BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —HeNDERsON's light estimate of the value of an oath may have been brought about by his swearing so much, Itis a well known fact that familiarity begets contempt --When such usually reliable Reput- lican voters as the Virginia Quakers de- clare against MamnoNE it must be con- fessed that the cause of the little rebel is in a shaky condition. —A fellow with two mouths is on ex- hibition at a Philadelphia dime museum. Although better provided in this re- spect than ForRAKER, we doubt whether he can do as much blowing. —~Considering the quality of the wa- ter, the Philadelphia milk dealer who was fined fifty dollars for watering his milk must be regarded as having got off with a very light punishment. —Another unsuccessful attempt to blow up the Czar of Russia with dyna- mite is reported. These demonstrations don’t appear to diminish that potentate’s chance of reaching a good old age. —T'here isn’t much of a Republican party in Berks county, but what there is of it has managed to split itself in two by a factional fight. The apple of dis- cord is prominent in what would other- wise be a fruitless contest: —Sunday can hardly be considered the correct day for holding an election, but the French voters did so well at the polls last Sunday that they seem to have verified the old maxim of “the better the day the better the deed.” —The New York Sun is begging the millicnaires of the metropolis to put up $5000 apiece towards a fund of a million dollars for the Columbus expo- sition. The close fisted meanness of the plutocrats of the great city doesn’t de- serve the Fair. —The New Yorkers have at last fixed upon the site where the Columbus ex- position shall be located, but the rich men of the city are not reaching down into their pockets with the air of men who are determined to back the scheme with their money. -—The Chairman of the Republican National Committee has devised a $10 bond as a means of raising a permanent corruption fund for campaign use, and he hashad the gall to embellish this evi- dence of corrupt politics with a likeness of honest OLD ABE. —In getting a successor to TANNER the Republican managers don’t consider it of as much importance to select an incumbent who will perform his trust to the best interest of the people as to get one whose appointment will be satisfac- tory to the Grand Army of the Repub- Yio. —Chicago is usually regarded as a fast town, but its characteristic rapidity is not displayed in getting a jury for the trial of the CRroNIN suspects. Weeks were consumed in securing four who were possessed of that degree of ignor- ance which the law seems to require of jurors in murder trials. —The Commissioners of Pennsylvania held a State Convention in Allentown this week. Centre county's representa- tives could impars to their official breth- ren some brilliant financial ideas. Their plan of reducing taxation by increasing the valuation of taxable property, would be calculated to produce a sensation in | any assemblage of financiers. —Ex-President CLEVELAND'S new aphorism that “Party honesty is party expediency,” is as obnoxious to Repub- lican sentiment as his celebrated decla- ration that “Public office is a public trust.” Itis natural that such doctrines should excite the contempt of a party | that regards public office as merely the avenue that leads to public plunder. —Rev BARBOUR, a Baptist clergyman of Chicago, startled his congregation the other day by declaring his disbeliet in | the existence of the devil, but his church members dissented from this view with STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. — YOY. 3 A Comparison That is Interesting to the Voters. The people will be interested at _ this time in a comparison between thie man to whom the Democrats would com- mit the care of the State money and the one who has been selected for the Republicans as their candidate for State Treasurer. Epmuxp A. BiGLER is a gentleman whose personal charac- ter is of the most unexceptionable or- der. His whole life has been one of the strictest personal integrity ; the po- litical traditions with which his name is connected are associated with honest public service, and he is in no way con- nected with cliques that have made the State treasury the means of private ac cumulation. How does his opponent, Mr. Boyer, compare with him in these respects? Against the personal character of the latter gentleman nothing can be said, but his candidacy stands for all the bad methods which for years have been employed in the management of the treasury and the general government of the State. He is peculiarly Boss Quay’s man. This was so distinctly understood before the nomination that of the numerous obsequious henchmen of the Boss, who are never known to decline the