BY P. GRAY MEEK. , Ink Slings. —His nibs, the ground-hog, is out to- day. — Business is always picking up with the rag man. —-Old Probs has made several very good bluffs at winter, but the game is too stiff for him. —Man is always muster of his actions when it comes to facing a collection basket in church. : —Your German neighbor, next door, unconsciously makes you a present of a | chaffing dish every time she hus saur- kraut and back bone for dinner. —Though the patent on the Bell telephone Co’s., receiver has run out the rent of the instrument is still as high as the ‘‘hell-o”’ pitch of the Central girl. —If MrircHELL suffers many more loses like that one in Jacksonville, last week, he'll either have to ride “pony” Moore home or take a long, damp walk. —CorBETT will fight PETER JACKSON, the Australian colored slugger, in June, but nobody knows where it will come off as yet. Jim will find the nigger-head a little harder to thump than he did MITCHELL'S —One shell from Uncle Sam’s big popper on board the Detroit settled the doubt which the Brazilian insurgents had in their minds, until Tuesday, as to whether our men-of-war were only in the port of Rio for show. —Men who refuse to work because they can’t get $2.00 or more per day deserve the sympathy of no one. Tis better to work for half that sum, than run therisk of inculcating habits of laziness which will never be over- come. —Our new minister to, Bolivia is Hon. TaoMmAs MooNLiGHT, of Kansas. If the fair sex down there are anything like the typical North American girl, he will have a ‘cinch’ on the Bolivian maidens and they will doubtless soon find out “what's in a name.” —GALUSHA GROW has no right to be in Congress. We want able men, with well defined ideas, to represent this great Commonwealth’s interests. No half- way fellow will fill the bill and GArLU- SHA don’t know whether he is a Demo- cral, a Republican, or a Populist, — VAILLANT, the French Anarchist who threw a bomb into the chamber of Deputies, was executed on Wednesday. France is taking drastic methods to rid herself of the red-flag and were other foreign countries to follow the example it would not be long until Anarchism would die. —Germany is happy because her Em- peror and Prince BISMARCK have kissed and made up. If the pictures which have been published lately do not belie the old “man-of-iron’’ we fear there will be another eruption if etiquette de- mands the young Emperor to do any- more kissing. —GLADSTONE’S determination to re- tire from the English Parliameat will give the enemies of the “Grand Old Man” an opportunity to console themselves with the idea that they will soon have one straw removed from their way, and the supporters of Home Rule a leader whom they will not easily re- place. — What right has GALUSHA GROW to ask Republicans to vote for him ? Why he thought he was a Populist, and had his head chuck-full of Populistic speeches, when the G. O. P. put him on the ticket for Congressman-at-large. A man who doesn’t know what side of the fence he is on has no claim nor right to represent any party in Congress. —The young Patchinville joker, who made a bogus confession to a minister during a revival service holding in that town,and claimed that heand a friend had murdered a peddler, who mysteriously disappesred, near McGhee’s Mills, three years ago, came near going from the al- tar to the halter. As it is his friend has sued him for slander and he only saves his neck by professing it was a joke. -—The Hollidaysburg Register claims that the McKINLEY bill never drovea single workingman into the street. We don’t know whether it did, if a literal interpretation were given its statement, but can the Register explain what has been responsible for the idleness of so many thousand workmen during the winter and of their enforced return to work at an average reduction of 20 per cent. ~- Hayti is the latest seat of interna- tional trouble 1n which Uncle SAM has a finger. dertook to give old Hipp oLYTE some advice which he did not think he need- ed and now things are strained. We are doing our best to knock the ¢‘‘millen- | nium in '94” theory into a cocked hat. Until this last difficulty is fixed up the lion and the lamb can’t bo said to lie down in peace. Our minister Mr. SMITH un-' :; | | | | | | | i STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 39. BELLEFONTE, PA., FEB. 2, 18: 5, Quay as a Repudiator. Senator Quay, in a recent interview, : made a display of the malignant char- acter of the Republican opposition to the measures of this Democratic admin- istration. It is as plain as a mathematical dem- | onstration