BY PP. GRAY MEEK, Ink Slings. —CHARLEY WOLFE interjects into this campaign the slogan of Dinna ye hear it, Bosses ? —1In the numerous fights which are springing up among the Repub- lican leaders it doesn’t matter much which side Mr. HARRISON'Is on. —If the Force Bill should knock out the Monopoly Bill it would go to show that the bayonet as a political instrument isn’t an entirely unmitigated evil. —YVice President Wass of the New York Central Railroad displays an arro- gance in his treatment of the strikers that makes him appear as the Czar Rerp of railroad circles. —The flowery eloquence with which young Mr. SwooPE dpened the Repub- lican convention on Tuesday, failed to enthuse the assembled delegates. Prob- aply it was too rich for their blood. —The pointed question which the col- ored Republican put to candidate DEL- AMATER at Chambersburg afforded another illustration of the fact that the colored brother has become a trouble. some element in politics. —The defeat of SAM Losu for con- gress in the Schuylkill county Repub- lican convention last Tuesday may have been in consequence of Dick Quay souring on him. In such matters Dick reflects the acidity of his father. —The Pinkerton detectives area dan- gerous excrescence which should be rub- bed off the surface of the body politic, In this free country there is but little use for a standing army, and one run as a private enterprise is altogether obnox- ious. —The brickmakers of Philadelphia at their picnic last Monday furnished a specimen brick which serves to show the character of the political structure which the voters of Pennsylvania are go- ing to erect this year. ' They took a vote for governor which resulted in 916 for ParrisoN and 305 for DELAMATER, —The scheme of sending word out from Bellefonte a few days before the primaries that it wouldn’t do to nomi- nate Capt. MoNTGOMERY, was a piece of boss business that would hare done credit to MAT QUAY. The chairman of the Republican county committee is be- eoming quite proficient in that style ot political management. —At one point in the proceedings of the Republican convention last Tuesday it looked as if business would be suspend- ed until a telephone message could be sent to Philipsburg inquiring whether there were any more candidates lying around loose in that enterprising town who would be willing to take the bal- ance of the nominations. —We object to our lively neighbors of Philipsburg moving the county seat, with all the official appurtenances, right away over to their thriving and ambitious city. They, however, may have the jail it they are willing to take the present Sheriff along with it as an encumbrance. That is the only condi- tion upon which we are willing to part with that institution. —There is a report that HARRISON and REED have become so angry at Quay for his interference with the Force Bill that they have a mind to punish him by helping to defeat his can- didate in Pennsylvania. It is to be hoped that this is mot true. Such a display of hostility on their part would excite a sympathy for the Boss which that old political reprobate doesn’t deserve. —In nominating WoLr, whose can- didacy was sprung on the party a few weeks beforethe convention, and reject- ing Capt. MONTGOMERY who was in the field earnestly working for: at least six months, the Republicans of this county reversed the old maxim that the early bird catches the worm. WorLr, how- ever, by the time the campaign is over will find that the worm wasn’t worth catching. —Our old friend, Jor Hoy, who is in a better political humor than he was Jast year, can’t resist cracking a joke at the expense of the Republicans. He says they have a Beaver for Governor, have nominated a Wolf for Sheriff, and have Kunes on their ticket for Com- missioner, and he brings the laugh in by saying that the Democrats will enlarge this collection of animals by giving them a skunk in November. CuarLey WorrE stated an un- deniable fact to the Union county farm. ers when he told them that Republi- can supremacy in the State means the rule of the corporations ; and he knew whereof he spoke when, on the other | Why increase the cost of the people's hand, he said to his agriculiural audi- ence that “Governor Parrisox had the “ honesty and courage to stand by the “hoodwinked and oppressed farmer “ against the chicanery and oppression “ of corporate power.” Mr. WoLrg will state many telling facts pertinent to the issues of the campaign before the con- test shall close in November. 82. | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. 1MAVH wl 1 1 ‘DUNST nd 68 ihr = = B _VOL. 35, A Bugle Blast from Charles S. Wolfe. We had no doubt as to the side on which CoarLes S. Worre would be heard in the contest in which RoBEerT E. Parrisox is pitted against the can- didate chosen by the corrupt Boss of the Pennsylvania Republicans. Earlier in the season the Delamater organs announced with well feigned sat- isfaction that Mr. WorLre and others of the old Independents were going to stultify the position they took in 1882 against bossjdictation and machine rule by supporting a candidate who is the offspring of the perfection of bossism, in comparison with which that of 1882, objectionable as it was, might have been considered decent and tolerable. The organs claimed that Mr. WoLre was going to subject his honorable independence of eight years ago to such stultification, but we didn’t believe it. At the Union county farmer’s annu- al