00 EE ES SR Jat Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 14,1898. ame THE TREASURY LOOTERS. The Appailing Figures That Show How It Costs More Than Ten and a Half Millions of Dollars in Excess of the Cost in 1883-86 to Run the State. The Machine Figuring on New Tax Bills to Get Money to make Good the Treasury Deficiency. A mnarrisburg correspondent writes: here are two problems of serious im- portance facing the treasury officials of Pennsylvania to-day. The first is how, for the sake of the Republican machine, by whose favor they hold of- fice, the fact that there is a practical deficit of nearly $3,000,000 in the state treasury can be disguised or explained satisfactorily to the voters. The second is, how they can get the additional money which will be absolutely needed for the coming year’s expenses if ma- chine rule is to be continued, or unless an anti-Republican Legislature shall be chosen this fall and shall proceed, immediately after convening, to stop all the steals and cut off all the extrav- agances. As to preventing the people from learning that there is a deficit, that it is an ugly one, and that it will sooner or later produce no end of embarrass- ment, both for the state and its cred- jtors, that is simply impossible. The facts are too plain. The ordinarily in- telligent man has but to take up the reports of the state treasurer and audi- tor general and glance for a moment at the figures to satisfy himself as to the melancholy and disgraceful truth. Each year, for the four years last past, the appropriations have exceeded the estimated expenditures, and the actual expenditures have been greater than the estimated income by from two to four millions of dollars. For the year 1898 the treasurer’s estimate of income, leaving the sinking fund out of consid- eration, was $11,191,628, while he found that, in going over the 1897 appropria- tion bills and adding to their totals the overdue payments on previous appro- priations, there would be needed during 1898, again omitting the sinking fund items, the enormous sum of $17,346,823. That sort of financiering, continued for a few years, would bankrupt even a Standard Oil trust. Corruption and waste have been con- spicuous in Pennsylvania state govern- mental matters for very many years, but it was not until Beaver’s adminis- tration began, in 1887, that the looters got things down fine and began stealing and squandering by wholesale. TUn- doubtedly there were moneys unneces- sarily expended from 1883 to 1886 inclu- sive under Pattison, but the total ex- penditures were nevertheless comp=ra- tively modest. The following, taken from the reports of the auditor general, show the total expenditures during that period on current account—that is, less interest, loans redeemed and United States bonds purchased: ; 1583... vs ‘ sieasinsuraiine yas sven l, 330,978 ASR: onsiitenss mevreninisbevenns 4,383,515 AS85 Laine halts aes ave ree 5,068,782 Q8BG ciionnns sessssssnicesnins ee... 4,367,751 Total .ccoienis iva cesseneees.. 518,157,024 Average each year..............$4,539,256 During the same period there were state loans redeemed, including the premiums paid thereon, aggregating $3,290,427, and United States bonds pur- chased under the Humes’ act amount- ing to $5,305,814. These items are not included in the above total. As an exhibit of how the machine has learned to get away with the taxpayers’ money since then, the following ex- hibit of the yearly expenditures under Hastings, added to the actual surplus left over from 1894 in the general fund, and the deficit that will show at the close of 1898 will be found edifying: The 1894 SUrDiNS........s.:.0... $3,807,747 The 1895 actual expenditures...13,402,962 The 1896 actual expenditures...11,004,517 The 1897 actual expenditures...12,768,515 The 1898 estimated exp........17,073,452 The probable deficit............ 2,762,834 Total Sal See bt ares $60,820,027 Average per year 1895-9S..... $15,205,006 Average per year 1893-96..... 