Demon tna BY P. GRAY MEEK. oT Ink Slings. —The odor of freshly fried fat will soon pervade the political atmosphere. —When challenged to back his charge against candidate ISHLER with proof, the Keystone Gazette man adopts the silent policy of MAT Quay. —DELAMATER killed the farmers’ tax bill legislatively. As a matter of just retaliation why shouldn’t the farmers kill DELAMATER politically ? —It may pain them to disoblige the Boss, but the people have made up their minds that his ardent desire to own a real live Governor shall not be grati- fied. —If the people want PATTISON to battle successfully with corporate abuses and monopoly extortions they must give him the assistance of a Democratic Le- gislature. —BoB KENNEDY'S speech goes down on the congresssional Record somewhat shorn of its offensiveness, but still sufficiently indicative of Bom’s belief that QUAY is a rascal. —1It cost a pretty penny to vindicate REED’s high-handed proceedings in congress by his re-election, but the re- sources of the fat-friers were abundantly sufficient for the expense. —Isn’t it a little Singular that a Re- publican candidate for Governor in a State whose Republican majority runs close on to 100,000, should find it nec- essary to go around button-holing the voters ? —In abusing the Democrats the Re- publican speakers at Pittsburg forgot to say anything about DELAMATER. However, it made no difference as QUAY’s candidate is of no account in the contest. -——When a gang of political corrup- tionists and public spoilsmen are brought before the tribunal of the peo- ple for trial, the introduction of the tariff into the proceedings is entirely ir- relevant to the case. —When Has1INGS gave it as his opinion that a Republican leader who steals from the public treasury is better than the best Democrat, he furnished a fair sample of the political ethics that prevails among the henchmen of the Boss. —Two hours allowed in the House for the discussion of the Senate's amend- ments to the Tariff Bill was the extent of Dictator REED’s tribute to the free- dom of debate. He has got the right of free speech nicely under his heel in that body. —I1f the new tariff is to be such a good thing why should its originators postpone the beginning of its operation to so late a date as the first of next February ? Why should there be de- lay in giving the people the advantage of such a blessing ? —With a loss of four State Senators and eighteen Representatives in the Le- gislature, and a large decrease in their general vote, the Republicans find their ingenuity greatly exercised in making much of a victory out of the Maine election. —The Standard, the most influential Republican paper in Somerset county, in saying that Republicans are justified in revolting this year, is entirely correct in its opinion that there couldn’t be a better year for the honest and decent men if the party to assert themselves. —The “hero of Johnstown’ hardly did himself credit when he said that a treasury raiding Republican is better than the best Demorat. Such an opin- ion needs considerable revision before he can be accepted as a safe man to take charge of the World's Fair. —Berks county has always been the favorite locality of unterrified Democra- cy, but never was the old county so full of the spirit of JEFrERsoN and Jackson as it was this week when the Democra- tic Societies of Pennsylvania held their general assembly in Reading. —The quinine monopolists have a grievance in not being accorded the same right to pillage the public that is given to other monopolies by the McKinley bill. Quay, who offered an amendment to restore the tax on quinine, came to their assis- tance a little too late in the game of plunder played by the present congress. —BoB PORTER, who is an English- nan, you know, is interspersing his du- ties as head census taker with the little job of apportioning the congressional re- presentatives of the American people. He has been assigned the work of get- ting up an apportionment bill that will keep the Republican party in pow er. —--“If a man is a Democrat, in God’s nawe let him be a Democrat. He that is filtky let him be filthy still,” exclaim- ed INGALLS in his Pittsburg speech. This Kansas jayhawker who talks so glib- ly about filth, was brought into the State to harangue in the interest of a political desperado and treasury raider whose rot- ten record is a stench in the nostrils of the nation. VOL. 35. Hasting’s Remarkable Speech, There was a Delamater meeting in Pittsburg last Saturday night at which General Hastings made a speech. He advocated the election of the Re- publican State ticket,not for the reason that it would be in the interest of good government, but because its defeat would give the Democrats “the man- agement of the greatest Republican State in the Union.” The people will fail to see, under present circumstances and conditions, the cogency of this reason why the Quay ticket should be elected. The present political man- agement of the State is alike disgrace- ful and injurious, and surely the peo- ple have no interest in maintaining it merely that Pennsylvania may contiu- ue to be “the greatest Republican State in the Union.” Ifthe General could show that the election of DeLamarer would furnish the people with purer