| | Ink Slings. —The trial of the Australian ballot system in Montana proved its efficacy in counteracting the boodle method of run- ning elections. —It would be a novel experience for the people of Pennsylvania to have the State treasury in honest hands. Tt would also be a profitable one. —Private DALZELL’S case is a remark- able one. Through the sheer force of cheek and jaw he has achieved a notorie- ty far beyond the deserts of so insignifi- cant a character. —Ex-President CLEVELAND is said to be growing stouter. In stalwart growth the cause of tariff reform is keeping pace with its illustrious defender It is also growing stouter. —The Republican committee of Philadelphia bas expended $10,000 for tax receipts for the use of party voters There is boodle enough in the city gov- ernment to reimburse such an outlay. ~The Pan-American congress will hardly succeed in devising a plan to bring into our ports the products of South America which we are doing all we can to keep out by tariff taxation. Z —The Republican State Committee is repeating the baby method of exciting the emulation of its party voters by the offer of prize banners. This will do for a party that has no principles to vote for. —The negro-butcher CHALMERS has withdrawn from the canvass as Republi- can candidate for Governor of Mississip- pi. He shows himself to be more capa- ble of shame than the party that nomi- nated him. —The world didn’t come to an end on Wednesday as was predicted by the crank prophets who are never so happy as when laboring under the delusion that there is going to be a wind-up of sublunary affairs. —In his desperate battle for political supremacy in Virginia MAHONE has been given absolute control of the federal patronage in that State. It will only make his defeat the more signal and the disgrace of the administration the more complete. —The great manufacturing town of Norwich, Connecticut, went Democratic last Monday for the first time since the establishment of the Republican party. Tariff reform and the Australian ballot divide the honor of that glorious achievement. —The party managers are having a ticklish case down at Howard. Three fellows want the post office, and it wouldn’t do to make two of them mad before the election ; hence the appoint- ment has been postponed until after they shall have voted. —New York hasat last opened sub- scription books to raise money for the Celumbus exposition. The experience with the Grant monument doesn’t en- courge the expectation that the Gotham population will trample each other down in their mad rush to subscribe. —We haven't heard any of the weath- er prophets refer to the unusual number of squirrels this fall as indicating the kind of weather we are going to have next winter. The thousands of frisky litttle tails ought to point to something more than ordinary in the meteorologi- cal line. —Itis a mean St. Louis man who says that Chicago people after they die always think they have got to heaven, whether they really have or not.— Somer- ville Journal—This may be so for the reason that any place they go to after they die is so much better than Chicago that they very easily mistake it for heaven. —After four months from the occur- rence of the great calamity, the payment | of the $1,600,000 relief money to the sufferers at Johnstown commenced last Monday. If this money had been in the custody of the fellows who manage the State treasury we would almost be inclined to believe that they had been favoring pet banks with it for specula- tive purposes. —Master Workmar. PowprrLy de- clares that he believes that the time will come when the world’s workers will toil only five days in the week. But this isn’t the boon that the true worker is looking for. He is willing to work {ull time, but he wants full pay for it. He isn’t hankering after more time to loaf, nor does he believe that it would be to his benefit. The election in Connecticut on Mon- day filled the measure of bad luck that has attended the Prohibitionists all along the line. The Prohibitory amendment was defeated by an adverse majority of of about 30,000. Considering the com- parative population of the State it was as bad a defeat as the one they sustained in Pennsylvania, and clearly indicates that the land of steady habits doesn’t want to make them any steadier by con- Ol 54, The Licking That Mahone Is Going to Get. It is now a certainty that WiLriax Manoxg, the choice of the administra- tion for the Virginia bosship, and the | Republican candidate for Governor of that State, is going to get the most complete licking that was ever admin- BE | { 1 i | | | istered to an unscrupulously ambitious politician. a united Democracy, which in itself is sufficiently strong to handsomly whale any Republican candidate that can be put in the field in the Old Dominion, but a Republican opposition has sprung up against him which extensively iu- cludes the better element of the party in the State. These opposing Repub- licans held a conference in Richmond last week where they organized the op- position which they have set on foot against the Boss, and that they mean dead-earnest business in shown by the manifesto they have issue which con- tains a bill of indictment charging him with a most comprehensive assortment of political offenses, including systemat- ic corruption and bribery. Harrison miscalculated the influ- ence which the official patronage that would exert in Virginia politics. The more