VE rt TS ME es... cma ance seal pom BY P. GRAY MEER. Ink Slings, —Tyrone chickens, like Democratic roosters last November, are mighty few ard far between. —If BARDSLEY is to be pardoned it will only be in accordance with a prophesy made in this paper over a year ago. —Since the Methodist preachers have beseiged Tyrone the busy chicken hen is giving all her attention to ‘‘layin low” instead of eggs. —WorTH, the great Parisian dress maker, is dead. It is cruel to say such a thing, but we’ll bet their will be lots of fathers and husbands glad to hear the news. —The riot at New Orleans has about subsided and international *‘etiket’”’ will demand Uncle Sam to ask pardon of JoHN BULL for having allowed one of his subjects to be killed. But that won’t bring the dead seaman back to life. —The mad fury of the Republicans of the Indiana Legislature, on Monday night, was a pretty commentary on civil freedom. Determined that they would oust a Democrat from office they almost killed several members in their fight to keep the Governor’s veto of the enact- ing measure from reaching the speaker of the house before its adjournment. —The resumption of the WESTING- HOUSE air brakes works at Wilmerding, after a seven month’s idleness, is an in- dication of better times. It would be well if the first consignment of the lock- ing devices made were put on the Re- publican calamity howlers. Had they been furnished with air brakes some time ago the business of the country would not be in such a weakened con- dition. — When we read of the notorious pro- ceedings that disgraced the Indiana Legislature on Monday and, for that matter, the free citizenship of every American, we have little wonder that labor riots and class wars are continual- ly causing trouble. It Legislators are tolerated in such resort to blood-shed to carry partisan measures what can be ex- pected of those for whose guidance they are supposed to be criterions ? —A new department is about to be added to the State portmanteau and through it the farmers are given a chance to whack a little for themselves. It will be found that by the time the positions are all apportioned out there will be more politicians who have be- come farmers than a few. Farming is not 80 much out of their line after all, since the only difference between them and the genuine husbandman is that the latter tills the soil while the former soils the till. —The Senatorial apportionment bill introduced in the Legislature at Har- risburg, on Tuesday, proposes taking Clinton county off this district and tacking it onto Cameron, McKean and Potter counties. With all the frightful gerrymandering to be expected from this Legislature we cannot but heave a sigh of joy at such a change. The fact that such would-be Senators as Mr. S. ‘Woops CALDWELL are to be put out of reach of us is some cause for thankful- ness at least. —The legislative cheers that greeted the reading of HAsTINGS’ apology fol having signed the MARSHALL pipe line bill may bave been intended to make the people of the State believe that his action was exactly what they wanted, but the public will easily see through the flimsy excuse the Legislators try to enshroud themselves in for having passed such a measure. Let any of them read the condemnation of the citizens of the oil regions if they want to know what cause they had for cheers. —Representative Fow is father of a * bill that proposes a change in the exist- ing libel law. His idea of justice in cases of libel is that an offending news- paper should have a chance to retract. It is very kind of Mr. Fow to give his time in interest of newspapers, but his bill would not prove very elevating to journalism. There is no reason, what- ever, why any reputable journal should ever be guilty of libel and to put an avenue of escape in front of a class of 30 called journalists, who are continually getting into trouble of this sort, would only increase the injury done through the columns of their papers, -—Senator CAMERON is to keep open house at Harrisburg long enough for him to ‘‘hornswoggle’” the Legislature into passing a resolution favoring free | silver coinage. The Senator has not | given up his hopes of being a silver can- | didate for President yet and has had to | | do with Pennsylvania Legislatures long | enough to know exactly how to bring | them around. Like his old father his | political ascendency was brought about on the free silver—or any kind of money you like—basis, and the Middletown | & | by Governor ParTIsoN, but in dealing bank was the treasury from which it was issued. DoNaLD will get what he wants if he has to keet open house for a year. STATE RIGHTS AN 1S oy ~~ 7 na’ D FEDERAL UNION. ofan; “VOL. 40 BELLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 15, 1895. NO. 11. The Surrender to the Standard Oil Company. The lawmakers who rushed the Standard oil company’s bill through with ench unseemly haste, were so de- lighted with the Governor's approval of it that when the message givingit his sanction was read to them they manifested their pleasure by vociferous applause. Such a display of satisfac tion in being the willing tools of the most odious of monopolies, was doubly disgraceful and offensive in view of the fact that these same legislative roosters have pigeon-holed the bills presented in the interest of the working people, and are likely to ignore any that may be offered during the balance of the session. In giving his excuses