government ; would pat an end to a de- grading system of bossism, and would make the interest of the corporations and monopolies subordinate to. that of the general class of citizens, he would give a reason worth listening to. But when he tells Republicans that by go- ing against the candidate of a treasury raiding boss they will go hack on their principles, he presents very nice prin- ciples, indeed, for them to stick to. The General hardly satisfied the political ethics and moral sentiment of the best men of bis party when he said “even if it was true that a Republican leader had stolen money from the State treasury he would consider him better than the best Democrat.” This is an insult to every decent, self-re- specting Republican whom he asks to condone the offense of a rogue because he is a Republican rogue. If the Gen- eral expects to rally his party by such sentiments he will find that their ut- terance will be foilowed by over- whelming defeat instead of the victory which the usual big majority encour- ages him to look for in defiance of the respect which the people have for honesty and decency. — ——The Cleveland Leader, which is a Republican paper, publishes extracts from some fifty letters and dispatches which congressman KENNEDY received from person in all parts of the country, including Republicans as well as Dem- ocrats, giving him credit for speaking of QUAY in terms that were so suitable to that notorious character. However solicitous the party managers may be to keep KENNEDY'S speech out of the Record, the people don’t seem to be so anxious to have it hushed up. A ————— Self-Stultification. The Senate, which co-operated with the House in passing the McKinley tariff bill, ventured upon ticklish ground when it recommended the ap- pointment of a Tariff Commission to overhaul the legislation which has created our present tariff laws. This indicates a doubt on the part of that august body as to the effect of the highest tariff rates which any congress ever imposed upon the country, There can be butlittle doubt as to the result of submitting the tariff laws to the overhauling of a commission, if one may judge from what occurred in the past on that subject. In [883 when the general tariff rates were not as ex- tortionate as they are now,a tariff com- mission, appointed upon the advice of: President ARTHUR, recommended a general reduction of 20 per cent. A similar commission, composed of intelligent and conscientious persons who would have no other object than to get at the facts and merits of the question, would make a similar recom- mendation. Isn't it an act of self-stul- tification for the Senate to advise the overhauling of the tariff laws by commissioners who would be pretty sure to recommend the reduc- tion of the high tariff it bad assisted in enacting ? er ———— ———Could it be possible that the of this place have so much to say, and others cf Snow Shoe to vote against gress, four years ago? STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. _ BELLEFONTE, PA., SEPTEMBER 19, 1890. NO. 37. Naturally Opposed to Pattison. It 18 entirely natural that the trust, syndicate and monopoly interests should be opposed to the election of Roserr E. Partrison to the guberna- torial position. He can’t be put to the use which they require and look for in a governor. For their purpose there had better be no governor than to have ParrisoN in that office. . Look how shabbily he treated Frick, the great coke baron. When Frick’s men were so presumptuous as to be troue blesome because he didn’t pay them fair wages, and he telegraphed to Parri- soN,who was then Governor,to send on a regiment of State militia to put down he rebellious strikers, what did Parri- soxdo? Did he show the alacrity that HARTRANFT, or BEAVER, or any other Republican governor would have shown in maintaining the rights of capital and upholding the privileges that belong to the industrial nobility ? Not a bit of it. He was so lost to every sense of duty to the rich employ- ers and powerful syndicates thai he actually refused to allow the militia to be used in suppressing the servile in- surrection of the coke-burners, and had the face to telegraph to baron Frick that if he would pay his men decent wages they wouldn't strike. What use have the coke barons, and the coal and iron lords, and the big corporation magnates, for such a gov- ernor? No wonder they are all down on him, and will liberally contribute their money to help DEraMAter, who would serve their purpose a good deal better. . ~ A More Humbug for the Farmers. The monopoly supporters who had set their faces against every proposi- tion to reduce tariff duties, which they stigmatized as free trade, are now en- deavoring to secure some credit for the Senate's putting binder twine on ihe free list, contrary to the original inten- tion of the McKinley bill,which main- tained the monopolist’s tax on that article so necessary to the farmers. The bill, as passed by the House, ex- pressed the preference of the party leaders for the monopoly interests and advantage of the noble Britons, and their true feeling in the issue between the farmers and the trusts. The House was faithful to its monopolistic in- stincts in refusing to drop the iniqui- tuous tax on the farmers’ twine, the