* who were with us all summer, Ea 9 Demoreaic 1 ¥F (HE, = “By P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —RoBERT VALENTINE has spiked the Gazette's $900 gun. —The tin-plate robbery of the Me- | Kinley tariff will be resented at the polls : by the “tin-bucket brigade.” —Subjecting it to the action ‘of an | Emery-wheel hasn't made DELAMATERS | pathway to the Governors office aay smoother. —After being so thoroughly sk ¢ by EMERY, the Republican candidate for Governor may be considered an ar- ticle of raw material. Pas —-Tt is reported that candidate j Ruev has bought a new gun. From amount of game that JOHN is gona to bag in November we presume tht a double-barrel. » HARTER miscalculate when he —Doesn’t Dr. the size of Penn's Valley thinks he can putit in his pocket— Democrats and all? —The new tariff requires all imports to be branded. But there will be a deeper brand on the party that is responsibie fr this monopoly tariff. — The eensus of 1890 is now generally considered untrustworthy. This comes from the misfit of employing an Eng- lishman to do an American job. —The swallows and ANNIE ROONEY, have de- parted. The former will be back in the Spring ; the latter, we trust, has gone forever. —The magnifying power of a forty- foot telescope would be insufficient to “discover the proof which FIepLER has been challenged to produce in support of his $900 charge. —In sacrificing his ¢‘coal lands” for the cause of Labor, RYNDER evinces the magnanimous spirit with which he has assumed the championship of his “fel low workingmen.”' —Who knows but that the train which is now conveying the Democrat- ic candidate and people’s choice for * Governor through the State, is also car- rying a future President. —GRrUBB, the famous Philadelphia trooper, has been appointed Minister to Spain. What could be more appropri- ate than the sending of so gallant a cav- alier to the land of the Cid ? —Dr. HARTER claims that he is going to get the votes of all the members of the Bellefonte Band, irrespective of par- ty. Yes, “ina horn I” ' In this band matter the Doctor is only blowing. —DELAMATER in his electioneerin g tour is traveling on a free pass. But as the pass to the Governor’s office will. be furnished by the. people, and not by a railroad Company, QUAY’S man won’t get there.’ —CxsAR said that “all Gaul” was divided into three parts. But old Ju- L1vs hadn’t any idea of the amount of gall that DELAMATER could put into a ‘campaign or he would have reserved another andqeparets division for it. —The ort with the tariff Dbenefi- ciaries who furnished the campaign boodle of 1888 has been fulfillel by the passageof the McKinley bill. The fat furnished to elect HARRISON will be lib- erally repaid at the expense of a pillaged people. —The cold-blooded unseating of a Democratic congressman who had been elected by 1300 majority, wasa blow” at . our popular system of government more’ deadly than that which was directed against the Union by Lee's army. The Union was saved, but it looks as if the government is being destroyed. —Emperor WILLIAM of Germany visited Vienna this week and a cable- gram says he had the biggest reception ever given to man in that ancient city. The great NaroLroN of France visited that ancient capital on several’ memora- ble occasions, and the réception he re- ceived was from the thunder of his vie-' torious artillery. ; —It was a ‘cold deck” that the American ship offered to BARRUNDIA when he sought protection under the flag that waved at its masthead. It wasn’t so in the Democratic administration of FRANKLIN PIERCE when the Austrians were taught that the deck of an Ameri- can ship must be held as inviolable as so mach American soil. —There was Roman sternness in Pres- ident HARRISON'S signing the Anti- Lottery Bill. History records how a stern parent, impelled by his judicial duty in the days of old Rome, rendered a de- cision that resulted in the cutting off of his son’s head. Asa sample of parental austerity in the performance of duty, djd that surpass Mr. HARRISON's sign- ing the bill that cut off the profits the { Ye, oA, linia SOL 85 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., OCTOBER 3, 1890. NO. 89. Yimery Sustains His Charges Against Delamater. ir the address which he delivered at Bradford to a large concourse of citi- last Friday” evening Ex-Senator Funky fully sustained the charges he made against the Republican candidate for Governor, that he was guitly of bribery, perjury and forgery. He pro- duced