. Ande mn oh em —— AA cm aad - - .BY P. GRA MEEK. Ink Slings. —It is easy to get married. Quite different to get enough to keep a fam- ily." —If humane societies keep on, why we won’t be allowed to pare our corns after while. —There is nothing to indicate that the man who refuses to pay his debts is destined to die rich. —The century plant has bloomers once in a hundred years, but the Cen- tury wheel bears them daily. —The great storm in the West was not a FORAKER blow. His time won’t come until he gets into the Senate. —A machine to milk cows has been invented, but it is not nearly as effect- ive as the cow’s machine for kicking the operator. —The Valkyrie is for sale. She would make a good garbage scow for Philadelphia. They want something slow down there. —Tonsorial artists in all parts of the land will experience a decided increase of business to-day. The foot ball sea- son ended yesterday. —The everlasting fitness of things is nicely illustrated in the arrangement that brings the foot ball season to a close on Thanksgiving day. —The man, who sits around waiting for a shower of silver dollars to fall into his pockets, would be too lazy to pick them up if they fell at his feet. —Bad boys are beginning to hang around Sunday school doors. That lit- tle cornucopia of candy given out at the Christmas festival is in sight. —The horseless wagons that are talked about now are very much like the Chinaman’s electric car : there is “no pushee, no pullee, car go alles samee likee hellee.” —When SCHLATTER, the unique faith curer who appeared in Denver last week, dubbed himself “the healer’? few people realized the significance of the cognomen:. When his sudden dis- appearance was announced they knew that he was indeed a heeler. —They say a man’s residence for vot- ing is always at the place where he gets his washing done. BRICE has had his political linen all rubbed to pieces in the Ohio machine and is now going to move to New York. He will not need more than one car to carry his furni- ture. : —The Bethlehem iron works has just received the largest order for armor plate given to.any foreign nation in re- cent years. The order comes from Rus- sia and specifies 1,126 tons of HARVEY- ized plate. We hava been trying to re- member whether such a thing as this ever happened while the McKINLEY bill was in operation. —JOHN SHERMAN has the reputation of being a crafty man, but that quality didn’t succeed in diverting the public eye from himself to the characters he assails in his book. On the contrary, there seems to be a determination among the people to examina the gun before they become interested in the ac- curacy of its shooting. —The seal question has again become a serious one to Uncle Sam. The close of the season discloses the startling fact that twenty-seven thousand pups have been found starved, on the Pribylov islands, because their mothers had been taken by sealers. It is sad to contem- plate, but the seal question will not be settled until the last seal is killed. —CORBETT’s latest : “I am disgusted with the entire business and henceforth will confine my enterprises to the stage.” He was talking about his pro. fession as a prize fighter when he made the above declaration. While we are glad to know that the brutal business has no more attraction for CORBETT we are inclined to believe that he has grown sick of it only because there is not much money in it any more. —The McCORMICK-ROCKERFELLER wedding at New York, on Tuesday, was a very quiet affair, considering that the young people’s daddies are millionaires, away up in figures. The bride is a daughter of the Standard oil magnate, while the groom’s papa has grown wealthy manufacturing the barvesting machinery that bears his name. There’s is a fitting union, indeed. With plenty of the Standard oil to lubricate it the McCormick machine ought to work easier than ever: —C. H. RoGERs the MCARTHUR, Ohio, man who spoke disrespectfully of a lady school teacher, was taken to the fair ground in that place, on Monday night, tarred, feathered, and ridden on a rail. He appealed to the sheriff of the county to know what to do with him- self after he had been dressed in his sombre plumage, and that functionary advised him to take to the woods. If RocErs followed the suggestion he bas more than likely been shot for a Thanksgiving turkey ere this. tee — _VOL. 10 ~ BELLEFONTE, PA., NOV. 29, 185% STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. t 5 re en = NO. 47. What the People are to Expect. Ex-Congressman CaLpweLL, of Ohio, tells the people what they have reason to look for as the result of the Repub- lican victories. He says that a return of the Republican party to power will be followed by the restoration of the McKINLEY tariff, and he especially de- clares that- “it means a duty on wool.” So the people can expect to have business disturbed, and all the indus- trial disorder resulting from another tariff agitation, in order that the capi- talistic beneficiaries of ‘protection’ may have a restoration of big profits at the expense of consumers. It can not be denied that under the present reduced tarift business isin a satisfactory condition. Nothing can be more evident than that labor is now in a better condition that it was under the McKINLEY policy ; that it has more steady employment and is