Deora a . BY RP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Shape’’ is a mice thing to look at, but it isn’t the most essential quality of a Governor. —Pittsburg’s councilmen have refus- ed to have their picture taken in a body. ‘Were they afraid that some time in the future there might be occasion to use it for the embellishment of a rogues’ gal- lery ? —A Quay paper says “Republicans are active.” The only Republican ac- tivity that is now observable is being directed against QUAY and his candi- date, and its liveliness is likely to in- crease as the campaign progresses. —RoGERS, of Arkansas, the other day went for the Czar of the House with a charge of forensic dynamite that wasn’t as dangerous as the favorite explosive of the Russian nihilists, but had the effect of driving the congressional despot into the cloak room. —There is a report that Spanish agents are at Washington trying to dicker Cuba off to the United States for the trifle of $200,000,000. Do the Dons think that the pension grabbers need any assistance in getting to the bottom of Uncle Sam’s bar’l ? —There is nothing strange in the bri- bery of the Beaver county congressional cogferrees. The contagion of political rascality that pervades the Beaver at- mosphere can be easily traced to its or- iginal source, where the responsibility for the demoralization belongs. —The Republican organs that haven't a word to say against Quax’s $260,000 raid on the State treasury, but profess to be morally shocked at BarcLAY'S drawing a prize in a lottery, display the most remarkable case of ethical obliquity that ever came under our observation —The abject organs, in their eager haste to serve the Boss, are reading Mr. Henry C. LEA out of the party. Mr. LEA will be out long enough to assist in subjecting the old party to the purge it is so muchin need of. It isgoing to be drastic, but a scouring of its bowels may save the life of the moribund G. O. P. — While on the 14th of this month the French were celebrating with great ‘enthusiasm the 101st anniversary ot the fall of the Bastile, the American con- gress was deliberating upon a Force Bill that is more odious in its tyrani- ical intent than anything the old strong- ‘hold of French despotism could ever ‘show. —The Inquirer, intending to be severe on WHARTON BARKER and HExrY C. LEA, says that their present attitude has been brought about by “disappointed hopes.” There is some truth in this. They vainly hoped that their party would have too much pride to allow itself to be bossed by a treasury-raiding adventurer. —It hardly can be expected that Mr. BLAINE will throw himself into the vor- tex of the Pennsylvania campaign this year, as he did four years ago, and exert ‘his magnetic influence in an endeavor to arouse enthusiasm for the Boss’s can- didate. The Secretary = will attend strictly to official business while Mr. DELAMATER is being scalped. —The Record can’t be reasonably ‘charged with unrecessary cruelty in publishing the Press's strictures on EMERY’S exposure of DELAMATER'S -delinquencies ; but it is hardly humane for it to prolong the torture of its es- ‘teemed contemporary by keeping that article standing in its columns during the entire campaign. There should be a limit to punishment. —At the time the charge of bribery, forgery, perjury and general corruption was brought against DELEMATER by ex- ‘Senator EMERY, the Philadelphia Press said to Mr. D., “You cannot afford to remain silent under accusations such as these.” But it seems that so far as the action of the Press is concerned he ean afford to be silent, for he doesn’t say a word and the Press makes no sign of being “agin him.” —President HARRISON, who in his gift cottage at Cape May seems to have been stung as much by public censure as by mosquitoes, now rises to the full dignity of his high office and declares that he will pay the rent of the Cresson cottage out of his own pocket. There are no mosquitoes at Cresson to bother VOL. 35. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE. PA. JULY 18, 1890. NO. 28. The Scranton Convention and Ballot Reform. It seems to us that our esteemed Harrisburg Democratic contemporary is unnecessarily exercised about the Scranton platform not being expMeit enough in its declaration for ballot re- form. We think that in declaring for the Australian system, without involv- ing it with the issue of a constitutional amendment, the convention covered the immediate necessities of the ques- tion. Anything more would have been surplusage that would not bave added to the strength of its deliverance on the subject. A reformed ballot, even with some remaining defects, would be of great service in the Presidential election two years hence. It would be immediately and beneficially serviceable without being perfected by a constitutional amendment. The perfection which require at least three years to bring about. Valuable time and opportuni- ty would be lost by such delay. The Legislature that is likely to be elected this year will be pretty sure to favor the Australian system, which, if adopted at the next session, would he useful in the election of 1892. At any time after its adoption there will be nothing to prevent its being made per- fect by a constitutional amendment that will do away with the numbering of the tickets which under the present law, as required by the constitution, inter- feres somewhat with a complete secre- cy of the ballot. The reformed system could go on in its operation until that perfection should be reached. It would in fact aid in bringing about that final accomplishment, inasmuch as it would in a great measure protect the ballots of the people when they should come t0 vote on the amendment intended to make the system as perfect as it possi- bly can be made. It is odr epmion that the Scranton convention acted judiciously in declar- ing in general terms for ballot reform on the Australian plan without com- plicating the question at this time with specifications. PT ——— The Outrageous Force Bill. The people do not generally compre- hend the enormity of the outrage upon their liberties that is proposed to be perpetrated by the Force hill which has been devised by JounNY DavENPORrT, introduced by Representative Lobe, and is being put through congress un- der the lash of Dictator Reep. It puts the federal elections, by which is meant the electionsof Presidents and congress men, entirely under the control of of- ficers selected by the leaders of the po- litical party which, at the time, may be 1 power. These partisan agents will be author: ized to supervise the registra tion of voters required by State laws. In other words, they shall have the power to reject from or add to the register of voters ac- cording to their determination as to what would be most advantageous to their party, They are to determine who shall be qualified to vote under the State laws,and that this power may be carried to the fullest extent, these supervisors, as they are called, shall have the right to take any ballots which the election officers may reject and put them into the box with their own hands, the election officers being deprived of the power to prevent it. And as an additional entrenchment of the party that may control these su- pervisors,the law requires that when con gressional candidates whom the elec- tion officers declare elected are different from those who are declared to be elected by the supervisors, it shall be the duty of the clerk of the House to put on the roll of the House the the President, and he wants 1t to be un- derstood that as a cottage-holder at that summer retreat there shall be “no flies | on him,” either. —A Methodist church in Lowell, | Mass., has determined to use water in- | stead of wine in its communion service because a communicant, who had been a drunkard, twice returned to his old ha- bit in consequence of tasting the con- tents of the communion cup. Possibly CarisT didn’t understand his business in directing such a tempting beverage to be used in the sacrament. At least that is to be inferred from the action of the Lowell Methodists. names of the persons whose election shall be certified to by the latter. To completely fortify the power of these party agents in controlling the elec- lions, they are authorized to “employ such part of the land or naval forces of the United States as shal! be neces- sary to enforce the provisions of the law.” Thearmy and navy are thus in. tended to be used in keeping the Re publican party in power. There was never a more daring and reckless attempt made to subvert the liberties of the people than is apparent in the object of this bill. such anamendment would secure would: The Difference. The large towns in. southeastern Pennsylvania are not making the in- crease in population that could be ex- pected of them. For the capital of a great State and a town most magnifi- cently located, Harrisburg makes slow progress, remaining still under 50,- 000, while the capitals of western States, like Columbus and Indianapo- lis, have reached or gore over the hnn- dred thousand mark. This may be owing to the conservatism of the Penn- sylvania German element that largely prevails in and around Harrisburg, For the same reason, perhaps, Lancaster and York continue to be only