Denoeaiic, Watchin Bellefonte, Pa., September 19,1890. THE INDEPENDENF FARMER. How pleasant it seems to live on a farm, Where nature’s so gaudily dressed, And sit ‘neath the shade of the old locust tree, As the sun is just sinking to rest ; But not half so pleasant to hoe in the field Where the witch grass is six inches high, With the hot scorching sun pouring down on your back— hi each moment as though you would ie. *Tis pleasant to sit in the cool porch door While you smoke half reclined at your ease, Looking out at your beautiful meadow of grass That sways to and fro in the breeze; Bur not quite so pleasant to start with your seythge~ v E'er the morning sun smiles o'er the land, And work till your clothes are completely wet through, And blisters shall cover your hands. In keeping a dairy there's surely delight, And it speaks of contentment and plenty, To see the large stable well filled with choice cows, Say numbering from fifteen to twenty ; And yet it seems hard when you've worked from the dawn TiH the sun disappears from your sight, To think of the cows you have yet got to milk Before you retire for the night. But, the task fairly over, you cheer up once more, And joyfully seek your repose, To dream of the cream pots with luxury filled, And the milk pans in numberless rows; But the sweet dream is broken when early next day You're politely requested to churn, And for three weary hours, with strength ebb- ing fast, The crank you despondingly turn. Bat in raising your pigs there is truiy a charm When they sell at the present high price; And of all the young stock which a farmer can raise’ - There's nothing that looks half so nice, How cheerful one feels as he leaves them at night, The encouraging lot of eleven, But his joy slightly wanes when he goes out next day And of live ones can count only seven. But no one disputes that the farmer is blessed With true independence and labor, Whose food don’t depend on the whims of mankind Like that of his mercantile neighbor, or God in His mercy looks down from above And paternally gives him his bread, Provided he works eighteen hours every day And devotes only six to his bed. THE DONATION PARTY. BY EBEN E. REXFORD. “We're great on donations, elder. We jest go in heavy on them things.” Deacon Spears made the announce ment to the new minister with an air of stating the possession of a great moral virtue peculiar to the people of Scragsby Corners. “I have rever found donation parties very satisfactory,” said the minister. “I would greatly prefer having a stated salary, and having it paid in cash.” “Wall, yes, I &'pose ye would,” said the deacon. “That's what all the min- isters say. But, ye see, "twon’t hardly do here in Scragsby Corners.” “Why not?” asked the minister. “0, they've got in the habit o’ havin’ donations, an’ they expect em, ye see,” replied the deacon, “an’ they'd feel sor- ter offended ef u preacher sot his foot down an’ said he wouldn't have ‘em. Some folks give suthin’ in cash, and we're bound to gitall out o’ the ¢'mmu- nity that we can, ye see.” “My experience has been that a great deal of what people bring to a donation party is worthless or useless,” said the minister. - “Wall, yes, I 8’pose 80,” assented the deacon. “But 'twouldn’t do to kick ag’in’ donations on that account here. Ye'd have the folks down on ye in no time.” “Well, then,” said the poor minister, with a sigh of resignation to the inevit. able, “I suppose it will have to be.” He thought of his last donation party with its dozen loads of ddzy, half-rotten stove wood ; wooed which was worthless to the doners, because it had been cnt 8o long that it was unsalable,and which they would never have thought of us- ing at home. More than once his wife's temper had been sorely tried with the miserable stuff and she had threat. ened making a bonfire of the whole lot, and probably would have attempted carrying the threat into execution if she had any idea that it could have been coaxed to burn itself up. “Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs, Spoon- erin dismay, when her husband told her that a donation party was being talked up. “I did hope we might es- cape the infliction when we came here, I don’t think I was ever more vexod than I was the morning after the last one. There wasn'ta room in the house fit to'use until it had been cleaned. There was half a chocolate cake be- tween the pillows on the parlor bed ; pie in the bureau, and some one had empied a plate of