Demoreaic Wate a BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Now would be a good time for our Bellefonte enthusiasts to have another ex- cursion to Canton. —Free trade would be a more hopeful incentive to unloading the over-burdened ware-rooms of eastern manufacturers than is the free-ride sort of inducement to get country merchants to buy. ——With the price of wheat going up and the wages of labor going down the kind of prosperity that is sweeping over the country is likely to make strangers of the poor man’s stomach and the bread plate. —The depth of the affections of GILLES: PIE, the star witness for the prosecution in the CORNELLY arson trial, were measured in an extremely original manner when he spoke of the Coleville girls as ‘‘females” and those of Axe Mann as ‘‘ladies.”’ —The American window glass associa- tion is the latest trust that has sprung in- to existence under these beneficent Repub- lican tariff ideas. The new association will control fifteen-sixteenths of the glass pots in this country. Its only object, so far as is known, is to give the public high- er priced panes. —The only trace of the recent reunion of the mighty SMITH family at Lakemont, near Altoona, is a set of false teeth that were picked up on the grounds. Inas- much as none of the SMITHS could be found who would claim the artificial chew- ers it is reasonable to suppose that that family is not as ancient as the world be- lieves it to be. —The number of young girls who have been crowding the court room since the trial of JAMES CORNELLY was called seems to indicate that he will be quite the fad in town in the event of his acquittal. There is no disputing JIM’s versatility, but we fancy he would flounder as a leader of a swell german, all bedecked with the cute favors of his fair admirers. —The rise that has taken place in the wheat market is one that will profit the farmer more than any advance in the price of any of his products has done in years. This time the price has gone up before it has been sold, so he will benefit. As yet only 72,000,000 of our 500,000,000 bushels crop has been sold and the farmer will get the advanced price, this time, instead of the speculator. —AL HANKINS, a noted Chicago sport, sat down on his folding bed, Wednesday evening, and he never knew that his neck was broken. The treacherous thing closed up and AL is a corpse now. This simply goes to show what uncertainties there are in life. Here the very article that was to give him rest and recuperation snuffed his light out with all the dispatch of a modern hanging machine. —The assassination of great public char- acters seems to be growing in popularity. No sooner has the Spanish prime minister’s murder been dropped by the newspapers than the story of the shooting of the Presi- dent of Uruguay is reported over the world. While such crimes fortunately occur at rare intervals yet they are always followed by a feeling of uneasiness in all countries lest their commission might lead fanatics to similar ones. --There were forty-five thousand vet- erans in line at the great encampment parade, at Buffalo, on Wednesday. Presi- dent McKINLEY was at their head. When LINCOLN was the commander of those soldiers, thirty-two years ago, they made the United States the greatest nation of earth by proving that though torn almost assunder by the most disastrous internal warfare known to history there was yet re- cuperative strength for a firmer union than ever. A Union that should recognize all men as free and equal. How do you sup- pose this later day commander must have felt, knowing that the equality, the strug- gle for which had caused so many of the sleeveless coats and crippled bodies that trudged bravely behind him, has now come to be little more than a farce. Through the political policy, he sat there the em- bodiment of, the black slavery of before ’61 has been changed to the white slavery of 97, when labor is trampled upon by pampered trusts and the blighting powers of centralized wealth. —It seems strange that the Democratic party of Pennsylvania is never ready to take advantage of opportunities that are thrown in its way. Never in the history of political situations in this State has there been a more hopeful out-look for Democracy than there is just now. With the people all cognizant of the most fla- grant and costly administration of state affairs, burdened by the debts of two notoriously corrupt Legislatures, conscious of the plundering of state funds to make jobs for political heelers ; with all the damning evidence of malicious leadership that was uncovered by the Republican state chairmanship fight in 1895 and know- ing that the State cannot pay its appro- priations for public schools, though the taxes for that purpose were eollected long ago, everything conspires to the success of Democracy. When our party should be preparing to take advantage of such oppor- tunites we find it on the verge of disrup- | tion. Why fight now ? Let there be harmony and if there is harmony there will be success. Let the convention at Reading settle the dirputes amicably and halt this business of running over the State fomenting discord before any cause for it has arisen. En RRL Demacralic ag “4 ng | dt IIE —S The Only Prosperity in Sight. The managers of the