DEMOCRATIC WATCHMAN. SUPPLEMENT. BELLEFONTE, PENNA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1891. PATTISON 10° THE SENATE The Subjects to Be Considered in the Extra. ordinary Session Explained at Leagth. STATE OFFICIALS TO BE REMOYED. CHARGES AND EVIDENCE AGAINST THEM GIVEN IN DETAIL, Millions Lost to Taxpayers by Neglect or Collusion—Conclusions Drawn From the Checkbook Stubs — Showing Up the Rebate Steal—After Mercantile Appraisers and Magistrates. Governor Pattison’s message to the sen- ate is given below in full. Itis upon this document that the senate is expected to inaugurate an investigation which will re- sult in request to the governor from two- thirds or more of the senators that he re- move from office Auditor General Mc- The message also asks the senate to consider the propriety of removing certain mag- Camant and State Treasurer Boyer. istrates and constables of Philadelphia, who are alleged to have been in a con- spiracy to defraud the commonwealth in connection with the collection of delin- quent mercantile taxes. The Addressto the Senate. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT OF THE COMMON-) WEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, HARRISBURG; Pa., October 13, 1891. To the Senate of the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania: GENTLEMEN: By virtue of the authority vested in me by the constitution, I have convened you in extraordinary session by proclamation for the transaction of executive business. Ia my judg- ment, conditions éxist in the commonwealth to warrant and require the exercise of this power. The constitution provides that all offi- cers elected by the people, other than some especially excepted, shall be removed by the governor for reasonabie cause, after due notlce and full hearing, on the address of two-thirds of the senate. Having convened you in order to give you an opportunity to take appropriate ac- tion, under your constitutional powers, with relation to the alleged misgonduct of the heads or two departments of the state government as well as of other elective officers, I deem it my duty to briefly review the course of events which have led to the call for this ssssion of the senate, and to refer to you such sources as I know of for urther information. On or shout May 21, 1891, John Bardsley, treas- urer of the city and county of Philadelphia, elected in 1888, and whose term would not have expired until the end of the present year, prac- tically retired from the active discharge of the duties of his office, and tendered his resignation of the same, to take effect May 30. It was soon disclosed that very large sums of money which he had from time to time collected for the com- monwealth of Pennsylvania, had not been paid over by him, and that no adequate security for the same existed or had ever been given to the state. Several Investigations on Foot. For the several months succeeding the retire- ment of John Bardsley from his office, various in- vestigation have been in progress with a view to ascertain the character and extent of his mal- feasance, the complicated transactions in which he was engaged, using the public moneys.for pri- vate speculation and other unlawful personal purposes; and to discover, if ‘possible, the con- nection and compl city of other persons, official or private, in his illegal and criminal acts. One of these investigations is being conducted by a committee of the councils of Philadelphia and another is in charge of experts, duly appointed and acting under the authority of the mayor of Philadelphia. Representatives of the treasury department of the United States have been en- gaged, for many weeks in examining the books of at least two of the national banks in which John Bardsley deposited city and state funds. A commission, assisted by expert accountants, of my own appointment, has been likewise en- gaged in investigating the accounts of John Bardsley with the banks and has been inquiring generally into the relations of the accounts of John Bardsley with the commonwealth and his transactions with its moneys. The pres- ent treasurer of Philadelphia city and county isalso actively and earnestly engaged in investigating the practices ‘and in uncovering the abuses which have prevailed in the former administrations of his office, especially touching its relations to the commonwealth. Criminal prosecutions were begun against John Bardsley by the district attorney of Phila- delphia, and terminated with his plea of guilty and sentence to fifteen years imprisonment in the Eastern penitentiary for the conversion of public moneys to his own use and for loaning them for interest. Bardsley Refused to Testify. In a preliminary hearing before two judges of the courts of Philadelphia, conducted by the dis- trict attorney of that county, John Bardsley was called as a witness to testify to his relations with the state officials, whose duty it was to require from him an accounting for and payment of the money collected by him for the commonwealth. He persistently and defiantly refused to testity, whereupon it was held by the court and hy the district attorney that no warrant for the arrest of the