MEEK. BY Ink Slings. —Don’t let the weather on Tuesday keep Democrats from gettingamoveon. —Centre county must record a Dem- ocratic majority next Tuesday. Demo- crats, getamoveon. —Don't be fooled by Republican promises. They are rarely fulfilled. Democrats, getamoveon. —Senator CHANDLER, of Maine, thinks we are to have war with Erg- land. Democrats, getamoveon. --We have a good ticket this fall, There is no reason why every-oneshould not support it. Democrats, getamove- on. —Accept no excuse from stay at homes. We must have every Demo- crat at the polls next Tuesday. Demo- crats, getamoveon. : —They say it is true! That “Quic- LEY don’t know the boys with whom he used to run barefooted” in Liberty township. Demccrats, getamoveon. —HAsTINGS i8 very anxious that QUIGLEY should be elected, so they say. This is the very reason why the people want him defeated. Democrats, get- amoveon. —1f ABE MILLER thinks old soldiers ought to vote for him, why in the world didn’t he support Democratic veterans when they were out for office ? Demo- crats, getamo veon. : —ABE MILLER is not competent to be made prothonotary, so the Gazette says, but everybody knew it even before the Gazette acknowledged it. Demo- crats, getamoveon. —ABE MILLER has been a bitter, uncom promising, abusive, mud flinging Republican all his life. There is not a single reason why a Democrat should support him. Democrats, getamoveon. —Say, you fellows, who are going to vote for QUIGLEY, stop and think a moment ! Did he know you before he found out that he needed your vote to gratify his ambition ? Democrats, getamoveon. —The Gazelle can excuse the present administration as much as it pleases for signing the Standard oil bill, but the people continue to pay an increased price for their coal oil, all the same. Demo- crats, getamoveon. —Republicans would like to make people believe that they are having plain sailing in Ohio, but there is a CAMPBELL out there with about as many humps as they can crawl over. Democrats, getamoveon. —QUIGLEY is the man whom HasT- ING’S wants elected, QUIGLEY is the man who must therefore be rejected ; QUIGLEY is the man who must not be elected, for if he is, the county biz will surely be neglected. Democrats, get- amoveon. —1It is being whispered that Quia- LEY’s friends intend trading MILLER wherever they can. The Republicans would like to get complete control of the court and they intend stopping at nothing to accomplish this end. Demo- crats, getamoveon. —Since QUIGLEY can’t tell the differ. ence between an intelligent citizen and an ignorant Hungarian he practically says there is no difference between the two. Do you want to vote for a man who rates you with an ignorant Hun: Democrats, getamoveon. —There are more pensioners on the rolls now than there has ever been. Over 1000 names have been added dur- ing the past year, in addition to the many old pensioners restored, yet the Republicans claim all the credit for taking care of the veterans. Democrats, getamoveon. —Czar REED is QuAY’s favorite for the Republican presidential nomination and is it any wonder? The methods of the two men have been almost identical. Each demands absolute control of ev- erything he goes into, but neither will have control of anything in the future, if Democrats, getamoveon. —The Gazette says: ‘‘Republics are not ungrateful ; the people will remem. ber services such as Mr. MILLER per- formed.” Great JEHOSEPHAT! we should say they are not ungrateful. MiLLER has been feeding at the public crib ever since he came home from the war and this very fact is what the peo- ple want to ‘remember when he tells them how he has been neglected. Dem- ocrats, getamoveon. —A young German with three chil- dren i§ detained on Ellis’ island, N. Y., because the immigration bureau fears that she will become a public charge. She came to this country from Rotter- dam to marry ALBERT CorrI, of Chi- cago, the result of an exchange of pic- tures and correspondence. Her lover was telegraphed for and this is the way he answered : No money. Can't come. I want to marry her by telegraph or telephone. It has been done. Can’t you accomodate me ? The poor fellow is evidently very anxious to get married, but the telephone plan is a poor way of getting together. Democrats, getamoveon. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. wv, 7 7! : VOL. 40 Shall it be Justified or Condemned ? If a farmer or a business man should have an agent in his employ to whom he had entrusted a sum of money, what would he think or do if he should find that his agent had put that money out at interest and pock- eted the proceeds as his own personal profit ? To continue the comparison a little further, what would be the feelings of that farmer or business man upon his discovery that the money was not ap- plied to the object for which he had intended ‘it, because his agent had in- vested it in his own private specula- tion, and it was inconvenient or impos- sible for him to call it in when wanted for its legitimate purpose ? It may be believed that that farmer or business man, unless he were a very pious character, would indulge in