evidence, direct, circumstantial and implied, sufficient to establish the fact that, when a candidate for the of fice of State Senate, DeramaTeEr had used money, and had employed others to use money in buying votes, and in other unlawtul ways to promote and se- cure his election. The offense of per” jury followed when in taking the oath otoffice as Senator he swore that he had not used money to procure his nomina- tion or election. The guilt of forgery was fastened on him by proof that he got up a spurious conference report on a bill to which the names of Members and Senators were falsely attached. This bill was in line with other work he did in the Senate, its object being to create a monopoly in natural gas, and well became one who was an adept in the methods and practices ot the Stand- ard Oil Company, of which he was the recognized agent in the Legislature. Mr. Exery also showed a letter writ- ten to S. B. Dick, esq., by J. S. Rutan, the well known Allegheny county Re- publican leader,dated October 3 lst, 1888, months before Quay had selected DEL- | AMATER as his candidate for Governor, in which RuraN communicated to Mr. Dick the information that DELAMATER, as Senator, had sold out to the Stand- ard Oil Company i in the matter of the Billingsley’s pipe-line bill, for $65, 000, paid with stock of the Meadville Gas Company, Rutan states 1 his letter that Quay. old him how much DerasmaTer had made in this deal. The record, as proved by Ex-Senator, Emery, fully shows up the character of the Republican candidate, and it is just such a character as the corrupt | Boss would want to see in a candidate whom he desires to elect and own ‘as | Governor, ——Chairmgn Kgrr takes his dis- appointment in not being renominated for Congress like a true philosopher | and a gcod Democrat. Instead of grumbling and kicking, he regards his | not being made a candidate as a cir- cumstance that-will give him more time to devote to the election of Parri- soN. Applying his whole attention to this really patriotic purpose, he casts personal disappointment behind him, forgetting everything but the good thac will come to his native State from the overthrow of corrupt machine govern: ment. on his hands, and in its performance he will be loyally backed fy the peo- ple. ~ ee———————_———— Servile Duty. The Republican organs have great trouble in shielding the rascals who have been allowed to become the lead: ers of their party in this State. The unre- generate rogue who has made himself the Boss, needs a great deal of shield- ing, which the servile party organs ‘endeavor to give as best they can. Thus in the matter of his treasury theft they resort to the stupid expedi- ent of getting a statement from old Mr. BurLer, now on a sickbed, to the ef fect that when he took. charge of the State treasury, as the successor of Treasurer NovEs, there was no defi- ciency of funds. This is given to prove that the charge that Quay and his gang had depleted the treasury during Noyes’ term is not true. The utter foolishness of this defence appears in the fact that BuTLER refused to take charge of the funds until the deficiéncy caused by the Quay raid had been made good. Noyes did not hand the treasury over to his successor until Dax CameroN had come to the relief of the gang, and by paying the amount of the default saved Quay and his ras- cally associates from the consequences, of their crime. Burrer is correct in saying that when the treasury was transferred to hie charge “Mr. Quay did not owe the treasury anything.” Cameron = had which the advertising of lotteries in his | made good the loss of the State money paper was enabling his son RusskLr to incurred by Quav’'s stock gambling, scoop in? Who will say that there "and saved him from the penitentiary, isn’t a great deal of the Roman charac- ' Ex-Superintendent WickrrsuAy relates ter in BENJAMAN’'S make-up ? " the distress BuTLER was in when he dis- Mr. Keir has a glorious work | covered that the treasury which he was about to take charge of had been de- pleted by the robbery of the gang. The Republican organs should feel the humiliation incurred in defending their disyeputable leaders. The con- sideration that 1t is done “for the good of the party” does not diminish the shame that attaches to such a duty. Regard for the honor of the State, for honest and reputable government, for even common decency, must be sacri- ficed in such a service. To represent that a treasury thief is a leader worthy of the endorsement of his party, and that a creature