Demorraic anon BY RP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Chicago councilmen are legislating against bloomers as a female attire. This is strange, since Chicago is called the Windy city and it is usually more wind than anything else that fills the average girl’s bloomers. —The probable cause of the appor- tionment bills’ defeat lies in the fact that the Republicans were unable to gerry- mander & congressional, senatorial, ju- dicial or legislative snap for every little fly-by-night politician in the party. —A passenger yacht, named “TRILBY,” tipped over at Buftalo on last Saturday morning and five men were drowned. It seems cruel to jest over such & misfortune, but we can’t refrain from’ believing that McGINTY will be glad to hear BEN Bort down at the bottom of the sea. —Governor HasTiNGs finds himself in an extremely embarrassing position just now. The garb bill has passed the Legislature and only awaits his signa- ture to become a law. He will have to sign it, but in doing so he will bring down upon him the wrath of hosts of those who helped encompass his elec- tion. —Last Sunday afternoon a Curwens- ville girl was sitting in a boat on the mill pond at that place when a large bass jumped out of the water and land- ed in the boat, at the maiden’s feet. The good people of the town up the river are at a loss to explain this rather unusual piscatorial episode and it seems strange that none of them have realized how easily the fish might have been de- ceived in thinking the fair boater a little fly. —Massachusetts hopes to abate the tramp nuisance in the establishment of a 2000 acre farm of wild land, to which all hoboes, who appear in the Bay State, will be sentenced for terms varying trom a year to longer periods. They will be made clear it off. Yankee in- genuity again asserts itself, for in the face of such a condition of things the average dusty idler will prefer other parts of the country to a life ala Davy CROCKETT, in Massachusetts. —While the failure of the Republi- can Legislature to pass apportionment bills at this session will be a distinct violation of the constition it is far bet- ter that it be so than that the nefarious gerrymanders they proposed should be passed. The constitution has long been violated i this respect by the Legisla- ture, so the State will excuse this furth- er evid ence of culpability in preference to having thousands more of her voters disfranchised in congressional, senatorial and judicial elections. —All last Fall it looked as if HasT- INGS, MAGEE and MARTIN -were plan- ning Quay’s downfall, but the wily politicians managed to carry the water on both shoulders until Tuesday night when it spilled and the rupture opened in earnest. The trio are in favor of passing apportionment bills to which QUAY 18 opposed and a battle royal will be the outcome. One good that will possibly result from the fight will be the defeat of the judge’s retirement bill, which it is thought QUAY will now en- com pass. —The Pennsylvania State College is in a fair way to receive $212,000 appro- priation from this session of the Legis- lature. The committee on appropria- tions cut the request for $375,000 down to the amount that has already passed second reading in the House. This drop will be a sore disappointment to the many friends of the institution who recognize its good work and deserts, but the amount that it is likely to get will help the College along very well toward the accomplishment of the end of broad- er education in view. —One hears malapropisms in almost every quarter now-a-days, but the worst that has come to our ears for some time is credited to a woman whose husband owns a little stock farm up the country. Her effort to sink the now famous Mr, Lzirer, of Washington, into oblivion found its birth in a battle two of the horses on the farm indulged in one morning. She was out in the farm yard when the two vicious horses began fighting a battle royal and a few days afterwards she announced to friends in this place that they had had a very ex- citing “hors de combat” up at home. — When the venerable Representative Geo. V. LAWRENCE asserted that “no graduate from The Pennsylvania State College had yet adorned the bar, the pulpit or the bench’ he displayed a la- mentable ignorance of the nature of the work done at that institution. Until very recently the College had been a distinctively agricultural and technical institution and offered no classical course in its curriculum. Within the last few years, however, more has been done in this line, aud we need but direct Repre- sentative LAWRENCE’s attention to three members of the class of ’89. One in Pittsburg, one in Schuylkill county and another in Bedford county, all of whom silver coinage of the United States to | facture into money the thirty-five mil- have already graced the legal profession and whose names, even he will see honored before he dies. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 40 BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 31, 1895. NO. 22. Be More Explicit, Gentlemen. If Secretary CaruisLe, Comptroller Eckres aad others who are on the stump advocating what they consider “gound money,” would only be a little more confidential with the people, and tell in plain and explicit language what they mean by that term, they might make converts to their financial theories and with much less trouble than they are now doing. The ordinary mind comprehends the fact that our present silver dollars, con- taining 371% graing, the intrinsic or metal value of which is but 68 cents, will to-day, purchase just as much in any market of the country as will a gold dollar. And thisis too in the face of the fact, that the government has refused to recognize silver as a “coin,” such as was contemplated for the re- demption of treasury notes; that its representatives are denouncing it as a “dishonest” or “debased”” dollar, and are decrying and discrediting it to the greatest extent possible. This fact, in addition to the truth that every one acknowledges that while a silver dollar, discredited as it is by the power that should protect it, and said to be worth but 68 cents will pay just as much in- debtedness as will a gold dollar, 1s what makes its standing with the peo- ple, and creates doubts in the mind of the ordinary individual of the correct- ness of the theories, about intrinsic or commercial values, ae a basis of money. What the advocates of a single stand. ard basis propose to substitute for this dollar—the dollar that the Democracy has always considered the “dollar of our daddies,” is a matter the public is anxious to ascertain. We must have dollars and fractional parts of dollars. If intrinsic, or metal val ue is to be the basis of these, as meas- ured by gold, what is to become of the five hundred millions of silver coin now in use? Is it to be declared of but halt the value it now represents? Is it to be gathered up, recoined and made into almost double its present size in order to be of the actual value stamped on each piece ? Is the entire be changed with every fluctuation of the price of the metals out of which it is made in order that it will at all times be worth, for all purposes, the amount it is supposed to represent ? Or it we are to have no more silver coinage, and all money is to be based on the value of gold, what are we to do for a fractional currency— halves, quarters and dimes—how are they to be made that they will always be worth intrinsically their face value, with the metal out of which they are stamped continually fluctuating in commercial value? When six banking concerns can cor- ner the entire gold supply of the country, twice in two months and com- pel the government to go to Europe and borrow, in order to maintain its credit, what is to become of the debtor class, when the basis of all our money, is placed atthe mercy of these finan- cial sharks to control as they see prop- er? These are questions that may seem of trivial importance to the great fi- nancial heads that are now enlighten: ing the country on the money issue? They are such, however, as you hear the ordinary business man ask, and the sooner they are explained and ua- derstood, the sooner the public will be ready to accept the theories of the monometalists, and those who are be- lieved to be working in their interests. S—————————— Won't Need a Mint. The Philadelphia papers are clamor: ing for the commencement of work on the new Mint in that city. Most of these same papers are denouncing the proposition to remonitize silver as an effort to flood the country with a de- based currency. Now if we are to have no more silver coinage, what the the deuce is the sense in spending mil- lions of dollars to build a new Mint. Any old establishment of the kind anywhere in the country will manu- lions of gold this country produces annually, and if silver is to be tabooed as money, as the Philadelphia papers demand it shall, there will be no more need for a Mint in that city than for a storm-shed in Heaven. Lawless Refusal to Pass Apportion- ment Bills. It is no wonder that lawlessness is becoming rampant in this country when State Legislatures act in open defiance and with perfect contempt of the organic law. The constitution is the highest law, upon which the or- ganism of the State is based. It regu- lates, defines and restrains all other law, and therefore it should be held in the highest respect and its provisions rigidly observed. But the disreputa- ble majority that constitutes the law making power of this State repudiates and epurns the higher law of this com- monwealth, known as its constitution, committing thie outrage deliberately and with full knowledge of the import and effect of such lawlessness. The constitution clearly requires that as soon as it can possibly be done after every census there shall be an apportionment of the State into dis- tricts necessary for the purpose of rep- resentation. This requirement has been intentionally and systematically disregarded during a long course of years. Five years have passed since the last census was taken, and although sworn to observe the constitution in this, as in every other respect, this Leg islature deliberately continues, to vio- late the higher law by refusing to pass apportionment bills. It proclaimed itself to be a lawless body, and openly perjured itself before all the world, by its action last week in defeating those bills. The influence that in this matter is more powerful with these Legislators than the authority of the constitution is the claim of the Republican poli- ticians. The organic law, on the one hand, directly and peremptorily orders them to apportion the State. The Re- publican politicians, on the other hand, tell them not to do it, as 4 new arrangement of districts would conflict with their political and personal inter- ests. Between these opposing authori- ties, that of