h. 8Y P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. He dared to be a DANIEL, Though he didn’t stand alone, He dared to think himself king bee When he was but a drone, —There is another dead duck in the political pond. — When rascals fall out honest men get their dues. A Democratic omen for this fall. — ABE MILLER, the Republican can- didate for Prothonotary, is tickled over Hastings’ downfall. ABE has always had it in for DAN. —There ie nothing but the brightest prospects ahead for Democrats. Repub- lican dissension and business prosperity are good conditions that confront us. —Even MALIN eays: “It’s all up with us.” For the enlightenment of any who don’t understand the above ; tus,” in this case, means MALIN, Hasr- INGS et al. —The Governor’s pat candidate for District Attorney will hardly use coal- oil to grease his campaign with. Coal oil would havea bad effect on the troub- led political waters of this county. —International troubles confront us again. France has one of our citizens penned up, England is getting hot over Nicaragua, China won’t protect our missionaries and we are having pen and ink scraps with State officials on all sides. —The St Louis has proven herself the fastest vessel afloat. She carried the stars and stripes at the rate of 23.6 knots an hour, in the English channel, on Tuesday. Like the Legislature that saw her launched the St. Louis is get- ting away with everything in sight. —An Alabama judge has decided that if a young man puts his arm around a marriageable girl’s waist it is prima facia evidence that he bas pro- posed. It might have been a sign when that judge was younger, but now-a- days—most men would become verita- ble BLUE-BEARDS were it true. —The announcement that real Mexi- can bull fighting is to be a part of the amusement provided by the managers of the cotton states exposition, at At- lanta, has brought considerable censure down upon the heads of those in charge. They have been equal to the emergency, however, and are now flooding the country with the announcement that nothing is to be killed in the fights— not even the bull. : —It is said that a Centre county vet eran is very much worried be- cause he has lost his buck-tail and won’t be able to have that mark of dis- tinguishment when the famous old regi- ment holds its reunion at Lock Haven, next month. It ought’nt to be hard to get all the buck-tails that anyone could carry now-a-days. Quite a number could be located through the guidance f the commitment docket in the Pro- thonotary’s office. —It is a noteworthy fact that Gov- ernor HASTINGS paid the fines of nine- teen vagabonds, who were in jail at New Castle, Del., last Monday, and thereby insured their immediate release. Why? We sincerely trust that it wasn’t because they were all Philadel- phians and his act was prompted by a hope that they would all return, forth- with, to the city and vote for him at the primaries that were held there next day. It looks that way, though, don’t it ? —1It might be well for the people of Pennsylvania, as well as those of neigh- boring States, wo have been watching the factional strife in the Republican party in this Commonwealth to ‘be for- warned of any shyster act that the ad- ministration might be forced to under- take. There is every probability that if QuAY wins over HASTINGS, in the fight now on, the latter will endeavor to laugh it off and say he didn’t care much ; that the convention chairmanship was all he was after. Remember, how- ever, that the Governor refused such a proposition to settle the trouble and there can be nothing but the defeat of his highest hopes should QUAY succeed. — Whatever the outcome of the fac- tional strife that is now rending the Re- publican organization in Pennsylvania the people of the State will have had an opportunity of seeing the innermost re- cess of the corrupt machine that has dominated this State for years. If the combine wins, it will be the supremacy of debauchery. If Quay wins, it will not be any particular confidence in his assertion that he is for ‘reform in poli- tiesyi’ but rather a rebuke to the most extravagant administration of state we have ever known. It will be a rebuke to a policy that bas made the judiciary a political weapon; a rebuke to a man who has created fat officas for his hench- men at the expense of public schools, asylums and charitable institutions, a rebuke to Standard oil favoritism that has put luxuries on the tables of mil- lionaires and left those of the common people without necessities. VOL. 40 _ STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. “BELLEFONTE, PA., AUG. 23, 1895 ie % NO. 33. The Choice Between Two Evils. The concluding stage of the disturb: ance between the Republican factions indicates the probability that Quay is going to come out on top. This result will not be due to the influence of any political virtue possessed by that notor- ious party manager. He is the same corrupt machine politician he has al- ways. been, since he acquired control of the Republican organization in this State. A jleopard could change his spots about as easily as Quay could change his political character. His probable victory will, in addition to its other significance, prove that in the management of party machinery he is superior to the