a - Demorratc Watdmone BY =>. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The real question now-a-days is: Is it warm enough for you? —The Japs are still plugging awey at the Chinese and the latter are being perforated about as rapidly as the Mikado’s guns go off. — Senator JONF's currency bill is des- tined to newspaper notoriety only. It begins to look as if it would never bein- troduced into Congress. —To-morrow evening Democrats should turn out to their crucuses every- where. We must be up and doing else we will surely be “done.” —The Japanese cry now is: On to Pekin. Their foemen are giving very little attention to peekin just now, they : the instrumentality of an immense find their whole attention taken up in: making tracks. —The Republican Legislators in Pennsylvania are making a great stab at fooling the people into thinking they are going to do something. Enough bills have intrecduced already to plaster the Stato from one end to the other. been ——Anatomisls say that a woman’s height should be six times the length of her foot. Is this so? It ssems to us Chicago women have never been noted as being abnormally tall and as there is no denying the size of their feet, they must all fall more or less short of the ideal conformity. Hawaii is trying to enlist Uncle SAM’s sympathies by letting on she is afeaid of Japan. The revolutionists in LILIOUAKALANI'S country are bound that we get entangled in the embroglio in one way or another. About the gurest way for us to get out of it is to keep away from Hawaii. —There is an experiment in process that has for its result the hops of com- pressing wine in cakes. Should the thing succeed there will be more ‘‘win- ners’ than ever in the world, that is, if every one who “takes the cake” would be looked upon in the light of past in- terpretation of the slang expression. —Every time CLEVELAND looks at a Senator or Congressman now-a-days it ig said there is new financial legislation on foot. He and JouN SHERMAN took a drive together on Sunday and now ev- ery one thinks the Ohio Senator is to be numbered among the Cuckoos. As if Grover would talk shop on the Sabbath day. —AMELIA BLOOMER died at Council Bluffs, [owa, one day last week. She was one of the first woman’s rights agi- tators and is said to have been the first to introduce reform garments for wom. en, hence their name bloomers. AMELIA has left a monument behind in “ the bloowers that will attract more at- tion than a statue of bronze would. —The Brooklyn street railwaymen who are on a strike have so completely tied up the trolleys in the city of churches that none of the lines are run- ning and everybody walks. There is one thing about a trolley line that is al- ways sure of being let alone and that is the electricity bearing wire. Strikers need no instructions from the police to keep “hands off’ of it. —The fact that many of the ablest constitutional lawyers in Philadelphia, and among them several noted Republi- cans, have declared that Governor PaT- TISON is eligibla to the office of mayor of that city is the best of evidence that the best people of the city are combin- ing to find 2 candidate who will nip MARTIN'S embryo boss sprout before it even sends out cotyledons. —The poor department of the borough of Bellefonte needs investiga- tion. When the Danville insane aslyum refuses to take any more of our patients because we have not paid for those already there it is high time to be looking into matters, Mr. McCLURE, there is something wrong. Why did you lay a double millage in 1891 to pay off all outstanding indebtedness if you have not done it ? —The great cry of distress that comes from the destitute tarming re- gions of Nebraska, where thousands of heads of horses and cattle and many human beings are actually starving to death, is meeting with a hearty re- gponse in the more prosperous parts of the country. The great train loads of provisions that are daily steaming westward to succor the destitute, ere beautitul manifestations of “man’s hu- manity to man.” —The question as to Governor PaAT- TISON’s eligibility to the office of mayor of Philadelphia seems to be a last straw at which the new Republican combine in that city is clutching for salvation. The good people of the Quaker city are rising in righteous indignation at at. tempts of the MARTIN — PORTER combi- nation to entrench themselves behind the city’s public works, where they can continue their peculations at will. PaT- TISON’S election will save Philadelphia millions of dollars. VV’ STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 40 BELLEFONTE, PA. JAN. 25, 1895. NO. 4. Pattison for Mayor. The nomination of ex-Governor Pat mison for Mayor by the Democrats of Philadelphia offers to the people of that city a chance to overthrow the ring of politicians who have managed to plunder the city taxpayers through partisan wajority from which they derive their civic authority. Party feeling is the sentiment which these ringsters have taken advantage But the large majorities that have been at ot to keep themselves in power. their command have made them reck- less in converting the municipal gov- ernment into a source of personal profit, and encouraged them to assume the right to distribute the offices among their retainers. The city for too long a time patient- ly submitted to their organized system or spoliation, but when at their last powinating convention they displayed in an unusually offensive manner their determination to have the