am —. = ik at wen a jute BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. # —The thaw has consigned the “belly- bumper” to innvcuous desuetude. --When the mercury gets down to the neighborhood of zero a cheap coat makes a cold man. —The President’s last message con- tains twelve thousand words. A few commonplace ideas straggle through this wordy wilderness. —1It ought to dawn upon even the dull comprehension of this Bourbon Admin- istration that the people settled the Force Bill question at the polls. —The fact that the Republican House has already passed a Tobacco Rebate bill is evidence that in tits tariff legislation last session it bit off more than it could chew. - -Editor FIEDLER forgot to include the Barings of London among the bankers whom the Democrats involved in financial difficulty by carrying the lute elections. —-DELAMATER’s sudden change from a possible Governor to an actual bankrupt affords another illustration of the un- certainties of politics and the vicissi- tudes of finance. —The Cherokees have been offered $6,000,000 for their spare land, but they are holding out for $10,000,000. Short rations are not likely to force such well- heeled Redskins to go on the war path. —The author of ‘Silver Threads among the Gold’” married a widow in Wisconsin. last week. * He now stands a chance of having both thesil- ver and gold threads snatched from his toppiece, --Among the dissatisfied Indians is a chief who bears the suggestive name of “White Gut.”” Probably on account of the short rations furnished by the agents his entrails collapsed and became bleach- ed in consequence. —A President of the United States exerting his official influence to promote the passage of a Force Bill presents a political anachromsm. The period of GRANVELLE or of LAUD would have suited him better. —Even the contents of Santa Claus’s pack will not escape the grip of the Mc- Kinley tariff. The malevolent monster will insist upon crowding itself down the chimney along with the benevolent pa- tron of the Holidays. —-Secretary NoBLE says that the im- mense amount of money disbursed in the payment of pensions ‘blesses him that gives and him that takes.” Bat didn’t the pension attorneys gobble up too large a share of this beatific disburse- ment ? -—A Chicago millionaire named IN- GRAM has been amusing himself by beating his wite. Under the circum- stances the castigation of a millionaire at the whipping post would be a fitting addition to the sensations of the Windy City. —Inquiry into the causes which have converted peaceable Indians into hostiles discloses the fact that the Winnebago style of treating poor Lo, practiced by the government agents, has more to do with the difficulty than aboriginal cuss- edness. — From the circumstance that a He- brew, an African and an Arab were all three arrested the other day in Detroit on complaint of a Chinaman, one may judge of the conglomerate character which the American population will in time assume. —Senator PLuMB threatens to di- vert the course of legislation in the Se- nate from the Force Bill by interposing the Free Coinage Bill. It would thus appear that as a matter of change the Free Coinage Bill may accomplish more than one purpose. —-Governor BEAVER is represented as saying ‘that the present system of man- aging the state financial affairs is the best that can be devised.” Treasurer BoyEer’s bondsmen won’t thick so when called upon to make good the Jamison and Delamater losses. —TFor the erection of a monument to Prince Bismarck the German people have already raised 838,525 marks. This is in marked contrast to the illiberality of the American people who have failed to come up to that mark in the mater of the Grant monument. —Mrs. Ayer, widow of the noted American pillmaker of that nawe, the other day bought a magnificent resi- dence in Paris for which she paid $600,- 000. Can any one calculate the amount of scraping to which American bowels were subjected to furnish that large sum of money ? —The lively campaign which the two Irish factions are about to open in the interesting little island would be incom- plete without meetings at Kilkenny and Donnybrook, localities where in times past many a point of controversy was discussed with the blackthorn. An Irish campaign without the shillalah as a factor would be deficient in the train of argument most convincing to the Irish understanding. acm; c. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 35. The Delamater Failure. The failure of the Delamater bank at Meadville, last week, produced a sensation. Its coming so close upon the failure of the BArRkERs, the firm of Jamison & Co. and other banking es- tablishments, was a startling addition to the succession of collapses; but the circumstance of the recent Republican candidate for Governor being connected with it gave it additional interest. The firm consisted of G. W. DeraA- maTER and his father and brother. It had the reputation of being a solid one, the members having been reputed to be millionaires. But the misfortune which has overtaken them discloses a condition which was the inevitable re- sult of injudicious or, rather, reckless operations. It appears that G. W. DEeLAMATER invested $90,000 in Mo: FarLaNg's financial schemes in Phila- delphia, which resulted so disastrously in the earlier months of this year, branding with fraud the principal man- agers of the