——————————— ee s————— A. Dwele GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. By P. » —MCKINLEY wants one hundred cents worth of silver in a dollar, and so far as heard from no one has filed any objection. —Calves make up the best scene to be seen in the gredt social comedy that is put on at sea shore resorts by this kind of weather. —It is evident, from the appearance of things, that HENRY WATTERSON has gone out of business as a platform maker in Kentucky. —PENROSE boodle beat WANAMAKER piety, in Huntingdon county, on Saturday. There is no use in talking the politician who gets ‘‘the boys’’ gets the persimmon. —They called the late DANIEL DoOUGH- ERTY ‘‘the silver tongued orator,” yet no one had the nerve to say that what he said was worth only half as much as it seemed to be. —HANNA is reported to be on deck in St. Louis, but it is the colored delegate whose feet are full of blisters. He has to walk the streets at night for want of a place to sleep. ; —The elements cleaned Altoona and Hollidaysburg off thoroughly, on Sunday, and now nature is doing her best to make the places beautiful for the golden anniver- sary of Blair county. —Do you think that the men, whose in- comes for a minute are nearly ten times as much as a laboring man earns in a whole day, are a class who have the interests of the latter honestly at heart ? —The Republicans have a sort of a pig in the poke in MCKINLEY. He is theirs, sure enough, but they don’t know what they have and are not likely to know, either, until he feels inclined to talk. —The college graduate and the fair seminary girl are now being cast out on this cruel, cruel world, only to find that all of their smartness will prove of no avail ~ unless mixed with a little hard, practical sense. —If any one imagines that the Demo- cratic party in Centre county is not strong and enthusiastic all they need to do, if they did not see for themselves, is to ask some one what it ‘was like in Bellefonte on Tuesday. —Lieutenant TOTTEN is trying to make the world feel gloomy by predicting its early dissolution. The ministers and evan- gelists of the land have an excellent reme- dy for that feeling, if you should happen to to have it. ——1It is a wonderful mixture to be farming on Marsh creek, practicing law, and be the Prohibition candidate for Legis- lature, all at the same time, yet that is just what H. WILBUR BICKLE, Democratic county auditor, is doing. —DANNY Woop, the popular Tyrone railroad man, has a tin MCKINLEY cane, which a Tiffin, Ohio, friend has just sent him. If such a gift was intended to wheedle DANNY into support of the major, that friend deserves a tin ear for such a foolish presumption. —Professor CHARLES STEWART having just announced to the Royal institution, in London, that there are three hundred thir- ty-five thousand hairs on the average on the human head, it now remains for some investigator to count the number on the upper lip of the up-to-date chappie. —The Oak Hall stage horse that fright- ened and ran away when it saw a flag that was intended to make the stage coach look patriotic, on Decoration day, must have had some Spanish blood in it. It cut about the same caper the Spainards do every time there is even a sign of Uncle SAM’S colors being flaunted in their faces. —Inasmuch as the last cargo of Cuban tobacco arrived in New York, on Monday, we would advise everyone to look to the cultivation of large cabbage crops. The American people are nothing if not equal to any emergency and even if WEYLER denies us the Cuban product we will have our own fragrant cabbage leaf to fall back on. —The colored delegate to St. Louis is meeting with a cool reception. None of the hotels will entertain him and the at- | tempt to charter a steam-boat for his habi- tation has even failed to carry. Since Mc- KINLEY is such a mighty straddler it seems strange that he can’t cover them all. He expects to mother the whole batch, so why keep them out from under his wing. —Lieutenant TOTTEN, the scientist who has tried to scare people to death so often before, is sure that in the recent storms in the West there is a warning of impending disaster to the universe. Of course he fig- ures it out all right and has always reduced his argument to a most convincing form, but old GABRIEL has failed to run on Tor- TEN’S schedule so many times that there is hardly anything to make us believe he is going to appear as soon us the Lieutenant says. —In the selection of HuGH S. TAYLOR for county chairman for 1897 a representa- tive of the young Democrats of the county has been honored. He is a young man who has been thrown on his own resources for years and the fact that he is now a promising attorney, with numerous other business engagements, is evidence that he has the sort of get up needed in a party manager. If he makes it as warm for Re- publicans next year as he. did for Belle- fonte, as superintendent of the steain heat works, he will have made a glorious coup for Democracy. YoL hh BELLEFONTE, PA., JU STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NE 12, 1896. _NO. 24. Ended in Disgrace. This week the most