large- sized country towns. It was expected that Reading would make a better showing than it has, its population be- ing but a little over 50,000, while Scranton, which ten years ago was a less populous city, closely reaches a hundred thousand. Is there not dis- played in this comparison the difference between the slow-going German ele- ment and the alert and progressive New York and New England people who have contributed so much to the growth of Scranton ? The Anti-Quay Repulsiteans. This is going to be the #4 remark- able campaign this State has ever wit nessed. When the fight shall warm up, thousands of Republicans will vie with the Democrats in performing a duty to the State and a service to decent gov- ernment by defeating the representa- tive candidate of a corrupt and arrogant Boss who has grown big-headed enough to believe that he owns Pennsylvania and can make her governors for his own personal use. From every part of the commonwealth arises the protest otf Republicans who are going to vote against DELAMATER for no other reason than toretrieve their party from the disgrace of Quayism and all the dishonorable “and debasing attributes which that term implies. A leader among ‘these Republican protestants 18 Mr. WHARTON BARKER, of Philadelphia, who in an interview with a newspaper correspondent last Saturday, gave the following outline of what the anti-Quay Republicans in- tend to do in this contest : “You ask me,” queried Mr. Barker, “whether I have received any letters from Republicans commending my step in coming out in support of Pattison? In answer I will say that from all over the State letters have been pouring in from prominent Repub- licans stating that not only would they support Pattison, but would use every honest endeay- or to see that he was elected.” “I tell you,” and Mr, Barker's hands came together with an emphatic slap, “there will be nothing short of a revolution in Pennsylvania politics in November. The Republican ma- jority will dwindle away until nothing is left and the Democratic majority loom up in its place. It will be but history repeating itself, when Folger was snowed under in New York. I have received word from several exception. ally well-known Republicans, telling me that they intend taking the stump this year in the interest of the Democratic candidate. I am not at liberty to mention their names yet, as plans for the campaign have not yet been for- mulated.” ; “What are those plans?” “Well, in a few days, probably a week, a con- ference of leading Republican politicians from the interior of the State will be held in my of- fice and a plan of campaign agreed upon. To each man will be assigned some particular dis- trict, and he will have sole charge of working against Delamater in that section.” “Will you work in conjunction with the Democratic Committee ?” “No; that point we wish to make particularly apparent, We want to show that the Demo- cratic State Committee and the Anti Delamater Committee are totally distinct organizations. The election of Mr. Pattison as Governor of Pennsylvania is,of course, the common object- ive point, but there will be no collusion of the Democratic and the Pattison-Republican forces.” “But why should you wish that fact made particularly apparent ?”’ “For this reason ; we want to show that the Democrats unaided would have probably—no, sureiy—lost. The entering of a Republican Committee in the interest of the Democrats is our protest against Quayism, and we—the Re. publicans who will not be ruled—will elect Mr. Pattison. We draw no party lines; we want to show to the entire United States that in this State at least there are men who, in the interests of honest government will rise su- perior to party politics and help elect the man, who, in their minds, is best fitted for the posi- tion. Mark my words: In November you will see nothing short of a revolution in Pennsyl- vania politics,” This'is the programme which will be carried out by a large number of Re- publicans in defense of their party against theobloquy of being merely the personal property of such a character as M. S, Quay. So far as they are con- cerned their part in the campaign will be a vindication of Republicanism against such a stigma. Bribery in a Congressional Nomination. An ugly case of bribery has been de- veloped in the twenty-fifth congressional district of this State composed of the counties of Beaver, Butler, Mercer and Lawrence. In the Republican confer- ence which did its work last week, TowxsexD, the Beaver county candi- date, who was Quay’s man, was beaten by MoDowgLr, of Mercer, after a long and tiresome contest. It now appears