gus A £ Dewormli fat <. BY P. GRAY MEE : Ink Slings. —Pittsburg got it — in the neck. —CAMERON’s declination means a change in name only. You can count on DoNALD when the ownership of his successor is questioned. —Boston Democrats are the stuff. They snuffed the Republican lights ¢lear out and even ‘‘doused the glim”’ in the secret chambers of the A. P. A. —That Lock Haven girl, who has broken through the. ice three times al- ready this season, must be having sport at what we used to know as ‘‘tickley- bender.”’ : —The Smoky city wasn’t exactly in 1ine for the Republican national conven- tion, but got a better thing inthe Pro- hibition one that will meet there next May ; that is, from a moral stand point. — RoBINSON CRUSOE’S old musket is said to be for sale among a lot of curios at Edinburg. Why, we would not be surprised to hear of his man, FRIDAY, turning up in some old junk shop near by. —Venezuela has a new cabinet. “We | hope it is not a spiritual affair, for if such should be the case, American jin- goists would be ‘sounding the tocsin of. war with Great Britain in it all the time. —The Sultan of Turkey having per- suaded SAID PAsHA to return to the palace of his highness there are those who think there will be another dead Turk by Christmas day. Such invita- tions from the Sultan are usually of the spider and fly order. —WiLLiaM E. BARRETT, the man "who is to misrepresent a Massachusetts district in the fifty-fourth Congress, evi- dently had set his mind on proclaiming himself the frst ass to turn up in that body. He wants Hen. THos. F. Bay- ARD, our ambassador to the court of St. James, impeached. —PaATr FacAN, & contractor, skipped out of Tyrone, last Saturday morning, after having drawn the money owing to the men he had employed in building the new Phenix telephone line from Altoona to Tyrone. FAGAN is a pro- verbially bad name, but in this instance it didn’t raze the Phenix to its ashes again. —Senator GORMAN is reported to have announced his desire not to be re- elected to the U. S. Senate from Mary- land. His health, we believe, is the cause of his desire to retire. By way of explanation we might state that he possibly alluded to his political health, which is known to be in a state of utter collapse. . —HARRY HAYWARD, the Minneapo- lis murderer who was hanged on Wed- nesday morning, will hardly carry out his threat to come back and haunt those who helped convict him. There are some barbs on & much talked about fork that be will more than likely get stuck on if he tries leaving the place he has surely taken up his abode in. —Vermin infested youngsters have set Lock Havens public schools to scratching and the risibilities ot the direc- tors are being excited by the indignant people of that town. If such things are heard of much oftener we needn’t be surprised to find the next Legislature being gobbled up by a fine tooth comb trust, that will want to make itself rich by supplying the public schools of the State. — When the people of Massachusetts come to realize what a miserable squirt they sent to Congress in the person of ‘Wirriaym E. BARRETT they will want to keep even shadier than the sepul- chral precincts of their A. P. A. infest- ed communities cast over them. That man assailing such a character as THoM- As F. BAYARD reminds one of a misera- ble flea trying to make itself in evidence on the back of an elephant. —A good old Presbyterian elder is op- posed to putting a new bell on the church he attends out in Cambridge, Ohio. He says people never fail to gat to the opera house on time for the cur- tain rising, nor miss the first dance at a ball, yet they always want something to help them to get to church. His premise is well taken, but if he don’t believe in such things there will be lit- tle chance of anyone wakening him up when old GABRIEL toots his horn. —The determination of the state board of agriculture to refuse to accept the paltry $2,000, appropriated for its use by the last Legislature, and its re- markable intention of maintaining it- self at the expense of its membership, is calculated to make the dispensers of the public funds feel real bad. Had it been known how zealous the mem- bere of the state board were in their work, surely no one would have thought of trying to disband them by refusing to appropriate money for their expenses. Let the board stick to it as long as possible. While paying its own expenses the public will have all the more reason to believe there is some good in it. VOL. 40 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., DEC. 13, 1895. “NO. 49. How It Would Work, The President's message and the re- port of the comptroller of the currency both strongly recommend the retire ment of the “greenbacks’ and the sub- stitution of national bank notes in their stead. a Both of these officials believe in a single gold standard or monometalism, as it is termed. They advocate the doctrire that the measure of values in this country should be gold alone; that all its money should be redeema- ble in gold which would make all debts, all contracts and all obligations payable in gold. Because the government ‘‘green- backs,” which by the way are simply non-interest-bearing government obli- gations, and which after being