for signing the Standard company’s bill the Governor “doth protest too much.” His special pleading in its behalf is insufficient to change the opinion of the public in re- gard to the character and purpose of that most heartless corporation, or to induce the people to forget how its grasping and over-bearing greed divert. ed into the pockets of a few individuals the larger part of the benefits of one of our State’s great natural resources. The success of that company in strangling competition has robbed Pennsylvania of the best part of her petroleum product, and now in the de- cline of that production, it is an insult to the inteiligence of the people of the State, and an abuse of their patience, for Governor HASTINGS to represent that in disposing of what is left of the petroleum deposits competition will be promoted by allowing the Standard company to get control of all the pipe- lines, which will be the effect of the bill he has signed. It might not have sounded well, but it would have been more candid, if the Governor had admitted. as a reason for passing this bill, that the obliga: tions of the Republican party to the great oil monopoly, as well as to other kindred corporations, on account of election contributions, are such that it cannot ignore their demands. Legislative Flunkeyism. Nothing could more clearly exhibit the flunkey character of our Republi- can state lawmakers than the avidity with which they take up the proposi- tion to make a county that shall bear the name of Quay. The State constitution wisely places obstacles in the way of the disturbance, contention and expense incident to the ambition of some locality to separate from its old connections and set upa county of its own, usually to satisfy the aspiration of some town that wants to be the county seat. So formidable are those constitutional obstacles that since they were interposed no new county has been made. The people about Hazleton have for some years been hankering after a new county, with the court house in that town. Their Hazel county, as they proposed to call it, didn’t prove a suc: cess. But they have now iit upon the ingenious expedient of christening it after the Republican state boss, and the magic name of Quay, attracting his legislative henchmen as rats are attracted by the odor of toasted cheese, may have the effect of embellishing our state map with a county deriving its title from that illustrious states- man, ] aa———— dpa When the bill allowing the Standard oil company to secure con- trol of the pipe-lines passed through the Legislature as slickly as it it had been greased with a pecuniary lubri- cant, the popular mind turned to Gov- ernor Hastings with the thought that it was the kind of bill that would test the rigidity of his backbone. Those who believed it would be stiff enough for such a responsibility seem to have been ignorant of the gelatinous nature of the Republican backbone when sub- subjected to the pressure of corporate influence, HasTINGS’ spinal strength | proves to be no greater than that of the average Republican statesman when the monopolies demand his ser- vice. A similar bill in the interest of the Standard oil company, passed by Republican Legislature, was vetoed with the corporations PATTISON’S spinal column wasn’t found to be made of jelly. Money Paid for Titles. Lverybody should rejoice that the display of snobbing in the newspapers, for a nnmber of weeks, over the mar- riage of J. GouLp’s daughter to a French nobleman, was brought to an end by the young woman with the multiplicity of dollars marrying the man with the big titles, and packing off to Europe to enjoy their honey- moon among an “effete” nobility. Rev, J. MapisoN Perers, of New York, whose pulpit oratory is apt to run into the sensational, went so far as to preach a sermon in which he severely criticised this matrimonial episode that eo largely occupied the attention of a curious public. Bat marriage is so private and personal a matter that it is dufficult to see how the wedding of any particular party, what- ever the circumstances may be, can be appropriately made the subject of a public discourse. But it must be admitted that the eagnerness shown by too many Ameri- can heiresses to marry foreign adventur- ers for the sake of their titles, exhibits a vulgar snobbishness that cannot but be offensive to Americans of better gense and greater refinement of feeling. In fact it is a reflection upon the breed- ing of the American people, for when the foreign world sees the rich women of this country, who presumably belong to the upper class, eagerly prostituting themselves by a purchased alliance with nobility, it will naturally conclude that the generality of Americans are snobs and vulgarians. It isin this way only that the “no- ble” marriages of these ill-bred rich girls concern the sensible and better portion of our people. If they are snubbed and abused by husbands who married them only for their money, that ie their own business. They have plenty of time to repent the folly of "bartering happiness for a title. Compulsory Education. It is questionable whether a body like the present Legislature of Penn- sylvania can entertain a sensible idea in regard to education, and therefore there is a risk of its bungling in any- thing it may attempt on that subject. In its purpose to improve the common school system by compelling the atten- dance of pupils, it is likely to do more harm than