JERHEND Demorralic 8B8Y RP. GRAY MEEK. dp Ink Slings, — The summer days are coming on With blossom, bud and shoot, When the kid, who has outlived his skates, Will succumb to unripened fruit. —1If you want to get along well with the world remember that there are oth- ers in jt besides yourself. — Miss Gould, that was, is a countess at last and her husband has become a counter ; since marrying her pile. —There is nothing in this world so much to be despised as a man who poses as a man and is but a demagogue. —The Governor has vetoed the bird book bill and now the ‘country mem- bers”’ will have to advise their constit- uents to content themselves with look- ing at their scare crows. —Cuba has an embryo revolution on its hands. It is not altogether likely that it will amount to much but it will give Spain a little more to do than spend her time watching bull fights. — Inasmuch as the central Pennsyl- vania Methodist Conference will con- vene at Tyrone next week we deem it quite a propos to enquire as to whether that town has any gubernatorial timber to boom ? —A New Jersey man boasts that he can manufacture gas for thirty cents a thousand and “have a picnic,” pecuniari- ly speaking. That's nothing. There are plenty of Bellefonte men who can manufacture it for nothing and have a picnie too. —It desn’t pay to be a Queen after all. Poor LILIUOKALANI has been sen- “tenced to’pay a fine of $5,000 and go to jail five years, merely because she tried to get back on her throne in Hawaii, after some American usurpers had estab- lished a republic on the islands. — We sincerely hope the world has seen the end of the VANDERBILT scan- dal. Mrs. “WiLLrg” is divorced and dare marry again, if she wants to, but her recreant spouse has been deemed by the court to have had his share of con” jugal bliss and must live by himself 1n the future. —The fellows who bought Reading railroad stock last spring and danced with glee when it jumped to 14 in two days time, are dancing with something else now that there is a likelihood of its mortgages being foreclosed. Of course, if that is done all of the stockholders will be left without a cent, for the prop- erty isn’t worth enough to pay the bonds. —TromAs BRACKETT REED’s action in refusing to vote with his colleagues, in thanking speaker Crisp for his ser- vices during the sitting ot the 53rd Con- gress, was one that will hang to him, to his discredit, as long as he lives. If he hoped to curry favor with his constit- nents by it, be failed, and if it was in. tended to make Mr. Crisp feel badly it was equally as much of a failure. —Davip B. HiLL's late assertion that he is “not a monometalist’’; seems to have been right in line with that noted saying “I am a Democrat.” Our party must stand for bi-metahsm or it will fall. The tariff will be lost in the money question of future campaigns, and the party that will stand for the use of gold and silver, and maintain their parity, will be the dominant party. —After thirty flve years of public life Congressman HoLMAN has come to the conclusion that there is no money in it. On the floor of the House, the other day, he advised young men to stay out of politics. It has long been an accept. ed fact that a man without means should haveno business with politics and we are surprised that Mr. Hor- MAN banked so heavily on that little 106 acre farm of his out in Ohio. —The idea ot making LINCOLN’S birthday a national holiday is being agitated and seems to be meeting with a great deal of favor. It is an excellent plan to recognize, in some fitting man- ner, the services of those who have done so much for their country, but to make nagional holidays to commemorate them is wrong. We have more legal holi- days now than are good for the country and again the practice of making more of great patriot’s birthdays is in vogue there will not be any time to get our work done. —Princeton has declined to meet the University of Pennsylvania on the ath- letic field in the future, giving out, as her reason, the statement that the contests between the two institutions engender too much bitterness. Such a flimsy excuse for trying to place herself beyond the reach of a competitor, that has proven worthy her mettle, will be locked upon by the college world as unbecoming an institution like Prince- ton. If the day has come when her athletes can no longer boast superiority over those at the U. of P. and her back- ers are no longer dead sure of ‘‘swipin” good Quaker money, she would act with greater honor by taking occasional defeats instead of playing baby and cry- ing, we won't play with you any more, you're getting so big we can’t lick you every time now. eee Demacrali STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. 