Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. I3, 896. A Great Trimmph. It is not quite a year since the President of the United States called a halt on the land pirating scheme which England was | attempting to practice on Venezuela. The | notice to desist was rather pointed and not " calculated to please the English fancy, but it appears to have effected its purpose, as | Premier SALISBURY has announced that England has abandoned the scheme of stealing Venezuelan territory. It is distinctly remembered what an ex- citement was created by President CLEVE- LAND’S Venezuelan message. declared thas it was a rash step and that we would be lucky if it didn’t get us into a war with England. blustered with its usual truculence, and denounced the American impudence that would presume to dictate to England in the management of her colonial policy. In the sprung up on both sides of the Atlantic the President of the United States coolly pur- sued the plan he had proposed for deter- mining the relative rights of the two par- | ties to this Venezuelan controversy. land had been bullying the weak South | American republic for years on the bound- ary question claims submitted to arbitration, but acting upon his determination to have the matter fairly settled the President appointed a commission, whose business it should be to . ' \ — oi ~ | OFFICIAL. RETURNS OF CENTRE COUNTY FOR 1896, i ; . i = mg rm ern —- — — DL - = TT Sn | . 5 ' i ean .00 a Year, in Advance. ! President, 1896. Congressmen At-Large. | Cong. | Assembly. Sheriff. | Treas. | [Register| Record, | Commissioners. Auditors. |! = | — 1 fo 1 : i | iT el E EEE 512 Eells ei gipiR IES Ell gil Tie Ei ell Bll = Bl EE Fl E Bi 2B n= = i BOROUGHS (Ft zIgisl Bidz |E121212, FIZ El R;iaiigia]lSiE slEliFgiEI EIR : Zi BIS|E. Si RIZE! er} AND Zig suEin 21% ISIRtE I RIRIRiZiR FllEIElZiBIE|2||E|F]|2 EE |ZligIs RISE E||2 (2 EIR = TOWNSHIPS. cape IEE 2 E(B Ei iZl5]2 lz Eh ei Eh EifiiE" ZIEIJRIZ I E12|F (3 2° IR: i od e : Ly i | F ei & — - = - ; - =F : Tienes. | 21 f tH PIRI% I EPI RII Blel i w||PIE|Eirl3|F] Pld | lig!lmi|Ble]|mir]|]lF Ba v3] I Se wir : m3 : FiFll flr i lial fl wi Bi wr | Bi glmii sin IFT : Piilni ti didi EI HIRI id Ir SUE RT el HIT] | IF clit pal Flite il rE ET bE EE jidf | i : mm re re Tui a a ad 2 Toot Tn fo al Elm ee er I ] Ieee ee) — —t— North ward.. i133] 216] 16 | 126] 269] 16} 16]. 2 i ; 206! 15] 15l...... onl] 138) 102| 2581 | 141 277) | 134] 281) | 204| 210/ | 208) 205! | 161| 138] 273] 252! | 157] 145] 255" 262] [177] 290 | 152. 266 Bejefonte, 1 Stith ward 6 1H TTT 16 wl 18 TT) TTL Id 13) 13 y 191) 164] 160| | 178) Teg| | 163] 201] | 229] 133 | 213 190! | set] sn] coal roel | Tor] Tas Tt] Sou | onl Sag | doz ane West ward. 541 79] 60; 58) 5 62) 80, 87, 4 3 TT) 58] 78 | 64 ot | 65] “90! | 74] 82 THOTT 69) 64 93 86 il 62] 91) 8611 70! 86! 64 gu | Centre Hall borough... TH 800 32 uy 8 8) 151 361 75 38 | 73] 43 | 85) 31) 80 33 | 80 76| 41) 33) | 82 82] 33 52 | 85 31]! sy 33 Milesburg borough... 4 92; joy 5 a 6 26 98) 94) 28! 100 29 Joi | 32) 96/4 28 98 | 20| 291 94] 1001 | 29 29 96] 450 | 20 99 | 29 99 Jrathein: Boson gh. Be a 4 3) us 4 = 123] 52 1s 58) | 128 46 | 110] 57 | 125 118] 54| 51) | 125] 127] 50) 46) | 126] 47) | 125 48 Oa Doma ] ol mo 65 78 99 | #9 99 | 47) ou | 35 a7| 105 103 | 37] 37] 104! 105 | 37 103! | 37: 103 ili Pred = 400 173) 85 | 76 128] | 65] 132) | 07) 100] | 69) 130 | 06] 62| 136( 135 | 70] 64 134 132 | 66 137 | of 199 Philipsburg borough, < Second ward. 95! 1] 210 128) | 114 169) | 105] 163/ | 116] 162 | 111) 165/ | 102| 103] 174{ 173] | 111] 100! 171] 167] | 105] 174] | 108 176 : hs Third ward. 76 OT 184, 1150 | 86] 157,] 78] 161] | od] 1511 | 85! 154) | 76 76| 160| 159] | 107 79 138] 150 | 79] 161] | 7s 161 { South Philipsburg boro........... 24 210 41 39) | 220 40) 23; 39 | 26] 38 23 39! 23] 23] 30| 40/| 27] 23 36 39): 23 40 23 q State College Borough 0, 59 64] ng ui 120 | 67) 109i | 741 1071 65 117: | 66f 71] 113] 112] | ev] 68 111] 111) | 67] 118 | 70! 116 | Unionville borough.............. i 26 28 54 ly 28 aol 2m a2) 30) 441734 46 | 25! 18! 46] eri) 28] 25) af a1) | 260 a4) | 3) ay Remer township | Northern precinct. i; 83° 61 83] 83. 