re. deemed in coin, are reissuable again and again and can be ueed an’ indefinite number of times to drain the public treasury of its gold, they propose to do away with them euntirely, and as a substitute for this currency, allow the issuance of that much more nation- al bank money. Just how this will stop the drainage of gold from the treasury is not made clear. : We may be particularly obtuse in such matters, but for the life of us we are unable to understand how, chang- ing the character. of the paper money of the country—if it is to be all made redeemable in gold, the government is either going to increase the amount of gold in the treasury or decrease the demand for it, either one of which con- ditions must be secured if present con- ditions are not to continue. To-day, if an agent of some foreign banker wants to take a million of dol- lars of gold outtof this country he sim- ply gathers up a million dollars of our ‘“‘greenbacke’ and goes to the treasury and demands that amount of gold. It is paid to him, even if it has to be borrowed, notwithstanding the fact that these ‘‘greenbacks’ are redeemable in “coin,” which means either gold or silver. The million of dollars in gold then goes out of the country, and the million of dollars in ‘greenbacks’’ goes back into circulation, thus leav- ing the same amount of circulating medium in the couutry there was prior to the shipment of the gold. notes are to be substituted for ‘‘green- backs,” and are to be redeemable in gold, they will be gathered up just as. the “greenbacks’” are, demand for re- demption made, and when redeemed will be retired or destroyed thus contract- | ing the currency or mopey in the country to just double the amount of every shipment of gold to Europe. This policy, of course, would be popu- lar with bankers apd money lenders, because it would tend to make money scarce and interest rates high. But what of the people? Where, in the course of time, would the money" or circulating medium, with which to do bueiness be found ? It is an excellent plan, as we see it, to enable bankers and money lenders to contract the currency and run the rates of interest up to any figure their greed might demand, but would it not prove a woeiu! experiment to the pub- lic? . : In our bumble financial judgment a much simpler and more effective plan to stop the gold drainage of the treas- ury would be for those who gre maan- aging it to recognize the fact that “coin,” in. which - “‘greenbacks' 1 are made redeemable, means either gold or silver coin of the United States ; means just. what: the government makes the citizens accept as a legal ten- der for a debt, either 16 ounces of eilver bearing the stamp of the government ag representing one dollar, or one ounce. of gold, bearing the same stamp, as it may best suit those who have to pay. If the government, itself, would not, at the dictation of gold gamblers, discredit the money it puts out as “coin” and requires the people to ac- cept as legal tender, and would re- deem its ¢ ‘greenbacks” in such propor- tion of gold and silver dollars as it had in its vaults it would stop the demand for redemption very soon as well as the speculation in gold shipments-that are constantly draining the treasury and threatening an untold issue of in* terest bearing bonds. ——Do you read the WATCHMAN, A Significant Democratic Victory. Congratulations to Josian Quincy, mayor-elect of Boston! He is enti: tled to them. He is worthy of them. He deserves the best wishes of every Democrat in the land. There is no mugwumpery, -politieal hypocrisy or half-way Democracy, about him. He is what he is and °the . voters of the “Hub” know him. They have elected him mayor because of his polit- ical manliness and through him have entrusted-evers department of the city government to the management of the Democrats. The board of aldermen is unanimously Democratic ; the city council, in both branches, is over whelmingly Democratic ; the echool board, for the first time in many years is in the hands of the Democrats and the street department will not know a Republican in its reorganization. All honor to the Democratic people of Boston ! ; . Mr. Quincy was for a short time act- ing assistant secretary of state at the beginning of the present administra: tion, He sent Democrats abroad to represent the country and a Democrat: ic administration and all mugwamp- ery ‘and civil service reformers were horrified at the thought that Demo- crats should be chosen to fill positions from which the people - believed they had voted to. exclude Republicans. There were officials, higher than Mr. QuiNey about Washington, who joined hands with those who denounced his straighout and unadulteraed Democ- racy. They believed the country was safe and the people satisfied if they were in office and a balt was called on doing what the Democratic people had voted ehould be done. Mr. Quincy, as a consequence, resigned his position and went home, because he could not serve his party as he believed it deserv- ed and demanded. Vv It seems that the people of Boston appreciated his manliness and approv: ed of his kind of Democracy, and were not ashamed to say eo by their votes. It is possible that if Washington had more JosIAH QUINCYs