I AT ic — 8Y PRP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Philadelphia ~~ Democrats, like Philadelphia water, are slightly off color. —FLOWER is the Democratic posy of New York, bat he is tired growing in the Gubernatorial gardens at Albany. —Be a man. If you have an opinion, stick to it until you are satisfied you are in error. The lack of stamina is the cause of more failures in manhood than any other thing. —-If the Japs force an entrance to Pekin, the Chinese will be a fallen race and “the flowers that bloom in the Spring” will have had nothing to do with the case. —Every voter should have enough interest in the welfare of the govern- ment, both national and local, to pay his own taxes and not leave it fora political party to do, thereby practically selling his franchise. --The Republicans continual cry : ‘Let us conduct a clean campaign this Fall 7” What is it they are afraid of that they are so anxious lest the Demo- crats begin to enquire into the personel of their candidates ? —The English cricketers defeated the gentlemen of Philadelphia in the inter- national match, on Monday, by one- hundred thirty-one runs. Old Lord HAWKE will preen his feathers in great style over this. —HASTING'S still goes on with the calamity howl, entirely ignoring the platform on which he is afraid to stand. His party declared for a $40 per capita currency, but DAN knows if he advocat- ed such an inflation the wind it would raise would bust him. —If the grangers had been paid ground rent for all the bits of their park that were carried away from Centre Hall, last week, on the shoes of the visi- tors the Centre county organization would be so rich that it would not care if wheat never gets above fifty cents. —The determination of FRANK JAMES, the ex-convict and desperado, to bring his seventeen year old son up ‘‘a quiet steady, sober man,’ does credit to one whose past has been coupled with some of the blackest crimes ever committed. The man who once tastes crime’s bitter dregs will never advise others to follow in his footsteps. —The changing of the name of the post-office at Appomatox to ‘‘Suarren- der’ is rightly causing considerable in- dignation among the people in the South. When they have giver every evidence of wanling to forget the past there is no sense in parading it forever before their eyes in the name of a post- office. Let by gone be by gone. —Why don’t Hastings. and his crowd of statesmen, who are now junket- ing around blarneying the people, come down to State issues and stop the calam- ity howl? Thereis one thing certain if they don’t stop lying about the cause of the late business slump there will be some guns turned on them that will give them something worth howling about. —The Hon. Benj. M. NEaD, of Harrisburg, was nominated the Demo- cratic candidate in the Fourteenth Con- gressional district and appointed re- ceiver of the suspended Middletown National bank, both on the same day. The latter position will supply his needs in getting the former. His name is certainly a misnomer when such luck befalls him. —1It seems strange that after making all manner of charges against him Con- gressman JACK RoBINsoN should be riding around with the HASTINGS’ boomers advising people to vote for WALTER Lyon, the Republican candi- date for Lientenant Governor. Before the nomination, when JACK was aspir- ing for Lyon’s present place, his friends could not say enough mean things about the Pittsburger, but now he is touring the State making himself outa dema- gogue by advising all to vote for his successful opponent. --The Philadelphia Evening Tele- graph so far forgets itself, in a vitupera- tive attack on negro Democrats, as to say : “The freedom, the citizenship, ‘the equality before the law, every polit- “jcal advantaze and some social ones ‘‘which they all of them enjoy, they owe “to the Republican party, which sacri- ‘‘ficed blood and treasure to free them ‘from slavery, which contended as “strongly and valiantly to give them ‘civil rights as it did to break their ‘shackles. They owe everything to ‘‘the Republicans, and they would be ‘the greatest of ingrates were they to “ally themselves with the party that ‘‘resisted their emancipation and that ‘struggled to prevent them securing civil rights.” When a paper gets so hot, because the colored people are be- ginning to see what party befriends them, that it loses all idea of truthful ness and weaves such a tissue of lies as the above, it is time 1t stops to reflect. ‘Were there not as many Democrats wv, t 2< ‘> STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. % ~ VOL. 39. BELLEFONTE, PA., SEPT. 28, 1894. NO. 38. The Reduction of Prices. The Democratic party promised the people that it would pass such tariff legislation as would relieve them from the oppression of McKiNLEYISM. Al- ready they are experiencing the fulfill- ment of that promise. Scarcely had the new tariff bill been passed before there was a marking down of goods, preparatory to a general reduction in the cost of the necessaries of life. This is but the beginning of a new era of cheaper living. Its advent is observable at every store counter in the land. It is heralded by the adver- tisements of merchants announcing a lower schedule of prices. Among the first to publish the fact that heis sell- ing goods at reduced rates on account of the new tariff is Mr. Joan WaNa- MAKER, the great