that reckless Republican legislation, and extravagant practices in the management of the government, emptied the Treasury and produced the impaired condition of the public fin- ances, The present movetary situation is the wreck they left behind them. Having wrought this ruin they show- ed their indifference to it by refusing, at the close of their administration, power to do anything that might have | in some measure relieved the financia embarrassment they had created. This was the condition of affairs that was imposed upon the incoming ad- ministration. The Republican wreck- ers gloried over the trouble which their own maladwministration had im- posed upon their Democratic successors and had compelled them to struggle with as an embarrassing legacy. They gloated over it, and have opposed every measure designed to bring order out of the fnancial chaos of which they were the originators. Secretary CARLISLE met this situa- tion with the determination of a man who had a trying duty imposed upon him, but who was determined to per- form it to the best advantage of the public interest. Immediately the Re- publican malignants commenced howl- ing at him for not borrowing money to supply the deficiency they had caused. Like a careful guardian of the trust committed to him he hesitated about increasing the public indebtedness, by the issuing of bonds, which the exigen- him to do. And now the Republicans are howling against him for doing that | which they had previonsly abused him for not doing. But the worst manifestation of this | malignant spirit was made by Senator | Quay in his attempt to discredit the | bonds which the government has been | compelled to issue to meet a grave pub- | lic emergency. He endeavored to pre- vent their sale by infusing into the public mind an apprehension that they | would be repudiated. This was a morally, if not a legally, treasonable act, and although it may not be im- peachable by legal process, it certain- ly exposes him to the impeachment of public opinion. Opposing a Pennsylvania Interest. The Philadelphia Press is not speak- ing for the interest of Pennsylvania when it opposes the free importation of iron ore. In lamenting over the injurious effect of allowing ore to come in free “from Cuba, the Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean,” is it conscious of the fact that the importation of ore from those regions does not interfere with the digging of a single ton of Pennsylvania iron ores; that the iron and steel industry, particular- ly in the eastern part of the State, is languishing in consequence of being de- nied the profitable use of those ores by the duty insanely imposed by a Re- publican tariff. The kind of iron ore brought from abroad, and which is so indispensable to the production of steel and the finer qualities of iron, cannot be furnished by the mines of this State. The in- crease of its cost by an unnecessary tariff duty is not so injurious in its ef- fect upon the steel manufacturers of the western part of the State to whom the freight charges on the Michigan ore, required for steel manufacture, is not as heavy as on that which is car- ried farther east ; but the tariff on im- ported ore is a vital injury®to that line of industry in eastern Pennsylvania, and this injury the Press insists upon having continued, not for the benefit of Pennsylvania miners, who cannot fur- nish this needed variety of ore, but for the advantage of a Michigan monopoly. The Press ought to speak for the in- terest of Pennsylvania which on this point it appears to have eatirely lost sight of. —The doctors of Beaver Falls have all become wire pullers. Eight | year old Harry HiLi, of that place | swallowed a piece of copper wire three inches long, on Wednesday, and they cies of the situation at last compelled "are all after jit. ' A Trick That Did Not Succeed. The self-styled “Pennsylvania Demo- crats,” better and more properly known as “Quay’s Philadelphia Reserves,” who with the backing of the Re- publican press of that city, have been attempting to create trouble in the Democratic organization throughout the State, met with a merited defeat, on Wednesday last, in their effort to dis. credit the legality of the late State con- vention. They had fixed up objectiong to the nomination of Hancock, but failed to notify him of the fact as re- quired by law, and as a consequence Judge SimonTON, before whom the case was brought, sat down inconti- nently upon them by simply ruling that they had no case. They went home possibly a little wiser, but we presume will work just as hard as they have done for years to