state officials could, under the circum- stances, properly issue. At that hearing, and subsequently, a large number of letters were produced, substantially admitted to be genuine, written to John Bards- ley by officers of the commonwealth, whose duty under the law it was to have required account- ing for and payment to the commonwealth of the public moneys coming into his hands. A joint committee of the two branches of the legislature, appointed January 19, 1891, author- ized to inquire into the administration of the of- fices of auditor general and state treasurer, and instructed to report to the executive at the” ear- liest time possible, has held sessions from time vo time since the adjournment of the legislature, and the evidence which it has taken will be ac- cessible to you, I assume. Hon. George 8. Graham, district attorney of Philadelphia county, and Hon. E. 8. Stuart, mayor of Philadelphia; Francis B. Reeves, chair- man of the commission appointed by the exec- utive of the commonwealth, and Mr. William Van Osten, chairman of the committee of coun- cils. have freely offered to furnish all the evidence in their possession bearing on the subject of the present inquiry. Bardsley’s Big Stealings. From these various sources of information it appears to be the undisputed fact, that during most of his official term John Bardsley was per- mitted to retain and to use a very large amount of money collected for and payable into the state treasury, for which he neither made, nor was ever called upon and required to make, the ac- count directed by law. For the collection of the moneys so retained by him no such legal steps were ever taken as are mandatory upon the state treasurer and auditor general; and he is shown to have embezzled them to the amount of more than a million and a quarter dollars. The memoranda and entries made in hisbooks at the time by John Bardsley, and when he had no apparent reason to expect public disclosure or adverse use of them, indicate that apart from the salary, fees and commissions of his office, to which he was entitled by law, he made as inter- est, dividends and bribes nearly $300,000. The greater part of this was paid to him for the use of the state moneys which he was allowed to re- tain in his possession, and for his exercise and abuse of powers in association with and under the control of the auditing and fiscal depart- ments of the state. The stubs of his check book and the entries upon his private memoranda, made at the time, show that he paid to a clerk of the auditor gen- eral’s office a one-half share of moneys crimi- nally received by him from the magistrates of Philadelphia in whose hands he placed the suits for the collection of delinquent mercantile taxes. The magistrates have testified that they paid John Bardsley these moneys to the amount of $350 each, in each year, he deducting it from their warrants on the state treasury, which the auditor general testifies he sent to John Bards- ley, and not to the persons in whose favor they | were drawn. Livsey’s Remarkable Absence. These same memoranda and stubs show that John Bardsley regularly received large sums of money from the publishers of newspapers, which obtained the advertisement of the mer- cantile appraisement lists, and were paid by the commonwealth for this advertising. The selec- tion of these newspapers was the duty and right of the auditor general and John Bardsley, act- ing cojointly. It is admitted by some of the newspaper publishers that they paid these moneys to a clerk in the office of Auditor Gen- eral Thomas McCamant; and the books of John Bardsley indicate that he divided the bribes thus received with Auditor General Thomas McCam- anj, or with some as yet undiscovered person of the same initials. The auditor general has de- nied under oath that he received any share of these moneys; and his clerk is dead. in the volume of testimony already taken and from the reports of the different authorities en- gaged in the work of investigation, other signifi- cant and serious matters appear. William Livsey, three times state treasurer, familiar with the office, and the cashier of State Treasurer Henry K. Boyer, has been absent from the state almost continuously since the first Bardsley exposures. He is reported as being be- yond the reach of all officials and investigating committees who have desired his presence for some months past. The state treasurer has testi- fied that he has no knowledge of Mr, Livsey’s whereabouts, and that since July last he has had no communication with or from him, except to receive and accept his resignation. Among the books and papers of John Bardsley appear evidence and memoranda made by him, to the effect that on certain days and dates he received large sums of money for interest from banks, depositories and individuals to whom he had loaned the funds of the state, which he was permitted to retain or which was transferred to him by the consent, permission, confederation and connivance of State Treasurer Henry K. Boyer, Cashier William Livsey and Auditor Gen- eral Thomas McCamant. Somebody Shared in the Spoils. These same memoranda and check books show payments by John