Republican Philadel phia merchant, who is conforming his prices to the new order of things which the Democratic tariff will enforce in the interest of purchasers and consumers. When McKinney increased the tariff duties four years ago prices at WaNaMAKER's immediately responded with an upward tenlency. Shopping women and other customers at that es tablishment were told that the increas” ed cost of their purchases was in conse- quence of the higher tariff, and they were told the same at every other store. It is well remembered what an effect this had upon the female mind, even the result of the following election being attributed to their exasperation. After the recent reduction of tariff du- ties there is much significance in the announcement of Mr. WANAMAKER, and other store keepers, that the prices of goods must cone down as a conse- quence. In the face of such a state of things the hullabaloo that is being raised by the McKiNLEYITES will amount to noth- ing. Itisidle to tell them that their wages will be reduced, when a decrease of their living expenses will be practic- ally equivalent to an increases of wage earnings. It is not likely that the compensation of labor will be lower than it has been in many of the de- partments of industry under the Mo- KivLEY tariff, while there is n> wiping out the fact that the cost of living will be less. An Embarrassed Organ. The Philadelphia Press is just now experiencing considerable embarrass. ment from the conflicting testimony of its editorial columns aad its news col- umns in regard to the business sitna- tion. Editorially it pictures a very de- plorable condition of affairs, while the news and business departments of its contents, notwithstanding a manifest effort to curb them, give hopeful indi- cations of reviving business and rein- vigorated industry. Itis the purpose of the editor to impress his readers with the belief that the “calamity is worse than ever, but the editorial howl loses its effect when the reader turns to other parts of the paper and sees announcements of renewed activ- ity in business operations and improve- ment in the markets, which the wana- gers of the paper would much rather suppress, but which must be published as matters of news. The embarrassment in which the partisan duty of the Press places it in this matter excites our sympathy ; but, to preserve an appearance of consis- tency, we would advisz it to either stop howling calamity, or stop publishing news items and market reports which show that the depression of McKin- LEYISM has passed and that better times are at hand, ——The vote for Tox Corrins will be swelled by the ballots of thousands of men who have been in his employ and who found him a fair man to work for. 1n his many operations he never took advantage of a workman nor add- ed to his gains by distressing labor and no man in the State ever employed a larger number of working people. This will tell to his advantage when the working people vote at the next election. ——JoHN WANAMAKER'S advertise: ments are doing missionary work in the cause of tariff reform. The lower prices at which he offers his goods are object lessons which teach that the Democratic tariff is reducing the cost of living, In the face of such teaching who died that the slave might be free as | what does the calamity howl amount Republicans ? | i to? A Practically Settled Question. Governor FLower was right in de: clining to go into a tariff discussion with RoswiLL G. Horr for the reason, as he put it, that the tariff question has been settled for the present by the passage of the new tariff law. It has been the cry ot the Republicans that business was disturbed by the tariff agitation of the Democrats. They charge the Democratic party with having brought on the collapse by tink- ering with the tariff, yet without giv- ing the new tariff a chance to show what its effect will be, they want to fight the whole question over again and continue the agitation and uacer- tainty which they represented to be so bad and injurious on the part of the Democrats. Furthermore they know that the excitement they are now raising on this issue can have no practical effect, as the present tarift cannot possibly be annulled for at least three years. They are raising the disturbance for no other purpose than to affect the coming election. Even if they should elect a majority ot the next Congress and secure control of the Senate, the President would stand in the way of their restoring McKiNLEYISM, before the 4th of March, 1897. They there- fore appear guilty of being will- ing to afflict the business inter- ests of the country by the continu: ance of the tariff agitation with no oth- er object than to carry the next elec- tion. How foolish they are in their pro- ceedings on this issue. The question as raised between the two parties by the passage of the Democratic tariff bill, will be determined by time. If within the three years during which that tariff is sure to stand, it shall prove to be a failure, it will bring de- feat upon the Democratic party. If, on the other hand, it shall prove to be a success, the Republican party will be given a back seat for many years to come. So what is the use of all this clatter acd calamity howling at this juncture, in view of the fact that time is going to decide the question. The Democrats are confident that their tariff will be a success as a restorer