pic-nic last week he proved that he isn't that kind of a man. On that occasion he arraigned with his usual force the bosses and machine men who for years have been using the Republican power in this State for the benefit of the railroads that have discriminated against the interests of the farmers, and who, for the promotion of corporate interests and the aggrandizement of corporate power, have prevented the enforcement of those provisions of the State consti- tution which were intended to shield the people against corporate encroach- ment and usurpation. He was quite plain in expressing bis opinion that Mr, DeLaMATER represented this ma- lign influence. Mr. Worrg gave an illustration of the complete subjection of the Republi- can leaders to the railroad power. He further arraigned them for che failure of the Revenue Law designed to benefit the farmers by an equalization of taxes, which in its passage from the Speaker of the Senate to the Governor was 80 mysteriously manipulated that | it vanished entirely from human sight. | He also charged that when Governor Parrison had the courage to bring suits against certain corporations for establishing freight pools, coal combi- nations and other abuses, the corporate power thus righteously assailed had no other escape than “to elect a Gov- “ ernor who would discontinue the liti- gation.” If under Beaver the corporations have been allowed to have their own way, what would they not be permitted to do if the servant of the Standard Oil Company and the choice of M. S. Quay should be made Governor of the State ? The campaign against the abuses which so long have injured and op- pressed the people of Pennsylvania could not have been opened more forci- blyjand effectually than was done by Mr. Worre at the Union county farm- ers’ pic nic. ——JoHN D. RoCKEFELLER,the head of the Standard Oil Company, denies that he is going to endow a Baptist nniversity with $20,000,000. The Bap- tists can consider themselves lucky in not becoming the recipieuts of such a ‘questionable benefaction. Money ac- quired by the methods of a grasping, heartless monopoly is not the kind of stuff to put into institutions intended to promote religion and morality. A Choice of Alternatives. Mr. James DossoN, the great woolen manufacturer of Philadelphia, who has been a very Trojan in upholding the high tariff exactions, in a letter urging the immediate passage of the McKinley bill gives a pitiful descrip- tion of the present condition of the woolen industry. He says: “The wool: “en trade all over the country is in a “ worse condition now than for years, ‘ and we certainly need either greater “ protection on the finished goods or “freer raw material.” Why not adopt the remedy of “freer raw material’’ which he admits to be one of the alternatives in this dilemma ? clothing, already too high, by another turn of the tariff screw, when free raw materials, as recommended by Grover CreveraNp and advocated by the Democratiay party, would relieve the woolen menin their embarrassed condi- tion and at the same time reduce the cost of one of the prime necessaries of civilized life ? NO. 33. Delamater Pleads Not Guilty. A colored man at a Republican meeting at Chambersburg last week was instrumental in forcing candidate DELAMATER to break the silence which he solong maintained under the dam- aging charges brought against him by ex-Senator EMERY, The Republican candidate was ad- dressing the meeting and was having smooth sailing in his exhortation to his hearers to stick to the ticket and main- tain inviolate the blessed tariff by the election of the candidates furnished by, the Boss, when suddenly and unexpect- edly, in the midst of his harangue, a colored brother arose in the audience and expressed an uncontrollable desire to hear something about the Emery charges, The colored gentleman, no doubt, had heard enough about the tariff and wanted to get down to business that had some connection with the cam- paign,and it is altogether likely that the speaker, so startlingly interrupted, had he dared to express his opinion of that ebeny Republican, would have called him an impertinent nigger. But having to face the interrogatory about the charges which represent him to be guilty of bribery, forgery and per- jury, as a matter of course he pleaded “not guilty.” What less could he have done? It is the plea almost invariably putin by every culprit arraigned before a court of justice, but the court doesn’t im- mediately order an acquittal because the prisoner eays the indictment isn’t true. rr Twat) Congressman Kerr Should Be Renomi- nated. Democrats all over the State teel an interest in Hon. James Kerr's being sent back to congress for another term. They are interested in him not only for the reason that he has made an ex- cellent representative and an earnest and active supporter of democratic principles in the treatment of all the | measures that have come up in the House since he has been a Member, but also because the position in which be has been placed at the head of the Democratic State Committee requires of his Democratic constituents that they show their appreciation of his service and their acknowledgement ot his worth by the endorsement of a renomination. While he is attending to the business of the State campaign he should be en- couraged in the work by the approba- tion of the Democrats of his district which would be expressed by making him again their candidate for Congress. On