the constitution and that of the Republican politicians, the for- mer is kicked aside contemptuouely by those who were sworn to observe it and who will go home as perjured a set of rascals as ever went unwhipped of justice. Disgraceful Subservience. Nothing so completely demonstrates the abject and comtemptible character of the present State Legislature as its thorough subjection to the will of Quay. The general worthlessness of the body that is disgracing the Legis- lative function at Harrisburg is uni- versally recognized, but in no particular is it more obvious than in its slavish obedience to its master. The question with the Republican majority in that body is pot, what do the people want, but what does Quay want? They don’t concern themselves about the public interest, but give their exclusive attention to the political in- terest of the boss. “What will Quay think of it?" “will it meet with Quay's approval 7 “when will Quay be here ?”’ and similar questious -indicat- ing absolute subservience, are heard in the Legislative circles at Harrisburg. The most disgraceful incident of this slavish condition is PENROSE'S commit. tee calling on Quay to receive his in- structions as to how the whitewash shall be applied in the Philadelphia investigation. Rough on McKinley. The general revival ot the industries ought to be stopped out of regard for Governor McKiINLEY's sensibilities. Just think how badly he must feel about it. The worst of it all is that this offense to the great champion of protection is being committed in his own State, where the Youngstown ironworkers have been given an ad- vance in their wages, the Hocking valley miners have been similarly fav- ored, and every department of labor is aggravatingly active. This isn’t treat: ing MoKiINLEY right. ——The Republican Legislature, that was to be a model for economic work and a short session, is still fighting over the little it has left in the treasury, and will adjourn about the middle of June, with the deserved reputation of being one of the most profligate ‘and corrupt bodies of law-makers that ever met in Harrisburg. If anybody, anywhere, has a good word to say for it, or its actions, it is full time that word was spoken. Pennsylvania's Iron Industry. In the great revival of industry that is in progress under the Democratic tariff the renewed activity of the iron business is conspicuous. In this con- nection nothing is more worthy of at- tention than the disadvantage which the furnace men of eastern Pennsyl- vania labor under in the matter of iron ore. In the Pittsburg, Mahoning and Shenango valleys, Buffalo, Cleveland and Wheeling districts, the furnaces are being worked to their utmost capacity. At the Duquesne works of Carnegie & Co. four new furnaces are being pushed to completion as fast as possible, to take advantage of the in- dustrial revival, the output of each of which will be from 350 to 400 tons a day. One hundred tons a day was considered a big enough output for a furnace in McKINLEY times. All these furnaces are west of the Allegheny mountains and enjoy the advantage of cheaper transportation of the Lake Superior ore required for steel purposes. This advantage is denied the iron trade in the eastern part of the State for which the haul from the lake region is too long and expensive ; yet notwithstanding such a drawback the Pennsylvania steel company at Steelton, which barely es- caped bankruptcy under the McKINLEY tariff, has sprung into renewed life since the passage of the Wirson bill. Its output of pig iron last month was phenominal, one of its furnaces turn- ing out 200 tons each day, while the combined product of two others for the month was over 12,000 tons made of Cuban ore. But why should that com- pany be put to the expense of a duty on that ore? Itis true the duty has been reduced one-half by the Demo- cratic tariff, but if the imported ore, absolutely necessary for steel produc. tion, were allowed to come in free, it would not displace a pound of Penn- sylvania ore at the Steelton or any other Pennsylvania furnace, for the two do not come in conflict. This is the question that comes up in considering the wellfare of the iron business of eastern and central Penn- sylvania, which is handicapped by heavy freight charges on the lake ore: Why should it be put to a disadvan- tage, with no corresponding advantage to any other interest ? The Pennsyl- vania iron ore interest is not injured by the use of bessemer ore, whether that ore be brought from Lake Su- perior or from Cuba. The largest amount of Centre county ore is used by the Carnegie company in conjunc- tion with the Lake "Superior article. Could there be anything more foolish than to tariff the imported ore that is necessary for the prosperity of the iron business of the lower part of Pennsyl- vania ? Republican Congressmen from this State have been guilty of folly, and the§ will repeat this foolishness it the special bill to put iron ore on the free list shall be brought up again at the next session of Congress. Their tariff prejudice has paralyzed their common sense. Cameron’s Flag Still Floats. The result of the recent Republican primaries in Lancaster county shows that Canmzronisy is still on deck and the Winnebago flag flies as defiantly as ever, The contest was between the CameroN and anti-CAMERON factions on the question of a district attor- ney nomination, and the CAMERONIANS won a complete victory. It is consid- ered a