decent portion of his party spurn him and his official spoils, and the par- ty managers who expected to make a point by the prostitution of the offices to partisan use will have the humiliation of defeat as the pay for their dirty busi- ness. Quay too will find that the money raised on his $10 certificates and put into the Virginia contest has been just that much campaign ammu- nition wasted. The Presidential incumbent has made a good many blunders in the short time he has been in office, but no other one of them has equalled his blunder of trying to make Virginia Republican by backing the little rebel and repudiator, BiuLy Manon, for Governor with the offirial influence of his administration. He didn’t make a worse break when he put Taxxeratthe head of the pension bureau, and scarce- ly anything could be as bad as that. A ————— The Organs Getting Scared. What is the meaning of the follow- ing expression of anxiety by that stal- wart Republican organ, the Philadel- phia Inquirer ? The loss of Pennsylvania to the Republicans this year means its probable loss next year, when a Governor, Legislature, twenty-eight Congressmen and a United States Senator are to be chosen. A reduced Republican majority this year means a perilous uphill fight next year, with all that will then be involved. With a mammoth majority ranging at about 80,000, which its party has been having for some years past, should not a Repablican organ be ashamed to even intimate that there is a possibility of defeat in Pennsylvania ? To show fear undersuch circumstances is to admit that something very wrong has been done that may turn this great preponderance of popular favor against its party. Evidently breakers ahead are com- ing within range of the organic vision, otherwise the Inquirer would be calm, serene, confident and happy in the un- questionable prospect of certainjvictory. It wouldn’t be caught squealing in i a dubious and undignified manner. But it is conscious of the weakness of a candidate who was the Speaker of a House of Representatives that habit. ually cringed to the corporations and the money power and turned its back on the working people, he heing largely responsible for that sort of legislative action. Itis also very evident that the farmers can have no friendly feeling for the presiding officer of a leg- islative body that has paid no atten- tion to their demand that corporate wealth should bear a portion of the taxation which has been unduly im- posed upon farm property. With the wage-earners and the farm- er having a grievance against the Re- publican candidate, there is reason for the party organs to apprehend “the loss of Pennsylvania to the Republi- cans this year.” But considering the recent big majorities they should be heartily ashamed that it is so. Doesn't it indicate that even so blind a thing as an organ can see that there is some thing rotten in Pennsylvania than there ever was in Denmark ? c—————— more fining the popular beverage exclusively to cold ater. guard of pure election, The secret ballot 18 the safe. ! He is rot only opposed by | | bargain or not, as there was no means. | : i Cenvention, The Reform Ballot. The Australian ballot method was used in the Montana election and effect- ed all the good results that were claim- ed for it by those who favor its adop- tion. It enabled the voters to cast a strictly secret ballot; there was no bulldozing, for the method of voting prevented anything like the cocrcion which can be exercised when the bal- lot is not surrounded by entire secrecy ; and if there was any attempt at bribery it was entirely at the option of the vot- er to carry oat his part of the corrupt of knowing how he voted. The objection that the Australian system consumes too much time was not sustained by its working in Montana. The booths am- ply accommodated the voters, enabling them to vote rapidly and without em- barrassing delay. The Harrison administration resort- ed to every means to carry the four new States. The official power it was able to exert was brought to bear upon every one of them, and Quay’s pecu- niary methods were put to work, There can scarcely be a doubt that Montana 3 | would have been carried as the three he placed at the disporzl of Manone | others were, if it had not been for the Australian ballot boxes. They were the barriers against which Republican power and corruption beat in vain, The same ballot system was also tried for the first time in Connecticut at the election on Tuesday. How it work- ed is told by the following account of its operations dispatched to the New York Sun : The new secret ballot law worked beautifully in this town for the Democrats to-day. Forthe first time in the history of the Republican party here the straight Democratic ticket was elected at a town election. Since the civil war times this town has been known all over southern New iungland as the “Citadel of Con- necticut Republicans.” To-day every buttress of the citadel which has been shaking for sey- eral years, got a clean knock-out blow, and the old thing was tumbled into the moat of public repudition. The secret ballot helped to do it, for in no part of the Union his policial bulldozing on the part of the mill owners been more flagrantly and audaciously exercised. In some of the mill villages it has been worth a mill hand's job for him to vote openly, as he had to do under the old-time ballot, for Dem- ocratic national or township officers. Often