offices filled exclusively by incumbents who would be serviceable in carrying out their policy of plunder, a revulsion of feel- ing was produced in their own party which will array thousands of Repub- lican voters againet the ticket set up by the machine politicians and the street railway and other corporations that have entered into a corrupt com- bination to control the city govern- ment and use it for their mutually mercenary advantage. Indignation and disgust have been excited even among the Republicans of the city, who are usually influenced by the claims of party allegiance, and in such a revulsion of feeling it some- times happens that a man is presented suitable to the emergency. That man in this case is Roserr E. PATTISON. The people of Philadelphia remember how he was called to the Controllership when the city treasury was being made the spoil of jobbers; how he exposed and corrected their corrupt practices, and conducted that branch of the city government upon the principles of pub- lic honesty and for no other object than the public service. They aleo know that in the high office of Gov- ernor his conduct was directed by no other motive than to so administer the State government as to promote the general interest of the people. The corrupt condition of the Phila- delphia city government calls for such a men in its highest office to correct the prevailing civic demoralization. The Democrats have presented him for this emergency, and we believe that enough Republicans to elect him will vote for Roperr E. ParrisoN from a conviction that he is needed in the Mayor's office to relieve the city of the bad government by which it has been too long afilicted. The Dark Cloud at the Inauguration. It was rather an inauspicious coinci- dence that at the very moment Gov- ernor HasTINGs was being inaugurated his party in the city which gave him the biggest majority it ever gave any Republican candidate. was being ripped up the back by a bitter feud among its leaders. This coincidence was of a sufficiently gloomy character to cast a shade over the inaugural festivities, and to fill the gubernatorial mind, at the very threshold of his administra- tion, with forebodings of future trou- ble. That such a spectre should have ap- peared at the feast was a sad com- mentary on the instability ot political situations. The new Governor's sky had been tinted with uo other than the rosiest colors ever since the election. His cup of political happiness was as tull as a 240,000 majority could make it. Never before was everything as lovely or the goose hung as high for an iccoming Governor, and he looked for- ward to his inauguration with no rea. son to fear that anything of a dis agreeable nature would mar the pleag- ure of the occasion. Very much, therefore, like a dark cloud the Philadelphia rupture intrud- ed iteelt upon the inaagural horizon. It presaged the breaking up of the party machine in that city. It fore- shadowed the overthrow of a supremacy which through corrupt means had added thousands to the Republican majority inthe State. It indicated even a possibility of the Democrats carrying the very strong-hold of Pennsylvania Republicanism. These were premoni- tions that were calculated to detract from the pleasurable emotions of the new Governor at the movement of his official exaltation. Reforming Democratic Rules. The Democracy of Philadelphia are to be congratulated oun the movement they have made towards allaying the tactional differences that for some years have divided them. Much of the discontent that disturb- ed and weakened the party in that city came from objectionable features in the rules that governed the organization. The complaint was that there was not allowed sufficient popular expression in the nominating conventions. was not close enough connection be tween the voters and the power that made the nominations. Here in the country the Democrats in every voting precinct hold their primaries and elect their delegates who go directly into the conveations and carry out the will of their constituents. The party rules in Philadelpbia made no provision for such direct representa tion, There were no delegates going directly from the voting division to the convention, The voters of the divis- ions were allowed representation in intermediate ward conventions, and it was the latter that selected the del ‘egates that nominated the party tickets. There was an intermediary power be- tween the voters and the nominating function, giving, cause for the com- plaint that it was too often perverted to boss purposes. It was certainly con- trary to the Democratic idea of popu- lar sovereignty, and if there was rea. son tor dissatisfaction in the party in Philadelphia it was not necessary to go further than this to look for it. This, however, is to be all changed, and it is certainly high time that it should be. The factions have gotten together and agreed upon a change of the rules, There will be division repre- sentation, There will no longer be intermediate manipulation of delegates by ward bosses, as the voters will take a direct hand in choosing their repre- sentatives in the nominating conven: tions. This is onthe reform programme, and it is to be hoped that it will be perfected, for not only the party in the city, but the Democracy of the entire State has suffered from the bad shape in which the organization has been in Philadelphia. Infant Protection. In the resurrected circular which we published two weeks