of this thief, who has been proven guilty of bribing voters, of perjury in taking an official . oath, and of forgery in getting up a bogus legisla- tive report, is a fit man to be elected Governor, involves a degree of degrada- tion which can be accounted for only as being the result of long service in Fthe interest of corrupt yolitical bosses. Quay’s Man. The Pittsburg Dispatch, the leading Republican paper of western Pennsyl- vania, but opposed to DELAMATER on account of his being therepresentative of Quax’s personal 1ule of the party in the State, has gone to considerable pains to ascertain the feeling in the oil regions on the subject of the gov- ernor’s election. Its, reporter was pre- sent at the meeting in Bradford at | which ex-Senator Emery proved that his charges against DELAMATER were true, The reporter says that “public sentiment in the oil region is. almost unanimously on the side of Exery, and that the feeling against the Republi- “can candidate is strong on account of his having been an agent of the Stand- ard Oil Company, whose assistance, as | Senator, in defeating a free pipe-line bill, was an injury to the oil region. The reporter accordingly represents that -on the evening when the Ex-Senator verified his charges against Derama- TER there appeared to be but two per- sons in Bradford who antagonized his | sentiments. - Que was L. B. LockHART, who is connected with the Stand Com- pany. The other was Joux P. ZANE, who had been hung in effigy in the { public square of Bradford on account of his hostility to'the Billingsley free pipe bill which DeLaMarer helped to defeat iu 1887. After presenting the evidence of Devamater's guilt the Ex-Senator made a profound impression on his audience by the remark : “God knows “I would like to go into court to-mor- “row and produce these proofs and “others, that this man who asks for “ your votes is unworthy of them.” The effect made on the meeting by Mr. EMERY’S exposition is described by the reporter (of a Republican fberphtieny ber) as follows : When the crowd was dispersing exclama- tions were heard voicing the sentiments of Emery’s hearers, as follows : “The charges are proven.” “Chambersburg denials don’t go this year.” “No Delamater in the Executive Chair to ‘veto Billingsley bills.” “The Standard don’town the State, or Emery either, you bet.” “It would have been better for Delamater had he plugged the gas well plugging confer- ence report.” on “Briber, perjurer, forger—a nice combina- tion for Governor.” This feeling towards Quays bribe- giving, false-swearing and forging can- didate for Governor is not: confined to the oil regions. It extends all over the State, I A —— ——The book ' containing a list of the Johnstown beneficiaries, which has just been published, is cre ating ‘considerable excitement, and more is likely to be created when the secrets of the great flood fund shall be- come wore fully divulged, as they will be, sooner or later. Out of the total of $4,000,000 reported by Secretary Kra- | MER, it appears by this book that less than $2,500,000 were given direct w the people. There is no telling the amount of picking and stea¥ng which! that magnificent contribution of the world’s charity afforded some of ite custodi- ans who were more avaricious thun conscientious. ——His excellent qualities and ener® getic manner are having a fine effect for candidate GraMLEY in Lis cauviss for County Treasurer.s The: county funds can be nowhere safer ‘than in the hands of an honest farmer, The Feeling in the 0il Region Against An Amusing Performance. There is an amusing performance going on in the Labor side-show which T. P. Ry~NDER, of this county, has got ten up as an agnex to the Quay-Dela- as ie presented in this show cannot fail to be a source of amusement to the working people. So funny a feature of the performance ‘as RyNper in the role of a workingman, and his cavort- ing in thé ring as the trick-mule of Boss Quay, will afford more fun than a labor audience could derive from the antics of the best trained trick-mule that ever kicked up its heels in an or- dinary circus. How this sort of eutertainment i is ap: preciated by working people is set forth by Mr. Joux Brapy, a Labor leader of Luzerne county, who was invited to meet Ry~NpEr at Philadelphia and as- sist in getting up his Labor ticket, but was disgusted with the proposition, and, returning to Luzerne county, made a rattling speech at Freeland las - Fri day evening in favor of ParrisoN. In this speech Mr. PraDY said ® I was called to Philadelphia, as was Mr, Mec- Garvey, hurriedly, and when we got to the ho- tel we were told the “cause of our hasty sum- mons, Mr. Rynder, who used to he a friend of labor, treated us very kindly and spoke very feelingly of the deplorable condition of our fel ow-workingmen. After a time we were let into the scheme, and Mr. McGarvey was offer- ed the Lieutenant Governorship, and to * assist. him in the campaign as a starter was offered the big sum of $200. Mr. Rynder, when asked how he had come by so much money, replied that he sold a tract of coal land for $500 a few weeks ago, and that Mr. McGarvey was wel- come to that sum. Whoever heard before of a laboring man owning a tract of coalland? We laughed at the idea of ‘$200 to start with, but our labor friend sssured us there was a barrel of it: to be had, and intimated broadly that Mr. Quay, thé man who owns Delamater, was the owner, of said barrel. We emphatically de- clined to enter any scheme todefeat our friend Mr. Pattison, gnd strongly advised that he be indorsed by the Labor party, but our friends. Mr. Rynder & Co., would not see it that way. There was something really pathetic in the. feeling | manner in which Ryn- plorable condition of onr fellow work- ingmen.” His sympathy for them in their down trodden condition was so great that he did not hesitate to sell his coal lands 2nd apply the proceeds to the purposes of a campaign in which their rights should be vindicated- and maintained against the tyranny of their oppressive task-masters. The expression, “our fellow working- men,” as used by the great Centre cot n- ty Labor champion, was good, consid- ering the fact that he hasn’t been known to do a day’s work in the last twenty years, and, as to his coal lands, which he is willing to sacrifice in the labor ‘cause, it would take a’ mighty smart surveyor to locate them, It wasn’t difficult for Mr. Brapy to see that Ry~Nper has been assigned to play the part of trick-mule for Quay, for which he is to receive his ration of oats. ; re ——————— Love for the Crowned Heads. Foreign potentates appear to have A the affections of American Minis- to a surprising extent, it we are to judge from the way the latter speak in praise of the crowned-heads. Minister Suita feil in love with the Czar of Rus- sia at first sight, giving evidence of that sentiment in the letters he has written homein which he tells whata benevolent ruler the Russian autocrat is, and with what a gentle hand his imperial scep- ter is wielded. As to Jew-baiting, of which the Czar is accused, Minister Syrri repudiates the charge as being a baseless misrepresentation—as vile a slander as—as is, for instance,the charge that Mar Quay raided the Pennsylva- nia State treasury. Minister PrELps also dearly loves a .crowned-head. The - object of = his adoration is WiLriay, Emperor of Ger- many. He was captivated as speedily by the Kaiser as Samira was by the Czar. Such 19 the high estimation he has formed of the German ruler that he verily believes he has no other wish ou ¢vih than to make his subjects hap- py. luo the exuberance of his admira- tion Minister PurLps calls him “the poor man's Kaiser.” Even the bad treatinent which the Awerican hog has received at WiLLiaM's hands will, uot turn our Ministet’s affections away frown that imperial young man. How is this love for the crowned- abroad, to be accounted for? May not ‘Le, fact that we also have a Czar , excite in them a love for the potentates i ot the old world ? mater combination. Such broad farce" DER i to Mr. Brapy of “the "de. heads on the part of our representatives The Legislature and Governor Should Both Be for Reform. It is gratifying to observe how gen- erally the people are impressed with the fact that the good which would come from such an honest administra- tion as Governor Parrisoy would give the State, could not be fully carried out without the assistance of a Legislature in harmony with his principles and his purposes. The farmers and laboring men are particularly impressed with the importance of having these two agencies of reform in the State govern- ment operate together. To the farmers, the question of the highest account for the#interest is the equalization of taxes. For years they have beef deceived on this subject by Republican Legislatures and Governors. They can expect no justice from them in the matter of taxation. We have the testimony of Worthy Master. Ruo~g, and the other grangers who had the tax equalization bill in charge, that the