chance for an office that has profitable stealing connected with it, not one of them thought it worth while to be a candidate when they knew that the Boss had arranged for the treasury goose to be plucked by young Bover in the interest of the ring that has so long flourished on pickings derived from that source. Quay's convention was duly instructed that he wanted that place for Boyer, and, with its accus- tomed obedience, gave him a unani- mous nomination. The young man fs emphatically Quay’s candidate and if elected would unquestionably be his servant, and everybody knows what that would mean in treasury management. Surely the Boss has not such a reputation that it could be expected that the sub- jection of the State funds to his control would be to the interest of the people. His 1ecent relations with “addition, division and silence,” have sufficiently indicated his unreliability as a manager of public moneys. In this question the Boss is to be regarded as the chief factor. By no construction that can be put upon his candidacy can Boyer be considered ayything more than the tool of one who has selected him for use. A comparison between the two can- didates for State Treasurer and the cir- cumstances connected with their can- didacy, is certainly of great interest to the voters. Change the Time. A dispatch to an Altoona paper in regard to the Grangers’ pic-nic at Cen- tre Hall last week, called it a signal failure in every respect. This was too sweeping an assertion. The fact that it said that twenty thousand people were in attendance relieved the pic-nic of the imputation of having been a failure. In point of numbers in attandance it was a great success, and the only re- spect in which it failed was that of the weather. This should teach a les- son to those who may have charge of its future manazement. Make the pic-nics something that will afford pleasure to those in attend- a unanimity that must have been grat- ifying to his Satanic Majesty, who, it may be believed. is averse to having the | impression created that he isn't doing | business at the old stand. —Secretary Tracy's determination to ance. Nothing could be more con- ducive to that object than to hold them in pleasant weather, when it will be a delight to sojourn under tents and to be in the open air. There is a time inthe late summer when this can be assured, hereafter build the war ships in the | government navy yards is in line with | the Rebesonian policy which made a | navy yard and a gold mine convertible | Besides furnishing pickings for the politicians, a navy yard can be made useful as a snug-harbor for party work- | ers, two considerations which have their | influence in inducing this administration toswork them to their full capacity. terms, = Victor E. Prouerr may be enti- | tled to the questionable distinction of an- tagopizing the comuion sense of his par- ty on the subject of tariff reform, but the Philadelphia Press credits him with too much when it that he was the Democratic candidate for Litutenant | Govirnor when Judge the nominee for Governor. sayvs PERSHING was There was no Lieutenat Governor elected that year, a fact which a political authority, like the Press ought to be acquainted with. Land it would 1 'mannge these granger gatherings to but it is not at the time of the autumnal equinox which for the last two years has been selected for the Grangers’ pic I nicks with very unpleasant results to those who attended them. People can’t be comfortable in tents when their teeth are chattering, and cold rains ar: not {conducive to the comforty of a crowd. Such a condition of affairs is less Iikely to exist in August than in September, be well for those who bear this in mind. That the location is admirably suited for the collection of a great crowd has been fully shown under the most ad- [verse circumstances in regard to weath- "er, To make them brilliantly successful rin every respect, better judgment should be exercised in holding them at a time when the weather ismore likely to be favorable. BELLEFONTE, PA Jin KevpLe | and his entire accord with the policy of | In a Bad Humor. . SEPTEMBER 27, 1889. NO. 38. A Change of Production Needed. Both the wage-earuer and the farmer | The extent to which the farmers of will not have reason to be in a good { Juniata county have gone into the pro- humor when they exercise the right of | duction of peaches is attracting atten- suffrage in Pennsylvania this year. | tion, this new industry being calculated They will have cause to remember a to effecta great change in the character good many pledges that were made | of the agricultural operations of that them a year ago by the politicians who | region. This departure from the old secured a majority of their votes, which | rut of raising cereals commenced, with- pledges have