22 7 Da "WOT. 40 BELLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 8, 1895. NO. 10. Politics in Local Elections. The public mind is beginning to ask why politics should have anything to do with municipal government? The absurdity, and, in fact, the actual harm, of making the election of city and borough officers a party question, are becoming too obvious to be con- cealed from ordinary discernment, Local government is intended to regu- late local affairs and to promote the in- terests of the locality. That it should be made a political matter, involving issues of party policy, and be converted into an object of coatention in party lines, is certainly a gross perversion of its legitimate purpose. : Nothing could be more ridiculous than the assumption that a municipality should be under the control of one po- litical party or another. Municipal gov- ernment embraces interests entirely separate and different from the policies with which political parties are con- cerned, and to mix it up with the con- tentious of such parties not only in- troduces a disturbing element into local affairs, but subjects them to influences and agencies that cannot be otherwise than harmful. The business of those who have charge of the government of boroughs and cities is to lay and expend the local taxation, afford police protection, pave, light and repair the streets, preserve the public health by sanitary regula- tions, furnish a sufficient water supply, maintain the public schools, and ren- der other service pertaining to a well regulated community and necessary for its local advantage. Can it be made apparent that this function is better performed by one political party than by another, or that it isin any way affected by high tariff or free trade, or by any of the principles upon which national parties are divided ? And yet upon such irrelevant issues, having nothing whatever to do with local affairs, it has become the practice of politicians, for their own advantage, to conduct municipal elections. The party organization is employed to keep them in positions in which they grow rich at the expense of the local tax- payers. By invoking the partisan feel- ing of the majority party, and utilizing its machinery, they manage to main- tain a prolonged enjoyment of mu- nicipal epoils. This misuse of party politics in city and borough elections, bringing into them issues which in no way pertain to municipal affairs, has been practiced by both parties, to the great detriment of local interests as well as to the de- basement of party principles. But the worst instance of this abuse was pre sented in the recent Philadelphia city election, where the hold of a thievish combination of Republican politicians on the city government was defended on party grounds; partisan feeling was appealed to in support of corrupt city government, the tariff was brought into service to stimulate partisan zeal, and a Republican Governor introduced into the contest to increase the party enthusiasm in support of candidates nominated by ringsters whose occupa- tion has been the looting of the city treasury. Bad local government must neces sarily be the fruit of such practices. The only hope of reform in the admin- istration of city and borough affairs is in the entire elimination of politics from municipal elections. When the people fully understand this fact the needed reform will be brought about. ——A bill is before the New York Legislature for the adoption of the whipping post as a means of punish- ing brutal characters who inflict .vio- lent personal abuse upon the victims of their brutality. This of course would include wife-beating and the abuse of children by a brutal parents. The bill is supported by the sentiment of some of the best newspapers of the State, which express their conviction that imprisonment is not sufficient to prevent such outrages, and that the brutes can only be deterred from their inhuman conduct by punishment that will make them squirm under its in- fliction. A fellow who should get an adequate number of lashes on the bare back for beating his wife or vio- lently maltreating his children wouldn’t fancy rendering himself liable to an- other dose of such corrective medicine by repeating his brutality. What the Administration Has Had to Encounter. The disorder in which Republican legislation and management left the financial and business condition of the country necessarily made it difficult for the Democratic administration to meet the monetary exigencies imposed by the requirements of government conjoined with a depleted Treasury. A Republican tariff had not only impair ed the industrial situation, causing a general paralysis of business which be- gan to manifest itself about the close of the Harrison administration, but also, on account of its inadequacy as a revenue measure, it left an insufficiency of tunds to carry on the public business. In addition to this embarrassment, the financial situation was seriously de- ranged by the Republican silver policy and currency laws. No administration ever came into power embarrassed by such difficulties, resulting from the delinquencies of its predecessor. It had not only to meet this trouble but had also to encounter the unscrupulous opposition of those who were responsible for it, and who, for political effect have endeavored to coutinue it by opposing every move- ment to relieve the financial situation and retrieve the public credit. Noth- ing being so desirable to them, for a partisan object, as that the Treasury should remain in the depleted condi- tion in which they left it, that design has arrayed them against every mea’ sure proposed for the relief of its financial embarrassment. Under these circumstances the ad- ministration has had a hard struggle to secure the means of meeting the public obligations and maintaining the national credit, but relief is at hand. The new fiscal laws are bringing in money at a rate that warrants Secre- tary CARLISLE to announce with rea. sonable certainty that by the end of the current year the tari{l and internal revenues will exceed the government expenses by at least $23,000,000, with. out taking the returns of the income tax into account. It will be the glory of this Demo- cratic administration that it repaired | the