69 | 95 57) 84| 65: 83 s2| es] 71) | s6| 85 66! ob | 87) 63! 87 5 2 “MP § Southern precinet..| 62 sy 07 | ofl a3 | es 8 63 ef; 53! os) 70 64) | 6-63) 61 o1 | 8] 58 | cu 61 | _,. | Northern precinet...| 29 55, 27) 8) | 21) O08) 29, 56 | 26) 25 58| 58!) 27 27) ov 46 | 8] 48! om ow | Boggs tornsing, elas precinct. .. a3 4 a 62/1 60; 59) 60F 58. 56 58 62| 611] 59! 58! 60] 61) a8 a | 53 66 | ; J Western precinc 871 90° 168; 881 172] | 86) 160 { 100) 161) | 89] sol 171) 171) | 86] so; 166] 166] | 92] 164 | 89; 168 { Burnside township.............ccoue... ; 33 33° 72, 33 72! 33 72! 35) 70| 33 33 72 72] 33] a; 72 721 33 72 am 79 College townshi Eastern precinct... 5! 103 139, 92: 149 | 105 135, | 99) 141; | 93 97] 147] 141 96| 94! 144] 1465 98| 144; | 96] 145 Hi tes} woringe SMD § Western precinct... a 15 13 10 100 1 12 100 10 10 12 12-1) al] 12 12) 10) 100] 12{ 100] 12} 10 1S enemies Curtin township...... Pl ees ff | ot 2 oy 58) 55) 59, ol 60; 5311 570 56) 56) o8! | 58 57) 54) 54) | 62] 50 59 53 sie ‘nship | astern precinet.. 58: GO) 155 76; 153 79, | 159' 74] | 152] 81 | 156 154) 771 79) | 135] 156 6 77 157] 761 158; 75 ee mE at eR ie ptt i HAR PH Ps Gregg township : Exstern pocinet, om! I 31 1320 20] vl oil i ol a ea a wi | 18 Ale] on The English press Western precinct... 8 : 145) 75! | 146) 74) | 142 79) 1431 141) 760 78 1 144) 146] 75] 78] | 146] 74) | 144] 77 stlizes township | Eastern precinct....| 119; 36|.... : 291 95! 96 43) | o4i 45) | 91] 46/| 96) 03) 46! 42 | of od] 45 45/| 03 a4! | oal 43 § Western precinct ..! 3 53! | 168] 56) | 144 80) i 144 79’ | 142) 142] 82! 81) | 142] 144] 81! 80! | 145] 79 145) 81 Halfmoon township................. = y 8 7 a7| { 411 1020 1 55 88 | dol 99 | 44] 42 97] 041 | 431 41] 101] 100, | 43] 101] | 42] 101 Harris township... - : 75 76) | 127) 126! 81) | 134) 73) | 126] 771126 163! 71! 35! | 128 128] 76! el | 127) 70 | 128% Ty Howard township. 3 90, 119. | 71] 97 | 62 107] | 61] 109) | 65] 104] | 61] e2l 108! 107) | 62] 61] 107] 107] | 62 107) | 62 107 Huston township : ! iy) 68 | 64) 112) 53) 120i | 60] 112 | 55 113! | 53] 43] 103 117] | 73] 42) 117] o6i | 47] 123! | 9al s¢ : Liberty township D1a1l 165 | o7] 163] | 92] 164] | 03 164 | 07] 1600 | 92 91] 164 167) | 92 92) 162] 163] | 05] 161] | oa} 108 midst of the excitement that Marion townshi 54 oi | 851 57 82] 62! | 82 oL| 84 60 | 820 s21 63 58 | 83) 82] ell eo! sil co | 3 61 . is ! 200 200 | 69j 26! | 71} 24 2; : 700 ev! 25 28 | 8 67 26) 28! | eo! 26) | cs] 26 Miles township Middle precine 330 30 | 144) al | 143) 35] | 146 144) 145 34) 33 | 145) 144] 341 320 | 146] 34] | 146] 31 - “J Western precinct. | 18] 18! 71 18| | T0j 19) 7a] 71 18| 181 v3 70] 18] 19 7 18 | mj 1s Patton township... ie i 2 2. 103, 132} 78, 122 Gl 138 BS 67| 62] 134) 125 63] 60] 135] 133 60{ 137) | 62| 134 Penn township. : | noi. 200 2401206 24 | 2050 23 | 207 207| 202] 24| 23/1 207| 207] 24! 24 | 208] 24 | 208] 24 | Potter township } Yorthern prec PH 2 2. arl ay i125) sl | 122 36 123) 120 120, 40) 33) | 122 122 37) 37) | 123! 36) | 121) ax | Southern prec | 4 1 G81 TT 10m 0] | 102] 84) | xt 193 1871 79) 82| | 195) 195] 77; 77| | 196| 78! |-196] 7s Bo) Th tot | | ) HW a hl i ola 1) oil) 08 10 ol | Sou inet, ..... ! 2 2 76! 781; 92 7 $ 5 3 0 vt 88 8] 81 19 * Snow Shoe Twp) ) Raster preoing. : 2 y = on | sl 119 | 83 13 83 80 104 123] | 84° 82] 121] 120] | 84] 121} | 84! 121 | : 2 * J Western precinet...| : 3. J 21: 46: 73 7, 13 46) 46 73] 731 | 48 47] T2| 73) | 48) 73 | 48 713 | ; 3 Xorthemn broatneh..f 5 : In 104 | 65) 123 59! 126 i 63{ 56 13 115 65, 65 119 116 71 114 64! 121 . i Resizer en A i | ~ i: . | . | Spring township ~Southern precinet... hi 58) 146) | 106; 165] | 88| 181! | 123 98) 107{ 193] 140, : 120! 148! | 119] 149 and refusing to have her eo) Western precine a ny 104 | 60’ 114 : 108] 36! 58f 125! 111! 67) 111) | 64 112 { Eavior township...............cicceco nee einen] SBR [8d : 5 61] 94i| a8; 82,1 30) 88 35 20 To! 93 28! 891 | 28 81 Union township... 128, 10, 8) | 63) 54 ez 12s | a5 134) | 53 131) 9 | 50] 33 hy 136) 56] 131 | 58 138 | Walther township 167} 1 224 107) | 232) 218! 91j 107) | 222) 112) | 221] 115] | 22 9 | 219! 