BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Marbles ought to be plenty in this , country. So many people seem to have lost theirs. | —An appropriation of $1,000,000 is wanted in Kentucky to furnish a State | canal. The colonels have no other use for water. —Talk about hard times, why money is cheaper in New York to-day than it is in London, which is supposed to he the centre of the financial world. —The CARNEGIE armor plate scandal still sends out a few faint puffs of smoke that leads us to believe that it might be worth while for Congress to go into the matter thoroughly. Where there is smoke it is well to look for fire. —South Carolina is once again the scene of cld time liquor dispensations. Saloons are opening up everywhere and Governor TILLMAN, so far as paying any attention to them is concerned, seems to have lost his other eye. —1It is aid that twenty thousand peo- ple die annually from snake bitein In- dia. The Temperance people have not furnished us with an estimate of the number who die in the United States from the effects of “snake bite.” —Citizen GEORGE Francis TRAIN has joined the CoxEY movement and will try to share some of the notoriety enjoyed just now by the blooming Ohio fanatic. What the government needs just now is a place like a dog pound so fellows affected with the rabies can be caught and put out of the way. —Itis possible that Senator MILLS will answer DAaviDp B. HILL's attack on the WiLsoN bill and if he does, we hope the able Southerner will lay the peanut politiciar from New York, out so flat he will never have the brazenness to open his mouth again in the traitorous manner that characterized his recent de- liverance. --A German has invented a bullet proof coat for the secret of which that government has offered him three hun- drad million marks. It is altogether probable that if Emperor WILLIAM were to learn Low to make bullet proof coats he would soon fit out his army and march into France, but the French could enlist & few of their anarchists who would soon blow up a German army, notwithstanding the coats. —— The colored preacher pension agent who was sentenced to twenty- eight years in the penitentiary at Chat- tanooga, Tenn., the other day for being mixed up in tourteen fraudulent pension claims will begin to think he had better have staid at his old business. Colored preachers who presume on their prover- bial handiness at small game—chickens forinstance—will do well to think twice before getting in with pension sharks. —Uncle Sam has always been a little slow in passing around honors, which possibly accounts for his recent nomina- tion of a number of officers for brevet grades for gallant service in Indian campaigns. Most of the officers are dead now and it may seem useless to bestow titles on the dead, but who knows what weight they will have with St. PETER, when those old warriors come to present their credentials on the last day. —Thus far the great strike of the coal miners has had a very encouraging ef- fect on those who hope to see the opera- tors acceed to their demands, and as long as the mine workers keep from un- lawful proceedings they will have the sympathy of every-one who realizes the scanty pittance which they receive for their labor. There seems to be a possi- bility of their winning this fight, for the operators have never before been in such a demoralized condition. —The Legislature of the Buckeye State on Tuesday granted the women out there the right to vote at school elections. The bill became a law at once so that Ohio women can now march up to the polls, peddle bad whis- key, dispense cigars swear and chew to- bacco, while the returns are being counted, with as much gusto as the most vulgar ward heeler. But no, be- ing allowed to vote themselves school directors, they will soon educate the coming generation into giving them a full and free franchise. ——Rupvarp KirLiNG in a recent interview with a London reporter said : “There is a dyspepsia epidemic in America, They doa’t understand our comfort. Kverything is too temporary for that. They are in a railway station waiting room stage of civilization, and it is hardly worth while yet for any one to settle down and be solidly comfort- able. America feels like one vast camp.” ‘Which, alas seems too true. The Ameri- can psople live too fast. Not half of us spend as much time at table as our constitutions demand and the result is that we are worn out before we fairly reach the age when we might enjoy the fruits of our labors. The Englishman’s comparison of our life to a “vast camp” 1s a happy one, for half of us have camp fires in our stomach ; and all because we make them do the work that the Creator designed for our teeth. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 39. BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 27, 1894. NO. 17. Tramp Influence Upon Congress. The alarming tendency of the vaga- bonds of the country to make their way to Washington with the object of influencing the action of Congress is be- ginning to attract the serious attention which the dangerous character of such a movement deserves. At first the idea of gangs of tramps organizing a demonstration of this nature and mov- ing towards the seat of government was regarded in a humorous light and was made the subject of jocular com. ment in the newspapers. Such treat- ment of this disorder, and the misguid- ed newspaper enterprise which has heralded the movements of Coxky’s vagabounds, bas given them encourage. ment and helped to stimulate this dis- orderly purpose. It is now beginning to occur to sen- sible people that there is danger in this thing. It cannot be otherwise than that if such proceedings are permitted to go oc they will be repeated and grow more formidable and dangerous with every repetition. The tramp element of the country will habitually march to Washington to take a band in the government. It is not hard to see from what source this disorder has sprang. Congress for years has beeu subjected to outeide influence. It has been the custom of Republicanism toallow the committee rooms and the lobbies of Congress to be crowded by favorite parties intent upon affecting the action of Congress for their special behoof. = When tarift beneficiaries and the recipients of sub- sidies have been invited to throng the capitol tor the purpose of presenting their claims and influencing gongres- sional action favorably to their inter- ests, why ehould it not occur to the tramps aud daugerous characters of the country that they have just as good a right to appear in the national capitol waking body ? When the supporters of taruf taxation are invited to make an imposing demonstration in Wash. enter the heads of the vagabonds that they also have interests which they may enforce by a threatening display of numbers at the seat of the govern- ment ? ulated by example, and this is a pecu. liar danger in a popular government. of encouraging and providing for spe- every facility tor bringing their ioflu- ence to bear upon the law-making pow- that it is their turn. Fining The Absentees. Congressman WoLVERTON, of this State, has again shown his usefulness and fidelity as a representative of the people, by presenting to the House the report of the Judiciary committee rec- ommendiog the revival of the law that imposed a fine upon members for for absence from the House without a valid excuse. A rule to this effect was adopted in 1856, but was allowed to fall into disuse. The revival ot such a restraint upon absenteeism will have a good effect in promoting the efficient action of Con gress. It is sentimentally contended, by those who object to such expedients, that a sense of duty and a regard for the obligation of their trust should be sufficient to ensure the attendance of members, and that measures of a punitiveand compulsory character are an offensive encroachment upon their personal independence. This will do as a matter of sentiment, but the act- ual experience is that a more substan- tial restraint is required to prevent some members from neglecting their representative duty. It is better that a fine be imposed, and a quorum counted than that legislation should be blocked by. absenteeism and contumacious fili- bustering. The people pay their re- presentatives liberally and are entitled to their full service. We can imagine with what satisfac- tion Congressman WOLVERTON, who means business in everything he un- dertakes, introduced the report for the revival of a law which, if enforced will make the laggards come up to their work. i ! —Read the WATCHMAN, ial inter iving th i 2418 | a . e Befeste, giving, those. lnweresis required increase by adding one penny and exert a pressure upon the law- The Bituminous Coal Strike. The strike of the soft coal miners, which is now on, including all the bituminous regions of the country, is one of the most extensive movements of the kind that has ever occurred in the mining industry. It is hard to conjecture how long it will last, or what will be its effect. Demoustra- tions of this kind have seldom accom- plished their object, and have usually been more injurious than beneficial to those who have engaged in them. One thing at least is made evident by this movement, and that is, that the workmen in the protected industry of coal mining are not satisfied with the wages they are getting, Itis not under a low Democratic tariff that they are kicking aboutlinadequate pay, but under the highest tariff ever known, by which liberal provision is made for the protection of the Jicoal interest, and which is said ito have teen intended to secure ample wages for the coal miners. Somebody is getting the benefit of this protection, but the strike of the workmen in the protected industry in- dicates that they are not receiving a due portion of the advantage. When a tariff is laid which increases the prof- its in a certain line of production, and the working people complainjthat they are inadequately paid, there can be no other conclusion than that the profits are absorbed by the magnates who manage the operations. Such appar ently being the case, the workers ob- ject to being *‘dead heads in the enter- prise.” Whether it is wise for the miners to strike is another question. The expe- rience they have had in such under- standings 18 not of a characier that should encourage them to repeat it, A long continuance of tariff favoritism hss made the operators so rich that they are able to stand out against|tleir ‘employees in astrike, to whom a cessa- ington with the view ot interfering with | a tariff retorm bill, why should it not These evils are propagated and stim. | The Republicans have set the example tion of work for any length of time means starvation. t Praise for the Income Tax. Although