bill was deliberately rejected by the last. Republican Legislature, and that Deramarer participated in its rejec- tion after he had promised to sup- port it. . . To the laboring peorle, who have in vain asked for legislation to protect them against pluck me-store robbery and other methods of extortion, and for executive prevention of the use of Pinkerton’s thugs in bringing them into subjection to industrial oppression and injustice; a’Democratic Legisla- ture in conjunction with a Demo- cratic Governor is also a matter of the highest interest. It is for this reason that, especially among farmers and working people, there is. a gratifying impression, amounting to a conviction, that in or- der to have the full measure of the benefit which the State will derive from PATTISON'S election, there should him in his measures of reform. pis conviction wi!l have a very favorable effect in increasing the majorities of Messrs, Hor and MoCormick, the Democratic candidates in this county. The same consideration will produce a similar effect 1n other counties. More Evidence of Quay’s Treas- ury Theft. The charge made against M. S. Quay that he participated in an unlaw- ful use of money taken from the State treasury, practically amounting to a theft,; scarcely needs corroboration. The character of the man, as shown by all his public methods, is prima fa- cic evidence of the truth of the charge. But in addition to this, it is made so circumstantially, and with such direct specification of time, locality, and per- sons connected with and cognizant of it, and is suomitted to with such unbroken silence by the accused, that none but those who wish to condone his offense will even pretend to disbe- lieve it. ta But if further evidence of Quax’s guilt should be necessary we have it in the statementof Mr. WicKERsHAM , at one time Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction, which we re- print in the inside of this issue. Mr. WickersHAM was at the head of the school system of the State while QuAy's treasury raiding was going on. He says that the depletion which it caused prevented him, for the time be- ing, from getting the money which was intended for the schools, but which the treasury thieves,under MAT QrAY’S direction and management, had ab- stracted and lost ina desperate stock- gambling speculation. For months the operation of the school department was crippled by this criminal abstrac- tion of the funds from the treasury, and it was a mystery to Superintendent WickersHAM why his legitimate de- mands for money were for months answered with the reply that there were no funds, until the incoming State Treasurer, Mr. BuTLer, divulged to him the disgraceful fact that Quay and his gang had cleaned out the treas- ury by an unsuccessful stock operation. Mr. WickersHAM was a Republican able character, Yet he is assault: ed by the Quay organs for bearing tes- timony against a scoundrel against whom there is evidence stronger than that which would be amply sufficient to send a horse-thief to the peniten: tiary. be a Legislature that will stand by, Spawls from the Keystone, —Williamsport has 4126 school children. —A Japanese miss attends school at Wilson College. * —Chester county’s real estate is valued at §.7,089,364. —The Hepner murder county mys.ery. is sull a Bucks —West Chester is to have another census enumeration. —A newly elected school teacher at Berne- ville is but 13 years of age. —The North Wales Web Factory has an ore der for ten tons of suspenders, —Mrs. Ellen Wachter, the Whitehall faster, has again changed for the worse. —A farmer at North East says he eleared $400 dollars on two acres of grapes. —The Gibson oil well is unmanageable, and is spouting fifty feet into the air. —A Bethlehem man has been arrested for burying a cat in his neighbors garden. —Eugene Auchy, of Norristown, broke his arm while enjoying his honeymoon. —A Carlisle girl with an 18-karat appetite recently ate two dozen ears of corn. —The report of the Pittsburg police depart» ment shows a remarkable decrease in crime. —A New York leather firm is about to start a kangaroo farm at Warrington, York county, —Henry Kintzel, of Port Carbon, uses a barlow knife imported from England in 1760, —Patrick Clare walked over one of the Pittsburg’s great bluffs and fell 150° feet, and still lives. —The State Association of Poor Directors will meet at Lancaster on October 21 to 23 inclusive. —The National Progressive . Union of the coke regions has been united with the Knight of