demoralize, dis- courage and divide, what is left of the Philadelphia Democracy. This failure results in the beneficial effects of having candidate Hancock's name printed, as it should be and as the Democracy of the State desired, un- der the head of “Democratic ticket.” These Quay Reserves hoped through technicalities, to have a decision that would require his name to be placed under the head of “by-nomination pa- pers,’—sandwiched in with the Popu- list, the Prohibition and their own can- didate. In thig way thousands upon thousands of votes would have been lost to him, by Democrats who after voting that part of the ticket printed under the party heading, would have neglected, or failed, to look for and mark his name on a different part of the ticket. It was a nice scheme, A brilliant idea to reduce the Democratic vote, and thus give these croakers an oppor- tunity to denounce the organization, and the Republicans gronad for alleg- ing that Democrats refused to vote for Hancock because of his tariff reform ideas. Had they succeeded, fully one half of the Democratic vote of the State, as registered for the local Democratic ticket would have been lost to the can- | didate for Congressman-at-large, nd every one that would have been thus lost would have been heralded, by the Republican press, as a vote withheld because of the tariff policy of the par: ty. In this effort Mr. Quay and his re- serves, have received a very effec tual knock-out. The Commissioners’ Statement. In supplement form the WarcamMaN this week gives to its readers the Com- missioners statement for 1893. We are free to admit that it is neither as ex- plicit as it might be, nor is it as promising for the tax-payers as was looked and hoped for. While it shows an excess of assets over liabilities, it also shows that the management has been such that large amounts of inter- est isstill being paid, for borrowed money ; that while but $3,895.74 were needed for bridges and less than one thousand dollars expended in improv. ing the public property, the aggregate of expenditures are kept up to the full amount expended during the years the county was erecting its big iron bridges, repairing public buildings, and feeling the weight of a burdensome indebt. edness. The cost of managing the county affairs,—that is Commissioners’ pay and clerk hire alone—amounts to OVER len per cent. of the entire tax levy, while other counties in the State are managed, at an expense to the people, of less than Ave per cent. of the tax. levy. Where Reform Wouldn't Hurt. The tax collectors fees for collecting taxes for county purposes amounts to about 3} per cent. of the amouat col_ lected ; the county treasurer's salary, for receiving, paying out and being re- sponsible for the safe keeping of the county funds, amounts to less than six per cent. on the amount of money handled. For simply over seeing the distribution of this money the Commis- sioners’ charge over ten per cent. of the entire amount collected and expended. A little reform in the business methods of that office might cut this average cost, down to something like reasonable figures, Won't brother Stromy, who takes credit for running that offices make a move in this direction ? Consistent in Their Malignancy. The attempt of the Republicans to impair the public credit by discrediting the bonds issued by Secretary CARLISLE is in keeping with the course they have generally adopted in opposition to the Democratic measures for the re- lief of an embarrassed government, as well as of an overtaxed people. The business prostration, which is chiefly an effect of a Republican mo- nopoly tariff, is falsely represented by them as being caused by the Democra- tic intention to reduce the excesses of that tariff, a barefaced attempt to take advantage of their own wrong. With the object of intensifying the opposition to tariff reform among an unthinking class, they endeavor to make the hard times serve that pur pose to the fullest extent by resorting to influences that are calculated to continue the business depression which their tariff policy brought on, and which they impudently charge as be- ing due to what they call “Democratic tariff tinkering.” But all great movements for the public good have to encounter opposi- tion, and it would have been too much to have expected that Democratic tariff reform would not have to grapple with the malign iaterests that have grown etrong and insolent under Republican administration. The Democratic party however will be equal to it, and wil] not desist from the work it has been called todo until it shall have correct- ed