good. Compulsion is of but little avail as a means of effecting a good object, in most cases defeating its purpose by ex- citing resistance. A compulsory edu- | cation law, however plausible the argu- ments in ite favor, must necessarily be obnoxious to citizens whose private rights it invades as guardians of their own children and to whom the com: pulsion involved is a grievance. That it is impractical is sufficiently proven by its failure in every State where it has been tried. Its offensiveness has caused it to become a dead letter. There are other ways of improving our common school system instead of ingrafting into it methods that cannot be enforced. It surely needs improve- ment in some way if the political bum- mers and corporation pimps who com- pose the majority of our state Legisla- ture are to be accepted as the fruit of two generations of common school ed- ucation. —— We scarcely believe that it is in the interest of art that Senator OsBorN has introduced in the State Senate a bill requiring every public school in the State to be provided with two hun- dred and fifty photographic illustra- tions. The ostensible object is to im- part pictorial instruction, but there is ground for the suspicion that the nig- ger that is concealed in this photo: graphic wood pile is eome syndicate of photographers who want to work off a job on the State. The estimated cost of the photographs proposed by this bill is about $300,000, entirely too large a sum for school ornamentation that would be of no practical good whatever, and would answer no other purpose than to afford a profit to some firm of photographers willing to make a “divvy” with those who would give out the contract. Governor Hasrtines has signed the MarsHALL pipe line bill and thus early in his administration has put himself on record as in favor of corpor- ate interests. Imbecile Remonstrance. There could not be a more pitiful display ot imbecility than is tarnished by the comments of such Republican newspapers as the Philadelphia Even- ing Chronicle and Evening Telegraph on Governor Hastings’ approval of the Standard oil company’s pipe-line bill, known as the MarsmaLn bill. Both these papers profess to entertain objec- tions to the Governor’s act, one of them saying that “‘he has given his ap- proval toa piece of legislation which ends all hopes of relieving the independent oil producers from the ex- actions and schemes of the oil trust magoates ;”’ the other, after asserting that the Governor “has thrown down the barrier that restrained the oil monopoly,” continues its strictures by saying, as a warning, that “the people do not forget ; they are having a long and hard struggle with the monopolies of the time ; they will yet triumph.” All this may go for what it is worth, but the very papers that make these comments are responsible, to the ex- tent of their influence, for the State of affairs about which they complain. When an election is pending they are habitually found supporting party candidates whose success will be to the inevitable advantage of monopolistic corporations, From the past policy of the party, from the influences enlieted on ite behalf, from the interests involv- ed in its success, from the character of its candidates and of his political asso- ciates, it was as certain as anything humanly could be, that the success of the Republicans in the last State elec- tion would be followed by every con- cession that the corporations and monopolies might demand. Yet these Philadelphia papers, which now as: sume to complain, were foremost in helping to swell the vote whose very magnitude was construed as a license for such acts as the signing of the Standard company’s pipe-line bill. They say “the people do not forget,” yet when their party service is required {at an election they display the utmost zeal in their efforts to make the people forget the consequence of putting a monopoly party in power. Such being i their habitual conduct, their complaint about the Governor's action is either rank hypocrisy or pitiful imbecility. | ' A Cartoon That Would Mean Some- thing. It cannot be expected that so politic- ally dissolute a paper as the Philadel- phia Press will manifest any serious objection to Governor Hastings’ sur- render to the petroleum monopolists, and yet it is a subject for a cartoon that would have infinitely more pith and point than the fat-witted pictures on political subjects with which the Press is io the habit of offending the good seuse and good taste of its read- ers. The WarcaMaN office is not suffi- ciently supplied with artistic appli- ances to get up the cartoon for its own columns, but our Philadelphia contem- porary can have the benefit of the sug- gestion that the Governor's recent exec- utive action would be strikingly illus- trated by a picture representing him, with his veto blunderbuss firmly braced against his stalwart shoulder, firing away at the “Birds of Pennsylvania,” while right under his nose, as it were, within reach of his gun, but unshot at and unmolested, sits the Standard oil vulture that has already gorged itself with most of the petroleum wealth of Pennsylvania, and proposes, with the Governor's consent, to gobble what is left of it. The artist could impart a realistic appearance to the picture by filling the air with the feathers knocked out of the robing, pee-wees and catbirds by the Governor's unerring shot, and portray- ing the vulture, insolently perching under