bill being disfigured by that iniquity when it came to the Senate. It was only because some of the western Republican Senators had heard from their constituents in a way which alarmed them about the tenure of their seats, that they were frightened into putting binder twine on the free list, and now the organs are calling the at- tion of the farmers to the great solici- tude of this Republican congress to supply them with cheap twine for their harvests. The fact is that if the Senate hadn't been scared by the threats of the western farmers the twine monopoly would have been maintained with the other extortions of the McKinley tariff bill. —— The Later Aspect of the Maine Election. The Republican organs are not point- ing with as much pride to the Maine victory and the vindication of Czar REED as they did immediately after the result in that state was announced. An analysis of the figures has had a wonderful effect on the significance of the victory, It shows that the Repub- lican vote which brought about the triumph over which such a great fuss has been made, was some thousands less than any vote the party polled in that state since 1880. The Democrats, having no hope of carrying the state, stayed at home in unusual numbers. They saw that BraiNe and Reep would use all the power that money and political posi- tion gave them to carry the state, against which it was useless to contend, and therefore they made no organized opposition. Under such favoring cir- cumstances of course there was a big majority, but it was shorn of its signifi- $900 of which the Republican papers | cance by the fact that the Repablican | vote was 4,500 less than in any year of which they are now trying to get out | the last decade. of, had reference to the money Major Worr, the Republican nominee for endorsement which Reep and his ty- Sheriff, offered to Squire Brown and “ceived at the hands of his constituents. ; | : ParroN when he was running for con- ' But what is to be thought of an en- There was much exultation over the ranical methods in the House had re- dorsement made by 2,200 less than the number that voted for him two years ago? Is it too much to infer that more than two thousand Republi- cans didn’t consider his course worthy of their approval? His increased ma- Jority was not in consequence of his having the full endorsement of his par- ty, for it failed him by over two thous- and, but it came rather from the dis- couragement of the Democrats of the district who believed that it was useless to contend against the influences which they knew would be exerted for the re-election of REED, they therefore staying away in much larger number than the Republicans did, although the absentees of the latter were unusu- ally numerous. A victory to which a large per cent- age of the victorious party declined to contribute, as shown in the shrinkage of the Republican vote, can hardly be considered much of a party triumph, notwithstanding the size of the majori- ty. The Maine election didn’t signify half as much as did the election in Vermont, ——Mr. WiLLian Brookig, the dis- tinguished Philadelphia business man who died suddenly the other day in that city, and whose death is the sub- ject of public regret, was one of the prominent and honorable Philadelphia Republicans who signed the protest against the election of DELAMATER and the appeal to their fellow Republicans to resist the corrupt and odious per- sonal rule of M. S. Quay. Mr. Brook- IE was a leader in the business move- ments of the city, a member of the Union League, and never affiliated with any other than the Republican party. ss ——— Contrasted Nobility, Mr. AnxpreEw CarNEcIE is said to have sorely offended the British nobili- ty by a specch he made some days ago in Dundee, Scotland, in which he drew a comparison between the hereditary lords of Great Britain and the industri- (al lords of the United States, who owe their nobility to the favor of tariff laws. The comparison was to the dis- hence the offense. Mr. CarnNeGiE is able to speak for the American aristocracy whose claim to distinction is founded altogether upon their money. He has reason to look down upon the effete nobles of the old country as a slow set, who have been dukes and barons and earls for cen- turies and can’t begin to equal in ready cash the iron and steel barons and other American nobles who were impecunious nobodies before a war tar: iff afforded them an opportunity of rob- bing consumers, but who now, through the favoring influence of discriminating tariff laws, can discount the British nobility on the question of dollars every time. There is CARNEGIE himself, for ex- ample. See what a high tariff has done in the way of ennobling him. Were Great Britain to be scraped with a fine tooth comb very few dukes or earls could be found with as much money as he has, all of which came to him through the fostering which his infant steel industry received from a beneficent monopoly tariff. America 1s rapidly acquiring a class of nobles. It isn’t old; its blood isn’t any of the bluest, but in the vulgar quality of money it has already sur passed the wealth of the English no- bility. — ——PorTER, the Englishman who was given the job of superintending the American census, has now been entrusted with