the hands employed by the most powerful corporations were driven in the mill teams in squads of thirty or forty to the polls, and an overseer walked with the voter to the boxes to be sure that he cast the ballot the bosses had prearranged he should deposit. That the Australian plan of voting put a stop to this system of bulldoz- ing is shown by thechangein the vote of Norwich and other Connecticnt towns. i No wonder that Speaker Boyer and | his Republican legislature objected to a system that would relieve working- | men from the control of bulldozing em- | ployers at the elections, and thereby put an end to the supremacy of the monopoly party in Pennsylvania. A Preliminary Skirmish. They had quite a spirited time in the Clearfield county Republican con- vention last week in the election of delegates to the next Republican State As the porty candidate for Governor will be nominated next year the selection of the delegates had reference to that coming event which is already beginning to cast ahead of it quite a large sized shadow. The friends of Hasrizas and of DeLaMarir contended for the Clearfield delegates, and as it should go without saying that the in- fluence of the redoubtable Adjutant General laps considerably over the con- fines of his own county, it easily in- cluded Clearfield and carried the dele- gates for him, The Impression seems to have spread abroad that it was a fight between Quay and that faction of the party that has organized an opposition to the Boss, but we cannot see how this can DeLadarer has all along been cousidered the favorite of the Beaver statesman, hasn't IT AsTINGS been generally regarded as his pet? When our distingaished townsman’s name has been mentioned in connec tion with the governorship, hasn't it be, for although invariably been attended with the re- “Pax’s all backing Lim?” Js mark : right—Quav’s it possible that the straight forward, ingenuous and honest Boss has a pair of favorites for the next gubernatorial nomination ? But be this as it may, the Clearfield that the fight started in earnest contest demonstrates for (rovernor has among the Republican politicians and that ITasTixas is a candidate whether LLEFONTE, PA., OCTOBE Awaqury apg OANISINIAVH i J68 ke FEDERA L UNION. Quavisfor him or not. Butitisn't like- iy that gubernatorial lightning will keep striging Centre county all the time, It wouldn’t be long enough between flash- es to nominate DAN next year. Prolonging an Interesting Case. The Williamsport papers of Satur- day made the encouraging announce- ment that the Lycoming judicial con- test is progressing, as the case for the respondent will be closed on the 12th inst., when the contestant will begin to introduce the sur rebuttal. What a satisfaction it must be to the taxpayers of the county to know that after the contest has extended through nearly a year, with a heavy draft on the county surplus, the ‘sur rebuttal has been reached. A good, healthy sur rebuttal, in the bands of skillful lawyers and learned judges, ought to have enough life in it to last for another year, and by that time some other device may be resorted to for the extension of this in- teresting case. It must also be a source of joy to the Lycoming taxpayers to learn that a new batch of witnesses have been sub- penaed and that the three learned Jjddges have spit on their hands with the determination of taking a fresh hold on the case. A local paper, speak- ing of the contest, says: “The ques- tion now is whether or not the three judges will open the ballot boxes; if they do, the contest may be indefinitely continued.” It may be taken as a pret- ty sure thing that the ballot boxes will be opened, for both the judges and the lawyers seem to have caught on to the profitableness of keeping this case in- definitely continued. The taxpayers “they pay the freight.” How Things Were Reformed. Two years ago the present Republi- sean office holders in this county got into office on false preteaces. A good many well meaning people were in- duced to vote for them on the repre- sentation that the county affairs were in bad shape and needed improvement Harrison administration. which Republican rale would bring about. This was represented to be particularly the case in the commis- sioners’ office which was held up as be- ing a fit subject for reform. The voters who, helped to bring about a change should have known better than to be humbugged by such false pretences. They can now thank themselves for having the weakest and most incompetent administration of the commissioners’ office that ever mismanaged the aflairs of a county. The large balance that was left in the “treasury by the last Democratic board has gone nobody knows where. So | far as county interests are concerned it “couldn’t have been worse applied if it had been actually stolen. The result 1s that there is not the means on hand | to provide those bridge facilities which every county owes to the travel- ing community. Months have passed i ard no preparations have been made to rebuild some of the most important bridges carried away by the flood. The bridges generally are reported to be ina bad conaition. The $40,000 Democratic surplus would now be of great service, but it has evaporated through the channel of mismanagement. The boasted scheme of ranning the county on a two mill tax has proved but the idle dream of muddle-headed financiers, and the clumsy and dishonest expedient of an underhanded