BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. -—An exchange speaks of FRED Dou- GLASS as the ablest specimen of his race. Which race? As between black and white Fre is half and half. —There isn’t to be a legislature elected this year, but the wage-earners will have a chance to rebukea recreant legislature that was elected last year. —A political court is not a desirable institution to have in a county. Vote for RILEY and prevent our court from as- suming too much of a partisan com- plexion. —Don’t fail to be at the pollsin No- vember and bring your neighbor with vou. This isn’t a year for Democrats to stay at home when there is voting going on. —The success of the Democrats in Pennsylvania this year will be a step toward the adoption of the Australian ballot system, and ballot reform means the freedom of every workingman at the polls. —A full Democratic vote this year will be the most effectual step toward putting the Commissioners’ office next year in the hands of competent officers who won’t increase the taxes by increas- ing the county debt. —The administrative tergiversations coing on at Washington give color to the report that the President eats pie for breakfast. There is every indication of something heavy lying on the stom- ach of the administration. —The agricultural folks whose tax bill was pigeon holed in the last Legis- lature should see to it at the next No. vember election. They can look at it most effectively through the medium of the Democratic State and county tickets — Chicago has opened headquarters at Washington as the nucleus of some lively work designed to capture the con- a ressional appropriation forthe World's Fair. There won't be any modesty «standing in the way of her operations. —--At the election in November the farmers will have a chance of show- ing how they like the way their tax- bill was treated by monopoly legis- lature. Speaker Boyrr is now with- in reach of the granger’s stogy boot. —There isnodissatisfaction among our county Democacy this year; they all agree that the county ticket is worthy of being elected. Then let them come to the polls en masse and vote it. Votes are necessary to make such harmony bear its proper fruit. —Harmony prevails to a most satis- factory degree among the Democrats of Centre counly. Butharmony can pro- duce no practical results without ac- tivity. There iz no kicking, but there should be a great deal of walking— toward the polls. —RAUM may not have as big a hole in his countenance as TANNER, but he may be trusted to make as big a hole in the surplus as his lavish predecessor started out to make. He will keep his mouth shut but the treasury door open for the pension raiders. —The exposure of the forgery that was resorted to for the “promotion of his election has had a bad effect upon Foraker. He issick,and will be sicker after the election, yet we hope he will not die. There would be something wanting in Ohio politics without the familiar sound of the Foraker fog-horn. —BiILLY GRAY is gaily traveling the county in the zealous pursuit of votes and with the happy anticipations of guileless youth, blissfully ignorant of the fact that the ringmasters have de- termined to sever the jugular vein of his political prospects in the interest of Freming. But the longer WILLIAM lives the more he will find out. —Mr. PowbDERLY, you told the Knights of Labor that the Australian ballot system would be®the palladium of the wage earners’ rights. Be alittle more specific and tell your people that a candidate who is so decidedly oppos- ed to this palladium as Boyer has shown himself (o be, isn’t worthy of their votes. Now is the time to talk with practical effect. —Tolallow Hastings to pull the wires of the Republican party in this county is a matter that concerns only the mem- bers of his party, but to put him in con- trol of the Prothonotary’s office through the medium of a henchman would in- vest him with a legal bosship that would affect interests wider than those of the Bellefonte ring. It isn’t well to give a boss control of such a variety of wires. --When the official situation different from what it is now, Mrs. BrLaINe turned up her nose at Mrs. HarersoN. But the vantage ground of her position as mistress of the White House Mrs. HARRISON now elevates her nasal organ at Mrs. BLAINE, and the complication is approaching the erisis at which they may not speak as It is to be hoped that the administration isn’t drifting into anarchy. was from they pass by. that’s the only reason why FrED was Wack "STATE mi GHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., OCTOBER 25, 1889. Lr RL The Unrewarded Colored Voter. The time hae again arrived when the Republican leaders in State and county will call on the colored breth- rescued from defeat. In this county the colored vote is a considerable fac- tor. It is located chiefly in Bellefonte where the colored population is large for a town of its size. This vote has been used by the Republican politicians | of the county for their own benefit with- | out a thought of giving anything in re- | turn to the colored men who y~ar after | year have voted their ticket with the | regularity of machinery. It is large | enough to turn the scale in a close elec- tion, and the Republicans who are en- joying the profits of county offices have squeezed through by the assistance of the colored people. What have they given in return ? Absolutely nothing. It would raise a big fuss among the leaders if any of these “niggers,” as they call them, should ask for a small