Rp BER 4 BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The bayonet charge of the Republi- can statesmen has shaken even the gran- | ite foundations of the Green Mountains. —Probably Tom Pratt declined the mission to Spain because he did not wish to get quite so far “outside of the breast- works.” — After the display of pugilism in the House last week it won’t do to speak lightly of Jon~N L. SULLIVAN'S congres- sional candidacy. —Whitewashing is usually done in the Spring, but in Raum’s case it is be- ing shown that a neat job of congression- al calsomining can be done in the fall of the year. —(CANNoN, of Illinois, has always been somewhat of a windy character, but that didn’t justify his introducing in the House a windy subject that drove the ladies out of the gallery. —The “Democratic war veterans’ of Philadelphia, published as being op- posed to PATTISON, are deficient in two essential elements. They are neither Democrats nor war veterans. —The disfranchiserent of white vot- ers in Maine to help the election af REED beats anything alleged to have been practiced on black voters in the South which is said to require the interference of bayonets. —The complaint of McKINLEY’S friends that he has been made the vic- tim of Democratic gerrymandering is calculated to excite a derisive smile. It is merely retribution that is operating in McKINLEY’S case. —Candidate DELAMATER will visit Bellefonte on Saturday under the wing of General HasTINGs, but that cover will not be sufficient to conceal the Quay collar which the Republican car= didate wears around his neck. —It is strange that Rogers, of Ar- kansas, didn’t jump into the row in the House,” remarks the Philadelphia Press. It is not at all strange. ROGERS is not a blackguard. The row in the House was exclusively a Republican affair. —The President at Cresson will occu- py one of the highest peaks of the Alle- ghanies, but its altitude won’t enable _ him to takeacorrect view of the political field. From any stand point he can see nothing in the prospect but HARRISON. —It was through influences which had the assistance of DELAMATER that Philadelphia lost its place as the second city of the Union. If it shall give him the usual Republican majority it will maintain its position as first among boss- ridden communities. —Thirty thoustn 1 Democratic majori- ty in Arkansas, following close upon a hundred thousand majority in Alabama, is enough to set every bayonet states- man shouting for the regular army to march right down into that rebellious region. —The number of excursionists that were drawn to Cression last Sunday by the presence of the President’s family abundantly paid the Pennsylvania rail- road company for fixing up a cottage for the Harrisons. Putting the Presiden- tial office to such business uses is a new feature of the executive function. —1It is a mistake to say that CANNON, who made a blackguard of himself in the House, is not fit tobe in Congress. He is exactly fitted for such a ccngress as the present one. Any low-down blackguard is not out of place in a body where indulgence in obscene language is promptly followed by a display of pugilism. —Speaking of the shape in which McKINLEY finds his congressional dis- trict, a contemporary of high moral tone says—“It is no defense for the Demo- crats that Republicans have gerryman- dered congressional districts.” It may not be a defense for the Democrats, but it ought to shut up the mouths of the Republicans. —Minister SMITH expresses himself as greatly pleased with the Russian govern- ment. He.no doubt discovers a familiar resemblance between the Czar who gov- erns Russia with a rod of iron, and his friend REED who controls the American congress with the hand of a despot. The American Minister finds in Russia something that reminds him of home. —The Altoona Tribune says ‘our Democratic friends are urging their peo- ple to stick to the ticket. This advice is equally good for Republicans.” Tt would be if their ticket was worth stick- ing to, but, as a disgraceful product of boss rule, many Republicans think they will do themselves and their party credit by defeating it. —The angel in front of the Court House has assumed a more angelic hue since it has become certain that the of- fices in that building will soon be entire- ly under Democratic control again. Tt isa ‘cold water” angel, and therefore has a good reason to smile at the inevita- ble defeat of the fellows who made rum the chief factor in inspiring the delibera- tions of their convention. There is now nothing green about that angel. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Bh LAL BELLEFONTE, PA. SEPTEMBER 5, 1890. NO. 35. People Against Dela- mater. The Working Mr. Hue McGarvey was chairman of the Knights of Tahor committee that attended the last session of the State Legislature for the purpose of se- curing legislation in the interest of labor. As every body knows, it was strictly a Republican legislature. That party had everything its own way in directing and managing its pro- ceedings, and Mr. DELAMATER., a8 a Senator, was one of its most promi: nent and influential members. Mr. McGarvey and his committee did not succeed in getting from that legislature legislation that in value amounted to a hill of beans. He is naturally angry about it and is free in saying what he thinks of Republi can legislation as a medium of benefit to laboring people, and of Mr. DELAMATER as a friend of labor inter ests. In an interview published in the Philadelphia Ledger of last Saturday he gave an account of how he found the sentiment in the coal regions as between ParrisoN and DELAMATER. He said: The sentiment there and in the immediate vicinity is strongly in favor of Parrimon. I have been in Carbon, Luzerne, Schuylkill and Lackawanna counties since the nominations were made, and found the feeling intense. My correspondence with friends and laboring men is very much to the same effect. I have yet to hear a working man, who knows ‘how many beans make five’ stand up and defend DELAMATER. On the other hand, I have heard hundreds—and Republicans at that— de- nounce him and advocate the election of Par- TISON. Why this animosity towards DEra. MATER exists among workingmen is ex- plained by Mr. McGARVEY. As a Senator he failed to vote for the factory inspection bill giving protection and re- lief to the working women and children of the State. He voted against the employer's lability bill, changing his vote only when he found it had two of a majority and would pass in spite of him. He voted against the anti-com- pany store bill and the miners’dockage bill. As a member of the Senate judi- ciary general committee he assisted in smothering the Farrell store bill and the semi-mouthly pay bill. In short, Mr. McGarvey and the Knights of Labor committee found Senator DELa- MATER, in every instance, bitterly and heartlessly opposed to bills that were intended to protect labor against the extortion of company stores,the robbery ofthe dock boss,and ensure the relief that would come from the enforcement of a semi-monthly pay. They found him to be the consistent and unyielding agent of the employing interest and the money influence, and as much the enemy of the working people as he was the servant of the Standard Oil Company and other overshadowing and oppressive organizations. Mr: McGarvey charges Waters, the Re- publican nominee for Lieutenant Gov- ernor, who is also a Senator, with hav- ing acted with DELAMATER in opposing these labor measures in the Legisla- ture. In regard to ex-Governor PartisoN, Mr. McGARVEY said : There is a strong love for Mr. Parrisox among the miners particularly, as well as among the working people generally, but after all it is not with us Delamater vs. Pattison, or the Republican vs. the Democratic party, as much as itis opposition to the men and the machine who had the power to give us the re- lief and ‘protection asked for, but who denied our every plea, petition and prayer, and went even so far as to sneer at organized labor while opposing our bills on the floor of the senate. Is there any longer a question as to how the great majority of the working people are going to vote for Governor at the coming election ? A significant meeting took place at the Logan House in Altoona last week which forehadowed a heap of trouble to the Boss and his man in the pending campaign. Ex Senator EMERY suddenly appeared at that public house and his presence there was coincident- al with the appearance of ex-Senator Lee and ex-Representative MaPEs. All of these three men are Republicans and all of them were participants in the Independent revolt in 1882. Other independent Republicans also put in an appearance, and it leaks out that the meeting was preliminary to the or- ganization of a Republican movement to oppose the election of Quay's can- didate for Governor. ——Democrats, work for the State and the County ticket with equal zeal. The Difference Between the Two. Candidate DELAMATER is not proving a success on the stump. He would probably do better if he should stick to his original programme of privately in. terviewing reluctant Republicans and coaxing them to stick to the ticket. His speech to the farmers at Wil- liam’s Grove failed to have the desired effect. It was a big blunder for him to go before the people whose interest he had neglected as a legislator, and promise what he would do for them as Governor. There wasn’t a granger at Williams Grove who did not know that the tax bills in which they were interested were not the kind of legisla- tion that interested Mr. DELAMATER as a member of the Senate. In that posi- tion he was a corporation man. The Standard Oil Company and the other corporations and big monopolies had his sympathy aud assistance. They didn’t want any change in the tax laws that would take the burden of taxation from the farmers and put it on themselves. The arrangement by which land is made to bear the -princi- pal tax burden exactly suited the corporations, and they had such men as Deragarer in the Legislature to see that tax laws so advantageous to them should not be changed. He is now their candidate for Governor,and, after his record as a Senator, his appearance before the farmers as an applicant for their votes for Governor upon the as. sumption that their interests would be safe in his hands, was impudent, to say the least of it. Candidate Parrisox has no occasion to resort to the method of electioneer- ing which Quay’s candidate adopted at William's Grove. It is not necessary for him to go to farmers’ gatherings and make promises to them. They know that the corporations don’t own him and