getting better pay. No interest is demanding a higher tariff except the trusts, which can practice their extortion with greater effect aud security under the protection of higher duties. Is the country to be disturbed by another tariff campaign for their advantage ? As to the restoration of the duty on wool it may be plainly stated that with free wool the people are getting better and cheaper clothing. The woolen manufacturers have their mills in full operation, have control of the home market, and in consequence of cheaper material are even sending their prod- ucts to foreign countries; they are paying better wages and are making more money than they did when Mc- KiINLEY’s bill was in operation. In the face of these facts we are told that when the Republicans return to power there will be a restoration of the economic barbarism ot a tariff on wool that would deprive the country of all this benefit. | We believe that the people will have | something to say about this matter | before it can be consummated. — Another Compulsory Law. The effect of the new factory law which is now in effect, will be far from | being an unadulterated benefit. It be- longs to the class of compulsory laws, | which however good their object may be, are ‘necessarily attended with a good deal of harm. The factory law, | as a gpecimen of compulsory legizla- tion, is a companion piece to the edu- | cational law that is intended to com- | pel all the children of the State to go | to school. | There are thousands of youths in the | State under sixteen years of age, em. | ployed in mille, factories and shops, who, by the terms of this law, will be compelled to stop work and become attendants at school. The general ef- fect may be beneficial, although that is problematical, but such are inflexible rule is likely to work hardship in many cases where the labor of boys of fifteen and. sixteen is helpful to de- pendent parents. It is doubtful whether the little schooling forced upon reluc- tant boys of that age will compensate for the loss of wages brought about by this compulscry interference. That children of tender age should not be put to daily labor cannot be questioned, and is equally unquestion- able that the children of the State should have the advantage of the pub- lic schools, but 1t is far from being cer- tain that the interests of the rising generation can be most effectually se- cured by compulsory means. —-We are loath to believe that such is really the case, but it does look a little as it the Governor was afraid the people ot the Commonwesa!th are be- ginning to imagine that some one, other than himself, is writing his speeches, proclamations, ete. Suan- day’s Philadelphia Times made a long route about the bush, but finally suc- ceeded in working in a fac-simile of the Governor's original draft of his recent Thanksgiving proclamation. It took a whole page in the Times to worm up a sufficient excuse for publishing the fac simile and when done there are very few readers of that paper who will be able to comprehend the motive in its publishing an original draft, nearly three weeks after it had pub- | lished the text of it. | SS——————— | ——The approach of a comet “that { will soon be visible to the naked eye” . will be very apt to force some fellows | made exempt from taxation, and main- ' to use “‘eye-openers.” Destroying Forests — Exterminating Game. In a recent issue we called the atten- tion of our readers to a condition that confronts the people of this Common- wealth and proclaims itself of vital in- terest to us in many ways. In writing of the destruction of our forests we noted the growing frequency of floods and droughts, as the result of the gradually clearing of vast wooded areas. There is another consequence of this devastation. The gradual disappear- ance of the gamethat was once so plentiful in all our mountain regions. The reports of hunters, who have gone out this fall, indicate that game of all kinds is unusually scarce. Deer, bear, squirrels and pheasants seem to be dis- appearing eatirely and where once the Allegheny mountains were their nat- ural home, now they are only occa: sionally found. The explanatisn is a simple one, and is the same as that for the frequency of droughts and floods of late years. The destruction of the forest deprives its denizens of a home and they either live or are soon killed for want of places of concealment and breeding. Take the laurel thicket from the bear, the virgin forest, with its protect- ing undergrowth, from the deer and the hickory bottom from the squirrel and they will soon die out for want of nat- ural surroundings. Each must have the lair to which it is native if we want the species to replenish itself and when we cut the forests away we either drive our game before the woodeman's ax or expose it to the immediate destruction of hunters. The sportsmen’s associations of the State have led a most commendable ef- fort in the past to have the Legislature buy large areas of wild lands in which to establish and maintain game pre. serves for the propagation and protec tion of all kinds of game. We have: our state fisheries, which have already proved their usefulness, and it is not unreasonable to assert that state game breeding farms would go a long way toward foreetalling the extermination of our wild animals