wreck left in its hands by the Re- | publicans, and did it too in spite of all | their efforts to prolong the ruin they | had wrought. | Unnecessarily Scaved. The machine politicians who man- age the Philadelphia city elections have been surprised and embarrassed by the completeness of their recent job. They find that they most decidedly over did it. That the scamps were scared and apprehended a rebuke, which they were conscious ot deserving, was evidenced by the unusual efforts they made for the election of their candidates. They were uncertain as to the support they would receive from their own party. Ordinarily their rapacious misgovern- ment should have outraged and dis- gusted any party. They knew this and they feared it. But the result of the election proved that their apprehension was groundless. Philadelphia's ‘‘grand old party” rallied “nobly” to the sup- port of the plundering ringsters who fatten ou the spoils of the city govern- ment, giving the rascals so full a party support that they find that the ten thousand fraudulent votes which they managed to poll was just as much su- perfluous rascality. They could have easily done without them. The magnitude of the Republican vote for mayor is the clearest evidence of fraud. It was 21,184 more than was polled for HARRISON in an election when it was certain that every Repub- lican vote was polled. The difference could not have been made up from Democrats voting for Warwick, for Parrison’'s vote was within 5,600 of that which was cast for CLEVELAND. Admitting that this number of Demo- crats voted for Warwick, and adding 5,000 secured by the understanding with the organized liquor interest, there remain at least 10,000 votes which can be accounted for in no other way than that they were fraudulently returned. That they were unnecessary was shown by the zeal with which the Republican majority came up to the support of their municipal thieves. The rascals should have better understood the temper of their party and not al lowed themselves to have become un- necessarily scared. -promotive of the iron trade. The chief The Passing of the ¥ifty-third. Congress adjourned at noon on Mon- day and tbe country is glad. But why? Not because it squandered public mon.. ey, for it used over a half-tillion dol- lars less than its predecessor ; not be- cause it made unsatisfactory laws, for it did too little in legislation ; but mere- ly because it failed to restore prosperity to a country that had been bolstered aud pampered by Republican legisla- tive nourishment until its business collapsed with the suddenness of a bubble. This is the reason those fanatics, who blame everything oun the party in power, threw up their hats at noon on Monday. Yet not one of them can give a sensible cause for having expected Congress to relieve the country at once. The same tidal wave of public indig- nation that swept the Republicans out in 1892, because of their ruinous poli- cies, was turned against the Democrats in 1894, because of their apparent in- competency. And thus it will ever be unless people are brought to think more and stop jumping at conclusions. Scarcely had the WiLsonx bill, the one product of the Fifty-third, become operative, before the party that had framed it was voted out—e’en before those who had directly condemned it by their suffrage had had an oppor- tunity to watch its effects. No political power under the sun could possibly have filled the expectations the pub- lic unthiokingly hoped to realize from the change of administration in 1892 However the Democrats are not wholly pardonable on the ground of - impossi- bility. There can be no doubt of the fact that the last Congress was lamen- tably weak in leadership and without any organization to speak of iar less was accomplished by it that could rea- sonably have been expected. When united action was necessary to pass the WiLsox bill, in its original form, the party fought and quibbled within itself until the country saw its pledges broken and its utter inability to make laws on the line of its plat: form. That was the beginning of the end. Failure to adjust the differences between the gold and silver interests and guide the government safely through the monetary crisis were other charges laid undisputed at the Demo- cratic door. These, together with the lack of push in apportioning to Demo- crats the offices they had a nght to | expect, combined to bring about the revulsion of feeling that bas made a Democratic Congress give way to an opponent. Thus it happens that the Fifty-third has passed into history and the coun- try breathes with a relief that is be- gotten by the thought that if no good can be done, there will be nothing to | fear, at least, from Washington. Next December the Republicans will take hold, but meanwhile the new tariff will have wrought its good re- sults and the income tax will have replenished the treasury depleted by Republican mal-admistration of former years. Then comes the query: Will the credit be placed where itis due. Will the Democrats be given approba tion for the good work, or will the Re- publicans steal the reward of Demo- cratic laws as they saddled the blame of their own on the Democrats last fall 2 ——No less than thirty-three fur: naces have been abandoned in the Schuylkill Valley within the last fif- teen years, and the Lehigh Valley shows an equal decline in the produc- tion of pig iron. These furnaces were out of blast before the last election of CLEVELAND, their abandonment hav- ing