BY RP. GRAY MEEK. i Ink Slings. Now the proudly strutting turkey Is growing slightly jerky, AS he catches daily glimpses of the hatchet ; From that blade his thoughts go changing To his neck, trim and ranging, Where he knows Thanksgiving time will make him catch it. or —The new woman will have her own weigh if she has to drop a nickle in . the slot to get it. —A vote for MILLER means a vote for a man who is inno wise competent to fill the office he seeks. —Remember that you can vote for on- ly six candidates for judge of the super- ior court. The supreme court has ruled thus. —SHERMAN’S book, like SHERMAN'S march to the sea, is a work that will tickle his friends and embitter his ene- mies. —A cold storage company at Wilkes- barre has gone into the hands of receiv- ers. This chilly weather probably pre- cipitated such a move. —The old woman tactics of the Ga- zette are creating much laughter among the people who read that paper. - When- ever it finds itself cornered it cries ; Liar, liar, liar. . —The announcement that a five per cent dividend has been declared in fa- vor of the Keystone national bank creditors will not be sufficient extenua- tion for the pardon of BARDSLEY. : —The Blair county commissioner, who has been convicted of malfeasance in office, will realize that public office is a public trust” by the time he pays his fine and is removed from his position. —A Kansas theatrical company is playing the ‘“‘fatted calf’ through the West. The ambiguity of the name leads us to wonder whether it isn’t an advertising dodge of some pad manu- facturing concern. —-The latest gossip among writers has it that Max O’RELL intends to retire and live in seclusion for the rest of his i days. We sincarely trust that MARK | TwAIN’s combing down had nothing to do with this step. —ZRepublican political tactics will corrupt anyone. The latest is from Ohio where a minister, who wanted to Demaera To Your Tents. O Isracl! Democrats, it will be only about ten days from the day this issue of the WATCHMAN reaches you until the elec- tion ! . Do you realize how short the time is? Do you appreciate the importance of the questions at issue here in Centre county ? Do you fully conceive of the work that is to be done? In their cowardly, quiet way—the same way in which a skunk robs your hen roost—the Republicans are work- ing to steal the county again. They are doubly anxious to succeed this fall in order that a different result may not be taken as a rebuke to their state ad- ministration. This is their great fear. They don’t want Centre county—the home of Governor HasTiNGs—to speak out against his coal oil legislation ; against the increased state expendi- tures that have been created since he became Governor, or against the gen- eral debauchery, extravagance and corruption that have characterized his ad ministration. The truth is, the leaders of the Re- publican party here, in the county, wouldn't care a bobee 1f both their lo- cal and state tickets were snowed un- der to the extent of 1,500 majority if it wasn’t that they fear the resultjwould reflect upon their Governor and his acts. They are ae sick of paying twelve cents a gallon for the oil that furnishes them light as” are the Demo- crates. They feel the extra taxes re- be re-elected to the Legislature, offered to sell his vote to a Democratic nominee for United States Senator for $1,500. —Do the voters of Centre county in- tend electing QUIGLEY to be district attorney ? Vote for him if you want to endorse HASTINGS the man who made it possible for the Standard oil company to take whatever it pleases from your pockets. —Mrs. JaMEs BrRowN PotrTER has declared that ‘society is shallow, dull and heart breaking, and art is the only thing worth living for.” If this is really a conviction with her, and many critics are to be believed, it is a great wonder that she doesn’t lie down and die. —If the Gazette thinks the fact of Governor HAsTINGS having bestowed his friendship on QUIGLEY is enoufh to warrant that young man’s election to the district attorneyship, its editor ought to talk to some Republicans in this town who reveled in this friendship (?) previous to the Governor's election. They can tell him what. it is. —The fellows who are continually poking fun at mother-in-laws will find 8 boomerang in the fact that Joux S. ‘WricHT, of Burnside, Pa., who has to answer a charge of counterfeiting could find only one person in the country who would bail him. And that one was his mother-in-law. Here is one case, at least, where this much abused class proved itself unworthy public ridicule. — Wednesday's Pittsburg Times, the Republican administration paper in the western part of the State, came out with a long account of CARNEGIE’ having secured a contract to furnish 1,100 tons of double forged armor plate to the Russian government ; the contract being procured in competition with the big- gest manufacturers in England and Germany. So much for American abil- ity to compete in the world’s markets \ ithout the nourishment of McKin+ LEY’S robber tariff. —A candidate who is too dumb to: distinguish an unraturalized Hungarian from an intelligent looking American voter ought