Ink Slings. -—With free wool there should be lots to pull over the eyes of the voters this fall. —The two cent duty on playing ecards is not likely to disturb the ‘ante’ of the game, —The Republicans of Nebraska are calling their Nationgl committeeman, Mr. ROSEWATER, sweet-scented names because he has bolted their ticket. —MATT QUAY’s vote in the Senate was largely responsible for our not hav- ing free sugar to-day. Republican stumpers will bear this in mind while making up their orations for this fall’s campaign. —The chappies who persistin wearing their trousers turned up while riding on railroad cars do so possibly because of the springs in the seats. Anything that sounds like water makes them: af- fect the London fad now-a-days. —Bloody bridles WAITE, the freak Governor of Colorado, was arrested on Tuesday evening for violating the U. S. postal laws. He opened some mail belonging to a female and is likely to get into trouble for his curiosity. —A Republican slogan this fall is to be ‘to work, to work.” Allthe party workers the g. o. p. boasts can get to work if they chose. All the laboring classes are getting to work and the Re- publican haranguers can work all they please, but ’twill be to no profit. —The very day the WILsoN bill be- came a'law the Valentine Iron Com- pany’s mammoth furnace at this place went into blast after an idleness for months. Does this look much as though Centre county manufacturers are afraid of the new Democratic tariff measure. —The government is making money off its employees. More than $20,000 have been realized by docking members for absence. Now if there was only a law to suspend scme of them without pay it would not take future Congresses long to get down to good work and stay there. —A Washington woman’s scheme to blackmail Senator STEWART, by try- ing to get him named as co-respondert in a divorce suit was nipped in the bud by the veteran Nevada legislator. He believes in free silver all right, but not when when it comes to shelling it out to free and easy women. —Dear, oh dear! Mr. QuaY demands rest at last. Those select tariff readings were too much for him and he is about to fly to some secluded spot where he will not be disturbed. It isa wonder he did nou realize that the public needed a rest long before he began droning off those made to order speeches. i —The Populist congressional candi- date in the Mercer-Lawrence-Beaver- Butler district is a man by the name of KIRKER. In order to help along his campaign the KIRKER boys have organ- ized a brass band among themselves and have determined not to leave their daddy to blow his horn alone. —Czar REED's little boomlet, for the Republican presidential nomination in 1896, was launched at Orchard, Maine, last Saturday. The kind of political fruit he might pluck from that Orchard in the event of his candidacy will pale into insignificance when the Damocrat- ic bins are measured up next time. —The Republicans are short of gub- ernatorizl timber in New York. They are continually prating about Demo- cratic mis-rule in the Empire state, yet they confess that their own party is so corrupt within itself that they can’t combine on any man who will pull for all factions and lead them in a cam- paign. —Hge~NrY F. GrRiswoLD, the young desperado who was arrested last week for “holding up” a C. M. and St. P. passenger train near Chicago, two de- tectives having been killed in the at- tempt to arrest him, has turned out to be a son of a prominent New York life insurance man. Verily the son took | after the father. He went to taking | lives. —The WILSON bill is become a law. For the first time in almost half a cen- tury the country will have an oppor- tunity of seeing what Democratic legis- lation ean do for trade. The features | of the WiLsoN bill mark a step in the right direction, but there will never be a wholesome stimulus to business until a monstrous stride down the scale taken. is —There is nodenying the fact that advertising makes = everything boom. Not long ago Coxey was tickled to death if he could get any one who would | sit still and listen to one of his wild | speeches, and when he picked up 8 few | coppers in the hat, that was usually | passed afterwards, he deemed his wind | highly appreciated. He has been ad- vertised through the length and breadth | of the land now, with the result that he has more engagemants than he can fill at $100 the night. : | in regard to the tariff bill not farnish- | gelist who after being pardoned from | him off to prison "as fast as possible, | The Buzzarp flew out of jail several | times and they did not care to' run any ee ————— Denacral [ SHO “VOL. 39. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA. AUG. 81, 1894%__ NO. 34. A Clean Campaign. | The Philadelphia Times is gratified in believing that we are going to have a thoroughly clean State campaiga. It is to be hoped that it will be clean, and we are sure that it will be, so far as the influence of the Democratic can- didate for Governor can be exerted in giving character to it. Mr. SINGERLY has never sanctioned a low order of politics. The tone of his newspaper has always been high; its treatment of political questions has always been as fair and dignified as it has been for- cible, and it has never been guilty of personal abuse. Such being the dis position and babit of his paper, what else could be expected than that its editor will require that cleanliness shall characterize the side of the campaign on which he is the candidate ? There are better arguments to be used in candidate SiNGErLY’s behalf than the abuse of his opponent. The principles represented by his candidacy are of the highest interest to the State. He is the opponent of an economic gystem that in the long ran has done Pennsylvania more harm than good— a system whose defects and abuses have repeatedly been the subject of ex- posure in his newspaper, and against which his election would be a protest. he was among the first to combat a false and pernicious tariff policy that has had the effect of enriching a class while withholding its benefits from the generality of the people, and under which the State has seen the present prostration of her industries brought about, and her working people reduced to an unremunerative rate of wages. He has been untiring in his efforts to dispel the delusion that industry is promoted by restriction, and that a people are made prosperous by taxa- tion. The collapse that has attended the high-water mark of protection in the McKINLEY tariff has verified the correctness of his position, and-entitled’ him t> the confidence of the people in whose interest he has spoken and acted. Pennsylvania has had her share of the injury resulting from the high tariff delusion, and will partake of the bene- fit that will come from the better economic system, just inaugurated, which Mr. ,SiNGerLY has so largely assisted in indacing the people to ac- cept. A candidate that has such a claim to the gratitude of those whom he helped to disenthrall from the incubus of an oppressive and injurious tariff, has no occasion to resort to low methods of obtaining votes, among which personal abuse of opponents is the lowest. Such a public service as he has rendered in the tariff reform movement, together with his high personal character and irreproachable business reputation, is all sufficient in commending him to the people, requiring the employmeat of no questionable campaign expedient. Most of all would personal abuse be unnecessary and undesired on his eide of the controversy, and as for the other side, they have no point upon which to attack the Democratic candidate per- gonally. ——The hold which CLEVELAND has on the people is showa in various forms of expressions, but it makes itself partic- ularly manifest in Democratic couven- tions. Wherever the Democrats have ootten together in convention their ex- pression of confidence in the President has amounted to enthusiasm, Doubt may be entertained as to the fidelity of other leaders to the principles of the party, but the rank and file—the peo: ple, have an abiding faith in the hones- ty and faithfulness of CLEVELAND. Amid the dissatisfaction that prevails ing the full measure of tariff reform, the people are convinced that: the President did his utmost to tulfili ‘the pledges of the party, and that if there has been any short coming it has been no fault ot his. —ABE BuzzArD, the out-law evan- the eastern penitentiary for many crimes, | is back again behind the bars. He was convicted in Lancaster a ‘few days ago for thievery and the authorities hustled more risks with him. ——Subsecribe for the WATCHMAN, The Lynching of Negroes. The English papers are giving much attention to the lynching of negroes that is too much practiced in the southern States of this country. The earnestness with which they condemn it is no doubt strengthened by their general inclination to take advantage of anything that may be derogatory to the United States, yet it can pot be denied that thereis ground for their strictures. : The Loudon Spectator, speaking of the lawless violence with» which negro offenders in the South are treated, en- deavors to give a cause for it in its statement that “in the minds of the white population there is implanted the unextinguished jealousy of a race once subject, afterwards almost master and at all times either hated or dis- pised.” This is not a sufficient explanation, The general treatment of the blacks in the South does not show that they are hated by the white population. The ordinary relations between them are friendly, and since the war there has been a remarkable disposition on ‘the part of the superior race to improve and elevate the inferior. This has been shown by the large appropria- tions in every southern State for the education of the negroes, and by the encouragement that has been given them in every department of industry. There is no element of hatred or ill will in such a disposition. But the fact is that lynching is a method of punishment too much prac: ticed in every part of the United States for certain kinds of oftences, particu- larly tor criminal assaults upon fe- males, and it happens that crimes which are considered lynchable by lawless and undiscriminating mobs are more frequently committed by the blacks than by the whites. This is at least oue of the reasons why eo many ‘We would by no means excuse the violent and lawless punishment of col- ored oftenders in the South. Whether such treatment is inflicted upon whi tes or blacks, it has a demoralizing ten: dency and is a disgrace to the civiiiza- tion of this country. Itshould be sup- pressed everywhere. Quay Responsible for the Tariff on