219; 119] 112, 225! 110; | 226) 109 | Worth township... 129] 3] 62) 132) | 06 Gf 124! 111, | 10% 92! | Go| 128 3 | 65 631 127] 131) 06 120] | 66] 126 i 5 iT Li TT ry fe) ne fee ee) fee = ET I] Total, 316 4460.4870% 36] 213) 207) 4644 47411 15045 4558/4424 4461] (4772 4756) 145434860] [4933/4518] 4823 4540) | 4705/4737) 146894765 | ar Lown ta Le ay ome ol eal alg ed give the issues between the two parties a thorough investigation and report accord- ingly, at the same time intimating that the report of that commission should be the’ basis upon which the dispute should be determined. The world knows the sequel of President ! CLEVELAND'S action in this matter. The commission went on with the work assign- ed it. England got in a better humor in regard to the matter and acquiesced in the proceedings, and last week Premier SALIS- BURY, In the most complacent manner, an- nounced at the Lord Mayor’s dinner that the Venezuela difficulty had been satisfac- torily arranged, and gave President CLEVE- LAND’S commission the credit for having done it. So great a diplomatic triumph was never achieved by any other American adminis- tration, and it was a triumph in the inter- est of international justice and peace. The Present Outlook in the Electoral College. The election is over now and nothing remains to be done but the balancing up of the accounts. The following table will show the strength of the two candidates in the electoral college. It will be seen that Mr. Bryan has 23 more votes than Mr. Harrison had in 1892 and just four less than Mr. Cleveland had in 1888. Sure for Bryan. 11 Sure for McKinley. STATES. Alabama. Cs Kentucky.. Louisiana Maine .. Maryland... Massachusett: Michigan... Minnesota . Mississippi. Missouri. Montana. Nebraska Nevada... New Hampshire. New Jersey New York North Carolina. Oregon. Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina, South Dakota wale Vermont. Virginia..... Washington West Virgir Wisconsin. Wyoming otal, McKinley Has Settled It. Brrrkronte, Nov. 0.—(Special)—It is now defi- nitely settled, since the election of McKinley, that the plant of Bellefonte glass company will be put in operation. Work will be commenced to-morrow to get everything in readiness for operation by November 20. “A furnace of six pots will be used. The above is the kind of slush that is going the rounds of Republican papers just now in the effort to have the public believe that MCKINLEY’S election is the one thing that insures the starting up of the different factories that are now being put into ,oper- ation. So far as this one-—the Bellefonte Glass Co.—is concerned, Republican suc- cess had no more to do with its revival than it has with the brisk business the under- takers have heen doing since the fall season set in. The money, $3,000, to start the glass works here was raised by popular sub- scription before a single vote had been cast and while the country was in doubt as to who would be elected. Not a man whose name is upon that subscription list will say that it was put there on the strength of MCKINLEY’S election, nor will the men who aie organizing the enterprise and most of whom areRepublicans,say that his success has either helped or hindered their under- taking. It is alittle piece of very little poli- tics for any one to try to make political capital out of such a matter, which only serves to show how hollow the pretense is, that to the success of the gold bug candi- date can be attributed the starting up of various enterprises, many of which were closed down during the campaign for polit- ical effect. The Bellefonte glass works would have been put in operation if Mc- KINLEY had not carried a single State. ‘The Official Returns for Congress. The return judges for the 28th Congress- ional district met in Clearfield, on Tues- day, and summed up the vote polled for the various candidates in the district at the last election. It will be seen that Mr. ARNOLD carried three of the five counties in the district and that his majority over Col. SPANGLER is 1205. Spangler Arnold Brennan Centre county 4644 4741 197 Clearfield ** 6063 7385 557 Clarion ** 3923 3305 157 Elk £2 2745 2694 48 