G THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA. QUAY HAS TROUBLES The Campaign "A Com edy of Krrors." HIS OWN STATE CHAIRMAN. Bard and Cruel Fate Continues to Porsue the Boss in His Eflorts to Hold the Nose of the Party Up Stream. (Bperliil Correspondence.) ' Philadelphia, Sept. 18. The Don:0 orntle, state committee Is now more royally housed la Philadelphia than it has been in years. Larue, airy rooms hare been fitted up "with Democratic slBipllilty" nt MOS-10 Ponth Perm quart, within the shadow of the city hall, the ountliest pile of marble, brick and cement in the world, a colossal monument of Republican extravagance and knavery. Here during the cam paign State Chairman Rilling of Erie, Secretary Moyer of Schuylkill and Representative Palm of Crawford, In charge of the publicity department, will be dally found on the "flrini? line," together with a staff of assist ants. A large and hospitable latch string hangs on the door's outside. Democrats and others Interested in the war upon the Quay machine and In favor of honest and economical Ute government are invited to drop In, and it goes without saying, they U1 be welcome. Since our last epistle the political temperature in the state has arisen somewhat, but has hardly touched anmmer heat from the fact that the Republican campaign has "slipped a eng." The loudly heralded Intention f the Quay managers to open the campaign with a blare of trumpets, a battery of spellbinders and with Colo Bl Barnett raising the "blazing cross" aloft with one hand and the flag In tho other, has been run on side track. THE TROUBLE WITH BARNETT. Colonel Barnett has got psoriasis, or, In. plain English, the itch. This means that between the itch and the pepper ing In store for him and his aiders and abettors that he and they will be kept scratching from now until the 4th of October. Colonel Barnett Is now In a sani tarium, and the opening of the cam paign has been deferred until Oct. 4, when the Republican State League of Clubs will hold a fandango at Ilarris burg, when the shootin' of niggers in the Philippines will be glorified and pertinent state issues Ignored again aa completely as was the case with Quay's state convention. Meanwhile the Quay machine la beset with troubles, and like the 111 luck man who begins to slide down hill, every fel low citizen stands ready to give him a kick to expedite his descent. COMEDY OF ERRORS. Quay's appearance before the last legislature in the role of "an old panta loon," clamoring to be permitted to retain his seat in the senate, was "a comedy of errors." and the Republi can campaign this fall promises to ex ceed It not only as a comedy, but as a larce-comedy as well. The choice of General Reeder, who was kicked out of the Hastings cabi net for cause, for chairman, has been found to be an error. In the first place he is discredited and smirched with the independent voters. Then bis selection is the foolish flaunting of a. red rag before the maddened insur gents. 'The famous resolutions ho wrote for adoption by his Northamp ton convention, in which he termed those Republicans who had voted for anti-Quay members of the legislature and the anti-Quay legislators who voted against Quay aB "cowards and traitors" and declared that "such masqueraders should be debarred from taking part in the deliberations of the party," is regarded as the serving of a formal and insulting writ upon them ana tneir iik mat tneir votes are neither wanted or required for the Re publican state ticket this fall. Then, the machine's place holders are demurring at Chairman Reeder'a assessment for campaign boodle on the ground that while he was In the lux urious enjoyment of the $20,000 job of secretary of the commonwealth he re fused to chip In a single penny to the state committee's treasury. Then, lib eral contributors are declining to remit for the reason that they have no con fidence In the committee's manage ment, which ia a most serious thing, since there Is a debt of $30,000 which will have to be liquidated, as the creditors are tired and urgent. But the troubles do not cease here. Gen eral Gobin, who is permitted to roam about without a check rein or a muz ile, and whom no politician will In jure against committing blunders In a speecblet to the Grangers at Will lam's Grove, threw another handful of salt and pepper on the raw flesh of the Insurgents by coarsely reminding them of their sins and that tbrere are no seats checked for them in the Quay band wagon. Then in the Quay privy council the jealousies, the trace kicking and cow punching of the tin lieutenants, which have been so notorious, have broken ut afresh, compelling the "old nia.i," In sheer self defense, to send tho 'prlntlce boys to bed and tak3 the dl rection of matters In his own bands. "BULL" ANDREWS' MISTAKE. The old Crawford rooster, Bill An JrewB, who was deprived of his tail feathers while the "prlntlce boys were musing mankind with their "comedy Of errors" during the leglHluture, has again been rentored by tho boss to power and favor on the basis of Cap tain Cuttle and old Soil (jilln that if "anybody klu, he kin." The bluff that the senate will neat Quay on Governor btonc's ready inal and unconstitutional credi-ntialH buy ing failed becaima McKlnley und Hun na are agin it, the