4,539,256 So that the Hastings administration has cost the state more than ten and one-half millions of dollars each year over and above the yearly cost of the first Pattison administration. Again, I say, financiering of that sort weculd quickly bankrupt even a Stand- ard Oil trust. What are they going to do about it? They don’t know them- selves. And, except for the disastrous effect it is apt to have upon the/pros- pects of Republican success in Novem- ber, when the facts become generally known, as they certainly will be, they don’t care much. They are just now most concerned regarding the threat of certain school districts to test the state’s right to hold moneys that have been appropriated to their use and that are due under the terms of the law. If that test should be made and the decision be against the state, it would not be surprising to see the treasury issuing orders at no distant day in payment of salaries and other current expenses. Of course, if that result can be avoided, it will be, and in the hope of avoiding it the treasury officials are busily engaged in devising schemes to get more money out of the corporations as tax on their capital stock. ete. This will be done bv raising the assessments as made in the auditor general's de- partment, and if that plan will not work. then they will be prepared with a bill, to accomplish it. which they will urge upon the legislature next winter. If that legislature is an anti-machine body, as is now hoped. it will address itself rather to lopping off expendi- tures than to devising new tax schemes. It is really amusing that ‘‘Boss’” Mar- tin should be iauded as a reformer. What Wanamaker says and what Swallow says all goes to prove that Jenks should be elected. All the “Pluck me store” proprietors in the field are candidates on the Re- publican ticket. There are Thropp in the Bedford and Woodin in the Colum- bia district running for congress as Republicans. The Philadelphia Times says that two influential Democratic papers are out for Swallow. One of them is a Pop- ulist paper and the other a side organ in a county where there were but 1,105 Democratic voters in 1896. A larger, brainier and in every way better Demo- cratic paper in the same county is straight for the ticket. The voters are in the same boat. Treasury Balances. Their Manipulation in Debauchery of our Politics— How a Beneficent Democratic Law Operated to the Profit of the People and Was Surreptitiously Set Aside by the Machine—The Proof That Democrats, When They Are In, Do Real Reform Work. The state treasury balances, whetner real or fictitious, have never since 1888 fallen below $3,687,035 and have gone as high as $6,679,854. According to the reports of the auditor general and state treasurer they have been, for the last ten years, as follows : 1888 rereecacse snseacecncnsens..$3,637,085.65 1889 sessnssaraaes cess. 3,969,5687.53 1890 .cueceer arrcreveseseinnass—4,426,045.45 AB ccernsreein soccrecenseess. 6,619,3654.55 389 ..cieceeener cessenaees .. 6,000,644.95 1893 ..eeues ceccreeceesreases..5,830,308.07 1894 .eceaees srerenecseiriessss 5,014,642.18 1895 seenss ceirinciienssenvess HA29,654.07 1896 ...ccevvenveneesns. cesses «+ D,062,604.19 1897 cveeverrrccencncessoneesss 5,136,700.02 AVErage ..... seeeceessee...$4,923,767.66 These are the balances at the end of each fiscal year. The monthly balances are approximately the same. No money is kept in the treasury. It is all in the banks. Here we have, therefore, an average of about $5,000,000 constantly in the favored fiscal institutions. This is so large a proportion of the total re- sources of many of them that financiers say a sudden withdrawal of the whole line would create something like a panic. Indeed, that reason has more than once been put forward to stay re- forms intended to prevent the carrying of such balances, by cutting down taxes when the balances have been real, or requiring that the money be paid out when they are manufactured. When banks are without adequate money re- sources of their own, depositing with them ceases to be safe. It is notorious that the machine has been in large part maintained from in- terest privately paid on the deposits to its leaders. Smedley Darlington, of the collapsed West Chester bank, open- ly admits that he paid such interest, and glories in it. Responding most reluctantly to popu- lar protests against the outrage and de- mand that it cease, the legislature of 1897 passed the act requiriaz the pay- ment of 11% and 2 per cent interest to the state. The state treasurer selects the de- positories with the approval of the board of revenue commissioners. The members of this board are the auditor general (Quay machinite) the state treasurer (Quay machinite) and the sec- retary of the commonwealth (the head of the Martin machine). And since most of the depositories are with the Quay machine, it will be seen that that machine has everything in connection with this business nicely within its own control. The best possible proof that this mat- ter of the state balances has been a scurce of unusual profit to the favored banks, and that they have been willing contributors to the support of the ma- chine, in return for the favor of the deposits, abides in the fact that no word of open protest has been made against the new law (which went into operation on the first Monday in May of this year, 1898) and that there