set-down for merchant Wana. MAKER, whose ambition for the United States Senatorship, as against CAMERON, was represented by the defeated can- didate. Money was never more plenti- fully used at a Lancaster county elec- tion. Some of the voters openly boast- ing of the amount of boodle they got for their votes, and declaring that never before had there been so profit able a primary in the old Republican stronghold. The result, however, proved that Cameron overbid the pious Philadelphia politician, who wants to succeed him in the United States Senate. ——Mocnday’s papers announce that the second largest cotton mill in the world is to be erected at North Adams Mass., the coming summer. Work upon it already being commenced. And this too under the operations of a Demo cratic tariff bill. Rivals in Infamy. From the Pittsburg Post. The Democrats oi New York, city and state, are evidently pulling them- selves together for a thorough reorgani- zation and a battle this year and next in the line of their historic efforts when rallying from the reverses inci- dent to bad leadership. The Republi- can, as a reform party, either at Al bany or in the metropolis, has not been a bewildering success. The party seems to be about as badly split up now a8 the Democrats were in 1893 and 1894. When Dr. Parkhurst and his associate crusaders, of the highest ideals in politics, declare that the Platt rule, now controlling the Republicans of New York, is infinitely worse than Tammany, it is time to look out for breakers. We know of only one legis- lature in the Union that is more sav- agely denounced for its incapacity and corruption than the late Platt legisla- ture of New York, and that is the Quay legislature of Pennsylvania, and it was not elected as a reform body by a long shot. Growing in Popularity, Even in the North. From the Altoona Tribune. The town of Danville, Ill.,, was the scene of a disgracefal mob murder ear- ly last Saturday morning, the victims having been two young men who were accused of having committed an assault upon a young woman on the previous Thursday night. The mob when ap- pealed to let the law take its course, ex- cused their murderous conduction the plea that if the two young fellows were convicted Governor Altgeld would par- don them. That wasa trivial excuse. It would have been no difficult task to lynch them after conviction and pardon. This lynching business is sure to spread unless summary example is everywhere made of men who take the law in their own hands. The experience of the south shows that mob law always re- sults in an increase of crime, and that, too, of the very crime for which most of the lynchings take place. McKinley’s Defeat in Ohio. From the Pittsburg Post. Ex-Governor Foraker had his innings at the Ohio Republican cgnvention. His was the controlling Fonioot Sherman’s nor McKinley's. "He nomi- nated his own candidate for Governor —his devoted personal friend, the millionaire who provides him with the sinews of war—and then had himself nominated for the United States Senate to prevent Sherman and McKinley dealing from the bottom of the pack, as on other occasions. McKinley put all his eggs in the presidential basket, and his chances of the nomination are no better than Reed’s, Harrison's, Al- licon’s or Morton's. Foraker has got the Senatorship sure it the Republi cans carry the State this fall, and they probably will, : The Same Old Flim-Flam. The Same Old Sucker. From the Butler Democratic Herald. When will people learn to leave card sharks alone ? The latest Butler county victim in this line is Christian Schweinegruber, of Harmony. Chris- tian went to Zelienople on Monday to see Hunting’s circus, carrying $440 with him. He ran across a familiar old farmer who inticed him into a game of cards and Christian is now ahead $440 worth of wisdom, but minus that amount of cash. When he discovered that he had been fleeced Schweinegru- ber went to ‘Squire Niece, of Harmony, who sent him to Butler on Tuesday morning, where an information was made before 'Squire McAboy against three unknown men for defrauding the affiant out of his money. The victim is a young man and has only been in this county a few years. Ex-Representative Shaffer Takes a Stand on the Money Question. From the Renovo Record. The Eastern prees are a unit for the maintenance the “gold standard,” but the party which fails to give an ex- tended recognition to silver as a money will find when the votes are counted at the next Presidential election that it will be defeated. The west and the south are almost a unit for bimetalism. They recognize that the silver dollar is an honest dollar, and the working peo- ple will not allow the gold grabbers to crowd it out of circulation. The peo- ple are in favor of a safe and prudent use of both gold and silver. Distributing Fish. The state fish commission is distrib- uting a great many million fish in the state streams from the hatcheries of Erie county. Eighty millions were put in the Youghiogheny, the Cone- maugh and the Mononghela last week. The superintendent has distributed in the interior streams 3,000,000 brook trout, 2,000,000 European ground trout and 100,000 hybrid. The state fish commission has decided to try the propagation of blue pike for state streams and the inland lakes. The eggs will be taken at Lorain and San- dusky. Talk is Cheaper Than the Carriage. From the Philipsburg Bituminous Record. J. N. Casanova is talking about pur- chasing