baked beans behind the sofa. It took me all of two weeks to get straightened around. And now that we've just got settled, there's to be another. It's too bad, but I don't know that we can help ourselves, since 8 minister and his family are consider- ed objects of charity, and, therefore, obliged to take up with whatever the people see fit to give them, without the chance to say a word for themselves.” “A donation party will be held at Elder Spooner’s next Thursday even- ing, the Lord willin’, an’ it's hoped ev’rybody ll turn out, an’ bring suthin’ for the &'port o’ the gospil,” Deacon Spears announced, one Sabbath, after service. “The Lord loves a cheerful giver,” he added, in a sort of postscript, after which he blew his nose vigorous- ly on a great red and white bandanna, in a manner that suggested applause, over the neat way in which the an. nouncement had been made, and then pat down. Immediately there was a buzz among the female portion of the congregation, and little groups of women put their heads together and began discussing | what to carry in the shape of eatables 3 while the men got together in the ves. tibule of the church, and consulted with each other on what they were to “donats.” r “I reckon I'll take beans this year,” said Mr. Wade. “It's been a great year for beans, I hain't raised so big a crop enny year since '65, 's I can re- collect. I can give beans 'thout feelin’ it much.” “So can 1,” said Mr. Pettigrew. “I got a jofired big crop off’n the side-hill lot. I guess I'll take beans, too. I can spare ’em better'n: enything else, an’ they ain’t a-goin’ to sell fer much this year, ‘cause they're so plenty.” . Several others who listened to their conversation concluded to take beans also, fur-it had “been a great year for beans” in Scragsby Corners, as Mr. Wade had said. - v “I’ve a good notion to take some o' my Almiry’s clo’és,” said Mrs Deacon Spears to Mrs, Pettigrew. “She's out- grow’d ‘em, but they'd jest about fit the elder’s oldest girl, I sh’d jedge, an’ they're most as good as new, some on ‘em. You don’t 8’pose Miss Spooner 'd feel put out about it, do you now, Mis Pettigrew. “I can’t see why she should,” re- sponded Mrs. Pettigrew. “Clo’es 1s clo’es an’ ministers folks hada’t ought to git mad at what's give 'em as long as they hev to depend on us for a livin.’ "Tain’t as if they could afford to be in- dependent, y’ know. 1 s'pose I might take some jackets an’ trowses that air gettin putty snug for the boys. I will, if you conclude to take some o' Al- miry’s dresses, Mis Spears.” “Wall, then spose we do,” respond- ed Mrs. Spears. The evening of the donation party came. The first arrival at the parsonage was Mr. Wade. He met the minister, who came to the door in answer to his knock, with a two-bushel bag full of something on his shoulder. “How'd do, elder. Beautiful night fer the donation, ain't it?’ was his greeting, as he shook hands with the minister. “I’ve brought some bears fer ye. Fust-rate beans, too, ve'll find. Beans is healthy livin, elder. I was raised on ‘em. Nothin’ better fer growin’ children.” “You can put them in the wood- shed,” said Mr. Spooner. Just then Mr. and Mrs. Pettigrew drove up. “Hello, elder, good evenin'' cal’ed out Mr. Pettigrew. “I’ve got some beans here for ye. Wher'll ye hev em put?” ; “In the woodshed,” said the minis- ter, with a smile at his wife. “It's go- ing to be beans this year, my dear,” in a whisper. Then other arrivals followed in rap- id succession, and at least three out of every four brought beans. “I've counted fourteen bushels al- ready,” whispered the minister to his wife about eight o'clock, “and still there’s more to follow.” “It's old clothes in my part of the house,” said Mrs. Spooner. “I do be- lieve there's enough to last the children till that time. I can imagine the ap- pearance they’d make in them. No two alike, and probably not one that would fit one of the children. It’s too provoking for anything. If it wasn't for making the people mad, Ud sell the whole lot for rags to the first rag ped- dler that comes along.” “Brothers’ n’ sisters, ’n’ frien’s’ ’n’ neighbors,” announced Deacon Spears, after supper, when the party was about ready to break up, “the proceeds of this ’ere donation amounts to twenty- seven bushel o’ beans, three turkeys, a pig, two bushels o' potatoes, and a large amount of clothing, and some otherthings. In b’half of the elder an’ his folks, I thank ye fer y'r lib’ral’ty. Y'r kindness is appreciated by him 'n’ hig’n, I feel sartain, an’ I'm shure his heart 'n’ han’s is strengthened by this evidence of fellowship on your part. Truly, as the psalmist says. ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ ‘I cordially endorse the sentiment from the recéiver’s standpoint,’ said Mrs. Spooner, as they looked over the ‘proceeds’ of the donation-party when they were alone. “Just look at the col- lection of old clothes, Henry. I sug- gest that you give up preaching and move to the city, and start in business as a bean broker, and I'll run an old- clothes stcre. We'd be well stocked up to begin with.’ ‘What will you do with the stuff?’ asked the minister, turning over old Jackets and aprons, and other articles of clothing with a comical look of dis- may on his face at the formidable col- lection, ‘I think I shall make about a hun- dred yards of rag-carpet,’ answered Mrs. Spooner. “That's about all a good deal of it is fit for.’ One afternoon 1n the following week the minister sat down to prepare a ser- mon for the coming Sabbath. As was often the case, he talked it over with his wife. When he named the chapter he proposed to read at the opening of the service, a suddee gleam of mischief came mto Mrs. :Spooner’s face. But she said nothing. Daring the week Mr. Spooner wrote to a friend in the city, asking him if there was any sale for beans there, He had twenty-five bushels to dispose of at a low price, he wrote, adding that it had been “a great year for beans in Scragsby Corners.” When Sunday morning came Mrs. Spooner sent her husbaud on to church ahead of her, under the plea that she had not got the children quite ready. ‘Don’t wait for me, Henry,’ she said, or you may be late. We'll get there in time for the sermon.’ He was reading a chapter from the Psalms when his family arrived. He had reached the verse in which the lily of the valley is spoken of, and these words rolled oft soncrously from his tongue justas the door opened and Mrs, Spooner, followed by her children, filed slowly and impressively in— “Verily, I say unto you, even Solo- mon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” As he finished the verse he looked | up at the advancing arrivals, and the spectacle that met his eyes tested his power of self control more than any- thing else he had ever experienced, he } afterward told his wife. His mouth | twitched, and a smile flickered about his eyes, but he managed to keep back | the grin that would have appeared at the faintest encouragement. Such a sight! The eldest girl was arrayed in Almiry’'s cast off dress, of navy blue, with some other girl's polo- naise of red. Her sister was resplend- ent in a dress of Scotch plaid pattern of most gorgeous colors, originally, but now somewhat subdued by time and wear, still very vivid, and over it she wore a jacket about three sizes to small for her, the picturesque costume being topped off by a hat trimmed with old ribbon freshly dyed a very bright ma- genta color. The oldest boy had a pair of trousers which fairly dragged at the heels, and a jacket which was long enough for an overcoat, wile the other boy wore trousers so short that they failed to meet the top of a pair of bright blue stockings, while his jacket refused to keep company with the top of his trousers. Each article had a peculiar color of itsown, and the gener- al effect was, as has been said, decid- edly picturesque. The minister had no inkling of what his wife intended to do, and the sight of his family in such fine array so up- set him for a moment that he read the verse he had just finished over again— “Verily, I say unto you, even Sol)- mon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.’ A very audible titter went through the younger portion of the congrega- tion. Some even laughed aloud. Mrs, Wade looked at Mrs. Pettigrew to see what that estimable woman seemed inclined to think of the proceeding, but she couldn’t catch her eye. She was too busily engaged in following the scripture lesson to look at any one, ‘I'll bet she’s mad, though,’ thought Mrs. Wade. ‘One o' them jackets an’ one 0’ them trowsis came from her [ dunno, though, ’'s they look enny worse than that dress o’ Almiry’s does. L didn’t 8’pose they'd think of riggin’ the children out in ’em to wear to church. I'll bet Mis Spooner done it a purpose.’ Mrs. Spooner had ‘done it a purpose,’ as she admitted to her husband, on their way home. ‘I don’t think you ought to have done it, Susie,’ he said gravely, but there was a laugh in his eyes as he said it, as he looked at the motley group ahead.’ ‘Perhaps not,’ was his wifes reply, ‘but I wanted them to see the striking ‘effect resulting from their generosity. Of course they can’t get angry about it, since they gave the clothes to be worn, I do think it'll have one good effect, and that is, that old clothes won't be one of the important features of the next donation party here.’ Mrs. Spooner was right. When the next donation party occurred not one old garment was ‘donated.’ Mr. Spoon- er at last succeeded in disposing of his beans, but he had to do so at a sacri fice, on account of its haviag been such a ‘great year for beans in Seragshy Cor ners’ that they overstocked the market. — Yankee Blade. ———— A Hero in Spectacles. The prevalence of short-sightedness hasincreased so much in recent years, especially in European countries, that officers of the armies, and sometimes private soldiers, are permitted to wear spectacles. In the campaign of the French against the celebrated Abd-el- Kader, the Algerian chief, there was, in a battalion of foot chasseurs, an adju- tant named Dutertre, who was often rallied by his messmates because he was permitted to wear spectacles. Not much of a hero, some of them fancied, could be aman who habitually wore glasses. But one day, Dutertre, engaged with a reconnoitering party, was surrounded by the enemy, slightly wounded in the head, and taken prisoner. He was brought before Abd-el-Kader. In the meantime, the rest of the French com- mand—a small battalion—had taken re- fuge in a neighboring walled inclosure. “Go to your companions,” said the Arab commander to Dutertre, “and tell them again what I told them yesterday that if they surrender their lives shall be spared. And yours, in that case, shall be spared too. But if they do not sur- render, I shall exterminate them to the last man, and shall decapitate you and give you to my dogs. And urnder- stand I send you to your companions on this condition, that in any event, wheth - er they accept my terms or not, you are to return to me.” Do you accept my conditions ? “I accept them,” said Datertre. He left the Arab camp, knowing that his only chance of life lay in the surrender ct the French battalion. If they determined to fight it out, he was bound in honor to return and meet a horrible death. The spectacled ad- jutant returned to his companions. He had always been a man of few words, and he used very few on this occasion, ‘‘Chasseurs,” he said, “if you don’t sar- render they are going “to cut off my head. Now die, every one of you, rather than yield I" Without another word Dutertre returned to the Arabs with the message that his comrades re- fused to surrender. Abd-el-Kader car- ried out his threat, and the brave adju- tant’s head, still wearing the spectacles, was carried at the end of a pole before the walls of the building in which his companions were intrenched.— Argo- naut. : Picnics. Almost any boy or girl can tell yon what a picnic is like, but I wond r how many know why it is so called ; or that the custom is said to date only from 1802, not a hundred years ago. Then, as now,when such an entertain- ment was being arranged for, it was cus- tomary that those who intended to be present shouldsnpply the eatables and drinkables. Originally the plan was to draw up a list of what was needed, which is an exceilent one to follow, for often, when there has been no previous agreement, it is discovored, when too late, that there is too much of one kind of food and not enough of another, The list was passed round, and each person picked out the article of food or drink he or she was willing to furnish, and the name of the article was then nicked off the list. So it was from these two words, picked and nicked, that this form of out-of-door entertainment first became known as a pick-and-nick, and then as a picnic, the old fashioned name for the basket parties of to-day. The Revolt of a Leading Republican Journal. The Philadelphia Daily News Bolts the Quay Ticket. (Philadelphia Daily News, Rep., Sept.1) The Daily News is, as 1t always has been, a staunch Republican newspaper. It believes in the Republican party, the party of Lincoln, Sumner, Grant and Garfield. The News always has supported, and always expects to sup- port, Republican principles, but it is just as ready to strike at corruption in the party 8s out of it, and therefore cannot advocate for the office of