/ YOL.LXXI., CENTRE HALL, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1898, 7 SHE WAS AN ADVENTURES. / WASHINGTON LETTER N | JENKS AT OIL CITY. monster great heaps. This morning their cake | was turned to dough. | Gramley may have been prepared to { and a careful search of the tax book of LOCAL ITEMS, the District of Columbia, shows that | he paid no personal taxes in Washing- A meeting greeted candi- Cullings of More than Ordinary Interest date Jenks at Oil City. From his re-| ® from Everywhere. A NATIVE OF OUR SECTION IN A] BREACH OF PROMISE SUIT. Kaneville, IL, Figures in Exposing a Woman After His Duoats, The Aurora, Ill., Daily News, ofl September 20th, contains the follow- | ing interesting tale. The principal and defendant is a native of our wval-| ley and is well known here: | B. F. Gramley is a rich, old farmer | at Kaneville, | Barring his lawyers fees and a few | minor expenses he is just as rich and | just as heart, hand and fancy free to- | day as he was last week. But that is | not the fault of Laura E. Gossin, of | Chicago. Gramley settled in Kaneville many | years ago. He was poor then but he | was industrious. He rented a farm, soon owned it, and then made a prac- | tice of buying another farm every year | or two out of his earnings until he was | counted wealthy. In the meantime his children grown up and married and his wife | had died and Benjamin grew lone- some. He made a few trips to Chica- go and soon had things coming his | way. One of the things that came his way was Miss Laura E. Gossin, a charm- | ing dime museum freak, fat, fair and | forty, or thereabouts. They say that Laura was captured at first sight. At! any rate on the witness stand she stated that Gramley agreed to take | her as his housekeeper ata salary of three dollars a week, and that if he cooking and dishwashing came wp to | her expectations he would marry her. An Aurora man named Hardin, who had been employed on the farm, testi- fied that he had heard Gramley make some such assertion, Laura registered no objection to such | proceedings and she and Ben had pro- | ceeded to get real thick. After a while, so the story goes, the | gay old widower tired of his Laura, and his love, like Dead Sea fruit, ed to ashes at the touch. He then did a real meah thing to his “sure thing,” giving her the doub- | le cross and the left hook in her heart of hearts. He drove to Batavia one morning, starting while it was yet dim and misty twilight on board his stone wagon, and ordered a curb stone for his well. The mason had to cut the stone to measure and during the hours he was busy Gramley went to Geneva, pro- cured a marriage license and, by the | time his curbstone was ready, had been married to a Batavia woman. Wife! aud curbstone were loaded on the wag- on together and, despite a severe rain storm and the fact that the wagon | broke down once under its load, the sporty old Kanevillian and his bride arrived home before the cocks began to Crow. When Laura Gossin senses that morning, she found had been seriously trifled with — “thrun’’ down, jilted and trampled | under foot as it were. And as Gramley’'s feet are large, burt like the dickens. She forthwith bad an interview | with herself, and, with flashing ee and heaving bosom she exclaimed: won't stand it. He shall not sr aside my saccharine affections in this! heartless manner; he shall not quench | my passions thusly. Not on your tin- type.” : Or some such language. Anyhow, it is said that Laura got real hot under the collar and in spite of the fact that Ben paid her a whole year's wages at $3 a week, when she had kept house tor him less thao two months, the first thing B. F. Gramley knew he was the defendant in a $10,- 000 breach of peomise suit, It is rumored that at the time Lau- ra filed the suit in the Kane county circuit court the breach in her heart was so wide you could roll a Hubbard squash through and never touch the sider, Yesterday the case came to trial. All Kaueville was on hand either as list- eners or witnesses, Laura grew real embarrassed apparently, when she told the court how ‘‘Ben'’-—that's what she called him-—would clasp her plump hand to his shirt front and whisper iu hier shell pink ear, with his hot breath “Stick to me little one, ever, and you'll wear diamonds,” Aud thifigs like that. And Laura believed it all, foolish thing, and clung to Ben like all git out, but the diamonds failed to arrive from the mines, Then eame his marriage to another women, and Laura went after Ben's bank account for a plaster that would unite the right and left auricles of her throbber and lace it once more in| delega good working vrder, Laura sod her lawyers had their own way with (he court yesterday and had | | i i tarn- ¢ awoke to Ler she | it | | refute many of Ladra's statements but, {he did nothing of the kind. This | morning he produced in court a man never been | divorced. Evidence was also intro- | duced showing that Laura had been | married a second time also, and that husband No. 2 had secured a divorce i had not been divorced. The