the duty of reappor- tioning the congressional representatives of the American people. A reappor- tionment bill was presented in the House last week which was drawn up after consultation with Porter on fig- ures furnished by him trom the census office. The managers think that the bill will do, as under Porter's manip- ulation it is so arranged that the Dem- ocrats will gain but six representatives while the Republicans will gain sixteen. It is by such management, and the un- seating of Democratic congressmen when opportunities are presented, that the “grand old party” proposes to maintain her supremacy in congress. ——That was a grand vindication which Hastings gave the treasury thieving Boss at Pittsburg. A Democratic Legislature is Necessary. The farmer voters who are going to vote for RoBert E. Pattison as a step towards an equalization of the tax burden ; the toilers in the mines and factories who will support the Demo- cratic candidate for governor because he will assist in protecting them. against the oppression of greedy em- ployers, the robbery of pluck-me stores and the outrages of Pinkertons thugs ; the men of business who will vote for him because they know that he will exert his official influence, as he did in his former term, to restrain railroad discrimination and other abuses by which they have been injur- ed and public prosperity im paired—all these well meaning voters should bear in mind that the objects they wish to accomplish by the election of Roser E. Parriso¥ can not be fully secured without a legislature that will back him in bringing about the reforms so greatly needed in the state government. No other than a Democratic legisla- turewould assist him in eradicating the evils of bad government that have for years afflicted our commonwealth and in enacting the laws that are required to enforce the long neglected and despised provisions of the constitution relative to railroads and other corporations. A Republican legislature, controlled by boss influence and dominated by corporate power, would be a hindrance to an honest and well-intendingZexecu- tive. Gov. Parrisox will need the help of a Democratic legislature. Therefore, not only the Democrats of this county, but the Republicans who are going ta vote for Parrisox for the good they expect of his adminis tration, will also vote for Messrs. Hot and McCormick. ' SS ——— ——The Keystone Gazette is as silent as a clam when challenged to produce evidence to support the $900 charge it made against Mr. IsaLer. The halt called on that lie was so sudden that | it entirely took away the breath of the liar. A ——— Why Don’t They Give Names? The Delamater organs make an attempt to off-set the landslide ot Republicans from their candidate for Governor, by setting up the claim that the bolters from ParrisoN are more numerous than those who are cutting the Republican candidate. But why don’t they give names? What delica- cy do they labor under that prevents their specifying who those Democratic bolters are? It is easy enough to say that ParrisoN is losing the support of Democrats, but who are they? What are their names? Fifty-eight of the most prominent Republicans of Phila- delphia have declared their intention of opposing Deramater, and they have signed their names to the decla- ration. In all parts of the State lead- ing Republicans have wade similar announcements. Why don’t the Dela- mater organs specify the Democrats who they say are offsetting these Re- publican bolters ? That they don’t give names is because they cannot. ——————— Reacting on Its Circulators. The $900 lie that was so flippantly heralded by the Republican ring organ immediately after the Democratic coun- ty convention, has returned to plague and demoralize its inventor. The paper that first started the story is now trying to crawl out of the dirty hole it got iato by declaring that it was a Demo- crat who originated the lie. It doesn’t matter now who originated it. The party who circulated the foul slander has found out that such stories only aid the individuals whom they are intended to injure, and that in place of any body being induced to vote against Mr, Isurer through that kind of abuse, it has only solidified his party in his support, and insures him the assistance of hundreds of decent Republicans who are disgusted with the efforts of the ring to blacken the char- acter of an honorable, upright citizen, simply because he is the nominee of an opposing party. I — Protective reciprocity is one of the latest political humbugs. It is equivalent to such an inconsistency as a free trade high tariff. It is another instance of BraiNm's deceptive inge- nuity in politics. corporate Spawls from the Keystone, —Franklin county has 12,597 voters.. —dDysentery and diptheria prevail at Strouds burg. —Pennsylvania potatoes are being shipped into Ohio. —A Pottsville man has assumed the office of public dog poisoner. —A woman has been appointed an officer of the Luzerne county Court. —DMore cigarettes are sold in Pittsburg than any other kind of “smokers,” —A Tockton man has been arrested for cute ting his horse’s throat in a drunken fury. —One hundred fire companies will partici. pate in Chester’s Convention this week. —Porter Devinney, of Concord, has been are rested for stealing