some vigorous swearing at such an agent, and would proceed to kick him out of the fiduciary position he had so shame- fully abused. Such a case as this is the exact par- allel of the conduct of the present Re- publican state treasurer and his predecessor. The state money that should be ready at hand to pay all the demands upon the State without de- lay is distributed around among a number of selected banks that use it in their business, and the increment— the interest—goes to a ring of politi- cians, who absorb it as a personal per- quisite, with the exception of what may be contributed to Republican campaign funds. : According to the state treasurer's own report there was a balance of state money in the treasury on the 30th of June ; amounting to $4,400,000, and at that time there was a delin- quency of more than $2,000,000 in the payment of the public school appro- priation, a deficiency that is being slowly made up in such installments as these speculators with the public money are able to call in from their speculative investments. It is unnecessary for us to tell our readers that this a most shameful and corrupt use of money committed to the care of public officers. But it is a use which has been sanctioned by the peo- ple themselves in their not showing their disapproval of it by their votes at the polls. Year after year this abuse has been committed by Republican state treas- urers, and the people have gone on electing them at each recurring elec tion. Can corrupt practices be stopped in that way ? BexsamiN F. MEevers, the Demo- cratic candidate for state treasurer, pledges himself not to use the interest on this public money as private swag, but will turn it into the treasury. The Republican candidate keeps quiet on this subject, giving no pledge, but relying upon the usual Republican majority to justify him in speculating with the state money, and putting the profits into the pockets of a set of po- litical ringsters. It is for the people to determine at the polls whether this practice shall be justified or shall be condemned ! EE — Vote the Fall Ticket. The supreme court of the State hav- ing decided that a voter can not cast his ballot for more than six of the sev- en superior judges to be elected the strict partisan character of the election, as designed by the law creating the court, will be carried out. One of the Democratic candidates will necessarily be elected, but the Democrats should endeavor to elect six by voting for all of them. There is much dissatisfaction among the Re- publicans with the judicial candidates they have on their ticket. The man- ner in which they were selected by Hastings, to serve a partiean purpose, is disliked by many members of their own party, who look upon them as political tools and disapprove of hav- ing such characters on the bench. For this reason the Republican judicial ticket will be heavily cut, and the Democrats will be remiss in their duty if they do not poll the fullest possi. { ble vote for their judicial nominees, | who stand a chance of being elected on i account of Republican disaffection. | If there are not six Democratic ‘superior judges elected it should not : be because any of them did not receive "the full Democratic vote. The Theft ot the Increment. It must seem strange to the people that money belonging to them, and en- trusted to a public officer for a public purpose, should be put out as private investment, producing an income that is used as a personal profit. The dullest mind can comprehend the vicious character of such a finan- cial practice, and yet it has been long continued in this State, and has be- come a regular custom with the Re: publican officers that have control of the state treasury, It has been continued not because there has not been an effort made to correct it. Repeated attempts have been made to induce Republican Leg- islatures, to enact that if balances of the state money in the treasury should produce an increment it should go to the State and be included with -its other sources of revenue. But no Re- publican Legislature could be pre vailed upon to give this matter the least atte ntion. No Republican Gov- ernor showed an inclination to recom- mend such a reform. This private use of the State money produces be- tween one and two hundred thousand dollars & year in interest, and the Re- publican managers have preferred that it should go to party workers, and to officials who could be assessed for campaign purposes, rather than that the State should get it, Governor PATTISON, in his messages, repeatedly urged Republican Legisla- tures to protect the state money from the danger of being loosely deposited in banks that give no security for it, and to require the interest accruing from it to be paid into the state treasury, for the benefit of the tax-pay- ers, but he might as well have advised a gang of footpads to return the money which they had eecured by a success- ful robbery. This abuse in the management of the state treasury has been brought more directly to public attention this year by the increased boldness of the officials in their misuse of the public