since been disregarded: | | Steady employment and better wages | were promised the workingmen as a sure consequence of the election of a Republican President, and the farmers were to be benefited by the mainte nance of the war tariff. It was also threatened that if CLEVELAND were elected there would be a general col- lapse of all kinds of business interests which it was said were kept from going to ruin only by the prospect that Har- RISON’s election would rescue everything from a general and eternal smash up. The wage-earners, the farmers and all others who were affected by such representations have since had an op- portunity of seeing how they were humbugged. Work is scarcer, wages are lower and times are harder than they were at any time during CLEVE- LAND'S term, and the time and atten- tion of those in power are taken up en- tirely with dividing the offices among the spoilstnen, apportioning the surplus among the pension claimants and shaping the governmental policy in the interests of the plutocrats who furnished the money toelectthe Republican Presi- dent. When the working people turn their attention from the broken promises in regard to national measures, and direct it to the State Legislature, they find that in every instance in which they asked favorsin that quarter they were denied them by the party that had con- trol of legislative action. Not a single one of the many measures introduced to protect the rights and promote the wellfare of wage-earners met with the slightest favor in thetwo sessions over whieh Speaker Boyer, who is now the Republican candidate for State Treasur- er, presided. Laws were asked for to suppress the extortionate pluck-me store system,also for the enforcement of semi-monthly payment of wages, and for other legal defences that would pre- vent the employee from being so entire- ly at the mercy of the employer, but in no instance were such reasonable de- mands complied with, most of these bills having been stranghed by the com- mittees of Mr. Boyer’s creation, while others were defeated outright when they came to the test of a vote. It was a pitiful exhibition of the Legislature of a great commonwealth being used as an instrument for the suppression of the rights of the laboring population that constitute the bone and sinew of the State. Nor were the farmers treated any bet- ter in the defeat of the tax bills that were offered forthe purpose of relieving them of a tax burden which should be more equally shared by the corporations, Efforts were made in both sessions over which Bover presided for a more just equalization of taxes in the inter- est of the farmers, but failed in both in- stances, Such systemetically bad treatment has had the effect of putting the farm- ers and the wagt-earners in an ill hu- mor which will have its influence when they come to cast their ballots at the next election. A —————— The Reason Why. It was not so very long ago that the Philadelphia Press took a correct view of M. S. Quay’s character as a public man and a politician. When Quay wag implicated in the Kemble bribery case, a villainy that involved the cor- ruption of the legislarive power of the State, the Press more than intimated that he ought to get his punishment in the penitentiary. And when in 1885 this same Quay was a candidate forthe Republican nomination for State Treas- urer, this same Press declared that the party would be dishonored and dis- graced by such a nomination which would clearly be in the interest of the treasury ring. Why the organ should have objected to Quay’s having control of the State money at that time, but | now favors Quay's man Boyer’s hand- | ling the cash, can be accounted for on- ly by the reason that an organ must al- ways obey the command of the Boss. Quay is now a good deal bigger Boss than he was in 1885. in the last ten years and the number of peach trees that have been planted run into the hundreds of thousands. The fruit produced is of excellent quality, the claim being made for it that it stands at the head of the market. This season it has been shipped in all directions by the car loads, and there can be no doubt that the Juniata peach raisers are making far more money than they could realize from the production of grain. There may exist favorable conditions in the region in question that tend to make the peach business successful, but there can scarcely be a doubt that it would be to the advantage of farmers in other sections if they, like the Juniata peach raisers, should strike out into a new line. Would not the farmers of Centre county be benefited by a greater diversi- ty of productions? They are not mak- ing as much as they should in raising grain, and they might profit from the example set by their Juniata brethren. At all events it wouldn't hurt them any to get out