of business activity and a promotor of in- dustrial prosperity, and await the re- sult with entire composure. Denouncing the Income Tax. The New York State convention, that nominated willionaire MorToN for Governor, is the first Republican gathering of that kind that has ventur- ed to condemn the income tax. The others that have been held this season, recognizing the popularity of that tax, have abstained from saying anything against that Democratic measure. Prob- ably becaus: the New York convention nominated a candidate who is worth his millions it thought there would be consistency in protesting against a tax upon his surplus wealth and the big incomes of the class to which he be- longs. The platform of the convention de- nounces the income tax as a ‘tax up- on prosperity,” But where is the sup- port of the government to come from if not from the prosperous? Is it to be contributed by the poor? It has been the custom of the Republican party to make the generality of work- ing people furnish the larger share of the government's support through the medium of tariff taxes, but the Demo- cratic party, through an income tax, proposes to effect a fairer adjustment of the burden. By the way what has candidate Hasrines to say on this subject ? The convention that nominated him was shy of the income tax, but are his sen- timents in favor of making the rich pay their due share of the government expense, or does he want it to be borne by the great aggregation of people who have no more than a living ? ——It won't make so much differ- ence to the poor man whether the coming winter is going to be a cold | one or not, as free wool and lower du- | ties on woolen goods will give him a | coat and a warmer blanket at a lower price. . ———A year ago there was one Dem- ocrat in the Maine Senate. Now there is not one. What a tremendous sweep i this was; what an immense gain! Was Holland ever so completely taken i by the Dutch ? Unmerited Praise. General Hastings evidently had some indiscreet friends at the Fire- men’s convention at Norristown, who tried to work a little politics into the proceedings of that body for his bene- fit. The man who got up the annual report had an eye to political effect when he inserted in it the following paragraph : “The civil war had its Beaver, Hancock, Hastings and HARrTRANFT; the firemen of Pennsyl- vania had their H. A. Derr, Ben. Mc Coor, Jim Baxter and H. A. NoLLiN- GER.” A man with intelligence sufficient to be president of a State Firemen’s As- sociation is certainly intelligent enough to know that Danier H. Hastings did not win his military fame by ser- vice rendered in the civil war and there- fore there could have been no other reason for placing his name in that connection than to promote Hast- INGS gubernatorial interest. This was indiscreet partisanship, for it was sure to provoke correction, which was manifested in the objection of one of the delegates who called the attention of the convention to the fact that General Hastings had not served in the civil war, but had gained his title in the militia service. The objector based his protest on the ground that the use of Hastings name in that con- nection looked like politics, but le might also have put it on the ground that it was historically untrue. It was a remarkable indic~ tion of the partisanship of some of the members of the convention that there was vio- lent opposition to the proposition to strike General HasTINGS’ name out of document that untruthfully associated bim with the heroes of the civil war, those opposing it being fully aware that he never served in any other capacity than as Adjutant General of the State militia. ——No objection of a popular na- ture is being urged against the income tax. It has become a part of the tariff law with the almost unanimous ap- proval of the people. While the tax on the necessaries of life has been re- duced, taxation has been laid on wealth that has long been exempt, and the fairness and equity of the arrange- ment are generally recognized. Re- publican campaigners who indulge in general condemnation of Democratic policy, will be shy of saying anything against the income tax. [t is deserv- edly popular, because it is just, and it is a Democratic measure. As long as the government requires revenue, wealth hereafter will have to contrib- ute its due share. One of the most absurd canards that was ever set afloat ‘for campaign effect is the representation in Republi- can papers that the western sheep owners are rushing their flocks to mar- ket and selling them to the butchers on account of the removal of the wool tariff. If there was anything that might have induced them to such a course it was the low price to which wool dropped under the McKINLEY tariff ; but since the prices of wool, which a month ago were from 12 to 24 cents a pound in Boston and New York, according to quality, now range from 22 to 37 cents, the western sheep raisers will be encouraged to hold on to their flocks. Rev. Firzwitniams, of Shamo- kin, displayed a little too much zeal some Sundays ago in requesting his congregation to sing the doxology as an indication of thankfulness for the defeat of Congressman BRECKINRIDGE. The people of the Ashland district may have done wellin rebuking Col. BRECK- INRIDGE, but it isn’t quite so evident that the religions congregations of Shamokin were called upon to display their feeling