Forest * oar 1170 76 18,090 19,295 1035 ——There has been considerable talk to the effect that the warm personal friend- ship that is said to exist between major MCKINLEY and president judge JOHN G. LOVE, of this place, will result in the lat- ter’s receiving some very nice appointment under the former. It is hardly probable that judge LOVE would give up the posi- tion he now holds, unless it would be for a seat on the state Supreme bench. If the judge and Governor HASTINGS were closer we might name him as a successor of Su- perior court judge E. N. Willard, of Scran- ton, who will probably resign before many months. W. J. Bryan a Busy Man. Has 1,000 Letters a Day to Answer Besides Pre- paring for a Campaign of Speeches. LINCOLN, Neb., Nov. 11.—W. J. Bry- an’s first speech since election will be made in Lincoln Saturday. In the afternoon he will speak to the Mary Bryan club, num- bering over 1,000 women, and will advise | them as to methods by which they best can | continue their silver educational work. i One Saturday evening he will speak in one of the theatres. His plans for the next i two weeks include an address in Denver on i November 24, and probably a visit to Mis- | souri for recreation and consultation with | Governor Stone. For more than a week Mr. Bryan has | been overwhelmed with mail, the average | being 1,000 letters a day, and it requires | nearly all his time and that of two secre- taries to attend to this corresponilence. Regarding the proposition of the Wash- {ington Legislature to elect him United | States Senator, Mr. Bryan has not express- | ed himself, but it is believed that in view of his desire to devote himseif exclusively to the cause of bimetallism, he will hardly accept the seat if tendered him. It is stated that the Denver meeting on | the 24th will be the opening of the cam- paign of 1900, and will be a monster affair. It is expected Mr. Bryan will make several speeches addressing 100,000 or more peo- ple. Canuot Last Long. Henry Labouchere’s Opinion of the Hold the Money Power Has on the American People. LoxpoxN, Nov. 10.—Commenting on the recent election in the United States Henry Labouchere in Truth says: ‘‘The vic- tors will do well to realize that apart from bimetallism there is a strong growing feel- ing in America against huge accumulations of capital in the hands of individuals, ob- tained by means of the trusts, which arc really monopolies, and gambling With clog- ged dice in railroads. The greedy plutoc- racy, unsupported by an armed force, can- not long hold its own against the rights and well being of all. ‘‘America’s worst product is its dollar- ocracy, whose members have literally nosh- ing to recommend them. The odds are that either they or their parents acquired huge fortunes by the most questionable means. As a rule they are ignorant and vulgar. If the United States is not to be- power, these worthies, who have increased and are increasing, must greatly diminish.”’ ——Want of management ruins ten men Po, Where lack of opportunity holds one come a mere plutocratic and oligarchic, | Dark Outiook for Tariff, Opposition to the Dingley Bill Places the New Ad- |" ministration in a Dilemma—No Way to Stop the | Deficit—Republicans Insist on the Highest of High | Protection—Demand from Northern States. WASHINGTON, Nov. 11th.—The revenue | and tariff problems set for Republican solu- | tion grown more perplexingly difficult the more they are studied. As the situation develops the tendency is to quit discussing as to whether or not the Dingley Lill ean be got through the senate this winter, and inquire whether the Republican tariff lead- ers themselves will care, or dare, to pass that bill. The interview with Ways and | Means Chairman Dingley, telegraphed from Maine night before last, has convine- ed many people here that ex-Governor i Dingley himself does not now want his | bill passed. > Those familiar with Republican feeling | to the states along the Canadian border i will not be surprised if it is found that bit: | ter opposition to the passage of the Dingley | bill crops out here as soon as the represen- tatives of those states return to Washing- ton. These Republican