syndicate. The McFar- LANE failure, with the disclosure of rascality which attended it, occurred at the time when DELAMATER was being pushed for the nomination for Governor, and to protect his candidacy from the scandal which would have resulted from a connection with the McFarvaNe default, he paid the full amount of his liability, which required the large sum of $90,000. This appears to have been more than he could afford to lose, but, following it, he plunged into an expensive campaign for Gover- nor to which his personal means were largely contributed. His father, the head of the banking firm, is said to have put $100,000 into the fight, while candidate DELAMATER'S campaign ex- penses are set down at $50,000. Long before the nomination it is related of his tather that he said that the family could expend $200,000 in behalf of the son's candidacy and not feel it, and there is reason to believe that their campaign expefses nearly reached that amount. have felt it, and very seriously, too. Of course, they counted upon sac- cess, a delusion caused by the habitu- ally big Republican majority, which in this instance wasn't realized. If the young man had been elected Governor ence would have commanded, would have more than compensated the fami- ly for the inves‘ment of $200,000 in the campaign. An incident of the DELaMaTER fail- ure will be the loss to some one of $100,000 of the State funds deposited in the bank. State Treasurer Boyer says that this money was secured by a judgment bond from the firm, but if the firm is bankrapt the quality of the security is extremely dubious. In case of the DeLamaters' inability to repay the amount Mr. Boyer's security will be answerable. He had left $25,000 with the broken Jamison Company, which, followed so closely by the prob- able loss of $100,000 with the Dgra- MATERS, should sharply impress him with the danger of the vicious practice of giving speculative bankers the use of state money. The Delamater bank was also made the depository of Craw- ford county funds, $47,000 of which was on deposit at the time of the fail- ure, while the School Board, Sheriff and Prothonotary were also depositors. It will be remembered that Capt. Mox- ris, the Republican candidate for Treasurer of Crawford county whom DeraMaTer opposed and helped to de- feat, was made the object of his oppo- sition because he would not promisdé to. deposit the couuty money in the Dela- mater bank. We see in some of the papers expres- sions of sympathy for the brokeu banker and politician. Why this feel- ing should be entertained is not appar- ent to us, The object to which it 1s extended belongs to a class of financial operators whose way of doing business is not to be commended. Those who will suffer from his business methods are most to be pitied. And as the im- pairment of his financial standing was largely due to the money he diverted from his business to the corrupting of a state campaign, the swift retribution which followed may justly be regardea as a legitimate punishment for such a transgression. ——The Warcrmax will keep you booked on correct political topics. BELL) rename mete vo | t | | | the bank’s unrestricted use of the mon- ! ey of the State, which his official influ- % Y¥ re NTE. PA., DECEMBER, 12, 1890. NO. 49. oe 2 © w Political Party. i Wey : The meeting of representatives of the Farmers’ Alliance at Ocala, Florida, which concluded its business this week, terminated in the incipiency of a new political party. Their purpose, deter mined upon at this meeting, is to hold a National Convention in Cincinnati next February, which will formulate the principles and outline the objects of this new political organization, and ask for them the favorable counsidera- tion of the American people. All the farmer organizations and labor unions of the country have been invited to send delegates to this convention with the object of uniting elements that are dis- satisfied with existing political policies and organizations, and of forming a par- ty whose purposes will be more par- ticularly directed to the protection and promotion of agricultural and labor interests. Among the subjects which will be brought before this convention to be worked into the declaration of its in- tentions, will be “the emission of legal tenders to do the business of the coun- try ou a cash basis; " free and unlimit- ed coinage of silver dollars ; confisca- tion of land held by alien owners; con- trol of therailroads and all other means of transportation and communication, with a view to eventual government ownership; equal taxation “so as not to build up one class of interest at the expense of another,” and the limita- tion of revenues to the necessary ex- penses of government economically and honestly administered, This is certainly a comprehensive programme, but we fail to find in it the paternal project of government ware- houses in which the farmers may de- posit their surplus productions with the gnarauntee of payment from the public treasury equivalent to the value of such agricultural deposits, The financial part of the programme has the color of the old “greenback” doctrine ; and the unlimited coinage of But 1t appears that they | silver dollars supplements the cheap money idea of the party which whilom demanded an unlimited issue of paper money. In asking the government to assume the ownership of all the railroads and avenues of