Republican party are congratulating themselves on their luck in being relieved by a boom in wheat which may verify their promise of prosperity. Just after the enactment of their tariff bill, luckily for them, an unprecedented failure of the crop has occurred in every wheat raising country of the world, except in the United States, which is favored with an unusually abundant yield of that cereal. Here is presented a conjunction of cir- cumstances than which there could be nothing more conducive to an improvement of business conditions in this country. The European markets are found to be bare of wheat, while the foreign crop has proved to be almost an absolute failure. There is scarcely an exception to this misfortune in any European country, and what increases the shortage abroad is that the countries from which Europe makes up the defi- ciency -in her own wheat production have also been overtaken by a failure of their crops. India, Australia and Argentina can send no wheat to Europe, which must look to the United States alone for this in- dispensable cereal, and here the supply is unusually abundant. No combination of circumstances could have been more favorable to the agricul- tural interest of this country, insuring a great profit, and it comes just at a time when the Republican promise of prosperity became due. But how much of this prosperity can be credited to Republican measures? What part of it has been brought about by the DINGLEY tariff? The prosperity of which Major MCKINLEY was to he the advance agent was to come through the effect of higher tariff duties and as the result of protection to the manufactur- ers, but the only relief from the gen- erally prostrated business condition is seen coming from a line of production and a class of producers that owe nothing to the Republican protective policy. The farmers, whose product is bringing the only prosperity in sight, are not indebted to DINGLEY for as much as the value of a bushel of wheat. Let us suppose that the situation in re- gard to the crops was of the usual charac- ter at this timeg,.ovith Europe producing her accustomed harv vest, and Russia, India, Australia and Argentina in condition to compete with the United States in supply- ing the normal deficiency in the European market, what chance would there be for dollar wheat and what sort of prosperity would be striking the country at this time ? Unless the Republicans can show that they were instrumental in blasting the crops in Europe and other wheat growing regions, and influenced Providence to fa- vor this country with an unusual harvest this year, we can’t see how they will make it appear that they are entitled to credit for the prosperity which will be solely due to our big wheat crop. But we shall not be surprised if they claim the exclusive credit for it. Who Will Pay for he Free Rides. The country dealers who are being lured to the eastern cities to buy goods by ‘‘mer- chant’s associations,’’ and ‘‘trades leagues’’ standing the expense of their railroad fare, should not delude themselves with the idea that the cost will not be footed in the end by other parties than the city mer- chants. We do not begrudge the rural trader the enjoyment he derives from the excursion which he is thus enabled to indulge in without paying the customary charges of the railroad companies. If he takes his wife along, and even his mother-in-law and other female relatives, so much the hetter, as it enlarges the diversion furnish- ed by the generous city merchants who pay the fare. It will do the country ex- cursionists good to have an outing at this season of the year. There is exhileration in the breezes that blow from the ocean at Atlantic City, while a bath in salt water is conducive to health and promotive of pleasure ; and in addition to such enjoy- ment on the Jersey coast they will receive the most polite attention in the city from the mercantile gentlemen at whose invita- tion and expense they come eastward to purchase goods. We would in no way diminish the pleas- ure of these country dealers, but nothing could be a greater delusion than for them to imagine that the expense of the railroad fare, exemption from which is the induce- ment for them to make the trip, will be paid out of the pockets of the enterprising but wily city merchants. It will all be made up in the charges for the goods. The rural trader will find an advance in the prices of all the articles he purchased. Of course the new tariff will occasion an increase in the cost of goods, but an addi- tion to meet tite expense of the free ex- | cursions will go into the bill along with the tariff gouge. In the natural order of trade the country merchant will make his customers pay for this increase in the cost of his invoice, and so in the end the farm- ers, mechanics and other dealers at the country stores will have to shoulder the expense of the ‘‘free rides.”’ | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., AUG. 27. 