members did not like the Dingley bill ‘when it was up in the house. They voted for it under the threat of Speaker Reed’s displeasure, and, when they had done so, excused themselves to their constituents by saying that it was an emergency measure, which was not to be taken as at all indicating the policy the party would pursue if it had full control of congress and the executive. Some of them, like Congressman Black, of Troy, N. Y.. who was last week elected governor of his state, vigorously denounced the Ding- ley bill after it went through the house, and declared that the Republican manag- ers had got themselves in a bad job by forc- ing it through. The secret of this attitude of the Troy congressman and other Republican con- gressmen from states along the Canadian border was that their constituents were flooding them with letters and telegrams demanding that that the tariff schedule. be raised as high as those of the McKinley bill, if not higher, so as to kill off all pos- sibility of competition by the Canadians in the American markets. This demand ‘for the highest sort of high protection, nothing short of absolute prohibition, came from every state from Maine to Washington. . It came from Mr. Dingley’s own state, as he has learned, and it explains why he may now turn eut to be an opponent of ‘the passage of the bill which bears his name. It is safe to predict that opposition to the pascage of the Dingley bill will - be found among cll Republicans from the northern border states. They will no doubt prefer that no tariff legislation at all should be attempted this winter rather than that the Dingley bill should be passed. They will prefer to wait until an extra session can be assembled and a general re- vision of the tariff made. Then they will fight for the highest kind of protection for the industries in which their constituents are interested, so that the latter may be saved altogether from Canadian competi- tion. If this opposition to the Dingley bill, or any other moderate protective measure, is successful this winter, then the Republi- cans will have to cast about for other means to raise revenue which will stop ‘the deficit and avert the danger of bond issues to maintain the gold reserve during the early months of McKinley’s administra- tion. So far not a suggestion has been heard that promises to get the Republicans out of this very probably dilemma. They evidently will have the hardest kind of a nut to crack at the very beginning of their new lease of power. Wanted to Cede Formosa. Alleged Proof that China Proposed Giving it to Great Britain. LoNDON, Nov, 11.—The ‘‘Globe’ this afternoon confirms on ‘‘undeniable author- ity’’ the statement recently made that, toward the close of the war between China and Japan, China offered to cede the island of Formosa to Great Britain uncondition- ally, with the view of excluding the Japa- nese from that territory, but Lord Rose- bery, then prime minister, promptly declined the offer. The ‘‘Globe’’ adds that the offer was made through the victory of Hankow. Castles to Sail Saturday. LoNDON, Nov. 11.—Walter M. Castle, of San Francisco, called at the United States embassy to-day. He will sail for the United States on Saturday next, ac- companied by Mrs. Castle. The figures above have heen verified by the official count on all candidates and can be relied upon as being correct. *NoTE.—To the Bryan vote, as given in above table, should be added the 71 votes forthe Free Silver electors and the 15 votes cast for the People’s electors—the ¢ ing the total for Bryan in the county 4546 and McKinley's plurality 324. There were 4 Socialist Labor votes polled in Huston township. General Weyler to the Front. Has Gone to Take Command Personally Against Maceo’s Advance. HAVANA, Nov. 9.