that he is an enemy of the monopolies. His record as Governor is sufficient assurance that, on a ques- tion of taxation, so far as his execucive power could extend the farmers would not be sacrificed for the benedt of cor- porate interests. Should It Be Disturbed? The Southern States are giving such evidence of material prosperity that it would be a pity to disturb it by the in- trusion of bayonet laws. As between the necessities of the Republican party, which require force in the South,and the peace, good order and prosperity of that section which would be injured by the exertion of such force, there should be no hesitation in deciding which should be preferred. See how the South has flourished since carpet-bag government was brought to an end and Republican scallawag ad venturers, put in places of authority by ignorant negroes, have been expelled from political power. The Manufacturers’ Record of Balti- more shows that in four years the South has produced about 28,600,000 bales of cotton, 6,000.000,000 bushels of corn, 200,000,000 bushels of wheat and 315,- 000,000 bushels of oats, the total value of these and other agricultural products reaching the enormous aggregate of nearly $3,500,000,000. With a cotton crop worth nearly $500,000,000, a corn crop that will yield $250,000,000, $75,000,000 of wheat and oats, added to rice, sugar, tobacco, vegetables, etc., the South's sgricultural products will this year reach at least $1,000, 000,000, or about $400,000,000 more than in 1880. This, without taking into account the wonderful manufacturing advance of the South, is in itself a magnificent exhibit of the progress which thatsection is making. Should it be checked by the restoration of carpet-bag govern- meat at the point of the bayonet ? s———————— The Democrats of Indiana have followed the example of their brethren of Ohio in their declaration against the monopolistic abominations by which, under the pretense of protection, the many are robbed to enrich the few. Like the Democrats of Ohio those of Indiana have put at the head of their State ticket the most extensive and influential farmer of the State. At both conventions the mention of the name of Grover CLEVELAND was greet- ed with enthusiastic applause. Such applause is a sure indication of earnest | ness for tariff reform and government for the masses as against the classes, The Independent Movement. The Republicans who are opposed to boss rule and want to bring it to an end in this State are getting themselves in shape to deal Quay a blow that will end his bosship by defeating his candi- date. Mr. ALFRED SHARPLESS, a lead- | ing Republican of Chester county, is authority for the statement that ‘the names of 700 Chester county Republi cans have been listed who will positive- ly vote for Governor Parrison.” This embraces merely the members of the party who are out-spoken in their op- position to the Quay domination. The number is likely to increase as the campaign progresses, and it is equally probable that there are hundreds who will oppose Quay’s candidate without open demonstration. Another form of hostility to boss rule bas been developed in the Farmers’ League of Indiana county, composed largely of Republican farmers, and ex- presses itself in the following question submitted to candidates of both politi. cal parties: “Will you do all in your “ power to defeat caucus rule and de” “ feat the will of M.S. Quay in elect- “ing J. D. CAMERON or any corpora “ tion lawyer for United States Sen- “ator?” This question, of course, involves hostility to the candidate for Governor nominated at “the will of M. S. Quay.” The Farmers’ League of Indiana coun- ty, including the Republicans as well as the Democrats who compose it, may be counted as solid for Rosurt E. Pa1- TISON, who is not “a corporation law: yer,” nor the servant of the corpora- tions. There is not a county in the State in which there are nota large number of Republicans who are going to help redeem the credit of their party by rescuing it from the disreputable per-- sonal control which has so long dis- graced it. The Foolish Promises of a Desperate Candidate. “The Legislature took off all State “ tax from real estate twenty-five years “ ago, but it left all local taxes on it “ and these have become too large “ when compared with what the cor- “ porations pay,” said the Standard Oil candidate for governor to a meeting of Montgomery county farmers the other day. This was a confession of an offense committed by his party. For twenty- five years they have controlled the leg- islation and government of the State, and are responsible, as Dgra- MATER acknowledges, for the tax on land being “too large when compared with what the corporations have to pay.” Those who have kept this undue burden on the farmers can not say that there were not frequent demands for an equalization that would have made the corporations bear their just share. This was the object of numerous tax bills introduced into the legislature re. cent'y without avail, the latest instance being that of the grangers at the last session, which met at the hands of Sen- ator DecaMarer and his Republican associates in the Legislature the same treatment that was accorded to the bills which the labor men vainly asked to have enacted into daw. In the light of such experience the farmers