Bardsley of money to William Livsey, cashier of the state treasury, and pre- sumably to Auditor General Thomas McCamant, from time to time during the period that he was permitted by these officials to retain the enor- mous amounts of state moneys which he then had in his hands. Regularly, for a considerable period, on or about the first of each month, after receiving in- terest, Bardsley appears to have drawn checks for a portion of it for the benefit of some person or persons whose names cannot be ascertained by reason of the mutilation of the stubs of his check books. With like regularity and at dates quickly following his receipts of interest, as will appear from the letters, of which admittedly cor- rect copies are accessible to you, Auditor General Thomas McCamant wrote, gracefully acknowl- edging favors received from John Bardsley. His statement as to the meaning of these letters will also be accessible to you. In like tecms of acknowledgments for favors sent him, at dates corresponding with John Bardsley’s checks, William Livsey wrote fre- quent letters to him. For example John Bardsley received interest monthly for the state moneys he was permitted by the auditor general and state treasurer to re- tain and use, instead of paying them into the state treasury, as directed by law. On April 1, 1840, John Bardsley drew a check, of which the stub is missing, for $500. On April 2, 1890, he sent a registerd letter to Auditor Gen- eral Thomas McCamant and another to Cashier William Livsey, of which they acknowledge the receipt. For Favors Received. On May 1, 1890, John Bardsley drew a similar check for $666. In a letter of May 3, 1890. Audi- tor General Thomas McCamant says: ‘‘Please accept my thanks for favors received th's morn- ing.” On June 2, 1890, John Bardsley drew a like check for $666. In a letter to him, dated June 4, 1890, Auditor General Thomas McCamant says: “Your favor of yesterday received and you will aceept my thanks.” On July 5, 1890, John Bardsley drew a check for some unknown person for §7¢0. On July 6, 1890, he received a letter in which Auditor Gen- eral Thomas McCamant says: ‘I have your fa- vor and you will please accept my thanks.” On August 5, 1880, John Bardsley’s check, of which the stub hag disappeared, was drawn for $700. Auditor General McCamant’s letter of the same date says: “You will please accept my {hanks for favors received.” On August b, 1890, Cashier William Livsey wrote: “Your compli- mentary note received, many thanks.” On September 4, 1890, John Bardsley drew a check, of which the stub has been torn from his check book, for $600. On September 5. 1890, Auditor General McCamant wrote him this ac- knowledgment: ‘I have your letters this morn- ing and you will please accept my thanks.” On October 2,1890, John Bardsley drew a check for $600. The letter to him from Auditor Gen- eral Thomas McCamant, under date of October 3, 1890, says: “I am in receipt of your favors yes- terday, and you will please accept my thanks for the information therein contained.” In a letter dated October 8, 1890, Cashier William Livsey says: “Compliments of yesterday duly received. Accept thanks for same.” On October 81,1890, John Bardsley drew a check for $600. William Livsey writes under date of November 5, 1890: “Am obliged for your kind note and compliments of 1st inst. The Contents Were Damaged. On November 29, 1890, John Bardsley drew a check for $600. On November 29, 1890, Auditor | General Thomas McCamant telegraphed to John Bardsley: “Letter received, damaged but I trust not very seriously; ascertain if you can from trustworthy sources what probabilities are and ‘ write me so that it will be received to-morrow morning. Confidential.” On November 30, 1890, Auditor General Thomas McCamant wrote to him: “Your letter received and I am much obliged for your kihdness.” On December 2, 1890, William Livsey wrote to John Bardsley: ‘“Yeur note was duly received. I hope Keystone will pull through.” On December 24, 1890, John Bardsley drew a check of the same kind for $600. On December 26, 1890, William Livsey wrote him: ‘Your kind note received.” On December 21, 1890, Thomas McCamant telegraphed to John Bardsley: *‘Can- not leave to-day, but will be at your office to- morrow at twelve o’clock m.” On December 24, 1889; Bardsley drew a check “to the order of myself” for W. L., $500; on the stub of this check—not torn out of the check book—appears the following: “William Livsey, for his kindness to me during the year.” In a letter from William Livsey to John Bardsley, dated December 31, 1889, he wrote: “I received your letter in Pittsburg on Saturday last when I arrived home. Thanks for your kindly consid- eration.” On February 28, 1891, a check was drawn by John Bards ey for $1,000, and upon the stub of it he wrote: “For L & M - January, February, $1,000.” ' On March 17, 1891, John Bardsley drew a chec for $375; and on the stub wrote: ‘Cash; half of $750 Mc. $375.” The Rebate Steal. On May 31, 1889, Auditor General McCamant approved the bills of the Philadelphia news- papers for advertising the mercantile appraise- ments for $40,722.60. On the same day, accord- ing to John Bardsley’s