this subject the Philadelphia Re- cord expresses the sentiments of the Democracy of the State by the follow- sensible and well-timed words. Representative James Kerr, Chairman of the Democratic State Committee, will have no opposition in his own county of Clearfield for renomination to Congress. He should have none in the other counties- Clarion, Forest, Elk and Centre—which with Clearfield make up the Twenty-eighth district. With the pos- sible exception of Forest county the whole district is strongly Democratic. A Democratic nomination is equivalent to an election. Whilst Mr. Kerr is lending his whole time and best efforts to insure Democratic success in the State, his fellow-Democrats whom he has reputably served at Washington should see toit that his necessary absence from his own camp shall do him no injury. Itis the custom to elect a faithful Representative for a second term. 1t would bea still better cus- tom to elect faithful Representatives as long as they shall be faithful. But in Mr. Kerr's case, standing as he does now as the represen- tative of the party throughout the State, it would be not only a mistake but a mishap not easily reparable to cut him off with a single term. The moral effect of not giving him a renomination while in his position as hairman of the State Central Commit- tee and manager of the campaizn,would be damaging to the Democratic cause. This is something which, in this con- nection, should be taken into account. That Centre county will throw no obstacle in the way of Mr. Kerr's re- nomination is a fact well understood. The people here are for him, the candi- date of the county—CoL. SPANGLER— is for him and he has had the manli. ness to so declare publicly, His confer- ees are warm KERR men, and political trouble takers outside of the district need have no fears, as to the final re sult. Mr. Kerr will be renominated, and elected by a much larger majority than was given him two years ago. —Probably the reason why Speaker REED doesn’t want to have CooPER on the Raum inwestigating committee is that he is afraid he might put a head on the Commissioger of Pensions. ELLEFONTE, PA., AUGUST 22, 1890. Edmunds in the Role of a Kicker. Who would ever have thought that Senator Epmunps would be a kicker against even the most iron-clad party regulations? But it is a fact that | after the Senate caucus last week he | expressed his dissatisfaction with the arrangements that had been made to keep the Republican Senators down to | the line of duty prescribed by the man- | agers. He inveighed against the crimi- nal extravagance of passing the river and harber bill when there is a deficit of $40,000,000 and $50,000,000 staring congress in the face, and the obstinacy with which the members of the Fi- nance Committee are trampling down matters of important legislation in or- der to rush through the tariff bill. As friendly as he is to the Force Bill he does not want the Tariff Bill disposed of without a full debate, and he charged its managers with having handled it for the benefit of special interests and in entire forgetfulness of every prin- ciple of right and justice. There must be something very palpa- bly wrong in Republican management when a veteran party man like Ebp- MUNDs is compelled to kick, “Goodby to that corpulent old Treasury surplus if your Uncle Bex BurLEr ever gets a whack at it,” re- marks the Philadelphia Press. But the corpulency of the surplus is being so rapidly reduced by the Republican treasury raiders pegging away at it, that by the time BeN’s turn shall come there will be hardly a shadow of it left for him to whack at. 1 ——— ——— Diplomatic Impudence. No American Minister abroad ever did any thing as cheeky as that which Minister WaireLaw Rip is now do- ing in France. The government of that country has excluded the import- ations of American pork, its purported object being to protect the French pork raisers from the competition of foreign production. Mr. Riep has en- tered a protest against this, expostulat- ing with the French authorities for pursuing a policy so injurious {0 Amer- ican interests and unfriendly to a peo- ple who have always been on such good terms with the French. To read the long expostulation of the American Minister, which has been republished in the papers in this country, one would almost be led to believe that the American government has been the most liberal in the world in allowing importations from foreign countries, and had a right to complain of illiberal trade regulations on the part of other governments, when, in truth, at the very time when Minister Rip is calling the French authorities to ac- count for laying an embargo on Amer- ican pork the congress of the nation he represents is engaged in increasing the tariff restrictions on foreign impor*- ations alriost to the point of prohibition. Surely the French have a reason to regard our Minister's action in this matter as a remarkable case of diplo- matic impudence. It is unfortunate that France can jus- tify her exclusion of American pork by pointing to the American tariff which imposes restrictive duties on French productions. It is also unfortunate that other foreign governments are adopting the same method of retalia- tion by excluding the agricultural pro- ducts of the United States. It is rough on the American farmers,but the American government should not com- {| plain about 1t, for it is only applying to her the treatment which she accords to