gover- nor of Pennsylvania Senator Quay’s man, George Wallace Delamater. The country knows that Matthew Stanley Quay is one of the biggest rascals out ot jail. It knows that he is a man whose word is worthless, whose {treachery is notorious, whose dissipated habits are a national by-word and whose selfishness and cowardice are monumental. The country knows that Quay has been charged with ac- cepting bribes, and that he did not re- fute the charge. It knows that he was a venal legislator, and a crooked State treasurer; and that, after em- bezzling several hundred thousand dollars of the State tunds, he was only prevented from carrying out his threat of jumping from the third-story win- dow of a Harrisburg hotel or drown- ing himself in the Suaquehanna by Don Dameron making good the stolen money. This embezzler, M. S. Quay, who now disgraces this Commonwealth by appearing in Washington as one of her United States senators, has his fingers clutched upon the throat of the Republican party. He is prostituting the party to his own selfish purposes, He is making the name “Republican” synonymous with rascality, lying and stealing ; and where there a national election this year, the Republican party would be defeated, because Quay con- trols its machinery. Unless his grip is broken the party will be whipped in 1892. Against the will of the Republican party in this State Quay forced the nomination of this man, Senator Dela- mater, for governor. No Republican Who respects himself, and who realizes what Quay’s domination means, will vote for Quay’s candidate. Delamater’s election would mean the subversion of the will of the people to the will of a man who is degrading a great party. The Democrats have nominated for the office of governor Robert E. Pat- tison, a man whose character is above reproach and whose ability is conceded ; aman who once ably filled the highest office in the State, and who owns him- self. For the sake of the future of the Republican party Pattison should be elected and Quay’s man defeated. Every Republican in Pennsylvania who believes in the principles and who re- veres the history of the great political organization with which he is connected ought to work and vote for this end. If Pennsylvania Republicans once realize that Quay’s success in this cam- paign means the party’s defeat in 1892, the embezzler’s candidate will be whip ped before the polls open in November. Philadelphia Daily News, Sept. 2. DELAMATER’S COLLAR. A number of respectable newspapers in this city, and in other cities in Pennsylvania, we trying, in vain, to prove that Senator Quay doesn’t own Delamater. The truth 1s too plain. Delamater wears Quay’s collar, in the sight of all men. Every rivet in that collar was forged by Quay’s hand, and the padlock that secures it is Quay’s padlock, Delamater could not get rid of the thing, if he would, and he is eon- tent to wear it, though it is a badge of infamy. It is not a pleasant thing to be known as a puppet in the hands of a man like Quay, and yet Senator Delamater dare not deny he is such a puppet. He dare not open his mouth—for if he did, Quay would pull a string, and the jaws would come together. Like a monkey hitched to a string, Delamater must dance when his master wills, and though his collar galls bim, he must wear it. Quay’s collar is like a ticket, which all who run may read. Upon it is marked the dishonesty of the man who made it, and the degradation of the man upon whom it is fastened. How would the Republicans of this State like to elect a man with this shame- ful circlet under his chin to the gover- nor’s chair ? How would they like to see a man, marked by such a token, discharge the functions of chief execu- tive of the Commonwealth at Harris- burg? Cooking in Africa. The Dishes Might Taste all Right if You Didn't Know How They Were Made. As a rule only one principal meal is eaten in Central Africa, in the early part of the evening. It usually consists of parrot soup, roasted or stewed mon- keys, alligator eggs (also well liked by Europeans) and birds ot every descrip- tion. The also have moambo, or palm chops and fish. A delicacy, so consid- ed by European and natives alike, is elephant’s feet and trunk. These have somewhat the taste of veal. To pre- pare them the natives dig a hole about five feet deep in the sand and in it build alarge fire. After the sand is thoroughly heated the fire is remove, leaving only the ashes in the hole. The trunk and feet are placed in this hole and covered with leaves, and afterwards with hot sand. In two hours they are done. All carcasses of animals which are to be cooked are placed on a block of wood { and pounded until every bone is broken, | care being taken not to tear or bruise | the skin. They are then boiled or roast- ed on an open wood fire or in hot sand or ashes, without removing the hide or feathers. The cooking is of a vey in- ferior grade, the only spices used being salt and pepper. ——————— Frrzy Tries 10 Bi FuNNy.