increase of taxable valua- tions won't sapply the deficiency. It hasn’t prevented an actual increase of over $6,000 taxation, notwithstanding the sham claim that a 2 mill tax is suflicient to meet county expenses. The upshot of such mismanagement will be that the next Auditors’ report will show an alarming increase of the county liabilities, unless the Commis. sioners shall positively refuse to make such improvements as the convenience of travel, the reputation of the county and the welfare of the community im- peratively demand, which seems to be their intention, ~—KprsoN has returned home from the Paris exhibition where he was as great a celebrity as the Hiffel tower. They made a baron of him and gave him the cross of the Legion of Honor, but such gewgaws don’t add anything to the dis- tinction of the man who invented the electric light and the phonograph. im . a EE SERA RS The Rejected Veterans, The Republican soldiers of Centre county, who were led to expect official fayors at the hands of the dispensing power, may be entirely satisfied with the shabby treatment that has been ac- corded them, or they may not. That is entirely their business. But to the disinterested observer the manner in which they have been used for the benefit of a few scheming ‘ringsters, upon promises of rewards which have never been fulfilled, has a ludicrous as- pect whatever may be its appearance to the victims who suffer from it. Braver’s record of disregarded pled- ges to Centre county soldiers who help- ed to elect him Governor, furnishes a page in his political history that cannot be read without contempt. The same indifference to the soldiers’ claims is being shown in the distribution of the offic al favors in this county under the Was it a soldier that got the prize of the Deputy Collectorship? Is it possible tha among the “defenders of the flag,” whose praises the Republican poli- ticians are continually mouthing, one could not have been found as compe- tent and worthy of filling the office of Deputy Collector as Ep, Omampers? To say that one could not have been {found among the veterans of this coun- ty fit to perform the duties of that of- fice is to pay but a poor.compliment ‘o their ability and worth. After all the Republican prating about the. obliga- tion of the country to those who fought for its flag, that office should have sought a suitable soldier instead of be- ing sought and found by a favorite of the ring that manages the official pa- tronage in this county. This, we say, should have been done to preserve a consistency between Republican pro- fession and performance in regard to the claims of those for whom the bos- ses always show such great; deference when there are no offices to be given out. In the matter of the post offices the soldiers, particularly those who are poor, are meeting with the same kind of treatment. At Milesburg the poor veteran RAGER is rejected and the post office is given to Bocas who'is well- heeled financially and draws a big pen- sion. At Coburn HosterMAN, who never fired a shot at a rebel, is preferred for postmaster to CooNry who was rid- dled with rebel bullets and is poor in consequence of his disabled condition. The same sort of love for the defenders of the old flag is shown at Lemont where the veterans BarHate and ARMSTRONG, who weren't afraid to ex- pose their bosoms to the storm of bat- tle, find their applications for the post- mastership set aside in order that. the office may add to the snug profits of druggist Evererr who was careful not to expose his precious person to rebel marksmanship. But the most dis- graceful of these instances of ingrati- tude was the one at Aaronsburg where the maimed soldier SyLvius,indigent in consequence of ivjuries sustained in fighting theenemies of the Union,had his application for the post offie cast aside with contempt in order that the oftice might become the prize of Mica Mus SER, a local political manager whose circumstances don’t require the assis- tance of official pap. Nor are these snubs of the veterans confined to the post offices. In the matter of the gaugershipat the distillery at Coburn the application of the old soldier JonN Stirer was thrown out and the place given to Samunt Uren, a local politician who never did any military service. This is the record of the official fa- vors that have been accorded to the old soldiers of Centre county. In every instance the preference has been given to some henchman who could make himself useful to the county bosses who control the offices. The veterans may like this sort of treatment. It is not for us to sav whether they should like it or not. That is entirely a mat- ter of their own feeling. But to those who stand oft and take a disinterested view of the way they are stood aside when they ask for their share of the official rewards, the treatment accord- ed them looks like a combination of injury and insult. SS v——————— -—— When the wage-carners and far- mers get through with their reckoning with candidate Bover there will Le little left of that 80,000 majority. Spawls from the Keystone, —Lackawanna county has abolished all its” toll gates. —Lock Haven people now have ‘their mail matter delivered. —Despite the unfavorable weather the Allen- town Fair netted $8000. —The goose bone prediction is that it will be an open winter with an early spring. —The prick of a thorn caused the death of William Cox, of Cochranville. —A chestnut bur faund on