the manifold evils with which a long continuance of Republican rule has afflicted the country. He Should Take Courage. Congressman BELTZHOOVER is evi- dently laboring under a wistaken ap- prehension in regard to the Wirson tariff bill. He appears to be restrained by a fear that the effect of such a tariff would be of a character that would injure the popularity of Representa- tives who should vote for it. He ought to dismiss this fear from his mind. It would be well for him to look back to the case of the Democrat- ic Congressmen from Pennsylvania who were frightened into voting against the Democratic tariff of 1846 by the fear that it would ruin Pennsylvania and that their constituents would con. sequently be down on them. That bill was passed, and it did not ruin their State whose industries became more flourishing than ever. In a little while the people of Penn- sylvania were well satisfied with the low tariff, and of those Congressmen from this State who were re-elected, the only one that was not scared by the calamity howl! raised at that time, but manfully and like a good Democrat voted for the WALKER tariff of 1846, was sent back with the biggest majority. Representative BELTzHOOVER should bear this bit of tariff history in mind and take courage. His Object Endorsed. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs justly and properly indorsed the object the President had in view in his action in the Hawaiian matter when it declared : “That we heartily approve of the principle announced by the President of the United States that interference with the domestic affairs of an inde- pendent nation is contrary to the spiri of American institutions.” The President had no other purpose than to let the world understand that it is not the policy of this government to encourage or take part in the over- throwing of other governments, or to aid and abet conspirators who under- take such enterprises. It will indeed, be a shameful day for the Republic when its Chief Magistrate shall recog- nize a filibustering and piratical policy towards other nations as being its policy. Such recognition cannot be expected of GrovER CLEVELAND. —1It is important that every Dem- ocrat who canshould make his arrange- ments to attend the February election. Every Democratic vote that fails to be deposited will be alleged, by Republi- can papers, to be withheld because of Democratic efforts to reform a vicious and oppressive tariff system. To sus- tain the party position and to encour- age those who ara battling to relieve the people of oppressive tariff taxation. Every Democrat should make it a point to be at the polls at the February elec- tion and cast his ballot for Jas. D. HANcoek. A ~ NO. 5. g ¥ The Glories of War. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. While the rebel and government fleets of Brazil are bravely contriving to keep out of each others way the gar- rison of Bage is rejoicing over its relief from a diet of cats enforced upon it by the beleaguring rebels now dispersed. In sheer contrast with the mild and gentle character of this war in Brazil is the ferocious fighting in Central America, where native and Spanish blood seems to form a particularly hot combination, and slaughter and devas- tation follow their continual wars. The Honduran army has again been defeated in a very sanguinary battle near the town of Choluteca, which was utterly destreyed by bombardment and fire. How terrible it would be it big Brazil were half so much in earnest as these little countries are over their lit- tle quarrels. On the Political Fence for Sure. From the Easton Argus. Some persons living along the state line, who have been surveyed from Del- aware into Pennsylvania, are not taking the change with very good grace. Pol- iticiang are hit especially hard. Some who have been led to believe they were citizens of one state and who cast their fortunes with the majority of one party now learn that they live in another stata and that a party of opposite convictions is in power. They have nothing todo but accept the situation and make the most of it. Care should be taken in the fature too haveall imaginary dividing lines of states distinctly marked. Instances like the late one are at times very aggrava- ting. A Fossiliferous Specimen. From the Uniontown Genius of Liberty. Galusha A. Grow could be of no pos- sible use to his constituents or himselt in Congress. He is old and infirm, a back number, without any well defined ideas on any subject of interest to the people. A vote for him is a vote thrown away. The tariff bill will pass the house long before the