and fowls. Wild land could be purchased at a nominal sum by the State, it could be tained and guarded at small cost. | Preparatory to the establishment of | such preserves all hunting should be | prohibited for a period of at least five years, then the woods would have time to be restocked, and with the ad. ditional protection rendered "by the State's vast preserves, game would abound once more as it did years ago. —— An End of It. In every attempt.of the natives to throw off the Spanish yoke Cuba has had the sympathy of the United States. Though they haye never been official ly recognized as belligerents they have always been aided by the individual interest of our liberty loving people. There are many advantages in hav- ing friends within a few hour's voyage, but the insurrectionists ceem to have forgotten this as well as the fact that their junta is on the way to Washing: ton, now, to ask the new Congress to grant them belligerent rights. The latest reports from the island bear the information that, the iosurgents are burning and pillaging American-owned plantations there. They will have to pursue a far different course if they are ambitious to retain the friendship of the people of the United States. ——There is nothing improbable in the report that Georce GouLp gon- templates buying a Senatorship. Why shoulda’t he go into the market and buy an article of that kind if he wants it? They are for sale and he has the money to make the purchase. His sister used her casb in buying a French nobleman for a husband, and GEeorce could add to the distinction of his house by purchasing a place among | the plutocratic nobility that are be- coming the predominant powe: in the United States Senate. ———— As far as the day itself was con- cerned there could not have been a more ideal one than yesterday. Holi- days are nothing without suitable weather. Christmas fails to satisfy our greatest anticipation when there is no An Abuse that Should be Stopped. The Philadelphia Record calls the British people to task because, while raising money for a monument to Mrs. Saran Scorr Sippoxs, the famous tra- gedienne, they have left her great grand-son die of starvation on. the streets of London. The incident is a sad one and has the sound of romance, but there can be nothing of discredit to the people of London in it. England has humane societies, just as we have, for the relief of the poor aod needy. This boy, or young man, could have applied for assistance to any of them and received it. But the Records insinuation does not include him as an object of charity, but cen- sures the English for not pampering him because of his distinguished great grand-mother. This calls to mind a very question- able practice, which it would seem the Record endorses. Because a man has bad an illustrious parent or relative is there any reason for giving him credit for qualities which he has never possessed ? There are too many peo- ple in the world, already, who are shining by reflected light to encourage this practice any further. Persons have lost their individuality entirely through being connected with some: one whose name has become famous. And while there is a constant danger of pamperiog a class of indolents, who are content to flutter about in the halo of renown that illamines the name of a distinguished ancestor, there is a greater danger in our permitting ad- miration for a distinguished personage to totally blind us to excellent qualities that are often found in their posterity. We have organizations of society whose only claim for recognition is based on the valor of their member's parents. We have secret societies, in our colleges and universities, to which wealth and parental distinguishment is the ‘open sesame” and indeed it is beginning to look as if the history of our daddies, like “the dollar of our daddies,” is the one thing every one seeks. An end should be made of such practices. Many good men are un-| manned and worthless ones given | notoriety by continually speaking of | them as relatives ot this or that dis- | tinguished person. Would it not | be better if ever mortal stood on his or | her own legs ? John Sherman’s Promise. What an arrant old political hum- bug Jory SHERMAN is, considering that he is a mar of undoubted ability. In his “Recollections,” just published, he says: “If my life is prolonged I will do all I can to add to the strength and prosperity of the United States.” How much did he add to their strength and prosperity when he dralt- ed and engineered the passage of the silver purchasing act, by which the government was saddled with a useless and pernicious expense that depleted the treasury of its gold, weakened financial confidence, and contributed more than any other cause to the busi- ness panic which overwhelmed the country, and which the Republicans took advantage of by charging it to the CLEVELAND administration ? To what extent did he advance the general prosperity by his anti-trust act, which he drew up in such a way that when attempts are made to enforce it in the courts itis found to be utterly inoperative ? Wasn't it more the in- tention of “honest JoHN"' to strenghten the interest of the monopolies by that megsure than to promote the prosperity the United States ? Moreover he was always a leading advocate and supporter of those