machine's (-mature , 'iare been aocretly at work for mirut .Ime in clearing the necks for a spuria lesslon of the legislature, setting tinp ind snoods, dyke, nets and eel pots all over the state for the rupture of !u urgeut member and "Indoociug 'em,' ns Artcmus Ward would say, "to JIn Ike Young Men's Christian rtasoclrt tlnn" rind to consent to vote for Quay, I'ncle mil Andrews being again In the s;iddle, started up toward the head waters for big cnnie and got as far as Washington county, but not being a "keorful Injun," he neplected to de stroy lila trail. He la reputed to have made n "proposition" to an insurgent member who was still 'strong In the faith and who made report to the In Furrrnt rhtefa. Hut tit nil events t'nele Bill, whether he smelt "a p'aln clothes man" or not.haatilychuckedhls Bible and i'U;,lit shirt Into a grip and departed for the far nway land of the Montczumas, where he Is tho pro prietor of a gold mine the real thing pot the kind producing the gold bricks of politics. ANNOYED BY KILLING'S PERSIS TENCY. But the troubles of the machine do not end with this by a darned sight. State Chairman Killing some time ago sent a chnllenge to General Reeder proposing a joint debate between the state candidates, but the communica tion evidently found Its way to the dead letter office. Chairman Rilling has hung on to General Reeder's ear, however, like a tick-seed to a coon's shin, and has again proposed a scries of joint debates on state issues. In the last communication he says: "That all the matters at Issue In this campaign, the election of a state treasurer, as well as judges of the su preme and superior courts, may be properly discussed, we respectfully suggest that we have throughout the state a number of joint debates, the details of the same to be mutually agreed upon by us. Let the speakers of both sides address the same audi ence from the same platform. Let each side present Its case to the voters for their benefit. These matters ought to and can be-discussed In a fair and proper spirit. You will please let us hear from you regarding this sub ject at an early date." This challenge has been In the pos session of General Reeder for some days, and he Is treating It like the "man with an elephant on his hands." That he will turn Its picture to the wall is about as foregone a conclusion as that the ascendency of the Repub lican party means higher taxes and maladministration. He will fall back on the defense that the Republican platform advocates shootin' niggers In the Philippines and that a Democrat has no right to live; that It Is silent as to state Issues, and that he has therefore no authority to raise and discuss Issues that are not included in that "fearful and wonderful party" deliverance. His position reminds me of the Jer sey justice of the peace who remarked to the young legal sprig who was quoting him the supreme court in the course of a case that "he wanted It understood that this court don't pro pose to go outside of the state of New Jersey for its law." Death and tax ation are always with us, and so are troubles with the Quay machine. STONE'S FOOT IN IT. j The latest vexation Is due to the stupidity of Governor Stone the First. Certain long range politicians set a trap for Stone, which he unconscious ly walked Into. He was an easy mark. It was deemed desirable that an expression on trusts should be ob tained from some conspicuous mem ber, some "shining light," of the Quay household, since the Quay platform is as silent on the subject as "the tomb of the Capulets." It was believed that Quay himself was too old and experienced a fox to even smell at the bait, so the trap was set for Stone. The editor of the New York World was Induced to Invite Governor Stone to write that Demo cratic paper a screed on the question of trusts, which Is now banking up like a storm cloud on the political horizon. To the general surprise the Keystone executive complied with a rough hewn defense of the trusts and of the promoters of trusts. He gave his ipse dixit that trusts, although undisguised blessings to mankind, are not a political issue, nor are they likely to become such. No fee-gorged attorney of John D. Rockefeller or Phil. Armour could have defended or apologized with more seal and bold ness or less skill and Ingenuity these criminal aggregations of capital, that are making the consumer squirm lik;; skinned eels and are handing the na tion over to a soulless money feudal oligarchy. PENROSE AND ANDREWS TRAP PED. The trap was again baited and Sena- tor Penrose and Bill Andrews, the rec ognlzed lieutenants of the machine, were Interviewed by the Philadelphia North American, and they practically indorsed the trust position taken by Governor Stone, and so by this round' about way the trust has been made an Issue in this fall's campaign, and is so rated. FUSION IN CHESTER. The experiment of fusion on county offices between the Democrats and tho good government and anti-machine forces in Chester has attracted wide attention. It is regarded by the ma chine leaders much as the people of tho southern communities look upon an outbreak of yellow fever or the au thorities of continental Europe the bubonic plague. It must be stamped out and quarantined against, lest it become epidemic. A few days