Bellefonte, Pa., October 3, i890. — ON THE HILLS OF JUDEA. Where is the morning brighter, Where isithe air more bland, Where do the stars glow whiter, Than on this Po land ? Slopes that sre srown and barren Scarce show a spear-green sod, But wait for another Aaron, And'the blow of his quickening rod. Never a wild voice quavers, Never a song bird trills; Only the warm light wavers Overithe desolate hills. Plodding, the pilgrim passes; Patient the shepherds go; Seeking the tender grasses, Far im the vales below. ‘Shade there is nowhere growing Wide as the eye can sweep; Founts there are nowhere flowing Down from the rocky steep. Only the vulture veering High like a wind blown weft, Only the poppy beeping Out from the rocky cleft. Once there were orchards teeming, Once there were pastures fair, ‘Once there were vineyards gleaming Green in the golden air. Now there is desolation ; Then there was bounty ; then Flourished a haughty nation Strong with its million men. How is its prowess shattered ! Dust are its priests and kings ; The sons of its sons are scattered Like seeds on the swift wind’s wings, Their doom is a whole world’s scorning, Yet where is the soul but thrills Beholding the light of morning On the Se Judean hills! —————— Speech of Hon. W. U. Hensel at Reading* The following forcible and telling speech was delivered before the Demo. cratic Societies, recently assembled at Reading, by Hon. W. TU, Hensel, the brilliant Democratic leader of Lan. caster : At the opening meeting of the Repub- lican State campaign in Pittsburg last Saturday evening, an orator imported from Kansas is reported to have said, in substance, that the meanest Republican thief who ever cursed a Commonwealth is better, politically, than the most ex- alted Democrat whose character and conduct blessed the State. General Hastings, a speaker at the same meeting, is reported to have said that even if a Republican leader stole from the Treasury, he was better than a Democrat who sought to guard it from spoliation. Mr. Delamater, who was present, and sat on the platform, neither resented, rebuked, nor repudiat- ed these utterances Upon any other theory than his sympathy with and his faith in them, it is difficult to see how, with any degree of confidence, the Re- publican candidate can aspire to an office for which he has plainly disquali- fied himself. In view of the unmistak- able provisions of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, Senator Delamater’s pathway to the gubernatorial chair js barred by an offense to the accusation of which he dare not plead “not guilty,” and concerning which the public records supply the ample evidence, The charge of misdemeanor in his high office is not born of partisan rancor : i depends up- ‘on mo doubtful testimony and the results ofit are to be measured by a standard which cannot be stretched or shrunken. He has, a member of the General As- sembly,as persistently violated the Four- teenth section of the Nintk article of the Btate Constitution, and he is disqualified to hold the office for which he is ga can- -didate, or any other in the State, for a period that runs beyond the expiration of the next Gubernatorial term. It will be remembered that Mr. Quay, al present a United States Senator from Pennsylvania, was a candidate for State Treasurer in 1885. In the campaign of that year be had large material assist. ance from Mr. Delamater, whose name at that time was searcely known beyond the borders of his own county ; and there his reputation was rather that of a thrifty banker than of the advanced statesman and unselfish political re- former ‘which his followers now set him up to be. HE PROFITS FROM PUBLIC MONEYS. - Searcely had Mr, Quay taken hold of the management of the State Treasury than he began to repay his benefactor, who had meantime become his official bondsman. The records of the State Treasury show that on the 1st of June, 1886, the private ban king-house of Dela- mater & Co., at Meadville, Pa , of which the Republican candidate for Governor 1s now—and was then—the head, had on deposite $2,000 of the State funds, the public moneys, to “use” and “make profit” out of them. This amount con. tinued there until.on or about September 1, when it was ipsreased to $30,000, at which figures it wemained until after December 1, 1886. Mr. Delamater had, in the meantime, become a candidate for and had been elected State Senator. He qualified shortly after January 1, 1887, and the ameunt of the public moneys which his bank had to use and make profit out of—ran up to $47,914.