—“Hel- lo, Fitzy, where did you get that black eye ?”’ “Oh, it was only a lovers’ quarrel.” ‘Lovers’ quarrel | Why, your girl (did not give you that, did she ?” ' “Oh, it was her other lover.” | | [and its founders great. | AREER WHICH ? Two seeds by the sower were dropped as they passed, — The one grows daily with noble increase, Thh other but molders and rots away ; The one hears foliage, flowers and fru it, The other a loathsome, dark decay ; Yet round each one was the warm earth's rest, And the sheltered dark, where things grow est, Which seed, O sower! did your hand cast ? Two thoughts by the speakers were uttered broadeast,— The ono is aglow with purity, strength ; The other a foul and blighting breath, For the one is Love, true, tender, divine ; The other is Sin, whose harvest is death. In the dark of a heart each one was born, The light of life, and the lie forsworn, Which thought, O speaker ! through your lips passed ? Be — The Independent Movement, The tollowing circular has been issued by tbe Independent Republicans of Philadelphia, which we copy from the Philadelphia Public Ledger. | I'HE LINCOLN INDEPENDENT REPUB- LicaN ComMITTEE, No. 1301 Arch street.— We, the undersigned voters ot Pennsylvania, address our fellow eciti- zens of the commonwealth upon what we believe to be the paramount is- sue in the approaching campaign for the election of Governor. Some of us who sign this paper are, and have been since the birth of the party, earrest Republic- ans, who have given its policy and plans our constant approval and support ; others of us, while heartily working with the party in past years, have more recently become dissatisfied with what we, as individuals, have regarded as a departure from its primitive fatih. But all of us, without exception, are of Re- publican affiliations ; we reverenee the party traditions, and fully recognize the great national work which the party has accomplished in the past. Even now, if we could do so consistently with our sense of self reapest and of public duty, we would support the nominees of the Republican party. With this necessary preface, so that our position may be clear to all who read our words, we earnestly ask our fellow citizens to cast their votes in the approaching election for Governor in favor of Robert E. Pattison, the Demo- cratic candidate for that office. Our reasons for this suggestion we will make both brief and emphatic, believing that the logic which supports them will bring conviction to the sober and un- biased thought of the community. There is a great issue in t'1is campaign, an issue of far reaching, of supreme importance. The greatest question which the November elections will de- cide is a question of fundamental public morality ; far reaching, since it holds all other question ‘in its grasp ; fundamen- tal, since upon its decision the ultimat integrity, even the life, of our free Re- publican institutions depends. ! The platform of the Republican party in Pennsylvania endorses without quali- fication or reserve the junior Senator of this State, Matthew S. Quay, a man whose very name has entered the politi- | cal vocabulary as a term of politic do- minion and corruption; a man whose way to political eminence has been won by no distinguished service to the nation or State, neither by the conception nor the execution of a single great or bene- ficent public measure, but solely by chicanerg and political corruption, by the creation of an immense army of serv- ile followers through bribes of public offices and by skillfal distribution of public patronage. This man has so suc- cessfully increased his own power that be is to-day among the most induential of Republicans, and in his own State his personal will has virtually usurped the will of the people. He is at least popularly understood to have controlied the last Republican State Convention, and to have imposed upon it the can- didate of his own selection, But to crown his