Sugar. After all the Republican fuss it ap: pears that the one-eighth of a cent dif- ferential in favor of the sugar trast, which is the only defect, though a vital one, in the tariff bill, is chargeable to a Republican source. The Philadel phia Times, in stating how it got into the bill, shows that it got there by the casting vote of Senator Quay, the Re- publican leader ot Pennsylvania. The Times says : : When Senator Kyle moved to strike out this differential duty of one-eighth of a cent on refined sugar it was lost by a vote of 35 to 34, Senator Quay having voted for the differ- ential sugar tax and thereby gave ita major- ity of one. Had he voted to strike out this feature of the bill, which levies a tax of one- eighth of a cent on sugar solely for the benefit of the sugar trust without paying one dollar og reveuue into the treasury, it would have been defeated. Those who read the proceedings in the Senate on the tariff bill will recog: nize this statement as being as true as gospel: The duty differeatial to the trust would have been struck out of the bill ifit had not been for Quay’s vote. The Republican leader of Penn- sylvania interposed to conserve the in- terest of the sugar monopolists. QuaY's entire conduct in this tariff business has been of but’ little credit either to himself or the State he repre- seats. Without having the ability to make an effective impression upon the question, he assumed a sort of jump- ing-jack aciivity in the controversy. His speeches, inflicted upon the Sen- ate on the installment plan, were read from the manuscript that had been prepared for him whenever an oppor- tunity to obstruct the progress of the bill presented itself, He was, more- over, detected in having speculated in sugar etock while the bill was pending and didn’t appear to be ashamed of it, | and when it required but one vote to maintain the differential on refined sugar which the trust was fighting for, he furnished that vote, Nevertheless Republican newspapers that wear the Quay collar are clamorous about the sugar schedule in the tariff bill. IMS SSRI ——10 you read the WATCHMAN, Government Protection from High Water. Whenever a river becomes unruly and overflows its banks, doing damage to people living along its borders, it has become the custom to seek relief from the general government. Thus it is seen that the population of the Susquehanna valley, particularly those of the West Branch region, have ap- plied to Congress for an appropriation of money that will furnish the means of protection from the floods. It is remarkable how strong has grown the disposition to take advan- tage of the paternal care of the govern. ment. The people are looking to Washington for relief from almost every difficulty and the appropriation bills are the means by which they seek to obtain most of the desired help, with the result that mach money is devoted to uses that'were not contemplated in the original design of governmental expenditure. When the founders of the government authorized the appropria- tion of public funds for the improve ment of rivers and harbors they had no other object than the facilitation of commerce, and the present disposition to obtain money froin the public treas- ury for protection against inundations springs from an unfortunate impression that has taken hold of the public mind that the government owes a paternal duty to the people. While the inhabitants of the Sus: quehanna valley are asking the gov- ernment to protect them from the rav- ages of high water, it is refreshing to see an exception in the case of the town of Sunbury which has concluded to protect itself and for this purpose its authorities have appropriated $15,000 for the building of a levee that will keep out the water, and a contract for the work has been awarded. The peoc- ple of Sunbury are to be commended for not depending upon the paternal care of the government, and the other 'Sutyuehanna towns subject to floods i hardly be true. ehould follow her example of self pro- tection. Something about Cuckoos. “No other President can hope to be surrounded by flocks of cuckoos,” says the Cincinnati Tribune.—This can In all probability | there will be future Presidents who | will be faithful to the principles of the {parties that elected them, and" will be surrounded by supporters faithfully | sustaining them in the honorable dis- charge of their trust. . These may be called cuckoos by the malignant and foolish enemies of the principles sup- ported by them, as is found to be the case to-day. JEeFrERsoN had his unfaltering sup- porters who were reviled for their at- tachment to him when he ingrafted in- to our institutions the true principles of Democracy. The silly term cuckoo was not used against them, but other opprobrious terms were employed. Jackson also had his faithful followers, who stood by him through thick and thin in his fight with the enemres of democratic government, and although they were not called cuckoos, they had equally spiteful terms applied to them. Whenever a' President shall ' be found faithtully and honorably main- taining the principles he was elected to carry out, he will be surrounded and sustained by a class of followers such as fools are now calling cuckoos, whose service in behalf of honor, principle and the public good will be remembered by a grateful people long after