funds The schools and charitable in- stitutions must wait for what is due them until the speculators with the state money can release it from invest- ment in which they are personally in- at : zs. BELLEFONTE, PA., NOV. 1, 1895.” NO. 43. Censure That is Well Deserved. A vote cast for the Democratic tick- et will be a vote for censure to the ca- lamity howlers who tried to prevent the return of industrial prosperity. It-will be a stinging rebuke to the dishonest Republican leaders who last year deceived the people by charging 8 Democratic administration and a Democratic tariff with being the cause of the hard times. It will be the most effective way of condemning a party that supported a tariff under which labor was thrown out of employment and its wages were reduced, and whose organs and speak- ers lied about the Democratic tariff that has given industry the greatest boom that it has had since the war, and has put employers in such a pros. perous condition that they voluntarily increase the wages of their workmen. For this reason, particularly, the votes of the working people should ad- minister the severest condemnation of the McKINLEY policy. A vote cast for the Democratic tick- et will, moreover, be a rebuke to the last Republican state Legislature, the most scandalously corrupt, extrava- gant, reckless and incapable legisla- tive body that ever assembled at Har- risburg. Such a vote will condemn that Legislature's profligate waste of the public money ; its multiplication of unnecessary offices ; its addition to the salaries of useless officials ; its sub- traction from the hard-earned taxes paid into the treasury by the people, and its division of favors among the office-holders, the corporations and the monopolies. The voters will be false to them- selves if they do not rebuke that in.’ famous Legislature. They are also called upon, by their regard for the reputation and interest of their State, to rebuke, through the ballot box, the scheming politicians who are trying to set up a political ‘machine for a court, and who are dragging the robes of the judiciary through the filth of a partisan cess- pool ; and it is their interest as tax- payers to condemn the speculators who bave the state money out at interest aud are putting the profit into their own pockets, terested as sharers of the prefits. This kind of treasury management | naturally accompanies such abuses as those which the present state adminis | tration is guilty of. It 13 0f a piece | with the extravagant creation of un- necessary offices, the profligate in- crease of salaries, the prostitution of executive action in the interest of ra- pacious corporations, and the degrada- tion of the judiciary to the level of partisan machines ; and it is in keep- ing with the generally scandalous | character of Republican state legisla. tion. The pocketing of the interest on state funds is nothing but official theft, and after the votes are counted at the next election we shall see wheth- er the people are willing that the treasury shall remain in the hands of thieves. CO Stop the Treasury Stealing. In replying to the committee which notified him of his nomination for state treasurer by the Democratic state convention, Hon, B. F. MEYERS expreased a principle which every hon- est citizen will endorse, when he said “he should regard all increments of the funds in the treasury from what- ever source, as accruing to the Com- monwealth and not as his personal perquisites or the epoils of party.” This is a principle that should gov-' ern every officer entrusted with the funds of the State, but it has been con- tinoally and systematically ignored by Republican state treasurers, who have placed millions of the state mon- ey with banking institutions that have used it without paying the State a single cent of interest for its use. That it bas produced an increment— that it has brought its interest—goes without saying, but that increment, estimated to amount to $100,000 a year, has gone into the pockets of the treasury ring, with a possibility that some of it has been used for political purposes, Hon. BeNsamiN F. Meyers, the Democratic nominee, pledges himself to stop this stealing if -he-shall be elected state treasurer. He is a man of well-known honor and probity, and the people can rest assured that it they give him the opportunity he will treasury | Aud they owe a severe reprimand to | the Governor who, in the first year of his term, has increased the expense of the departments of his administration ‘at least $250,000 ; who bas approved every extravagant and profligate act of the Legislature ; who has intruded his henchman, DeraNEY, into the custo- dianship of the public grounds and buildingg, to lavish money with an un- sparing hand, and to furnish and em- bellish the gubernatorial mansion with barocial magnificence; who has shown such favor to the petroleum oc- topus that it has been enabled to in- crease the cost of the lamp-light 1n every household in the Commonwealth, and who has withheld no franchise or privilege from corporations and monop- olies, while he has had no favors to bestow upon the