court, under the circumstances, gave the plaintiff permission to dis- miss her case and her attorneys were prompt in makiog the motion, Gramley was the subject of congrat- marks we extract the following : An illustration of the character of taining is this: There is a clause in k constitution of Pennsylvania, by which money paid out of the treasury except upon an appropriation made by the as- sembly. That of course includes the governor with his power. But we find | an altercation took place between Gov- | ernor Hastings and his attorney gene- government had gone on a bond ulations on all sides and Laura returned | {to Chicago to resume her old oe cupa- | { tion of “‘the female § Sampson’ and the | ] : ly HE PAYS FOR ALL, The Workingman’'s Iuterest in the Pending | Contest — Why He should Vote for Jenks, of our citizens are more | deeply interested in the election of the | | Democratic state ticket than the work- |ingmen. The Republican administra- | tion is squeezing $12,000,000 annually | out of its taxables for state purposes, {and will ave to squeeze a good deal machine extravagances | | and steals are speedily checked. It | trite that a considerable share of this | | money comes from the corporations, | But in the final reckoning the people | pay it, as they pay all taxes, however | it is an income No class is tax, | be levied. Ex-Governor to additional | company | if an {tax is put upon a railroad | the company adjusts its freights and fares accordingly; if upon a house, the | the rent; if upon any article of consumption, the dealer | { fixes his scale of prices to suit. And] {this is always and inexorably true. | { The people must have found out from | | their ex perience with the war taxes { who must pay them and that escape | The people must pay the more than | five million dollars annual increase in | i i has been piled up since we last had a | Democratic House of Representatives | Governor in 1883. | They must pay the $170,000 biennial, agricultural department steal, the $124,- | 000 banking department steal, and all the other steals of greater or lesser The corporations do not pay them; they are merely the inter- mediaries in the payment, By the close of 1808 the four years’ term of Governor Hastings will have | i expended, in round figures, £54,000,000, | Jul there was a surplus of | the last year | of Governor Pattison’s term. A sim-| ple calculation will show that that has | been exhauosted and that the machine | treasury managers will still be $2,000, 000 in a hole. The people, the common | people, the business men and the work- { ingmen, will have to pay the addition- i al taxes that will be imposed to cover may be corpora~ 000,000. upon the The old English ale house sign of Alls” applies always and The king—*'I rule all.” The preacher—*‘I pray for all.” The lawyer—*‘I plead for all.” The soldier—*1 fight for all.’ The Workingman--'] pay for all.” a Gs fs EDITORIAL JOTS, Philadelphia is going to have a great peace jubilee, the greatest celebration of the character ever held in the Uni- ted States, October 26 and 27. The President has appointed a coms mission of nine to investigate the war scandals, and of these Gen. James A. Beaver Is one. There are suspicions it is selected to whitewash Alger, Rosevelt, commander of the Rough Riders, is certain to te the Republican nominee for governor of New York. The Spaniards in Havana have tak- en up the remains of Columbus intend- ing to ship them to Spain, The Uni ted States may object. The Spanish cruiser Maria Teresa has been floates hy Lieut. Hobson and is to be added to our wavy. In Huntingdon the Democrats and anti-Queg people have fused on pssem- tes to down the machine ibitionists, Democrats and people of Delaware county on assembiy nominees. will next try to raise the isers Colon and Mercedes, seeps making it hot for faforms the boss he is ready at least four instances in y bought conferees and by offering pogt-master and hips for such votes. The way Jenks and Sowden are expusing bis bows od soaking him Piled up wvideges of Ben's trifling | and it amounted to a considerable tsum. I do not remember the amount, but it was enough to pay ofl’ 22 Quay take care of business, cr to keep promises which Quay had made These men could not be put upon the pay roll, because there was no pro- bill vision made in the dppropriation by the legislative Assembly for them. a bond given by Mr. Reeder, who was Governor Hastings, and by Mr. Elkin, { who is chairman of the Republican | committee, and was assistant attorney | general of the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania, by which they promised the treasurer to indemnify him in) A case the money was not appropriated | ! at some future period. Now, that is a distinct violation of | of those people | would obey and de- | who swore they They swore that they would not pay out any money except upon an appro- priation made by the assembly, they proposed to have this done, this bond to treasu.er, This is robbing the people, and it was a perjury on those who though