political appren- tices whose swelled heads led them to believe that they could turn the Boss out and run the shop themselves. A fight between these factions pre- sents merely a choice between two such evils as the control of Quay or the su- premacy of a combination like that of Hastings, MarTiN and Macee. Al- though the one has no redeeming vir- tue, the other is so thoroughly mis trusted by the people that preference for the former is made possible That the rank and file of the Repub- licans are against the Combine has been made sufficiently evident by their votes, wherever they have been allowed an expression on the issue between the two factions. The primaries, where a direct vote. was permitted, have shown a decided preference for Quay, which can have no other meaning than that the Hastings administration has in- curred the disapprobation of the party that put itin power by such an im- mense majority. There is abundant reason why repu- table Republicans should be disgusted with a state administration which must share with a reprobate Legisla- ture the blame for the profligacy, ex- travagance, corruption and imbecility that characterized the proceedings of the last session. If the Legislature increased the state expenses, by creating new offices and increasing official salaries, it was the Governor that instigated that repre- hensible proceeding, in order that party workers might be rewarded and his personal following be venal Legislators were eager to pass bills desired by monopolistic corpora. tions, the Governor was just as ready -| to approve them wirh his signature. If an unnecessary Court was called into existence, by an act of legislation, the Governor, after giving his-assistance to that bad piece of work, promptly made use of the judicial appointments for the promotion of his factional designs, thereby committing a gross prostitu- tion of the appointive power, His entire administration has been converted into a factional machine, op- erating with the foolish design of se- curing the unattainable object of a per- sonal ambition. As his chief assistants and advisors in this work he has chosen the most notorions lobbyists of Pittsburg and Philadelphia. These are the reasons why the Re- publicans, where they have been given a chance'to vote on this tactional issue, have given a decided majority for Quay as against Hastings. There being no other alternative they prefer the leadership of so discreditable an old Boss to that ot a thoroughly de- bauched and disgraced state adminis- tration. It is not Quay’s strength, nor any confidence the people have in him, that has brought the results he is now elated over. It is the pitiable weakness of and distrust in the administration that has done the work. —Governor Hastings has visited a Delaware prison and made himself solid with the convicts. While at New Castle inspecting the Naval Brigade, last Monday, his curiosity led him to visit the county jail where the whip. ping post is located. The presence of his Excellencv attracted the attention of the prisoners, a number of whom asked his assistance on account of their being Pennsylvanians, and whose release depended upon the payment of fines. The Governor paid the fines of seventeen of them, who gratefully started for Philadelphia at once, and no doubt were on hand on Tuesday at the Republican primaries, and voted early and often in the interest of the i Hog Combine, enlarged. If, A Sensible Conclusion. A Democratic silver conference was held in Washington last week, it be- ing composed of members of the Dem- ocratic party, who are in favor of free silver coinage. The conclusion it came to did not indicate that the party is going to suffer to any extent from de- fection on the silver question. The members of the conference, among whom Senator Harris, of Ten- nessee, was the most prominent, were candid in declaring that their object was to secure the endorsement of free coinage at the next Democratic nation al convention and the nomination of a free coinage candidate for President. In the declaration of this purpose they exercised their undoubted right to ex- press their sentiments on a question which is clearly an open one. The party, as a party, is not committed either for or against the coinage of silver. Bat the conference, with commend- able fidelty to the Democratic organi- zation, further declared that if their views in regard to silver coinage should not be accepted by the nation- al convention such action would in no wise affect their allegiance to the party, nor prevent them from accept- .ing its platform and supporting its candidates. This is the right position and it will be found generally adopted by Demo. crats in the next national campaign. It is becoming evident that the mone- tary question is not going to be settled as a political issue. Silver is drifting out of the domain of politics, and is as- suming the character of a great inter- national interest, which no nation can determine single handed, but which re- quires inter-national action and agree- ment to bring it to a practical and ef- fective solution. Both Are Guilty Alike. The cowardice of Senator Quay and his followers is shown in their efforts to saadle all the corrupt and villianous | work of the last Legislature upon the | administration. The Lorp knows that ' Gov. Hastixgs and his Combine have ' enough to answer for in the settlement | of their own sins against the interests. {of the people and the honor of the Commonwealth, but to make them solely responsible for the joint acts of the Combine and the Quay gang, is I like punishing the thiet for the crimes of the receiver of stolen goods. In their just and bitter condemnation of the debauchery and corruption and ven- lican people should not forget that not one of the acts of which they com- plain, and which the Governor is rightfully denounced for approving, could have been enacted without the Both factions are alike responsible for the disgrace they have brought upon the State, and the debauchery that held high carnival among Republican Legislators. Things Are Different Now. For the year eading June 30, 1894, a McKINLEY year, the difference be- tween the deposits and withdrawals at the New York savings banks showed a net loss of $35,000,000. For the year ending June 30, 1895, a WiLsoN year, the difference at the same banks showed a net gain of $15,000,000. Business with savings banks is done principally by working people, and this increase of deposits compared with the loes of the previous year, shows the improved condition of the common people under a Democratic administra- gion. In looking back at the prostration of the McKINLEY period and compar- ing it with the present condition, it may be truly said that things are dif- ferent now. » —It is the opinion of C. P. Hunt: INGDON, who is one of the best judges of business matters, and has been studying the situation in this country and Europe, that we have entered a remarkable era of prosperity and will have five or six of the best business years this country has ever seen. Such a prospect is naturally gratifying to those who predicted and hoped that Democratic administration of the gov. ernment and Democratic fiscal policy would be attanled with rainoas coase- quences. ality of the last Legislature, the Repub- | aid and support of the Quay crowd. | Gratitying to Democrats. Dgmocrats derive much pleasure from takizg a retrospective glance at the course of industrial events since the adoption of the Democratic tariff policy, and a prospective view of the still greater benefits of that policy which the future has in store. . Every department of industry shows its beneficial effects, but particularly gratifying are the splendid achieve- ments of the woolen schedule under the Democratic tariff. There is no mistaking such a beneficent manifesta- tion as the advance in wages, in at least fifty woolen mills since the pres- ent season set in. In addition to this benefit, effecting the individual interests of the woolen workere, free wool and lower duties on manufactured woolen goods have given a great impetus to every branch of that industry. During the eleven nonths, that ended with the first of May, the expanding business of our woolen mills required the importation of over one hundred and eighty million pounds of wool, a quantity which ex- ceeded the importation of wool during a corresponding period under the Mc- KiNLey tariff by one hundred and thirty-six million pounds. This immense importation of raw material means more extensive opera- tions for the mill owners, more work and better pay for the workmen, and cheap. er and better fabrics for the people, as most of the wools imported are of the higher grades. That this has not in- volved any loss to the American sheep raizer is proven by the fact that while these importations have been going on the price of American wool has ad. vanced two cents a pound. There could not be a more splendid vindication of the Democratic principle of free raw materials. It is based on the economic fact that by giving our manufacturers the advantage of raw materials from whatever quarter they may be obtainable, manufacturing op- erations are given such a stimulus that our home raw materials are included in the increased demand, they being involved in the effects of the general prosperity. Contrary to the Republican doctrine that high duties are necessary for American industry, the reduction of the tariff by the Democrats-has placed the woolen manufacturers in the best position they have ever occupied, has increased the wages of the workmen and given them more to do, and will supply the American people with a better quality of woolen goods at lower | prices. It extends similar benefits to other branches of industrial produc- tion. : These effects of their tariff policy are certainly gratifying to Democrats, who, while carrying on their campaigns of education, had to suffer so much mierepresentation and abuse from parties “interested in maintaining a wonopolistic tariff. Quay Demands a Fair Count. Boss Quay takes the right position in asking that there should be a fair count and no gouging in making up the roll of delegates to the State Con- vention, ‘and that the State Com- mittee should be previously called to gether tor that purpose. In such a matter, as a practical pol- itician not over-stocked with honesty, “he knows how it is himself.” From long personal experience and practice in the methods of crooked politics he is fully competent to judge how there may be such a rascally manipulation of the rell