finan- cial and fiscal abuses that accumulated through a long period of Republican rule, calminating at the close of Har- RISON’8 administration in immense gov- ernmental liabilities as the result of billion-dollar legislation; an empty treasury, a depleted gold reserve, im- paired public credit, deranged business conditions and prostrated industries, the whole situation having much the character of a wreck which those who produced it had the face to represep* as having been caused by the election of a Democratic President. This is the way in which Jonn SaerMaN helped to promote the strength and prosperity of the United States. It is too late now for him to snow to add to the merriment of the day. i promise that if his life is prolonged he A Good Joke on the Governor, From the Philadelphia Times. “There is a story told in connection with Governor Garb-Bill-Hastings’ visit to the Atlanta exposition which deserves to be printed. “General” Hastings made a speech at one of the gatherings, in the course of which he dwelt in a clumsy sort of way upon Pennsylvania's greatness. With ex- treme bad taste and manners he spoke disparagingly of all the states repre- sented at the exposition, and coming to Rhode Island, sneeringly eaid, ‘Well I'll just put that state in my vest pocket. “He had no sooner concluded than up jumped a bright young man--the speaker of the house of delegates of Rhode Island. He began very smooth- ly by saying that the people of Penn- sylvania should be proud of the physi- cal specimen of man who presided over the destines of the state. Then allud- ing to the “vest pocket” remark, he said that that could best be answered _by telling of a wordy altercation that once occurred between Robert Toombs and Alexander K. Stephens, of Georgia Toombs was a big, burly man; Stephens very small, but all brains. Toombs concluded a bitter speech by eaying : ‘And as far as the gentleman (Stephens is concerned I will take him up and put him in my vest pocket. Stephens arose and with much dignity replied, concluding by saying. ‘And I sincerely hope the gentleman will carry out his threat of putting me in his vest pocket, for if he does, he will have more brains in his vest pocket than he ever had in his head.” The Rhode Island man referred this to ‘General Hastings without comment,” Gaining Botlf¥ Ways. From the Williamsport Sun. Do the workingmen ever stop (© think that their condition would be very much better it the highly pro- tected Pennsylvania manufacturers and mill owners had not believed in and practiced free trade in labor ? These manufacturers, while demanding pro- tection for their product, were not averse to importing cheap foreign labor out of employment. Fifteen years have made a big change in the labor market of the country, and the Amer- ican workmen should have ng difficulty in discovering that while the protected manufacturers have growo rich by the employment ot cheap labor the Amer: ican workman has grown poorer. The friends of a home market are not the friends of home labor. Great in a Modest Calling. - From the Doylestown Democrat. The death of Calvert Vaux, the land- scape architect of New York, which occurred by drowning, 1s universally regretted. He had been in charge of the Central Park improvement, almost from the first, and while he had as- sistants, all the attractions of that great pleasure ground which make it probably the finest in the world, were his inspirations. He was modest to a fault, and loyal to the trust reposed in him, _mendatory. The Tariff Bugaboo Still Haunts Them. From the Pittsburg Post. Congressman Acheson says he is going to have a duty on wool, “else the wool industry will be killed.”” There are 50,000,000 sheep in the country, and there will be no tax put on wool, and the industry will not be killed. For a man suspected of common sense talking such irrepressible nonsense as killing the the woolon industry shows a dense state of ignorance or political humbug. Mr. Acheson knows he talks nonsense, and he knows that other people know what he says is all gammon, yet he will per- sist. A Sure Riddance. From the Mifflinburg Times. The Berry Detective Agency of Chi- cago is composed of ex-convicts. They decided to kill a bad man, but killed his brother, who was not a bad man. The best thing Chicago can do is to bang everybody connected with the agency except Charles F./ Berry, who was absent in New York atthe time of the cold-blooded murder, but he Dron be sent to the penitentiary. for ife. The Height of the Silver Craze. From the Wilkesbarre Sun. If a man or a woman were to find a silver ‘dollar and a ticket to heaven, and they had their choice as to which they would keep, these are the days when nine out of ten would take the dollar and run their chances of crawl- ing under the canvas. A ————————— Give Him the Appendicitis Through Some Well Aimed Grape Shot. From the Altoona Times. The “sick man of the east’’ does not appear to be recovering under the medi- cine which has been given him by the powers of Europe. Evidently some- thing stronger is what is needed. The Reason Why. From the Kansas City Journal. The strange case of the Wichita man who refused to drink a glass of beer when ordered by the court to do go is ex- plained. It wasn’t beer. " will do better in the future. All criticism on bis