memoranda, he paid them and received $16,289.04 from the newspapers in which he and Auditor General Thomas McCam- ant had conjointly directed the mercantile ap- praifements to be advertised. Of these bribes John Bardsley’s books represent that he paid $2,000 to H. N. Graffen, a clerk in the auditor general's office, and $7,144.52 to Auditor General Thomas McCamant. The telegrams show an ap- pointment of Graffen wi h Bardsley on May 31, 1889. On June?2, 1890 Auditor General Thomas Mec- Camant approved the bill for the mercantile ad- vertising which he and John Bardsley had con- jointly directed to be published in four Phila- delphia newspapers. These bills aggregated $42,865.00 and John Bardsley’s memoranda in- dicate chat he got $17,076 from the publishers of the newspapers and paid $7,108.85 of it, in “large” bills, to some person unknown. The stub of the check on which the money was drawn is miss- ing. Itwaspa'd on June 11, 183. In a letter dated June 6, 1890, Auditor General Thomas Mc- Camant made an appointment to meet John Bardsley at the office of the latter at 6.30 p, m., on the 1ith of June. On July 6, 1890, Auditor General Thomas McCamant directed John Bards- ley to invest $10,000 in railroad bonds for him. On April 14, 1891, Auditor General Thomas McCamant approved the bills of the Philadelphia newspapers for advertising the mercantile ap- praisement lists. They aggregated $46,656. They were paid by John Bardsley out of the state funds in his hands on April 15, 1891; and on the same day he made a deposit in cash to his own account of $17,320; on April 18 he drew a check to the order of himself on this fund for $8,064.40 and made an entry on its’ stub: ‘‘Mc. myself in full, £8,064.40.” The Mercantile Appraisers’ Conspiracy. On January 1, 1891, referring to an inquiry of a then member of your body as to the amounts paid to the Philadelphia newspapers for this ad- vertising, Auditor Generali Thomas McCamant wrote to John Bardsley that he had withheld the information desired and advising Bardsley before going to first consult the newspapers that made the publication. It further appears that the five mercantile ap- praisers for Philadelphia, appointed by John Bardsley and Auditor General McCamant, have, during each of the years in which they have ex- ercised the duties of their office, returned for ad- vertisement and appraisement a large list of fictitious names, of persons not residing at the places designated, of persons from whom they had reason 10 know no taxes could be collected, persons whom they themselves had, from year to year, exempted, and persons against whom, again and again, the commonwealth, at enor- mous cost, had brought fruitless suits for collec- tion; so that out of a total appraisement of $529, 799 for retail merchants, brokers, auctioneers and eating houses, billiards, &c., for the years 1889 and 1890, the deductions for uncollectible taxes, half the cost of publishing thelist (the other half being charged to thelliquor licenses) and the costs paid to magistrates and constables in cases in which the commonwealth recovered nothing, amounted t» nearly $250,000, or about half the entire ass@ssment. Indeed, for the years 1885- 1890, inclusive, the costs of advertising the mer- cantile appraisement lists in Philadelphia alone were about $270,000, although the auditor general testified that no public advantage whatever re- sulted from this publication, and that it was an utter waste of public moneys. For the same years the costs in delinquent cases aggregated over $200,000, for which not a dollar was realized to the commonwealth; and the credits given for uncollectibie taxes footed up $425,000. The Auditor General's Admissiens. The auditor general in his testimony has ad- mitted, in substance, that no effort has ever been made to determine the accuracy or the honesty of these returns. These enormous bills of ex- penses have been promptly and unguestioningly paid out of the state treasury. Yet a searching investigation, begun and in progress under the present treasurer of Philadelphia city and county, has already disclosed wholesale padding of the lists for the purpose of defrauding the state, and endless ramifications of a corrupt system. Indubitable proof is furnished that the state has been defrauded out of its just revenues. The mercantile appraisement books of the past three years present evidence of this on their face; while those of the four preceding administrations have entirely disappeared from the office; and the auditor general and ex-city treasurers re- port utter ignorance of their whereabouts. So-called ‘‘suits” to recover delinquent mercéan- tile taxes appear to have been simply schemes to raid the state treasury. By contrast, under im- proved methods, instituted this year under di- rection of the treasurer of Philadelphia, thou- sands of dollars have already been saved by not engaging the state in costly and fruitless litiga- tion and by honestly pressing to recovery judg- ments against persons who have been heretofore permitted to evade their debts to the common- wealth. More has already been collected in this way for 1891 than in any previous year, though less than