transportation and commu- nication we are afraid the new party would be asking Uncle Sam to take a burden upon his shoulders under which he would be liable to break down, as his constitution and the build of his political system were not designed for the bearing of such a load. In its demand for equal taxation “so as not to build up one class or interest at the expense of another,” and for the limitation of revenues to the necessary expenses of government economically and honestly administered, what could the new party ask more than has been demanded and practiced by the Demo- cratic party ever since its organization? Thesereally are the only practical points in the policy of the Alliance, which they have ample assurance of securing through the confirmed opposition of the Democracy to monopoly tariffs which favor the few at the expense of the many, and the Democratic hostility to taxation exacted beyond the require- ments of economical and honest gov- ernment expenditures. The attain- ment of these feasible objects may be accomplished by che Alliance helping the Democrats to bring them about. A new party, however, would not fur- nish that assistance. ——Senator EpMuNDs deceives him- self when he says that “it is impossi- ble for any one to know within twelve or possible twenty-four months wheth- er the recent tariff will produce an in- crease of prices.” The women knew it in less than two weeks after the tar- iff wentinto operation. It was brought to their attention by the fact that they had to pay more for the goods they bought. Itmay be said that the store keepers put up the prices without any cause attributable to the tariff. But that's the way a tariff operates. As: sure the producer or seller that he! is protected against competition and he is at once tempted to increase his prof- its by increasing his prices whether there is a substantial cause for it or not. ——Prof. Kocn calls his lymph “paratolidin.”’ Even so formidable a name will not discourage the consump- tive patient who wants to be cured, Parnell Deposed. PARNELL’s overthrow has been prac- tically effected. After a hard struggle, not much to his credit, to maintain his leadership of the Irish; nationalists, he was deposed by the aggion of a majori- ty of the Irish members of Parliament last Saturday. A meeting was held the proceedings of which were attended with much altercation and bitterness of feeling, but the majority were against the long recognized chief, for- ty-five members of the Nationalist par- ty withdrawing, a small minority re- maining with the discredited leader. His conduct at the meeting is said to have been unreasonable and violent, and his declared determination to ad- dress an appeal to the Irish people is not likely to repair his damaged lead- ership. Archbishop Wars demanded his removal from the head of the national movement. Mr. GrapstoNE declin- ed to co-operate with a leader whose moral reputation had been damaged. The Catholic clergy can not be expect- ed to condone such an offense as that which PARNELL has been guilty of, and GLADSTONE has expressed the belief that with such association Home Rule would be ruined. Without the Catho- lic hierarchy and without GLADSTONE what chance would there be for the success of the Irish cause? PARrNELL's resistance to being depos- ed-is not creditable to him. It savors too much of a selfish determination to maintain his leadership with reckless disregard to the injury that would be done the national movement by a lead- er who has lost the respect and confi- dence of his followers. ——State Treasurer Boyer takes a happy and contented view of the State's complication with the failures the Delamater bank. He says he, as Treasurer, can’t lose anything; he is sure that his bondsmen can’t lose any- tii and quite certain that the State can’t lose anything by the failure. May be it is entirely a false report that Deramarer has gone financially up the spout. This isthe only hypothesis upon which to explain the State Treas- urer’s confidence that nobody is going to lose anything. The Farmers and the Force Bill. If the meeting of the Farmers’ Al- liance at Ocala shall result in nothing more, it certainiy has done a good thing in bringing the sections of the country together and placing the stamp of condemnation on the politicians who since the war have served their parti- san ends by maintaining sectional ani- mosity. It is said thatthe patriotism and conscience of the country stand be- tween the plow-handles, and when the men who wield the plow get together from every part of the Union and evince the fraternal feelinggnatural to fellow countrymen, it is clearly evident that sectionalism has lost its power to divide the American people. The oc- cupation of the bloody-shirt waver is gone. In no act of the farmers who assemb- led at Ocala did they display their 7u- triotism and solicitude for the peace and weltare of the whole country more fully and pointedly than in their de- claration against the Force Bill. They could not fail to recognize in it a last but most dangerous effort of a sectional party to maintain disorder in the South- ern States by which they may be po tically benefited. It was the declara- tion of peaceful farmers against the reckless scheme of using the machin- ery of war to control the federal elec- tions. The adventurers at the head of the government have had but little re- spect