own dishonor and the shame of the Commonwealth, he stands for months silent under public, repeated and specific accusations of the greatest official misconduct, of having taken from the Treasury of the State large sums of money, with the knowledge of its official guardian. In this man the Republican party platform expresses en- tire confidence, and it calls upon the eciti- zens of Pennsylvania to endorse both him and it by the election of Mr. Dela- mater as Governor of the State. No more serious, clear, or unavoidable issue than this could be presented to the people, Mr. Quay is the acknowledged unblushing ebampion of political cor- ruptionists. He 1s silent under a recent responsible and repeated charge of em- bezzlement of public money ; he selects Mr. Delamater as a candidate {for Gov- ernor, and pliant convention ratifies his selection ; the party platform endorses Mr. Quay, and Mr. Delamater stands on that, platform and no other. The con- clusion is irresistable that the election of Mr. Delamater will - have as its main and most potent result the public ap- proval of Mr. Quay, and his permanent intrenchment in the Republican party of the State as its acknowledged leader and counsellor, the representative of its principles and the exponent of its policy. Are the men who saw the Republican party begotten through the eloquence, the statemanship, the lofty pablic mor- ality of Sumner, the political genius, the all-embracing humanity and self- sacrifice of Lincoln, through the great popular hatred of wrong and oppression, through the great and first awakening of a national heart and a ‘national con- science—dead, that they should accept such a lame and impotent, such a dis- graceful conclusion to a party history as this ? Indeed all keen sense of pub- lic honor and of justice must have fled the State if its citizens will tolerate this disgrace. It was unswerving devotion to principle as opposed to greed, to self- ish expediency, toevery low induce- ment, that mede the Republican party 0 If we honor them and approve their political policy , we cannot be false to their example. { But Mr. Delamater, in various pe:- sonal interviews with uncertain Repub- lican voters, has, during the past sam- mer, explained to them that he dissp- proved the course and methods of Mr. Quay, though obliged to accept them to gain bis present position, and he prom- But even in the event of Mr. Dela- mater’s entire sincerity in offering such an explanation and making such prom- ises, no intelligent voter can for an in- stant suppose him, when in the position of Governor of the State, without the power of patronage, capable of tulfilling i his promises or exercising any appre- ciable influence for reform. Mr. Quay controls the patronage of the State, hence the political power of Pennsyl- vanio rests in his hands, not in the hands of the Governor. The election of Mr. Delamater means the public en- dorsement of Mr. Quay, and the in- crease of his prestige, not only in the State, butin the country, the encourage- ment of his methods, the elevation to greater and greater power of men made in his mould. The election of Mr. Pat- tison will secondarily give to the State a tried, able and trusty Executive, but primarily it will be a rebuke, felt not only in Pennsylvania, but throughout the land, to a man who has corrupted and dishonored a great party and a great State; to a man who has given his strength for the triumphs of political methods which are not only false and vicious in themselves, but which, if unchecked, will accomplish the ultimate ruin of free institutions, as in past ages they have accomplished the downfall of empires. On this single issue we rest our ap- peal to the citizens of Pennsylvania for the defeat of the Repeblican candidate for Governor. Justus C.Strawbridge,}Joel J. Baily, ddward T. Steel, Wm. MeVickar, D., D. William Brockie, A. B. Roney, Gr. Strawbridge, M. D.,! William Moss, M. D;, Franeis R. Cope, |Edward T. Barlett,D.D., Francis B. Reeves, | Ellis D. Williams, John T. Bailey, {David B. Srull, Enoch Lewis, [Joshua IL. Baily, James A. Wright, |E. M. Wistar, Redwood F. Warner, [Geo.ge W, Blahon, Richard 8S. Mason, G. Emlen Haae. D. D,, N. Dubois Miller, [Alfred J. P, McClure, Wiliam C. Anderson, Wilson B. French, William Longstreth, Joseph May, L. I. D ) Henry S. Pancoast, |Jas. Durrach, M. D., H. Hartshorne, M. D.,|F. Hazen Cope, Thos. C. Pottar, M. D.,/Edward H. Coates, Alexander E. Outer | Benj. Shoemaker, bridge, Jr., |Edward- Lewis Stnart Wood, Edward 8, Buckley, Thomas Stewardson, George C. Blabon, Wiiliam Ely, [Wilbur F, Paddock, Owen J. Wistar, |George D. Bromley, John Stewardson, Nathaniel BE. Janney, Walter Cope, [Charles Wood, D. D., Dr. James E. Rhoads, A. B.'