®l)f iCrntrr flrmorrat. S. T. SHIGERT & E. L. OIiVIS, Editors. • VOL. 6. 1 iht Ctnfte democrat. Twai Sl.ftO par Annum In Advance Thursday Moraine, February 7, 1884. A COMMITTEE of the Window Glass Workers association from Pittsburgh, visited Washington last week with a petition containing 75,000 signatures, asking the passage of the bill to pre vent the importation of foreign con tract labor. ALTHOUOH great effort has been made to induce the Hon. Eckly It ('/OX, of W ilkesharre, to reconsider his incision, he positively declines to be a candidate for re-electioa to the senate fjom the Tweuty-first district. This will be a subject of sincere regret to the people of the state. FUKD DOUGLASS receives uuy amount of indignant ju-otest from hi" colored brethren for mixing with "white trash," when there were so many attractive belles of his own color, who would gladly have contributed to his happiness and the care of his jdathoric bank account. Boss QUAY IS very clear and satis factory when he couveys the informa tion that the Pennsylvania Republican delegation to the National convention will vote for Arthur, Edmunds, Logan, Vmcolu or some other man. That %)me other man" is probably a dark that Matt may be grooming for jJP occasion. Is his name Don ? A FAT CIEKKHHIP 1 A committee •if the New York legislature develops the fact that County Clerk Keenan, of |the city of New York, has an annual income from hit office of gR2,000. He | admits a net income from searches of $66,000, salary 13,000 and other pea- of 13,700. He objects of .-,.rp of patriots in Re senate. - - ♦ THE Dsmocrats of the I nited State Senate possessed a little too much gpod sense and sound judgment to uflow Sherman and Mahone to in veigle them into their "bloody shirt trap." 'Sherman baited well, fully up to his best efforts, when "Eliza Pinker ton" was his inspiration, but tho Dem ocratic senators treated him with con tempt, and hia"b!oody shirt" campaign for 1884, fell as flat and harmless as his dead Eliza. NOTWITHSTANDING his admonition to another, Bora Quay talks and dumb- Aunds some of his most ardent party admirers by his talk, when he admits kat there should be considerable odificationa in the tariff laws. Be careful, Mattl The senatorial elec tion is sometimes uncertain and result in the promotion of very insignificant men. This ia no time for a Republi can to be honest even if heroes acci dentally catch a glimmer of tbat virtue. "DonT talk." CARLISLE on Saturday bad an arri val of fifty-two Apache and ten Puebla children to enter the Indian school at tbat place to commence their educa tion. They are accompanied by four of toe Apache chiefs, who will remain at the school a few days and then proceed to Washington. Tbe addi tion of these pupils raises tbe number of students to between 400 and fiOO representing many different tribes- The advancement of the students in (We schools are represented as very flphfactory, and but little doubt now mcists that the right method has at BMMS been adopted to settle tho vexed Awkfot of Indian civilization. Our Improvement# Railroad construction is the absorb ing interest in this locality, and it is a source of regret to us that we have not had time since the sickness ami absence of our juuior, to gather such information of the progress of the various works as would be desirable to our readers, but we hope before long to make amends for the omission. The most important work now in progress is the Vauderbilt line which passes up Beech Creek, traversing Snow Shoe and Rush townships in this county t ami the county of Clearfield, and will be intersected by the Buffalo Run road from this place at Beech Creek. These roads which have already made rapid strides towards completion, wilt, when complefed, bring into active market the coal deposits of those districts with the inexhaustible iron beds of this county, besides settling and populating : a large scope of country heretofore j destitute of these facilities. Already ■ this fact is becoming apparent along ' the line of Beech Creek where settle ments are made, and a respectable town has sprung up as if by nfagic within the last year, and is increasing , rapidly. It is named in honor of Ex- Senator Peale, who represented us so acceptably in the