for constitutional or prescriptive restraints in carrying out their revolu- tionary and arbitrary measures, but possibly they may give some heed to the farmers’ condemnation of the Force Bill. Death of Ex-Senator Allen. We have the painful duty of an- nouncing the death of ex-Senator Ros- ERT P. ALLEN, of Williamsport, which occurred at his home in that city last Saturday. He had been ill for some time, his ailment being Bright's dis- ease, which baffled the skill of the best physicians that could be procured, ter- minating his life at the age of 56. The Ex-Senator was one of the most prominent members of the Lycoming county bar and stood high in the com- munity-as a citizen as well as a lawyer. He was among the foremost Democrats of his section, occupying prominent and responsible posjtions in the party. In 1883 he was a member of the Demo- cratic State Executive Committee and a delegate in 1884 to the National Con- vention that nominated Grover CLEVE- LAND for President. In 1874 he was elected to the State Senate, and, being re-elected, served two terms. Inspeak- ing of his death a Williamsport paper feelingly and truthfully says: “In every walk of life Mr. Allen was the very soul of honor; he was never known to avoid doing a good deed, and now that he is gone there is no man who can say he ever sustained an inju- ry at Mr. Allen's hand, His loss is a public calamity, and Williamsport sin- cerely mourns for one whom she can ill afford to spare.” ——The financial failure of the late Republican candidate for Governor as- sumes larger proportions as the particu- lars are more fully learned. The lia- bilities of the broken bank with which he is connected have not yet been defi- nitely ascertained, but they are now thought to be about half a million, though one report places them as high as $800,000. The firm has issued a letter saying that depositors would be paid in full if time be given. Some comment was excited in Philadelphia by the unfortunate banker's obtaining money in that city og worthless checks after he knew that his failure was in- evitable, but it is to be hoped that this is susceptible of explanation which may clear him of the intention of com- mitting a fraud. The Handwriting on the Wall. Last March, it will be remembered, Mr. ANprEW CARNEGIE, the mest fit- ting representative of the tariff favored class, gave a gorgeous banquetin New York for ‘the entertainment of. the President, his cabinet and the delegiltes to the Pan-American conference. No- body could have gotten up such a spread in more lavish shape than could the man to whom money, wrung from highly taxed steel consumers, was no object. In making a speech in the Senate soon after this Belshazzar feast, Mr. Vor- nies alluded to it in the following terms: My earnest prayer and belief is that a hand- writing, beginning in the banquet halls of un- righteous monopolies, and spreading over the walls of all the farm houses and homes of labor in the United States, is now heralding the speedy overthrow ofa system of extortion and robbery more wicked and criminal in the sight of God and man than all the sins of Babylon when herrobes were most scarlet with iniquity. It scarcely can be believed that when the Indiana Senator indulged in this philippic he expected;that the hand writ- ing on the wall would be followed by such a swift response at the ballot box. Pension Plunder. Even Secretary NoBLE hasbeen mov- ed to express indignation at the amount of plunder which the pension agents are getting out of the pension system. He disapproves of the robbery by which the sharks manage to secure $150,000 to $375,000 per week out of the money which the government pays to its pensioners, in many cases for services that are entirely unnecessary. But wasn’t the ten dollar fee allowed by the disability bill, and is it to be supposed that the bill would have been passed if the pension agents hadn't been stimulated to work for it by their desire to get those ten dollar fees? A practical interference with the plunder of the pension sharks was ef- fected last week by a Democrat, Mr. Dockery, of Missourr, who offered an amendment to the pension appropria- tion bill providing that hereafter no fee shall be paid to any attorney for securing an increase of pension under the disability act. This is in the in- terest of the veterans who get the pen- gions; but the agents may have cause to complain that it isn’t according to the contract with the party leaders who agreed to give them a liberal share of the pension plunder in consideration of campaign services rendered. ——An exchange says that Home Rule is dead and PARNELL killed it. This is nonsense, A cause that de- pends upon the reputation of any one man for its existence isn’t fit to live. But the Home Rule cause isn't of that kind, spawls from the Keystone, —Berks county has 370 physicians. —A Lancaster man has been held for stealing a pile of manure. —Two Reading girls have been charged with safe robbery. —An umbrella thief, at Montrose has been sentenced to seven months. —Harrisburg hotels have all their rooms en- gaged for inauguration time. —A Womelsdorf man has made a wager to eat 500 oysters at one sitting. —Myerstown, Lebanon county, shipped twen = ty-two tons of turkeys to Easton. —No more Sunday coal trains will be run by the Reading Railroad Company. —Charles Willig, of Reading, was attacked a few days ago