B BY P. GRAY ME=K. Ink Slings. —The latest report is that ANTONIO MAcCEo, the Cuban generalio, is alive again. ; —Senator HILL is a ‘‘peach’’ for saying good things, but in action—why that is another thing. —Speak nice to every one now. How do you know but that some of them are going to give you a nice Christ mas present. —More than one third of the entire ex- pense of our government is for pensions. Do you think it wise to rush into war with Spain ? ? —New England has had quite a snow storm, - Philadelphia and New York have each been visited, but Bellefonte has wheels yet. — After the President gets settled down as a resident of New Jersey he can keep his hand in at duck shooting by practicing on the mosquitoes. —With all its toys and tinsel things, Christmas comes on apace ; the bad boy stops saying naughty things, and wears a pious face. —When the fat girl thinks of Christ- mas time and of what use her stockings can be put to then, she no longer raves because of her obesity. —The Mackeyville skunkery will more than likely be run on honest enough meth- ods, but it ’1l raise many a stink before it is in existence long. —The life of Cincinnati's first one cent paper was just eleven days. The trouble appears to have been that the value of the money was higher than that of the paper. —The past season holds the record for the largest corn crop ever raised in Amer-. ica. It is too bad that nature should have thus conspired against the temperance forces. —So Bellefonte is to have an elope- ment. The Magnet has a corner on the news. ‘Who is the woman you intend carrying off from her hubby and two children, dear Mr. BAILEY? —The advent of evangelist MooDYy at Sing Sing caused a little stir among the convicts at that penal institution. MooDY should be right at home at Sing Sing, if there is anything in a name. ! —Judging from the number of debtors who say : “I'll pay you whenever I get able,’”’ Uncle SAM would have a great many disabled men to fall back on should the worst come to the worst with Spain. —Quay thinks that they are not treat- ing him right in Philadelphia. He is say- ing all kinds of nasty things about Phila- delphia’s attempt to send $400,000 Jonx WANAMAKER to the United States Senate. —QuAY has beaten WANAMAKER in Philadelphia. Think of it, that business men’s league knocked out and pious JouN left to run the big Bethany Sunday school, instead of being an United States Senator. —The Pittsburg Post says Major Mc- KINLEY ‘‘could go further, say to Centre county—and fare worse’’ in the appoint- | ment of an Attorney General than in giving that portfolio to J. HAY BROWN, of Lan- caster. What does this mean, brother BARR? Do you dare to fling at our DANIEL? —After we get Cuba free Kansas will | demand our attention for awhile. MARY! ELLEN LEASE is in trouble out there in. Some one wants to sell her prop- | erty because it has shrunken so much in value that it isn’t worth the money she is said to have borrowed on it. Centre coun- ty has lots and lots of cases of this very sort. —It was the foreign voter that elected McKINLEY. In every State where the native born citizen predominates there was a victory for silver, and in every State, where a large percentage of the voters are foreigners, MCKINLEY won. This looks very much as if the Dagos are beginning to get the upper hand. The immigration bars ought to be put up. —Senator VEST is of the opinion that high tariffs are as injurious to American industries as is opium to the human sys- tem. We agree with him there. Tariffs are unnatural stimulants. They, deaden the nerves of legitimate business, create false standards and finally leave industry in such an exhausted condition that it can- not stand alone, when the tariff pap is taken from it. —The DINGLEY bill is dead. That means that this Congress is not going to meddle with the tariff and if Mr. Mc- KINLEY wants to do it he will have to call an extra session in the spring. The New York Herald will have to find another reason for the with-holding of prosperity. It has said that the fear of tariff meddling is what keeps manufactures from picking up, now that they have elected their ‘‘sound money’’ goo goos. —There is lots of fun in watching a fight, such as i3 now being waged in the Republican party in this State, but there is very little in past experience to prove that it will be of any benefit to Democracy. The remarkable feature of Republican fights: is that they .invariably forget all about them before election time. Now with the Democrats, unfortunately, it is just the reverse. They never quit and that is just why our party isso continually in a condition of disruption. ness boom would immediately set in. Demacralic STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. "BELLE Maceo's Probable Assassination. If it be true that MACEO, the patriotic Cuban leader, has been assassinated by the Spaniards, under circumstances of peculiar treachery and atrocity, and for the foul purpose of removing an enemy whom they could not conquer by honorable methods of warfare, so dastardly an act will probably do more towards the achievement of Cuban liberty than if the life of the brave chief- tain had been spared to continue its service to the cause of