one-tenth of the cases have been heard. Inview of the relations which are admitted and shown to have existed Letween the ap- praisers, the magistrates, the city treasurer, and the auditor general’s department, thls condition of things becomes of significant import. Proceedings are now pending in the criminal courts agalnst the mercantile appraisers of Phila- delphia, charged with conspiracy to cheat and defraud the comruonwealth of Pennsylvania. In this connection careful inquiry should be made to ascertain whether there is ‘reasonable cause” for the removal of any of the magistrates or constables of Philadelphia because of faithless or dishonest conduct in the performance of their official duties. Embezzled Over a Million. é From the testimony given by Thomas Mc- Camant, auditor general, and by Henry K. Boyer, state treasurer, before the legislative in- vestigating committee, it appears further that of the moneys collected by John Bardsley for the commonwealth of Pennsylvania he has failed to pay over the following amounts: 4 ersonal property tax License taxes (1890).....000000 $622,013 11 289,232 96 Municipal loans tax (1890) POLAL vicseri-cnrresrnees i tierimueiatein $1,366,378 59 Of this total no portion has been secured to the commonwealth except $120,000, the entire amount of the license tax bond given by Bards- ley, leaving due to the state about a million and a quarter dollars. In addition to this sum there was paid to John Bardsley out of the state treas- ury, on December 30, 1890, $420,000 for the public schools of the city of Philadelphia, no portion of which was applied by him for that purpose, and for the whole amount of which the authorities of Philadelphia claim to have a legal and moral obligation against the commonwealth. In what proportion the losses of thee public moneys shall be divided between the city and the state is the subject of litigation not yet concluded. But, in any event, it appears that a total of $1,786, 378 59 of money belonging to the commonwealth of Pennsylvania has been misapplied, misappro- priated, embezzled and stolen. The subject of your inquiry should be whether or not the re- sponsibility of this loss lies with the fiscal and auditing officers of the state, or either of them, or of the subordinates for whose acts they are offi- cially responsible. Bardsley Kindly Treated. Fiom the testimony of Thomas McCamant, auditor general, given before the joint legislative investigating committee, and from an examina- tion of the books of the state department in the treasurer’s office of Philadelphia city and connty it appears that nearly ail the moneys collected for the commonwealth on account of personal property tax are received by the city and county treasurer, aml were in particular received by John Bardsley before the first of August in each year. The act of June 1, 1889, (p. 1., 427), under which these taxes are levied, prescribed that the several counties and cities collecting them ‘on the first Monday of September shall pay into the ‘state treasury all such sum or sums of money as may then have been collected, and shall on the second Monday of November immediately ‘fol- lowing, in each year, complete and pay into the said state treasury the wholeamount remaining unpaid, anc fn default thereof it shall be the duty of the auditor general to add ten per cent. penalty to each county or city on all taxes re- maining unpaid on the second Monday of No- vember of each year.” Of the moneys thus col- lected for the personal property tax of 1839 by John Bardsley, (the commonwealth’s share, amounting to $530,044.27), only $200,000 were paid in before the second Monday of November. The sum of $124,500 was paid in January, 1890, and the balance, $170,895, was retained by John Bards- ley for his own personal use until November 28, 1890, more than a year after-the same was due and payable to the state, and several months af- ter the collections for the ensuing year were in his hands. This money of the commonwealth was allowed to remain in his possession and un- der his control, with the knowledge, consent and permission of the auditor general and state treas- urer. No settlement of the same was ever trans- mitted to the attorney general for collection, no penalties nor interest were charged against John Bardsley and no commissions were abated by reason of his default. Holding Back Taxes. Of the taxes collected for 1890, amounting to $785,753.27, no portion was paid on the first Mon- day of September, nor on the second Monday of November following. On December 31, 1890, $1£0,000 was remitted to the commonwealth by John Bardsley, but on the same day this was re- turned to him by the fiscal and auditing officers of the stat>. On January 13, 1891, it was again paid into the state treasury by Bardsley, and af- ter that t'me no portion of the personal property taxes collected for 1890 were paid into the state treasury, and $632,012.11 of public moneys have on this account been embezzled, stolen and lost. Among the papers of John Bardsley is found a letter from the state treasurer, Henrv K. Boyer, dated Harrisburg, December 22, 1890, in which that official says: “I find I can