- 28 before a month of his term had elapsed. - When Mr. Delamater took his seat he swore to faithfully observe and support the Constitution of the State, Section 14, of Article 1X, of that instrument says : “The making of profit out of the pub- lic moneys, or using the same for any purpose not authorized by law, by any officerjofithe State or member of the Gen- eral Assembly, SHALL BE A MISDEME- ANOR, and shall be punished as may be provided by law ; but part of such pun- ishment s/all bedisqualification to hold office for a period, of mot less than five years." } It cannot be: presumed that Senator elamater was ignorant ot the provision of this law, or in . doubt as to 1s mean- ing. A sketch of his life, printed at his expense, published by his authoriyy and distributed by his friends, which I now ! hold in my hand, sets forth that he is a lawyer of “thorough and ample train- ing,” educated in the best schools of his profession and possessed of “a law li- brary of rare excellence.’ Moreover, his admiring biographer declares he en- tered public life to “‘subserve the good of the public ;”’ he is one who had been *‘drawn into political life by & belief that his principles and methods of political management were better and more just to all than the methods prevailing.” In the full light of his knowledge of the | October 1, 288s.. . 1 law, and in the promotion of the lofty purposes which have drawn” him into politics, the record shows him steadily holding on to the public moneys, in violation, of the constitution and con- trary to his oath of office. STATE FUNDS IN DELAMATER’S BANK. These figures show the extent to which Senator Delamater’s private bank had the use and profit of the State funds while he was a “member of the General Assembly :” February 1, 1887. eis el $47,014.28 March 1, 1877.. 47,914.28 April 1, 1887 ,000. May 2, 1887... 40,0 0.00 June 1, 1887. 30,00,.00 July 1,1887...... 30,000.00 August 1, 1887..... .. 30,000.00 September I, 1887...ccuvuiirerererereners ens 40,000.00 Mr. Quay resigned the Treasurership to take a higher place on September 6, 1887, and Delamatet’s use and profit out of the public moneys for the time being were terminated. But Quay’s man knew Quay’s friends ; his successor evidently knew where to place the public moneys 80 as to do the most private good. Inter- mitted for a time, the favors of the State Treasurer to Delmater’s bank were re- newed. Almost simultaneously with the beginning of what has been lauded as Senator Delamater’s eminent services to the Quay National Committee in New York during the summer and fall of 1888, began the restoration of the public moneys to his private use and profit. For fourteen successive months this ta- ble shows his balances—while he was “a member of the General Assembly.” June 1, 1888 £50,000,00 July 1, 1883. 50,000,00 August 1, 18 50,000,00 September 1, 75,000,00 November 1, 1888.. December 1, 18s8.. January 1, 1889..... February 1. 1889 March 1,1889...... April 1, 1889... May 1, 1886.. June 1, 1889. July 1,1889.. OFFENDING LEGISLATOR. During all this time, while using and making profit out ot an average of $50,- 000 of the public moneys, Mr. Delama- ter was a member of the General Assem- bly ; his official pay was only about one- third as much as the yearly earnings and profit which any well-conduct pri- vate bank would make out of the funds that his institution enjoyed from the State Treasury. It is preposterous to maintain that this condition of things did not fall within the prohibition and pen- alties of the Constitution. If that sacred instrument has any authority, upon whom shall it rest with more binding force than the members of the General Assembly ? If it can regulate and gov- ern any functionaries of the Common- wealth, in any relation, who shall be held to closer accountability than the members of the Senate, which is made the constitutional jury to pass upon State officials accused of misconduct in office ? 