occurred under Republican tariffs that were claimed to be particularly cause of this decline was the scarcity and cost of iron ore, which might have been supplied them advantageously by the removal of the duty on imported ore. Such free raw material, furnish- ing a kind of ore that cannot be sup- plied by the ore-beds of this State would have kept these furnaces going, and given employment to hundreds of workmen, --With all its sins of omission and commission the fifty-third Congress be- came a thing of the past at noon on Monday. However little it did of good to the country, less than a half billion of dollars can be charged up against its expenditures. The New Post-Master General, From the York Gazette. It is doubtful whether Mr. Cleveland has made any appointment since his inauguration which gives more genuine satisfaction to the real Democrats of the country than the appointment of Will- iam L. Wilson as post master general. Mr. Wilson has earued a reputation for honesty and fearlessness and devo- tion to Democratic principles, and bas the implicit confidence of everyone, friend or foe. When he fell in the struggle last fall which proved so disastrous to many of the leaders of the democratic party there was a universal feeling of sorrow and regret. Tariff reform lost a doughty champion on the floor of the House, and the Democrats of that body a trusted and skillful leader. It was hoped then, and the hope has not proved groundless, that Mr. Cleve- land would not permit so strong a Democrat to pass into retirement but would}in some wise way secure for the party and people his invaluable ser- vices. In calling him into his immedi- ate political family the President ob- tains a trusted adviser, a man who measures public acts by the golden rule, a man whose sympathies are with the people, not with the monopolies or the money power. The cabinet is stronger for his presence. Mr. Bissell, whom he succeeds as post- master-general, has filled the office most capably, and leaves his great depart- ment working smoothly and according to strict business principles. Mr. Wil- son finds no demoralization to correct and can proceed without the handicap of past mistakes. A Joy That is Common. From the Philadelphia Press. The best thing that can be said of the adjourned Congress is that it has not made an extra session of the Fifty- fourth Congress necessary. It passed all the necessary appropriations bills—in fact, appropriated the people’s money quite too liberally—and vanished with the sincere regret of nobody. The people at large may not be so boisterous in their demonstrations of joy over final adjournment as the members of the New York Stock Exchange, who gave an hour to unrestrained boyish hilarity after the noonday hour yester- day, but that is about the way every- body feels about it. The country hopes to enjoy a good nine month’s rest from crank Congress- men, and that is occasion emough for some very heartfelt thanksgiving on the part of those who must get their living by minding their own business. Ingenious Advertising. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. It is said that the most ingenious ad- vertisers in the world are the English. Evidence of their use of the coupon scheme is given in this item from Paris. A letter addressed ‘to the statue of | the Venus de Milo in the galleries of the Louvre’ was received by the authorities ot that national museum of France a few days ago. The letter was addressed in English in an unformed hand-writing and it proved to be from a little girl of London whe enclosed a number of coupons cut from the bill heads of an English commercial house. The coupons showed that for twenty five of them a photograph of the Venus de Milo might be obtained from the J firm from whose bills they were cut. The little girl had misunderstood the matter and addressed the letter to the statue. Will They Obey the Manifesto. From the Clearfield Republican. Catholics must leave the lodges. Archbishop Corrigan has sent to every Priest in the State of New York the following letter : “A recent decree of the holy office, confirmed by the sover- eign pontiff, instructs the bishops of the United States to advise the faithful committed to their charge against affil- iation with societies known as the Odd Fellows, the Sons of Temperance and the Knights of Pythias, with the further injunction that if Catholics, after such admonition, persist in their connection with any of these societies and will not give up membership there- in, they cannot receive the sacra - ments.” Declining Like Wheat. From the Philadelphia Record. Cotton Facts, a periodical edited by the secretary of the sub-committee of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, urges the cotton-growers to raise food crops, and to make cotton their sur- plus or money crop. Can it be that King Cotton is about to join the line of monarchs that totter on their thrones ? The Scholar is Usually to Blame. From the Butler Democratic Herald. A Sharon parent has gone to law for his child who was whipped by a teach- er with a chunk of a board. We pre- sume the boy needed a clubbing and the only mistake in the matter probably was that he didn’t get hoarded at home. When a teacher takes a board there is generally a need for a club. ——GrorGE Gourp declares that his family did not buy Count CASTELLANE for his sister and talks as if it was a pure love affair. No doubt it was, but a love of money. Spawls from the Heystone, —Kutztown is 80 years old. —Reading’s