State Senate a few years ago. It is a compliment well deserved a- it was to his energy and public spirit, in connection with our present distinguished Senator Wallace, that the people arc largely, if not mainly indebted for the great improvement now in progress. Again work has been commenced and is in progrcra by the Pennsylvania com pany for building a road from Belle ibnte to Lemont, which is intended to connect with the road from Lewisburg on the Susquehanna through Peons valley. This is another important connection which should have bean nllkde years ago in justice t<>our PeHos 'valloy friend- who contributed so 'liberally to its accomplishment. We are glad now to have the opportunity j to congratulate our patient friends on the certainty of Us completion at an early day. IF any other evidence were wanting then the contempt meted out to Ma hone and Sherman by the Democratic senators, to prove that the late effort of these worthies to inaugurate a "bloody shirt" campaign for the Presi dential election, is destined to end in discomfiture, it is given by influential Republican journals, who -peak for decent Republicanism throughout the country. The Utiea Herald has this to say : "The solid South is, in it essence, chiefly an organized protest against Federal interference with the internal affair* of tbe Southern States." The Rochester Po*i-KsprtM signifi cantly says: 'No mention was made of the 'Southern question' in Presi- 1 dent Arthur's last message. We are also of opinion that in bis inaugural President Garfield said something very like this: 'Enterprise* of the highe*t importance to our moral and material well being invito us and offer ample scope for the employment of our best powers. Let all our people, leaving behind tbem tbe battlefields of dead issues, move forward, and in the strength of liberty and restored Unioo, win tbe grandest victories of peace.' Garfield and Arthur ought to be pretty good authorities on such a point." The war irauee are past and Sher man, at least, ought to have tbe capa city to discern tbat tbe existing busi ness and social relations between the two sections are an effectual bar to the "blood and thunder" denunciations of tbe Southern people, because some rogues ply their villainous methods there, as ihey do to a very large ex tent here in tbt North. MA HONK'S aim, be of hip-pocket notoriety in tbe Virginia riots, baa been given a place in tbe senate, su perceding an experienced and respeota. bie official. Tbis ia civil service in the senate. . : "X|UAL AND XXACT JUSTICE TO ALL MXN, OF WHATXYKR STATS OX FKXPVAAION, KBtlOloe* OX POLITICAL.JW.rot. BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1884. THE G. A. R. of the department of Pennsylvania is to be held in Laucax ter, on the sixth and seventh of this month. Great preparation has been made for this meeting, and it is ex pected to be very largely attended. WENDELL PHILLIP*, the world re nowned lecturer and orator, died at his residence in Boston on Sunday last of heart disease. He was in his seventy-third year. His career has been that of a reformer, and has oer tainly tilled a prominent part in form ing the history of the country. ♦ THE reveoue officers at Philadel. phia, it is announced, have discovered ; irregularities'at twelve distilleries in | Lehigh county. Stamps uncancelled and casks tilled with liquor without j lieing stamped. These operators do , not appreciate laws that place stamp* | upon their industries. THE distiibution of the eastern mail the other day was not made strictly in accordance with the rcgula -1 tious of the post-office department, when it was scattered along the rail road for a distauce of seventeen miles 1 between Huntingdon and Altoona- The mail pouch thrown from the fast train at Huntingdon struck a snow bank, was caught up by the wheels of the car and carried aloug and de stroyed with the principal part of their content*. Registered letters and pack ages were found along the track rilled of their contents. THE Democratic State committee at their recent meeting in Ilarrisburg, cl.