1897. What the Bankers Want. The meeting of the bankers’ convention, which was in session, in Buffalo, during the past week, was an occurrence that should interest the American people. The public are interested in it not from any benefit that may be expected to result from this convention, but rather for the reason that its deliberations related to a matter that closely affects the public welfare, and which, if misdirected, will be attended with injurious consequences to the people. A tremendous influence is exerted by the parties who assembled at Buffalo to de- liberate upon questions affecting the money interests, and particularly such as are con- nected with the banking business. They represented banking capital amounting to over $680,000,000, and individual deposits closely approaching two billions. They constituted a power that can exert a vast influence upon the country, and if that power is improperly directed the injury it might do would be proportionately great. The direction in which that power will he exercised appears to be sufficiently in- dicated. It was shown, last year, when everyone of these institutions contributed its share of the means by which a national election was carried, and evinced by the tendency to the centralization of wealth for the attainment of political as well as commercial predominance. The sentiment of the bankers is unani- mous for the limitation of the currency to the narrow basis of the gold standard. The more contracted the basis the better for their interest. They want no paper circulation except that which they issue, based on gold bonds. For this reason they want all the government notes ret.red and the greenbacks made a mere recollection of the past. They want, in short, an entire monopoly of the currency of the country, and after securing this profitable privilege they will not think it too much to ask to be exempted from taxation and to be allow- ed to issue notes up to the full par value of the bonds they deposit as security for their circulation. This is a synopsis of what the bankers proposed at their convention, and what they will attain if it can be accomplished by influencing the governmental authori- ties, towards which they made a big step at the last election. Our readers may judge for themselves whether the interest of the people or of the plutocrats would be better served by the accomplishment of such designs. - Hanna’s Surplus of Boodle. There is certainly something suspicious in the circumstance that the checks which HANNA’S paymaster, Major DICK, handed around among the Populists of Ohio at their state convention to induce them to nominate a straight ticket, with CoXEY at the head of it, and thus prevent a fusion with the Democrats, were drawn on the bank at Washington where HANNA keeps the balance of the boodle fund that was left over from the McKINLEY campaign. There was no attempt made to conceal these checks. They were passed around and handled as if they were being used in a legitimate business transaction. It was known that HANNA had the money with which to turn the middle-of-the-road party away from the Democrats, and COXEY and his crowd were on hand to receive their pay from HANNA’S agent. The parties that were bought were a contemptible set, but their purchase was as corrupt a trans- action as if the goods that were delivered had been of a higher quality. The large balance which HANNA has on hand for the purpose of political cor- ruption this year shows how lavishly the contributing trusts, hankers and moneyed corporations poured their money into the campaign fund last year. It was estimated that sixteen millions of dollars were raised by the corruptionists to secure MCKIN- LEY’S election ; nor is this an extravagant estimate considering that the sugar trust will make more than that amount, alone, from one year’s profits from the differential duty on sugar in the DINGLEY bill. The contributions for last year’s cam- paign from the various interests that ex- pected’a share of the tariff plunder was so profuse that HANNA actually couldn’t spend it all and has about $2,000,000 for this year’s Ohio campaign. It is to be seen whether the American people will become reconciled to his method of deter- mining the result of elections by the boodle process. ——The Democrats of Clinton county held their convention, on Tuesday, and | nominated H. T. JARRETT, for register and recorder. W. H. BRIDGENS was nomina- ted for jury commissioner and W. L. AL- LEN, H. G. HANNA and P. KANE were made delegates to the state convention. Strong resolutions endorsing the Chicago platform were adopted. They included the following significant clause : ‘Resolved, that it is impolitic to elect or retain as leaders of the Democratic party men not in sympathy with the principles enunciated in the Chicago platform.” Demoralized by Bad Association. Ex-Gov. ROSWELL P. FLOWER, of New York, furnishes an example of the demor- alization to which Democrats were exposed by allowing themselves to stray off into the camp of the goldbugs. The ex-Governor stood high in the coun- cils of the Democratic party. He had the confidence of Democrats to such an extent that he was elected by them to the high office of Governor of New York. But he yielded, last year, to the blandishments of Wall street. He bowed in worship before the golden calf, and such debasing idolatry has had the effect of bringing him still low- er, as he now poses as the defender of the trusts. If he had remained true to the principles of the Democratic party, as de- clared in the Chicago platform, he would not now be found in the