a whole drove of sheep. —A Doylestown barber has customers whom he has shaved regularly for the past forty years, —A hog lost by a Lehigh county farmer was found after a month lodged tight in a hollow log. ‘ —George Bennett, of Reading, took an in= voluntary bath in a vat of coal tar a few days ago. —The Allegheny Club has lost its 100th game, and a local paper says ic is hot after the “jay” record. —Grave robbers have carried. off the skull of Henry S. Wise, who was hanged in Lebanon ten years ago. ~The Western Pennsylvania Historical So. ciety is trying to determine the origin. of the American tribes. —The Lebanon Valley has been flooded for forty-eight hours, and much damage has been done. —John Fleming, aged 8 years, was cut in two by a Lehigh Valley fast train at South Easty ton on Monday. —Anenterprising Che-ter tailor offers a $40 suit of clothes to the handsomest fireman in in Thursday’s parade. | —Nearly 2000 people attended the funeral of the eminent physician, Dr. William T. Potts, at Bristol, Pa., on Sunday. —A bold Chester man is seeking a Co~Operas tion of capital in establishing an independent daily newspaper in that city. —Three hundred Knights of the Golden Ea- gle paraded Bristol's street. on Saturday night, - many of whom were visiting lodgemen. : —Two Italians wer killed on the Erie Railroad at Germantown, near Susquehanna,on Sunday They were run down by a pusher engine, —The forty-ninth annual session of the East Pennsylvania Synod of the Lutheran Church at Columbia, Pa., began on Wednesday. —Colonel A. J. Whittier died of dropsy on Sunday at Nazareth. Hebelonged to a Massas chusetts regiment and was a member of Meade Post. : —Fourteen prisoners tried to escape from the Uniontown jail a few days ago, but they stopped short in front of the revolvers of the guards. —William Hall, aged 12 years, a barefooted lad, sneaked into the jewelry, store of David Seifert, of Easton, and stole two watches worth $150 each. —While the driver ofa York “dinkey” cap was changing his horse from one end to the other a thief snatched the money box and made off with it. —A wagon-shed on the farm of James Kis. sling, near Robesovnian, was struck by lights ning on Saturday night and itand a large barn were burned. —In a runaway accident at Altoona on Sun. day James Brenaman, his wife, Miss Margaret Hamilton and Mrs. Arnold Phelps were seri ously injured. —Thomas Doyle, of Doylestown, who has been on trial charged with the burning of hig house to defraud an insurance company, has been acquitted. —A Carlisle jury, in deciding a very trifling case which should never have gone to Court, directed that the fees of the Constable and Jug» tice be disallowed. —The surviving members of the Washing. ton Cornet Band, of Bristol, Pa., which did such excellent service during the late war, have reorganized, —Two veterans, Charles Gordon and Martin Keckel, of Sullivan county, have started to walk ninety miles to Susquehanna to attend a reunion of war comrades. —An old-time canal boat was drawn through the streets of Leechburg recently upon the occasion of the annual gathering of the assoe ciation of canal boatmen. —Two Allentown women joined forces the other night and drove two young girls out of town. The girls had been flirting with the husbands of the other women. —The Philadelphia and Reading station at Annville was blown up by burglars on Friday night and the building wrecked. The only plunder was some railroad tickets. —Thowmas Pendergast,of Pottstown,converted all his property into money and started for Europe, but at New York he fell in the hands of sharpers and was relieved of it all. —Thirteen Clydesdale colts belonging to Isaac Pfautz got out of his stable and going to the railroad track near Littiz, were struck by an engine and all killed, on Saturday morning. —Grand Army Posts from Reading, West Chester, Coatesville, York, Lebanon and Hare risburg will take part in the reunion of Grand Army Posts at Lancaster on October 23. —Mrs Harriet Ward, the old colored lady who was buried in Bristol on Saturday, was one of a group of little girls who strewed the path of General Lafayette with flowers on his entry into Bristol in 1824. —Mrs. Mary Ann Kepler, wife of Tilghman Kepler, a prominent miller at Easton, wag found dead in bed Saturday morning at the family residence in the Bushkill Valley. She had spoken to her husband at 4 o'clock in the morning about family affairs for the day. —The German Lutheran Church was dedis cated at Altoona on Sunday, Rev. G. A. Wen- zel, of Washington, Pa.,and Rev.J. C Kunss mann, of Greensburg, officiating. Sermons were preached in the English and German languages. The building cost $28,450. —The spire of the Lutheran Church at Eliza. bethtown was struck by lightning in Friday night's storm and one of the stone "pillars of the cupola was wrecked and all the slate torn from the roof. This is the third time this year this building has been struck by lightning. —Orson Clark, Pineville, Bucks county, had a large quota of his teeth knocked out by g horse's heels. Henry Hartley, of the same town, received a dislocated jaw in. shooting, He immediately put a stick of wood betweep his teeth to prevent the jaws from locking, and the doctor had some trouble in getting ouf the stick.