his protection, grown fat and swollen to gigantic proportions with the spoil of Pennsylvania's oil regions. Such a cartoon, in addition to its ar- tistic merit, would have its moral, im- pressing the people of the State with the conviction that his excellency de- serves but little credit for shooting such small game and allowing so ravenous a bird of prey to continue its depreda- ticns, --There is no license at Tthica, N.Y. and the Cornell University students are doomed to go dry or provide themselves with side-boards. Since liquor is to troubled with ‘‘JoEN JOHNSON." : i censured. stop flowing there Cornell will be less ! Cumpulsory Education. From the Doylestown Democrat. The Farr Compulsory Education bill, which has attracted general atten- tion, will doubtless become a law, as it has passed the House by a vote of 136 to 38, and its passage inthe Senate cannot be prevented. We have doubt- ed its utility from the first, because we do not believe the will of the people is behind it, nor does the vote in favor of the bill represent the wishes of the people. The old adage that you ‘can take a horse to water but can’t make him drink’ applies to the case. The idea of one being compelled to send his or her child to echool begets a re: bellious spirit right away. If parents do not sufficiently appreciate education to send his or her children to school without compulsion, they will hardly do it with, for they will find many ways to render the law inoperative as to them. The law will generally ap- ply to the children of foreigners, who care the least about education, and they will be the hardest to reach with the penalty. A large class of children within the school age, in both city and county, are kept at home to help make a living for the family, and, in numer- ous cases, both ends cannot be made to meet without their assistance. In such case it would seem cruel to take away part of the support of an indi- gent father or mother for the purpose of sending the child to school. Such cases will come up everywhere. If all things were even, the law might be found a good one, but, as things are very uneven, we think it will be found a bad one. a—— What the Last Congress Saved. From the Pittsburg Post. One of our esteemed contemporaries think it a very small matter that the appropriations of the late congress fell below those of the Reed billion con- gress about $45,000,000. Despise not the day of small things. Forty-five millions of dollars is a comfortable sum of money, even for a wealthy peo- ple like those of the United States. It will pay the army and navy appropria- tions for a year. It is an amount equal to the annual average of all ap- propriations for the support of the government when Franklin Pierce was president. It is about the amount we expended a year when carrying on the Mexican war, which brought such large additions to the territory of the Union. Republican taxation and pro fl- igate expenditure have accustomed the people to big figures. We are not struck with any great admiration for the late ‘congress, but even the gentle- man in black should have his dues. It it had handled other questions as dis- creetly as the money question in the matter of making appropriations it wouldhave had a record of honor. The Wilson Bill Will Prove a Blessing and Don’t You Forget It. From the Williamsport Sun. Anomalous as it may appear, Ameri- can cloth is being sold in the English markets and in the English manufactur- ing districts. United States Counsel Meeker, who has reported the fact to the state department, says that this seems to justify the passage of the Wilson tariff act. He states that a representative of an American house has been buying English cloth ia England and has at the same time been selling American cloth there. The American cloth is woolen stuffs suitable for coatings and men’s suitings, selling at fifty to sixty cents a yard. English merchants pronounce it superior cloth for the grade made of short wool, and cannot see how it can be produced and sold for the price. Looking for an Easy Man to Defeat. From the Philadelphia Record, Everybody will be rejoiced to know that ex-President Harrison is recover- ing from his late serious illness. He made a better President than even his own party anticipated. He has been a dignified ex-President. He is also the most suitable man prominently named for the Republican nomiaation for the Presidency next year. The con- dition of his health is a matter of na- tional concern. He Is Sure the Experts Were Fooled. From the Pittsburg Post. Editor Palm, of the Meadville Mes- senger, comes to the front with affidavits from the makers that the butterine ex- hibited by him at the February Mead- ville fair, and which took second prize as butter, was really butterine. plements this with his own affidavit that the butterine sent him: was placed on ex- hibition. Unless disproot is oftered Mr. Palm must be considered as having won his case, to having fairly shown that butter experts cannot tell good factory- made butterine from good cow’s butter. What Most of Them Must Have Been Doing. From the Easton Sentinel. The Argus is kicking because Howard Mutchler voted to give the Louisana sugars planters a bounty out of the United States treasury amounting to several million dollars. That’s a small matter, and Howard ought not to be He had no time to attend to such trifles. He was looking after post- offices. He sup- | spawls from the