to be ashamed to ask the people of Centre county to make him their district attorney. Last Friday QUIGLEY went out to the VALENTINE iron company’s works to electioneer and just for fun, the gentleman who was show. ing him around introduced him to a lot of Huns, all of whom QUIGLEY seized up- on ard asked them to throw a stone in his garden. ‘Twould have been better had he asked those wondering Huns to quired to pay the increased salaries of Republican officials as well as do Democrate, They know that they BELLEFONTE, PA. RO STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Why He Should be Rebuked. The reason given by the Republican county leaders why this county should give a Republi¢an majority this fall is the very strongest reason why it should roll up an old time Demo- cratic majority. Hastings having carried the county a year ago his supporters contend that a Democratic majority this year would be construed as a reprimand of his state administration, which they claim ought not to be. But does not Hastings, both as a politician and as an executive officer, deserve rebuke ? - Should he not be rebuked for the misrepresentations he made in last year's campaign, when he sounded the howl of calamity through the State, and deceived the people in regard to the cause of the business depression ? Should he not be rebuked for the ef- forts he ‘made to retard the return of prosperity in order to gain a political advantage, and for his misrepresenting the Democratic tariff policy which has since revived the industries of the country ? Does he not deserve a reprimand for his profligate increase of the state ex- penses ; for the unnecessary offices created and salaries enlarged, in which he was chiefly instrumental ; for the prostitution of his executive power to such corporations as the Standard oil compaay, the city street railway com- binations, and other like character ? Is be not worthy of the severest re- bule for so using his official signature that light is made dearer in every household, and laboring men going to and from their work on street cars must pay increased fare ? ? Should not censure.be heaped upon him for fastening a useless and expen- sive court upon the State for no other object than to set up a political ma- chine that will drag the judiciary through the mire of partisan politics ? Will his supporters have the face to have local candidates, neither of whom deserve their party support and oeither | of whom are competent to fill the | positions they were: named for, and | were it not for the political effect on the aspirations of Governor Hast | INGS, that an overwhelming reversal : of last fall's majority would have, : they would gladly see the county go back to ite former Democratic stand- : ing and would ofter no resistance. But with all the resistance they can offer : with all the eueaking work they | can do ; with all the appeals they can | make to the rank and file of their party, they can't get the honest people of this county to say by their votes or by staying away from the elections, that they approve of a party, and its legielation, that almcst doubled the cost of every man’s light in the county: that added to the taxes of every name upon the tax list ; that placed the en- tire State at the mercy of corporations and that refused to do do the slight. est thing for the farmers, -the laborer or the public generally. You have it in your power, Demo- crats, to say whether this county will endorse by its vote, the sins, the shortcomings and the outrages upon the tax-payers by the last Republican Legislature and its Governor. You have the vote to rebuke, repudiate and condemn them, if you get il out. It will take some work, but who among you will refuse to do his full share to show what this county thinks of the acts we hdve referred to. Scores of honest Republicans stand ready to help you. Times and circumstances “arein your favor. Your manhood, your self-respect, to say nothing of your own interest or fealty to your party, calls you to go to work and show that no quiet-sneaking, midnight efforts, on the part of your opponents, can place your county in the position of endors- ing an administration and Legislature that everyone of you condemn from the bottom of your hearts. Democrats, to work ! See your neighbors! Get them to work! Get-home those who are away ! Arrange to have every Democrat at the polls, and show the world what Centre county thinks of corporate sub- Z have thrown some eense, instead of stones. serving, official extravagance and coal ask the people of this county to give a Republican majority in order that such a record as this may be endorsed? { Does not such a record deserve the 8everest rebuke that can be given by the heaviest Democratic majority ? An Iron.Clad Fact. to ponder on the fact that in the year i of our Lord, 1895, under a Democratic tariff, the United States has taken (the lead of all other iron producing countries, * During the month of September, just past, the 229 furnaces in blast reached the tremendous weekly output of 200,- 000 tons. Just think of what an im- mense amount of iron that is, the la- bor it furnishes and the wealth