who heard DerLaMaTER'S pro- mise of better treatment than he and his party have been in the habit of giving them, must have been aston- ished at his folly in believing that they could be deceived by campaign pro- mises. The head of the government has shifted his location from the Atlantic coast to the Alieghanies, the Presiden- tial family baving abandoned the no- torious cottage at Cape May Point and taken up their quarters in the house provided for them at Cresson Springs. The scandal of this gift cottage busi- ness occasions less comment because the public have become more familiar with it. A motion to censure CANNON for his blackguard talk in the House the other day was cut short by the Speakers’s convenient gag, which was found to be as effective in shielding a blackguard as it was in passing a mo- nopoly tariff, ——The money of the corporations can’t save Quay’s candidate. Misdirecting His Efforts. With the grangers, the Knights of Labor, the big bulk of the farmers and most of the laboring people against him, Boss QuaY's pet has a mighty slim chance of being elected Governor. He shouldn't waste his time trying to honeyfuggle them with fair promises of what he will do for them if they will give him the office which the Boss wants to put him into. They know him and won't trust him, There is nothing in his past record that will justify them in trusting hin. Let him give up his attempt to fool the people whom he has already de- ceived. Let him fall back on his money as the only thing that may help him in his ambition to be Gov- | ernor. He is himself a rich man, having made much money through the corporations which he served, and he can command their resources for politi- cal purposes. They are at his back with their wealth and have a big siake in his election. Let him use his avail- able means for what they are worth in the campaign, but in trying to influence the grangers and the working people he is only wasting his time. They have no confidence in hisg pledges, are not in the market as political merchan- dise, and don't take any stock in a candidate whose el ction is desired by every plutocrat of the Standard Oil Company and kindred monopolies. FE —— Made Bold by Desperation. On the 10th of last December a buei. ness meeting of the State Grange was held in Harrisburg, which was follow- ed by a public meeting in the hall of the House of Representatives iu the evening, in the grange interest. Sena- tor DELAMATER was in Harrisburg at the time and was invited to address the meeting, hut he declined to do so, nor did he attend it. At that time he did not seem to be as anxious to talk to the farming people as he is now when he knows that he their votes or be defeated, and is alarmed by a well grounded apprehen- sion that a majority of them will vote against him for good reasons. He didn’t make his appearance at the State Grange meeting at Harris- burg last December, and a correspon- dent of the Pittsburg Dispatch at the time wrote to that paper that “the ‘“ grangers ascribe his failure to ap- ‘ pear at the meeting to the fact that ‘ he assisted in strangling the bill for “ the equalization of taxation in com. “ mittee after he had promised that it ghonld have fair play.” He was afraid at that time to meet the men who had been made the vie- tims of his treachery and deception. Does the Republican candidate be- lieve that the grangers have forgotten his bad faith in his treatment of their bill? Hasn't he as much reason to shirk them now as he had last Decem- ber? But he wants their votes and his desperation makes him bold. must have There is a bad break in the Re- publican ranks in Berks county over the Reading post-office. It is a prize claimed by two contending’ factior s and the fight that is going on about it causes much bitterness of feeling. A. M. Hier was the Berks county dele. gate to the Chicago convention that nominated Harrison, ard when he got back he announced himself in advance as a candidate for the Reading post-of- fice. Helis far from being popular with one branch of the party, and the announcement of his candidacy raised such a disturbance last year that the party split in two, causing two opposite county conventions to be held and the appearance of two antagonizing county committees, As the appointment hangs fire the disturbance is prolonged to the present campaign. Hien is Quay's‘candidate and it is said tha’ whichever way the appointment may go the difficulty will cost DrramMaTER from 1200 to 1500 votes. QuAY’s man is the most promis- ing candidate that ever asked the peo- ple of the State to elect him Governor. He is particularly promising to the farmers. He is going around among them promising every thing, but they remember that he promised to support their tax bill and kept that promise by helping to strangle it in committee. DeLAMATER'S promises can’t be rated as worth a cent on the dollar. Spawls from the Keystone, —York Republicans want the Democratie postmaster ousted. —Several original package saloons at Beaver Falls have been raided. —George Hoxworth, of Allen’own, hae cotton plant in full bloom. —An old crock found buried at York con- tained the body cf a child. —An English syndicate has bought the Col” umbia Iron and Steel Works. —Minnie Seward’s Dramatic Company is im financial straits in Shenandoah. —The