of the old rat, whether it be by the raising of fruit, or some other divergence from the routine which in this region interferes with the profits of farming. SPRECKELS, the great sugar manufac- turer, who proposes to go into the manufacture of beet sugar, has made an offer to the farmers of Berks county to take the beets they may raise at a price that will be much more profitable to them than ordinary farm produce. Beets, to produce sugar, require a soil of which lime is the basis, 1t being SeRECRREL'S opinion that Berks coutity land would in that respect be very suitable. Centre country land possesses the same quality, and if the Berks county sugar enterprise should prove a success the same conditions would make a similar enterprise successful in this limestone region. Boyer’s Dislike for Investigation. . At the last session of the Legislature, when Mr. WaERRY and other Demo- cratic members moved for an investiga tion of the management of the State treasury and the use to which the mon- ey of the sinking fund was being ap- plied by its Republican custodians, Mr. Hexry C. Boyer, Republican Speaker of the House, and now candidate for State Treasurer, exerted all his efforts to prevent such an investigation, and the influence he could bring to bear had a powerful effect in determining the re- sult of a movement to investigate. There were grounds for believing that favored banks were being allowed to use the State money, and that it was being employed in private speculations |! by members of the treasury ring. It was known that United States bonds, amounting to several millions, which had been purchased for the State as an interest-producing investment, had been sold, and it was charged that there was no other motive for this sale than the desiretoget hold of this money for a pri- vate speculative purpose. The demand for an investigation was not unreason- able. There were good reasons for it, yet Speaker Boyer lent his efforts to prevent it, and it was prevented by | the Republican House of which he was the presiding officer. This should be enough to convince every voter that the Republican candi- date for State Treasurer is in sympathy with the ring that have been using the State money for their personal benefit, and will assist and take part in their speculations. In the face of so evident a fact, to put him in charge of the Treasury would be as foolish on the part of the people as it would be for a business man to put his safe in charge of a burglar. e—ereevemc— —There is a breezy brag about Chica- go's movements to secure the exposition that is characteristic of the wild west, and may secure the prize while New York is meanly counting the cost. ross —— —James Conyard and Martin Freely were 1 { quarreling in Richard Courtright’s hotel at Plains, Luzerne county, when Anna Freely interferred and was seriously stabbed in the arm by one of the combatants. A Methodist Minister Asks of Repub- lican Politicians a Couple of Pointed Questions. . A great many of our readers, especi- ally those along the Bald Eagle Valley, will remember Rev. J. B. Manx, a Methodist minister who filled the pul- pit of the Milesburg M. E. Church some years ago. They will likely remember him more particularly for his extreme partisan views—his outspoken and ul- ‘tra Republicanism—than for anything else. Under all circumstances he was for his party, and for it “all over” and in the deadest kind of earnest. He seems to have gotten his eyes open so that he can “see a thing or two,” and we judge from the following, which we get from the Philadelphia Zimesof are- cent date, that the Rev. Manx, like a great many other honest and want-to- do-right citizens, has ceased to be the rip-roaring radical Republican he was a few years ago: To the Editor of the Times. I will write for information and in the inter- est of truth. I have been an ardent and unfal- tering Republican for the past twenty-five years, and twice voted the party ticket against my judgmeut and conscience, giving it’ the benefit of the doubt, (?) even when my convic- tions were clearly averse to its action. I was taught to regard it as the party, par excellence, of chivalrous morality, and for a long time my faith and satisfaction were perfect. I deeply regret that I am unable to do so still, for I con. fess to a decided “hankering” in that direction, but honor and fidelity impel a halt. For many years I was assured that the Republican party was the only reliable temperance party, while the “Democratic party was rum-soaked” and hopelessly “in for free whisky;” all of which I “steadfastly believed” and constantly affirmed. Further, I was lead to accept the Re- publican dictum that all genuine temperance legislation originated with and owed its adop- tion to the Republican party, and now, after a most sad and