freedom ; for there can be no question that if the details of this in- famy, as received through Cuban sources, are verified, such indignation will be excited throughout the civilized world, and particularly in the United States, as must prove disastrous to the Spanish cause in Cuba. Is it probable that there is truth in the report which represents General MACEO to have fallen a vietim to Spanish treachery ? It is the policy of the Spanish authorities to deny it, butin forming our opinion of the credibility of so dastardly a deed we are justified in drawing our conclusion in regard to it from what is well known as to the baseness and cruelty of WEYLER'S dis- position, and the combination of treachery and cowardice in the Spanish character that would readily resort to assassination to accomplish such a purpose as would be involved in the removal of MACEoO. Acquaintance with the atrocities of Spanish history easil,= induces the belief that the Spaniards would not hesitate to violate the rules of civilized warfare and outrage military honor by prostituting the sacredness of a flag of truce to the purpose of assassination, if thereby they could rid themselves of an enemy who could not be disposed of in any other way. What is known of Spanish practices in the past leaves scarcely a doubt that the report of MACEOQ’S assassination is true, and that a foul murder was resorted to as a means of ridding Spain of an enemy whom her arms were unable to subdue. Notwithstanding the almost incredible baseness of such an act, it would be but a repetition of infamies of a similar character chargeable to Spain. In the assassination of the Cuban patriot Spanish atrocity would but repeat the murder of the Prince of Orange. The two acts of infamy, thoagh widely separated in point of time would be, as historical parallels, similarly in- famons, thoroughly consistent with the Spanish character, which, if we may judge from its manifestations in the Cuban war, does not appear to have changed since the time when the hand of the assassin was employed to remove the patriotic leader of the Netherlands, who, like the Cuban Maceo, had resisted the oppression and baflled the military power of Spain. The past history of Spanish cruelty and ‘treachery, together with the well-known ferocity of the Spanish character, and the brutalities that have marked the entire course of their operations in the present war in Cuba, are circumstances which tend to support the charge that the Spaniards have effected the death of the Cuban leader by the base means of assassination. I ————————————— Our Delicate Industries. American industry appears to be a most remarkably tender plant. Something that subjects it to blight is constantly happen- ing, requiring the anxious care of those who have paternal charge of its delicate growth. Immediately after CLEVELAND’S elec- tion, when the industries were overtaken by a wide-spread depression, the collapse was declared by the MCKINLEYites to have been brought on by the apprehension of Democratic tariff reduction. The bad state they were found to be in at the end of the HARRISON administration was said to have been caused by the fear that the Democrats would deprive them of MCKiIN- LEY protection. But after the Democrats, under the CLEVELAND administration, got through with their tariff legislation, there was so little change in the rate of duties that it re- “quired an expert to tell thedierence be- tween the MCKINLEY and the WILSON- GORMAN tariff laws, as the average duties | of the two bills varied scarcely five per cent.” : There was, however, no cessation of the industrial slump, and the Republican spellbinders, during the recent campaign, operated upon public credulity by declar- ing that the fear of free silver and a de- preciated currency interfered with the re- covery of the industries by keeping them in a condition of nervous prostration. But as free silver, with all its terribly pictured evils, has been out-voted at the polls, what is now to prevent the recovery of the in- dustrial patient that seems to be so deli- cately constituted ? The public was as- sured that as soon as the country was se- cured from the danger of ‘‘dishonest money’’ by the defeat of BRYAN, a busi- The alleged danger of free silver has been averted through the agency of HARRISON'S boodle, but the promised business boom fails to put in an appearance. The industries continue to languish with the prospect of their being subjected to a still greater depression by another install- mént of MCKINLEY tariff legislation. Upon this subject the New York Herald forcibly remarks that ‘‘the mere suggestion that there may be an extra session of Con- gress to rip up the tariff has sent a chill through the country and checked the ad- vance which started when the victory for sound money was won.”’ It appears then that there is a poor show for the recovery of our delicately constitu- ted industries, which are being continually set back by alleged adverse conditions. Three years ago apprehended Democratic “free trade” was said to have prostrated them. Later on the danger of ‘‘dishonest money’’ and BRYAN ‘‘anarchism’ was charged with having prevented their re- covery, and now there is every reason to expect that their prostrated condition will be prolonged by the ‘‘ripping up’’ which the tariff will undergo in the next MCKIN- LEY Congress. Isn’t it about time that the American in- dustries should acquire a stability of their own, independent of political influences, and should be exempt from the blighting effects of partisan policies? They are cer- tainly in a bad shape when in four years’ time their prostration is assigned to three different causes connected with politics. Free Silver Education. The overthrow of the monetary despotism that is entrenched behind the gold stand- ard was not effected this year. It is almost invariably the case that the initial assault upon an established evil is unattended with the success it deserves ; but never in the history of reformatory movements did a first attack come so near a victory as did the Democratic assault upon the breast- works of plutocracy and monopoly in the recent campaign. The elimination of a few hundred thousand from the negro and Slav., vote would have proven disastrous to the party that fought behind the en- trenchment of the money power and the protected monopolies. It was a kind of defeat that only en- courages a renewal of the battle with higher hope and increased determination. That this has been its effect is shown by the preparation of the free silver leaders to put the ranks of the currency reformers in firmer order and more formidable array for the conflict, four years hence, that will restore silver to its constitutional place in the currency and repair the injury that has been done by the crime of demonetization. With this object those leaders have been in conference, and have resolved to perfect the organization and continue the contest from now on until, through the force of public enlightenment, the country shall be relieved from the despotism of a monetary power that exeits i oppression through a single standard of valpe which it has under its complete control. It has been determined by the free silver leadership that the agitation for the equality of ‘the two metals in our system of currency shall go on with increased vigor, and therefore a most thorough cam- paign of monetary education isto be in- augurated. It is evident that the success of the gold-bug cause in the recent election was the triumph of ignorance. That class which had intelligently studied the money question voted almost solidly for free silver, or in other words, for the bimet- allism that was established at the forma- tion of our system of currency. The ma- jority that supported the gold standard was derived from a class whose ignorance was affected by fear or who, in consequence of that ignorance, were insensible to the wrong of making their suffrage a purchas- able commodity. This class was prolific of votes for ‘‘honest money’’ and the main- tenance of the ‘‘nation’s honor,’ in all the manufacturing and mining centers where the lowest order-of naturalized voters abound, and from this class but a portion of the sixteen million dollar corruption fund was more than enough to purchase the number of votes that constituted the majority for the gold standard in the recent clection. As it is obvious that the result of the campaign was attributed to the want of a more general enlightenment on the money question, the supporters of bimetallism and monetary emancipation are determined that there shall be no remission in the dissemination of knowledge on this sub- ject, and therefore the campaign of edu- cation will be pushed with renewed and redoubled activity throughs the organized agency of free silver clubs and speakers, and bimetallic literature. This work of education will become easier and more effective each year of the coming four, during which the gold stand- ard will continue to furnish its object lessons of monetary contraction and the evils that follow in its wake : business de- pression, low prices, scant wages, hard times, general distress and discontent ; while increased tariff taxation will enlarge the opportunity of the trusts to practice their extortion upon the people. These conditions, whieh- are bound to be realized within the next four years, will wonder- fully assist the Democratic campaign of monetary education. FONTE, PA., DEC. 18. 1896. Proposed Currency Tinkering. It would appear that the Republican currency tinkers are going to have their innings, which, in conjunction with the MCKINLEY tariff tinkering that will soon be in operation, threatens a double calami- ty to the country. The Indianapolis conference, held since the election, was a movement preliminary to a proposed settlement of the currency question. It i$ intended to be followed by a convention that will be more exten- sive in its representation of the ‘‘business interests.”” Its ostensible object is to pro- mote a reform of the currency, and its en- deavor will be directed towards putting the monetary situation in a shape that will be satisfactory to the interests repre- sented in this undertaking, which is as- sumed to be of a reformatory character. It is not difficult to comprehend what kind of *‘businegs interests’’ are intended to be benefitted by the currency reform pro- posed to be brought about by this Indian- apolis