in the matter, as the in- trusion of such a subject upon their at- tention must have diverted their minds from their devotions. Rev. Firz- WILLIAMS cannot escape the suspicion that he wanted to do something in the sensational line. ——People who are finding a reduc- tion in the cost of store goods and oth- er necessaries laugh at the McKiIvLEY politicians who tell them that they have been injured by the Democratic tariff. The shopping woman is a more powerful campaigaer than Tom REED, and the merchants advertisements dis- count Dax Hasrinas’ calamity howl. Wages Going Up. From an Exchange. These are the bad times, very bad times, for political wool growers and calamity howlers. Not only do prices of domestic wools remain firm, at an advance of about 10 per cent. above McKinley prices of two months ago, but there is unusual activity in the woolen and cotton mille. The Wool and Cotton Reporter de- voteg a page every week to a ‘Bulletin of New Enterprises,” which, however, includes mills shutting down. There used to be more mills shutticg down than starting up ; but since the pas- sage of “the free trade Wilson bill,” which was to “annihilate” the woolen industry, the record has been a re- markable one—better than any two weeks during the four years of McKin- leyism. For the week ending September 6 the Reporter mentions five new mills, one of which is a cotton mill, to cost $150,000, twenty-eight enlargements and improvements, and twenty mills, to cost $150,000, twenty-eight enlarge: ments and improvements, and twenty mills starting up, one of which bas been closed nine months and another five years. Rawitzer Bros., of Stafford Springs, are mentioned as haying settled with their dissatisfied weavers, giving them a 25 per cent. advance in wages. This wage advance is more than the Ameri- can Economist could find in any protect ed industry during the first two years of McKinleyism. The record is a good one, but that for the week ending September 13 is better. During this week there were fifteen items under the column headed “New Mills.” One of the mills men- tioned is to have 48,000 spindles, and to be the largest cotton mill in the South. Another for making cotton, wool and worsted yarn, is to occupy a build- ing 110 by 200 feet, which structure alone is to cost $30,000. “The plans for the new plant,” says the Reporter, “have been ready for some time, but it is said the constraction of the mill de- pended upon the settlement of the tariff question.” Itis located at Philadel- phia. Another cotton mill, with 25,000 spindles, is to be built at Gaffoey, S. C., with a capital of $250,000. Another cotton mill, with $400,000 capital, is proposed for Bath, S. C. Two hundred thousand dollars have already been subscribed. The other new mills are for the man- ufacture of woolen, cotton, knit hosiery and silk goods. Under the column ‘Enlargements and Improvements’ there are eighteen mentions. Under the column “Start ing Up and Shatting Down” twenty mills are mentioned as having started or about to start up. One of these has been closed since April last, another over a year, aud a third for two years. All three are woolen mills. Only four are mentioned as shutting down—one to make repairs, another for two weeks another because of a death, and the last is running on short time on ac- count of low water. If this sort of business goes on until November the result of the election may not be so satisfactory to the Re- publicans as they have been anticipa- ting. They must either manage to keep the backwoods voters from koow- ing that more wheels are turning than ever before. Can they stave off pros- perity until after election ? If the drought had only lasted two months longer Republican prospects would be brighter. Brighter Days Are Dawning, From the Northampton Democrat. The indications everywhere indicate that an era of great business prosperity is dawning upon the country. The beneficial effects of Democratic Legis- lation will soon be felt by everyone, The farmer will reap the benefits in a greater demand and better prices for his products and a reduced cost for all his necessaries, The mechanics and toil- ers will feel the good effects by steady employment at fair wages. Of course, the blighting effects of McKinleyism and Republican mal-admiaistration cannot be cured in a day. It will take some time, but it will come, and the readers of The Democrat will begin to feel the beneficial effects before the next election. Monopolists favored by Republican protection are trying to keep back the tide of prosperity until after the Novem- ber election for the influence it may have in the election of Congressmen, but even their efforts will not be whol- ly successful. To effect their purpose they will continue to reduce wages to influence workingmen, but it will not do, for the good times are close at hand. ————— Just What We All Want, From the Altoona Times. There is a probability that Mr. Bow- er, the Democratic candidate for judge in the Centre-Huntingdon district, will be elected. The Republican con: ference, which has for a long time been engaged in balloting in Tyrone, cannot come to an agreement and the chances are that both the competitors, Megsrs Love and Lovell, will be candidates be- fore the people in November. If such should be the result of the present dead- lock, there is no doubt that the Demo- cratic nominee will win, Spawls