is almost as urgent a call on their part, to be per- mitted to continue as depositories as ever. Possibly the law will curtail to some extent the machine gain there- from, and that of the individual bene- ficiaries. But the money is worth to the banks that carry it more than the 11, and 2 per cent they are required to pay for its use, and it may be safely assumed that the machine leaders are not unaware thereof. There are stories current in Harrisburg and elsewhere that banks have paid, as bonus to those acting as intermediaries to secure de- posits, sums in excess of 1%, and 2 per cent. And, while it might be some- what difficult to legally prove these al- legations, no one familiar with the do- ings ‘on the Hill” of recent years can he found to doubt their accuracy. It is the boast of the machine lead- ers that the state has never been to any serious extent a loser through the fail- ure of banks carrying state deposits. Where such failures have occurred the loss is alleged to have fallen upon the treasurers and their bondsmen, or upon the wealthy machine politicians who have afterwards felt it incumbent upon them, or been in effect compelled, to make the treasurers and bondsmen geod. , The act of 1897 inaugurates a new order of things in this connection. Section 4 of the act provides that the state treasurer ‘shall not be held perso- nally liable for any moneys that may be lost by reason of the failure or in- solvency of any bank, banking institu- tion or trust company, selected as aforesaid.” Hereafter, therefore, burst- ed banks, if there be insufficiency in the bank’s bonds or default in their bondsmen, will mulct the treasury and the people instead of the treasurers. The act referred to is a concession to popular opinion created largely by Democratic platforms, Democratic newspapers and Democratic stump ora- tors, but it is far from being as safe for and profitable to the state as was an act originating with the Democrats in 1883, and passed by the legislature of that year and approved by the then governor, Robert E. Pattison. That act was known as the Humes’ sinking fund act,and provided that when state bonds were not to be had the surplus moneys in the sinking fund should be invested in United States bonds. It was the cus- tom in those days to carry the big end of the balances in the sinking fund, presumably because, when moneys go fnto that fund, there is no legal way of getting them out again, except to pay the state’s bonded debt, and having large sums there insured large sums for distribution among the hanks. There were about $2,500,000 then in the sink- ing fund, and not quite as much in the general fund. Senator Humes (Demo- crat) the father of the act, pointed out that $2,000,000 of the sinking fund bal- ance, which was not needed to take up bonds, could be utilized to save the state during the term the bonds then out- standing had to run from one to three and a half millions. The bill was fierce- ly fought by the retainers of the Re- publican machine in both houses, and did not pass the lower body until the night before the adjournment. when it did not have a single vote to spare. However, as already stated, it was signed by Governor Pattison and be- came a law. For eight years it remain- ed in operation, and it is the testimony, both of those who had to do with the execution of the act and of the books, that it operated largely to the advan- tage of the treasury. It hrought the oéate considerably more than 13 or’ z per cent on its moneys that would oth- erwise have been farmed out to the banks gratis, and it involved absolute=- ly no possibility of loss. Its repeal was not actual, but vir- tual. It was not manly, but tricky, after the manner of all the doings of the machine. In 1891 legislation was had largely lessening the flow of money into the sinking fund, so that there re- mained in that fund practically nothing to be invested under the Humes act. This was not because the balances car- ried were any less. In fact, they were larger in that year and the year fol- lowing than ever before or since. But they were kept mainly in the general fund, and the banks got them again, and the machine treasury and the ma- chineites reveled correspondingly. Here we have the convincing proofs that, when the Democrats are in, they do real reform work, and that the great ado recently made in so-called independent reform circles touching the debauchery of our politics through ma- nipulation of the state deposits is a very old story to the workers of the Democratic party. The Padded Pay Roll. Mr. Wanamaker, in Reply to Chairman Elkin, Gives the Names and Record of Some of the Men Who Were on the Roll. In his Media speech