movement. In order to ensure an extensive representation in the convention that is to be held sometime in January, itis being arranged to have delegates sent from all the ‘‘business centres’’ of the Union. Every town of any importance is expected to be represented, and with such a repre- sentation these currency reformers will imagine that they have comprehended all the interests worth considering. The bank- ers will be there in full force. There will be no lack of representatives from the mon- ey-lending and note shaving fraternities. The trusts, syndicates and corporate monop- olies that claim to have the biggest stake in the monetary question, will not be bashful in putting themselves forward in the proceedings. Banking institutions and corporations that contributed their thous- ands to MARK HANNA'S campaign corrup- tion fund will occupy front seats in this carrency reform convention, and there will not be a delegation from any town or city that won't be selected from what may be called its moneyed class, most probably consisting of its leading bankers and man- ufacturers. The mistake of these currency reformers, ‘who propose holding this convention for the settlement of the currency question, consists in their believing that the interest of their class comprehends the business in- terest of the conntry. The great agricul- tural community, that embraces the largest percentage of our population, will not be represented or taken into account. The numerous wage-earning class, that con- stitutes the largest portion of the popula- tion, will be given no more considera- tion in this matter than if it had ng ex- istence. Judging from their action in the poets election it is not difficult to forsée what conclusion the interests repréSented in such a convention will come to as to the system that should be adopted for the reg- ulation of the currency. It will be but a mere endorsement of the goldbug policy which by the means of unlimited corrup- tion and unparalleled misrepresentation se- cured the support of a majority of the pop- ular vote in the recent election, a majority that was more than made up of illiterate negroes, Dagos and Huns. Such a con- vention will recommend a continued main- tenance of a standard of value that gives the money dealing interest the advantage of a contracted currency. The influence it may exert in fixing the monetary policy of the country will be in line with the Re- publican practice of sacrificing the interest of the mass for the benefit of a class, and if its deliberations shall be productive of its intended effects it will be of a character more beneficial to the bankers and money changers than to the farmers and general class of working people. No Occasion for Surprise. In a tone indicative of surprise, and with a simplicity that is quite engaging, our es- teemed but misdirected contemporary, the Philadelphia Record, remarks that ‘‘so far from having been prostrated by their recent political defeat, the silverites are making extensive preparations for a new cam- paign.”’ If this astonishes the Record it is because that paper allowed itself to be deluded by the idea that when, in the recent presiden- tial campaign, the powerful money influ- ence of the bank syndicates, trusts, and general monopolistic interests had defeated the Democratic contention for the honest money of the constitution, and the princi- ples of popular government, the defeat was a final one that precluded the possi- bility of further effort for those great ob- jects. Nothing could have been more ri- diculous than that impression. It bor- dered closely on imbecility, in view of the fact that the principles which the Demo- cratic party enunciated at Chicago were supported by six and a half millions of voters, and that it required the corrupt ex- penditure of sixteen millions of dollars to secure the comparatively small majority by which monetary contraction and tariff spoliation achieved a precarious victory in the recent election. Spe Let us assure our Philadelphia contempo- rary that it is not a ‘‘new campaign’’ that the ‘‘silverites’’ are preparing to make. It is merely a continuation of the one which this year came so near being a Democratic victory for constituttonal bimetallism. Conditions that are sure to grow worse during the next four years under the increasing mone- tary constriction of the gold standard, and the disturbing effect of Republican tariff legis- lation, will produce an effect upon the pub- lic mind that will render it proof against the campaign misrepresentations of those who this year humbugged so large a per- centage of the voters by making them be- lieve that free silver meant repudiation, that the Democrats who supported it were anarchists, and that its adoption would re- duce the value of every dollar to 53 cents. These falsehoods will have spent their force in the next campaign for monetary free- dom and the currency of the constitution. And They Say it is a Fact, From the Clearfield Raftsman’s Journal. During the past week there has been stopping at the Mansion house, in this place, Henry Sutton{ of North Clarendon, Warren county, Pa., exhibiting a grapho- phone. This gentleman was a party to the most marvelous accident