other nations. The struggle for sheriff is causing an ugly snarl among the Republicans of Philadelphia which is likely to de- moralize their entire campaign. The report that Quay was going to take upon himself the authority of determin- ing who should be nominated” for sheriff raised a storm of angry protes- tation, and now the opposite report that he has concluded to take no part in the fight is greeted with derision by those who are best acquainted with his disposition to manage all the details of the party machinery. They remember the promise he made to Mayor FirLer that he wouldn't interfere with the Harrisburg convention, a promise which he kept by sending his son Dick to the convention to carry out the or- Some Census Facts. Enough is known of the result of the census to give a definite idea of the relative growth of the different States in population. New York State still keeps the first place, with a population of nearly six millions, but the percen- tage of her increase during the last ten years has not equalled that of Pennsyl. vania which easily continues to be sec- ond, with a population of about five million three hundred thousand. The difference between these two leading States in 1880 was about 800,000; it is now not more than about 600,000. The increase in New York State in the last decade was made principally in the two great cities of New York and Brooklyn, the other districts having grown very little, if any, in population. In Pennsylvania the growth of Phila- delphia was disappointing, the great in- crease of nearly a million in the popu- lation of the State having occurred out- side of its leading city, principally in the coal districts. We have seen the returns from bat one of the coal counties, that of North- umberland, which shows a population of 75,000, an increase of over 50 per cent. in the last ten years. No doubt the others have done as well, and we may expect to see equal gains in Schuyl- kill, Carbon, Luzerne, Lackawanna, and the bituminous counties of Clear- field, Jefferson, Indiana and the Con- nellsville and other coke regions. Bi- tuminous coal as an element of growth has vastly developed since 1880. No doubt there has been a considera- ble increase of population in the oil counties, but not near as much as would have taken place if the benefits of that great natural resource of this State had not been diverted to other States by the Standard Oil Company which has been assisted in robbing the results of its petroleum production by such agents as DELAMATER, the Republican candidate for Governor. The census returns show that there ‘has been little, it any, increase in the strictly rural counties of Pennsylvania, some of which have, in fact, diminish- ed in population. This is a bad show- ing for districts which were erroneously believed to have been benefitted by a tariff-furnished home market. ——A local Republican paper, speaking of the Democratic county con- vention of last week, said: “The con- vention last week was a fair sample of the power and rule of bossism.” This haphazard assertion was indulged in for want of something else to say. In what way did bossism make itself man- ifest on that occasion, and who was the boss? The paper that makes this foolish charge gives a willing support to a State ticket which is admitted even by Republicans to have been the handiwork of Boss Quay. A Republican Protest Against the Tin Plate Robbery. It was an interesting set-to the Re- publican Senators had over the tin- plate extortion in the tariff bill. Sena- tor PruMB, representing the anti-tariff Republicaas of the prairie states, beg- ged his Republican colleagues “not to ‘fuse an increase of duty on all'the tin “ware used in the country, on every *“ tin cup, on every tin plate and coffee- “ pot, and on every yard of tin-roofing ‘in the United States.” The protesting Kansas Senator in- dignantly declared that “not one single ‘ consumer of tin plate had asked for “the increase of the duty on tin,” which will make every housekeeper and fruit-canner pay increased tribute to a pampered syndicate controlling the tin trade, for whose benefit, he said’ his colleagnes had permitted themselves “to be urged into overriding public “opinion and disregarding the great ‘“ mass of consumers.” A Democrat of the Cleveland stamp could not have employed stronger terms in denouncing this tin-plate rob- bery than were used by the Kansas Senator. But what availed his protest in the interest of the western farmers, housekeepers and fruit-canners as against thé demands of an infantindus- try whose promoters want to become millionaires with the rapidity that is ensured by tariff extortion? A —————— ——HasriNgs, Brown, Coburn & .Co., couldn’t have put things in better shape for the success of the Democratic ders he sent from Beaver by telegraph. county ticket, Pennsylvania of the larger portion of Spawls from the Keystone, —A cat at Renovo kills 50 sparrows a day. —Clinton Schneck, who murdered Louisa Brunst, died in Montgomery county Jail. —A 36-year-old horse died at Springfield township, Chester county, a few days ago. —Corn and potatoes are plenty in Berks county, but the fruit crop is a dead failure. —The August term of the Criminal Court opened at Lancaster on Monday with 166 cases en the trial list. —At a rat-hnnting match at Minersville a young man was shot in the breast and killed by a companion. ~The wheat thus far thrashed in Lancaster county averages from fourteen