1f the voice of any one Senator can be stifled and his hands tied in an inquiry into the management of the State Treasury by the perennial de- posit of $50,000, how easy to place the funds of the State so as to head off all investigation and to prejudge every pos- sibility of impeachment ? It is idle to say that the constitutional provision against which Senator Dela- mater has so grievously offended cannot be enforced except by ‘appropriate legis- latich,” and that its penalties cannot be invoked until provision for punishment is made by statutory laws. High author- ity has declared that “the Constitution is the legislative act of the people them- selves in their sovereign capacity, and is therefore the paramount law.” “When- ever the sovereign power expresses its will that a certain rule shall be estab- lished, that expression mst be conclu- ives, whether such forms have been ob- served in making the declaration as are customary and proper, or not. We may query whe. her the will has been de- clared; we may question and cross. question the words emp oyed to ascertain the real sense that they express ; we may doubt and hesitate as'to the intent, but when discovered it must govern, and it is idle to talk of forms that should have surrounded the expression, but do not.’ “An offense which may be the sub- ject of a criminal procedure” is defined to be “an act committed or omitted in violation of public law either forbidping or demanding it.” In a State where it has been decided that to raise a liberty pole was “a notorious and riotous expression of ill will totheGovernment,”’ indictable even in the absence of statu- tory prohibition ; where disobedience to an act of assembly is an indictable of- fense at common law, even if no penalty is prescribed—in this Common wealth surely it will not be contended that an offense which the Constitution calls a misdemeanor, and the punishment of which it preseribes, is not indictable in the Courts of the State. Again and again it hasbeen judical- ly established that the failure of a pub- lic officer to do a public duty is indiet- able, although the statute prescribing the duty has affixed no penalty for its neglect. By how much more shall the act of a public officer, defined in the su- preme law asa “misdemeanor,” be the propersubject of criminal procedure ? 1f disobedience to any net of parli- meat, even when no particular penalty is assigned, was *‘contempt against the King’s prerogative,” punishable by fine and imprisonment at the discretion of the King’s Court of Justice, shall an in- fraction of the letter and the spirit of the people’s constitution, the overriding law of the land, be treated ‘with greater ja- dicial tolerance ? ( THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBATES. But, fortunately, for this discussion, the debates in the Constitutional Con. vention leave us in no doubt as to what was the intention of the clear-headed and high-minded men who framed this provision of that fundamental law. Their own expressions confirm the un- mistakable language of ‘this section. The provision forbidding members of the Legislature from having in their control, and for their use and profit, the moneys of the State Treasury, was -not | inserted without deliberation and discus- sion. Tt was not the repetition of an ex- isting form. It was a new provision, and in the original draft its languarge was materially different from that which was finally adopted. As originally ' re- ported it read : “The General Assembly shall constitute the offense of making profit out of the public moneys or using the same for political purposes by any officer of the State, or member or officer of the General Assembly, or any candi- | 00 | ensued over this clause, it was plainly -Pattipan’s buttons, and in the middle date for election or appointment, a mis- demeanor,” etc. But, as though un- willing to commit this protection of the public moneys to the uncertain action of the Legislature, the section was sub- sequently changed. Instead of leaving it to the General Assembly to “consti. tute” the offense a misdemsanor, it pro- ceeded to directly declare in the Consti- tution “IT SHALL BE A MISDEMEANOR,’ beyond the power of the Legislature to make it ctherwise by neglect of its duty, by slighting or by transcending it. Furthermore, in the discussion which avowed that its intention was to pro- hibit and prevent members of the Legis- lature from getting control and custody of the State moneys. No less eminent and sagacious a lawyer than Mr. Mac- Veagh, late Attorney General of the United States, pointed out, by way of objection to the sweeping provisions of the proposed law, that even stockhold- ers in a national bank competing for the custody of State funds would be prohib- ited