—Captain general Weyler has taken the field in person against the insurgents under Antonia Maceo in the province of Pinar del Rio, and reliable news received from the front indicates that the Spanish columns are approaching close to the enemy. General Weyler will go along the line of the trocha. Strong rein- forcements are being embarked to support the captain-general in the operations now in progress against the insurgents. The editorials in the local newspapers are given over to the important act joining together in support of the Spanish policy. ‘La Lucha” says that the act is due to the influence of Gover- nor Porrua, and adds that it corrects the error of the Autonomists and Reformists , in believing in political dealings with the ' rebels and not in energetic means of sup- | | pressing them. The Separatists, this pa- | per says, have clearly established that the | issue is to be settled with arms, and arms ! must be the only response. It points out ! that General Campos at a memorable meet- | | | ' i i An American Victory. Opinions of London Papers on the Arbitration of the Venezuelan Question. LoNDoN, Nov. 11.—The Westminster Ga- zetle this afternoon, referring to the practi- cal settlement of the Venezuelan question by submitting it to a court of arbitration, says : ! ‘The locus standi of the United States, which the Marquis of Salisbury at first de- nied, is now undisputed, and is accepted even to the length of ruling out Venezuela. We would much rather settle with the United States, but we naturally look to the United States to go bail for Venezuela in return. To this assertion of the Monroe doctrine, the most satisfactory point of all, is appended a general arbitration agree- ment.”’ The St. James Gazette asks whether the agreement will not throw into arbitration ‘‘all the sparsely settled region between the Schomburg line and the settled ter- ritory of Guiana, which Lord Kimberly and the Marquis of Salisbury declared they would never submit to arbitration and whereupon President Cleveland ahd Secre- tary Olney declared they should or the | ing at the palace before his departure said | United States would make them.” | that nobody could suppose that he possess- , ed sufficient prestige to change the status | of the Cuban question, not even by concili- atory measures. Havaua volunteers recruited from the colored firemen to the number of 300 are leaving Havana for the trocha. KEY WEST, Fla., Nov. 9.—Advices re- ceived from Havana last night, per steamer Olivette, gives details of an outrage on an American citizen, and the butchery of 19 non-combatant Cubans, including four women, by Spanish soldiers. The massa- | cre occurred last Thursday near the town of San Jose de Las Layas, Havana province. The Spaniards went to the sugar estate of Frederick L. Craycroft, who went there from Indiana about three years ago. Some of the soldiers seized Mrs. Craycroft, and when her husband rushed to his wife’s aid, he was struck down by a sword in the hands of an officer. The Spaniards looted the house, took $850 in cash, and then raid- cd other houses on the estate. They burn- ed eight buildings and shot and killed 19 inmates, four of whom were women. Crayeroft, when he recovered sufficiently wrote to Vice-Consul Springer at Havana. It is understood that the vice-consul cabled an account of the outrage to Secretary Ol- ney. MADRID, Nov. 9.—The report that Gen- eral Weyler is to be replaced as captain- general of the Island of Cuba is untrue. Their Salaries Went On. Heads of State Department Back to Work After the Campaign. Gossip of Coming Appointments. HARRISBURG, Nov. 9. — After about three months’ absence, during which their salaries continued, heads of the state de- partments have returned from working the McKinley end of the campaign. Deputy Attorney-General Elkin started in to-day, as did Captain James Clark, of the bureau of industrial statistics, and who expects to protects, has started a boom for the ap- burg. contest for him at a lively rate, and they claim that Quay will favor him. is now bank examiner here at $10 a day. Governor Hastings returned to Harris- burg this morning from a visit to Wash- ington over Sunday. long talk with Senator Quay. leaders are now working in harmony, adelphia bench a man in accord with the Senator and his friends in that city. A delegation of the Philadelphia attorneys will be here to-morrow to ask for the ap- pointment of Alexander Simpson, Jr., counsel for the anti.conmbine in its legal battles during the fight for sheriff. A movement has been started