Sharp Mountain contained seven nuts. —A new iron rod mill will be put in operation at Allentown in a few weeks. —A Frankford citizen complains of the | Slaughter of song birds in the suberbs —A blow on the head during a fistic encoun- ter has crazed J. Lember of Scranton. —Cattle in lower Berks county are dying in large numbers from a form of epizooty. —Up to date the roster of the West Chester Normal School contains 460 names. —Fannie Fern, a war horse with arecord of fift een great battles, is dead at Sharon. —Thieves at Norristown tied up the watch dog and robbed Jagob Romig’s shoe store, —A dog and a hawk were seen in fierce com bat near Norristown recently; the bird was vic- tor. : — Many valuable cows at Durmor, Lancaster county, have been disemboweled by a vicious boar. —Five persons have been killed within a year by vicious bulls in Chester Couniy within a year. —School directors of Ridley have warned shopkeepers not to sell cigaretts tothe school children. wt n —The water wheels of some mills along the Delaware near Easton were clogged with eels recently. ] —Bethlehem shopkeepers have formed .a trust and resolved not to trust Lebigh Univer- sity students. —The death of John Roberts, of Washington borough, Lancaster county, was caused by a boil on his lip, —A horse stuck in the mnd at Allentown and pulled his hoof off in endeavoring to ex- tricate himself, —The combined efforts of three constables and a team were required to arrest a crippled tramp at Lancaster, —A fifteen year old grapevine grows in Germantown on a trunk which measures two feet and a half around. —A marriage license for a 13 vear old child was refused by the Pittsburg courts. The mother applied for it. —A Wilksbarre man has figures to substanti- ate his statement that Wilkisbarre is the healti- iest city in the country. —A Wilkesbarre lad of five years enjoys a smoke and has a fondness for a 4 year old pipe of his father’s. —The Carbondale Leader claims that that town, with 12,000 inhabitants, drinks 1200 kegs of intoxicants in a month. —In an article published in a Wilksbarre pa- pera preacher denounces many features of the County fair. ! —The Presbyterian church at Oxford has deciaed to allow nonegmunicant members to vote on the selection of a pastor. —“Honey moon row” is the name given a row of hosues at West Chester occupied by newly married couples exclusively. —On the night following the Reading Grand Army parade thieves stripped the stores of their bunting decorations. —Albert Thaiheimer, of Reading, will give the soldiers of that city a plot of ground on which to erect a monument. —Thieves made a Dunkard’s meeting-house in Heidelburg township, Lebanon county, a receptacle for stolen goods. —Ten members of the family of Edwin Lutz, at Mountain, Berks county, have been ill at one time with typhoid fever. —Crazed by religious enthusiasm Miss Har- riet Bartlet, of Pittston, climbed the tallest trees in her efforts to get nearer heaven. —Finding no milk in thespring house a thief . in Fredric township, Montgomery county, went to the stable and milked the cow. —Miss Susan Coffroth, young and handsome of Beartown, Lancaster county, is hopelessly mad, the result of an unfortunate love affair. —A Luzerne county man wants the Governor to set apart a “sparrow day,” when a wholesala onslaught will be made on the little pests. —An immoral couple in Sewickly township near Greensburg, were talken from their house and cowhided by the indignant neighbors. Dr. Hand, of Scranton,whose horse was killed by anjelectric wire some time ago, had a similar experience a few days ago with another horse. —The members of a United Brethren Churen at Greencastle have ‘gone to law to decide wheter or not theyshall have a pulpit in their church. —During the last twelve months Joseph Sepp, a one armed newsboy of Reading, has traveled 1200 miles without paying a cent for car fare. ! —William B. Logan, formerly a Norristown blacksmith, a resident in Washington Ter- ritory, writes home that he has just killed an obnoxious Indian. i —Four men slept in the store of McKenna and Brandy, at Cornwall, Lebanon county, on Wedne :day night, while rurglars carried off $500 worth of goods. —The parents of Wiiliam Asperschlag, killed by the cars at Tioga Junction, Lackawana Co, have begun suit against the Reading Railroad Company for $10,000 damages. —Frank T. Garnet, a farmer of Seipsville Northampton county, was robbed of money and clothing amounting to $100 by a tramp who had been in his employ. —A beautiful spring of erystal water, where Vest Chester folk were wont to tarry, has turn- ed out to be the outlet of a filthy sewer, the water being purified by percolation through the soil, —With Buffalo Bill aspirations, a West. Chester lad lassoed a meek looking cow. The animal made things lively for a while and would have given the youth a milk shake had not the rope tangled around her legs. —While Mrs. Joseph Whitlock, of Pittston was absent from her hcuse a few minutes on Thursday a monster rat attacked her 6 months old child, which had been left sitting on the floor and bit the little one’s hands in several places, —Being unable to agree two Italians at Easton decided to divide their stock of fruit and part. The division was successful until it narrowed down to & big block of marble and a show ease, and they chopped the marble in half, and each took ashy #t the show case with tiie huge stones, demolishing it beyond repair. wi