that the successful candidate resorted to the Quay tactics in defeating the Boss's candidate by buying the Beaver county delegates, Tate, Dow~ine and Scmarrer. All of them have confessed their guilt, each having received $650, and $250 was paid to the party that ef- fected the sale. One of the scamps who allowed themselves to be used as politi- cal merchandize has made affidavit giv- ing the.details of the deal. MoDoweLr, who got away with the nomination by the use of money, thus beating the Boss and bis man at their favorite game of boodle, has adopted the Quay policy of silence and declines to say anything about the ugly charg- es that are made concerning the man- ner in which he obtained the nomina- tion. Probably he thinks that by say- ing nothing he will amply vindicate himself. In this he follows the example of the Boss. It remains tobe seen whether the people, and particularly the outraged Republicans of the dis- trict, will aceept it as a vindication. ———————— —It appears that the sum of $3, 134.45 has been screwed out of the school children of the State for the erection of a monument to E. E. Hia- BEE, late Superintendent of the com- mon schools of Pennsylvania. As there was nothing in Mr. HicBer's of: ficial conduct to deserve such a memo- rial this contribution of the children “s money, misapplied. Mr. Lea’s Arraignment of Quayism, The letter of Henry 'C. Lia, of Philadelphia, addressed to the Repub- licans of the State, which we repub- lish in another column, is a remark able document as coming from a Re- publican, in that it gives the strongest reasons why members of his party owe it to their self-respect and to the honor of their political organization to oppose the election of a State ticket that has been made at the command of a politi- cal boss who, charged with grave of- fenses, is unable to defend himself against the criminal imputations brought against him. Mr. Lea is correct in assuming that the Republicans are really more inter- ested in rebuking the arrogant roguery of Quay, and in resisting his impudent assumption of supreme political control in the State,than are the Democrats, for in addition to the interest which they, alike with all other citizens, have in incorrupt and honest State government, they arealso interested in rescuing their party from the stigma of being ruled— in fact, owned—by a character who can't refute the charge of being a pub- lic thief. That DELAMATER was nominated solely because Quay had determined that he should be, is a fact which is self-evident to every Republican, and itis also evidentthat Quay intends that the election of his man shall be a vin- dication of himself. Republicans have stood a good deal in supporting ques- tionable measures and upholding ob- Jectionable leaders—doing so for the supposed “good of the party,” but when they are called upon to vindicate a treasury-raiding leader by electing a ticket which he has made to suit his own purpose, many of them will come to the conclusion with Mr. Lea that they had better vindicate their party against such a Boss by defeating his ticket. The Republicans, as a matter of self-respect and party reputation, have more to gain by such a course than have the members of the opposite paity. —The Republican candidate expects to make his fine shape and genteel de- portment the chief factors of his cam- paign, and will put them on exhibition in every part of the State ; but,although under ordinary circumstances they might be considered recommending qualities, the people won’t accept them as a suf- ficient counterpoise to the fact that he is the creature of a corrupt Boss and an instrument of the Standard Oil mo- nopoly. A Big-hearted Journal. It was an inspiration of genius that prompted the Philadelphia Press's Most Popular Teachers’ contest. As a newspaper enterprise it was uniquely original, and its originality had com- bined with it a large element of benevo- lence. In comparison with it the Nel- lie Bly enterprise was a mercenary ad- vertising scheme. The Press succeed- ed in arousing a wider and livelier in- terest than ever before attached to a newspaper undertaking. There is no exaggeration in saying that the hearts of millions were in it. It was a whole- sale enlistment of popular sympathy. And it is gratifying to b:lieve that the far-reaching friendship that was dis- played for the fair contestants has ex- tended to and will abide with the big- hearted newspaper that has done much more than it promised. One lady teach- er was to go to Europe, but three are sent across the ocean with a carte blanc to be happy to the extent of their ca- pacity for happiness and to the fu'l limit of the Press's ample means Great is American journalism! Great is the Press! Se vmts——_ Mr. Delamater’s Personal Canvass. The Republican candidate for Gov- ernor proposes to make a thorough canvass of the State and personally in: teryiew, as far as he possibly can, such members of his party as may be way- ering in their support of the State tick- et. This may afford him an opportuni- ty to convince such dissatisfied Repub- licans that the following charges made against him by ex-Senator Lewis Ex- ERY, jr., a prominent member of his own party, are not true: I charge that he (Delamater) purchased his election to the Senate of this Stale in 1886 , that he directly bribed citizens of Crawford. county to vote for him at the general election and that when a memorial bad been contem plated to prevent him from taking the oath of office he paid large sums of money for the sup- pression of the said memorial. I charge that he did take the oath of office, thereby committing a crime against the good name and statutes of the Commonwealth, I charge, also, that during his services in the Senate he attempted to alter a public re- cord by framing a conference report ‘on a bill before it had been properly considered, eon- trary to all rules and practice, and signing or having had signed the names of the commit- tee, and in so doing offended the dignity of the Legislature and the law of the Common- wealth. : I make these charges without fear of con- tradiction, and court an action at law whereby I may set my proof before the people oath- bound. : Although these charges were made by ex-Senator EMERY some months ago, Mr. DeramaTer has not yet denied, nor even so much as taken notice of them. He shouldn't be silent about them when he has his interviews with the Republicans who are disposed to kick, but should give them the fullest proof that he has been misrepresented. Nothing short of this will satisfy them. If Mr. DeramaTer can not do this he had better not have his personal interviews, Re —————————————— \ Mr. Wallace Is All Right. A sarcastic grin prevailed among the Republican editorial fraternity im- mediately after the Scranton conven- tion, occasioned by the report that Mr. WALLACE was 50 soured by the result of the convention's proceedings that he would go to Europe and remain out of the country ‘while the campaign was going on. In the meantime his friends would be very lukewarm in the con- test. . There 1s nothing in this report that can afford the Republican papers any substantial comfort. Mr. War- Lace will be called away to England for a few weeks by pressing business but the ticket will receive his hearty support, he having declared that on his return, which will be about the first of September, be will do his full part to secure its success, and that his friends will not be backward in giving it their support. The ex-Sen- ator is too good a Democrat to be in- different at such a political juncture as this, and too much interested in the honor and welfare of Pennsylvania to be out of a fightiin which Republicans as well ‘as Democrats will array themselves for the resciie of the State from the disgrace and rnin of corrupt and disreputable bossism. Rt ————— —Secretary BLAINE is opposed to the Force Bill. He has also subjected his high tariff views toa considerable re- vision. If he goes on improving at this rate he will in. time become almost as ! good as a Democrat. Spawls from the Keystone, —The Cornwall [ron Ore Mines supply (welve furnaces. All games of chance will be prohibited at the Berks county Fair. —A relief fund has been started at Pittsburg for the Dunbar unfortunates, * —Lyeoming county is overrun with millions of toads the size of a grain of corn. —Alleghany county has made an increase of 51 per cent. in population in ten years. —Berks county census enumerators sat down to a banquet together at Reading. —A Chester street railway company gives its employes an annual ice-cream treat. . . —Pittsburg’s modest councilmen have re- fused to have their pictures taken in a body. —The Lebanon: match factory received an order for ten car loads of matches recently — An undertaker has been arrested at Pitts- burg for obstructing traffic with a funeral. —A candle fell into & child's coffin at South Easton, and the corpse was nearly cremated. —This year’s crop of wheat in the Schuylkill Valley will average twenty bushels to the acre. —The Women’s Christian Temperance Un _ ion of Chester will war on' indecent cigarette pictures. —Fish wardens sayjsay that the Hungarians along the Schuylkill kilt the fish with dy- namite. —The Sheriff of Montgomery county’ com- plains that he is kept too. busy selling out failing farmers. —A residentof Wayne eomplains that no enumeration of the census of that place has been taken yet. —The total contributions raised from the schools of the State for the Highbee memorial amount to $3134.45. —At Pittsbnrg a suit for assault has been brought against a man who rubbed his stubbly beard over a child's face. —A notorious woman of Laneaster went driving with an old lover after she had just been married to another man.. —The annual meeting of the-State Commis. sion having charge of the Soldiers’ Orphan School was held at Harrisburg. —Detective Lyon, of Reading, who was recently acquitted of blackmail but saddled with the costs, will have $365 to pay. —In a letter to a friend at Pottstown Henry 8. Longaizer threatens to bring a “pet” taran- tula home with him from Missouri. —Nockamixon township, Bucks county, boasts of a four-legged duck, which uses them all in a way that is a sight to see. —Hamilton Assembly, Knights of Labor, will have the semi-monthly pay act enforced in all Lancaster industrial establishments, —Charles Kern, of North Whitehall, Lehigh county, lies dangerously ill from the effects of an attack made upon him by his own dog, —The committee having charge of the Royer’s Ford camp meeting has decided to allow the ice-cream stands to do a Sunday business. —Reuben Watson, Superintendent of Mrs, G. Dawson Coleman’s farms, near Lebanon, on Tuesday fell from a haymow and was killed. —While the wheat crop in Chester county, except in’ the southern portion, is a short one,” the yield of hay is unprecedented in quantity, —Sixteen telegraph poles out of nineteen just South of Ottsville, were struck by light. ning during Thursday's storm and knocked to pieces. : —Harrison Rider, a Chester miser, was bad- ly injured by a fall out of a window a week ago, and has refused to secure medical atten. dance, —In a lecture at Susquehanna on Wednes- day night Mr. Powderly said the Knights of Labor are not at war with any other labor ore ganization, —After a barn raising in Lancaster county, the structure was tested by placing in it eleven women whose combined weight was 2040 pounds. —A pair of hogs weighing 900 pounds both died of the heat while being carried to Phil- adelphia last week in a wagon from West Chester. —At Swamp, Montgomery county, Clinton Shereck, a farm hand, shot Louisa Brundt, 14 years of age, dead, and then put a bullet into his own brain. i —Mrs. Adam Wuchter, of White Hall, who has been fasting for 105 days, is failing rapidly but refuses to eat, as she says she “wants to go where the angels dwell,” —Al Lawrence, of Chester, made a flying machine, with which he flew(?) from the roof of his house down into the yard. He had ex. pected to make a tenmile trip. g -—County Treasurer Mogel has brought suit against forty-five person in different sections of Berks county to recover the mercantile tax recently levied by the Appraiser. —A premature blast at the Pennsylvania Railroad Company’s quarry, near Huntingdon last Friday killed G. L. Secrist, of Hill Valley, and badly injured Robert S. Houtz, of West Huntingdon. —Hon. James W. Latimer, Additional Law Judge, was appointed President J udge of York county in piace of the late Judge Gibson. The successor of Judge Latimer has not yet been appointed. —Ex-Councilman William Thompson, of Reading, was arrested in church, where he is an exhorter, charged with inflicting probably fatal injuries upon Charles Wesley, while ejecting him from his house. John Hammer, a Lancaster county farmer in good circumstances, was found dead from paralysis of the heart on the banks of Chickies Creek last Saturday. He had left home an hour before for a day’s fishing. —Bepjamin Kalis, a young man residing at Steeve Station, near Pottstown, in attempting to board a train, fell under the wheels, there- by losing his left arm and leg and a portion of his right foot. He is still living. —Rufus Johnson, of Northumberland, was arrested on Friday on a warrant sworn out by Alonzo Robbins, President of the Pharmaceu - tical Examining Board, charging him with keeping a drug store without a proper diploma. ~The Gettysburg State monument comm is.” sion had a meeting with representatives from’ the 1st, 2d, 5th, 6th and 11th, Pennsylvania Reserve Regiments at Gettysburg. Sites for the memorials of the various regiments were selected. i —The corner-stone of St. Mark’s Catholié Church, at Altoona, was laid with appropriate ceremonies last Sunday. Rev. Father Wall, Vicar General of the Pittsburg diocese, deliv- ered the address to about 5000 people. The church will cost $33,000. 1