Labor, —A wild steer at Pittsburg made a bold ate tack on a locomotive, but was worsted in one short round. —By worrying over his wife's illness. John Swick, of Harrisburg, was himself dethroned of his reason. —Evidences of silver in paying quantities have been discovered along Brady’s Run, near Beaver Falls. ~—Thomas Martin has been placed on trial at Wilkes-Barre on the charge of murdering James Hughes. —Rev. Messrs, Kynett and Dyckman drove the gamblers from the Tri-County Fair grounds at Pottstown. —The old leaves on a horse-chestnut tree at Harrisburg have disappeared and new blose soms have appeared. —The landeau. which recently bore Presi- dent Harrison through the streets of Johns. town has been demolished in a runaway. —A motherand her babe were run down and trampled nearly to death by a drove of cattle at Mount Hope, Lancaster county. —There was an epidemic of marriages in the little town of Carbondale last week. Inside of a few hours seven couples were united. —The Thomaston Colliery, six miles west of Pottsville, has been shut down, throwing 400 hands idle, owing toa fire in the inside works, —The Bethlehem Iron Company will on November 26th consider the. increase of its capital stock from $3,000,000 to. $5,000,000. —Forty sill-plush weavers employed at the Unicorn Silk-Mill, Allentown, went on a strike on Monday against a reduction of 134 cents per yard. —Adam Miller and Lizzie Horst attempted to elope to Camden, but were intercepted at Lebanon by the girl’s father and were sepa- rated. —Henry Tan and his wife, of Ritter- ville, committed suicide together a few days ago because of griefover the loss of ail their children. —The Girard Estate Trustees are at Hazle- ton. So far they have found every thing in first-class condition there, and are well pleased with the trip. —A covey of partridges took shelter in’ a Norristown out-shed, and the weather prophets are predicting a cold winter on the strength of | the visitation. —Mrs. McConnell, of Erie, attempted to light the gas while she wore gloves that she bad just cleaned with benzine, and she was nearly burned to death. y —Several employes of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company have been laid off until they can show tne receipts for certain amounts due merchants of Easton. —A cave-in of the Keyley Run Colliery de- stroyed the foundation of twenty houses in Shenandoah and caused wide and deep cracks in some of the streets. —Mrs. Catherine Ueberroth, of Salisbury, Lehigh county, 81 years of age, frequently walks the four miles to and from South “peti lehem to visit her daughter. —A meeting of the oil producers of the But- ler and Washington fields was held in Pitts burg to take measures against the oppres- sions of the Standard Company. —Simon Link’s dog became mad at Prince-, town and bit so’ many other dogs that the en- tire canine population of that town bids fair to follow the Link dog to untimely graves. ,—A meeting of business men at Easton on Tuesday night decided in favor of a belt line around that eity to connect the Easton and Northern and Lehigh Valley Railroads. —Miss Emma Frazier, a teacher in the Ale legheny public schools, was dismissed by the School Board because she gagged the pupils with a piece of flannel saturated with benzine. —A satchel, containing $2000 worth of watches, in charge of E. W. Drary, a salesman for a Lancaster firm, was on Friday stolen from the railroad baggage-room at New Castle. —Patrick Killen, of Scottdale, was so enrag- ed at young Mr. Brown, who made formsl ap- plications for Killens daughter's hand, that the father chased him over town with a re- volver. —John Souders, a veteran of the late war, who served in the Thirty-first New Jersey Regiment, and had smoked incessantly and 'I'drank moderately ‘from boyhood until two weeks ago, died on Wednesday night at Ease ton, aged 91 years. | District Attorney Miller has sworn oub a warrant at Reading for the arrest, for criminal negligence, of Hindbrakeman H, C. Kemp, who was blamed by the Coroner's jury for | being the cause of the terrible wreck on the official and is a man of unquestion- ! ' makersville some weeks ago. Philadelphia and Reading railroad at’ Shoe- —The fourth German Catholic Congress at Pittsburg onSaterday adopted resolution pro- posing a federation of all German Catholic societies in the United States. as a better means of effecting better results in combating. heresy and fostering religion and morality among its members and extending such mem bership.