asto make a majority for the side that does the manipulating, although it may really have the small- est number of fairly elected delegates. GILEEsoN, as chairman of the State Committee, is in a position to do this kind of work, Quay evidently understands the na- ture of his opponents, when he warns them against cheating in the count; and GriuxesoN justifies the suspicion that there is going to be crooked busi- ness in making up the roll by declin- ing to comply with the request that it should be done by the State Commit- tee. Itis true that this would be an unusual proceeding, but the instinct of an old practical machine politician, like Quay, teaches him that in this case he has an unusually slippery set of political rascals to deal with. Expensive Dan. From the Uniontown Genius of Liberty. A gentleman who saw the review at Glencairn remarked that the boys made a magnificent, warlike appear- ance. But the governor and the staff officers will have a chance to learn something more about the actual real- ities of war next month when we take that trip south. We will have a great time, and will enjoy some new sights. Theg speaker referred to the tour that Governor Hastings will take in September when he accompanies the old goldiers to the Chickamauga bat- tlefield. His excellency bas made up his mind that he will go in his most royal state when he takes that trip, which will be largely in the nature of a junketing tour, The late legislature appropriated the sum of $5,000 to pay the expenses of the veterans who will represent the Pennsylvania regiments but before the chief executive would sign the bill he made the peremptory demand that the expenses of himself and staff be paid from that appropria- tion, He insisted on going on the trip and taking a large party with him, including not only his staff but many invited guests. ; His most excellency is now said to demand no less than ten rooms and a parlor at the Look Out Inn which will cost not less than $60 a day. Be- sides this trifling item the governor will have carriages for his party, and inasmuch as they are very scarce, the liverymen are going to charge $5 a seat. This, with other enormous ex- penses for the king and his retinue will go a long way toward exhausting the Appropriation, 80 the commission : of old soldiers appointed for this pur- pose will have to go afoot. One of the members of the commission sdid : “Inasmuch as ‘General Hastings never saw a battle, it was thought best to give into his demands, so that he could fully and with the utmost ease view the many places where the blue and gray made red the green fields of the western conflict. Truly the com- mander of the Hog Combine is not dy- ing from too much modesty. The Foundation of Prosperity. From the New York World. The doubting Thomases as to pros- perous times have need to look at the facts, With a corn crop “wath $111, 000,000 and other crops in proportion, the country couldn't be otherwise than prosperous it it would. Our exports of agricultural products alone will bring more than two billion dollars of wealth to us this next year. All our factories are running on full time. Wages are being voluntarily increased on every hand. Our iron mills are unable to supply the demands made upon them, and their rejected orders are going to Europe, where they will pay wages that must come back to us in payment for bread and meat. Prosperity is the normal and usual condition of the great Republic. Depression and hard times are accidental and unfrequent incidents Is Silent On That Subject. From the Pittsburg Post. A leading wool dealer of Philadel- phia, Mr. L. M. Whiddin, just return- ed from a tour of observation of the the wool-growing districts of the west, says the western wool dealers will get $6,000,000 more for their wool this year than they expected.” This news should be conveyed to McKinley to il- luminate his next calamity speech. But we forget. McKinley has dropped calamity oratory, and is now eloquent on every subject but the tariff. Yes It Do. From the Butler Herald. . The most prominent Senator of the New Ycrk Legislature is Senator Lexow, and he has within the past two weeks declared that if the present prosperity of the country continues it will prove that the Republicans are wrong on the tariff issue and have been all the while. Senator Lexow is not & Democrat, but a protectionist Republican, formerly of the most ex- treme type, but he is also a reformer. The world do move. Heading Toward the Farmer. Froin the Phila. Record. The exports from this country in 1894 exceeded those of 1893 by over $40,000,000 ; and as three-fourths of th e commodities sent abroad consisted of farm products, the farmers should be in as good humor as are the manu- facturers over the results of Tariff Re- form. At last prosperity has headed for the open fields. An Impossibility Under a McKinley Tariff. From the Cambria Freeman. An Alabama firm secured a contract for water pipes for Tokio, against bid- ders in England, Germany and Bel- gium, What has become of the Eurc- pean pauper labor law now? This kind of thing was never done under the | McKinley law, let it be remembered. | | 1 ——If you waut printing of any dis- cription the WarcaMAN office is the place to have it done. Spawls from the Keystone. —A new Board of Health has been or. ganized at Shenandoah. —Grasshoppers are eating the buck- wheat in Pike county. —Illness caused Sylvanus Klapp, ‘at Stoudsburg, to commit suicide. —An electric shock from a trolley wire at York killed Charles Anthony. —Reading bicyclers have clubbed to- gether to buy wheels at first cost.: —A bicycler at Douglassville ran down Mrs. Frances Good, fracturing her leg. —After a red-hot fight Reading’s School Board voted to change the text books. —An explosion ofgasin a Girardville mine blew out the life of Patrick Howe. —A severe storm visited Allegheny county Sunday, doing considerable dam- age. * —Mennonites baptized a number of converts in the river at Spring City Sun- day. —In six months there haye been 21:2 births and only 996 deaths in Schuylkill County. ' —Failing to hear an approaching train at Reading, Henry Fasig, 2 painter, was killed. —Natural gas has been struck at Toby- hanna, Monroe county, on Charles Wen- ner’s farm. —Pottsville citizens want their wards to be known by numbers instead of names, at at present. —Thrown from a carriage by a runaway team at Mt. Carmel, J. W, Pershing wag fatally hurt. —A pillow rolled upon an infant, Doro- thy Sullivan, while she slept at Shamo- kin, suffocating her. —Suffering from melancholia in the Lancaster Insane Asylum, Mrs, Mary Grog strangled herself. —Three prisoners, Frank Neal, Louis Roseburger and Michael Wright, escaped from the Kittanning jail. —Mrs. A. B. Brown has been appointed fourth-class postmaster at Reafren, vice James Patrick, removed. —Walking on the track of the jLehigh Valley Railroad, J. H. Tompkins, of Pitts- ton, was run over and killed. —Being seized with cramps while swim- ming in the river at Plymouth, young Richard Davis was drowned. —While fishing with a friend at Le Roy, Bradford county, Polk Hickok committ- ed suicide by drowning himself: —Thieves stole 8100 worth of tobacco and cigars from the Philadelphia & Read” ing warehouse, at Hellmandale. —A society has been formed at Tremont to mark the sites of former Indian vil- lages in Schuylkill county and vicinity. —Accused. of passing counterfeit ten. cent pieces William L. Dunmire, of Punx- sutawney, was sent to Blair county jail. —In a fight at Fordham, on the Monon- gahela River, Peter Ferris was shot and severely injured by Abraham Minney. —A burglar whom George Steinbacher found in his bedroom at ,Williamsport fired a bullet through the latter’s clothes. —Strikers at Creedmore mine of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, ° near Pittsburg, returned to work Friday. —The body of a man was seen floating in the Delaware River at Taylorsville, Bucks county, but it could not be recov- ered. 2 —Surviving veterans ofthe Forty-eighth Regiment, who served throughout the en- tire war, held a reunion at New Philadel- phia. —At Shamokin Thomas Edwards was struck by a trolly car, and William Ja- rass by a locomotive each receiving fatal injuries. —Hundreds of Irishmen from Western Pennsylvania met at Pittsburg and advo. cated physical force to free Ireland from British rule, —It is feared that little Russell Gar- recht, of Brooklyn, who was recently bit. ten by a dog at Easton, is suffering from hydrophobia. —While working on a Pennsylvania Railroad train at Columbia, Brakeman William B. Cqok, of Harrisburg, fell and was cut to pieces. —Lightning killed a cow at Boliver Run McKean county, while D. Dykeman and his little son were milking, and both were badly shocked. —Miss Ella Templin; of Birdsboro, who it was thought was fatally injured by having a chair pulled from under her, isnow able to walk. —Lancaster Court decided that the ri- val Evangelical denominations at Man. heim occupy alternately the Seybeg) Church temporarily. —DBecause the girl's parents objected to their marriage, Miss Jessie Cutts and Gus Strauss, of Limestone, Lycoming county, fled to New York and were wed. —Edward O'Donnell, of Shenandoal, has served as gatekeeper for the Lehigh Valley Railroad for fifteen years without losing a day, not even Sunday. —F. C. Job, elected a State delegate in the Third district of Schuylkill county, is arranging to take every delegate who voted for him to the State Convention. —The fifth annual convention of the Williamsport District Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal church will be held in Mifflinburg, Pa., on September 13, 14 and 15, 1895. —The oats crop of John Jonas of Nip- penose valley, was threshed last week. Tliree hundred sheaves turned out sixty bushels. The entire crop averaged sixty- six bushel to the acre. —Thieves entered three houses at Falls Friday night. Two suspicious characters were arrested, but as there was no proof of their having been conngeted with the robbery they were released. —A robber broke into the residence of P. B. Zentmyer at Clearfield, a few nights ago and got some money, watches and jewelry. He escaped, but not until after a scuffle with Mrs. Zentmyer. who dis" played considerable nerve. —During the prevalence of a terriffic electric storm in Huntingdon county on Friday Melvin B. Crum, aged 22 years, and two horses were struck by lightning and instantly killed. The young man had been plowing in a field and sought shelter under a tree. The tree was struck and literally splintered to pieces.