Tt pro- duces. There can be no question about its quality, as it was produced under a Democratic policy. Demo- cratic iron seldom, if ever, has any blow holes in it. The September output of ‘iron is 50,- 000 tons~mor Por week than in the corresponding month last year, and it is away ahead of the best year of the McKINLEY period. It will be difficult for the Republi: can politicians to explain away these facte. They are too big to be pooh- poohed, and too plain to be overcome by misrepresentation. This clean cut, unvarnished, undeniable fact stands out in bold relief, that with the re- moval of almost half the Republican duties on iron, the largest production of that metal is attained ; and this has been accomplished, not by any disad- vantage imposed upon the workmen, not by any reduction of their wages to make up for the loss of “protection,” but the daily wage has been actually increased. Republican high tariff theory is knocked out by this hard-fisted Demo- cratic fact. There are many, very many, reputable soldiers here about Belle- fonte, who knox Mr. A. V. MILLER. | Why didn’t he get some of these as vouchers to his integrity as a soldier and to the fair treatment of his men, in place of falling back on ex-police- man Fourk ? Everybody here knows JosHvua well, and because they do is what surprises them at MILLER refer- ing to him as a certifler of disputed statement. oil legislation. monopolies of. > , OCT. 25, 1895. What Is Involved. z This is a quiet election, but ¢ in- volves a great deal that is of practical interest to the voters. It presents to them an opportunity to determine whether an outrageously extravagant and profligate administration of the State government is worthy of their approval or their condemnation. . Will they cast their votes in such a way that the result of the election will be construed as an approval of the in- crease in the number of state officials and the enlargement of salaries that have added many thousands to the ancual expenses of the state govern- ment ? Will they deliberately go to the polls and disclose by their ballots that they approve of the DELANEY profli- gacy in the management of the public grounds and buildings, and the reck- less extravagance in furnishing the ex- cutive mansion ? Will their suffrage be exercised in commendation of the partisan job that has imposed a useless court upon the State at an expense of many thousands of dollars ? Will their elective franchise be used - to endorse a policy of treasury man- agement that keeps four millions of the State funds in favored banks to draw interest that is divided between the bankers and the treasury ring, while the public schools and charita- ble institutions must wait until these speculators with the public funds are ready to hand over the money out of which they sre making a private prof- jv? The following are the official figures of the appropriations made for the dif- ferent departments of the state gov- ernment, for the first year of the Hast- INGS administration, in excess of what was required for the last year of the Parrison administration : Auditor General's o State Treasury............. 19,000 Department of Internal 26,410 Banking Department .,. 97,400 Adjutant General's offic 6,000 Factory Inspectors....... 28,000 Harbor Master’s office, Phil 7,300 Public Buildings and Grounds.. State Reporter's office Total ex0ess,........c.c00 000i via $257,375 Will any voter who has regard for the financial ‘interest of the State, as well as for his own personal interest as : : _. | a tax-payer, deliberately and in his sane At this particular juncture it is well | mind, go to the polls and put iu a bal- lot that will endorse such reckless, ex- travagant and indecent waste of public money ? A vote cast for the Republican tick- et will be such an endorsement. There 1s no getting away from it. It will be that, and nothing else. —— A Great Cainpalgn Factor. There is apparently but little being done by either party in this campaign, but in reality the work that is being effected on the side of the Democracy is immense. There is no noise attend- ing it. Itis not accompanied by torch lights or brass banda. It does not re- quire the expenditure of campaign money. Silent, unobtrusive, it never- theless is doing campaign service with immense effect. Thie great campaign worker is the Democratic tariff. When the people see that under its influence business has revived, mills and factories are overrun with orders, workingmen are fully employed, and their wages have been increased, no campaign speeches that could be addressed to them could appeal more powerfully in behalf of the party whose policy is producing such satisfactory results. Its appeal to the voters is the more powerful because it was but so recently that HastiNes and his corps of ca- lamity howlers went through the State claiming that this tariff had ruined the industries and prostrated the busi- ness interests, The people allowed themselves to be deceived last year, but the very gross: ness of the deception, as now exposed by the beneficent effects of the tariff that was so shamefully misrepresented in last year's campaign, is turning the