election. On the other hand, his opponent James D. Hancock, is a man of con- victions, in the prime of life and able to do the State good service. Grow can do nothing while his opponent can do much. sm—— wn WF The English Have Plenty of Both, From the Walla Walla, Wash. Statesman. The announcement that England is to expend £5,000,000 in the construc: tion of new battleships will doubtless fill the vast army of paupers in that country with patriotic enthusiasm. They might prefer, itis true, to be filled with bread and beer, but they long since learned that, while food of any kind is a luxury navies and armies are a necessity, and that a million emp- ty bellies are of less serious import than a single empty exchequer. 'Tis royalty and loyalty that wnake the world go round. Cases Where Superstition Amounts to | Somethiag. From the Columbia Independent. Persons who believe in luck and signs will doubtless agree that it is un- lucky to be struck by lightning ont Monday, or take hold of a circular saw on Tuesday, or tumble down stairs with a coal scuttle on Wednesday, or to be hit by a cable car on’ Thursday, or tall overboard on Friday, or marry on Sat- urday a girl who swings ten-pound dumb-bells, or be one of thirteen at .dinner on Sunday, when there is food for only ten. A Smooth Road for Daniel. From the Greensburg Westmor'land Democrat The orders recently issued by Boss Quay that Gen. Daniel H. Hastings, of Bellefonte, shall be given the Re- publican nomination for governor this year, have reached Philadelphia. Promptly and with their usual obe- dience to the behests of the boss, the 64 delegates of that city elected to the state convention met, Saturday, and endorsed Hastings for the gubernatorial nomination. All For Glory the Printer's Life. From the Curwensville Review. It a doctor makes a mistake he bur- ries it; if a merchant makes a mistake he never tells it; if a lawyer makes a mistake he crawls out of it, but if an editor makes a mistake Le puts it on a large sheet of paper for the world to look at, and in every community there are cranks who think they are models of wisdom because they occasionally dis- cover them. a ——————————————————— She Could Waller Her Daub in it Any- how, From the Gebtysburg Compiler. No wonder they say the Yankees exaggerate. We know one who com. plained to his butcher that the last piece of steak sent him was so tough his wotber could not chew the gravy, And Very Effectually Too. From the Williamsport Republican. . Now Mr. Sullivan comes forward and says that he has not retired from the ring. No, neither has Mitchell. They were both knocked out of it. Spawls from the Keystone, —There are twenty-one National banks in Montgomery county. —The Bloomsburg Iron Company has gone into the hands of a receiver. —During 1893 nine houses were built in Royersford, as against 48 "in 1892, aad 43 in 1891. —Up to date §96,600 in liquor license fees has been paid to the Schuylkill county Treasurer for the current year. —The Pennsylvania railroad station house at Beatty was entered Sunday night and rob, bed of a quantity of store goods. —The one thousand people of Tobyhanna Mills, Monroe county, having nothing to do are harvesting an immense ice crop. —The various lodges of the Farmers’ Allie ance of Cambria county were in session at Ebensburg Monday and Tuesday. —The gun with which her brother intended to shoot a dog was accidentally discharged avd the little daughter of Mrs. Carmack, of Irwin, was shot dead. —Rev. A. H. Bartholomew, of Cleveland, W. Va., was last Saturday elected pastor of the Lutheran church at Ligonier at a salary of $800 and the use of parsonage. —The Lebanon county Commissioners have decided to enforce the dog tax law of 1893, and have fixed the minimum tax on male dogsat fifty cents and on female dogs at one dollar. —Recent deaths in Huntingdon county are : Mrs. Keziah Herman, of near Orbisonia, aged 74; Mrs. Stewart, of Rock Hill, aged 87; Mrs, Mary Ann Ricketts, of Mill Creek, aged 82 years. —Rev. N. C. Fetter, of Spokane City, Wash, ington, has accepted the call of the Doyles- town Baptist Church and expects to assume the pastorate of his new charge on the first Sunday of March. —The Thomas Grimison company, Hunting- don, has been chartered for the manufacture and sale of articles of food, confections and tobacco. Capital, $25,000. Directors, Thomas Grimison, William A. Grimison, Frank G- Grimison, Huntingdon. —Levi Young, aged 72 years, and a resident of Woolrich, Clinton county, had been ill from the grip. His nervous system was affected and to get some sleep he, on Saturday last, took