their revilers shall have passed away with the rubbish of time. ——The Republican Altoona 77ib- une says that “the Hawaiian republic is 80 much of a fraud that we cannot understand why a ‘fellow feeling’ doesn’t make the Democratic party ‘cotton’ to it warmly and immediate ly." Because it is so much of a fraud is the reason that it received so little countenance from President’ CLEVE- LAND, and is beld in low estimation by the Democratic party. Probably that is the reason why it (is favored by the Republicans.” A republic whose con- stitution has been framed by a ring of foreign residents, and whose Presidents are not to be elected by the people, but by an oligarchy governing the legisla- ture, is a kind of republic not calculat- el to excite the. admiration of the Damocracy. Better Times In Sight—And This CUn- der Democratic Rule. : From the New York Tribune. Rep. Although the uncertainty respecting the tariff continues, business men are breathing more easily. They koow that settled conditions are close at hand and they are already feeling the tonic effects of a restoration of confidence. The Gorman bill will either be vetoed before the week ends or it will be al- lowed to become law with or without the President's signature. In either event the industries of the country will have release from the uncertainties which have been paralyzing their ac- tivities. Business men will know what is before them, and with that faculty for adapting themselves to circum- stances, which is a marked character: istic of Americans, they will make the best of the situation. They share the feeling of Arctic navigators when the floes have parted and released the ship which has been nipped and imprisoned in the ice. They have the assurance that open water will soon be ahead of them, although they may not yet know the direction in which it will lead them. Democracy Is the Only Antidote for Such Poison. From the Seattle, Wash. Telegraph. “Neverin the history of the demo: cracy of this state was the opportunity more favorable to win a victory at the polls. The people of the state are sick of republican mismanagement of state and county affairs. If the in- genuity of the framers of our state con- stitution and fundamental laws had been exerted to devise something which would be cumbrous, unsatisfac- tory and needlessly expensive, they could not have done better than set up a system under which the state now suf- fers. We are governed to death, and yet it would be almost impossible to suggest'in what respect the affairs of the people could be worse attended to thay they are nox. Taxation is too high and the whole machinery of our government is so designed that it fails in a conspicuous degree to accomplish the purposes for which it is intended. What We Needed Was a New Capitol. From the Philadelphia Press. The improvements which have been made in the old Capitol at Harrisburg, together with the erection of a new building for the executive departments and State library, are most desirable ad- ditions to the structures on Capitol Hill. Most of the State departments have been too long kept in unfit and shabby quarters, but a few months hence there will be no longer any complaint on that score, while the new ball of the House of Representatives, besides hav- ing greater capacity, will not be open to the serious objection of the past that it was health-destroying on account of poor ventilation, or what was practical- ly no ventilation at all. It was much better for the State to make these im- provements as it has than to enter upon the expensive and almost endless job of constructing a new capitol. ————— It Is Consumption, Not Protection, That Stimulates Business. From the Wayne County Herald. The general expression of opinion among the leading manufacturers of the country as to the effect of the new law is, that while there may be some reduction of wages in a few 1nstances, there is likely to be a great increase of business. We will soon be in shape to export and can compete successfully with any nation upon the globe. There is ‘still an adundance of protection left upon our manufactures; twice as much at least as there was between 1850 and 1860, which, the census shows, was the period of our greatest real pros- perity. Give It a Chance to Boom. From the Doylestown Democrat. The new tariff bill became a law at twelve, midnight, last night, and went into immediate operation. The treasury officials have been preparing sometime to put the law in force, and importers will now have to pay duties according to the new schedules. There is every prospect of a boom in 'busi- ness, and we hope the enemies of ithe new tariff will let it be fairly tried = be: fore denouncing it. ~~ Our calamity howlers will please suspend business for a few weeks. ‘ a —————— Iv Is Money More Than the Pole They Ave After. From thie Milton Record. Mr. Wellman’s “dash for the pole” is postponed until next season. None the less it is good news to know that he and his companions are all safe, and are again within the limits of civ- ilization. Of course he will lecture this winter. The arctic explorer takes 10 lecturing ‘as ‘naturally as the prize fighter takes to the stage. SU — ——— Do They Fear Him, From the Williamsport Sun. : Oar Republican friends are very much worried over Judge Bucher’s can- didacy, and would be pleased to see him refuse to'be a candidate for ‘congress-at- latge,. Judge Buchet is too. good .a Democrat to care to please the Republi- can leaders, and all talk of his declining to remain on the ticket is folly. i Spawls from the Keystone, —Shenandosah is on a hdlf water allow. ance, $v id : —Fires are destroying mountain forests at Tamaqua. . —With a rope George W. Sisco ended his life at Scranton. . —Hazleton may tap the ILchigh River for a water supply. —A grand jury recommends anew Cour? house at Towanda. —Typhoid fever i3 responsible for four deaths in two days at Pottsville. —The Patriarchs Militant, 1. 