Mr. Wanamaker said: “Chairman Elkin, for shame. Dare you stand up and assert that all the politicians who were on the padded pay roll performed any service to the state? Dare you assert that Philip Gori, of Shechequin, Bradford county, who was appointed to pay a political debt the machine owed to the now discarded Louis Piollet, and who drew from the padded pay roll $1,080, ever performed any service to the state? “Dare you assert that James R. Greiner, of Luzerne county, now serv- ing sentence in the Eastern penitenti- ary for murder, who, as a political re- ward from the machine, received nearly $1,000 from the padded pay roll, and who visited Harrisburg but three days during the session, performed any ser- vice to the state? “Dare you assert that Jonathan Jones, of Schuylkill county, who testi- fled under oath in a libel case at Potts- ville in November, 1897, that his name was placed cn the padded pay roll by Senator Covle, a Quay senator, who drew for him $900, though he, Jones, was not once in Harrisburg during the session, performed any service to the state? “I have in my possession other names that were on the padded pay roll, and the amounts of salary they received, and stand ready to furnish before a court of record indisputable proof that these men performed no labor for the state, and that the money was paid as political rewards. “I am discussing Mr. Elkin as a public official, and not as a private in- dividual, and all interrogatories are ad- dressed to him as the official head of an organization. “Chairman Elkin, though you have been declared an unfaithful state offi- cial and have been dismissed for cause from public office, and though your at- tempted defense is a complete confes- sion of your guilt, and your explana- tions, in the light of historical facts, have convicted you of the grossest mig- representations, still,” under the prin- ciple of law that grants immunity to a coplotter who turns state’s evidence, and gives testimony that will result to the good of the public, there may yet be left a chance for you to save yourself, in some degree, if you will give to the people of this state the inside history of that fatal indemnity bond transactiom* What It Costs. To Run the State Department Under Quayism, as Compared With the Costs Under Democratic Man- agement. Here are some figures showing une cost of certain branches of the state government under the appropriation acts of 1883 and 1897 respéctively, the former having been the nearest ap- proach to a Democratic year the state has had since the war: Executive offices .....$517,006 Legislative expense .. 541,111 Judicial expenses 967,000 Printing and binding. 605,863 $1,613,971 724,828 1,342,682 1,130,984 $2,630,980 $4,722,465 These figures need little explanation. They show that in fourteen years, un- der the unbroken direction of Republi- can lawmakers, executive departments have been multiplied, salaries increased, riew and useless deputies and clerks employed and contingent funds padded, until from a half a million, our execu- tive expenses have swelled to a mil- lion and a half for each two years. They show that while the number of senators and members and the al- lowances for mileage, stationery and postage are the same as in 1883, by in- creasing the already large enough force of clerks and other employes, by add- ing enormously to contingent expense tc fee party favorites, by awarding pay for regular committee services, by creating whitewashing and fraudulent investigating committees (whose per- quisites were not vetoed), by piling up the cost of contested elections, etc., they have swelled the charge upon the people for holding a legislative session about $200,000, or over 35 per cent. They show that the expenditure for printing and binding the often worse than useless state publications has al- most doubled since 1883, although the actual cost of doing that kind of work has bean very materially reduced in the interval. They show that even the bench has been made to contribute to the imposi- tion largely by laws that multiply the number of judges beyond all reason and then making statutes that enable some of them to add almost 50 per cent to their legal salaries by holding court in other districts in years when, in or- der to keep up with the trial lists, they must have other judges come and hold court in their own districts. They show, in brief, that under Re- publican rule, the system is rotten from core to rind, and that there is but one chance for real reform, which lies in electing a Democratic executive ad- ministration and a Democratic legisla- ture. 3 The king said ‘‘I rule all.”’ The preacher said ‘‘I pray for all.” The lawyer said *‘I plead for all.” The soldier said ‘I fight for all.” The workingman said ‘‘I pay for all.” Legislative Employes. How Their Number and Cost Have Grown Since the Democrats Had a Voice in the Matter—A Dead Swindle in the Thing—Extra Clerks und Employes Paid for Twice—The Chief Clerks Defy the Law's Limitations as to Contingent Expenses, Etc. The number and cost of the officers and employes of the two houses of the legislature are justly objects of much criticism. If the public business were expedited by the constant increase of the number of this class of hangers on, with the attendant large expense involved, there would be no complaint. But it is plain that so large a force is not needed. Many of them do nothing at all, practically, to earn the money they draw from the treasury. Some of them spend but little more than as much time in Harrisburg as will suf- fice to sign the requisite vouchers and draw their pay. Those that are at hand are so numerous that they crowd each other and are in each other's way. There are certain periods of the session at which some of the clerks, notably those in the transcrib- ing rooms, are required to work hard, and even excessively, but this is com- pensated for by the far more numer- ous other times, when they have little or nothing tn do. Outside of two or three in each house, none of them put in as much time, or render as much service, as would be exacted from them in private or corporate employ for much less remuneration. Up to and including 1883 the force was large enough in all conscience. It is not easy to dig out of the records —they are generally in so unsatisfac- tory a state as to details, and change their form so frequently from year to year—with absolute accuracy, just the information of which one is in search. But, in so far as can be gathered from the reports of the apditor gen- eral and the general appropriation acts, the senate in that year had 41 officers and employes and the house, which was Democratic, 37. The very next legis- lative year (1885), however, the number in the house was increased to 58 regu- lars and two extras, making 60 in all. There was no need or reasonable ex- cuse for the jump. The 7 clerks of 1883 did as much work as the 10 of 1885, the 6 pasters and folders of 1883 put up and sent out the documents as promptly as the 11 of 1885, and the 10 pages of 1883 served the personal needs of the members as faithfully and fully as the 15 of 1885. But there was de- mand for more sinecures to compen- sate the ‘“‘workers,” who had repaired in 1885 the damage the machine had suffered at the hands of the Demo- crats and Independents in 1882, and they had to be provided. There were no apparent increases of the force in either body for the ensuing 10 years, the 41 sufficing in the senate and the 58 in the house. But in 1895 came an enormous jump, the number in the senate being increased to 47 and that in the house to 69. In fact, ex- cepting the ‘extra employes,” which gave rise to the indemnity bond scan- dal, there were no more in 1897 than in 1895. It was the legislature of the last named year that was the primary offender in this regard, notwithstanding the fact that it was scarcely noticed by the gentlemen who were so indig- nant and outraged by the perform- ances of 1397. And in connection with the 1895 employes in the senate, there is something singular. An act of March 6 of that year authorizes the chief clerk to appoint an executive clerk at $1,500, two additional transcrib- ing clerks at $7 per day and two additional janitors at the compensa- tion usually allowed that class of em- ployes. These appointments were made, and the auditor general’s report shows that the salaries stipulated were paid to the appointees direct from the state treasury. But it shows also that $3,700 was paid to the chief clerk for the ‘“‘sal- aries of additional officers and em- ployes under the act of 1895.” Who did that $3,700 go to? Not to the execu- tive clerk and the others lawfully, though needlessly authorized, for they got their money from the treasury on the regular pay rolls. Who, then, got it? Are we not right in saying that it is difficult to determine from the rec- ords how many officers and employes there are? E There is a very loose and entirely unconstitutional process resorted to in both houses to provide for extra employes and for their compensation. Section 10 of Article III of the consti- tution, which article covers the sub- ject of legislation, says: “The general assembly shall provide by law the number, duties and compen- sation of the officers and employes of each house, and no payment shall be made from the state treasury or be in any way authorized, to any