public mind in the right political di- rection. It is in this way that the Democratic tariff 1s doing great campaign work. ET E—————— —If you wapt {printing of any dis- cription the WATCHMAN office is the place to bave it done. Hastings and the Miners. From the Philadelphia Times. “The miners of the Clearfield soft coal field must see by this time that something is wrong with the state- ments of the orators during last year’s campaign. They know that within three weeks after the election their wages were reduced ten per cent. The _L.miners likewise know that they have suffered from two reductions since then and that during the past three months if the average pay was four dollars a week it was a good one. The tariff of fifty cents a ton is still on the sched- ule. It was never taken off and when the advice of the orators to vote to keep it on was given there was no chance to remove it. Yet“the Cape Breton miners of Nova cotia, where coal is free and open in competition with the markets of the world, are paid 69 cents a ton, equal to $65 or $75 a month. This is quite a difference over the Clearfield rate of 35 cents a ton and a possible $25 a month. The Clearfield miners have doubtless learned by experience that the tariff is a tax bounty in which they bave no share.” Thus another Republican promise has been broken. Candidate Hastings last fall was very solicitous about the welfare of the miners, and in pathetic tones pleaded that those hard working coal diggers should give him their votes for governor, as by so doing good times would be assured them. While the few who understand the tariff question, see the ridiculousness of claiming that a state administration can control the laws of supply and de- mand and of regulating the tariff rates, yet all will remember that the tariff question was the burden of Candidate Hastings’ talks. Deceived by his ar- guments that the tariff was the -su- preme iesue in the State campaign, the miners voted for Hastings, What has been the result ? Reductions and strikes | The workingmen did as they were urged to do; now let Governor Hastings explain why, instead of the good times he assured them, they- have only become more and more pov- erty stricken. But Governor Hastings cannot give a satisfactory explanation. But the people can see the deception that was practiced. Such deception should, be punished. Punish it by cutting aloof from the Republican party of falsifiera and deceivers, Vote the straight Democratic ticket. Mirages Seen Not Far Away. F rom the Glen Campbell Comet. On Tuesday afternoon s railroad boss on the P. & E. railroad near this place, witnessed a very strange sight; one not often seen in this section. He stated to us it was about 38 o'clock on the day mentioned when his eyes were attracted by a picture (as he called it) in the sky northeast of this place, which was a per- fect likeness of the large cut at McGee's Mills, and just as he was watching it with wonder, he was still more surpris- ed to see an explosion in the cut, and still more surprised to hear the report of the explosion in a few seconds later in the direction of McGee's. He claims he distinctly saw the smoke and rock flying through the air. The above was related to us Wednes- day by the gentleman who’ witnessed the strange sight, but we are unable to givethe gentleman’s name after securing it, oa account of mislaying our pass book. . The cut which he claims to have seen, is the one in which five men lost their lives three months ago. One day recently, as Mrs. D. H. Bee, of Marion Centre, was watching the clouds in the sky, she saw a mirage, or reflection, in the sky which looked like two gentlemen in a buggy passing along. So distinct was the mirage that one man wore a plug hat, and the harness on the horse could be plainly seen. This is a very rare occurence in this part of the country. ——————— Six for Us and Half a Dozen for John Bull. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. Scare headlines in many papers an- nounce aggressive action on the part of the British in Venezuela, but it is reassuring to hear the comment of the British Westminster Gazette that if the Monroe doctrine is ever questioned by European powers Great Britain will be found with the United States in sup- port of that doctrine, and not against it. This appears to mean that John- ny Bull has given up all hope of grab. bing any more territory in America, but is exceedingly anxious to bang on to all that he can possibly imagine to-be his. A Citizen's Duty. From the Doylestown Democrat. It is a duty you owe the Common- wealth as a citizen and a true man to go to the polls on the 5th of Novem- ber and assert yourself for honest gov- ernment, Let no excuse keep you away from the polls, and let no petty party boss persuade you that Quay" and misrule can give to the people of Pennsylvania a respectable and honest administration of its affairs. ———— A Mistortune Indeed. From Truth, If theres say mishap that can wring {from the sou An anguished and heart-rending wail, "Tis to patiently wait for the tunnel to come, And then find that she’s lowered her veil! Spawls from the Keystone. _ —It snowed Monday at Hazleton. —A train near Shamokin ran over and killed Mrs. John Deshay. ville lost both feet under a train. —A fall of coal in a Shenandoah mine crushed to death Albert DeKrelin. —Some orchards in Westmoreland county contain 5,000 bushels of apples. —When sentenced for tampering with a witness at Easton Edwin Schug fainted. —Safe crackers got 4150 from 8S. 8. Jones’ office at Shrewsbury, York coun- ty. —A reunion of the survivors of Scott's artillery will be held to day at Hazleton. —A trolly car at Harrisburg dangerous: ly injured Jacob Long, of Mechanics- burg. —Thieves stole $150 worth ot clothing from George F. Spangler’s store, at Cata- wissa. —The Eisenhuth Dam, at Morea, is the only source of water supply Pottsville has left, —The Attorney General during the last three months collected for the State only $16,704.55. —It was necessary to flood the burning mine at Plymouth Tuesday but the fire is not out. —In a fight at Lebanon, Benjamin S. Kenan was dangerously stabbed by Phil McConnell, —Robert Blanchard, the fifth victim of the recent Wilkesbarre mine explosion, died Saturday. —Northampton county Institute opened Monday at Easton with Superintendent Hoch presiding. —Johnstown is experiencing a building boom at present. Many new residences are being erected. reducing the death rate from diphtheria in Allegheny county. —The alleged Scranton murderer, Cri- sengo Merola, was brought home from New England Saturday, —John Mortoceio was convicted at Eas. ton of killing Orifrio Sachetti and sent to prison for five and a half years. —The propietor of the suspender fac- tory at Williamsport says the plant will not be removed from that city. —General John R. Dobson, of Phenix- ville. has been placed on the roll of re- tired officers of the National Guard. —Managers of. two Pittsburg railway companies fixed a day for stockholders to hold the proposed consolidation. —Of 213 public school teachers in Coi- umbia county, 241 Monday attended the Teachers’ Institute at Bloomsburg. —After a trial lasting a week, John Wisniski was convicted at Scranton of second degree murder for killing Felix Davidjak. —John 8S. Scallin, a well known ball player died at Osceola, on Friday. He was centre fielder for the Lancaster club this season. —Harry, son of Rev. M., L. Smith, of Huntingdon, shot four turkeys and five squirrels on the first day of the present hunting season. —Governor Hastings has granted a res- pite until November 26 for A. W. Wood. ley, who was to have been hanged in Al- legheny county Tuesday. —J.J. Murphy, of Pottsville, bas been appointed Deputy Revenue Collector of Sehuylkill County, vice Alexander Mec. Donald, of ITeckschervilie. ~John O. Boyle, of Pottsville, who stumbled over a loose board at Mahanoy City and was injured, was awarded $1000 damages against the borough —Survivors of General Gobin’s regi- ment, the 47th, held a reunion at Ifarris- burg and elected Francis Danefer, of Allentown, president. —It is stated that the shops of the Tus carora valley railroad will be built ag Blair's Mills, Huntingdon county, the present terminus ot the road. —The Keystone wheel club, William - sport, has disbanded aftera four years’ existence. All the club's property has been disposed of at private sale. —The site selected by the Commission- ers upon which to erect the Pottsville Public Building has been approved of by Secretary Carlisle at Washington. —It is said that Colonel Colquitt, Chief of Internal Revenue Agents, will report that the charges against Collector Grant Herring, at Scranton, were unfounded. —Fifty railway companies in the State have made their reports to the Secretary of Internal Affairs. They are due Nov ~ ember 1, with a $6000 penalty for any de- lay. —The Philadelphia express on the Pertsylvania railroad Friday night struck and killed Arehie Hammor, a €ol- ored man, whose residence was at Pat: ton. —Andrew Patriek, of Glen Campbell, has invented an excellent mining car brake and they are now being plaeed on the Glenwood coal company’s cays at that place. —The Evangelical Association filed two bills in equity against the United Evan. gelical Association to oust the latter from the churches at Tower City and Fre - mont. — President H. J. Hoffman, of the Holl. man File Company, Pittsburg, and want- ed at Chicago for alleged perjury on a $4800 contract, gave himself up in New York city. —The work of turning the Baltimore Southern Railroad into’ a bread guage track has been completed at Delta, and the people there celebrated the event Tuesday. —J. D. Hateh, of Lake Pleasant, Erie county, dug 238 bushels of potatoes from three fourths ofan acre of ground and H. C. Titus raised 13 bushels of corn from six rods of ground. ’ —The Huntingdon News says that when the boiler at the Juniata sand works ex. ploded during the fire, a freight train was passing within about tifty feet of the burning building. The red hot iron frag- ments struck the cars and set one of then: on fire, but the flames were extinguished A brakeman was standing on top of a car and was knocked down by the force of the explosion but was uninjured. —Brakeman Thomas O'Brien at Potts - —Anti.toxine is credited with greatly”