people who live by their toil. These are offenses which can be righteously and effectively rebuked by voting the Democratic ticket next Tuesday. Will the voters of Centre county withhold their condemnation where there is so much to be condemned? We do not believe that it will be withheld. Democrats, getamoveon. Cause and Effect. On~the first of this month the price of coke made a considerable advance ; which is av evidence of improvement in the different kinds of business that require that form of fuel. It ie partic- ularly a proof that the iron business is booming, In consequence of their getting a higher price for their coke the H. C. Frick coke company have made an- other voluntary advance in the wages of their workmen, which applies to about 13,000 men, and goes into effect along with the advance in price of coke. These are the practical arguments that are removing every doubt from the public mind as to the beneficial ef- fects of the Democratic tariff policy. strictly fulfill his pledge. Democrats, getamoveon. * Condemn the Judicial Machine. — There is scarcely a feature of the new judicial creation, called the su- perior court, that is not worthy of the condemnation of sensible and honest citizens, Its name ie an absurdity, for when the State has already a supreme court how can it have a superior court? What can be superior to that which is supreme ? Its creation was a political scheme, the purpose of those who devised it having been more to secure a partisan object than to serve the ends of jus- tice. : There is no necessity for it as a tribunal, there being a sufficient judi- cial force to dispose of all the cases that may arise for adjudication, and this new tribunal is calculated to com- plicate litigation and increase the ex- pense of obtaining justice. The large salaries of seven unneces- sary judges will add many thousands of dollars to the cost of maintaining the judiciary. The arrangement in the manner of voting for these judges, by which six are secured to one political party, and only one to the other, indicates the de- liberate fatention of imparting a politi- cal character to this court, and is not only outrageously unfair, but alarm. ingly dangerous in its purpose to insti- tute a partiean tribunal. In its original conception it was in- tended chiefly for the purpose of help- ing HasTINGs capture the control of the Republican organization and the people have ro more reason to ap- prove of it than they have to approve his signing the Standard oil company’s pipe line bill. In view of these damaging facts, con nected with this superior ogurt, what- are the people going to do about it ? At this time they can do no more than to show their disapprobation by voting against the candidates whom Hastings selected to constitute his partisan court, and who by Quay's consent, are the Republican judicial candidates. Voting against them is the only way in which the people can adminis- ter a deserved rebuke. Such a rebuke can be followed up next year by electing a Legislature that will"abolish this court, which if it should be continued, will saddle a useless expense upon the State, and by complicating and prolonging litigation will increase its cost. Democrats, getamoveon. Democratic Encourage ment. The situation has so greatly improv- ed since last year that the Democrats have every reason to be encouraged with the prospect in the present elec- tion. The bard times, for which the party was not responsible, was the cause of defeat a year ago. But the great improvement that has taken place since then has quieted the calam- ity how! and has vindicated the benef- icent character of the Democratic tariff. If the Democrats lost votes on ac- count of the prostration of business, for which they were not responsible, surely the popular favor will go with them this year when the great revival of prosperity is clearly the result of Democratic measures. The unparalleled activity io the iron business, the steady work in the coal mines, the boom in all the mills and factories, the full employment of labor, and the increased pay for it, are all arguments that are convincing the peo- ple that it is to their interest to vote the Democratic ticket. Moreover those who were deceived into voting with the Republicans last year by the calamity howl, have had a bitter experience with the present state administration and the last Legislature. The increased expenses that have been heaped upon the tax- payers by executive and legislative ex- travagance and corruption will long be felt. These are influences that will great- ly affect the public mind and produce | results at the polls next Tuesday that are likely to be astonishing. In order that it may have its full ef- fect no Democrat should fail to cast his ballot. Democrats, getamoveon. Spawls from the Keystone, —Goat picnics are popular at Reading. —Postmaster A. P. MacDonald, of Al- toona, is seriously ill. —A destructive forest fire is sweeping over the mountains at Auburn. —Firebugs burned three barnsat Hazle. ton worth $10,000 during the past week. —There are 302 more registered voters in Lycoming county this