post office or the nomination for one of the lower grade of county offices, ard yet among the better class of colored man of Bellefonte, who regularly vote the party ticket, there are some who could run the Commissioners’ office better than it is run by the incom pe- tents who are now mismanaging the county affairs. We could pick ont at least two colored men in Bellefonte who could make more efficient Commission- ers than HeNpERsoN and Decker. And infinite disgust vet it would cause g among the ringsters who have been enjoying the fruits of the colored vote, if these men should ask the smallest official favor. This sort of throughout the entire range of Repub- lican official patronage. The black men elect the Republican office-holders from the highest to the lowest,but can’t expect to be regarded as more than party slaves. Harrison would have been hopelessly defeated if it had not been for the colored voters of New York and Indiana. If they had voted the other way both of these States would have gone against him by large majorities; vet how many offices have been given to the men who gave him his position? Even Frep DovGLass | treatment prevails wonldn’t have got an office if there | hadn't been a black government to send him to as No white Republican cared about having it, and minister. allowed to have it. Pennsylvania bas been made the Republican State it is by the votes of | its colored voters of which there are at least 40,000, and which, if turned the other way, would knock Quay and | his party out of the box every time; but notwithstanding this fact, when the | Boss dispenses his official patronage he | is careful that none of it" shall go to the men of black skins who have so faithfully saved his party from defeat year after vear. While he and his | minions sit down to the feast of official” dainties, the colored men who farnish them with the feast must stand at distance and lick their chops as the only compensation for their invaluable service. What will it benefit them if they elect Boyer State Treasurer—s “a young man who ever since he became ot age has been enjoying the fruits of | political victories won by black voters to whom he has givin nothing in re- turn ? : The colored brethren may like this | kind of treatment. They may think they are getting all they deserve when they give the Republican party victory at the polls and get nothing for it. The voters of that color in Centre coun- ! ty may believe that they are fit for | nothing else than to be ‘“hewers of | wood and drawers of water” tor the Bellefonte Republican ringsters, who | wouldn't vive them a ten dollar per- quisite in recognition of their service, If they like it, of course they will go on keeping such ungrateful politicians in office. ning to get tired of it, we would sug- gest that this would be a good year to teach the Republican machine mana- State If, however, they are begin- gers and ringters, both in and county, by voting against them, that the days of colored slavery are over. re————————— —ScHAEFFER and MEYER illustrate the advantage of good reputations. The voters appreciate the excellent official service they have done and want them to keep on doing it for three years wore. ren to rally to the support of the rick- | ety old party which they have so often | become in truth a freeman. | for any man until he pledges himself to stand | to the Knights of Labor of Pennsylva- | ty of running the Post Office Department injunction to his Par-American pro- Pan-American Free Trade. | The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin ! says that “the free trade orators who | persist in thrusting themselves before the Spanish-American visitors ought to be taken in hand and muzzled.” What foolish talk thisis. We don't know whom the Philadelphia paper means by ‘‘free trade orators,” but if the object of getting the Pan-Americans together is to secure commercial inter- course between them, how is it to be done ifhigh tariffs are to continue as barriers to such intercourse? In invit- ing them to trade with us, are we te let them understand that they needn't | expect their productions to enter our ports unless the heavy tariff tax on them is paid as usual ? The very proposition of the Pan- American arrangement invoives a free trade idea. There can be no reciprocity if there is a tariff barrier, and there can he no intercourse without recipro- city. Itis really Mr. Brave and his followers that are floundering on the verge of free trade in this Paun-Ameri- can business, for if they don’t make strong concessions to that principle their congress will be nothing more than a fruitless farce. Already we hear Mr. JonN SHERMAN express his willingness to enter into a free trade arrangement with the South Ameriean countries. And vet we hear foolish papers like the Evening Bulletin advising the muz- zling of those who talk free trade to the Spanish American visitors. The K. of L. and the Australian Bal- | lot System. The Knights ot Labor should, to a man, be in favor of a reformed ballot | system so that dependent working peo- ple way be able to go untrammeled to the polls. Master Workman Pow- pERLY has used strong langaage in por- traying the manner in which laboring men are interfered with in the exercise of the right of suffrage by the bull-doz- ing power that holds them in subjec- tion. In a public address delivered recent ly on this subject, he said: | We cannot compel obedience to the Consti- | tution of Pennsylvania while men can be | browbeaten at the polls and compelled to vote | as the Corporation Boss and the Political Boss dictates. Before we can move hand or foot in the way of Reform, we must throw every safe guard around the ballot-box. Norifles or bayon- | ets, bombs or other weapons of cowards wil 1 be necessary. What we require is a seeret bal- | lot, one by which the partially free man may How many citi- zens of Pennsylvania will raise their hands | with mine when they read this and pledge themselves not to ask for another measure of Reform at the coming session of the Legisla- ture, except the passage of some such system of Ballot Reform as the Australian System ? | How many will pledge themselves not to vote | by the people and vote for such a measure ?” We would remind Brother PowperLY that now is a good time to repeat this nia and give it an especial application to the candidacy of Mr. Henry C. Boyer, the Republican nominee for State Treasurer,who, as Speaker of the Republican House of Representatives, took the lead in the rejection of the Australian ballot system by that body. Wanamaker finds the double du- at Washington and the Bethany Sun- day School at Philadelphia a little too much for him, and accordingly he has withdrawn from the superintendency of the latter institution over which he s0 unctuously presided. The Sunday school cause will not be injured by his withdrawal. The active participation in Sunday school work by a person who has fizured prominently in the most corrupt political scheme that ever disgraced American politics, was far from presenting an edifving spectacle, and was not calculated to benefit the canse, —— A ———— Notwithstanding Mr. BramNg's teges to lay low on Sunday and not to stray over into ('anada, an cuterprising Kanuek Wimax them across the Niagara enveigled river last named Sunday and made a speech to them in that a arrange- "Canada which he endeavored to show Pan-American commercial ment that didn’t include woulduit pan out to any material ex- tent: inshort wonld be a delusionand a fraud. Braing shonld keep his visit ors locked in rhe cars when they get | and the faithful performance of the same guar- | anteed by all law-makers of all political par- | their votes, and that since the Presiden- | post office can’t be given to a soldier if | ! there is a party worker that wants it. 00 near the Canada line. Why the K. of L. Will Oppose Boyer. It is announced by the York Gazette that at a meeting of Knights of Labor comprising the assemblies of eight counties, at that place last Saturday, it was determined unanimously, as mem- bers of that labor organization, to work and vote against Boyer, the Republi can candidate for State Treasurer. The motive for this action is obvious. During his entire legislative career,and particularly as Speaker of the Touse, the Republican Treasury candidate showed no friendly disposition toward the interests of labor. In no instance did he favor any of the measures offer- ed for the promotion of the welfare of those who work for their living, but,on the contrary, the legislative body of which he was the presiding officer and whose committees he appointed, refus- ed to pass bills that were designed to benefit labor, but did not neglect to legislate for the advantage of capital ard corporations. The course adopt- ed by the body of which Boyer: was the head, in the treatment of labor bills,was not only an injury but a posi- tive insult to wage-earners, and there- fore it is not diffieult to understand why the Knights of Labor are going to vote against him. A Growl from the Old Soldiers. Although Harrison last year re- ceived a large portion of his support on the claim that he was the especial friend of thesoldiers,the veterans are al- ready beginning tocomplain of the bad treatment they are receiving from the administration. Ata meeting of the Veterans’ Union of Pennsylvania at Harrisburg on Tuesday the resolutions passed contained the following omi- nous growl of the old soldiers : It has been brought to the notice of the eon- vention that certain true and faithful soldiers of the war have been removed from positions of trusts and profit in the gift of the present adgginistration for no specific or apparent cause, except it be to make place for politi- cal managers, which is contrary to the letter and spirit of the laws passed by congress, ap- proved and concurred in from time to time, ties. * The soldiers wiil in time discover that the profession of friendship for then was merely intended to secure ial prize was gained by their assistance the “political managers’ need the of- fices for the fellows to whom they are indebted for personal political service. It is the same all through the country as it is in Centre county. Even a small CC S—————— Sweat as an Element in Politics. Nobody suspected that candidate FreminG wassuch a poor man,requiring the charitable votes of his fellow citi- zens, until one of his supporters an- nounced it in a Republican newspaper of this place. Tis sympathetic friend pictures him toiling on the tailor’s bench, with the sweat streaming from his care-worn brow. The Bellefonte people who are personally acquainted with the ring candidate for Prothono- tary wouldn't be able to recognize him from this picture. They are accustom- ed to see him as a handsomely dressed, aristocratic looking merchant tailbr, and as viewed through the plate-glass windows of his handsome establish- ment he looks like one of the most prosperous business men of the town. And to say that he sweats from hard work is the most ridiculous rot. He is too great a gentleman