from becoming candidates for the State Legislature. Nevertheless, without a division, by a body made up in large part of many of the most eminent members of the legal profession, this provision was agreed to as written in the supreme law, and the construction that is now put upon it was virtually approved. WILL DELAMATER EXPLAIN? If it means anything it means that no Senator nor member of the House shall have control, custody or use of the State moneys ; if he does he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and is to be disqualified from holding office for five years. That is the offense prescribed, and the punish- ment. The proofs are to be found on the public records of the State, open to all its citizens. = The Treasurer's book shows that Delamater’s bank had the use and profit of this money. ' He got it while he was a member of the General Aszembly. I pause for his explanation or denial. I challenge his reply. If Senator Delamater is not the “head” of the banking house of Delamater & Co., he did not solicit, get and have this de- pet of from $20,000 to $75,000 while e was State Senator, or, if getting it, he buried it in a napkin and did not make useand profit out of it, let him speak out ! But if he did thus flagrantly violate the Constitution and set at defiance the sovereign law of the people, he must either withdraw his challenge to their favor at the polls, or he must go down before their condemnation. EE —————— THE OLD SHAWL, “For once I've been make a fool of,” said Mr. Pattipan, just before he went out to breakfast one morning. “I've taken bad money, and I no more know from whom than I know the Koran. | And what is more,” added Mr. Patti- pan, “I shall offer itto some one if I carry it about with me, and get into difficulties. I'll leave it here.” He put it into the china bowl full of visiting eards that stood on a table in the corner of his wife's parlor as he spoke, kissed her, and took his way to those regions vaguely spoken of, as “down town,” and Mrs. Pattipan look- ed at the counterfeit note, and in order that she might not make some mistake herself, tore it across the middle before throwing it back into the china bowl. “Mr. Pattipan never observes saffi- ciently,” she said to herself. “His organs of reflection are large, but his organs of observation are small. Mrs, Pattipan had stud'ed phrenolo- gy in her youth, when it was fashiona- ble to do so, and had a habit of attri- buting people's virtues or failings to their bumps. Then she went about her household duties, ordered the din- ner, scolded the servants, arranged her bureau crawers and attended to Mr. as his authorized biography declares ; if a he said, spreading both hands. “How about zis?” “Well,” said Mrs. Pattipan, “that is lovely.” “And zere is no more ; ’e come from Paris,” said the old clothes man. “Oh, he is sweet !"” said Mrs. Patti- pan. “I'll see what I have.” And upstairs she rushed, and gather- ing from drawer and closet all the old pantaloons with baggy knees, and all the old coats with frayed cuffs and greasy collars which were in the house, laid them at the feet of the clathes man. But now it.was the old man’s turn to be scornful. “Zese rags! Oh, madame, not zese rags for my lofely Cupid from Paris I” he sighed, reproachfully. “Madame vill find somezing else ; she vill not expect ze poor old clo’es man to cheat himself. Madame has some pretty silk dress—cloak, a shawl—madame vill see !” Madame, who could not give up the idea of possessing the Cupid, now that ghe had once harbored it, ran upstairs again. She searched her drawers, her wardrobe, but she had nothing. Sud- denly it occurred to her that she had a broche shawl, and that she never wore it. Shawls were out of fashion, and if she hated anything it was a shawl turn- ed into a cloak. The thing would lie there useless for years, or she should give it to Mr. Pattipan’s Aunt Jane. She would never wear it again, that was morally certain. Why not buy the Cupid ‘with it ? She unfolded the shawl and felt an unusual contempt for it, it looked so old fashioned. It had cost $25 when it was bought, and was as good as ever 3 but what an ugly thing! Yes, she would do it! She carried it down stairs, therefore, and the clothes man con- descended to accept it. However, he also put into his bagthe old clothes gar- ments. “I vill not leave zem about to trou- ble madame,” hesaid; “I vill oblige her by carrying zem