ago the question of fusion was submitted to the Demo cratic yeomanry of Chester, the in dependents having already agreed to it. The machine leaders ordered the half a score of Cleveland holdover Democrats who are allowed to hold their jobs in the federal departments of Philadelphia and are used by them to attempt to defeat the proposition a the pilinarlea, r.upplylng them with handful of caiih to buy and corrup the electors. But this was one of tho timei that money didn't count, and fusion swept the beautiful county 1 ijen these Jieinoerutlc Judas were or dmtsd to buy kuijio of the delegate to the county convention und Join them in a boll which had been planned by tho Kej)uiyiiuii leuilers tor u IiuniO' erratic convention. But this, too, lulu ernbly felled through the lynx-eyed watchfulness of Chairman Cavanaugh uliboiigh u Jim Crow bolt did occur wvi'U ttUeg'id Democrats walking out a strateht.-out-notie-trpnnlne-wlthout-our-label Democratic ticket. Thus we have the spectacle of reven beef enters, niafiqueindlng ns Demo crats, holding office under a Repub lican national r.dmlniRtration and al leged to be protected by the civil ser vice, playing into tho nands of their bouses. And such are tho manifold beauties of tho Chinese civil service re form. But tho fusion battle In Chester will be handsomely won, and next fall, encouraged by lis success. It will be come epidemic and ring the funeral knell of Qunylsm. But can Quay, who Is now the Job of Pennsylvania poll tics, take to himself the Biblical as surance "that whom the Lord loveth he cb.nsteneth?" THE JUDGE. POLITICAL NOTES. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. The legislature of Pennsylvania Is nne of the biggest and boldest legalized blackmailing concerns on enrth. The big corporations, the Insurance com panies, the Standard Oil company, the brewers, the counterfeit butter mnk ers, the pawnbrokers, the lottery pol icy knaves, the school book trust, the adulterer of food, trade outlaws nnd Interests that have shady and "under the rose" dealings, all dread the ap proach of a new legislature as the people of a southern community fear the coining of the yellow fever season. They can scent tho presence of the brigands and know that the hour has come when they will again be "held up" by Quay and his gang and com pelled to disgorge and pay tribute to them. And this Is how the game Is worked: A new and guileless member Is In duced to Introduce a bill belonging to the "snake" family, or better known as a "pinch." Then the little Joker Is taken under the wing of the old and experienced machine blackmailers, who In the meantime have hnd them selves fixed on tho gilt edge commit tee to which these "snakes" are re ferred by the speaker, who Is of course fully posted and la a partner. The favorite plan Is to allow the queer bills to pass the house and go to a senate committee on the promise that there will be a divide of the swag. This course thoroughly alarms the victims, who at once hustle to get a fund together to purchase the strangu lation of the measure thus threatening their Interests. Thousands of dollars are raised on the "camptown" prin ciple, and a representative sent to ne gotiate with the blackmailers. It sometimes happens that the black mailing cabal saves them this trouble, as was the case a few years ago when the speaker pro tem. of the senate was tracked to the office of a foreign corporation which had its headquar ters in New York city, and which was Invited to come down handsomely. The guilt of this legislative blackmail er became known, and there was a ecandal and a mock Investigation. The senate committee on finance Is one of the headquarters for the most notorious of the gang of Quay black mailers, and membership on it is worth thousands of 'dollars each session. Certain of the favorite Interests of the blackmailers, notably the school book trust and the Insurance companies, are compelled to protect themselves by maintaining lobbies at Harrisburg, but Quay, the boss, never undertakes to purge the legislature of these specula tive and highwaymen statesmen, so that it has come to pass that each leg islature Is more disreputable than Its predecessor and comes to he more dreaded and feared. Turn the rascals out. REPUBLICAN CLERICS. General Poo Bah Gobln, the Quay soldier-statesman of many jobs, was entirely right, although unjustly criti cized for it, when he told the farmers at William s Grove that the state treasurer is "only a clerk." Under the Quay machine this functionary is af ter all "only a clerk." He Is directed by others and has pratlcally nothing to do with the cash of the treasury, which is farmed out among the po litical banks that pay interest to the boss and allows the money to be used by him and his family and favorite lieutenants for speculating in stocks and entering into speculative business deals. William Llvesey was a smooth and obliging "clerk." He was state treasurer for nine years, and when he was not state treasurer he was the state treasurer's cashier. He visited Canada, you will recall. He thought he would be safer there than In Har risburg, particularly if he kept him self disguised ana went under an as sumed name. He remained In the queen s domains for a long time. He is now said to be living in