an electric carriage. The cost is $4,000. Spawls from the Keystone. —Aged Mary C. Lowe was found dead in bed at Altoona. —Aged Mary C. Lowe was found dead in bed at Altoona. —Commencement week at Muhlenberg College, Allentown, will begin on June 16. —The appropriation of $170,360 for the Huntingdon reformatory has passed both houses. —The bakers of Williamsport resolved to advance the price of bread to five cents a loar. —Erie reformers declare that Councils’ and Executive offices there must be in- vestigated. —In many of the collieries of the state incompetent and careless laborers are being discharged. —A new steam plow tested at Waynes- boro turns furrows aggregating 40 feet in width at one time. —The Hanover Coal Mines, near Wilkes- barre, have shut down, throwing out 200 men and boys. —After being sent to the Reading sta- tion house Edward Hitchins made three attempts to commit suicide. —If enforced the Compulsory Educa: tion law will compel 3)0 more pupils to attend school in Clinton county. —A train at Ashley, Luzerne county, killed young Henry Kline, and his mother witnessed the horrible accident. —Speakers at the Cumberland county Sunday school Association in Carlisle say: “There is not enough Bible taught.” —Deaf and unable to hear the approach- ing danger, agéd Mary Garrahan was killed by a train in Luzerne borough. —It is said there is considerable inter- est in Cambria county over the possible find of a silver mine near Johnstown. —Williamsport cannot afford to pave its streets at present, its load of indebt- edness having reached its legal limits. —Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks, Meade D. Detweiler, of Harrisburg, says that order’s factions will be cemented. —Flocks of owls are seen in all parts of Jefferson county and are much dreaded by the poultry breeders of that region. —Freight Conductor Francis Huntzing- er fell from a Philadelphia & Reading train near Rockville and lost both legs. —Paxton is the name of a new post of- fice in Hopewell township, Huntingdon county, with George Brumbaugh post- master. —John E. DuBois’ mill at DuBois has turned out 444,000 feet of sawed lumber in one day, which breaks all sawmill rec. ords. —The Central Pennsylvania company’s telephone line to Lewistown is being equipped entirely with long distance in” struments —Williamsport continues to have more or less trouble in collecting money to de- fray the expenses of its centennial cele- bration. —The county commissioners of Tioga county recently let contracts for the con- struction of six bridges, the aggregate cost being &12,700. —The colleries of the Philadelphia & Reading and the Lehigh Valley Compa- nies work three days this week, commenc- ing on Monday. —It keeps the towuship constable of Lycoming county busy running down and arresting people engaged in passing counterfeit money. —The Governor re-appointed Senator Gobin, of Lebanon county, to be Briga- dier General commanding the Third Brigade for five years. —George P. Hamilton, with his wife and seven children, has just reached Willams. port, having driven I600 miles from the western end of Kansas. —Dr. Samuel A. Martin, formerly of Lincoln University, was impressively in- augurated as president of Wilson College Chambersburg, Tuesday evening. —The wealthiest physician in West- moreland county, aged Dr. G. H. Lomison of Greensburg, was killed by a plunge from a window during an attack of verti g0. —'Squire William Shubert, for 59 years organist of Longswany church, Berks county, has sued to recover $259.50, which is the salary the church is said to owe him. —At Montoursville Thursday 5 year-old Walter Else fell on a stone step and bit off nearly a third of his tongue. What will be the result of the painful injury isnot yet known. —The business outlook for Portage and vicinity is brightening up. The mines on Trout Run are making fair time and people are feeling much more confident and cheerful. —An old tunnel, started at Tower City 40 years ago, is to be driven through the mountain by the Reading Company to Rausch Gap, and will open upa rich tract of coal land. —An Indian grave was opened Friday in a field near the mouth of Pine creek by relic hunters. A number of articles of Indian workmanship were found, allin a good state of preservation. —The tannery at Lilly is going to be en- larged to about twice its natural ‘size. The annex will be of Humelstown brown stone with Tennessee marble trimmings and will be in full blast for '96. —A Nittany valley correspondent states that there are many fields of grass in that section almost ruined by “sorrell.’” The farmers are discussing the cause and some way to prevent its growth. —The South Fork Record says itis re- ported that the Peunsylvania Railroad company has purchased 1,000 acres of farm land around Scalp Level. It is said that the farm of Messrs. Bantley and Shaffer of Johnstown were sold at a good price. —The basest creature on earth lives in Clearfield. He went into the new ceme- tery at that place a few days ago and af- ter gathering up all the glass jars, vases, etc., that had been placed on the graves for holding flowers, took them and smashed them on a headstone. —The DuBois Courier says the drillers of the Falls Creek oil well were at work Friday drawing the casing and every- thing of value will be taken away. The machinery will be set up on Boon’s : mountain, where Brockwayville parties are interested in putting down a wild cat well.