away.” Mrs. Pattipan returned to her parlor to adore her Cupid—certainly a very lovely little thing. “How Iadmire it! It's my ‘ideality’ and my ‘form,’ I suppose,” she said, be- coming phrenological again. “I should have been an artist, having form and color so largely devloped.” Then she placed it on the cabinet shelves, and as she retired to a distance to observe the general eftect, saw that the counterfeit bill that she had thrown into the china bowl after tearing it across had vanished. The old clothes man had taken it—there could be no doubt of that. “But he was so acquisitive he could not withstand temptation,” said Mrs, Pattipan. “Well, 1 hope he will not pass it on some poor person,and I don't care if he gets himself into trouble—he deserves it.” pid—how much better than an old shawl that she detested! Still, she would not mention the old shawl or the coats to Mr. Pattipan. Since she had wade the awful mistake of ex- changing his best trousers for a match holder it was understood between them that old clothes men were not to be permitted to cross the threshold. No; she could buy what she pleased and Mr. Pattipan never thought of ask- ing where it came from. It should go so. But,oh! her lovely cupid—how she adored it! At} 5 o'clock in the aftornoon Mr. Pattipan returned in very fine spirits. “Well, Ducky,” he remarked to Mrs. Pattipan, “I've got a surprise for you. Shan’t tell you what it is until [ have had dinner. 1t is a birthday present.” Then he concealed a bundle beneath of this task heard the door bell ring. It rang twice without being answered —cook and Sara Jane being in a deep quarrel, occasioned by the reproofs of their mistress—so Mrs. Pattipan, hav- ing peeped over the balustrade for some seconds, descended the stairs and opened the door herself. Through the glass ehe could see that it was only a peddler of some sort, who would be sent away at once, after which she would attend to the culprits below stairs. As she opened the door she saw up- on the steps without an old clothes man with a basket of china on his arm. A fat little old fellow with an immense nose and a benevolent smile, who push- ed his basket into the door as an en- tering wedge, and said very softly and tenderly and with persuasive waves of his hand from the cheek outward : “Laty—dear laty—a-me-aible laty, vill you not exchange some ole clo’es which are of no goot, for some elegant new vases vich vill make you alvays some bleasure ven you look at dem ? Elegant vases! Oh, vou shall see dem.” “No,” eaid Mrs. Pattipan, no, 1 think not.” But the woman who deliberates with an old clothes man at the door is lost, The basket wedged itself further in. “It vill cost noding to look at dem,” said the old clothes vender. “It vil be 8 bleasure and cost noding.” “Very well,” said Mrs. Pattipan, “I don’t really promise, you know ; you never ‘give much for the clothes. I think your acquisitiveness is more largely developed than your benevo- lence. Seems to’ me so, looking "at you.” “Madame is very good,” said the old clothes man, waving from him the com- pliment he fancied Be had received, “I go in—danks.” He. enterered the parlor. Mrs, Pattipan rested herself on a chair near the window, and the old clothes man exhibited his stock of common vases, at which Mrs. Pattipan looked con- temptuously. Finally, regarding her with an acute eye, the old clothes man restored all these to his basket, and saying : “No, dese are not to madame's superior taste,” he pat his hand in his the sofa. Mrs. Pattipan felt pleased to be re- membered. She was as charming as possible during dinner time, and Mr. Pattipan made her guess what he had brought her; but her guesses were all failures. Not roses—not a book—not his photograph—not a watch—not a ring—not a dress rattern—not a muff! “I meant to buy a muff,” said Mr. Pattipan ; “but this was brought into my office by somebody—quite as though I had asked the spirits to help me, you know. Come along, my dear; I want to see you sail up and down the parlor in it. You ‘are quite a queenly figure, you know, and a shawl’— “A shawl ?”” said Mrs, Pattipan. “Ah!” said Mr. Pattipan, who was now unfolding his parcel beside the par- lor table, “ashawl! Itisa splendid one—a cashmere, or some Indian place of that sort—wonderfully valuable; but you know he smuggled it, and so sold it for nothing. For a shawl like that forty-five dollars is nothing—and I knew ou were out of