promising to defend and obey the con- stitution, had gone on that bond. If it will be this The constitution with reference to appropriations will be reduced to an absolute nullity, yet and wns given the way : because if they can do it in this instance they can do it in ev- the will They can create all please, and all they priation bill, Mr. Elkin, in his book, ; because it has been the custom of his party for 25 Years, without your Roowing it, to take money ont of Lhe treasury for the | paying out of which there was no law, taking money out of the tieasury and giving it to men whom they might employ for any purpose without your | authority. This would rub out alll your personal rights so far as your tax- | es would be concerned, and put it in the power of these men to take from | the people their money without any authority, campaign i tM A RH ! The Alaska Argonauts. The story of the gold hunters, as pre-| sented by a shipload of returning pil grims, tends to drive away all the | glamour that has hung above the heads of the pilgrims to the inhospita- ble Arctic regions. The gold that is found is little enough, while the! crowds that have sought it are large. A ship comes out from the northland carrying 600 miners and $150,000 in gold. That is an average of $250 to the man, or not enough to pay him for the money he expended in trans portation charges alone, to say noth- ing of the cost of his winter's food and the loss of his time. Bat, to make the matter more discouraging, most of the men whocame down on the ship bro't nothing but that old and mueh told about thing, experience, a good enough acquisition, but one always procured at a cost far out of proportion to its value, It is estimated that a liberal allow- ance for all gold brought out of the Klondike country for the year would nbt exceed $12,000,000. That is Jess than what has been expended in gei- ting the crowds at Dawson City into the mines and keeping them there. The Klondike when the balance sheet is struck ‘will be found to have cost more money than it has paid. A few men have earried away treasure. The vast majority have been losers, and many have paid the cost with their lives, sn mA A More than twenty million free sam- itech Haze A COMMITTEE WHICH WILL NOT | INVESTIGATE. The President Appoints Men to don Little | Whitewnshlong, Gen, Beaver a Member of It, WASHINGTON, Rept. should the investigation of the War | Department be made a star chambe r affair? That is the question asked on | every side since it was announced that | Mr. McKinley's would, until further notice, conduct the inves- | tigation behind the loc of room in the War Department, Seetet at | investigation has never been popular | 26.—~Why | commission ked doors This was | stated that | ‘ “until | is expected that | American people. those who these doors would be elosed { further notice.” It testis | mony in this investigation be publicly | Hi be thrown open, and (he { taken, and that expectation will al-| most certainly realized. Let the its consideration of | be Commission make may desire, but let the testimony by taken in public. Otherwise, the pub-| lie will put the whole affair down farcical. but it is as It may be only a coincidence | significant that the | McKinley's Commis- | Dodge, -Gen. G. M.| The other members, | un one named of Iowa. sion is are, Col. J. E. P. Howell, Wilson, of Ind.: Gen. A. D. Dr. P. of Til; ( Maj. Gen. J. M. + Hon. C. A. Denby, Seaver, of Pa.: of New York, of Ohio. ‘apt, i Ex-| Mo- | = 1 Gov. 1 ( ‘ook, and Giving officers honorable discharges, | who have been openly accused by Gen- erals in the army of incompetency and mismanagement, convince the is not a good way to | that the War | wishes to find the | guilty or intends to punish them when | found. A cage in point is that of Lieu- | tenant Colonel Rush H. Huidekoper, | the horse doctor who was Chief Sur-| : i country Department either geon at Camp Thomas, Chickamauga ! Park, and against whom many charg- | es were made, including from | rigadier General, made directly Secretary Alger. Instead Huidekoper court martialed, he could have vindicated | ed, that | his resignation should be accepted and | he an honorable discharge, | Mr. McKinley heard of that order and | countermanded it, and directed that Huidekoper be ordered to Washington { to testify before the investigating eom- Mr. McKinley finding out much more about things than he knew before the talk about investiga-| tion began; and it is believed that hel intends making it hot for some of the | guilty parties. In fact, one al to | =O that | either Were been or convict orders issued be given mission. is his personal he must do so for self-preservation. Representative Cochran, of Mo. who is in Washington trying to con-| { vince the administration to order more | service, said of the Republicans asking endorsement of their conduct of the “The Republicans will be fortu- | nate, indeed, if they can divert public | attention from the bond issue, the neg- which has characterized the conduet of the au | thorities in actual