the Pniladelphia Record is decidedly down on a United States income tax it admires the efficacy of the same method of raising revenue as practical in England. It being estimated that the expen- ses of the English government tor the coming year will be £5,000,000 more than they were in the preceding year, the authorities propose to secure the "in the pound to the income tax, and : by a slight increase in the taxes on in- er, and now the tramps have concluded Y g heritances and on spirits and beer. This way of meeting a deficiency is so highly approved by the Record that it says: “The British system of taxation is admirable, at least in its simplicity and convenience.” It is indeed admirable, and the fea- ture in it that is most to be admired is the provision it makes for raising reve- nue through the medium of a tax on incomes in preference to taxing the necessaries of the working people by means of tariff. The revenues of the British government are largely sup- plied by the taxation of incomes. Al- though aristocratic in its character it justly regards wealth as the proper source from which government should chiefly derive its suprort, and in this respect it sets an example to Demo- cratic America which exempts the wealthy and taxes the general mass, irrespective of their pecuniary circum. stances, through the agency of tariffs. Our Philadelphia contemporay has much to say about the cumbersome, inconvenient and inquisitorial charac- ter of an American income tax, yet it is pleased with the “simplicity and convenience’ with which the English raise revenue by that means of taxa- tion. Does it not look like a quibble to say that the same revenue method caunot be attended with the same con- venience and simplicity in this country? ——The resignation of Dr. Prprer as head ofthe University of Pennsyl- vania, takes frem that institution a man of wonderful administrative ability and one whose individual repu- tation has begotten much of the re- pute which the University enjoye. It will lose a great man, but he will be- come greater in devoting himself ex- clusively to the fizld of science. Some Corporation Injuries. It is undeniable that large business enterprises are more helpful to a coun- try than small ones, yet in many wavs they are injurions and this is the rea- son people come to look upon them as preys upon the public. The massing of capital for the purpose of conduct ing specific branches of trade will re- suit in good for a land, as loag as the corporations investing it do not resolve themselves into trusts and monopolies. It will result in good so far as an im- provement in manufactares or public service is helped by the employment of unlimited capital. Just as the enor- mous wealth that backs the Penusyl- vania Railroad company has made it the most efficient public carrier in the world. But withal there can be-no doubt of the ill effects which allied capital brings about occasionally, Aa excellent illustration of which we find in the present strike which involves nearly half a million coal miners and threatens to tie up many of our rail roads and manufactories for want of coal. Had it not been for the larger syndi- cates, operating Pennsylvania coal fields, there would have been no trou- ble. They caused it all. It is not the little operator who employs a hundred or more men. He is all right and were it not for membership in the United Mine Workers Association his miners would be working to-day. But when one man quits all must quit, Such operators as the Berwin, Warr Co. and BeLr, Lewis & Yates go into the market and take contracts below the smaller bidders. The result is they have to cut down expenses and make up the deficit out of the miners pockets. This state of things has been carried on until the miners of Pennsylvania have become ver- itable slaves. The price of min- ‘ing has been repeatedly cut down until it has at last reached a point where subsistence is impossible and the miners propose forcing the operators to a recognition of their rights to a living, if nothing more. A large percentage of the smaller operators in the State had been paying 50 cts. per ton when the large corpor- ations declared a reduction of 5cts. and many of them continued paying 50cts even after a second Sct. reduction by their larger competitors and the work- men in these large mines, refusing to accept wages on which live, struck and were supported by all the members of the National Associa: tion. Thus it will be seen that while corporations are benefits in many ways, yet there are others in which they are decidedly injurious. Tae present strike, unless settled 8000, will result in direful business dis- tress for many railroads and other in- dustries using bituminous coal as fuel will have to suspend. Lynch Law in Ohio. Two lynchings in Ohioin six months is a record which the people ot the Buckeye State have but little reason to be proud of. One of these cases of law- less punishment having occarred in that focus of Ohio Republicanism, the Western Reserve, the victim having been a negro, it looks as if ‘Southern barbarism’ is being practiced by the old time Abolitionists of that region. Governor McKINLEY's attention having been called to these violent in- fringements of the law he acknowledg ed his inability to prevent them, say- ing, as is very true, that ‘the law lodges no power in such cases in the bands