shawls. You used to wear them so elegantly in our courting days, and I haven't seen one on you for years!” “Nor on anybody else!” Mus. Pat- tipan said to herseli, but she beamed upon her husband. “Here it 18 I" said he, flinging it abroad. “Now put it on.” The room was not a large one, and as the shawl swept into the air it struck the cabinet on that particular spat on which the Cupid was perched. The lovely bit of china danced wildly for a moment, then toppled over and fell to the floor. Nothing remained of it but gleaming fragments as Mrs. Pattipan stooped to pick it up. “Never mind the gimerack, Ducky.” remarked her spouse. *I hope it is that confounded match safe that you gave my best trousers for—ha! ha! ha! Come, try onthe shawl!” Mrs. Pattipan, with a secret wail for her treasure, obeyed. She turned her back and allowed the drapery to fall over her ample shoulders, and glided as gracefully as possible up and down the room. “Charming!” said Mr. Pautipan, “You must wear that freely. Don't save it for best. By Jove! I'm glad I bought it. The little old fellow ‘came into my place with the parcel, and pocket and drew forth a little orna- ment of very beautiful china—a Cupid with a butterfly on its shoulder. ‘Zere!’ bless me if he wasn’t a curiosity | He called me a worthy gentleman, and he wanted to show me a shawl, Well, I Atall events she had her lovely Cu- — wouldn’t look «t it until he told me all about the Vale of Cashmere, where it was made, and asked me to smell the attar of roses! and suddenly says I, ‘The very thing for ducky I’ and I had Pringle, the clerk, in and put it on him and he said he thought it must be genuine, for his grandmother had one Just like it"—(“No donbt,” said Mrs. Pattipan to herself)—*“and out came my little $50 bill and he gave me a $5 note, and done it was!" Mrs. Pattipan had reach the end of the parlor and was standing quite still with her back turned. She could not control her features at that moment ; she had just recognized her own old broche shawl-——the one she had given to the clothes man. She knew it only too well by the pattern. And there was the little fray darned by her own fingers, five years ago, when she did occasionally wear the shawl to mar- ket. “Turn about, Ducky,” said Mr. Pat- tipan. “Now, do you know, _ haven't seen you look so elegant for a long while! We'll go to the opera to-night —comic—and show it off. I know women like to exhibit elegant things wheu they have them—and here is the change the old fellow gave me out of the fifty—a five dollar bill. Take care, its been mended. You'll want some little fallal.” As Mrs. Pattipan came to her hus- band’s side she was aware that she should see the counterfeit bill that the old clothes man had stolen from the china bowl, and indeed she did; and I cannot help but believing that some of the very finest phrenological develop- ments must have heen hers, for she smiled up into Mr. Pattipan’s face and said: “My dear, you are really gen- erous!” and put the worthless biil in her pocket with a little air of coquetry and actually wore the faded, old fash. ioned broche shawl to the theatre that evening and was happy in it. But after all, to have a husband who thinks one a beauty at 45, and is anxious to make one happy, compen- sates for any such little mortifications as that which Mrs, Pattipan experi- enced when the lady in the seat be- hind her whispered audibly : “Well, that shawl must really have come out ot the ark !"—DNfary Kyle Dallas, in Fireside Companion. Stunning Testimony as to Treasury Raid. Quay’s Why Col. Wickersham Was Unable to Get Money to Pay School Expenses. Ool.\J. P. Wickersham, of Lancaster, late Superintendent of Public Iastruc- tion of Pennsylvania, in a recent inter- view, told a New York World report- er that he would not vote for Quay’s can- didate. Of the Boss and his methods he said: “T was at my desk, at the State capi- tol, at Harrisburg, during a considerable rtion of the period described in the istory of Matthew Stanley Quay, pub lished last March in the columns of the World. 