sickening experience of false hood and treachery, I am asked by the Repub- lican press still to regard that party as the only trae champion of temperance reform. Is not that just a trifle cheeky ? But if it be so I am more than anxious to know it, as I really want an excuse for remain- ing with the “grand old party of moral ideas.” But bitter disappointment has made me snspi- cious and something more than partisan :«®x- ment {s necessary. If my memory serves me correctly it was the Rev. W. H. Boole—New York Conference Methodist Episcopal Church, brother of a somewhat celebrated Alderman of New York city, a gentleman still living—who exploded the claim of the Republican party and showed conclusively in a pamphlet com- piled mainly from the legislative records of the several States and Territories, that the Demo- cratic party had put more real temperance laws upon the statute books of the various Common- wealths of the Union than its boasting rival. Am I right in supposing such a publication-ex- ists and that it contains the proof of what I have indicated ? Will not some of the great newspapers look into this matter and give us the facts? Why not the Press ? which so often and vehemently declares that all efficient legislation for the suppression ot the rum traffic is to be credited to its party. It would render the truth, as also its own party, a magnificent service. Nothing is ultimately gained, even in politics, by empty sound and idle boasting; and if the Republi- can assumption is true and well established it can very readily be shown; if not, then, in view of the June election especially, it is worse than folly—it is a erime—to reiterate it, as is con” stantly done. Irepeat, [ am in search of infor- mation, and shall be most happy to receive it, that I may act wisely in the future. Should any of the newspapers conclude to enlighten me on this subject, may I further request that they explain how it is that high- license Chicago required the past year 128,000 barrels of beer more than the “big city of New York, where rum selling is practically free ? A truthfully and manly answer to these questions will greatly gratify a sorely perplexed and painfully bewildered haniioe “Tarn on the light” and give us the “truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” Yours in Christ, J. B. MANN, Pastor Newberry M. E. Church. A Fearful Issue. The attention of the friends of good and honest government is attracted to Virginia where a desperate attempt is being made to carry the election of Ma- HONE by the same corrupt means that were used last year in electing Harrr- soN. The chairman of the Republican National Committee is taking a hand in the contest and the corruption fund that is being raised by the issuing of Quay's $10 bonds, is furnishing the means upon which the rebel candidate of the Virginia Republicans relies for success. In addition to this money in- fluence the government offices are be- ing prostituted to the base purposes of these corruptionists. The civil service in Virginia is being made an adjunct to the method of carrying elections with money which the Republicans have regularly adopted by the systematic is- suing of bonds for the raising of a cor- ruption fund. A fearful interest at- taches to the question whether this de- liberate villainy is to become a perma- nent feature of American politics. The defeat of ManoNE will go a great way toward discouraging the desperate po- litical characters who seek to secure success by such corrupt appliances. Spawls from the Keystone. —Rat bites killed a child of Daniel Rhine, of Robesonia. —Tyrone merchants have to send all the way to Michigan for potatoes. —Twenty-six new locomotives have just been turned out of the Altoona shops. —A 2-months-old calf raised on the farm of Tho mas king, of West Chester, weighed 249 pounds. —The Bethlehem Iron Company is erecting a building to contain the largest steam hammer in the world. —Constable Emers, of Towanda, has caught and caged a humming bird—something rarely seen in captivity. —The car that bore Lincoln to Washington to be sworn in is now running between Wells- boro and Antrim. —The Pittsburg Johnstown Committee has wound up its affairs, turning over $160,000 to the State funds. ~Crawford county farmers are building silos extensively. This plan of winter feeding cattle is growing. —Mr. Sallive, of Tionesta vicinity, has a bad ly scarred face, the result of a recent encoun ter with a squirrel. —Reading’s Board of Trade has appointed a committee to encourage the establishment of new industries in the city. —Josiah Sheck was held in bail at Hazleton last week on a charge of having burned his barn te get the insurance. —Half a dozen gas wells are being put down by as many different parties in the eastern and southern parts of Erie City. —Ben