disgraceful posi- tion of an advocate of the Standard oil company, the sugar trust.and other preda- tory combinations. Who would have expected ever to see Gov. FLOWER stand before an audience and defend these organized robberies, yet that was what he was recently seen to do when in an address to the farmers of the New York state grange he declared that “to inveigh against trusts is to cry out against combinations of human effort and possession in every field of activity—to set one’s self against the laws of progress and in favor of retrogression and anarchy.” There could not have heen a more bare- faced attempt to represent as legitimate “human effort,” in the way of business ac- tivity, these conspiracies to break down competition and restrict trade in order to secure the ends of monopoly, and nothing could be more impudent than to stigma- tise as ‘‘anarchy’’ the natural opposition of those who suffer from such asystem of spo- liation. That ex-Gov. FLOWER should have spe- cially selected the sugar trust as an object of defence shows how debased his senti- ments have become since he abandoned the principles upon which the Democratic party contended last year against indus- trial, as well as monetary monopoly. Upon his assumption that the trust has reduced the price of sugar, he can see ‘‘no public injury”’ in a combination that has not only sé&ured absolute and arbitrary control of an indispensable and vastly valuable com- modity, but has also succeeded in exercis- ing control over the Senate of the United States. In addition to his abandonment of Democratic principles, it may be that ex- Gov. FLOWER’s large interest in the Chica- go gas trust has had its effect in arraying him among the defenders of those rapa- cious monopolies that are robbing the American people. Even Mr. CLEVE- LAND’S Democracy was not proof against the effect of his Wall street associations. Produced by Exceptional Causes. The prophet who predicts that the pres- ent rise in the price of wheat is going to be a permanent condition shows that he has not learned anything from past experience. Such a situation as that which causes a great demand for our grain, and conse- quently high prices, comes but periodical- ly. There is no cause that can make such prices permanent and regular. They must necessarily be uncertain, as they depend upon the contingencies of failure of foreign harvests and favorable crops in this coun- try. The New York Evening Post, in remark- ing that the exceptional advantage of the present great demand for our wheat cannot be continuous, says : ‘‘The high markets of 1879 set all the world to raising wheat and building railways to carry it to mar- ket ; in 1882 the world’s harvest was 200,- 000,000 bushels larger than the heaviest crop ever produced before the shortage of 1879. The series of short crops in 1889, in 1890 and in 1891 had exactly similar re- sults, and by 1894 all the markets were discontentedly talking ‘‘overproduction.’” There is no reason to suppose that the next three or four years will tell any different story.”’ An occasional profitable crop of wheat, with conditions that send the price up in the neighborhood of a dollar, does not dis- prove the fact that the value of agricultu- ral products have steadily fallen since the demonetization of silver. There may be a spurt now and then, produced by some particular cause, as at the present time, but after it is over a falling back to low prices can be surely looked for. The Republicans are making all the polit- ical capital possible out of the wheat crop. The improvement in business which it may cause will be credited to the DINGLEY tar- iff, but this claim will be as absurd as the assumption that an occasional rise in the price of wheat from exceptional causes proves that agricultural values have not been depreciated by the demonetization of silver. —One of the anouaties of the present business condition of the country is the fact that the more bread goes up the less of it will go down. "NO. 38. The Cause of Dollar Wheat. From the Venango Spectator. A great ado is being made by all the Re- publican journals over the advanced price of wheat, they all giving the credit of the advanced prices to their party. The truth about the matter, as every intelligent man knows, is that the wheat crops in foreign coutries have been short, while India has an actual famine and starvation. The best authorities, taking the latest figures, put the European wheat crop this year at 1,- 294,000,000 bushels as against 1,518, 000- 000 a decrease this year of 224,000,000 bushels. This shortage of wheat i in foreign countries is what is causing the advanced prices. European countries are short of bread materials and the United States is the only country on the globe that has more than enough for its own uses and plenty to sell to those who are short. We are glad to see wheat go up and up, but when we know that the advanced prices we get are from our starving fellowman that brings up a question we would rath- er not discuss. We know that one man’s loss is another man’s gain ; that is the way of the world, but we doubt if it will always be so. The truth about the advanced price of wheat to-day is that our fellowman in some cases is short and in other cases starving, and if money was more