0. O. F, broke camp at Williamsport Monday. —Easton’s new $100,000 high school build - ing will be dedicated on September 12. —An express train on the B.and O, at Robbins, crushed J. C. Price lifeless. —While fishing at York, Millie Ford tumbled into the water and drowned. —A horse kicked and crushed the skull of Mrs. Catharine Yingst, at Annville. —Anti-Bowmanite Evangelicals opened big camp meeting at Catasauqua Mon. day. —While riding a bicycle at Media, Isaac Labue was badly stabbed in the leg by a boy. —Coalport has a newly organized pro- hibition club which started with 24 mem. bers. —Thrown from his wagon at New Trip oli, George M. Schellhammer met instant death. —A valise containing $250 was stolen from George L. Foote, a Wilkesbarre col. lector, —A dog bite inflicted a month ago has brought William Joyce, of West Chester to his bed. —Insane from illness, Samuel Haas, of Shamokin, hanged himself to a tree at Halifax. —Huff’s Church at Seisholtzville, Berks County, was robbed of its communion service. —Survivors of the 128th Pennsylvania Regiment will reunite September 17, at Allentown. : —Eight-year-old Willie Pudleiner was beheaded by a train while he was picking coal at Reading. ! —Little Edward Bowin, near McKees, port, poured o1l into a lighted lamp and was burned to death. —At the shooting tournament at Wopso- nonnock on Wednesday, E. D. Fulford broke 198 out of 200 targets. —Thirty six employes have sued the embarrassed Diamond Drill Company for #4000 in back wages, at Reading. —Firemen on the Lehigh Valley Rail- road object to the introduction of bitum- inous coal on the locomotives. —In a freight wreck at Erie, Brakeman William Rehr was dangerously hart and an unknown ride-stealer killed. —Little Yetta Moore, daughter of Joseph Moore, Pottstown, who was burn- ed while playing in the street, is dead. —The Johnstown Fire Insurance Com. pany, an assessment mutual concern, has been reorganized as a stock company, —Myron Osborne was appointed post- master at North: Rome on Monday in- stead of Mrs. Fanny McCabe, removed, —While attending an open-air Indian medicine show at Easton, William G. Roseberry dropped dead beside his wife, —Ex County Auditor Lockard’s wife dropped dead of heart disease, in the road at Richmond, Northampton County, —Boys threw alighted cigarette und er St. Bernard's Catholic Church, Bethle. hem, and it narrowly .escaped destruc = tion. —The body of an unknown man Was found in W. C. Hallman's barn near Norristown, lie having been dead for weeks, —James H. Cummings, of Williamsport, who accidentally shot himself on Tues- day, died on Thursday evening from the wound. X —Nineteen-year-old William Rupp, Jr. has been mysteriously missing from his home at Onset, Lebanon county, since August 10. —Mrs. Margaret Albright had to arrest her young son, William, at Reading, for striking her in the face she forbade his stealing apples. —A divorce was Saturday granted at Reading to the young wife of Rev. U.S. Glick, who disappeared after their mar- riage in 1887. —Several hundred dollars worth of sil- verware was stolen from Milton Heidel. baugh’s Lancaster residence during the family’s absence. —Suspected of being the hotel beat wanted at Allentown, Easton and Beth lehem, M. F. Meyer, of Chicago, was Sat. urday caught at Stroudsburg. —The annual reunion of the survivors of the Fifty-seventh Regiment Pennsyl- vania Volunteers will be held at Ulster, Bradford County on September 22. —¥or the third time in a few months robbers looted S. B. Rushby’s variety and jewelry store at Reading, on Monday night. They got goods worth $1000. —Itis said that peaches are being ship. ped from Mifflintown station in: large quantities, and:ishippers are realizing bhet- ter prices than they have done for years. —Daniel Reed, of Penn township, Ly- coming county, who was badly hurt on Tuesday and underwent an operation in the Williamsport hospital, died in that in. stitution the following day. —A large wild cat that has been prowl. ing about in the yicinity of Haneyville, Clinton county, for some time, was shot a few days ago by Tom Mullen, The ani. mal was one of the largest that has been killed in that section. —The Ninth Regiment's rifle team to compete ‘at Mt. Gretna comprises: Ser: geant Frank W. Innis, Company Cj Ser. geant Arthur Everett, Company E ; Pris vate John Leidner, Company F ; Private James VW. Burns, Company C; Private Alfred N. Mahon, Company C. —Jacob Waterman, of Lock Haven, is the owner of a Continental bank note of the denomination of ‘two thirds of a dollar.’ Mr. Waterman found his money on the street at a sea shore resort several years ago, and has been offered a consid. erable sum for it but prefers to keep it in his own possession as a relic,