disreputable con- gressional body that ever assembled in the national capital will close a do-nothing ses- sion of six months. ‘‘Disreputable’’ is rather a harsh term to apply to the law-making branch of the government, but it is not wrongly applied to a body whose adjournment carries with it a reputation that will be a disgrace to it for all time. No other legislative bedy ever assembled with the deliberate intention of injuring public interests. No other one ever con- vened ‘with a cold-blooded and calculating design to do nothing in order that the country might be the worse for it. When this Congress got together it was determined that there should be no legisla- tion that would relieve the finances, im- prove the currency, or contribute, in any way, to a restoration of business prosperity. Its sole purpose was to continue a had con- dition of affairs, and, if possible, to make it worse, in order that the ‘‘calamity’’ might be charged against the administra- tion of another party. The people were to be embarrassed with the interition of fool- ing them as to the cause of their embar- rassment. In the pursuit of this design this Con- gress failed to provide for an increase of revenue, while it piled up unusual ex- penses that would require an exorbitant out lay. It refused to legislate for the correction of defects in the currency, yet did all it could to harrass the administra- tion struggling to maintain the public credit that was imperilled by a defective currency system. While it was inactive in doing nothing to restore public confi- dence, the only activity it displayed was in restraining measures that would have revived the stricken interests of trade and commerce and given new life to prostrate industry. Its do-nothing policy was designed for political effect. The sole object of the ses- sion was politics, and the Republican party was intended to be the only beneficiary. The general injury that was done for the benefit of that party made the session a crime against the nation. “Rebuking” the President. What silly stuff Republican organs can indulge in when the supposed interest of their party calls upon them to make a dis- play of their foolishness. For example, some of them are boasting of the rebuke which Congress administered to President CLEVELAND for vetoing the river and har- bor bill by passing it over his head. Let us examine the character of this re- buke. With a display of the most unex- ampled extravagance a combination of con- gressional log-rollers passed a bill that ap- propriated $80,000,000 at a time when there is a deficiency of revenue and a pési- tive refusal on the part of Congress to enact measures to supply the deficiency. The President vetoed this log-rolling scheme, not only on account of its inherent extrav- agance and corruption, but because the pub- lic revenues were not sufficient to meet such increased expense. But although these were good and valid reasons for veto- ing the bill, the combination of congres- _sional spoilsmen, who were eager for a di- vision of the ‘‘pork,’’ contained in the riv- er and harbor barrel, passed the profligate measure over his veto, and the organs call this a rebuke administered to the Presi- dent. This is a kind of rebuke similar to that which would be administered to an officer of the law by his being over-powered by depredators with whose getting away with their swag he had interfered. In the de- moralized Republican mind it is the officer of the law and not the depredator that de- serves rebuke. Its Corrupt Methods. A scare has been created among Mc- KINLEY’S backers by the report that the ‘‘gold-bug” interest in the Republican party, that is not satisfied with the major’s wobbling position on the silver question, and fears that he has an understanding with the mining camps, has raised a fund of $1,000,000 to defeat his nomination at St. Louis. It is not probable that “here is anything substantial in this rumor, but its circulation shows that the MCKINLEY crowd think they have reason to fear that the same corrupt means that were em- ployed to secure his great majority of the delegates may be resorted to at the conven- tion to prevent his being nominated. It further shows that the currupt use of money in’ politics has become so familiar to the Republican mind that the expenditure of a million dollars at St. Louis against Mc- KINLEY would be considered by them as being as much in the order of politics as was HANNA'S boodle in putting McKiN- LEY ahead of his competitors. The politics of the country have certain- ly been subjected toa terrible ordeal of corruption by the methods of the rascally old party which has made money the con- trolling factor in accomplishing political objects. The injury it has done to free and popular government, by its corrupting practices, are immeasurable and may be irreparable. The Stick That Stirred the Monkeys. The MCKINLEY men are showing great anxiety to have speaker REED as the nomi- nee for Vice President. They want him for the purpose of giving strength to the ticket which cannot be imparted to it by the man who will be the chief candidate. The