plentiful—if the mints of India had never been closed to the coinage of silver, wheat would be higher still, and while there might be a famine there would be no actual starving, as the Indian would have money to buy all the food products he wanted from the country that had them to sell. If anything on God’s earth ever makes England open the India mints to the coinage of silver this famine will. Al- ready many of her statesmen see that India could have passed through this famine without starvation had she the money to buy food products, and that she would have had the money had her mints to the coinage of silver been left open, It was a fearful crime against that unfortunate country and one thatwill have to be an- swered for some ed. A Badly Botched Ballot Law. From the Phila., Public Ledger. The new ballot bill, known as the Beck- er bill, appears to be fatally defective in one clause, that which declares that upon the ballots to be voted at any election the name of any candidate shall not appear more than once by certificate of nomina- tion, or more than once by nomination pa- pers. This is a restriction upon the right to make nominations, which is not only impolitic, but we believe, beyond the power of the legislature to impose. The names of our judges frequently appear up- on all the tickets ; the tickets would be in- complete without them ; and the legisla- ture has no authority to say that a political party shall not nominate a particular man or shall go before the people with a ticket ‘“‘half made up.’” It would be desirable to prevent duplications, but the only way to do that fairly is to change the character of the Pennsylvania ballot, and instead of printing party tickets put the names of candidates for a particular office under the office, with designation of the party or par- ties making the nominations. That is the best form of ballot, but was rejected by the politicians of the state, who keep their hold upon public affairs by getting the ma- jority of citizens to vote party tickets blindly. To amend a ballot law providing for the printing of a succession of party tickets so as to prevent the duplication of names is to deprive one or more parties of freedom in making nominations. That this is understood to be the effect of the law is shown by the statement from Har- risburg, that if Dr. Swallow should be nominated by the prohibitionists his name could not appear in the Democratic col- umn. Itis doubtful whether this clause of the Becker bill would be sustained hy the courts, Nothing is more certain than that in the interests of public policy it shall not be sustained.”’ The Geology of the Klondyke. From the Pittsburg Post. Under eternal snow and ice the geo- logical formations of northern and western Alaska lie hidden, and the scientists who have visited that wonderland have given us little definite information concerning the nature of the strata. It is true that most of the rocks exposed near the gold diggings and in the famous Chilkoot pass are of igneous origin, being composed of impure granite or syenite, and the moraines of living glaciers are made up of the same kind of materials, which might be taken as an indication that the hed rock of Alaska is all granite. But there are other facts which show that the formations are varied, and that the territory is not devoid of rocks of a more recent geological age. Away up along the western coast great cliffs of car- boniferous limestone have been discovered, and at the same place there are fossil glaciers supposed to be the remains of the great glacier of prehistoric time, which came down as far south as Pennsylvania. There is a good field for the geologist in Alaska at present, and he is needed there to point out the trend of the strata, tell the world the nature of the formations and explain whether the placer gold of the Yukon originated from the grinding up of indigenous rocks, or was scooped up out of the Arctic ocean by the great glaciers of some prehistoric age. France and Import Duties on Wheat. PARIS, Aug. 22.—The Eclair and other papers say that official circles regard it as useless to suppress the import duty on wheat, and assert that M. Meline, the premier, has made no special declaration on the subject. © The Temps says he has given the matter close study, but at the ministry of agricul- ture, which does not appear to share the excitement of the spapers, there is no disposition either to suppress or to lower the duties or cereals. The Repubiique Francaise says that it learns that the government has resolved not to accede to the demands for the aboli- tion of the duties. Spawls from the Keystone. —The peach harvest has fairly commenced in Cumberland valley. —Mrs. Jacob Mawry, of Tamaqua, fed a tramp who awarded her kindness by steal- ing 340. —The new United Evangelical church at White Deer, Union county, was dedicated Sunday. —Mystery surrounds the disappearance of Thomas Johnson, who left his home at Mauch Chunk last Thursday. —A Lehigh Valley train killed George Mustro near his home at hickory Swamp, Northumberland county, —Ermentrout Grove camp-meeting, near Stroudsburg, Monroe county, has closed after a successful 10 days’ session. —The 3000 Union Coal Company employes in Northumberland county will work an ad- ditional day each