person, ex- cept to an acting officer or employe elected or appointed in pursuance .of law.” Section 16 of the same article is to the following effect: ‘““No money shall be paid out of the treasury except upon appropriations made by law and on warrant drawn by the proper offi- gers in pursuance therof.” Yet, on the last day -of the session of the house of 1897, Mr. Keyser of- fered and the house passed the follow- ing resolution: “Resolved, That the payment for ex- tra; labor in the house of representa- tives for session of 1897, including com- mittee and transcribing clerks, not pro- vided for by special items in the appro- priation act, be paid by the chief clerk, on vouchers approved by the speaker and attested by the chief clerk, war- rant to be issued by the auditor gen- eral to the chief clerk or the state treasurer therefor.” The house has no constitutional right to vote money in that way. The state treasurer has no right to issue his war- rant upon any such authorization. The auditor general has no right to pass such an account. The question of law- ful right or constituionality will never, however, amount to a deterrent when the machine has a purpose to fulfill, so long as the machine remains domi- nant in the legislature. There is but one cure. The Democrats must cap- ture the body named. The Democratic house of 1883 was as well, if not better, served by the 37 lawfully authorized clerks and employes as was the Re- publican house of 1897 by 69, nearly, if not twice, the number. The $27,886 paid during the regular session of 1883 for the service was sufficiently extrava- gant. The $74,197 paid in 1897 for no better« service, if as good, was more than half of it thrown away. And yet, if Hastings had permitted it, the ap- propriation would have been $12,500 more. that being, in round figures, the SE mn cui UL ‘NE ZOVErnor’s ‘vetoes in tmrs line. The increase in the cost of the genate clerks, etc., has been just about as great. The appropriation for 1883 was $23,700. The appropriation for 1887-88 was $47,710, and was $54,976 be- fore being trimmed by the vetoes. And if William A. Stone should be elected governor and a majority of machine legislators returned, every item vetoed by Hastings will be reinserted in the general appropriation bill to cover “a deficiencies in salaries, etc.,” passedand approved. The contingent funds of the senate and house indicate a like degree of fraud and extravagance, even if we admit that the money is actually ex- pended as professed. In 1883 an appro- priation of $4,000 for the senate and $5,000 for the house, to be paid out by the chief clerks, was considered ade- quate to cover all contingencies. In addition, the librarian of the senate got $1,200 for recess postage, etc., and the resident clerk of the house got $1,050 for the same purpose.” In 1897 the appropriation for the senate for contingencies was limited to $8,925, and for the house to $13,580. In 1895 the limi- tations were $7,700 for the senate and $10,800 for the house. Notwithstanding this, however, the actual expenditures by the chief clerks for contingencies in that year were $8,500 in the senate and $14,741 in the house. In the senate the limitation was exceeded by $800 and in the house by nearly $3,900. It is not so much the amounts thus expend- ed that is to be deplored as the impu- dent and daring disregard of constitu- tion and statute law that characterized them, and the evidence it affords that, under Republican sway, all the depart- ments of the state government are in constant collusion to loot the treasury and swindle the people. Colonel Stone’s Ten Thousand. His Fee Three Times Larger Than the Amount Recov- ered—The Accusation, the Admission, and All the Details. In the Philadelphia Press of April 18, 1897, was an address delivered by Major George W. Merrick, of Tioga county, who was a schoolmate of Colonel W. A. Stone, the Republican candidate for governor, in which he said: “I have undertaken to state from the stump that Colonel William A. Stone, now of Allegheny, late of Tioga county, is the slated candidate for governor; that his candidacy was agreed upon by the powers that be some two years since; that he had served the machine faithfully, during the whole of his po- litical life; that he said to me fre- quently during the past eight years that his great ambition in politics was to be governor, but that he could not be a candidate for office until the ‘Old Man’ said so, but he would be when he did say so; that two years ago in the senatorial campaign, he made the de- claration that his relations to Mr. Quay were such that his political fortunes would rise or fall with those of Mr. Quay. I asserted also