are lights cost $105 each. —Two poor boxes in St. Peter's Cathe- dral, Allegheny, were stolen, —A coal oil lamp exploded at Reading, burning to death Mrs. Lydia Coldren. —Aged Mrs. Bridget Coyle, of Leban- on, fell from a chair, fracturing her leg. —Over 1,80 dogs have been reported tor registry and taxation in Harrisburg. ~The discharge of a single man closed the American match factory at Lebanon. —Jolted from his ear at Columbia, Brakeman John H. Seward's head was cut off. —No more small coal cars will be used on the Wyoming division of the Lehigh Valley Railroad. —The McKeesport Zimes says all Al- legheny County is opposed to the Greater Pittsburg scheme. —Jacob Young, a Lancaster County farmer, residing near Rothsville, hanged himself Monday. —The big air-brake factory at Wilmerd- ing will resume operations on Monday after long idleness. —While arguing a case before the Reg- ister, ex Judge M. C. Herman, of Carlisle, was stricken with paralysis. —George Drumheller was hurled 250 feet down a chute at Buck Ridge mines Monday and instantly killed. —Harrisburg Presbyterian ministers were entertained at Lebanon Tuesday night by Rev. Craig B. Cross. —South Bethlehem National Bank has moved into one of the finest new bank buildings in the Lehigh Valley. —Minnie Geyer was reprimanded by a Wilkesbarre Justice for sending, it is al. leged, an old-maid valentine to Miss Burkhardt. —The Lancaster County Agricultural and Horticultural Society has asked the Governor to veto the bill creating the Department. —Bishop Dubs preached the ordination sermon Sunday at Schuylkill Haven when several young men became full- flelzod ministers. —Conrad Albright, a school teacher in Codorus, York County, has been arrested as one of the robbers who raided Adam Albright’s home. —State Senator S. J. M. McCarrell was re-elected at Harrisburg Wednesday president of the Clearfield, Conemaugh & Western Railroad. —Judge Clayton made a decree Monday that unless exceptions was flled by March 14 the sale of the Willman Iron and Steel plant would be confirmed. —Reports from the northern and east- ern sections of the state show that com. paratively small portions of the snow which fell this winter have melted. —About 3000 men are employed at the Westinghouse air-brake factory, Wil- merding, which started up on Monday full hours, the first time in four years. —Only one ten.gallon keg of whisky has been purchased for the Schuylkill Coun= ty Almshouse since the scandals were re- cently investigated by the Auditors. —Berks County taxpayers have peti. tioned the Auditors not to sanction the fee bills presented by the County Com- missioners, claiming they are exeessive. —Dunbar, Pa., has had no licensed sa. loon or hotel for ten years, and the cit- izens of the place are making a strong | fight against the granting of license to a hotel. —Pugilists are being closely watched by the police in all parts of the state, the de- termination being to prevent all such encounters in every section of Pennsyl- vania. —A horse stolen from Liveryman Michael Cronin, of Chester, nearly three years ago, was recovered Monday after haying been in the possession of proba- bly a dozen persons. — The breaking up of the heavy ice on the Susquehanna has resulted in a great gorge ten miles in length, forming above Lock Haven. The jam extends from Queen Run te Glen Union. —A man named Hotfman was seriously wounded near Huntingdon, Pa., by a self- acting gun, which J. Howard Womelsdort had fixed at the door of his chicken yard as a protection against thieves. —Judge Gordon, of Clearfield County handed down a new rule Monday, requir- ing all proposed license transfers to be published in the county papers at least three weeks before the sitting of the Court. —The Cambria iron and steel company will begin the manutaeture of structural beams on March 15. It willbe an ac- tive competitor of the Carnegie steel com pany. Two large contraets have just been closed. —On Wednesday night last thieves en- tered the pig sty of William Showalter, at Latrobe, and butchered two of his hogs and carried away the meat without leaving any clue as to their identity. The animals were valued at $20. —Meadville Republican: In making an excavation last week, some workmen unearthed the fact that the ground was frozen to the depth of over four feet. This is the greatest depth that the frost has penetrated in this section for many a year. —A movement has been inaugurated to thoroughly examine the mountains north east of Mifflinburg for eoal, says the Lew- isburg Journal. Traces of coal have been found in that section and itis generally believed that there is an abundance of it. A fund has been raised, miners engaged and the search has been commenced. —A child about four days old was found in the Juniata river at Spruce Creek floating in a sealed jar. From its appear- ance it had evidently been strangled to death and there was also & little tiny hole in its right temple which looked as though it might have been made with a darning needle. There is noclue to the perpetrator of the foul deed. —While watching the gasoline tank at the axe works at Lewistown on account of the high water Friday night, Oliver Buyett and Frank Francis, both French _ men, held the lantern too near the man. hole and an explosion followed. The top of the tank was blown off and Francis had his hand and arms badly burned. Bujyett had all the hair burned off his head and was seriously burned on the upper part of the body, hands, arms and face.