Keystone, —A Board of Trade has been started at Yorkville. —Pottsville now has a Firemen’s Relief Association. —Judge Weidman,’ fot Schuylkill coun- ty, is seriously ill. —In Lehigh eounty 260 applications for liquor license have been filed. —The Fraternal Legion’s Supreme Com- mandery is in session at Pittsburg. —Ina trolley car accident at Reading. Conductor William H. Ritter was severely hurt. —Eight thousand Pittsburg coal miners have been granted the sixty-eight cent rate. —Smallpox has been brought by James Delaney from Hot Springs, Ark., to Pitts. burg. - Lancaster’s Court Saturday refused all new applications for hotel liquor li. censes. —Bonds for $400,000 will be issued by Luzerne county to pay for the new Court House. —The electric railway to South Wil- lLiamsport from the city proper was open- ed Saturday. —A large gate closed upon and crushed to death the little son of William Mall. near Brandon. —Delaware County’s grand jury scored Justices of the Peace who send petty cases to Court. —A tannery, a bark mill and the leach house at Jamison City, near Bloomsburg, were destroyed by fire. —While playing with a revolver Charles Desbrow, of McKeesport, dangerously shot his little brother. —In attempting to steal arideon a train at Williamsport, young George Sweeds fell and was cut in two. —Amanda Keener, a 23 year-old maiden, of East Berlin, York county, 1s believed tohave drowned herself. —Another cotton press for Texas weigh- ing 500,000 pounds, and to cost $50,000, will be built by a Reading firm. —There were twenty fatal accidents in the Pottsville anthracite district in 1864, against 270 the previous year. —Twelve blocks of model cottages for miners have been built by the Silverton Coal Company, near Pottsyille. —Tax Collector Reynolds, of Bethlehem, is pushing delinquents. He has put one in jail and has 600 others on the list. —His inability to eat a night lunch in less than an hour and a-.half resulted in the dismissal of Policeman Yeich, of Reading. —Rocco Gentile, who was stabbed at Conshohocken by Giuseppe Coecovia, while acting as a peacemaker, refuses to prosecute. —F. A. Blackwell, the well known lum- berman, will float about 47,000,000 feet of timber from the head of Bennett's creek this spring. —The base ball season will open in Wil- liamsport on the 20th of April when the Demorests will play the Lancaster state league team. —Applicants for naturalization papers in Northampton must hereafter be able to read English and have resided in the county one year. —Actor A. S Lipman, of the “War of Wealth” company, felland broke his leg so badly in Pittsburg that he will be laid up for two months. —An elaborate farewell reception was rendered Monday night to Bristol’s popu- lar Methodist minister, Rev. E. E. Burris, who goes to Philadelphia. —Tyrone has a new paper box factory, will soon have a race track and now they are trying to get something there to man- ufacture their mud into tile. —Judge Biddle has granted a rule on Clerk of Courts Heller, at Carlisle, to show cause why he should notallow pub- lication of marriage licenses. —At St. Gabriel's Church, Douglassville, John Kurst, the organ blower, was over- come by coal gas and the congregation, without music was dismissed. —Allegheny’s License Court opened Monday, and where no remonstrances are filed against saloonkeepers the applica” tions are granted without question. —Isaac Taylor, an aged and respected citizen of Trevorton, died Sunday last, aged 80 years. He wasa member of the engineer corps that laid out the original borough of Shamokin. —Dr. McManigal of Dudley was arrested at Huntingdon Sunday night on a charge made by Lizzie Winters also of Dudley with committing malpractice. He is sup- posed to haye been attempting to escape. —Williamsport hunters talk of restock- ing the woods in that vicinity with quail from Dakota. A subscription is now be- ing taken for that purpese. The present winter has been very severe on game of all kinds. —Lawyer John Smith will take testi: mony at Pottsville to show cause why the scandal case of Almshouse Steward Wel- lington Hartman should not be tried out. side of Schuylkill county. —Chester County Commissioners’ rul- ing, that inquests should not be held as to certain classes of deaths, would have indefinitely postponed Mrs. Rosanna O’'Brien’s funeral, set for last Wednesday, at West Chester, if they hadn't rescind. ed it. —B. ¥. Swan, ex- Postmaster of Portage, Cambria county, was arrested on Friday and brought to Altoona to await a hear- ing on the charge of aiding Postmaster Dayid Mehaffey, of Coalport, Clearfield county, to make false returns and there- by inerease his salary. —A party of chicken thieves dropped a match into a coop in Hollidaysburg Sat- urday night. The fire spread to Joseph Condron’s planing mill and four adjacent buildings all of which were destroyed. The loss is $7,500 upon which there is no insurance. —The Blair county auditors are investi- gating the accounts of the county com- missioners. They are hearing testimony and have unearthed many irregularities much looseness, and unexcusable extrav, agance. The investigation is giving the tax payers something to think about. —Jonathan Kelchner, age 63, a shoe- maker of Altoona, was recently divorced from his wife. Last week he married a young woman more than forty years his junior. Friday Kelchner was arrested and held for trial on charge of breach of promise preferred by Miss Annie Dressler: