oe a Ink Slings. —Will the poor people of Centre county endorse HASTING’S for signing the oil bill by voting to make his pet their district attorney. —QUIGLEY is very unpopular at his old home in Eagleville, where he is ac- cused of having forgotted the boys with whom he once ran barefooted. —A gold craze has struck Nebraska. Poor, ill-fated State. What a God- send it would be if the report were real- ly true and the starving populace would become suddenly rich. —A new carriage in which our Governor rides cost $1,500, He'll hardly look at poor little ¢‘Dandy’’ and that yaller BRADLEY wagon when he gets home from Harrisburg. —In Texas an extra session of the Legislature recently saved the honor of that State. In Pennsylvania it would be different ; an~exira session of qur Legislature would well know what it would mean. —The eternal fitness of things is seen in the report that KELLOG, the most promising candidate for half-back on the Cornell foot-ball team, “will hardly make much at the game’ because the poor fellow has a bald head. —The Clearfield county farmer who conceived the idea of clessing a baby show under the heading, ‘articles of domestic manufacture,” deserves a medal for long-headedness from the county agricultural society out there. —The consolidation of the three big street railway systems in Philadel- phia marks the beginning of the end of whatever of comfort and efficiency of service that city has enjoyed from her street railways in the past. Where there can’t be competition there will be little regard for public needs. —If there is any reason under the sun why a Democrat should vote for either ABr MILLER or HENRY QUIGLEY we would like to know of it. Both of them are unfit for the offices to which they aspire and would have to either neelect their work or hire it done at an auditional expense to the county. —The Democratic land-slides in the cities of Indianapolis, Ind.,and Chatta= nooga, Tenn., augurs well for great Democratic victories this fall. The tide has turned and Democracy will be car- ried on to victory. Get to work every one of you in Centre county. All we want is to get the vote out. Victory will then be assured. —The proposed action of the Ameri- can Kennel club, whereby the exhibit of dogs with cropped ears and tails will be forbidden at future bench shows, is another step toward the more humane treatment of dumb animals, though it will detract much from the ferocious looks of bull dogs. When cropping stops there will be a ‘tail-holt’’ by which the latter class of canines can be pulled out of fights. —The Democrat seems to have effect. ually answered the Gazette's charge that the Democrats have not befriended the old soldiers. ‘When a comparison is made the truth reveals itself that our party has given more to the defenders of the Union than the Republican party has, and if ABE MILLER tries to enlist your sympathy, because he is a battle scarred veteran, ask him why his own party hasn’t looked after him. —In 1890 there were 5249 Demo. cratic votes polled in Centre county, while last fall there were only 3967. The difference of 1282 is what we want to get out next month. With the same vote that we polled in 1830 the Demo- cratic ticket would bave a majority of 462 over a Republican vote as large as was HASTING’S vote of 4787 last fali. It was abnormally large, however, so you see it is merely a question of getting out the vete. See that it is done. —Scientists are trying to prove that the Garden of Eden was at the north pole. We are not much exorcised over the exact spot where ApAM and Eve held forth, but we would just like to drop » remark about the utter ridicu- lousness of this north pole location. Doesn’t the bible say that Eve’s only raiment was a fig leaf. Now whether she wore it in the shape of bloomers or, a8 tradition would have us believe, in the shape of a miniature apron, anyone would know that in a north pole region ghe would soon have perished. —1It is not often that an editor gets caught in any of the little games he at- tempts to play, but CHARLEY BAN- GERT of the Falls Creek Herald, is one of the unfortunate. About two weeks ago he started a ‘big potato contest’’ in which he induced farmers to bring in all the big potatoes they could find and run the chance of getting the paper for a year. A few days ago CHARLEY became the father of twins and now every one ie ‘“‘on to’ the potato contest racket. The twins appeared before he had scooped enough potatoes to do them all winter. Demacral _VOL. 40 BELLEFONTE, PA., OCT. 11, 1895. a STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NO. 40. Democrats of Centre County. This time three years ago, you, with the people of the county generally, were suffering from the effects of Re. publican mis-rule as no people any- where on the face of the globe had ever before suffered. Factories of all kinds were at a standstill ; mills were idle ; furnaces were fireless ; mines were closed up ; the wages of the few working men who could find employment were go- ing down, down, down ; the prices for agricultural products were lower than ever known before ; strikes were uni- versal ; tramps blockaded the high- ways ; the militia was in arms as at Homestead, keeping the starving populace in order, and on every hand was the evidence of euch distress and such times as had never before been experienced, and we pray God never again may be felt. This was under Republican rule and the result of Republican laws and ad- ministrations. You as Democrats were not back- ward in telling your neighbors that the condition of affairs then, was at- tributable to the mis-rule ot the party in. power. You believed what you were saying, and you were right. You demanded a change of admin- istration and many of your neigh- bors voted with you for a change. It came. With it is coming the pros- perity you predicted. On every side and from every quarter comes the evi- dence of revived industries, of restored confidence, of better times. Theres demand for the products of your farms and the prices of that which you raise are advancing ; furnaces that were out of blast then are now working day and night ; every ore ming in the country it being worked to its utmost capacity ; wages have increased—tramps have decreased ; factories and mills and mines have started up and every part of the country has evidence of the wel come change you worked for and se- cured. Republican politicians are trying to | pubhc affairs in steal the credit that belongs to you | and your party—the credit of securing | the better times and the general pros. | perity that now blesses the ccuntry. | They eay it is the consequence of their | success last fall ; that the people had no confidence in Democratic principles or Democratic rule and that the pros- pect of going back to Republican methods and Republican domination has brought about the change for the better. You know how wrong this claim is. You know how false it is. You know that the bettered condition of affairs is traceable alone to wise Democratic laws and to careful and economical Democratic administration. Shall this claim of the Republicans be sustained? It ie for you to say. The result of the elections four weeks hence will tell. A Republican victory would mean that the people believe it was Republican success last fall, and not Democratic legislation, that secured us the better times. Can Democrats af- ford to allow this belief to take hold of the people? Can they afford to be robbed of the credit that is due them, and have the country go back to its condition in 1892? This is the question we leave to you, Democrats of Centre country? Is your party right? If so show, that you believe it by getting out every vote you can to sustain and encourage it. ——Col. Francis JORDAN for {many years president of the board of truet- ees of The Pennsylvania State College, was practically financially ruined by a decision of the supreme court, on Mon- day. The Harrisburg Telegram, the property of his son, had passed into the hands of the sheriff when Col. Jor- DAN endeavored to secure himself, for the heavy endorsing he had done for his son, by levying on a $20,000 press purchased in Chicago. The Dauphin county court decided in his favor, but the decision has been reversed and the old gentleman is a great loser. ——Two better, more conscientions and painstaking officials have never served Centre county, in their respect- ive capacities, than prothonotary Smita and district attorney SINGER. They are both candidates for re-elec- tion and if the best interests of the tax-payers are to be served they will be elected. w A Worthless Endorsement. Its endorsement by the Republican state committee can hardly increase the public confidence in Quay’s prom- ises of reform. That committee -is chiefly composed of henchmen who graduated in machine politics under the old Boss himself, and with such a reputation their endorsement of his re- form program amounts to about the same as one bankrupt endorsing the | notes of another. What occasion is there for reform in this State, anyhow ? What is out of joint, and who put it out? Ever since the beginning of the war, a peri od of thirty-five years, public affairs in this State have been almost exclusive- ly in the hands of the Republicans. There has not been a law, a policy, or any measure of legislative action in all that time, that did not come from a Republican source. If there have been mal-administrations, bad laws, bad executive action and bad manage- ment of the State revenue, that party must be responsible fordhem, and that there has been all this has been ad- mitted by their promises of ‘reform. If there was nothing wrong there would he nothing to be reformed. But are the men who have produced a cor- rupt condition the proper ones to puri-' fy it? Quay has been at the head of this party in the State for years, and has controlled its policy. After having been chiefly instrumental in putting the condition in which they are, he now announces that he is going to reform them. Are not his pretensions a good deal like those of an old bawd who should an- nounce her intenfion of bringing about a reformation of the virtue in a com- munity which she had done so much to impair ? The Farmers Won't be Fooled. That the Republicans want to fool the farmers in one more campaign is evident from an assertion in the reso- lutions of the New York Republican state convention to the effect that they have been “robbed of millions of dol- lars through free wocl and the reduc- tion of the tariff upon agricultural products by the WiLson tariff bill.” That tariff has been in operation a few weeks over a year. During that year, including the fiscal year between June 30, 1894 and June 30, 1895, the imports of articles of food and live ani- mals amounted in value to $363,228, 274, as against $379,795,536 in the preceding year which was exclusively under the McKINLEY act. If the farmers have been “robbed” it must have been by the importation of foreign agricultural and animal products, and yet itis seen that dur- ing the past years, under the WiLson tariff, the value of such importations was over sixteen million dollars less than during the McKINLEY year. The Republican - politicians think that any lie will do to fool the farm- ers, and they have no regard for facts and figures when they get one up for campaign use. A Record to be Proud Of. The two leading acts of Democratic policy under the CLEVELAND adminis- tration has been the repeal of the SHERMAN silver purchasing law and the enactment of the WriLson tariff bill. The results of these two acts speak for themselves. The first relieved the finances from that disorder and panic which over- took them when the treasury was be- ing drained by the enforced purchase of silver which the government had no use for. The other relieved the country from the effects of an oppressive tariff law that fostered monopoly, depressed la: bor, and increased the cost of the nec- _essaries of life. The consequences of these two Democratic acts are seen in’ the re-es- tablished credit of the government, and the easy condition of the finances as the effect of their being placed on a | sound basis ; and in the improvement of business, the increased employment of labor, the advancement in wages, and in general prosperity taking the place of hard times. With such a record the Democratic ' Centre, that they will never hear them party can safely ask the country to ren- der its verdict at the polls. | parallel, they had to resort to an as- Personal Liberty in New York. The line of policy assumed by the Republican party in New York is something unprecedented in American politics. It has declared openly and unblushingly in its platform against personal liberty. The people of that State are suffering from the infliction of a sumptuary law that restrains their personal freedom. This enactment was intended as an ex- cise measure, but it has been perverted to the purposes of fanaticism and is used as a meaops of individual and eo- cial annoyance. It applies to all the State, but bas been made particularly oppressive and offensive in New York city. By the enforcement of this intoler- ant measure a harmless indulgence is converted into a penal offense. The common citizen is hounded like a criminal if he is suspected of indulging in his favorite beverage on an inter- dicted day of the week, while the wealthy are placed above such perse- culion by their pecuniary condition. The humble beer saloon is watched by the police, while liquor is allowed to flow freely in the aristocratic club room. It is contended by the upholders of personal liberty and equal rights that this law, originally intended for reve- nue, is being directed from its legiti. mate object, and is not only being made an instrument of Puritanical bigotry, but a means by which the private rights and eocial freedom of the citizen are violated, and is doubly obnoxious on account of its discrimina- tion between different classes. The reasonable demand is made by those who suffer from this law that the people shall be allowed to deter- mine by popular vote, for their differ- ent localities, whether there shall or sball not be a discontinuance of its operations. The Republican -State convention has declared its opposition to this principle ot popular sovereignty. It denies to the people the right to de- termine a question that involves the highest principles of free citizenship, and put itself on record as the up- holder of Puritanic intolerance, sump- tuary restriction and fanatical oppres- gion. ——There will be no trouble in giy- ing a good old-fashioned Democratic majority in Centre county this fall, if the Democratic vote is brought to the polls. The people are with us and all the Democrats need to do is to have grit enough to get out and vote. AND THIS THEY INTEND TO DO. mE SE———— An Unconsitutional Court. It could hardly be otherwise than that a law, conceived with such a par- tisan design as that contemplated in the formation of the superior court, should have some great constitutional defect about it, and this defect is point: el out by M. E. OLmsteap, Fsq. of Harrisburg, one of the ablest constitu- tional lawyers in the State, who main- tains that the provision of the law which practically limits the vote of the elector to six candidates when there are seven to be elected, is con- trary to the constitution, which in- sures to every qualified voter the right to vote for a candidate for every elec- tive office, except such offices as are expressly excepted in its provisions. It was the outrageously partisan in- tention of the framers of this law to secure for the Republicans six out of the seven judges of the superior court, and in their endeavors to effect this grossly indecent purpose, which as a specimen of partisan meanness has no sault upon the fundamental law of the State. There may not be time enough be- fore the election for the supreme court to act on the question of the constitu- tionality of the law that has created this new court, but the people should render their verdict in regard to it by defeating the candidates put forward by the schemers who ‘devised this un- constitutional law for a partisan pur- pose. 22 ——Last fall the Republicans had the bulge on us and haven't got done crowing about it yet. This is our fall and Democrats should be prepared to snow them under so deep, here in old crow again. a Loyalty From a Southerner. Extracts from Henry Watterson’s Speech at the Louisville Camp-fire. Comrades—for under the star flower- ed flag of the Union all who truly love il are comrades—in the name of the city and State I bid you the heartiest welcome. I have been in every State and terri- tory of the Union, and I can truly say that I never came away from any one of them where I had not found some- thing to make me proud of my country, Allthat I do contend for is that you will find here more kind of good things and more of them than you will find anywhere else on the face of the globe. Let the dead past bury its dead. You, at least, have no reason to complain. You got away with as many of us as we got away with you. The brave men who have gone to heaven have long ago settled the account before that court where all is made right that so puzzles us here. “God reigns and the government at ‘Washington lives.”” That should satis- fy us all. If there is any more fighting to be done, let’s go and lick England and take Canada ; let's go and lick Spain and take Cuba ; let’s go and lick creation, and make the unspeakable Turk vote the American ticket We can do it. Shoulder to shoulder, with the world before us and old glory above, who shall stop us ? ‘No surrender, No pretender Pitted together in many a fray. Lions in fight And linked in their might, The North and the South will carry the day.” All that is wanted in this great land of ours is for tho people—the plain peo- ple, as Lincoln called them—to realize, from Maine to Texas, from Florida to Oregon, that there is nothing whatever to divide them. They are the same people. The monstrosity of slavery out of the way, the Nation having actually had its new birth of freedom, ‘what but ignorance and prejudice is to hinder the stalwart American in Minnesota from taking the hand of the stalwart Ameri- can in Georgia and calling him ‘‘broth- er?” ° Both came from a common origin—good old Anglo-Saxon and Scotch-Irish stock, and are welded to together by common interest and a common destiny. Bone of one bone, flesh of one flesh, national aspirations and fellowship. God made this conti- nent for us and consecreated it for free- dom. The transfiguration of ‘nature not less than the transfusion of blood clearly indicates the will of God. Who dares dispute his awful works ? Why Deny Them Such Rights. From the Doylestown Democrat. The latest news from Cuba is to the effect the insurgents have organized a government with a President, members of the cabinet and generals for the army. This is all very well, and just what other people do, when setting up for themselves, but the most important consideration is can they maintain this dignity ? From the way Spain is hedg- ing in the insurgents with troops and a double cordon of gunboats, they may expect one of the toughest struggles of recent times before they succeed, if they succeed at all. Organizing a govern- ment, if only on paper, will give the cause of the patriots some strength, and should this be followed by the United States granting them belligerent rights, the insurrection will immediately as- sume a significance it could not other- wise have. With belligerant rights it would not be long before Cuba would have armed cruisers on the high seas. If money be needed to fit them out, plenty of it can be found in the United States. The Legacy of a Dead Politician and General. From the Washington D. C. Intelligencer, General Mahone's total disappear- ance from Virginia politics would leave the Populists free from a certain reproach in ‘their recent connection with one who has brought too much trouble on the State, and even to his own friends, to impart anything but unpopularity to any new movement. Mahone’s enemies have been unfair in attempting to rob him of his military reputation which he won with gal- lantry and ability all during the civil war. But his political career stamped itself upon the State in euch charac- ters as cannot be anything but discred- itable to his associates in any recent movement. The Republicans and Populists have his legacy of a very shrewd plan of coalition against unfair elections and they will be better oft witbout the author of it. Five Hundred Gudgeons. From the Easton Argus, It is reported that 500 young men were misled by a report that a rich Chinese merchant proposed to pay a fortune to any American who would marry his daughter. That ai least is the number of letters directed to the mythical Chinese Croesus, lying un- claimed in the San Francisco post-of- fice. Two things are ‘proved by the instance. One is that newspapers are wonderful advertising mediums, even to the solicitation of a husband. An- other is that there are plenty of per- sons who can be tempted into the most ridiculous acts by the glare of sudden riches. ——Subseribe for the WarcaMan and get all the news of the county. Spawls from the Keystone. -—Lebanon’s reservoirs are empty. --The State firemen have deserted Reuding and gone home. —Greensburg is trying to raise funds for the erection ot a hospital. —York county’s fair this Sl more successful than for many years. —Reading’s smallest man, Jeremiah Ludwig, 39 inches tall, died of old age. —A child at Kenilworth thrust a hair. pinin A. 8S, Shantz’s arm, and he may lose it. —The Hanover Record says that apples are selling for five cents a bushel in that region. —While assisting at an Allentown fu- neral, on Saturday, Mildrum Conner drop- ped dead. —A bursting fly wheel in the Home- stead electric light plant killed engineer John Bowman. —The Pennsylvania state council of Daughters of Liberty met Tuesday at Johnstown, —It is expected that Spangler’'s new school house will be ready to occupy by Monday next. —Pottstown Hospital managers elected T. J. March a trustee to succeed the late Henry G. Kulp. —Pottsville is again without funds,and a loan of $10,000, the limit allowed by law, will be created. —Caught between a mine prop and a car at Pittston, Charles Williams—syas squeezed to death. o —Charged with passing counterfeit sit ver dollars at Punxsutawney Jack Wright was jailed. — —Over 100 Poles, Huns and Italians were naturalized on Saturday in the Schuyl- kill county Courts. —While putting paper in a stove at Lebanon the little daughter of Charles Field was fatally burned. —Secretary of the Commonwealth Frank Reeder and his tamily have re. turned to Easton from Europe. —The explosion of a boiler at Shamokin fatally injured engineer Daniel McIntyre and caused $2000 money damage. —Picking a dynamite cartridge with a key and exploding it, Joseph Beamis. of Pittston, was critically mangled. —A charter was granted to the Pocono spring water ice company, of Naomi Pines, Monroe county ; capital, $100,000. —For stealing $18 from a Montgomery county man William Moore, of Philadel- phia, was sent to prison for 18 months. —Owing to the heavy death rate ag Scranton, the health board urges all the people to boil all the water they drink. —The Evangelical association in Leb. anon county has begun a lawsuit to oust Rev. W. H. Hartzle from St, Paul's church —Little Corson Laukhoff, living on the Wesh Mountain, Lancaster, was shot and critically wounded by Milton Fryberger. —The Middleburg Post says it is again rumored that the railroad laid out from Selinsgrove to Mifitintown will shortly be built. —Rev. H. C. C. Astwood, colored, of Harrisburg, will sue the school board for turning his children out of a white school. —Owing to the frequent suspensions of work at the colliery, Oscar Stein, a miner, near Pottsville, committed suicide with poison. —Elwood Gray, accused of stealing a horse from Mrs. R. A. Gould, of West Not. tingham, was captured near Oxford on Saturday. —The body of ex-Senator John W- Hughes, who was murdered at Antonito, was taken to his Sharon home for burial Monday. —Captain M. N. Baker, of Corry, and Miss Cora Stuchfield, of Allegheny coun- ty, have been appointed deputy factory inspectors. —Last Thursday little Irvin Bauer, son of Samuel Bauer, at Pottstown, was sent ona trifling errand, and he has not yet returned. —Il1 health caused Frank Anthony, employed in the office of the Carpenter Steel Works, Reading, to commit suicide with poison. —The Pittsburg bureau of health Mon- day reported seven new cases of scarlet fever, six of diptheria and eleven of typhoid fever. . —The Evangelical Lutheran Minister- ium of Pennsylvania is in session at Or wigsburg, with Rev. H. A, Welier, of that place, presiding. —Peter, a 12-year old son of William Eisel, a Homestead merchant, fell from a third story of a new building Monday and received fatal wounds, —Damages for $1850,50 were recovered at Pottsville by C. B. Wagner from the Le- high & Wilkesbarre coal company for culm washed upon his land. —Rev. E. D. Weigle, paster of the first Lutheran church, Altoona, who resigned to go to. Mechanicsburg, has changed his mind and will remain where he is. —A Philadelphia tobacco dealer, Eli Shertzer, will be tried at Lancaster on a charge ofswindling a bank by alleged false pretense in rating his financial cone dition. — Another ineffectual attempt was made Saturday at York to sell the tidewater eanal and columbia dam to satisfy claims of $1,000,000. A bid of $30,000 was. . made. —The first National bank of Kane has been organized by C. H. Kemp, M. W. Mofiit, E. Swanson, J. II. Groves, G. W. Campbell, T. KX. Hoskins, C. H. Heim, W. J. Armstrong. —Harry W. Hannah was nominated without opposition, Monday night by Re- publicans of the Fourth ward, Pittsburg to fill the unexpired term in select coun- cil of Henry Metzgar, deceased. —Mise Corr, of Marion Centre, Indiana county, who was tried for killing her 2 year old child last spring by throwing it into a well, was found not guilty, the jury declaring her to be weak-minded. ~The Hollidaysburg city councils grant. ed a water supply to the car shops, loco- motive works and 5,000 employees of the Pennsylvania railroad company at Al- toona during the continuance of the wa- ter famine in that city. Hollidaysburg is the only town in Juniata valley that has a good water supply. Six communities are dependent upon the local resevoir. an