ever known in the history of accidents. On the 10th day of August, 1885 he was at work at the bottom of an oil well derrick, when a § inch iron bar 21 feet long, cut off square at the end fell from the top of the derrick, 74 feet, striking him on the neck, passing through his body and coming out below the left nipple, entering again at the thigh and coming out 3} inches above the knee, pass- ing on down severing the little toe from the left foot and sinking eighteen inches into the ground. = Over nine feet of this rough iron rod passed through his body and after becoming unconscious some fellow work- men discovered what had happened and laid the poor sufferer down and extracted the iron bar by pulling it out. No one thought that he would live an hour, but he recovered and his case has been com- mented upon inall the leading medical journals of the day. ‘At that time he weighed 200 pounds. Now he weighs less than 150. The marks are upon his body and his statement is verified by men who were at the scene of the accident at the time. = Money Increases, Property Decreases, in Value. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. The Kansas City Journal says that the sheriff foreclosed a $1,400 nsortgage on Mary Liz Lease’s home because the house was worth only $600. Now we know that Mary Liz isa true blue Populist— Phila- delphia Press. : That is, at least, a very good reason why “Mary Liz” should be better enlightened than the Press as to the evil influences of currency based upon a metal that constant- ly increases in purchasing power. Assum- ing that Mrs. Lease’s house was not orig- inally mortgaged for more than it was worth her experience furnishes a beautiful illustration of the workings of our financial system. Last Year Their Folly Was the Theatre Hat. From the Braymer, Mo., Bee. In the Legislature of Georgia and Mis- souri bills have been introduced making foot-ball playing a criminal offense. Here is the old familiar ‘‘straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel.”” There are real evils to be remedied, but it is much easier to tackle the little things and gain the rep- utation for courage through them when the big ones strike terror into the hearts of the law-makers. Honesty in Dishonor. From the Steubenville, Ohio, Gazette. Now the New York ‘‘Goo-goos’’ are try- ing to beat Platt for the Senatorship with Joseph H. Choate, one of the fellows who justifies everything done during a campaign and then holds up his hands in holy horror of the chaps who did the dirty work. Platt has earned that Senatorship and he ought to have it. And he is better than his party, for he doesn’t pose asan angel. Printing by Moonlight. From the Montesano, Wash., Economist A young lady explained to a printer the difference in printing and publishing, and in conclusion said : ‘Now, you may print a kiss on my cheek but you must not pub- lish it.” With that he locked the fair form in his arms so that it would not pi and went to press. Mark Hanna in "Canton. CANTON, Dec, 15.—When Major Mc- Kinley goes to Chicago, as he now expects to this week, starting on Thursday night, in all probability he will occupy a berth in one of the regular trains. The object of the trip is to join Mrs. McKinley for a few days’ visit to her cousins, Captain and Mrs. McWilliams, as well as to obtain some rest from the continuous strain of receiving and entertaining callers. It is thought the inaugural address of McKinley will be well under way to com- pletion before the work of forming a cabi- net takes more tangible form. Rest and quiet, it is thought, will be found at the McWilliams home, and it is thought here that politics has no part in the arrange- ment. National Chairman Hanna and Lieuten- ant-Governor Saxton, of New York, return- ed to Cleveland this evening. Chairman Hanna came to confer on inauguration ar- rangements, particularly those decided up- on during his recent visit to the capital. The location of the’ inaugural ball is not fully determined, and the library building is still in view. : H. H. Kohlsaat, of Chicago, was in con- ference with Major McKinley several hours last evening. Daniel Ryan, ex-secretary of state, and former Lieutenant-Governor Lyons, personal and political friends of Major McKinley « .e with hima while this evening. srs ae —The steam laundry of EI fr. °. at Clearfield, was totally destroy:d by fire Thursday. Loss $3,000. —A coach on the Wopsoponock railroad was thrown from the track fast Friday and rolled down an embankment a distance of 100 feet. The conductor and brakeman and one passenger were in the car but none of them was seriously injured. —The Baldwin locomotive works have received orders for 13 locomotives for Japan. The company also expects to build eight engines for China. These works are very busy, having besides the above orders con- tracts for 32 locomotives for various roads in this country. Spawls from the Kceyste —While cutting trees for firewood near Emporium, a few days ago, Frank Peasley felled a tree on his 14-year-old son, Arthur, killing him instantly. The scene of the ac- cident was nearly a mile from home and the heart broken father carried his dead boy home on his shoulders. : —A movement is now on foot in