life and work is in the highest degree com- Spawls from the Keystone, —Milton shops are busy on an order for 500 cars. —The rains have made a slight raise in the Schuylkill river. — United Evangelicals will today dedi- cate their new church at Pottsville. —A spider bit Philip Beideman, of Nor ristown, causing blood poisoning. —Danlel Erhart, a farmer, residing near Mahantongo Station, hanged himself. —Peach Howard was sent to Carlisle jail for giving liquor to an Indian school- boy. —Girardville citizens have agreed to club together to employ a night police- man. —Adam Burke, of Minersville, was killed by a fall of coal in Glendower col- liery. —Three of Olive Reinhard’s four child. ren, at Allentown, died last week of diph- theria. —A heavy casting in Scaif’s foundry, at Pittsburg, fell upon and killed Frank Berry. —In a fight at West Newton John O? Grady was dangerously stabbed by James Berger. —The Executive Committee of the At. lanta Commission will met Tuesday at Harrisburg. —Falling 45 feet from a roof at South Pittsburg, F. A. Smith, of Somerset, was fatally hurt. —While climbing over a fence with his gun, near Uniontown, Isaiah Whitby fa- tally shot himself. —It has been discovered thatthe man killed near Tamaqua on Sunday was John Wessner, of Reading. —Philadelphia capitalists will develop a newly discovered ten-foot vein of an- thracite at Gordon. —Owing to the illness of a juror the Fisher murder trial at Wilkesbarre was postponed until Monday. —Williamsport is agitating the ques. tion of dikes to keep the Susquehanna from flooding the town. —A new rail for street railways is being made at Johnstown, the difference being in the greatly broadened flange. —Colonel A. K. McClure, of Philadel- phia, lectured before the York county teachers’ institute Monday night. —Young John Ward, accused of poi- soning Miss Lizzie Dugan, of Milmore, Cambria county, has surrendered. —Col. James M. Scoval addressed a large meeting of the Young People’s As- sociation in Reading last evening. ° —An explosion of powder ina Wilkes" barre county mine critically burned Mar. tin Kanicski and Jacob Muckavitz. —The Carnegie claims tor coal lands were postponed for consideration by the State Board of Property until Monday. —The Allentown and Bethlehem Trac- tion Company sells street car tickets in packages of 100. for just half the regular fare. —While playing doctor, the children of Daniel Solzfus, near Morgantown, gave a ehild carbolic acid, badly burning its mouth. —Evan’s Colliery, at Beaver Meadow, now in a receiver’s hands, resumed opera- tions Monday with several huadred hands. —Rev. C. E. Walters, assistant pastor of a Philadelphia Lutheran church, has been called to Hughesville, Lycoming county. —Accused of threatening the life of Mattie Kimbrough, of Limerick, John Collum was held under bail at Norristown for trial. —Jake Bricker, of Rauchtown, says that a peculiarity of wild turkey not com - mon to the domestic fowl is a lead col- ored streak on his back. —By a codicil of Eckley B. Coxe's will $26,000 is divided among about a dozen foremen at his collieries, and $6,000 goes to Lehigh University. —Rev. Peightal, formerly of McCon. nellstown, Huntington county, pastor of the Reformed church at York, has accep- ted a call to the Reformed church at Greencastle, —On the night of November 16th, the mill of Clark & Watson and the barn of Mrs. Clark Conners, of near Glen Camp- bell, Indiana county were totally con sumed by tire. —A Scranton gentleman and Mike Wel- ghans, the veteran hunter, since Tuesday have been in the Little Pine creek region with the result that by Friday the hunt. ers had bagged fifteen pheasants. —Reamer Hoke, who has been the as- sistant postmaster in Altoona for a num- ber of years, has been appointed acting postmaster of Altoona, to serve the unex- pired term of postmaster MacDonald, who died recently. —The building oecupied on the first floor by Charles Brion asa general store. and the second floor by David Foltz and family located -at Crescent, Lycom- ing county, was lotally consumed by fire Friday night }ast. Loss about $12,000 —Mr. R. Heck, son of Rev. Levi G. Heck, formerly of Cromwell township, Hunt. ingdon county, has been elected district attorney of Potter county by a vote ex- ceeding that of any candidate on the tick « et. Mr Heck polled 188 more votes. even than Haywood for state treasurer Cou- dersport, the eounty seat, containsa popu. lation of 46,0 and Mr. Heck located there recently after his graduating. —On Saturday the New York and Chica- go limited express on the Pennsylvania railroad struck and killed Io Correll at the McVeytown station. e had climbed overa freight train standing at the depot and had his back toward the oncoming train, which he did not see un- til it was too late. He only lived about two hours after being struck. He was a son of A, Correll, postmaster at Matta. wana, Pa. 7 —While Mrs. Elizabeth MoElwain and her son, aged 10 years, of Henderson township, Huntingdon county, were ree turning home on Friday afternoon, her horse frightened at sorie object near the the gravel pit point, at the northeastern end of Huntingdon, and ran off. Mrs. McElwain and son were thrown down the embankment and sustained severe in. juries. The boy is believed to be hurt in- ternally and his injuries are serious.