Graham, a farmer residing near Deck- ards, Crawford county, died from the effects of ivy poisoning several days ago. —Henry Fry, of Strasburg, Lancaster county, 60 years old, committed suicide on Friday by hanging. Ill health was the cause. —At the Berks County Fair Common Councils man John C. Hesler had 124 cases containing 34,000 buttons, no two of which are alike. —The publishers of Grit, at Williams- port, have been acquitted of the charge of sending obscene literature through the mails, —A fisherman at Doylestown saw a sunfish swallow abee and a few minutes later saw the fish on the water dead. He cut it open and the bee flew off. —During a violent rain-storm a few days ago an old woman at Wilksbarre took off her outer clothing and lay down on a door step, thinking it was her bed. —Widow Catherine Deemer,aged 83 years, of Moorestown, Northampton County, fell down a flight of stairs, Thursday, and fractured her leg in four places. —Quite a number of deer have been seen in Southern Pennsylvania. Small game is also very plenty—the result of close enforcement of the State laws. —At Wilkesbarre John Tate was acquitted of responsibility for the death of William Snell, who was killed by a blow or fall during a fight in a Pittston saloon. —Milkman Beatty's horse met with a pecu- liar mishap in Meadville. He was stricken with paralysis in one foreleg while being driv+ en at a leisurely pace. —James Lascomb, of Chester, had the handle of a $ umbrella broken short off in an odd way, having accidentally struck it against a passing lady’s bustle. —Fully 500 houses renting at $8 to $12 a month will have been built in Harrisburg by the close of the season, and still the demand exceeds the supply. —In Pittsburg next year the change of mov- ing day from April 1 to May 1 will be effected by making all leases to run thirteen months from April 1, 1890. —Alvin Maurer, while gunning on Saturday near Fleetwood, Berks county, shot a “Virgin ia reed-bird, resembling a quail, the first of the kind ever seen there.” —A 15-year-old boy, named Franzenfield, had one of his eyes knocked out by a vicious cow “horning” him on Friday on a farm in Salzbury, Lehigh County. —George B. Hickman, of West Chester, has just received an order for forty head of hogs from Frank James, of Mexico, the famous ex outlaw of Missouri, now settled down. —Blackbirds still flock on the island near Middletown, and great numbers are shot nightly. The birds are quickly cleaned by skinnig instead of picking, and mostly served in pot-pie. —VWilliamspcrters are mad because Governor Beaver has ignored their request for the appointment ot a fellow-townsman on the Flood Commission in place of the late Judge Cum- min. —Edward Levengood was arrested at Norris. town on Thur#day night while trying to sell a horse which he afterward confessed he’ had stolen from a shed at the Gentlemen's Driving Park. —Samnel Epright, of South Lebanon towns ship, Lebanon county, fell from a straw-stack and landed on his head, on Friday, causing complete paralysis of his body. He is not ex- pected to recover. —W. Rockway, aged 36, and Miss Maggie Hartzell, aged 17, went to the Court Clerk’s of- fice in Clarion recently, took out a marriage license, and were married right on the spot by Commissioner Bell. —XKatie Smiley was playing with her father, C. A. Smiley, of Alleghany, two nights ago, when her foot caught in a rug and she fell cutting a gash five inches long in her head« The wound may prove fatal. —Mary Paposeck, a Polish girl living in Wilksbarre, applied to the Orphan’s Court to have the marriage license granted to her the day before altered so as to permit of her marrying another man instead of the one named in the paper. -—The company which has operated Logan's Ferry, near Parnassus, for eighty years is just being sued for the first time. A $300 horse owned by the plaintiff, while being ferried across the Alleghany, became maddened, by sand-fly bites, leaped overboard and was drowned. —A Mount Carmel woman, some of whose grapes had been sampled by thievish boys, sprinkled paris green on all the others res maining on the vines, and went and told the neighbors of her vengeful act. On being told that she had'made herself amerable to law ,she hurried home, picked all the grapes and de® stroyed them. —Barney Martin, a noted character of Tion- esta, just acquitted of having sold liquor with- out a license, once beat Forest county out of several hundred dollars by manufacturing the ears of wildeats and getting bounties on the same. He used a genuine ear fora pattern, cutting them {rom the animals’ hide. As the wildeat’s ear has hair on both sides he scraped the hide thin and glued two pieces together, One day while getting a false ear cashed it fell into a tub of water, came apart, and expos- ed the game,