Chicago in strict retirement. BOYER AND HAYWOOD CLERKS. Boyer was state treasurer, and It will be remembered that the legislature undertook to impeach him because he had had queer relations with that colossal rascal, John Bardsley, of Phil adelphia. Haywood, the predecessor of the present treasurer, and who was "only a clerk," had his death hasten ed by worry and fear of exposure. He entered tne offlce a strong, lusty and happy man, but broke down under tho strain. Had he lived the courts would have sent him to the penitentiary What the people want Is a treasurer who will not be "only a clerk" or weak Democrat like "Square Timber' Noyes, who was used by the Republl can bosses through his cashier, Blake Walters, and whom the position ruin ed. Farmer Creasy, If he .bo elected will not be "only a clerk." There will be no speculating with the state's funds and payments held back from the counties that It may earn private Interest from the political banks. And he will turn the searchlight on the books and the papers; nnd what he will discover will be enough to raise the loot oft the state house. BOODLE USED IN CHESTER, The Quay machine, driven to (leaner atlon, went lta limit to boodlelze the Democrats In Chester county at last week s primary, at which the question of fusion with the independent He publicans was submitted to vote Whore the great wads came from Is a mystery, but thousands of dollars were in the hands of tho Quay agents throughout the county. The machine cash failed to defeat fusion, however which was overwhelmingly carried General McCauley then turned their attention to the county convention to have fusion rejected nftr the party had Instructed for It at tho polls. The Quay machlno was mnterlolly aided by certain miserable nnd traitorous Dem ocrats who hold John In the federal departments In Philadelphia Cleve land holdovers, who tints sold them selves In order to retain their places. PENNSYLVANIA'S CZAR. William A. Stone In the first governor of Pennsylvania who has undertaken to set himself up as superior to tho constitution and to usurp the functions of an emperor In a sovereign state of the American union. He appoints a United States senator when the consti tution requires him to summon the leg islature In extra session and when ho knows that the senate from Its estab lishment has never received, but has Always rejected an applicant applying under such circumstances with a gov ernor's credentials. He vetoes two proposed constitution al amendments looking to a elenn and honest ballot because his boss dlrnn, proves of them, and which the consti tution withdraws from his considera tion. He takes his pen and roams through appropriations which hedeems too large, striking here and there, thus constituting himself bigger than the legislature, and which no other gov ernor ever dared to do. He signs a bill nnd flies It among the statutes, but sub sequently, forming an unfavorable opinion of the law, he reconsiders his approval and Imagines that he has re pealed the act. He sends for the au thorities of state and eleemosynary in stitutions that have been given appro priations and compels them to accept a lower amount at the point of the pistol, or through the threat thatarefusal will cause him to veto the entire appropria tion. Thus things have come to a pret ty pass in Pennsylvania when a gov ernor becomes greater than the legisla ture and breaks the laws which he has sworn to execute and obey. PROOF IS WANTED. The claim is flaunted In the faces of the people by the Republican machine managers that the state treasury has never lost a dollar through the gutting of banks holding state deposits, such as the Delamater, the People's, the Key stone, the Chestnut Street, and other notoriously rotten political concerns. But how do the people know the state has never lost a dollar? Where Is the proof of It, where is the audit? We have only the "say so" of the Quav henchmen. The state Is bankrupt and cannot meet Its obligations even In boom times, and the governor Is com pelled to strike right and left with his Veto, starving the schools, the Insane and the charitable institutions In order, as he shouts, to save the state's credit. As Hamlet would remark, "There's something rotten In the state of Den mark." VETERAN QUAY. Senator Qunv Is the possessor of a medal voted him by congress for a! leged bravery in the rebellion, but he loved his comrades so dearly that dur ing the late national encampment held In Philadelphia he was bobbing for eels and angling for trout in the wilds of Canada. Quay has no time for an old soldier except as a delegate to a polltl cal convention or on election day. A JOB FOR BEATH. It Is now In order for General Bob Boath to reassemble the Pennsylvania War Veterans' Association, as he did In Philadelphia in August. 