ago, issued iu 1842) by Pennsylvania iron mannfacturers asking Congress to promote their in- dustry by tariff coddling, they put the amount of protection they needed at the modest figure of 20 per cent. ad valorem. Surely if an industry ever needs tariff protection it needs it most in its in- fancy, and those old ironmasters thougnt that their infant could get along very well with a sucking-bottle of moderate size. And it did thrive and became strong and lusty under the low tariffs of those early days. The greatest proportionate development of the iron business, and of every other branch of industry in this country, was made under a moderate Democratic revenue tariff. But eventually the requirements of a war period called for higher fiscal duties. Iron manufacturers, as well as others, began to taste the sweets of 40, 60 and even 100 per cent. protection, as the Republican Congress kept on increasing their bounties, and they grew fat and saucy upon the rich prov- ender they fed on until they contracted the presumptuous belief that the only duty of Congress was to pass tariff laws for their benefit. The ironmen of 1842, in the infancy of the business, asked for what they no doubt considered amply sufficient for their protection— 20 per cent ad valorem. The ironmen of to-day, with their business endowed with all the advantages of full maturity, are scarcely satisfied with anything hort of prohibition duties. It is hardly necessary to say that duties above 20 per cent. for the pro- tection of any industry is unwarranted largess to a favored class and an im: position upon the public. It is the purpose of the Democratic tariff policy to prevent such favoritism and to ter- minate such imposition. In another part of this paper will be found the Democratic county committeemen for 1895. It is not too soon. Let us get together and make our organization invulnerable. There | | i | | | | | Personating a Dead Veteran. The frauds practiced under the pen- gion laws are of varicus kinds accord ing to the circumstances that furaish the opportunity for that method of swindling the government. Among the many cases of this form of traud the {one which the Northumberland county Democrat mentions as having been re- cently discovered in that county, dis plays unusual boldness on the pari of the fraudulent claimant, and astonish- ing carelessness in those whose official business it iz to prevent the success of dishonest pension claims. it appears that in 1862 JosepH CoN- RAD, & young man belonging to one of the townships of that county, enlisted in the military services, and after hav- ing served bis time at the front was honorably discharged; but scon after his return home down with smallpox and died. His remaine were interred in the cemetery of the neighborhood of which he was a resi- dent. The body of the veteran had been peaceluliy resting in the grave for more than twenty-five years when it occurred to a cousin of this defunct hero, whose name was also Josepn CoNrap, that the military record of his deceased rela- tive might be turned to pecuniary ac- count in the shape of a pension. As a living soldier he had been of service to his country. As a dead soldier why shouldn't he be ot service to his sur- viving relative 2 Such, no doubt, was the view of the case taken by the liv- ing JosepH, and acting upon it he con- cluded, about two years ago, to per- sonate his departed cousin and reap a reward for service done oa the field of battle by-one who had long since gone to the eternal camping ground. He applied tor a pension as Josep Con- RAD, & member of Company C, 131st Pennsylvania Volunteers. The pen- sion authorities at Washington found that a person of that name had been a memberof that company and had been honorably discharged, and accordingly supplied the claimant with the nec- essary blanks. The personator had the address to he was taken secure witnesses who identified him as | find a parallel in China. Josepu CoNraD, which was correct so | was concerned. A | but we can’t have them if congress far as the name justice of the peace was unsuspicious or indifferent enough to fill out his papers, and he was entirely successful in passing the ordeal of the medical pension board at Sunbury, although he lived but a few miles from that town in the country where all his neighbors knew that he wasn’t the Jor CoNrAD who had fought for the old flag, and would have been greatly surprised as well as scandalized, if they bad learn- ed that he was applying for the pen- sion of a veteran, as they bad never known him to have done even as much as pull a trigger in his country’s cause. His claim was allowed at Washing- ton ; one hundred dollars back pay was the immediate compensation he re. ceived from Uncre Say, with the al- lowance of $18 for each month there- after for the term of his natural life. The bogus veteran was in clover until his neighbors began to discover that he was drawing 2 monthly remunera- tion, for military service which they knew he had never performed. Then there was a fuss in that vicinity. He was exposed as a fraud who had passed himself off for the soldier CoNRAD, whose grave had been decorated an- nually for a quarter ot a century, and it wasn't long before this false claimant upon the gratitude of his country found himself nnder arrest. He is now in the Sunbury jail awaiting such action as the law provides for such an offense. We allude to this fraudulent pension case on account of some of ite peculiar circumstances ; but in point of fraud it is no worse than thousands that have occurred under loose pension laws that actually invite dishonest claims. In an argument proceeding held before Judge Love, on Mooday, that official made a ruling on the “Howard church case” that seems to those, who understand the complications arising from this litigation, to be characterized by exceptional favoritism. = The new Judge had been an attorney in the case before his elevation to the bench and that he should make a ruling in favor of his colleague in the case so goon after his advent as judge leaves a suspicion that there may bave been considerable partiality in the ruling. v Don’t Deface the Ballot. from the Lock Haven Democrat. In the contested election case for “Spawls from the Kovstone —Caught'by conveyorsat Cameron Col- liery, near Shamokin, Richard Gillam was mangled to death. —While Edward Plutto, of near Hunt- ingdon, was coasting his sled ran into a stone fence and his skull was crushed. —The Elk tanning company has pur- chased the Everett tannery, for many years owned and operated by M. D. Barn- dollar. —Congress Monday passed the bill ap- priating £62,000 for a public building at Pottsville, Pa. This city is in great luck. —William Lane, of Bradford, was crushed to death between the coal shute and the tender while coaling an engine at Lane’s Mills. —Clearfield county will have four weeks of court during the February term and school directors, appealed from the! quarter sessions of Lawrence county, | the supreme court, in an opinion by: Chief Justice Sterrett, has settled an | important question as to the manner in which persons, who are not named upon the official ballot, may be voted for. The facts are these : At the elec tion held in Lite Beaver township, in February, 1894, many of the electors procured printed bianket slips contain- ing the names of the persons to be vot- ed for, the titles of the offices, ete. These slips they pasted on the right hand column of the official ballot, which was devoted to blank spaces, and when thus pasted they obliterated all the titles ot offices, the directions for marking. etc., upon the official bal- lot and substituted like matters which were printed upon these slips. Cross marks were also made opposite certain names in this eolumn. A contest arose and the court below decided that the ballots so pasted and marked were illegal. An appeal was then taken to the supreme court. In sustaining the lower court, Justice Sterrett quotes extensively from the ballot law, and in the substances de- cides that while the use of stickers is legal they must not be so large as to conceal the matter printed upow the official ballot. LRTI TLCS Immigration Falling Off. From the Altoona Times. It is a very easy matter to rail against congress for refusing to modify the Jaws regulating immigration into the United States, but those persons who think there should be a modifica- tion ought to be gracious enough to let us know what changes are wanted. For our part we think that little change is needed. The inflax of for- eigners into this country is not exten- sive at the present time and, while it 1s true that the falling off has been pro- duced by the hard times prevailing in the United States, it is not likely that the immigration figares will ever again attain such large proportions as they have been in the past. Further than a rigid inspection of ail those coming into the country and the exclu-, sion of paupers, criminals and similar undesirable classes what other restrie- tions can be imposed ? Ts Bodblute pro- hibition of immigration asked? We do not believe that a majority of our people desires anything of the kind. It would be a barbarous regulation: and a species of legislation that could best We want good immigration laws the same as we want good laws on every other subject, takes the advice of the eranks who are always ready to offer their crude views. ETAT GOS RR The World 1s Full of Such Fellows. From the York Gazette. : We publish in another column an interview with Edison, the great in- ventor and electrician, on the subject of electricity as a profession. His wise words, however, apply to all professions and eallings, Perbaps the best of all the good advice he gives is when he says : “Obtain an educa- tion in a live concern at anything and never mind the clock.” Success is not for the boy or man to whom work or effort is irksome, who drops everything at the stroke of the hour and grabs his hat and runs, who is afraid that be may possibly be do- ing too much work for his wages or salary. Such a man will always work by the hour and after a time wili find employ- ment only after men who “never mind the clock’ are taken care of. Mr. Edison has compressed the secret of success into these four words. Dana Is Right in This. From the New York Sun. When the Brooklyn trolley men prove that their strike is a strike, and not = riot, then the public may be able to consider their statement that the in- tolerable outrage of a stoppage in Brooklyn's street-car traffic must be ascribed to the companies rather than the strikers. While an extra policeman or a single soldier has to be on duty to keep the peace, all other questions and sentiments must stay swallowed up in indignation at the threat of violence. rn TE ———— Jaw Breakers For You, From the Student. Below are the nine longest words in the English language at the present writing : Subconstitutionalist. Incomprehensibility. Philoprogenitiveness. Honorificibilitudinity. Anthropophagenarian. Disproportionableness. Velocipedestrianistical. Transsubstantiationableness. Proantitransubstantiationist. ER ATT TE T— Right You Are, Mr. Gates. From the Bellefonte Daily News. : Representaiive Lawrence, of Wash- ington county, thinks the State College too highly favored with state appro- priations, If Mr. Lawrence could visit the College he might change his atti- has had sixty-seven divorce eases in three years and a half. —Uwing 10 the prevalence of scarlet feverand diphtheria at Huntingdon Fur- nace, Huntingdon County, the town has been quarantined, —Brakeman Harry Brandt, aged 25 slipped under the wheels of a car at York and had both legs cut off. He died a few hours later. —The Pennsylvania State College EXx- periment Station, is trying to ascertain means of raising tobacco in such a way as to improve its flavor. —Owing to a difference between the Mineral Mining Company and the: Penn- gylvania Coal Company, the new shaft at Scott, 450 feet deep, has been aban- doned. —Patrick Elliott. who stole three silver and two gb6ld watches from Thomas D. Bergan, of Pottsville, and pawned them in Philadelphia, was arrested at Tren- ten, N. J. —DBishop O’Hara’s circular, embodying the views of the Pope on Catholics be- longing to seeret societies, was read in all the Catholic churches of the Seranton dioeese Sunday. —At Mt. Pleasant four little giris went throngh the ice and Anna Baker, aged 6, was drowned and the other three, chil. dren of Hirman Pritts, were almost ex. hausted when rescued. —Haney Williams, an aged bachelor, who lived alone in a shanty above Cur- wensville, was found dead a few days ago. Haney was quite a character and was a familiar figure at all the eounty fairs, eircuses, harvest homes, ete. —Every voting district in Clearfield county must elect poor overseers next month just as in other years. The coun. ty home will not he ready for some time and the local officers must transaet the business until such time as the county officials are ready. —Brookamire, who murdered Cunning- ham in Indiana county a year ago, and has since been at large, is said te have been discovered by some hunters in a forest cave in that county a few days ago, but escaped. A reward of $500 is of- fered for the capture of the murderer. —The Franklin newspapers told this story recently : When John Hanpa was excavating near the Franklin reservoir one day last week, he came wpon a blacksnake six feet long imbedded under twenty feet of earth, The snake was ap- parently dead when discovered, but soon liwened up and was killed by the workmen. - —A citizen of Altoona recently took $110in ten and twenty dollar galé pieces to one of the city banks for deposit. The coin was very much soiled and the bank officials declined to receive it, believing it to be spurious. The owner, knowing it to be good, took it to a jeweler and had it polished, when he had no trouble in get. ting the bankers to receive if. —The Pennsylvania = State College makes a very good showing this year, the students enrolled numbering 336, of which 35 will graduate this year. The faculty has also been increased from. 45 to 48. The | new dairy school now contains 54 stu” dents, nearly all of whom are from this. state, one being from Canada. Auditor General VMylin is one of the students in the school. : —Among the resolutions passed by the: teachers of Indiana county’ at their re- cent annual institute, was this one : That the title “professor” belongs only to those persons who fill or have heretofore filled eheirs of our universities and col. leges and that we, teachers of Indiana county, will not use this title in address- ing any other than those persons. —Among the pupils. of one of the pri. mary schools in Lock Haven is a woman 54 years of age who did not have the op- portunities for obiaining an education in her childhood days which the boys. and girls of today have. She is making rapid progress in her studies and her example many other people might follow. A per- son is never too old to learn. —On Saturday evening, September 29, 1894, John C. Young and Miss Gertrude Bender left the residence of the bride's parents, in Altoona, saying they were going to attend a party at the residence of EQ Young on Fourth avenue, They didn’t put in an appearance at the party, however, but instead, went to Camden, that night and the next day were mar. ried. They returned home the following day but kept their marriage a secret un- til last week. —T.ast week Miss Amande Barkman, of Bedford county, took her life by using coal oil to saturate her clothing and then setting fire to it with a match. She used about a gallon. The work was done in an outhouse. When found the unfortu" nate woman was burned beyond recog. nition. She was about 40 years of age. For more than a year past the girl's mind has been worked up on religious matters until at times she was quite de: mented. —In the United States senate Monday Mr. Quay introduced a bill providing for the creation tor United States judicia purposes of the northern judieial distrie of Pennsylvania, to be composed of th counties of Wayne, Pike and Monroe de- tached from the eastern district and the counties of Susquehanna, Lackawanna, Luzerne, Columbia, Northumberland, Montour, Lycoming, Sullivan, Bradford, Potter, Tioga, Wyoming, Clinton, Union, Snyder, Centre and Cameron detached tude. from the Western district. and determination to acquire knowledge. ee lose AER : a RR ata _ i A EE iis lo