get along without any money this month from you,’” Bardsley hav- ing in his hands at that time, of state moneys, $1,456,758.06. nearly all of which had been col- lected by him prior to August 1, 1890, and most of which had been embezzled, stolen and lost. Ina letter dated November 24, 1890, Auditor General Thomas McCamant advises John Bardsley to “al- low the city share of the 1890 tax’’ to remain in his hands until December. \ From the beginning of the year 1891 until he quit his office, John Bardsley collected for the commonwealth, of personal property taxes, $289,- 232 96, no part of which was paid by him into the state treasury, and most of which has been em- bezzled, stolen and lost. Of the license moneys collected by Bardsley for the commonwealth in 1889, amounting to $572,- 339.36, most of which was collected before July 1, 1889, he was permitted to retain in his possession and for his own private use for more than a year, $237.078.48, for which no settlement against him was ever transmitted to the attorney general for collection, no interest or penalties were imposed upon him and there was no abatement of his commission for his default. The Commonwealth’s Slim Security. Of the $627,604.18 collected by him on the same account for the year 1890, most of which was paid to him before June 1, 1830, he was permitted by the fiscal and auditing authorities to retain the whole amount in his hands until February 27, 1891, when he made a payment of $100,000 and on March 183, 1891, of $160,000, leaving a balance of $367,604.18 of the commonwealth’s money, for all of which he was indebted to it at the time of his imprisonment; and for no part of which, ex- cept by the $120,000 bond, is the commonwealth secured. During somuch of the year 1891 as John Bards- ley was in the exercise of the duties of the office of city treasurer, of the moneys he collected for licenses, he claims a credit of the greater part for expenses and fees of mercantile appraisements. For the tax on municipal loans, payable from the city to the state, John Bardsley received from the city of Philadelphia, on June 26, 1889, $40,680.49), and on December 30, 1889, $39,524.77, making a total of $80,108.17 which he was per- mitted to retain in his own hands and for hisown personal use until September 30, 1890, when it was paid over. On June 6, 1890, he received from the city of Philadelphia, for like purposes, $47,444.88, and on December 5, 1390, he received $43,167.75, making a total of $90,612.63, all of which he was allowed to retain for his own personal use, all of which he embezzled, and no portion of which was ever paid into the state treasury. In all the foregoing instances it appears from the testimony of Messrs. Boyer and McCamant that neither of them made any attempt to en- force any of the provisions of ths act of May 7, 1889, to which, as follows, I now direct your par- ticular attention: 8 A Law that Was Not Enforced. An act providing for quarterly returns and pay- ments by county and city officers of moneys received by them for the use of the commonwealth. Section 1. Be it enacted, &c., That on the first Monday of July next, and quarterly the eafter, it shall be the duty of each county and city offi- cer torender to the auditor general and state treasurer, under oath or affirmation, quarterly returns of all moneys received for the use of the commonwealth, designating under proper hea !s the sources from which said moneys were re- ceived, and to pay the said moneys into the state treasury. Section 2. Any officer who shall refuse or ne- glect for the period of thirty days after the same shall become due, to make any return or pay- ment as required by the preceding section of this act, shall forfeit his fees and commissions on the whole amount of money collected during the quarter, and shall be subject to a penalty of ten per centum, which shall be added to the amouut of the tax found due. Section 3. The state treasurer and auditor gen- eral, or either of them, or any agent appointed by them or either of them, are hereby author- ized to examine the books and accounts of any county or city officer who shall refuse or neglect to make any return required by the first section of this act, and from information obtained from such examination the auditor general and state treasurer shall settle an account against such of- ficer, in the usual manner for the settlement of public accounts, and in the settlement of such accountsjand not to exceed fifty per centum, to the amount of the tax to provide for any losses which might otherwise result to the common- wealth, from neglect or refusal of the said officer to furnish the return. The State’s Safeguard. Section 4. If the amount of any account set- tled in accordance with the preceding section of this act shall not be paid into the sate treasury within fifteen days from the date of said ac- count then the same shall be placed in the hands of the attorney general for collection and shall bear interest from fifteen days after date of set- tlement, at the rate of twelve per centum per annum, and if the auditor general and state treasurer, or either of them, shall deem it con- ducive to the public