laudanum. Unfortunately he took too much and could not be aroused. He died last Monday afternoon. —Near Red Lion, York county, a farmer heard thieves trying to get into his meat house He had no shot in the house, so he used car- pet tacks in loading his gun. He sprinkled his man, and when the doctor was sent for he refused to pick out the tacks until the thief told how the tacks got there. —The farm of 100 acres of Samuel D. Long. acre, near Linfield, Montgomery county, has been sold to William C. Lynch, of Philadel- phia, fora figure approximating $10,000. Mr: Lynch is a son of John C. Lynch, builder, who also owns a farm near Linfield and expects to open a stone quarry on his son’s property. —On the 25th of January the Juniata Herald, published at Mifflintown, entered upon its fourteenth volume. On the same day its ene terprising editor W. M. Allison, reached the 62nd milepost of his journey on earth. The Herald is a newsy paper and Brother Allison is a hustler. May both live long and continue to prosper. —The Waynesburg Independent recounts the murder of Drover McCausland, Lindsey Pat- terson and Samuel McCoy, the huckster, and advises such dealers to leave with their fami_ ly the amount of money, character and de. nomination of the bills they carry with them, so that if they are murdered, their slayers. may be more easily identified. It also ad. vises them to do most of their business with. checks. —The money to pay the hands of the Ells worth Coal company, of Suterville, Westmore- land county, was stolen from the express car or station on Saturday. The package when received by the express company was in good condition, but when opened by them was found | to be nearly $1,500 short. The money had been taken out and paper substituted. The money was sent from Columbus, O., and was tampered with while in the haads of the Am eri- | can xpress company. —At a meeting of the committee of instrue- tion of Franklin and Marshall College it was decided to ask the War Department for the detail of a United States army officer for the instruction of the students in military science and tactics. Lieutenant 8. S. Pague, ofi the Fifteenth Infantry, now stationed at Fort Sheridan, Ill, has been asked for and will probably be detailed, Lieutenant Pague-mar- ried a Columbia lady and. is well known in. Lan- caster. The new course of instruction will be voluntary on the part of the students. —William Noble died.at his home in Wnion- town, aged 93 years. The deceased was one of the last of the stage drivers who drowe over | the great National pike when that thorough- fare was in its palmy days, having as passen. gers many of the most distinguished: men o the times, who were-going to and from Wash- ington city. The late James G. Blaine, spoke familiarly of Mr. Noble, in many of his letters to friends. For years he drove stage between Ubpiontown and Pittsburg until the-eompletion of the Chartiers railroad relegated: his stage to the rear, when he laid down the: lines never to take them up, and has since been a constant sufferer from disease. —Upon the authority of City 3olicitor Har- vey, of Chester; the Union Railway and the Chester, Darby and Philadelphia Street Rail~ way companies owe the city of Ch ester over $11,000, arrearages for dues onaccount of priwi- leges granted these companies to use certain paved streets over which their tracks have been laid, said the Chester News. The ordinance under which these companies pos sess theirfranchises provides that they shall pay $2 per lineal foot on streets on which €oun- cils give them the right of way. The City Controller has notified the Solicitor to proceed with the collection of the money. The Controller has also notified him to colleet the money due the city from Edward H. Roberts, the ex-City Engineer. —The Somerset Democrat contains the fols lowing: While engaged in the work of ape praising the personal effects of the late Leyi Yoder, of Conemaugh township, the appraisers came across an old German Bible which was printed in 1813. The Bible was printed by. Gottlied Goeb, who for a number of years con-~ ducted a printing establishment in this place in the early years of the present century, his specialty being Bibles. Mr. Goeb sold his printing office to J. B. Gruber, who continwed the business, making a specialty of the publi- cation of almanacs. Mr. Gruber eventually moved to Bedford and thence to Hagerstown, where he continued the publication of his al= manacs, which have now become famous as the “Hagerstown Almanac.” The Bible mention od above would be a valuable addition to the collection of any local bibliophile,