of the Governor,” He admits that all he can do is to use his influence with those whose duty it is to investi- gate such cases and to enforce the law. The same difficulty exists with the authorities in the Southern States, who haye been roundly abused by Re- publican newspapers for not doicg that which in such cases of lawlessness Governor McKINLEY says he is unable to do. But notwithstanding this acknowl. edged incapacity of anthority, an earn- est effort, backed by public sentiment, should be made, cast, west, north and south, to put an end to the operations of Judge Ly~xcH. Surely it is not be. yond the power of legislation to check these lawless demonstrations. ——-Do you read the WATCHMAN, Smarties Called Down. From the West Chester Jeffersonian. There is a class of smart folk who take a special delight in giving wrong information to reporters. Not long ago one of this kind was prosecuted by the Scranton Times for imposing a fraudu- lent marriage story upon one of its re- porters. Now the Williamsport Gazette and Bulletin has entered suit against a party who thought it would be a good joke to have it printed that the wife of a gentleman, more or less well known, had given birth to four children. The item, says the Reading Times, was a good one if true, and as the reporter had no reason at the time to suppose he was being imposed upon he used it in his newspaper, as would have been done anywhere. It turned out that there was no truth whatever in the report. As the newspaper did not propose to be used in that way to assist funny people in their low and disgraceful jokes or the wicked in their malice, it took very prompt and commendable steps under the law to vindicate itself by causing the arrest of the loose-mouthed man who deceived the reporter. It was what every newspaper under like cir- cumstances should do, and these people who are busy manufacturing news for others to assume responsibility for wend then soon understand the danger of it. An Impetus to American Wool. From the Chambersburg Democratic News. How does the following suit the Ohio ‘Wool men ? They never seem satisfied. The American Consul at Bradford, England seems to be a man who is on the lookout for the best interests of his country. “The American Consul at Bradford, England, reports that the manufacturers in that city assert that the moment the tariff bill becomes a law the prices of American wool will revive, and several of them are so strong in this belief that they have made large invest- ments in wool now held in Philadel- phia and Boston. They insist that the new impetus given to manifctures by free raw material will cause larger quantities of the United -States grown article to be mixed with fine foreign wools, and that the demand for Ameri- can wools for hosiery purposes will im- mediately set in on the English market. It is already proposed by wool dealers in England to exchange the grades of they cannot | wool more suitable for dress, goods and ' cloths for the American wool adapted | for hosiery and other purposes. Thay { argue that this will at once bring about i renewed activity in the trade and raise prices.” | Falling Off on the Wining Side of the Fence. | From the Philadelphia Times. David Martin has a heap of political | sense and he has no intention of mon- | keying with Grow whatever Magee or ! anyone else may do. It was against his judgment that Delamater was { forced on the Republican ticket in 1 1890, although he took his orders like | a little man and helped to do it. He i doesn’t want any more of that kind of | experience and he makes haste to say | he is for Grow because he is the most { popular candidate that can be placed on the ticket. Martin bas learned in the school of experience that it is bad policy to turn down a candidate the people want for one whom nobody cares a fig about. Grow won't be turned down this year if Martin's ad- vice is taken, as it probably will be. Democratic Rulings, not Despotism. From the Connellsville Courier. The Democrats in Congress haves cut the Gordian Knot that bound them to helplessness in the matter of doing busi- ness in a very proper and common sense way, and it wasn’t Tom Reed’s, way, eitber, as our Republican friends would have the country believe. The good re- sults of the Reed rule have been obtain- ed without its bad methods. Yea, Verily What Is It. From the Clarion Democrat. Senator Hill is the author of the dramatic statement, “I am a Demo- erat.” The Republican Boss of New York state, Thomas C. Platt, certifies to the correctness of the statement by having his legislature endorse Mr. Hill’s actions, and all the high tariff organs join in the howl of “amen.” What is Democracy ? Raises a Bigger Lump than Corbett. From the Osceolo Courier-Leader. Somebody has just discovered that an ordinary bee when not loaded weighs one five-thousandth of a pound. Load- ed or unloaded when he strikes a small boy he seems to weigh flve thousand pounds. He Doesn't Know What Democrat Means. From the Connellsville Courier. Senator Hill made himself famous once by the declaration, “I am a Dem- ocrat.’” The distinguished = Senator from New York may be a Democrat, but it’s a mighty poor kind. ——REditor Jim Goodlander, of the Clearfield Republican, is just home from the California Mid-Winter Fair and pronounces it a “Colossal fake.” ——If you want printing of any de- seripton the