Silk Mill has sued the members of Pottsville’s Board of Trade for $2000 damages. —W. J. Howard, of Philadelphia, with other property holders, have filed a bill in equity against the city of Pittsburg to prevent the widening of Diamond all>y. —Executive C mmissioner Farquhar says the Pennsylvania State Building at the World's Fair has not been sold. Heis still considering three offers made for it. —Brigade commanders of the Knights of Pythias, ineluding those from Pennsylvania, convened at Washington, D. C., Tuesday to ar- range for their enacmpment next Angust. —For testing a steam whistle to be used as a fire alarm, and thereby breaking up a Thanksgiving congregation, at Kittanning, Dr. J. A. Jessop, the inventor, was arrested . —The German American Title and Trust Company, of Philadelphia, has appealed the 95 suits brought by workmen at the Werners- ville Asylum and decided against the com- pany. —It is said that Mr. and Mrs. Wright, of Hummelstown, whose daughter, Agnes, was murdered by Benjamin Tennis, have asked for tickets to witness the hanging, which will occur in a few days. —Charters were Monday granted to the Monongahela River and Broughton Railroad Company, capitul, $50,000; and the Eureka Milling Company, Brockwayville, Jeffersom county, capital, $15,000. —The death penalty was Tuesday imposed in Pittsburg upon Noel Mazon, the French Anarchist, who had killed Mrs. Sophia Roes. The woman knew that Mason had planned te blow up public buildings at Ottawa, Ont. —Four alleged conductors of a Penn street lottery in Reading were raided. They sold cough candy, with concealed checks good for ag high as $3 each. The prisoners are Henry Osburn, Richard Hurst, Philip Felder and Winfield Huber, * # .