interest to proceed imme- diately upon said account against the sureties of said officer, they shall so instruct the attorney general, who shall proceed in accordance with such direction received from them or either of them. » Section 5. All acts or parts of acts inconsistent herewith, or which are substantially re-enacted hereby, shall be, and the same are hereby re- pealed, saving, preserving and excepting unto the commonwealth the right to collect any taxes accrued or accruing under said repealed acts or parts of acts. In his testimony before the legislative com- mittee State Treasurer Henry K. Boyer admitted that he understood this to be the law, and that quarlerly returns and settlements ought to be made. Auditor General Thomas McCamant tes- tified that the law was impracticable, but con- ceded that under John Bardsley’s successor, the present treasurer of Philadelphia, the law has been st ictly complied with, more than a million dollars collected ince John Bardsley’s resigna- tion having already been paid into the state treasury in regular monthiy payments, Bardsley’s Little Pull. Thomas McCamant, auditor general of Penn- sylvania, testified upon the same occasion that on December 30, 1890, at the instance of John Bardsley, he drew his warrant on the state treas- urer for $150,000 on. account of Philadelphia county’s share in the personal property tax of 1890, though at that time no portion of the said tax, except $150 000, which seems to have been simultaneously paid out of the state treasury, had been paid to or received by the common- wealth. Under the sixteenth section of the act of June 1, 1889, it is prescribed that the one third of the personal property tax which is collected and paid into the state treasury shall be re- turned by the state treasurer to the connty pay- ing it, and it has been testified that the board of revenue commissioners decided that under this act the several counties of the commonwealth were required to pay into the &ate treasury the entire amount of the personal property tax and were not entitled to receive any portion of it until after the whole amount had been paid in. Mr. McCamant, auditor general, testified that, at the time he drew and remitted the warrant for the before mentioned $150,000 to John Bardsley, there was then owing from him to the common- wealth $632,013.11 for tax on personal property, and $627.604.18 on account of licenses, a total of $1,259,677.29, all of which facts appear upon the books of the auditing and fiscal departments of the commonwealth. At the same session of the legislative investi- gating committee it was admitted by Henry K. Boyer, state treasurer, and it appears by the records of the auditor general’, state treasurer’s and school departments—that on December 30, 1890, in accordance with the agreement and con- federation of himself and the cashier of his office, William Livsey, Without Any Solicitation on the part of the municipal or school authori- ties of Philadelphia, or of any one connected with the school department of the state, he instructed and procured the superintendent of public in- struction to draw warrants on the state treas- urer on account of the schools appropriation for Philadelphia county, amounting to $420,000; that he had these warrants drawn five months in ad- vance of the ending of the school year, seven before the warrants of any one of the other twenty-three hundred school districts were drawn, for the express purpose of reducing the balance of money in the general fund below the limit of $1,550,000, and in order to evade the operation of the law which required him, on the first day of January, 1891, to apply all jsums in the general fund exceeding that amount to the sinking fund for investment in interest-bear- ing securities. He further testified that he carried these war- rants himself to Philadelphia and delivered them to John Bardsley; before he lett Harrisburg, however, he charged them up as cash paid out of the state treasury before January 1, 1891, in order to prevent the money from being paid into the sinking fund. John Bardsley, in his statement in court, testified that he received the warrants on January 8 or 4. It thus appears that State Treasurer Boyer, himself a commissioner of the sinking fund, sworn to obey and charged with the execution of the law regulating the sinking fund, deliberately, and for the express purpose of defeating the law, diverted $420,006 into the hands of John Bardsley. < He further testified that when William Livsey, cashier of the treasury, wrote to John Bardsley, under date of December 23, 1830, that this was done to reduce the general fund, and under date of December 29, that ‘the warrants must be charged not later than the thirty-first; also checks drawn to get our account down;” that such letters were written to John Bardsley by the authority of and in pursuance of an agree- ment made between Henry K. Boyer, state treas- urer, and his cashier, William Livsey, to evade and defeat the operations of the law regulating the management of the state funds. Never Reached its Destination. H also appears that no portion of this $420,000, thus improperly and unlawfully