WaTcEMAN office is the place to have it done. Spawls from the Keystone, —A big brewery will be built at Ma- hanoy City. —Beading Councils refuse to put up cash for free public baths. —The big fire is still raging in the St, Nicholas mine, near Ashland. —An electric car terribly injured Mrs, George N. Moyer, in Reading. —There was another cave-in Monday in the fatal Gaylord mine at Plymouth. —Steel Roller George Long lost a leg in the rolls in Lebanon’s Bast End Mill. —Trinity Lutheran Church, Reading, will celebrate its centennial on May 20. —William O. Bateman was killed in the Short Mountain Colliery, near Williams. town, —Endeavoring to mount a moving train at Centralia, little Daniel Sullivan was killed. —Pennsylvania Railroad Agent S. G. Grieb has disappeared from Marysville Station. —Ninety per cent. of the men, Rey. G. T. Street, of Allegheny county, says, are profane, —The Reading Archdeaconry of the Episcopal Church began its sessions Mon- day in Lebanon. : —Refusing to have his injured hand am- putated J. C. McClain, of Altoona, has died of lockjaw. —There is a movement in Luzerne County to abolish the kissing of the Bible in taking an oath. —A dozen men and several women, ac- cused of many robberies, were Monday jailed at Ebensburg. —Schuylkill county commissioners Sat- urday appointed 25 wardens to prevent or fight forest fires. —Attorney General Hensel has pur- chased a fine farm near Kinzer's station, Lancaster county: —Aged Thomas Ward, who lived un. happily at Mahanoy City, swallowed pars is green and will die. —Mrs, Elliott F, Shepard, of New York, has given $1000 to found a Shepard scholar. ship at Lafayette College. —Berks county Christian Endeavors, in their meeting at Reading, engaged in a competitive “drawing social.” —The funeral at Reading on Saturday of county Recorder I. W, Keim was one of the largest ever seen there. —An hour after eating strychnine pills for candy the four-year-old daughter of ‘W. J. Burns, Hazelton, was dead. —A Wilkesbarre justice refused to pun- ish Michael Buckalew, who stole a sack of flour to feed his starving family. — An explosion in a stone quarry start- led people in Lancaster county Monday, who thought it was an earthquake. —A coal train’s wreck blockaded the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad a few miles west of Williamsport Tuesday. —Iron manufacturers in the Lebanon Valley buy pig metal in the South which is delivered at the mills for $10.23 a ton, —In trying to destroy the lice ina hen's nest Farmer Baublitz, near York, set his barn on fire and it was totally destroyed. —Stockholders of the Schuylkill Valley Electric Railway Company have voted te increase the bonded indebtedness $55,000. —A Philadelphia boy, Frank Abbott, was sent home from Reading Monday where he says he was enticed by a strans ger. ' —Congressman ® Bzltzhoover §EMonday evening left his Carlisle home for Wash- ington, but had to return on account of a relapse. —For practicing medicine without a lie cense, C. R. Hemperly, of Union, town. ship, Lebanon county, was arrested om Monday. —Governor Pattison says the|Werners. ville Insane Asylum will be ready for about $0) patients in from three to five weeks. —All the Chinamen, except two, whe are ex-convicts, in the Pittsburg district wi'l register before the time limit expires on May 3. —Police are stationed at St. Mary's Po- lish Church, in Reading, every Sunday, and many people are objecting to the ex. tra expense. { —Running back in front of a runaway horse to save his marbles, 10-year-old John Holloway was fatally hurt at Ma- hanoy City. re —The body of Evan G. Hanaker, of Clearfield, who disappeared a month ago, was found Saturday in the Susquehannakh River, near Columbia. : —Rev. Dr. George T. Parves, of Prince« ton Seminary, will preach the bacealaure- ate sermon at Lafayette ;College com. mencement, on June 17. ! —Two men chased to the Welsh Moun tain and fired three shots at a fiend whe assaulted irs. Robert Lloyd, near Caer haven (Berks county) quarries. —A committee of the State Musie Teachers’ Association is at Harrisburg im the interest of music as a regular publie school study in Pennsylvania, —A temporary injunction was Saturday granted at Williamsport to prevent the sale of the Williamsport Passenger Rail « way to a Philadelphia syndicate. —Thomas V. Cooper isa leading stock- holder in the Guarantors’ Liability In. demnity Company, of Philadelphia, capi- tal $230,000 which was chartered Saturday. —Afteran investigation by the Prison Board of Luzerue county, Warden Jones and Watchman Fallon were exonerated from the charge of cruelty made by pris- oners, —Fourteen-year-old Morris Dickert dis appeared from his home in Allentown and came back with a dime novel tale that he had been kidnapped and taken to West Bethlehem. —8. I. Snyder, of Clearfield, has been granted a patent for a screw driver, and Messrs. J. P. Wynn and J. W. Gillespie, of Lock Haven, have just had a new pipe wrench patented. —Harrisburg’s Boot and Shoe Manufac™ turing Company is to have the largest plant of its kind in the world, to turn out 25,000 pairs of shoes weekly—more than double its present capacity. —A young woman by the name of {Fan- ny Huling has been victimizing the mer chants of Renovo and Lock Haven by ob- taining goods under false pretense. She was arrested on Friday but was let off by her brother paying all claims,