to do such a vulgar thing as to sweat. Perspiration will do very well for farmers, mechan- ics and laborers, but it is entirely out of place with a weli-dressed merchant tailor. It wouldn’t be doing FLEMING injustice to say that he hasn’t handled a tailors goose within the last ten years, for his employes do that part of the business for him, and vet he is rep- resented as being “a poor man who earns his living by the sweat of his brow working at the tailor trade.” We are warranted in saying that SCHEFFER, when a farmer, did more work and sweat more in hoeing a patch of pota- toes than the gentleman merchant tailor W. 1. FLeming ever did in the whole course of his life. The ring managers didu’t have any difficulty in putting their Prothonotary candidate on the ticket, but if they think they can sweat him into office they are greatly mistaken. NO. 42. Trying to Efface the Ring Mark. This is about the time of year when ‘some Republican, closely connected with the Bellefonte ring, publishes communications in thering organ under the assumption of giving the expression of some Democrat counseling other Democrats to vote the Republican tick- et. An old trick like this fails to effect its purpose and has no more influence in deluding Democrats than if it came directly from Hastings or any other of the party bell-wethers. Words from “Many Democrats of Ferguson,” or a “Marien Township Demecrat,” appear- ing in the ring organ,are neverof Demo- cratic origin, and are usually written in the organ’s sanctum. They are frauds, their appearance being am insult to a discerning public. Such was thecharacter of the com- munication inthe Keystone Gazette last week, of bogus Democratic parentage, defending Fremina against the charge of being nominated by the ring that pulls the wires in Bellefonte for the entire county. But facts as well as ap- pearances sustain the charge. Person- ally Fremize had no strength that would have legitimately gained him the nomination, and yet the ease with which he got on the ticket clearly in- dicated the manipulation of the ring- sters. Hastings, BrowN, READER, FiepLER, and the select crew who pull the strings, knew beforehand that the nomination was going to go to Frem- NG. They knew it because they bad their hands on the lever that controls the working of the machine, and they knew how they intended that the ma- chine should work. It is an insult to the intelligence of Republicans in other parts of the coun- ty to suppose that they don’t know that FLEMING'S nomination was of ring manufacture. The larger number of them no doubt will support it, but it would be putting too low an es timate upon their, inteltigencé” 10 be- lieve that they are not able to see the ring mark on it. But there is good assurance that quite a number will not support the ringsters’ choice, for the very good reason that they are opposed to putting an office so closely connected with the Court under the influence ot a set of politicians whe usually run things in their own interest. FrLemiNG would be incompetent to perform its duties, and the deputy would be selected by Hasr- NGS, and things would be run to suit the county boss who Las his interests to subserve in the courts as well as in politics. Many Republicans fear this, and on this account they find the greatest objection to FLEMING as the choice and tool of the boss ringster and the wire-pullers associated with him. There are plenty of prudent Republi cans who wouldn’t like to see so im- portant an officer as a Prothonotary put to such use. The organ sees how this is working against its candidate, and is doing allit can to counteract the unfavorable impression. But the ring mark cannot be effaced. ——There isn’t a laboring man whose condition has been improved by the result of the election last year, al- though it was represented by the mo- nopoly supporters that if it should turn out as it did it would be of great bene- fit to those who live by their wages. The low wages and scarcity of employ- ment now existing are sufficient proof of the falsity of last years’ promises. Keep your eye on the lying politicians who made them. They are again ask- ing the laboring men for their votes. IEEE ERE —— Puck never fails in making a hit. Concerning the Pan-American cousining that is now going on, it has a cartoon representing Uncle Sam making love to South America at long range. Our Uncle almost tears his straps in his effort to embrace the fair damsel of the Southern continent, but the insuperable war-taritf wall sepa- rates him from the object of his adora- tion. It is a clear case of ‘so near and yet so far.” The laboring men of Centre county who last year were promised better times if Harrison should be elected, have seen HARRISON go into office,but they don’t see the better times, The same fellows who fooled them with false promises of plenty of wor < at big wages are asking for their votes again. Is it posssible that they will get them either for State or county officers? Spawls from the Keystone, West Chester's Pedestrian Clabnever walks. —Tramps arrested in West Chester are set to work. —One of Lancaster’s dudes carries his eigar back of his ear. —Steel rail ties are being made at Carnegie’s Pittsbnrg works. ? —Walnut wood in large quantities from Lancaster. Arbor day was quite generally observed throughout the State. —Chester huckters can make three pecks of potatoes look like a bushel. —A girl who smokes cigarettes in public shocks Williamsport people. ; —A coon hunt in the very center of WII lamsport was