paid to John Bardsley by the state treasurer, was ever paid into the school fund of the city of Philadelphia; but that the whole of it has been stolen and lost; and that no portion of this loss would have been incurred had the warrant been drawn at the regular time, in accordance with law, and at the same date that the school appropriation became effective for the other districts of the state. I submit this summary of the facts touching the administration of these two departments, admitted and testified to by. their chief officers before a joint committee of the legislature, in or- der that the senate may determine the action ap- propriate in the premises. I regret the necessity which has arisen to sum- mon you from your homes and accustomed avo- cations to this extraordinary session. I have awaited the resort to and the exhaustion of the processes of the criminal laws. Their frustra- tion has only intensified the righteous demand of the people that their servants, sworn to obey and enforce the laws and to protect and defend the interests of the commonwealth, shall answer for neglect of duty or complicity in crime. 1he responsibility of determining whether reason- able cause exists for the removal of them rests with you. The public expects that it will be met and discharged without regard to partisan ad- vantange or detriment, and with a single con- cern for the good name and honor eof the com- monwealth. Iinvoke for your session that de- liberation of counsel, joined with prompt dis- patch of public business which every require- ment of the occasion demands. ROBERT E. PATTISON. CROPS IN THIS STATE. AN AVERAGE OF SEVENTEEN AND ONE- HALF BUSHELS OF WHEAT PER ACRE. Impossible to Estimate the Yield of Po- tatoes in Some Localities—Secretary Edge’s Latest Bulletin, The reports received by the state board of agriculture, since the threshing of the wheat crop was commenced, warrant Sec- retary Edge in increasing his estimate of the yieid slightly. The final crop reports of the board indicate that the wheat crop of 1891 will amount to 22,500,000 bushels from 1,300,000 acres, or at the average rate of seventeen and a half bushels per acre. In Chester, Lancaster and other southeast- ern counties crops of over thirty-five bushels per acre have been reported. Of this crop fully 2,500,000 was used for seed, leaving 20,000,000 for home use and for sale. At present prices itis safe to esti- mate the money value of the crop at $22,- 500,000. This is the largest crop for a- number of years and may be compared with that of 1872 which was estimated at 11,500,000 bushels. The board estimates the oats crop of the pust year at 31,500,000 bushels from 1,200,- 000 acres, or at the rate of an average yield of 20} bushels per acre. The yield of potatoes is estimated at 13,- 250,000 bushels from 142,000 acres; inasmuch as this crop is still rott ng quite badly in some localities it is impossible to even es- timate the yield in marketable potatoes. The hay crop of 1891 is estimated at 2,- 400,000 tons cut from 2,550,000 acres or at the average rate of 1880 pounds per acre. The yield was shortened by the fact that in the southeastern part of the state the wheat stubble of the crop of 1890 did not show a good stand of clover; this falling off was to some extent balanced by an un- usual cut of natural grass in the northern and northeastern counties of the state. The yield of corn, based upon the re- ports which have already reached the board warrant an estimate of 44,000,000 bushels from 1,325,000 acres, or at the average rate of 32.2 bushels per acre. The southern and southeastern counties, whic a are necessarily on account of location the corn growing districs of the state, report much larger yields, but the average of the state is materially reduced by the yields in the northern tier, where nothing but small eared, short season varieties can be profitably planted. Secretary Edge estimates that if these crops were at once turned into cash they would yield the farmers of the state not less than $78,000,000. A large proportion of all of them must be used for food for stock and the production of butter, milk, mutton, pork and beef, and the price which they will actually net the farmer will altogether depend upon the price which they receive for these products. The reports of the board indicate that live stock will generally go into Winter quar- ters in more than the average condition, and that there is less than the usual amount of disease among farm inimals. No great losses have been experienced from contagious diseases, and the out- breaks of Texan or Southern fever have been less numerous than usual. aera Vsited the Bethlehem Iron Company. BETHLEHEM, Oct. 14.—Secretary of the Navy Tracy and Commodore Folger, of the bureau of ordnance, made an official visit to the ordnance department of the Bethlehem iron company to-day. They witnessed the forging of a thirteen-inch cannon and a large armor plate by the 125 ton steam hammer, and the making of a 180 ton casting, the largest ever made in this country. The visitors expressed themselves highly gratified at the pro- gress being made in the fulfillment of the government contract.