than it has, there would have been more Democratic votes to count at recent elections. At least the overwhelming victory of a Democrat like Mr. Quincy in Boston, (is a matter for serious reflection on { th th i Ou the other hand, if national bank | Whe paR. Of Whois sepresenting tie party who have pursued policies that have not been approved by the people, and with which the Democratic masses seem determined to have nothing to do. Foreshadowing Its Doom. Until the municipal elections of last week, the government of nearly all the cities and large towns in Massachu: setts had for the past few years been brought under the control of a secret and unseen influence. A hand was stretched out from the dark recesses of the A. P. A. ‘that pulled the wires which controlled the elections in most of the municipalities in that State, and 80 great had this power become that the town council chambers may be said to have been transferred to the conclaves of this secret organization. As if municipal government was not sufficiently demoralized by the influ- ences that are everywhere bringing it under the control of ringsters and job- | bers, in these Massachusetts towus it had to be subjected tc an additional debagement by the domination of a bigoted and proscriptive oath:bound society. A change from this obnoxious situa- tion appears to have set in ‘at last week’s municipal elections in which the A. P. As sustained signal defeats in some of the Massachusetts towns at the hands of the Democrats and mem- bers of other parties, who are opposed to municipal government being mixed up with sectarian questions, and con- trolled by influences emanating from dark-lantern apartments. In Spring- field the ‘‘underground” forces were thoroughly routed, and in Taunton the Democrats surprised themselves and the enemy by electing their mayor by a handsome majority. Simiiar suc- cesses were gained in other places, and these results indicate the inevitable doom of any organization whose basis is intolerance and proscription, and whose operations are conducted in the dark. ——————— —It ia strange that it should have snowed s0 soon after the Boston elec. tion. Shall It Be Clothing or Beer. The deficiency of revenue arising from the present tariff will not be as great as was looked for some months ago. If the income tax had been al- lowed to stand there would be no defi- ciency at all. The shortage for the past six months hag been about $15. 000,000, but for the past month but lit- tle over a million, showing that there is a gradual improvement of this tariff ae a revenue producer as it gets more fully ia operation. Secretary Car. LISLE has every confidence that it will produce all the revenue needed ‘when trade has once adjusted itself to ‘the new fiscal regulations. : The revenue deficiency, which wt most can be but temporary, is being seized upon by the Republican leaders in Congress as a reason for more tar- iff legislation. [n their partisan opin- fon this deficiency must be supplied by increased tariff duties. Wool must be again taxed and a stiffer tariff réim- ‘posed upon the clothing of the people. “Such tariff mongering is entirely un- necessary. The slight deficiency can be made up from some of thes sources of internal revenue. An additional dollar on each barrel of beer will do it. But if they would rather tax clothing than beer, let them go ahead. The President would stop that proceeding with his veto, and they would be likely to hear something from the people about it. . —————— Bad for the Jingoes. The lower jaws of ‘the jingoes must have dropped when they read that part of President's message relating to the Venezuela question. They “bad all along been representing that Presi- dent CLEVELAND bad surrendered the Monroe doctrine and had abandoned the Venezuelans to the ferocity of the British lion. They pictured am bassa- dor avarp as crawling at the feet of SALISBURY and coining complimentary phrases to placate the English minis- try. : If they have any shame their faces should tingle with the’ blushing evi dence of it, when they see the energetic anouncement of the President that he instructed ambaesador BAYARD to notify Great Britain that the MoNRoE doctrine was an unalterable policy of | this government ; that its interdiction of any forcible acquisition of territory on this continent by any European power will be maintained ; that any and all attempts of that nature will meet with a determined protest from | this government, and that it insists | that the whole controversy between Great Britain and the Republic of Venezuela, regarding the British Guiana boundary, be submitted to im partial arbitration. These were the instructions that were given to our ambassador while the maligoers. of the administration were representing that CLEVELAND bad backed out of a great American priuci- ple and Bavarp~4ras eating humble pie before the British throne. What miserable skunks these jin- goes are, and how their misrepresenta- tions of their government, manufac- tured for partisan effect, are knocked to pieces when the facts are disclosed. Political Gall. The Philadelphia Press, on Wedpes- day of last week, devoted almost a col- umn of So to the exposition and de. nunciation of the failure-of