1 read that very remarkable story carefully, and its perusal caused me to indulge in many reminiscences. I had but little official intercourse with Mr. Quay, who was for a portion of the time of my service an absolute dictator at Harrisburg. He is a man of wonder- ful attainments in the art of manipu- lating men—executive ability we call it. He is aremarkable man in many re- spects, and if he had in other respects controlled the reckless side of his nature, he would have been a leader of whom all of his party might have been proud. ‘‘Autocracy is as natural to him as to the czar. He adopted the policy of silence on his own part, and the exac- tion of unquestioning obedience from all with whom he was in contact in the po- litical machine of the State You will scarcely credit the extent to which the autocracy extended. Ho would sit in his office on the hill at Harrisburg, and compel every one, high and low, to run at his bidding. The old soldier, Gov. Hartranft, was no exception to the rule. Quay would say to his messenger : ‘Tell Hartranft to come here; I want him,’ and Gov. Hartranft would obey. Gov. Hoyt was served in the same way, and the state treasurer, the auditor-general, and the secretary of internal affairs were as so many minor clerks. AN ENCOUNTER WITH QUAY. “I had an encounter with Quay when he was secretary of the common wealth. Our duties were disconnected, and there was rarely any occasion for official in- tercourse, as I have mentioned. But one day I received a message from him, delivered by a messenger,that he wished me to come to his office. I responded : “Tell Secretary Quay that the distance from his office to mine is exactly the same distance as from my office to his.’ “I do not think he ever forgave my hardihcod ; but then be is master of dis- simulation. The order was never re- peated. “In 1879 I had much trouble in hav- ing my warrants cashed at the treasury. You will perceive that it was my duty to sign the vouchers for school expenses all over the state. Teachers’ salaries, the heating and lighting of school houses, and the necessary repairs came under my official cognizance. Warrants for the soldiers orphans were accepted and signed by me. I had, as I said, difficul- ty in obtaining money, and finally Mr. J. Blake Walters, the cashier of the treasury, and to all intents and purposes its sole custodian, informed me that there was no money to pay the warrants and I must wait. State Treasurer Noyes, everywhere known as “Old Square Tim- ber,’ from his honesty, had not the grip on the business details,and Walters con- ducted everything much as he saw fit. ‘Square Timber’ Noyes was as honest a man as ever drew breath, in my opinion. We differed in politics, he being an old- fushioned Democrat and I, as at present, a Republican; but 1 knew and respected his sterling worth. “I pressed hard for the filling of my warrants. The school system of the state was suffering, Teachers were un- paid, and the soldiers’ orphans’ needs were not supplied as they should have been, Blake Walters was defiant and used to dismiss me without any other explanation than the stereotyped one, viz, Jack of money. As T persisted there came an order from Gov. Hoyt not to send in warrants until there was money to pay them. 1 wa: not bound to respect any such instraction, ard I did not obey. How little did I then understand the cause of the barren treas- ury ! “The time arrived for the newly elect- ed state treasurer to assume his office, ‘Square Timber’ Noyes was elected in 1877. His successor, Samuel Butler, was elected in 1879. He came from West Chester, and was a strictly honest, con- scientious man. How the ‘ring’ came to select him for treasurer I never could understand. He was, 1t is certain, out of place among them. He came to Har- risburg to look over the condition of the treasury before assuming control. Tt is customary to verify the statemerts of the public moneys with the amount be- longing to the treasury. Butler and I were personal friends, and we were fre- quently together. BUTLER’S ALARMING DISCOVERY, “One day he came to me in an agitated condition. He was greatly excited, and sat down in a chair and “informed me that there was something that alarmed him terribly. I wondered what it could be, for I knew him to be a cool, level- headed man, who was not given to need- less alarms. His agitation was altogeth- er too real to be misunderstood. Some- thing of a serious nature was evidently on his mind. Finally he said that he had found a greatdeficiency in the treas- ury and that he feared it ‘would reach the sum of $300,000. “I then could not help thinking of my rejected warrants to pay the school ex. penses. I am not quite positive whether it was on the first visit from Butler that he informed me that he had told ‘Square