year than last. —Two more suspects in the Hawley robbery murder case are in Scranton jail '—A little child of Mr, Pedel’s family at East Stroudsburg was suffocated in bed. —Brakeman Lewis Zehl, of Slatington, was killed by a Lehigh valley train Satur- day. —Ground was broken at South Bethle- hem for Lipp & Sutton’s new $50,000 silk mill. : —During the last two years in Pennsyl- vania only ten death warrants have been issued. —Andrew Carnegie will present a $3000 organ to each of three Homestead churches. —Asthe result of falling down stairsand breaking his back, George Weiss, Of las ton, died. 3 —Wendell Swartz, a farmer of White Deer valley, near Lewisburg, shot him- self to death. —Injuries received in a runaway near Adamsville, York county, caused Paniel Hollinger’s death. —Nearly all the anthracite miners in the Wilkesbarre region began working full time Monday. ] —Postal Inspector Moore, of Philadel- phia, Saturday finished his probe of the Smoky City office. —Edward Babb, a Philadelphia & Read- ing railroad brakeman, lost an arm while coupling ears at Norristown. —Miners Joseph King and Paul Vanit- sky were dangerously injured by a fall of rock in Shenandoah collieries. —The east Broad Top mines at Wood- vale were obliged to shut down last week because of a scarcity of water. —The Lehigh valley company will to- day make a general shift about of mine bosses in the Hazleton district. —The man captured near Stroudsburg as the supposed murderer of Justice New. burgh, of Pike county, was discharged. —Poor women of Reading husk cern in the country a day and get paid in husks. with which they make bed mattresses. —Detectives ran down Walter Shepley at Reading, who is wanted for wholesale robberies at Gordonville, Lancaster coun - ty. : —Mrs. Elizabeth Miller, of Lancaster, who was in jail charged with setting fire to her husband's proberty, has gone in- sahe. ~ —Ground was broken Saturday at Bloo urg for a new Methodist church to cost $50,000, and which will seat 2000 people. . —The corner-stone of Zion L=ztheran church, at Stouchsburg, the oldest con- gregation in Berks county, was laid on Sunday. : —The condition of John Tayloy, of Beth. lehem, General Traffic manager of the Lehigh Valley railroad, continues to im- prove. 1 —Chief of Police Russell, of Williams. port, shot RR. C. Chase’s herse, which fell into a well, and now the owner has sued the Chief for $210. —Harvey Boles, of Saltillo, Huntingdon county, fell off a wagon a few days since and had his shoulder bone broken and was pretty badly bruised. —Judge McPherson decided that the East Harrisburg trolley company must pay a tax of $56-a year for every caroper- ated,or a total of $4180 in 1804. —Firebugs and thieves have conspired to annoy William Thorpe, & wealthy con- tractor in Dennison, Luzerne eounty, and officers are looking for the raseals. —A- charter was granted to the-Lel. man manutacturing company, ofsPhila- delphia ; capital, $10,000 ; directors, John A. Lehman, George S. Hart, Harry B. Hart. —James Cunningham, employed in the Berwind-White shaft near DuBois, was killed Saturday by a premature fall of fireclay. He was abou 33 years of age and leaves a wife and two small children. —David Dressler, a highly esteemed citizen of Union tewnship, Clearfield county, died at his home Wednesday ‘morning, @ctober 22, at the advanced age of 8) years. He had been a resident of the township for nearly half a century. —A live bear was reported as having been seen to enter the limits of ths borough of Ebensburg on Monday even. ing, whereupon each ‘Johnny got his gun’’and started out on bear meat intent. Latest reports are to the effect that bruin escaped. —~W hile out hunting turkeys near lew Grenada, Fulton county, last week Wil. liam Hunter aeeidently shot Thoraton Foster, whom he mistook for a turkey. Sixteen number four shot penetrated Fos. ter’s body so deep that none of them eould be probed out, ten in hisleft arm, one in the breast, one in the stomeagh and four in the left limb. —The plant of the Muncy black fi ller eompany, located along the Resding rail. road at Muncy, was totally destzeyed by fire, together with its contents, about 2 o’cloek Sunday morning. Tha. origin qf the fire is unaccountable, but it is supposs ed that the structure caught from sparks from a passing train. The loss. is $15,000, partly covered by insurange. ~The towns in Clearfieldcounty are be. ing canvassed for subscaibers to a tele: phone system to be erected in that county by the American Electric Telephone company. The company has not yes been fully organized. It will be composed of Clearfield county capitalists. The object of the company is to, construct lines and operate telephones, in Clearfleld county. i =A stable belonging to Mrs. Lizzie | Foreman, at Russellville, Hopewell town. ship, Huntingdon county, together with an ice house, chicken ecoop and other | small out buildings, were destroyed by , fire on Thursday morning at 3 o'clock. There were thirty-three chickens in the , coop, of which thirteen are missing: The fire is believed to have been caused , by a chicken thief, Loss $150; no insur. ange,