and robbed of his clothes. —The recent session of the Franklin county court cost the taxpayers just $50 an hour. —A ghost armed with a revolver is said to stop Tyrone persons at the pistols point. —There are twenty-five applications for Mercantile Appraiser in Lehigh county. —John Brooks, of Plymouth, has been made the victim of thieves for the four the time. —Three colored girls engaged in a street fight in the business part of Chambersburg. —A big bear escaped from its Italian keeper, and is now roam ing through Lancaster county. —Lackawann Judges hope to decrease di vorce applications by ordering public hear- ings. —Neither side scored a point at a recent football game at Laucaster, but a man was nearly killed. —A horse belonging to Edward Shug, of Easton, had one of its legskicked off by a vi- cious stable mule. —The band of Shafferstown, Lebanon coun ty, has a drum that was carried all through the Rebellion. —William Hanley, of Reading, for fifty-two years a workman on the Reading Railroad, is its veteran employe. —The 5000 new freight cars of the Reading Railroad will be built by the Pullman Com- pany at a cost of §2,500,000. —The death of Charles Cochran, of Eden- boro, was entirely due to overexertion in lift= ing a heavy weight on a wager. —Benjamin Erb,a Reading Railroad fireman, was killed while performing a voluntary duty to help out a crippled train crew. —The Equitable Engineering and Construc- tion Company of Philadelphia, with a capital of $50,000, was charterediat Harrisburg, — Lancaster's Coroner will make an effort to secure a dead-house. He says he is tired of using the railroad baggage-room as a morgue, —The Lehigh Valley Bible Society is en- gaged in the annual task of supplying every passenger car on the line with a new Bible, —Clergymen of Oxford made a round of the pool rooms of the the place recently, and the natives are wondering what will be the out- come. —The Merchants’ Protective Association, of Reading, has a delinquent list of 1490 names, representing an aggregate indebtedness of $17,000. —Richard Beers, a Justice of the Peace for South Canaan, Wayne county, dropped dead on Wednesday while testifying in Court at Honesdale. —A monument has been reared in Dauphin county by the living members of the Enders family on the spot where Captain Enders sets tled in 1764. 2 "A 1500 pound bell, which was being hoisted into the tower of the Penn school building at Williamsport, fell 75 feet to the ground, but was uninjured. —A Chester gunner has discovered a spot on the mountains above Harrisburg where pheas- ants sit on the railroad tracks and dust in the public roads. —The statement made by a Pheenixville man living along the Reading Railroad that he never bought any coal lead to his arrest for robbing coal cars. —The Reading members of the Patriotic Order Sons of America have pledged thems selves to see that all national holidays are properly observed. — Thomas Weikel, the 83-year-old Constable of Horsham township, missed a train a few days ago, and walked to Norristown in order to be present at Court. _—At the recent loan exhibition at Lange horne, Bucks county, one of the attractions was a Bible used by the signers of the Declar- ation of Independence. —Diphtheria is making deadly ravages av Bangor, Northampton county, at Stroudsburg, Monroe county, and at Allentown and other points in Lehigh county. — Frank Arner, a German tramp who was killed at Norristown recently, is said to have stepped deliberately in front of the engine and smiled as it approached him. —A skunk got under the stairway ot the First National Bank of Warren the other day, It is said that the money market was very strorg while the little animal tarried. —Loppes, the burglar who broke jail at Gets tysburg on Friday night, has been captured in his unele’s house by Deputy Sheriff Mecllhens py. The horse thieves are still at large. The Forestry Association of Lancaster are arranging to have meetings held in all the- small towns of the county, to arouse an inter». est in forestry on the part of the farmers. —Adam Miller, of Harrisburg, many years. ago proprietor of the stage lines between Har» risburg and Wiliamsport, and Lancaster and York, died suddenly at Lebanon, cn Wed: nesday, aged 8% years, —At Serancon a jury remained out a week because of the obstinacy of one man, andiak the end of that time a mutual arrangement was made between counsel to accept the ver. dict of the eleven men. —The officials of the Bethlehem Iron Com- pany say the 1000 men thrown out of work will be able to resume just as soon as eertain re- pairs are made, and that then the works will be kept busy all winter. —Jealousy prompted a Pittsburg girl to falsely swear a charge of larceny against hey rival in a love affair, but the true state of af- fairs was discovered before the innocent girl had been sent to prison. —Aaron Abbott, of Norristown, charged with feloniously assaulting a girl 11 in whose case the jury disagreed at the Octo- ber term of court, was tried a second time, and the jury acquitted him. —For nearly twenty years past a man who gave his name as Augustus Wanner, who pre- tended to be deaf and dumb, has obtained a living by begging from Berks county farmers, On Thursday night he was found drunk in the streets of Reading, and papers on his person showed his name to be John Moore. He was neither deaf nor dumb at the police station. a