Timber’ Noyes of the deficiency , but he stated that when Mr. Noyes be- came aware of the real condition of the treasury he became frantic. The old man did not know what to do. He wrung his hands and I think cried like a child.” He had trusted everything ' to Blake Walters, and the terrible result came upon him like an avalanche. But- ler asked me what he should do. “Secure a good legal counsellor as quickly as possible,” “My advice was promptly acted on, and Lewis Hall, a prominent Harris- burg attorney, was retained. ‘An interval of time elapsed, during which Butler used to make frequent visits to my office to report the situation. He was quite as much disturbed, I think, as if the treasury deficiency had oc- curred with himself as the treasurer. He would sit with his face buried in his bands or with his head bowed on the table and sigh and groan as he talked. He could not make the deficiency grow less, and there was a heavy presure on him to tide over the deficiency accept the paper and assume his office,, “Whose paper do you refer to 7” “To the paper of “the persons men- tioned in the World's history, to the paper of Quay and Blake Walters,” re- sponded Col. Wickersham. “The press- ure came from Quay, Walters and the other members of the ‘ring,’ generally. “Old Noyes was crushed by the weight of the calamity which had befallen hit. QUAY’S PAPER REFUSED. “Butler never deviated from the path of duty, but it was a rugged path to fol- low. He felt under obligations for his election to the office of treasurer, and he would have liked to adjust the difficulty without exposure, but condone the mat. ter by accepting individual receipts or notes for the money of the people he must not, and from the beginning to the end he refused to do it. From what he said, they stormed and raved about his ears, vainly as it proved. “Blake Walters was drank and trucu- lent. He was a bright man and a good fellow at times, but a thirst for liquor overpowered him and placed him in the hands of stronger wills than his own. Finally the ‘ring’ became desperate over Butler’s refusal, and then the scene at the Lochiel Hotel occurred, at the time of Mr. Chris Magee’s visit, as described in the World. Finally the money was guaranteed or restored to the treasury through the aid of Senator Cameron,and Samuel Butler took the office. “There are many details of the trans- action which at present have escaped my memory,’ continued Col. Wicker- sham, ‘that bear on this case which ref- erence to memoranda would freshen, It was a trying experience for poor Butler.’ ‘What do you think of the candidacy for Quay’s man, Delamater ? “I cannot consistently vote for him in the light of my knowledge, but I am only a private citizen and my individual vote is of no consequence.’ “You know Senator Cameron well, do you not 2” “Yes, indeed, I do. He is ga manly, bighearted fellow, for whom I entertain good feeling. There is one thing you may rest absolutely assured of, e will never deny the part he played in settling the treasury deficiency, depend upon it.’ “What do you mean 2’ “I khow whereof Ispeak. He will never deny it, no matter how strong the pressure that is brought to bear on him. More than that I will say to no man.” —— Bad Female Habits. In all the large cities there are thous- to the habit of using pernicious drugs— the most common vice being the opium habit. Some women buy the crude gum and eat it regularly every day, while others buy laudanum and” drink it in quarter-ounce, half-ounce, and even ounce portions. Some delicate stomachs cannot take laudanum, and so paregoric is resorted to, and soothing syrups, that are put upon the market for the sooth- ing of babies, become the ruin of grown persons. And then there are the Dover powders and morphine pills, both of which act rapidly, especially the latter. The habit seems more a disease than s vice, for the whole nature of the victim undergoes a complete revolution, moral, mental and physical. ————— Lemon Pie.—One lemon, one cup sugar, three eggs, one cup of water, half tablespoonful cornstarch, one table.. spoonful flour. Cook over a kettle. Bake crust separate. Frost with the. whites of the eggs. ——— SPICED MoLAsskS CAKE.—One cup sugar, half-cup butter, stir ‘well to- gether ; three eggs, one cup molasses, oné cup sour cream, one teaspoonful and cinnamon, 2} cups flour. ands of women who give themselves up - soda, one teaspoonful cloves, nutmeg 2