to eighteen bushels to the acre. —The dwelling of E. C. Savage was robbed on Wednesday night at Bloomsburg of £500 worth of jewelry. —Lewis Derr, of Lebanon, dangerously wounded Charles A. Gronon while shooting sparrows on Thursday. —At Readinga man in a drunken stupor laid down on the pavemeni and two bull-dogs kept guard over him. —Black diptheria has broken out among the children at Miner's Mills. Three are dead and twenty-two are sici. —Just as a Pittsburg minister had pro, nounced him a husband Thomas Davis was ar- rested for beating his mother. —In one single night recently R.J. Mills, of Pottsville, rescued a woman from ruffians and was himself held up by tramps. —Harvey Dougherty, a boy, while hunting birds near Johnstown, accidently shot and killed Mollie Mangus, 15 years old. —A race to be run at night under the elec- tric light is a feature talked of by the man- agers of the Cumberland county fair. —Some Harrisburg Nimrods are hunting for a big animal supposed to be a panther that has taken up its residence near the city. —Five Italians have been committed to prison at Reading, charged with inciting to riot and threatening to kill their foreman. —Madison Quay, of West Pikeland, Chester county, still carries his hand in a sling, the re- sult of an acciden; sustained five years ago. —Joseph Toner, of Derry, in attempting to jump from a freight train struck his head against the ties and half his scalp was torn off. —There is an impression in Pittsburg that murderer Smith can be hanged in spite of the order of Courtto send him to an insane asylum. -—A Langhone man is fitting up a pigeon house to accomodate 100¢ birds. Thig wilk be the largest flock of carrier pigeons in the country. —At a Sheriff's sale of a farm of eighty-two acres in Solebury township,Bucks county, last week, it brought only $50 above the mortgages on it, —A horse drawing a wagon loaded with small boys ran away a few days ago at Lancaster and scattered the youngsters all over the street. —The members of a quarrelsome family at Williamsport have preferred charges and counter-charges against each other until they are all in jail. —Alleged violations of the Child Labor law willgrésult in the arrest of a number of Read” Ing mdaufacturers in order that test cases may 4 made. —Lima oil certificates were dealt in for the first tite on open board at Pitteburg Tues- day. The Standard Company has issued 8,000,+. 000 certificates. : —The 14-year old son of Joseph Klinger, a well-known farmer of Bethel township, Lebans. on county, fell from a straw stack on Wednes« day and was killed. —Thursday evening's hail . storm = did a great deal of damage to the tobacco crop in the southern part of Lancaster county. The loss will be very large. —Mrs, John Bartlow was killed and seven others seriously injured by being run down by a freight train, while walking on a railroad bridge near Hyndman. —William Keller, of Rockland, while on his way to campmeeting on Sunday was killed by the train on which his daughters were being carried to the camp grounds. —James Bishop, of Mount Joy, who ran away from home 15 years ago, was recently recog- nized by friends among the regular army men stationed at Mount Gretna. ' —John Gallagher, of Allentown, was so pleased because his wife and mother-in-law were going to California that he got drunk and. on Friday was found dead in bed. —Mrs. Martha Cook and Miss Mary Stack. house, of Wrightsville, Lancaster county,claim, to be the oldest living twins in the United States. They were 88 on the 29th of J uly. —Mrs. Wucehter, the Whitehall faster, has passed the 136th day of her enforced fast. She seems to be getting somewhat stronger, and the doctors think she will live another week. —Fred Babner, of Reading, suddenly expe rienced a loss of weight from 156 to 86 pounds, and a few days ago found the cause of it to be five lizards that had been living in his stom- ach. —Nicholas Brandon, a dissipated character was burned to death in his house early Moh, day morning at West Hazleton. It is SUppCs- ed that he upset a lamp while he was intoxi cated. —Little Katie Rau, of Reading, is dying from injuries received by being tossed by a vicious cow, whose owner, John Stark, hag since been arrested for allowing the animal to. roam at large, —Because a South Bethlehem Hungarian with a weakness for singing would not desist in his warbling of “Lil An Rooney,” on Sunday night, his boarding boss knocked him insensi= ble with a flat-iron. —A Ityear-old son of William Irwin, of Marysville, was buried between fourteen feet of dirt and stones while helping his father about an old well. He was dug out after four hours, conscious and only slightly bruised. —David Thomas,aged 12 years, of Shamokin * who was arrested for burglary a few days agoy was subsequently discharged from custody bes cause of the social position of his parents. He has since been rearrested on another charge. —Impnre drinking water is said to be the | cause of the typhoid fever that has attackeg ' the family of William Fike of Douglassville. | A grown son and daughter have already died ! and Mrs. Fike and four children are in a crit ical condition. —Thomas Philips, of Carbondale, was foun& ! dead on a railroad track at Scranton Sunddgr morning. His head was crushed in and his pockets were emptied of their contents.” The | bellef is that he was murdered, and Coroner Gardner has set about to unravel whateyet mystery is connected with the death,