1898, and again eulogize Governor Stone as the soldier s friend and flamboyant cham plon. Of course a little thing like Stone's discharge of old soldiers from the state departments at Harrisburg to make room for Quay henchmen who never saw a "reb" or smelled gunpow der In their country's defense, and which caused the McKInley Veteran association of Dauphin county and Ma Jor John C. Delaney to denounce him need not be alluded to. But as De Wolf Hopper would sing: "There are things and there are things 't were better not to dwell on." WHY JOSIAH WAS NAMED. It is the usual thing for the Quay machine to allow the railroads and the Standard Oil company to name the Judges of the supreme and the superior courts, but having a nomination for the latter this jiear at his disposal the boss j i i i I 1. .... , nkti Bulked In this corrupt conRDlracv and Holumitly takluf steps to conceive I Larry Eyre and the virtuous Auditor In order to bring the mayor of Phila delphia into camp, so as to have tne use of the delegates he controls and make the city "a wide open town" for election frauds, permitted that "ambi tious gentleman, who Is pipe laying for the next Republican nomination for governor, to name the candidate for the superior court. This compelled the boss to offend a great corporation by scratch lng the eminent jurist whom it had In duced Governor Hastings to appoint The mayor of Philadelphia, through some subterranlan reason, named Jo slah Adams, who has since been found to be morally and professionally unlit to a place upon so Important a bench as that of the superior court. There Is a grave scandal connected with his stew ardship of an estate which brought him to the verge of disbarment as an attor ney. Nearly nine years ago he was ap pointed, through the Influence of the men who had skinned the Penn Trust and Safe Deposit Company, aa its re ceiver, and he has managed for a long period to nurse this to his great flnan clal benefit. BOGUS ASSESSMENTS. The September return of the voters of Philadelphia has been completed by the machine assessors, and shows that the bogus and rotten assessment Is still being kept at high water mark. This Indicates that tho old game of voting the names of dead men, of dogs, poll parrots and monkeys is again to be re sorted to this fall by the gangs of trained home and Imported repeaters from Washington, Baltimore, Wilming ton and Chester. A boy not of age re cently admitted before a magistrate he had voted 3(i times at the last election in Philadelphia, receiving $1 for eac vote he got. A total return of 318,151 Is made, and yet thousands of addition al legitimate und Illegitimate voter will swear In their votes. On the basis of one voter to every five inhabitant this return gives Philadelphia an indl catad population of one and a half Bullions, which la preposterous. There ire 80,000 names on tho voting lists that do not hnlong there and which ac counts for the fact that Phlladelphl Is the only great city In tho United Slates that is ovs.'whelmiagly Repud- lean, R The Danger Signal of Lie Mr. C II. Snyder, a well known citizen of Lawrence, Kan, said : " I am now seventy years of age. About three years ngo I ex perienced a coldness or numbness In the feet, then creeping up my legs, until it reached my body. I grew very thin in flesh, appetite poor and I did not relish tny food. At last I became unable to move about. I consulted several dis tinguished physicians, one telling me I had locomotor ataxia, an other that I had creeping paral ysis. I took their medicines but continued to grow worse. Almost a year ago a friend advised me to try Dr. Williams' rink Pills for Pale Teople. Before I had finished my first box I found they were benefiting me. I used twelve boxes in all, and was perfectly cured. Although it is six months since I used my last pill there has been no recurrence of the disease." from Lawrence Journal. Pr. Williams' Pink rills for Pale Ptnpt eontnln, in a rondensod form, all the ele. ments nwessnry to give new life and rich new to the blood and restore shuttered nerves. They are nn unfailing specific for inch diseases M locomotor ataxia, partial pnrolrsis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neural pia, rheumatism, nervous hendaclie, the aftcr-eftects of the grip, pnlnltntinn of the henrt, pale and sallow complexions, and nil forms of weakness either in male or female. Dr. Williams Pink Pills tor Pal Psspl art nsvsr eld by tha doitn or hundrsd. but always In pack ages. At III druggists, or direct from tho Dr. Wil liam Msdlcln Company. Schensctady, N. V., 50 cant per bos, 6 box 12.50. We carry a i-t stock of goods valued at tl.NW.OOOOO We receire from 10,000 to 25,000 letters every day 2 3 """'"'HJf si: :;'" 'A j hiiMiitl 130 B39KJ OKU limit ;;3 B73K niiium; imiiinr.il w liJlitllifflJ Wo own and occupy the tallest mercantile building In the world. We have over a,ooo,ooo customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly engaged filling out-of-town orders. OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE la the book of the people It quotes Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 7a cents to print and mail each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show your good faith, and we'll send you a copy f K K c, wnn an cnargea prcp,u. .MONTGOMERY WARD pn Michigan Ave. and Madison Street UUi CHICAGO s1 8-Mms. FTP Not & Mirny School Whon " iiliamsport IitklMon Kmlnnry wiw fmindPft, mnney-mnkfnR wnn tho Uxwt tliouic lit of tu lirmiiuttTh. 'lu t'tvc tit yniinij men Hint womi'ii tliorotiKh tntWIwUiHl tiiMriit-tloii unit careful moral tritinint; itt Hi" IohhhI i.wnil.k cunt wus the I'HmmiMint iiirn. Ii Mill ruiuiiitiH It intriimmmt mm. 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