stones in the Spring City cemeteries have been shamefully mutilated. —Show people stranded “at Williamsport got out of town by selling their clothing. —Striking workmen are in terfering with the progress of the Pittsburg Exposition. —A ten-ounce peach has been picked in the orchard of D. F. Adams, at Lancaster. —A widow at Pittshnrg who cannot write has found her name forged to a mortgage. —An apple thief at Skippack lost a book ua- der the tree which revealed his identity. —Despite her reputation for worldliness | Reading has 17,000 Sunday-school people. —A babe born in the family of Jesse Oram of Shamokin, measured only five inches. : —A fox trotted con tentedly through the very heart of West Chester a few days ago. —Joseph Weaver, a Harrisburg brakeman, had his nose cut off by a railroad accident. aD religious services are held on 1e steps of the Capiwl building at Harri g at Harris~ —After a separation of many years aman and his wife were reunited in a Pittsburg prison. —Residents of Fogelsville, Lehigh county, experienced a three minutes snow-storm last week. —Two small boys have been arrested for robbing the residence of Senator Keefer af Cressona. —The 5.year-old son of Rev. Mr. Thorne, of Alleghany; robbed his father and ran away to join a circus. Ab Chambersburg a baseball hit a little girl and several members of the amateur nine were arrested. —The telephone manager at Chambersburg frequently gives his subscribers a concert over the wires, —The Johnstown Flood Commission has ap- propriated $5000 to continue the work of search- ing for the dead. - James Kaign, of Bristol township, Bucks county, has lost six cows by what is supposed to be Texas fever, : —Ten thousand acres of coal land near Coal- port have been sold by the Beech Creek Com- pany for $100,000. ~The peach crop of a Pottstown orchard was picked afew days agoand netted nine measly specimens. —Edward McDonald, of Allentown, thinks he owns the smailest dog. Itis I months old and weighs four ounces. —A thief stole a horse from a Chambersburg stable, and when he found the animal was worthless he drove back. —A drunken Polander at Smithville behaved so badly that some fellow countrymen bound him to a tree and left him there. —The town of Rutledge has been presented with a bell, and now the residents are irying to raise money for a schoolhouse, —Three prominent Bucks countians, Thom- as A. Darrah, Jobn E. Buck and Harry Lapp, have died within a week of paralysis. —When about to take a train for a religious meeting which he was to address, Mark Boll- ing, of Johnstown, was arrested for larceny. —While crossing the tracks at Shamokin, Hattie Derk, aged 20 years, was killed by a fast train. There are no gates to the crossing. —Frankliin Welsh, of Wilkesbarre, who was injured during the eyclone, died on Tuesday after suffering awful agonies at the City Hos- pital. —The band played “Praise God from Whom All Blessing s Flow”when the Pct s‘owm bridge was opened to the public on Monday evening. —Senator Delamater was at Washington on Tuesday's County Fair. He made the regu- lation tariff speech. The farmers were not enthusiastic. —A former Johnstown man looking over s lot of relics of the flood on sale at Pittsburg recognized his father’s watch and has secured possession of it. —A West Chester doctor nad so many pa- tients to visit recently that he tired out his two horses, and was obliged to bire an extrs horse from a livery stable, —A woman living in a hut near McKeesport was found dead on her bed, which consisted of twq rough boards with a stone for a pillow and an oid horse blanket for cover. —Senator Quay told a Pittsburg reporter om Monday night that in the State campaign there had as yet ‘been no formal presentation of the issues involved to the people.” —It was thought that gypsies had stolen the missing daughter of Henry Olpin, at Marietta, but her body has been found in the cana there and ihe mystery cleared. —A valuable horse belonging to John Mur- phy, of Foxchase, was on 'luesday severely cut about the legs by a seythe, which the horse knocked offa fence in a pasture lot. —The unclaimed articles of value found at Johnstown after thé flood were sold at Pitts- burg, the whole bringing $1000, which will be used to erect a mcrument tothe unknowm dead. —Withia two weeks and at different times the mare owned by Christian Ebenshade, near Lancaster,” gave birth to two colts, and one was jet black while the other was snow white. —The will of Richard B. Baily, of West Bradford, has been filed. The estate is valued at $180,000, Of this $40,000 is left to different charitable institutions. The he'rs will contest the will, —A reunion of the congregation of thie Jor- dan Lutheran Church, organized near Macun- gie 146 years ago, was held last week. Its 60 communicants are among the wealthiest iw Lehigh county. —The friends of murderer Maish, now is the Ebenshurg 2jail, raised a fund to defend him with, but they have since concluded that his case is hopeless, and have decided fo use the money to give his body proper burial. —The Chester News jokingly said of a local baseball enthusiast that he counted the rail- road ties from Harrisburg to Chester after recent game, and, filled with virtnous indig- nition, the fellow is hunting for a lawyer whe will take his case and bring a libel suit.