the Demo- cratic city committee of Chicago to fully account for money received by it for campaign purposes during last year. +} : Considering that Chicago lis a long way distant from Philadelphia ; that ninety-nine one hundredths of the readers of the Press care about as much for the local squabbles of politi: cal heelers out there as they do for the councilmanic changes that occur in Sitka ; that offenses fully as grave and dishonorable, as those it makes against Chicago Democrats, have been public ly charged, by its own people, against its own party organization in both Pennsylvania and the city of Phila- delpbia, without receiving a word of comment, explanation or denunciation from the Press, we must conclude that that journal vastly prefers to consider matters of this kind at very long range, rather than have a hand to hand tussle with them on its own door- step. Of course it is not to be supposed that the Press would overlook any scandal tending to tarnish the reputa- tion of Democrats anywhere, or calcu- lated to bring obloquy aud discredit upon their organization; but we submit, in all sineerity, if it would not be fully as interesting to the readers of that paper, more to the point, and show a greater degree of consistency in its pre- tentious condemnation of wrong doing if..it would devote a litle of its space to the explanation or denunciation of the same offense, committed by its friends here at home, that it so vehe- .mently denounces in the Chicago Democratic committee. Only last spring Congressman Jack RosinsoN, a member of the Republi- can state committee, charged openly and persistently that Republican state chairman GiLKEsoN—the Press's can- didate for re-election—tailed or refused to account for our over hundred thousand dollars, raised from Republican office holders, and placed ia his bands for campaign purposes in 1894. Lessthan a month ago the present chairman of the Republican state committee—the Hon. MarrHEw StaNLEY QUAY, of whose standing in his own party the Press has reason to have full knowl. edge—gave the facts to the newspapers that of all the money raised by the Republican city committee of Phila- delphia, for the recent State campaign —a sum aggregating over eighty thou- Sand dollars, not a cent of it had been turned over to the state committee or used, as far as he could ascertain, for campaign purposes. These charges are known to the Press. The tacts connected with them are within its reach either to ascertain their truth or prove their falsity. They reflect upon its friends. They compromise, 80 far as public charges can compromise, the reputation of men for whose integrity and honor tive Press has vouched time and again, and yet it “has had neither the manliness nor honesty to attempt an explanation, on behalf of its factional adherents or its party organization, nor the courage to condemn the crime, that its owa partisans have alleged was committed by them. What supreme gall such a paper must have to attempt to hold up to { public contempt Democrats away out in Chicago for exactly the same sin, the same shame and the same thievery that stands charged to its own parti- sans and friends at its own home, and this too, without a word of defens:, ex- planation or condemnation from it? I EERO rn. Semitic Persecution. Herr AHLWARDT, a German anti- Semitic agitator, comes to this country on a most reprehensible mission. He makes his appearance among us as a professional Jew baiter, representing that narrow-minded and intolerant sentiment that bas manifested itself in the proscription of the Jewish people in come parts of Europe, particularly in Russia and Germany, and which this misgnided German apostle of persecution is foolish enough to be- lieve may’ be introduced through his instrumentality in this land of equal rights and liberal sentiments. It ie not difficult to see how the ignorance, superstition, religious preju- dices and intolerance, and general bru- tality of the dark ages, were conspir- ing influences that brought about the persecution ‘of the Hebrew race, but that such a manifestation of an unciv- ilized condition of the. human wind sbould be revived in the midst of the enlightenment and ‘humanity of the nineteenth century, would be an amaz: ing contradiction to the usual order of mental and moral progress. 25% This German persecutor of the Jews makes a mistake in coming to this country with his-propagandism of re- ligious intolerance and race prejudice. Our free ivstitation8 guardutee to all American citizens equal civil rights and entire religious liberty, and the sentiments of our people revoit at the idea of persecuting a race that has proved itself to be moral, industrious, enterprising, law abiding and patriotic. euch a reception as would convince | tor, died at Fort Scott, Kan,, on Wednes. even 80 narrow minded a person as he is that his presence is not wanted in this country. \ —— Subscribe for the WaToEMAN. & | | | : : ‘Spawls from the Koystone, —DuBois is going to have a free mail delivery soon. —A fall of rock in a Babylon mine fatal ly crushed Joseph Kloss, —Williamsport’s school board has kill- ed the free library scheme there. —A man named Sampson was cut in two by a railroad train at Carbondale. —Police captured Donato Brongionne one of the supposed bandits of Hazleton .—Charles Unruh was appointed fourth- class postmaster at Wyndmoor, on Mon- day. —A State commission was granted to Michael Durkin, of Wilkesbarre, as mine foreman. —Alexander Morton, a Shamokin miner ’ bas inherited $10,000 from his grandfather in Scotland. —There were six fatal and 11 non-fata) accidents in the Eighth anthracite dis- trict in November. : —Threats of alleged “white caps” in- ; duced Leonard Reed to move from his home at New Castle. —A man supposed to be Peter J. Camp- bell, oi Meudville, was found dead in a street of New York city. : —The Duncannon board of trade has organized with a capital of $7,000 for the purpose of starting a brass factory. © —While skating at Beaver Dale, Mich- ael O'Connor fell through a hole in the ice and was nearly dead when rescued. —Judge Woodward refused 2 new tria) for Abraham Eckert, convicted of the murder of Fred Bittenbender, at Nanti- coke. ~—William Garrett, in Lebanon jail for assaulting a policeman, plotted an escape, but a fellow.prisoner gave the scheme away. ; —Proposals are being made to erect the new depot at Williamsport, for which there are a number of bidders already on hand. : —The Conemaugh yard of the P. R. R. is a sight to see these days on account of the great amount of loaded freight and coal cars.’ —Rascals chopped to pieces a flag pole 100 feet long, which United American Mechanics were to raise at Catasauqua next Saturday. co, Juniata county, has given birth to a calf with two well shaped heads, each containing two eyes. —The people of Fells) Creek can say: what few other towns can—they live in two congressional districts. and their town lies in two eounties. —At Ridgway Monday the ;jury in the embezzlement case of D. C. Qyster was discharged, having been out forty six hours and failed to agree. —The total number of prisoners receiv. ed-at the Huntingdon reformatory up to Baturday, November 23, was 1,94, The number then there was 486, —Rev. L. Caley, of Philadelphia, was elected president of the Pennsylvania State Council of the United Boys’ Bri. gade, in convention at Pittsburg. —The mines of the Cambria & Clearfield ‘sgion are working as they have not done T years, Immense quantities of coal and eoke pass through Cresson dally. —The Kulp Lumber Company, of which Congressman Kulp, of Shamokin, is at the head, purchased 1610 acres of rich timber 14nd from Greenough Scott, near Wilkes" barre. —The state board of health decided at Harrisburg that hereafter graves in popu- lous districts must be not less than six feet and in rural districts four feet in depth. —These Bedford county people have died recently : Joseph Beegle, near Cess- na, aged 62 years ; Samuel Scott Shroyer, aged 43; Jeremiah Weicht, in West Provi- dence township, aged 72. Presbyterian church of that town, in the interest of the new Presbyterian church being built at that place. —Ex Sheriff James Myers, of Ebens. burg, in going from his residence to the court house on Tuesday, slipped and fell, severely injuring one of his knees. He is compelled to use crutches in going about the house. —Henry Shunk, of Imlertown, Bedford county, has been elected second lieuten ant of Company I, National Guard of Pennsylvania, of Bedford, to succeed ‘Lieutenant F. J. Deckerhoof, who re. signed. —Viee President Andrew Wall, of the Fidelity and Columbia Building Associa. tion, of Washington, D. C., and convicted of conspiracy to defraud, was [sent to the Allegheny county work house for three months, —Superintendent J. George Becht, of the Lycoming county schools, has pub- lished in pamphlet form a remarkably complete program ot the Teachers’ Ine stitute, which will open at Muncy next Monday. : —The Pennsylvania railroad company are advertising for bids for the manufac- turing of 2,000 freight ears. If the con. tract is awarded this month yet, it will run the number of cars made this year by this company up to 7,000. —In the Thanksgiviag Day hunt of the Ebensburg teams, Captain T. M, Richards’ men bagged 108 rabbits, squirrels and pheasants to forty-five captured by Cap- tain M. D. Bearer’s men. The Bearer men, had to pay for am: oyster supper for the. i victorious hunters. —George Richards, of Reade township, Cambria county, loaded up his wagona few days ago intending to go to mill the next day. Puring the night sneak thieves. came along and relieved him trom, the journey. They carried off two bags of grain, a fur robe and whip. —Spurgeon Williams, of the firm of Luther & Williams, blacksmiths in Ebens- burg, has bought out the livery stable of Conrad Wentrdth, in. Wilmore, and in a short time will move to that place and take eharge of the business. Ebensburg, as a consequence, loses a good citizen and : .. | Wilmoro gains one. Herr ABLWARDT sbould meet with | —Frederick O, Baker, railroad contrac. day, justafter he received news through the press telegrams of the death of his brother, John A. Baker, at Bloomfield, Pa., i who had been editor of the Perry county, (Pa.,) Freeman for fifty-five years. F. O. Baker was a veteran of the Mexican war, —A cow owned by!John Burns, in Mexi. : —The Clarion Jacksonian is te be run during holiday week by the ladies of thes” ~~ ~.