week until further notice. —On the charge of stealing Valentine Stump’s horse at Avon, Lebanon county, Harvey Wise was held in $1000 bail for court. —Farmer Owen Artz was found dead in the road near Mohrsville, Berks county having been thrown from his wagon and killed. —It is estimated that the advance in wheat will make Berks county farmers $180,000 richer than their expectations one month ago. —\Walking in her sleep, Mrs. Earnest Ul- rich, of Cranberry, Luzerne county, stepped into a mine hole and almost perished before help came. —TFive thousand men are expected to take part in a parade of the Demonstration As- sociation of Central Pennsylvania, at Leigh- ton, on Labor day. —Fire damaged the chemical factory of Henry K. Wampole & Co., manufacturing druggists, of Philadelphia to the extent of $50,000, on Saturday last. —Lockjaw caused the death of Robert Luther, who in a fight at Altoona a couple of weeks ago, was struck on the head with « stone, alleged to have been thrown by Geo. Peight. —Samuel Gelwix was elected borough superintendent of the Chambersburg schools, and J. H. Kriechbaum, of Millersville, was made principal of the high school, the posi- tion heretofore held by Gelwix. —One hundred applicants for naturaliza- tion, half of the number that came up before Judge Savidge, at Sunbury, Monday, were refused papers because they could not proper- ly cast ballots in a booth set up in the court room. —Harrison Gehris, better known as ‘Pete’ is without doubt the champion bark peeler of Potter county. Mr. Gehris is 30 years of age and weighs 165 pounds, and the past season he peeled 236% cords of bark by himself. Some days he peeled as high as eleven cords. —At Salladasburg Wednesday, Mrs. Mary Whitcomb went to Dr. C. B. Bastian to have several teeth extracted. The dentist at first refused to administer ether, owing to the week condition of the lady’s heart. The woman was suffering intense pain from tooth- ache and insisted that the anesthetic be given her. The dentist finally yielded to her importunities and gave her the ether. Mrs. Whitcomb did not gain consciousness and died in the chair. Her husband and two small children survive. The dentist was exhonerated from all blame. —The prospectors who are searching for minerals on the Bald Eagle mountains are still at work, but as yet have found nothing of value more than the outcroppings of ore of several kinds. From the Jersey Shore Spirit it is learned the company now have leased about 4000 acres of mountain lands in Clinton county, on the mountain just south of Aughenbaugh’s Gap, and extending from the Clinton county line almost up to Pine station. Several tracts they have purchased outright. They expect to keep prospecting on their claim until they have thoroughly investigated the entire space. —The changes made by the present state hol- iday law are as follows : February 12th, Lin- coln’s birthday, is made a legal holiday for the first time. The third Tuesday of Febru- ary, election day, ismade a full holiday in- stead of a half holiday, as was provided by the act of assembly on May 23rd, 1893. Whenever May 30th (Memorial day) shall occur on Sunday, the following day, Mon- day, is to be observed as the legal holiday, instead of the preceeding day, Saturday, as has been the case heretofore. The first Mon- day of September is designated as Labor day, instead of the first Saturday in September, as was the case under the act of assembly of May 31st, 1893. —Warren W. Dickson, post office inspector at Pittsburg, on Saturday received a letter from Miss Maggie D. Ake, post-mistress at Portage, Cambria county, in which she states after reading the account of the robbery of the Barnesboro post office by James Lewis and William Moore, the men now in jail at Hol- lidaysburg, she believes that they also robbed the Portage office, for both jobs bear the same finger marks. As at Barnesboro they fastened the doors of the sleeping rooms of those who lived over the post office and kept them prisoners while they blew the safe open and got the money in it. In blowing open the Portage safe they did just as was done in Barnesboro. A hole was drilled in the top and a charge of blasting powder put in. They got $165.56 —The two men arrested on suspicion of robbing the Barnesboro post office, had a hear- ing before United States commissioner Mc- Leod, of Altoona. Postmaster Huber, of Barnesboro, indentified the money, stamps and registered packages found upon the pris- oners when arrested at Lewistown, showing in his register book where he had noted the receipt of one of the packages. Other citizens of Barneshoro testified of having seen one of the prisoners in the town the day before the post office was robbed. When the govern- ment rested its case one of the prisoners made a statement. He said his name is Wil- liam Moore, and that he alone robbed the post office. The other prisoner was only a chance acquaintance whom he met for the first time at Barnesboro the day before the robbery, and whom he met afterwards and traveled with until arrested. The other prisoner, who said his name is James Lewis, repeated this statement. In default of $2,- 000 bail for Moore and $1,500 for Lewis, they were both remanded for trial at the United States court to be held at William- | sport.