-Weimer, G+. Wharton Pepper, |Herbert Welsh, R. C. McMurtrie, [Charles Platt, John B. Garrett, | Wm. McGeorge, Jr., William Burnham, |George Burnham,Jr, CT ——— ar ————— Quay as a Tattooed Man, Republican Congressman Kennedy Bold- ly Brands Him as a Criminal. Hon. Robert Kenndey, Republican con- gressman from Ohio, in a speech in the House, on Wednesday of last week, paid his respects to the Pennsylvania Boss in the following style : “If,” said he, “the Roman toga has been bedraggled in the filth and the mire of the centuries, surely the cloak of Senatorial courtesy has been used to hide the infamy and the corruption which has dishonored and disgraced a body that was once the proudest in the land. The cloak of Senatorial courlesy has become a stench in the nostrils and a by-word in the mouths of all the honest citizens of the land. It makes a cloak behind which ignoront and arrogant wealth can purchase its way to power and then hide its cowardly head behind the shame- less protection of Senatorial silence. It means a cloak which shall cover up from the public gaze of an outraged peo- ple the infamies which demand investi-- gation and which merit the punishment of broken laws and violated statutes. PAYS RESPECTS TO QUAY. “The Judas Iscariot of 2090 years ago isto find a counterpart in the Judas Is- cariot of to-day. The Judas who took the thirty pieces of silver and went and hanged himself has left an example for the Mat Quays that is well worthy of their immitation. Some time since I stood upon my place in this floor and denounced a Senator from my native State 1 ecause, when charged with cor- ruption and branded with infamy he did not rise in his seat and demand an investigation and inquiry thatshould es- tablish the purity of his actions and his present honor. “One other, occupying the high place in the counsels of the party to which I belong, has suffered himself month in and month out to be charged with crimes and misdemeaners for which, if guilty, he should have been condemned under the laws of his State and have had me- ted out to him the fullest measure of its punishment. This man is a Republi- can. Shall I now remain silent? Is it just and honest ? “To remain in my seat silent because one who is accused of crimes and refuses to seek for vindication is a Republican, and that Republican the recognized leader of my party, neither decency nor honor weuld permit me to do.” QUAY BRANDED A CRIMINAL. “I do not know whether the charges made against the Chairman of the N a- tional Republican Committee are true or false, but I do know that they have been made by journals of character and standing again and again, and I do know that in the face of these Mat Quay has remained silent, and has neither sought nor attempted to seek opportu- nity to vindicate himself of them. I do know that as a great Republican leader he owed it to the great party at whose head he was either to brand them as infamies or to prove their falsity, or he owed it to that party to stand aside from its leadership. He has dore neith- er, and for this I denounce him. The Republican party cannot afford to follow the lead of a branded criminal. He bas failed to justify himself, and though ample time and opportunity have been given him, he remains silent. His silence, under such ecircum- stances, is the confession of his guilt. WANTS QUAY DRIVEN OUT. “An honorable man dces not long dally when his honor is assailed. He has delayed to answer too long to justify the belief in his inno. cence, and he stands a convicted erimin- al before the bar of public opinion, ised that upon his election be. would free himself from such entanglements and ! labor for reform. If this explanation and this pledge of the Republican can- didate is sincere, it proves him fulse to | the party platform which endorses Mr. ! Quay; hence his promises of reform are unworthy of confidence. Under such circumstances he should be driven away from the head of a party whose very life his presence imperils. * The Republican party has done encuch for its pretended leader. Let him be relegated to the rear, It is no longer a question of his vindication It is now a question of the life of the party itself.”