-cUb an executive committee com posed of the following gentlemeu : W. P. Harrity, of Philadelphia, R. P. Allen, of Williamsport, H. S. Packer of Mauch Chunk, B. F. Myers, of Harrisburg, W. 1. Brennan, of Pitta burgh, Richard Coulter, t>F Westmore land and E. A. HtgW, of Clearfield. TBE>ablo and experienced Democrats co-operating actively with the live and energetic head of the Htalc committee, is an earnest that the Democratic party in Pennsylvania will not fail from inefficient presentation of the issues involved in the campaign of IHM. THE work of restoring the stolen acra- of the public domain to the ownership of tiio government has l>e< n commenced in Congress, and it is to be hoped will he continued, so far as restoration is still possible, Mr. Cobb, chairman of tho committee on Public j Lands, on Friday last called up two hills which were passed. The first. forfeiting all the unearned land grants to railroad corporationa in Mississippi, Alabama, Iyouisiana and Arkansas, amounting to many thousand acres The second forfeit# the grant to the Texas Pacific railroad. Involving 15,- I ODO/MK) acres situated in New Mexico, Arizona and California, and ia claimed on behalf of the Southern Pacitic on j a consolidation of the two roads. Mr. Barr, of Pennsylvania, past the only vote in the House against the passage of the bill, and may be considered the champion of the fraud, if not the attorney of the lobby now in Wash ington protesting. THE latest rumors of cabinet changes at Washington sends Attorney-General Brewster to France and places Mor ton, the minister he snooeeds,' in the offioe of Secretary of the Treasury, and lands Secretary Folger in the office of Attorney-General. These changes are pronounced jndidons by the press. Morton, it is believed will be an able and capable guardian of the Treasury, whose appointment will please and restore Conkling to good temper. Folger is an accomplished lawyer, and will probably have some old fashioned ideas of honest manage ment of the Department of Justice, while Brewster can flourish ia frills and exccntricity in the French Re public to bis heart's content, and a reasonably creditable repreaeolapra. • Irr your Job Work done at the Can# TXB DaaocßAT. Jm ' < KeF • -ffj JkiiM Justlco to Gen. Porter The bill for the relief of Gen. Fitz John Porter pawed the House of Rep resentatives on Friday laid, by a vote of 184 to 78, after eloquent speeches from Ex-Governor Curtiu, and M tin Mtrswcx* pr 4rr*ts mini oc- CI SSIJ. I.4ST MTCRDAT. ANNAPOLIS, M 1., Jan. 30.— 00 Satur day afternoon a number of first class men went into fourth Classman f'adet ' r *ok M. Kussell s room and requested him to stand on bis head. Fourth t'lass" m*n Cadet Charles C. Craig, of Illinois Itusscii t room male —was next ap proached bjr the first classmen, when t'rsig raised his skates and struck Cadet John . Maxey, of Texas, in the fore head. The ligbt were then put out and a free fight ensued, in which Cadet Harry Fried lander, of New York, of the aecmd clam, waa knocked down and kicked in the stomach by Cadet Craig, who managed to fight faia way out of the crowd and get down stair*. The rebellion of the fourth clansmen against the higher classes was imme diately reported among the cadets, and three of the upper classes made one end after supper Cadet Craig seas oou fronted by a dosen upper classmen who wanted him to challenge any one of their number for a fiat fight op stairs. He said he would take it now. They then attempted to oarry him up stair*, but he resisted, and the noise at tract nt the attention of the Sergeant of Marine*, who does police duty at the new quar. ten, aed the sflbir ended. The matter waa reported to Captaio Ramsay. .Superintendent of the Aca demy, on Monday. It ia reported that after Craig had eluded their greep the upper classes slashed through the fourth clammen's quarters, and haaed them "all hand* around." The fourth rlammsn show all their old-time determination to prot*ul their tormentor* by their sileece aed feigned igooraeoe. Neval Cadet Sam WHeea, .Tr„ ami William Peacock, fourth rlaemtea, both of Indiana, quarantined en the Unites! Stete* ship San tee, left their quarter* yesterday and ctaid all night at tho Maryland Hotel, in Annapolie, where they eeolly registered their full names- This morning, their s bee nee bring die covered, Watchman Denver waa sent after them, and they were taken to the Sentee end pieced hi eoUtary confine NO. 15.