indulged in last Sunday. —Persons living near the sulphuz springs of wechlan have lost their sense of smell. ~~ —Chambersburg is troubled by misehief- makers who sound false alarms of fire. ol —Lee You, a Chinaman, was arrested at Lan- caster on a charge of stealing chickens. —Policemen arrested a man in Reading, with a bogus gold brick in his posession. —The Labor Union Council of Reading” wilt fight western beer and five cent barbers. —A “keg detective”makes his living by trac- ‘ing stray beer kegs for the Reading brewers. —A pair of twins weighing ten pounds each, were presented to conduetor Honaf, of East Reading. —Thirteen cords of wood were sawed from single tree in Colerain township, Lancaster couitty. —A gang of railroad Italians have been an- noying Hatboro farmers by their thieving dep- redations. —The three months bride of a Williamsport. piano tuner has eloped with one of the dudes of” the town. —The men of the Paoli wrecking erew wore high hats a few days ago when the inspec- tion train passed. —The Carbondale anid Providence turnpike, on which there are now four tol} gates, is to be made a free highway. —Robert Coleman, the millionaire of Leb- anon, will give the baseball team of Trinity College 850 for every game won. —Annie Schalle, 20 yearsold, of Fullertown, attempted suicide by taliing rat poisen, but prompt efforts saved her life. —Tormented by a safe agent, a Lock Haven undertaker got rid of the bore by offering to trade him a casket for a safe. —Mrs. Péter Yoh, of State Hill, Berks county, died on Tuesday a few minutes before the time set for her husband's funeral. —The Humane Fire Company of Norristown which has been singularly unfortunate with its horses has just lest another animal. —Reading’s board of trade hasf avorably con- sidered a proposition of a Philadelphia carpet firm to establish a factory in that city. —The proprietor of the Cooper House, at Lancaster, followed the female paseball troupa until the manager was able to pay his bill. —Mary Wilbhart, of Greensburg, a religious enthusiast, disturbs the neighborhood with open air prayers and her midnight prowling. —Landis Miller, of Auburn, Berks county, with his family has just returned from Kan- sas, having made the journey both ways in a wagon, —Twenty-five cents worth of apples which dropped from a tree overhanging two proper- ties, has lead to a lawsuit Letween Norristown neighbors. —The sour mucilage used by a Bethlehem clerk who had been tampering with his em- ployer’s mail matter led to the discovery of his erime. —The whiskers on a corpse disentered at Montgomery Cemetery have grown six inches during the twenty-five years the body has been under the soil. —His wife's infidelity being revealed to him through a tell-tale letter, J. B. Flick, of Brad- ford, packed:up the woman’s effects and sens" her to her lover. — Andrew Fleming, 78 years of age, a veters an of the Florida war in 1836 and Court Crier for Adams eounty for thirty years, died at Get: tysburg, last week. —Rev. J N. Steel of Ohio, has been elected pastor of the Reform church of Trappe in place of Rev. Sehmucker who was deposed for kiss. ing one of: his parishioners. —The uniform ofa pedestrian club compos- ed of Montgomery county girls is red, but the dear creatures can’t understand why they are chased by bulls every time they go for a walk. —Captain U. R. Burkhart, who is said‘to have robbed McLean Post G. A. R. of Reading: is also accused of having secured admission te the Hampton Soldiers’Home by forged letters. —While J. J. Mosser, of Allentown, was speeding his horse on a race track Saturday the animal ran away and was so badly hurt that it had to be killed. Mosser’s leg was broken —Henry Bachman, who was released from the Allentown jail last week, was catight Satur- day robbing Enoch Frankenfields residence in South Whitehall. Several companions esaped. —Jacob Scribner, formerly of Allentown, who murdered his uncle (Franklin Schriber} ‘atMoorehead, Minn. on September 25, has been declared insane, and will be sent to the Gov- ernment Hospital at Washington, D. C. —John Bucklen, of Phoenixville, visited Pottstown on Wednesday night, missed all the | down trains, and, while waiting for a morning train, fell asleep beside a hob cinder pile, when a train came atong and crushed his arm. —Suit for $15 has been brought against Lancaster county by one of its tavern keepers on the strength of his having a watering trough in front of his place. The County Auditors have tried to cut the allowance down to $3. —Two writs were issued directing the de- tention of W. B. Moger, one of Reading's im- prisoned saloon-keepars, after he had: served his term, but neveastheless he was released. . Subsequently he was rearrested and will be held until his fine is paid. —Thomas iuvason, of East Bedford, has nev- er prohibited persons from coming on his prop-~ erty and taking a few apples, but he haa to break his record for hospitality when a neigh- bor commenced to load a wagon with fruit from his orchard the other day. —A Lancaster county pensioner drawing $14 a month recently boasted to a stranger that he could set more fence than any man in the Co. When his pension was stopped he learned that the stranger was a Government deteet- ive sent to investigate his ease. ‘—An equity suit was begun last week at Chambersburg between the two factions of the United Brethren Church, which has been pre- pared as a test case, and will in all likelihood decide the ownership ot hundreds of valuable church properties in this and other Stateg