Harris- burg to do away with the volunteer fire de- partment in that city, and create a paid de- partment. It is estimated that the cost to the city will aggregate $35,000 per year, for which it will be necessary to levy an addi- tional one mill tax. —The engine house of Kulp, Thcmas & Co., at Milroy, Mifflin county, was destroyed by fire Wednesday night, together with a small locomotive, a car load of coal, lot of tools, kerosene oil and a quantity of tar. The loss is about $3,000. The fire is supposed to be the work of incendiaries. —Bella Frank, the 9 year old daughter of Julian Frank, of Irwin, Pa., was burned to a crisp on Thursday of last week, while standing in front of an open grate her dress caught fire. Screaming she ran. up stairs and entered her sleeping apartment, locking the door behind her. —William Ginithin, aged 16 years and em- ployed at Miller's saw mill, at Newton Ham- ilton, was almost instantly killed Saturday afternoon. His foot caught in the circular saw while he was stooping for a board and his right foot and left leg were cut off and his back split open from the pelvis to the neck. He lived about twenty minutes. —A farmer named Berkhouse, of near Reyneoldsville, was in his barn with a light- ed lantern, and upon looking out observed two boys stealing his apples. He dropped his lantern and ran after the boys, and upon returning found that the lantern had tipped over and set fire to the barn, which, with its contents, were destroyed. Loss $2,000. —(eo. Erb, formerly of Mechanicsburg, Cumberland county, delivered himself to the Harrisburg authorities Friday, confessing to the participation in the murder of a man named Edward Nutter, at Ft. Smith, Ark., last March. He and a woman named Ella Hicks gave Edward Nutter, weighmaster, knockout drops for the purpose of robbing him and he subsequently died. Erb said he could not keep the secret longer. He isin jail. : . —F. W. Clark, thé forger who swindled the Altoona Building and Loan association out of various sums of money aggregating about $20,000, was sentenced Tuesday by Judge Barker to pay a fine of $100 and costs and to undergo an imprisonment of two years and six months in the western penitentiary on each of three indictments, making an im- prisonment of seven and one-half years. Clark had been engaged in the real estate business, was prominent in the Rescue Mis- sion and editor of a Johnstown newspaper. —Some two weeks ago George McClellan, who resided in Friend’s Cove, about a mile cast of Rainsburg, Bedford county, cut with an axe the great toe on his right foot. The wound was not considered of any serious consequence at the time, but in a short time it became very painful, in so much that a physician was summoned. But the skill of the physician was baffled and despite his best efforts the patient died on Sunday morning last—the doctor said of sciatic rheumatism, aggravated by the pain in his toe. —VWilliamsport is on the verge of a big lawsuit anent their street paving. It seems the concrete used in the asphaltum pavement laid on West Fourth street, and the brick pavement on East Third street is defective, in that it doesn’t ‘‘set’” properly. It is charg- ed that the sand used is below the grade specified and the concrete will not hold the crushed stone together. Mayor Mansel re- fuses to draw warrants out of the city treasury for any more pay on the work, and the Sicilian Asphalt company threatens to bring suit to collect the bill due them for material furnished. —We see by the Willismsport Sun of Tues- day that the contractors who are building the Washington school in that city and have done defective work are being jerked up for it. Architect Reitmeyer shows that not only the brick work was done poorly, but that parts of the masonary that have been completed and will be most difficult to re- place are also defective. The stone supports of the turned pilasters on which the arched doorway rests are split from top to bottom already. That architect ought to have been around when Philadelphia’s public building was going up. —When the small sate containing the monthly salaries of the officials and em- ployees of the Beech Creek railroad arrived at Jersey Shore a few days ago, the paymas- ter could not work the combination and the door could not be opened. After making several efforts a blacksmith was sent for, who with chisels and hammer soon broke the door open. The money was then paid out. This is the second time that the safe contain- ing money for the Beech Creek employees had to be broken open owing to the failure of the combination to work. —Mrs. Josephine Martin, wife of J. T. Martin, residing near Royer, com mitted suicide by drowning some time Sunday might near Hoover’s dam, near that place. The dam is located ‘about fifty yards from the house. Mrs. Martin’s hus- band missed her from her bed about 2 o'clock Monday morning and naturally went and searched for her, finally discovering her body in the dam. Not only had she drowned herself, but she had also taken with her her 2-year old daughter, and both were found together at the bottom of the dam. Before committing the deed Mrs. Martin took off her shoes, and these, together with a nursing bottle, were found on the bank.