here to secure the appointment of Speaker Henry F. Walton for the vacancy to mollify his friends for his defeat for the Senate in the Fifth district hy the anti-combine can- cidate. The indications are Governor Hastings will have a vacancy to fill this fall on the superior court bench. Judge E. N. Willard, of Scranton, is tired of his position and has intimated that he will retire before the session of the Legislature. ; ——Subscriber for the WATCHMAN. ER pointment of surveyor of customs at Pitts- | Harrah’s friends have started the HOt any sacrifices of principle on cither I side. It adds: “‘If Great Britain does submit this issue to arbitration it will be difficult to disprove the American claim that the agreement is a square back-down upon the part of Great Britain. The decision of the committee not to report relieves President . Cleveland's government of the most serious difficulty of its own creation.” The ‘‘Pall Mall Gazette’? thinks that hereafter disputes are less likely to occur, ' *‘now that the principle of dealing directly get a more lucrative job in Washington. . Joseph R. Harrah, of Beaver, whom Quay | Harrah | | The Governor had a | the colonial office C The two | With one of the under secretaries, C. A. and | Harris, who had been prominently associ- as a result of their meeting the executive | ated with the Venezulean question from will name for the vacancy on the Phil- | the first. | i | with the little republic is set aside in favor of negotiations with their powerful pro- tector.” The ‘‘Globe’’ welcomes the agreement ‘‘because it releases the American govern- ment from a false and dangerous position.’’ Continuing, the ‘‘Globe’’ says : Had the commission reported adversely to Great Britain it would have forced President Cleveland to attempt the coercion of Great Britain or eat the humblest of humble pie. The decision of the commission to withhold its report is an obvious but effective way out of an awkward situation.” The ‘‘Globe’’ then proceeds to criticise the composition of the tribunal, and in this connection refers to the fact that Venezuela is not represented, ‘‘in spite of Lord Salis- bury’s early assertion that the question at issue only concerned the United Kingdom and Venezuela,’’ concluding : ‘It must clearly be understood that the constitution of the new tribunal of arbitra- tion is not to constitute a precedent for ar- ranging all future disputes between the United States and the United Kingdom in North and South America, and that we are not ready to recognize Monroeism as inter- national law. The statement published in the news- papers here that the British arbitrators in the Venezuelan dispute will be appointed by the lord chief justice, Baron Russell, of Kilowen, has caused much speculation re- garding the choise of Lord Russell. Sir Frank Lockwood, Q. C., who accom- panied Lord Russel on his recent visit to America, in an interview with a repre- sentative of the Associated Press, said : ““The result is one to gratify every English- man, particularly as if it was reached with- it is, however, no surprise to me or no the other members of the party which recently visited the United States.” After a cabinet council to-day the attor- ney general, Sir Richard Webster, went to and had a conference Bryan for the Senate. Pacific Coast Fusionists Start a Boom for the Popular Leader. Clause of the State Law. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 9.—A boom has been started here for William J. Bryan for United States Senator from this State. The silver fusionists will control the Senatorship, and as the constitution of Washington provides that to be eligible the candidate shall be merely an ‘‘inhabitant’’ of the State at the time of his election, the fusion majority could elect Mr. Bryan without any trouble. Richard Windsor, Sr., the Populist leader in Washington, and James Hamilton Lewis, Democratic- fusionist and member-elect for Congress, are rival candidates for the Senatorship, and Mr. Bryan has been suggested as a compromise. : lectors on the three tickets being the same— mak - The Senatorial Fight. It has Narrowed Down to Wanamaker aud Brown— Hastings is Out of It. HARRISBURG, Nov. 11.—The agents of the various candidates for United States Senator from this State are already in com- munication with some of the newly elected members of the Legislature. The Wana- maker people are particularly active, his forces are being led by State Senator Chris Kauffman, of Columbia, Lancaster county. The Philadelphia politicians all believe that Wanamaker, Hastings, Hay Brown, of Lancaster, Senator Boise Penrose and Don Cameron are all avowed candidates, and it isa curious fact that among many of these politicians there is a strong belief, though it is not their wish, that Cameron will suc- ceed himself. Cameron's friends count on receiving all or most of the votes of the thirty three Democratic Members and six Democratic Senators. They declare that in the end Quay and Chris Magee will both favor the ex-Senator’s re-election. Only Cameron's desire to be re-elected prevented him from taking an active part in the campaign for free silver, as his inclinings toward the white metal are well known. Down in Lancaster is Hay Brown, the present law partner of ex-Attorney General Hensel. The fight is between him and John Wanamaker. It seems to be conceded that if Wanamaker demands the senatorial seat, he will get it ; for he has again been liber- al with his campaign cash. ‘Most of the Philadelphia politicians admit that Quaye will not oppose the pious merchant if the latter insists upon succeeding Cameron. With Wanamaker out of the fight, how- ever, the chances for J. Hay Brown are bright. He is favored by Quay, next to Wanamaker. In Lancaster the politicians argue that Quay believes C. L. Magee will succeed him in the Senate when he (Quay) dies; and he considers it for the best interest of Pennsylvania that the senatorial represen- tatives at Washington should come from the extreme ends of the State. Mr. Brown's refusal to accept a seat on the superior court bench was because he wanted to be a Unit- ed States Senator. Boise Penrose is practically out of the race, and Governor Hastings more so. Notwithstanding the election of Crow as sheriff of Philadelphia—a Quay triumph— Dave Martin intends to continue his ef- forts for supremacy there ; and the elec- tion of Penrose for Senator would intensify the trouble and make Quay more enemies. It is asserted Quay has persuaded the young Senator to go in training for Mayor of Phil- adelphia. Governor Hastings is already shelved. The next Legislature being strongly Repub- lican, with a majority of Quay’s friends in it, and with no prospect for much legisla- tion that the corporations may want, Quay is not much in need of a Governor, as he can secure what legislation he wants, and Lyons will not be needed to step into Has- tings’ place. It seems assured Quay will have the au- thority in the distribution of the McKin- ley-Hanna favors in Pennsylvania ; and that is one of the reasons why Quay would be quite satisfied with the election of Brown as his colleague at Washington. Like Cameron, Brown would not interfere with Quay as the dispenser of the patron- age. Pennsylvania’s Vote. Complete Returns Show That McKinley's Plurali- ty in the State is 301,606—Costly Election. PHILADELPHIA, Nov., 8.—Oflicial re- turns from a majority of the counties in Pennsylvania, and complete returns from those in which the official count has not yet been completed, give McKinley a plurality 301,606, the vote being: Republican, 726, 823 ; Democratic, 425,217. The vote cast for the Palmer and Buckner ticket foots up only 10,878. There were 19,000 votes for the Prohibition ticket and about 10,000 for the other candidates and ‘‘scattering,’’ mak- ing a total of 1,191,918 votes in the State for all parties. . In this city McKinley’s plurality was 113,774, in a total of 243,731. This ex- ceeds the vote of 1892 by 40,678. Three years ago the total vote of the State was 1,003.010, or 198,918, less than that cast on Tuesday last. It was learned to-day that the cost of the election in Philadelphia alone for printing, rent of polling places, advertising, pay of election officers and assessors, etc., amount- ed to $139,500. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN.