Ivy P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. Tis «trang how the laws are disobeyed (?) In this land witn statesmen rife Yet’s a dull day with an Insurance man When he doesn’t take a life. —The third Triumvirate—RHONE, THOMAS, CSPARREN (?) (?) — If vou are on the fence, be sure and slide dowa on the WRIGHT side. --Tt should’nt be considered immo- ~—— dest to present a truth as a bare fact. — A dog has the better of the dude in this ; be is never bothered with knees in his pants. — Tf there is no rest for the wicked, what a tired set republican politicians must be. "fo think of it, a little fifth rate power making Chile sauce out of Uncle SAM'S marines. —The trouble with the man who looses his temper is that he is always sure of finding it again. —The trees are exposing their naked limbs and the corn is very much shocked, in consequence, —4“The longest way round is the shortest way home’ —Illustrated in the circuit LIVsSEY 1s making. —The refrain of the band (d)itti(e)s is heard everv where in Mexico now. New music, and very catchy. ..-Men who seemingly cut a big fig- ure before an election, often turn out to be mere cyphers after it 1s over. —Eight years Mrs. Fitzsimmons will sit in the penitentiary and meditate whether she took F1rz for better or for worse, —Poor old Ireland ! The only thing that keeps her from sinking completely, now since her leader is gone, is her great big Cork. —The wages of sin is not always death, In this state, ifa man is a re- publican, they pay him for that work with a fat office. —4The Campbells are coming’ is the favorite tune in Ohio, and East Liver- pool has become quite an oasis in the Protectionists’ desert. -~We are scarely out of summer months as yet, but all the same the ad- ministration at Washington is having an exceedingly Chile time of it. —Next Tuesday will be election day, and of course you'll join the throng, that will poke its ballots in the box, for a WRIGHT that can’t be wrong. —4“PATTISON shot,” VicTORIA Dead” and “Ohio’s Disgrace’ were startling heud lines in Saturday’s papers, yet the queen is not a corpse, BoB is not a mur- derer and Ohio will redeem herself by electing CAMPBELL. —The Boston Conservatory of Music will shortly honor a leading republican of that city, by placing a life sized por- trait of him in stained glass, in one of 1ts windows. We presume it does this be- cause he is the best representative of a lyre that can be found. —The new society fad is the ‘‘Jubi- lee” waltz. It would make an elegant step for McCAMANT and Boyer to trip out of office on, but the name is hardly as appropriate to their condition of minds as it will be the good people of the State who see them go. —And now since spook princess Ann Odelia Dis de Bar has gone crazy, over the thrills of joy experienced while kiss- ing a Chicago editor, quack doctors and scientists are publishing columns ahout the direful results of kissing. Ye gods, what a sweet thing he must have been. —There will be no difference between the n.erchant and the bond holder after the republicans repeal the mercantile tax as they now promise to do, if success- ful. Neither of these classes will be re- quired to pay any tax then. This work will be left exclusively to tarmers and workingmen. —Tt is said that the young Emperor of Germany has been down at the mouth ever since he realized that he could not raise whiskers. It seemsto have been a case of down on the chin "dio. | Dear, oh dear! how blue must be SATE wri Spawls from the Keystone. —Bishop O'Hara, of Scranton, is again ill. —Harrisburg Asylum Trustees are officially exonerated. —Hessian flies have made Berks county's new wheat fly. —The McDonald oil-field wells are produc. ing 70,000 barrels per day. —West Fountain Hill, with 2000 people, will be annexed to South Bethlehem. b\ > 7 I yw Ve —A dog poisoner has taken the lives of 0 many valuable canines at East Bangor. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. 7 | —Lancaster’s Fencibles expect. to disband as they cannot get into the National Guard. VOL. 36. —The Jeannette Textile Manufaciuring Company was chartered with $100,000 capital. NO. 42. BELLEFONTE, PA., OCTOBER 30, 1891. | Defeat the Ring and Learn the Condi- tion of Your Public Offices. If any republican paper or any re- publican speaker has given any sub- stantial reason, why any honest voter should cast his ballot to continue in the control of the State ring, the offices of Auditior General and State Treasur- er, we have failed to see them. We have heard much of next fall's cam- paign, of the tariff, of Brave jand all manner of subjects foreign to the ques- tion the people are expected to decide, on Tuesday next, but during the entire fall we have not read a single article or heard a single speaker who had the gall to say that under the control of the ring, that seeks a prolongation of its rotten rule, either of these offices had been honestly conducted or that any change would be made, in their management, if GREGG and MORRISON were successful. It is a notorious fact that these two offices have been the strong hold of the State ring for years back. No man to-day knows the condition they are in. No man knows how much the people have been robbed, nor can any one tell the extent of profligacy, neglect, favor- itism and corruption that has charac- terized their management for years past. Itis thirteen years since any one, oth- er than a tool of the State ring, has had a sight at the books and settlements in the Auditor General's office, and it is Treasury was sezn or counted by per- sons not under the control or subser- vient to the dictations of the same cor. rupt power, The losses and robberies that have come ‘0 light since the fail- ure of the the Keystone bank, are all cluded in a period of time extending back less than eighteen months. How much of the same kind of outrageous management and dowaright corruption has been covered up for the years prior to that, no man knows nor will any one ever ascertain, if the same ring is to be management continued. To secure a change in these two im- portant offices that will be of any ad- vantage to the tax payer it must be a radical change, not only in men but in methods and management as well. To put out McCamant and Boyer and put in GrEce and Morris N, while it would be a change of mean it would change neither the methods nor man- agement in these offi ses, for the same powers that controtle{ the actions of the two officials whose rule has ty and the State, would control the uc- tion of these new officials and mutters would go on just as they have been go- ing on for years. They are the crea- tures of Quay and his crowd, just as McCamant and Boyer have been. To this same ring power they are in’ debted for their their elections, i successful, and when installed into office their duty will be to obey the dictations of the ring that made them, and allow the people's in- terest to care for itself, Do the tax-payers want to know the condition of affairs in the two offices through the methods of which they now know that daring the past twelve months they lost or were robbed of over one and a half million of dollars ? Do they want a change in the man- agement, of these offices, that will se- cure hcnest administration and a faith- ful performance of public duties in the interest of the people? If they do the dutch winds cineca they can no | longer sigh throngh his imperial spront- lets. —DArwiN, the Lycoming county horse thief, claims to be a relative of the great naturalist and his actions in Wil- liamsport seem to. .snbstantiate the the evolution theory of the iliustrions englishman, From the monkey he hac a A ! made of hunself it 5 evident thet the cyele was not completed in his cuse, however. —The Right Honorable JAMES MiL- LIKEN is now writing his free coinage articles under the nom-de-plume “Poor Ricaarp 7 Colonel are’nt you depart- there is but one way to accomplish i, z - » 'e y and ‘TiTat by defeating the men who are the canaidales ia. she it elected will do the bidding, ‘of the same ring that committed the wrongs of which the people sof justly com- plain, | ticket, i8 a vote to endorse republican BarpsLevisM wherever it curses the commonwealth. NT C—O —{f Great and Morrisox should : be elected it will be taken as an indica- tion that the people of the State want ‘the saine method, now in vogue in the ing a little from your wsthetic english | habits in assuming a title made famous by the poor Yankee lad who en‘ered Boston with a loaf of bread under his arm and with a red stocking tied about ‘ple’s money. his neck ? Auditor General's and State Treasurer's office, continued. It will be an en- dorsement of McCayMant and Bover's management of these important posi tions, and a plain way of saying they did po wrong in allowing Barpsrey to steal a million and a half of the peo. fourteen years since the money in the | kept in power and the same method of brought open disgrace upon their par nominations and for | Intornot ovo IIOTESE QRH “Nothing New.” The Republican press of the State is seemingly rejoiced over the fact that so far the Senate investigation has ‘dis covered nothing ues.” In place of gloating because no new disgrace has been unearthed, it should blush for shame, that every charge made by Governor Pattison has been fuliy, and plainly, and undeniably proven, as against its office holders. It requires no “new discovery,” to show the people how the laws have been disregarded, the tax-payer robbed, and how profligacy, carelessness and corruption have run riot in the state offices under the rule of the Republi can State ring. It was to give the the accusations were talse, rather than the Senate ta find new developments, that it was called in extraordinary session. Simply a verification of every charge named in the proclamation of the gov- ernor and of very allegation set forth in his message to the Senate. It has been shown that every law regulating the duties of the State Treasurer has been disregarded ! That every act of the Legislature protecting the people’s money has been violated ! That to assist a member of the Re- publican State ring—JoHN BARDSLEY —out of financial difficalties, four hun- dred and twenty thousand dollars of the people's money, were turned over to him without warraut of law ! That this amount of money was lost to the people ot the State, through a conspiracy in wuich the Republican State Treasurer, the Republican school department aud tae Republican city Treasurer of Pailadeiphia, were the principals! That the bools in the State Treasury suo wv that warrants were charged, as being paid, betore taey were preseaied! That the cushier of the [reasary, WiLnian Livsey aceepted bribe atier bribe tor the use of public moneys, and fled to Canada to escape coavieion for these offenses, and that the State Treasurer shut his eyes to Livsey'’s crimes, and neither censared nor remov- el him, nor has he made any effort to have him returned tor trial and pun- ishment ! With these facts proven by the affi davit of the Treasurer himselt; with this condition of atfairs—rotten, cor- rupt and disgraceful as it is—admitted even by the accused; we ask, in the name of all that is honest, or just, or decent, what ‘new discoveries’ are needed to show the people the necessity ot a change? “Straining at a Gnat and Swallowing a Camel,” Ia this ealightened age, when news- papers have become the educators of the people, and have proven themselves almost as much of an essentiality as the light of day, is 1t possible that we have in this broad land a society, how- ever intelligent its members and noble its aims, which should endeavor to suppress the Sunday issues ot the news- paper? Yes, such 18 the case! In Pittsburg the Sabbatarian society has inangurated an attack upoa the Sun- day publications and proposes arrest- ing all newspaper men found at work oun the Sabbath. If the plan is sue- cessful the Smoky city will have no Sunday, and consequently no Monday morning papers, and its citizens will sus be cut off from the doings of the whole world for two days each week. , not presume to say that Sun- day typesetting is not as much a trans gression of the labor law as Sanday dry goods or grocery selling would be, vet we cannot see how the good people of that cily propose getting over the inconsistency they will be practicing when they close the printing office right in the niidst of the greatdin and smoke of their matmoth iron and glass fac- To which they know too well laries. iat a Suaday banking of the furnaces would mean the death blow. Not until the doors of every business Not until the d ¢ b place in the land are closed should the newapaper be stopped, and then we fear there would need be no organized effort to suppress it, for having no mis- sion to fulfill the weary printer would glory in one day’s reat. When yon vote on Tuesday next lon’t forget to vote “for a Constitution: al Convention,” accused an opportunity to show that Aad what has been shown ? | lature. Promising to Pile More Taxes on the Farmer. =~, While a few professed friends of the farmer, who have been bought by the Republican ring to betray the agn- cultural interests of the State, are send- ing out appeals in the interest ot the Republican ring ticket; the leaders of that party are quietly trying to secure the vote and influence of the merchants of the State, by promising a repeal of all mercantile taxes. On Monday morning last, every merchaat in the county received the following letter, in which was enclosed two Republican State tickets. IL was sent them from the Republican state committee rooms, although disguised as an appeal from an unknown organization called the “Dealer’s Protective Association,” and is as tollows : Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 24, 1891. DEAR SIR: The Mercantile Tax is unequal and vexa- tious. It costs the State for its collection one half the sum realized. The State does not need the revenue derived from this source. Although it does not amount to much in the aggregate, this tax is obnoxious and burden- some to the dealer—small and large. It ought to be abolished. How can thisbe done? Only by the Legis- How do the two parties stand on the | questicn of a repeal of this annoying tax ? The ‘of the county—gzoods wealth to the amount of millions of | kind levied upon this wealth—no road; | come to believe these taxes, paid into ‘the Treasury by the people of the thirteenth plank of the Republican platform adopted at Harrisburg, August 19, 1891, pledges that party to the abolition of th tax, as follows : “We arein favor of the prompt repeal by the Legislature of all Mercantile Taxes levied by the State.” On the other hand the Democratic party, at the State Convention of September 3,1891, in the twentieth plank of the platform then adopted, pledges itself to the continuance of these taxes, as follows: “We oppose the repeal of the Mercantile Taxes, and insist that they shall be fairly and equit ably laid, honestly collected, and that the money arising from them shall be paid into the State Treasury.” As a purely business matter, every dealer in the Commonwealth should vote and use his influence for the party which pledges itself to do away with this offensive and iniquitous tax. IF THE REPUBLICANS WIN, IT WILL BE ABOLISHED. IF THE DEMOCRATS WIN, I? WLLL NOT BE. By order of the EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. The total amount of Mercantile Tax paid by the merchants of this county for the past year was $2,646.75. This went into the State Treasury. Itisthe entire tax that is assessed against all the wealth represented in any and all kind of goods for sale by the merchants representing dollars. There is no other tax of any no school ; no poor; no borough. Of ‘all the taxes levied upon the farmer and workingman, none ure charged up “r{fTerests, by voting against the party | used as they see proper and for such . —Unification of home missions was resolved : ; u; by the Ref i Ingrden 7° Read the above letief care: pon by th eformed Synod at Harrisburg. y —At the car shops in Reading a new wreck fully, and go and vote for YOUR own | rear-has-beenbuitt-containing sleeping bunks. --On the railroad near Driftwood, Thomas McCaffrey, woodsman, was beheaded by a train. that would saddle additional taxation upon you, to benefit the merchants. Are You Ready ?' — Pennsylvania National Guard rifle prac” tice has been extended from October 31 to Nov. 14. —Rival sets of officials are fighting for thes possession of the Russian Hebrew Church in: Lancaster. —Fifty men began work at the Lancaster watch factory yesterday, and fifty will be add ed to-morrow. —A lamp exploded and fatally burned Miss: Amelia Yoder, while she was ironing clothes: at East Sunbury. —“The City and the Forest” was Dr. John B. Democrats, you have bat three days from the time this issue of the WaTch- MAN goes out, in which to finish up the work for election day. Are you pre- pared for that important event? To many it may seem that with no county ticket in the field, and but two State offices to fill, the matter of going out to vote and of getting others to go out Kieffer's theme in an Arbor day speech at. and vote, is of little concern. We Lancaster yesterday. know there has been no brass band | — Whil e assisting in the shifting of his own. campaign, no paccels and fire works no ‘rein near Pottstows, Frank W. Leader was. run down and killed. fuss, but all the same, the necessity for Yo toll i'l —The State College Cadet Battalion Mong covery man, bis 10 Dejieves i) ges 80" day made a practice march over the first day's ernment, being at the polls, is just as battle field at Gettysburg. imperative and important, as if the —Aged Robert Lawrenee and Jacob Hine, country had been turned upside down 30 yearsold, were both squeezed almost to. 5 i. death between cars at Gordon. with political tumult. ! —From Danville, Va., to Lancaster, Pa., over The two State offices to be filled at 33 iles, William Paulsen's two. Vonage the elcction on Tuesday vext are out- pigeons flew home in seven hours. side of the Legislature, the most im- —At Harrisburg the Reformed Synod has portant to the tax-payers of any for taken the initiative toward establishing a 3 : : x theological seminary at Lancaster. which they vote. The entire money at (61 B00 orth of elatils . —burgilars-capiure: wor oF ¢ g interests of the State, 80 far as the mat- drjewelery from william Chapman’s store, ter of collections and digbursements of at Chapmanville, on Sunday night. public funds are concerned—the faith- —The valve of Reading's Miller's foundry tal oversight of the millions wrung whistte stuck and nearly whistled the whole : i ti includi from the tax-payers and the honest set- ~~ i : l —Dentist C. H Thimme has deserted hi uement of all accounts with the com- i wife and his daughter, at Reading, monwealth, arein the hands of these gone, probably to his old home in Germany. two State offices. —A stable in which General Washington The loss to the people of the State of kept his horse at Oley, and the oldest barn in 3 Berk 3 i i over a million and. a half of dollars, SERS GONNIY; Yas urnel on Friday 81k vey —A new camp meeting association will res within the past year, through the care- (i; 110 seventy two old cottages at Stoverdale lessness and corruption in the offices of and at Mount Gretna new ones will be built. the State Treasurer and Auditor Gen- —An engine and many eoal cars were eral, isthe strongest evidenee of the wrecked by a rear eollision on the Lehigh and _ . ros Susqueh il Zei ) close connection these positions have, Se a MI Si Drie with ihe intcrosts of the t —Kischagquilla Tribe of Red Men, of Cones~ : he Interests o ie tax-payers. toga Centre, Lancaster county, were out om It is a pointer to every man whose the war pathi Friday, being twenty-five years name is upon a tax duplicate, or ‘vhose old. money is in the hands of a tax-collec- i ye sanhei Lehigh counaty, q : : ewportville, Bucks county, sixty-fiva miles, tor, showing the importance of going to J. Walbert and A. Baer drove a team is eight the polls and voting for men who Will hours. protect the interests of the people as against the interests of a ring. For years, as every bady knows, the Pittsburg, financial offices of this State have been _p (ho pono Evensetisal Church Will in the hands of men: under the absolute resist the Bowmanite control aceradised from control of a ring of boodlers. They the Indianapolis Conference. So will the hurch a . have sc.ttered the people's money “'"'° 8 Bangon Amon slavories.i alls over the: Sates —Accused of theft, Charles. Refier, a tramp, 2 Ses a : 7 murderouasly assaulted. Daniel H. and Wallace they have used the public funds for Kunkel witha knife,at Kempton, Berks couns private speculation, until they have ty. He isin jail. —Suit was brought against. Dentist Schwartz, . of Lebanon, .by a man named: Keitter who chargea his jaw was broken while-he was hav- State, actually belong to them te be ing a tooth extracted. —Eigh$ years in the penitentiary was the penalty inflicted upon Mrs. Lucy R. Fitzsim- mons for assisting her husband.in marder ak The Priceburg, Lackawanna ceunty, gang asagainst the merchant,but this beggar- | purposes as they deen best; they of John Macluski, a Pole, have violently as.. ly unfelt Mercantile Tax, which the | have, at thedictation of the ring, whose Republican party now promises to re- peal, ifit is successful at the polls oa Tuesday next. To repeal this taxis simply to say that the farmer who is now loaded down with all kinds of local taxes, must make up to the State Treasury the amount the merchant is relieved of. Some one has to make it up and who would there be to tax but the farmer and workingman. The tax on corporations and license taxes are fixed by law and cannot be increased. The value of the farmer’s property or of the workingman’s vocation is not. These latter are subject to any increase that public necessity may demand, and the relieving the merchants of the coun- ty of the payment of the $2,646.75, that they are now compelled to pay, would necessitate that much more tax being piled upon the farmers and work- ingmen. This is the plain, long and short of it. Exonerate the merchant of ail his taxes, and tax the farmer double for every thing he has. Itis the way the Republican party has of doing things to obtain votes. Its leaders know, that as a party, it has lied to and deceived the farmers; it has levied all kinds of taxes upon them and defeated every effort they made to secure an equalization of taxes until the men engaged in agriculture have revolted against their rule, and they now seek to make up for the loss of the farmer yote, by making the merchant believe that hereafter he will have no taxes at all to pay. In doing this they expose their purpose of adding additional burdens to those saulted thirty six Italians and Poles sinee Y . July 4. John.is in jail at last. creatures they are; set their own judg- ment up as against the law, and their own necessities as against public du- ties, and the result is a known loss, to the already overburdened tax-payer, of over a million anda half of dollars, in a sipgle year and how much more, that is unknown, no-one can tell. To the man who is interested in try- ing to lighten the burden of taxation that now rests: upon him, or who ‘be- lieves in the honest and careful man- ‘agement of the financial interests of the Commonwealth, the election on Tuesday next is far more important, than would be the election of a Gover- nor, Supreme Court Judges or any other State officials. These are the two offices that directly effect the interests of the lax payer, and every tax-payer in the country ought to think enough of his own wellfare to go out and vote. There is not much work in going to vote. There is but little cost, if any, in getting to the polls, and why any one who desires to see the rule of the ring of State robbers brought to a sud: den and disgraceful end, should fail to be on hand, and vote against the men and the party that have been so rock- less in their management of public af- fairs, we cannot imagine. Are you ready for the election, on Tuesday next, Democrats? You never | had a better opportunity to win, than | you now have. You never had great- | er reason to work than at present. If i you but do your duty there is no ques- | tion as to what the result will be. Will { you do it ? —Haaelton’s convicted. ex-clergy man, Rev. . H. E. Sutherland, who conspired and used the mails to blacken a rival in the church, has, been refused a new trial at Pittsburg. —Trying with his foot to adjust some ma. chinery in a wood-turning works. at Scraaton, William Kaathold had nis whole foot and: ane kle crushed to less thanan inchyin thickness:. —Mechanicad Engineer W. V. Smith, of Pittsburg, has a. plan tosupply all western. Pennsylvania. with fuel gas by utilizing the present waste from thousands of coke ovens. —Reading sextons dare nos bury any more unidentified bodies. They are ordered to. turn over all such corpses ie the Adams Ex-- press company for Pniladeiphia medical cole legos. —Her baby and the cradle it was in.were all: that Mrs. Thomas D. Weaver could. rescue that. —The life of the 17-year-old daughter of Emil Schmidt, of Bethlehem, has be en assess-. ed by a jury as having been worth $1792.50. She was killod ona the Roading milroad, and- . the father sued for damages. —To prevent the gushingJoil from. [running down his sloping deor-yard and possibly get- ting afire and burning him out, L. Chambon, Sr., seeks by injunction to stop the drilling of! a well near him, at McDonald. —Dissatisfied that Florence. C., one of the five sons of the late Lawyer A, H. Miller, of Piitsburg, gets the bulk of his $500,000 estates the other four will contest the. will, and have hired a lawyer who has broken forty-eight wills. —Public admonition is all the punishment Pittsburg’s United Presbyterian Synod ims poses on Rev. Dr. WV. J. Raid for naiting {a fel- low clergyman to a deceased wife’s sister and complicating the resurrection conundrum, “Whose shall he be 2° Two enormous cannons have been shipped by the Government [rom Washington to Beth- lehem to be tested, at Redington, by the Bethe lehem lron Company, by which corporation their tubes, jackets, ete, were made, and likes wise to be fired at and test the strength of new armor plate. Voters throughout this section | of the State, who want laws to protect —Mrs, W. W. Smith, of Philadelphis, caught from her burning home at M oshaunnon, this. county. She rushed through :flames.ito do. already borne by the overtaxed farmer | their interests—who faver a re-enact and workingmen, and open the eyes of | ment of the repealed fence laws, should voters to what the result will be if the not forgot that their only hope “is “Republicans win.” . through the aciion of a Constitutional What do you say farmers and work- Convention, her foot aud fell down a long flight of stairs at the Cooper House, Lancaster, with a helpless babe in her arms. A twist as she fell enabled the mother to strike on her back and shield the babe not only from instant death but from all harm. She will recover. FE Nii