from the Keystone, —John MeKee, the Allegheny County poet, is dangerously ill. —Fish nets and dams were torn from the Upper Delaware on Saturday. —Cormaeck McMonigal, of Hazleton, was run down by a train at Pittston. —Brakeman James Fetterolf was struck by a train at Locutsdale and killed. —August Schaled, a peddler, was cut to pieces by a train near Bristol Tuesday. —York county’s fair will open on Octo. ber 1, and promises to be a big success. —John A. Aldrich, a Reading salesman, has been missing for nearly two weeks, —James H. Lindsay, the wealthy Alle. gheny City iron manufacturer, is dying. —A dose of strychnine ended the life of John White, a blacksmith, near Connells- ville. —Lancaster county has sued Lancaster City to recover to $29,000 for street dam. ages. —Burglars raided the Pennsylvania Railroad station at Catawissa, Sunday night. —A shifting engine at Columbia Mon. day decapitated Car Inspector John Stuard. —Mrs, William Butler, of Osceola, died recently of cancer of the stomach, aged 71 years, —Mifllintown lodge of Odd Fellows will celebrate its 50th anniversary next month, —Columbia borough has applied to Court to be divided into a greater num. ber of wards. —A trolley road two miles long on West Third street, Williamsport, is to be abandoned. —A lad named Ruigland was drowned Saturday in the Susquehanna River at Harrisburg. —The Home for feeble- minded children to beerected at Polk, Crawford county, will cost $432,600. —Extensive preparationsare making at New York to en.ertain the Christian En. deavor next month. —James F. Sheaffer, of Boiling Springs, fell from his wagon near Carlisle Tuesday night and broke his neck. —While picking coal by the railroad track, near Hamburg, Mrs. John Free. man was killed by a train. —Little Augustus Mattes, while watch. ing companions fish in the Delaware at Easton, fell in the river and drowned, —Of 487 public school teachers in Berks county, 46) Monday attended the opening sessions of the County Institute at Reade ing. —A jury at Media on Monday acquitted George Sheetz, who was tried for shoot. ing Fish Warden, John Adams, of New Jersey. —The boiler in a cider mill at Wind Gap blew up, wrecking the building and injuring Harrison Hahn and Howard Hil. debrandt. —~Catholic temperance societies of the Schuylkill Valley organized Monday at Allentown with James G. McGee, of that city, president. —Struck by a beam and doubled up like a jack knife on top of a load of hay, Edward 8. Stahlnecker, of Williamsport, had his back broken. —Charged with violating the Factory laws by employing child labor, Hiram Wise, a Bangor slate manufacturer, was held for trial Saturday. —State Superintendent of Public In- struction Schaeffer does not take kindly to the proposition to have military drills in the public sclools. —A school teacher, Levi S. Peiffer, in Bethel township, Lebanon county, has sued Director Elias Edris for $3000 dam- ages for alleged slander. —As a bit of economy, the Easton Ex. press says Justices of the Peace should be salaried officials or small towns should have Police Magistrates. The Cambria Herald says that work on the Black:ick railroad is progressing satisfactorily, and the entire road will be completed in a few weeks. —Mrs. Margaret Coolridge, aged 73, died at Jersey Shore on Friday from a compli. cation of diseases. She was one of the oldest residents of that place. —The wife of Herman Pfaunen Schmid t an Altoona crank, who is in prison for pestering president Cleveland and others with silly letters, has sued for divorce, —Robert Wadsworth, the Keating Clin. ton county, blacksmith who attempted suicide by cutting his throat a few days ago, died at the Williamsport hospital on Friday. —Liberty Fire Company, Reading, took the prize for the largest number of men in line at the Norristown parade, and the Junior Company, of that city, wore the prettiest uniforms. —T. J. Burke, of Altoona, has been nominated as the Demecratic candidate for Congress in the twentieth distriet, composed of Blair, Somerset, Cambria and Bedford counties. —A fearful typhoid fever epidemic is raging near Rochester's Mills, Indiana county. There are eleven cases in the immediate vicinity of the town and many more in the surrounding country. —On Wednesday George Hurst, of near DuBois, lumber jobber for N. L. Hoover, while working on a landing near Falls Creek, was badly injured by having a pile of logs tumble on him. His hip was crushed and his one leg was broken. —Recent deaths in Mifilin county : Mrs, Polly Culbertson, near Siglerville, aged 58; Mrs. Margaret Fleck, Brown town. ship, 64 ; Mrs. Paulina Hall, Lewistown, 54 ; Samuel Gazette, Lewistown, 57; Mrs. Eliza McNabb, Belleville, 66 ; Dr. A, Rothe rock, McVeytown, 83; Elias Penepacker, Vira, 78; Mrs, Henrietta Raymer, Lewis. town, 19, The thirteenth annual convention of the Pennsylvania State Sabbath School association will be held in Huntingdon, Qctober 9-11, It promises to be one of the most interesting and important Sabbath school conventions ever held in the State, The Hon. Robert E. Pattison, governor of Pennsylvania, will open the conven. tion with an address on Tuesday evening October 9. The sessions of Wednesday and Thursday will be devoted to the (lig. cussion of the best methods for advanc. ing the interests of the Sabbath school work of our state and to addresses, cons ferences and normal classes, rpc m—————