that I did not deem him a safe man for governor to stem the tide of corrupt approach upon the state treasury, since in private life he had charged the state $10,000 for collecting $2,400. “Mr. Stone has undertaken to deny the last statement. Addressing a meeting at Royersford, April 13, he said: ‘It has been said that I charged the state $10,000 for a case which re- turned $2,400. I never made a charge against the state.” By this statement I understand Colonel Stone to deny the allegation that he received a fee of $10,- 000 for collecting $2,400. Does he mean to charge me with accusing him false- ly? I will submit the record, and you may judge, gentlemen, who is guilty of duplicity. “In Colonel Stone’s speech last week in Williamsport he said, alluding to this charge: ‘I was pained when my old comrade, Mr. Merrick, stated here in the city of Williamsport, not for the purpose of helping me but to injure me, that I had charged the state of Pennsylvania $10,000 for collecting $2,- 400. This is an old story and retold in the campaign against me in 1890, but I never lost a vote. I never denied the facts, and I do not deny them now, but I never presented a bill or made any charge. That is 12 years ago, and is known to everybody in Allegheny county, and now Major Merrick is re- viving that old tale.’ “Well, gentlemen, that is a pretty broad admission of the truth of my charge against Brother Stone, but Mr. Stone is mistaken when he charges me with reviving this old tale. On Dec. 14, 1897, a clergyman of Wellsboro wrote him as to the truth of this allegation, asking for information, saying: ‘In ref- erence to the past record to which you refer, I would say that for some years there has been a report current here that once in a case in which you col- lected a claim for the commonwealth in the amount of about $3,000 you charged and received a fee of $10,000; the story seems to be well supported. If it is true it would suggest some doubt as to the propriety of placing you in the high and responsible control in the office you seek in the affairs of our commonweaith. I shall be pleased to receive an answer to this question.’ “In reply to this letter Candidate Stone, in a letter dated Washington, Dec. 20, 1897, from which I now read, said: ‘The matter of the fee which you speak of occurred nearly 12 years ago. My fee was not fixed by me, but it was fixed at the request of the auditor gen- eral by attorneys in Pittsburg at $10,- 000, which the state paid me. Of course I am aware that my enemies will raise many objections to my candidacy,which will appear from time to time in the newspapers, but it is not my purpose, nor has it been my practice, to pay at- tention to them.’ ” Major Merrick is a prominent attor- ney. He is a Republican and a na- tive of the county where Candidate Stone was born, and lived many years. He was Stone's schoolmate and his friend in later years. He was every- thing that would have inclined him to be Stone’s friend. Charges of so grave a character, coming from such a source, would be a serious business, even without Stone’s admission of their truth, ag above avowed. ————————— ——The governess was giving little Tom- my a grammar lesson the other day. ‘An abstract noun.’’ she said ‘is the name of something which yon can think of but not tonch. Can you give me an example?’ Tommy—A red-hot poker! ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. Quayism in Figures. How Four Years of Machine Rule Converted a Real Surplus of Nearly Four Millions Into a Real Defi- ciency of Nearly Three Millions—The Figures From the Records That Support Mr. Jenks’ Charge That the State Treasurg Is Bankrupt. Mr. Jenks has charged, upon the stump, that the state treasury is bank- rupt and the astounding fact has not been and cannot be denied. Here are the figures, from the official records of the machine state treasurers, that prove it: GENERAL FUND RECEIPTS. 1895 ........ ro vasesssesennssnss 31,746,401) 1896 cssnennee ssesnssionesenesnres 12,265,756 31897 ...coni00 severe sesesvevens 12,475,070 A808 iis sees Tecrervinsevss 11,191,628 TOtAl ..... versecissscsecsves $47,678,865 GENERAL FUND PAYMENT. 1893 ........ avian sas ssees vanes 315,402,002 1896 ........ evivs esas susennnsss 11,004,517 3897 veviiiiivin ssnans sisnnisnnns 12 C05:010 1308. (iiarss crnvesenerenensesenee YT UIS,452 Total ...... ....... ceeeeeees. $54,249,446 The figures for 1898 are the official es- timates of the state treasurer. He cal- culates the probable receipts, and he puts down the actual obligations. By the end of the year, therefore, if all the obligations are in the meanwhile met, the state will have expended, during the four years of Governor Hastings’ administration, $6,570,681 more than its income. But there was a real balance left over from Governor Pattison’s last year, 1894. Auditor General Gregg (Republican) spoke of that balance in his annual re- port for that year as follows: After noting that the nominal balance was $5,014,942, he said: “Of the amount paid into the state treasury (as personal property tax) there remains to be paid back to the counties $1,273,578.09. This should properly be deducted from the reported balance, in order to ascertain the real, which deduction being made, would show a real balance of $3,807,- 747.62. “While we may point with pride to the existence of this large balance, it must not be too readily assumed that it will prove an unmixed blessing. Its very existence will invite applications for its appropriation to purposes neith- er necessary nor deserving. The reve- nues of the state are at present ample to meet its expenses if economically ap- plied.” And then this Republican auditor went on to recommend the appropria- tion of the surplus ‘to some needed public use, whose benefits should be enjoyed by the entire people, without placing’ upon the commonwealth an annual charge therefor.” Inheriting this ‘real surplus” of $3,- 807,747 from its predecessor, and ex- pending in four years $6,570,581 in ex- cess of its income, the Hastings ad- ministration has exhausted the surplus and left the state $2,762,834 in the hole. With “money to burn,” so to speak, four years ago, the treasury now has, if its debts were paid, nearly $3,000,000 less than nothing. This is Quayism fittingly illustrated in figures. State Reform. Democrats No Eleventh Hour Converts to the Doc- trine—Pertinent Extracts From Their State Plat- forms. The Democratic.party is no eleventh hour convert to state reform. For years it has been presenting the ugly facts and urging amendment. When- ever it has had opportunity it has loy- ally redeemed its pledges, to the full Lmit of its power. The following will be interesting reading in this connec- tion: In 1874 the Democrats of the state in their platform denounced the Republi- cans for fostering corporations to the detriment and injury of the great agri- cultural interest; for having introduced frauds and corruption into the depart- ments of the state government and among the state officials generally, and for having failed to dismiss them when exposed and convicted. They demand- ed a greater economy and the lopping off of every needless expense. In 1882 the Democrats elected their state ticket and secured a majority in the house on a platform devoted to state issues and condemning Republi- can theft and reckless expenditure. In 1885 the party thus said: “The long continued abuses and spoliations of the state treasury and the defiance of laws by its management make es- sential a radical reform so that large sums shall not be accumulated by tax- ation of the people to be distributed among the favored depositories of the state.” The convention of 1887 denounced the Republican legislature for “its failure to pass the state revenue bill, which was urged by nearly all the people in the commonwealth and which, by its failure, made the people pay a million of dollars annually that should and would have been paid by corporations.” It denounced, also, ‘the failure of the administration to attempt any correc- fon of the wrong doing or exposure of the fraud or criminal neglect, as con- fessing the supremacy of ring rule in Pennsylvania.” The convention of 1890 again urged re- form, condemned the Bardsley steal, and, following the election of the Democratic governor, Robert E. Pat- tison, the monies stolen by the said Bardsley and others were restored to the state treasury. A Rallying Cry Everywhere. All along the northern tier of coun- ties, throughout the oil regions and in the iron manufacturing districts the name of the Democratic candidate for governor is a talisman to conjure with, a rallying cry for multitudes of honest men who stand stoutly together for honest politics. The western Pennsyl- vania Democrats and independents are flocking to the standard of George A. Jenks because they see in his candi- dacy an assurance of deliverance of the state from the clutches of unclean hands that have grasped power only for plunder and personal advantage. Wherever intelligent public opinion finds expression throughout the state there is ready and ample concession of Mr. Jenks’ fitness for the office of gov- ernor, and especially at this juncture, when there is need for a stern executive hand at Harrisburg to restore old landmarks of honest state administra- tion.—Philadelphia Record. | description the WATCHMAN office is the place to come.