speaker, however, is determined that he shall not be lised to remedy the defect occasioned by MCKINLEY deficiency, and will not occupy the second place on the ticket if a positive refusal can prevent it. He deeply resents the fake methods by which a comparatively insignificant char- acter like MCKINLEY has heen pushed ahead of him in the presidential race, and experiences a sense of humiliation at being beaten by one whom he justly regards, not merely as his inferior, but as one of the weakest characters in the politics of this period. It is because he regards his defeat for the presidential nomination in such a light and with such-a feeling that one of his friends said, the other day, as if voicing one of the speaker’s characteristic expressions, that ‘he doesn’t mind so much being beaten as he does being beaten with the stick they stirred the monkeys with, as the small boy said at the circus.”’ It is the character of the stick, and the base purpose of monkey stirring for which it had been used, that excites his resentment. In other words his indignation is something like that of the man who had a collision with a gar- bage wagon. He wasn’t so much put out by the accident, but was terribly riled at the idea of being run over by ‘a d—-d swill cart.” : The preference of MCKINLEY ovel the really able leaders of the Republican party is one of the freaks of politics, and is cal- culated to aggravate such men as REED, MorToN, ALLISON and CuLLOM. The utter absurdity if it is comprehensible when the fact is considered that his ability as a public man is scarcely more than com- mon ; that he was but an ordinary coun- try lawyer when the chances of politics sent him to Congress, as frequently hap- pens with lawyers of no more than common qualifications ; that he accidentally be- came chairman of a committee that framed a tariff bill, to which his name was attach- ed on account of that circumstance, and that his only reputation is derived from his accidental connection with a measure which a large class of misinformed people believe to have been a cause of business prosperity. He never did or said a single thing that should lead any rational person to suspect him of being a statesman ; he never took a position on any question that did not indicate the natural weakness of his character ; his attitude on the tariff was merely an acceptance of a bad policy which other men had originated, and his expressions and actions in regard to finance and the currency never rose above the level of platitudes and were usually contemp- tible straddles. The crazy notion that this political weakling is an agent of prosperity has cap- tured the unintelligent portion of the Re- publican party, which is by far the larger portion of it, and will place him on their presidential ticket in preference to competi- tors of vastly greater ability and merit. No wonder ToM REED is disgusted and protests against being beaten by the stick with which the monkeys were stirred. The U. S. Senatorial Skrimmage. The senatorial succession to DoN CAM- ERON has developed into a lively fight be- tween JOHN WANAMAKER and Bores PEN- ROSE, the first round in which has come off in Huntingdon county with a knock-out in favor of the latter. In this contention of Republican factions PENROSE represents the QUAY interests, while holy JoHN WANAMAKER, who can turn his attention to dry goods, to religion and to politics with the odor of sanctity, and with equal trust in the grace of God and the influence of boodle, is the representative of the oppo- sition that is chrystalizing against boss QUAY. : Between these two Republican aspirants there is but little preference, so far as Demo- crats are concerned. Neither of them would be much, if any, improvement on CAMERON, and it wouldn’t take much of a Senator to be his superior. PENROSE would bea mere duplication of his boss. He has some personal ability, but not in- dependence enough to rise above the level of a henchman. WANAMAKER is a genius in the dry-goods line, but he would shine in the Senate chiefly as one of the million- aires who are becoming entirely too nu- merous in that body for its credit, or for the general interests of the people. There is no probability of breaking the succession of Republican insignificance that has so long represented ‘Pennsylvania in the United States Senate. It will be either PENROSE, WANAMAKER, or some other representative "of the faction that will dominate the party in the State, and the old Commonwealth must continue to be deprived of creditable senatorial represen- tation which she has not had since the in- cumbencies of BUCKALEW and WALLACE. The Veto Power. There maybe difference of opinion in re- gard to the propriety of the veto powers. It may be considered an undue exercise of the will of one man in opposition to the will of a majority of the people’s representatives, but it cannot be regarded as an unconstitu- tional power for it is clearly vested in the executive by the constitution. - The great minds who framed the organic law of the country believed that such power, placed in the hands of the chief officer of the gov- ernment, could be exercised with advan- tage to the country, and while there are in- stances where the veto has been beneficial in defeating legislation that would have been harmful in its effect, the cases in which that power has been abused are very few. : It can be brought to bear, with great ben- efit to the people’s interests in cases of ex- travagant and unnecessary appropriations. Such measures as river and harbor bills, where the combined schemes of jobbers make exorbitant and corrupt drafts on the public treasury, are proper objects of the executive veto. The appropriation bill through which the present profligate Con- gress proposed to expend an unusually ex- cessive amount of money on river and har- bors, was a log-rolling measure that most righteously deserved a veto from President CLEVELAND, and although the corrupt body that originally passed it was able to pass it again -6%er the executive objection, yet the President - was obligated by his of- ficial duty, and by his regard for the inter- ests of the people and his sense of public decency, to protest against the mammoth steal embodied in that bill, even if his veto was not able to defeat it. In most cases the veto power is exerted for the protection of the public interest, and certainly that was the intention of President CLEVELAND'S objection to the most recklessly extravagant and thoroughly corrupt river and harbor bill ever passed by any Congress. : ~ No Reason for a Split. Senator BRICE, although a strong op- ponent of free silver, hassense and modera- tion enough to regard it as an issue upon which the Democratic party has no reason to split. In a recent interview he recog- nigedy‘ ‘the remarkable strength which the silver sentiment had developed in all the States west of the Alleghenies,’’ and while he opposed it, and declared, from his point of view, that ‘‘it isa bad thing for the party to run off after heresies which are bound to be short lived,’”’ yet he did not hesitate to say that ‘‘Democracy will do in this case, as in others before now, and come around again after a little time.”” Regard- ing the conflict of views on this question as merely a temporary difference of opinion, in a matter that affected no vital Demo- cratic principle, he had no idea whatever of a bolt at Chicago. This is certainly a sensible and practical way of looking at a question upon which conflicting opinions are entertained by members of the party. If the advocacy of silver is, as Senator BRICE views it, “a heresy that is bound to be short lived,’ wouldn’t it be worse than mid-summer madness to smash the party into pieces about a matter which, if left to itself, will run its course in a short time? If, how- ever, it should prove itself to be an issue, substantial and beneficial in its character, there would be still less reason to wreck the party on account of it. It is gratifying to observe that the com- mon sense of the party is settling down to the conclusion to treat the currency question at Chicago the same as any other question upon which an honest difference of opinion may exist, and that there is a diminishing likelihood of the extremists on either side of the silver controversy draw- ing out of the party partnership and set- ting up a political shop of their own if their views are not adopted in the party’s national council. Weyler’s Tobacco Order. WEYLER may find that his tobacco order is more liable to get him into . trouble with the United States than his inhuman method of carrying on war against the insurgents. The latter may be denied, or glossed over, or it may be claimed that the brutalities practiced by the Spaniards are no greater than those perpetrated by the rebels, but when it is attempted to deprive the United States of its accustomed supply of Cuba tobacco, upon which our people depend for their best cigar, an act is committed that may call for serious interference. m— The Spanish general is not smart in touching the American people at so tender a point. When he prohibits the exporta- tion of tobacco from the island he inter- feres with trade. He injures a very impor- tant ‘commercial interest of this country. It may be maintained that such a condi- tion of warfare does not exist in Cuba as would justify any action of the United States against the Spanish power, but WEYLER'S tobacco order involves a serious commercial injury which our government cannot he expected to submit to. It isa foolish act, so far as Spain’s own interest is concerned, and it is an‘ unfriendly act to- ward the United States. J—— . conscious of the fact or not. Tat And Centre Co., is in the Same Boat. From the Walla Walla, Wash., Statesman. The total appropriations by this Congress amount to about $600,000,000, or about $9 for every man, woman and child in the country. This money is raised by taxing all the people through tariff and internal revenue charges. But all the people do not get a share of these appropriations, but only a small minority of the people receive any benefit from them. The people of Walla Walla county pay their share of these taxes whether they are An average of $9 per capita is paid by every inhabitant of this county. A family of six pay about $54. How much of this comes back to us ? In the present appropriation bill there is not a cent for Walla Walla, except a pro- vision which includes the salaries of the federal officers here. = We get no allowance for a public building, or for any other local object. Robbing Peter to Pay Paul. From the Easton Argus. A southern railroad is reported to have engaged in the padding of mails while the government was making a test weighing of the mail matter shipped over the road. That there are instances of the kind is not to be doubted. The question is to capture the offenders who thus hope to increase their earnings above the amount to which they are justly entitled. Many individuals and corporations have an idea that it is per- fectly legitimate to work public contracts for all they are worth. Too many seem to think that the government is well able to pay all that can be piled upon it. A few lessons administered to the offenders may have a beneficial effect. Where the Fan Came In. From the Tyrone Herald. One of the delights of a young American citizen is to fill a paper bag full of air and explode it. Yesterday on East Tenth street an urchin sat on the spring seat of a wagon to which two horses were hitched, their heads being fastened toa hitching post. From a strong paper bag filled with atmos- phere from the lungs of the lad a tremen- dous report followed a sledge hammer blow, but no sooner had the sudden sound reached the ears of the horses than they lurched forward, the boy turning a sort of a whirl- igig somersault to the floor of the wagon behind the seat. Gathering himself up, the young American surveyed the surround- ings, crawled down from the wagon and vamoosed. . Where Things are Different. From the Doylestown Democrat. of a political poser especially to the Repub- licans. The State had been Republican for many moons, and was thought to be secure- ly anchored within the lines of that party. In 1892 they elected the congressional dele- gation, and carried the State for President in 1892, by a plurality over all the opposing parties. Now both Republican candidates are defeated by the Populists. It appears the Democrats and Populists combined to defeat the Republican congressional candi- dates, but each supported their own ticket for supreme judge, and the Republican was consequently elected. Our Dan.—Then and Now. From “Doty” Rynder's Erie Echo. Gov. Hastings entertains the justices of the supreme court on a scale of extravagant magnifisence never before reached at the state capital. The stress put upon Gov. Hastings’ humble birth before his election and the poverty of his early life, as proof of his heart-to-heart relations with the common people, did not promise such great and magnificent goings on on the part of our Dan—but spending the people’s money in gold and crimson trappings is easier than digging potatoes on a Nittany valley farm, and who can blame Dan for enjoying it better ? ? " From the Easton Express. Has Major McKinley a financial policy of his own, or is he so pliable of character that he will take a ready-made policy man- ufacturad at St. Louis. The President and His Prerogative. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Of course the President defends the veto power. Itis a wise power in many re- spects and to bring about the best results it must be wisely used. A 16 to 1 Shot. From the Birmingham, Ala., State Herald. The Alabama Democracy wants a clean, clear-cut sixteen to one man on a sixteen to one platform. Short but to the Point. Here it is in a nut shell. The whole fi- nancial problem boiled down, condensed and presented in a way that any one has time to read and any one the capacity to understand. It came to us in an envelope, without post mark to know from whence, or without name to know from from whom. We give it just as received and know our readers will thank us for the explicit un- derstanding it gives them of this great question. It is against every law of human prog- ress, that a great and expanding country like ours, should be permanently anchored, by the small end, to the bucket shops on Manhattan island. It the tail will persist in trying to wag the dog, there is nothing left for the dog, (in order to maintain his equilibrium, and his self-respect asa dog.) but to bite the d——d thing off? And it looks very much as if he would be compelled to do so. eT vy Spawls from the Keystone. —The Tyrone council has repealed the or- dinance requiring dogs to be muzzled. —Dr. George M. Stiles was elected presi- dent of the Conshohocken school board. —John McCarthy, of Pottsville, was crush- ed to death on a bridge, at Milwaukee, Wis. —Rev. Father Hugh Garvey preached his initial sermon Sunday in the Bristol Catholic church. —While picking berries near Shamokin, John Kaffa, a small boy, was bitten by a rat- tlesnake and died. —The corner-stone of the new $20,000 church for the Reformed congregation at Bethlehem was laid Sunday. —Falling coal at the Neilson shaft, near Shamokin, instantly killed Peter Weand and fatally injured Paul Sweard. —W. J. Stickler has been appointed post- master at Painter Run ; M. D. Ake, Portage, and E. M. Ferguson Leasureville. —The Buckwampum Historical and Liter- ary association of Bucks county will hold its ninth annual meeting at Revere on Satur- day. —Michael Uhler, the founder of Uhler- town, Bucks county and its most wealthy and prominent citizen, is lying seriously ill at home, —William Barrett, an employe in the Con- shocken woolen mills, caught his arm in the machinery and had it wrenched off above the elbow. —The new department commander of the G. A. R., Alfred Darte, was given a recep- tion by the members of Conyngham Post, at Wilkesbarre. : —The first output of the new glass works at Port Allegheny, Pa.; has been sent to a firm at Chicago, and consisted of several hun- dred ink bottles. —Lumbermen are becoming impatient for a flood to float the 80,000,000 or 90,000,000 feet of timber, that is still lying up the river, to Williamsport. —The death of Thomas McDonald at Mt. Carmel, and the arraignments of James Lewis for murder, makes three murderers now in the Sunbury prison awaiting trial. —Of seven negroes charged with inciting riot in South Chester only two, Walter Hackett and John Peoples, were found guilty at Media Tuesday. They were given six months each. —The Clinton county agricultural society have elected the following named gentlemen to represent them at the State College in the election of trustees on June 16 : H. W. Wor- rick, G. M. Stoverand J. H. Welsh. —The Oliver iron and steel company, of Pittsburg, has voluntarily restored the wages of 500 employes to the rate they had received previous to a 10 per cent cut made three months ago unasked and a complete surprise to the workmen. —The Pennsylvania Society of Sons of the Revolution are sending out a copy of resolu- tions which they have adopted, urging that every citizen in the United States observe June 14 as flag day by displaying the stars and stripes at their homes. > —Deputy secretary of agriculure John Hamilton is making an effort to collect some The late Oregon election was somethis facts relating to our system of public roads, with a view to their improvement, and wants the names of all the supervisors of roads’ in all the townships of Pennsylvania. —The weekly crop report as sent out from Washington says this of Pennsylvania : Wheat, rye and hay somewhat improved ; corn, oats, potatoes, vegetables and most fruits continue promising ; insect pest trou- blesome ; meadows and pastures short and thin. —A heavy clectrical storm passed over Clearfield at noon Sunday. Mrs. George Hess, of Stoneville, was stuck and instantly killed by lightning. ' At Eleanor, near Du- Bois a Miss Bell was also struck on Sunday and instantly killed. She was in the act of closing the window at the time the fatal flash came. —Near DuBois Sunday, Emma, the daugh- ter of James Harvey, mine boss at the Ber- wind-White shaft, took oxide of mercury for the purpose of ending her life. Her aunt, with whom she was temporarily visiting, be- coming apprised of the act, sent for a physi- cian and against the girl’s protestations gave her emetics. These had’ the desired effect and it is believed the girl will recover. Her ‘parents’ interference in her love affairs made the girl despondent. —Governor Hastings has received a letter from the commissioner of the Atlanta exposi- tion notifying him that a diploma had been forwarded him in recognition of the State's excellent display of birds and mammals at the exposition. The letter also stated that a gold medal had been awarded the exhibit at a special meeting of the committee on awards and ‘the medal would be sent on payment of the cost, $125.50. It is stated that the State will forego the luxury ofa medal. —The station agent at Milesburg a few days ago asked a Bald Eagle Valley train- ‘man who lives in Tyrone to have some one send him down a good cat. The rail-roader communicated the message to all his fellow ‘craftsmen he met, and up to date the agent has’ thirty-six perfect and imperfect speci- mens of the feline race, among the number being a big tom cat that steals chickens, a present from “Peggy” Hull. Overwhelmed with cats, the agent in his distress wrote, an official of the road appealing to him in ‘the name of his maker to have the shipment of cats stopped or he (the agent) would be crazy inside of a week. —At Williamsport Saturday J. B. Den- worth, late candidate for commander of the state department, G. A. R., was held for trial in the United States Sm a charge of holding pension money fiom Mrs. Irene Brookens, a soldier's widow. J. Speed Smith, a special pension examiner, is the prosecutor. Mrs. Brookens testified that she received but $54 in cash of her husband’s pension from Mr. Den- worth, through whose services the pen- sion was obtained. A United States pension voucher presented in evidence showed the amount paid to have begn $498.20. On part of the defense it was shown that Mr. Den- worth was guardian of the Brookens child- *| ren and he furnished the family money and supplies prior to the receipt of the pension money. .