charge of the prose- cution of the war. How they can ex- pect to gain advantage by raising war issues, it is dificult to “understand. men of ali parties. They did their du- ty nobly, and have added to the glory and reputation of American arms, by deeds of unparalicled heroism. So much for the soldiers in the field, Now, if the authorities at Washington can afford to go the country for appro. bation of an administration, which failed to provide our brave soldiers with the rations, tents, medicines, and competent surgeons and attendants, during the struggle, and hinges the re- sult of the fall election upon this is- sue, the Democrats can afford to meet it, I think, however, that the war will cut very little figure. Parties will divide on old lines, and the issues of 1886 will be fought over again.” Much interest is feit in Washington in that affidavit made by “Teddy” Roosevelt, that he was not a resident wf New York, but of Washington, It in not believed that the making pub- lcjof this affidavit by the friends of Gov. Black, will prevent “Teddy” get- ting the Republican nomination for Governor of New York, but ““feddy’s"” explanation of why he made it will go a long way towards helping the Dem- ocrats to defeai him afterward, He says he made the aMdavit under ad- wice from his lawyers, because he was easessed for personal taxes both in New York and in Washington, and did not wish to pay double taxes. He ot wped iton. “Teddy's” army record shows | that a tax dodger may make a tip-top | fighter, but the voters of New York tax dodger governor of their state. Col. W. J. Bryan and Gov, Holcomb | of Nebraska, received much attention | from prominent Democrats during the | several days they werein Washington working in the interest of Nebraska | volunteers. Col, Bryan could not pub- lily talk politics, but he participated | in some important political ®onferenc- | es and freely gave his ppinion to his | fe How Democrats. i fy oy JURY LIST, Drawn for November Term of C out, Begin ning Monday, Nov, 28th, The following have been drawn as November term of ¢ sn Monday, N urt, ovember commencing 25th, and to for two weeks: GRAND JURORS —~I8T WEEK. John Bmith, James F, Uzzle, 8 Ne wion Gill . R. “hud Philipsburg. Harry Harter, Spring. Jonas Rishell, {iregy. now Shoe, ' Spring. Bitner, Gre ze. $ inger, Penn, Isanc Armstrong, E. E. Hagerty, Philipsburg, I. M. Cirege. Thomas Croft, i J College. Gramley, Boggs. Liberty, Benner, ohn E. oseph Marshall, Abednego Willi Huston. W. T. Harper, Union. 8S. D. Miller, Miilheim. Wm. Hoover, Spring. Chas. W, Wolf, Haines. ae WY. WW, yer, Potter, N. W. Eby, Haines, W. J. Quay, Curtin Wm. Bilger, Spring. Michael Dempsey, Rush. John Bellefonte, Foresman, ams, Anderson, TRAVERSE JUROR —IST WEEK. { Kepheart, Patton. John Hurd, Philipsburg. Heverly, Martin C J. 8. Mever, Penn. O. D El Huston, Wm. Ralston, C Miles Reigfritz, John F. Harter, Michael Fravel, Liberty. Jax. A. Decker, Ferguson. Wm. Winklebleck, Haines. Ephriam Keller aleb Jas, Howard, owher, Worth. NS yherts, lege, tush. State College, , Spring. Ammon Greainger, Bellefonte, Jacob Ge phart, Miles. John Met Walker, George F. Stephenson, Patton. Henry Huey, Benner, B. Shafer, Haines, G. W. Lucas, Philipsburg. Miles Walker, Bellefonte. Samuel Elder, Ferguson, C. T. Fryberger, Philipsburg, George Howe, Philipsburg. College, ‘auley, Lie, Wm. E. Grove, College. A. H. Leathers, Howard. Herbert Showers, Spring Harry Shivery, Benner. Orr Brickley, Howard. Chas, A. Musser, Philipsburg. Eugene Mutchman, Bellefonte. College, Heuner, Mingle, Bellefonte. L. Rodgers, Walker, < urtin Garbrick, Spring. ke Davis, Huston. AR Boyer, Haines, John A. Confer, Milesburg. Jacob Yarnell, Boggs. Augustus Newman, Milesburg. Henry Moyer, Gregg. Wm. Clark, Bellefonte, Wm. H. Markle College B. F. Deitrick, Bellefonte. Samuel Harpster, Jr. TRAVERSE JURORS SECOND WEEK, Samuel Wasson, College. Wm. C, Hubler, Peun. John P. Seibert, Benner, Samuel Bailey, Harria, Hiram Thompson, College, J. W. Fravel, Buow Shoe. J. R. Alexander, Spring. Jacob Breon, Penu. John Johusonbaugh, Patton. Theophelus Pletcher, Howard, Cland Cook, Rellsfoute, W. E. Vail, "Phil burg. Harry Deihil, Bellefonte, John Dunlap, Bellefonte, Perry Winters, Miles, Wm. Harter, Liberty. Edward Beckwith, Taylor. Thomas Malone, Hoggs. 8B. 8. Miles, Worth, © wW.T T. Hubler, Mijes, J. R. Strong, Potter. James Jags rn Philipsburg, John C. Marion, Philip H. eyer, Harris, Al Baum, Bellefonte. T. 8. Delong, Dursin, Wm. Good Cogs. oh. ~ Boodle, of lipsburg, Rat Walker. AG fobh, Water. w, M. Da ) . Bellefonte, yo L ns, Spring. os, Tush, Far. CC. 8. Witmer, Pence. Said the Sergeant to the Don, A fter scrapping at San Juan, ‘You're a soldier and a brother Let us shake with one another : Here's my hardtack—take a gnaw.’ Baid the Jackie to the Dago, Whom he licked at Santiago, “We plunked you and we sunk you, Now, we'll feed and clothe and bunk you, Here's my baccy, take a chaw, Weather fine, nights cool. Grain prices are slow on an upward The streams in our county are low The Bpanish forces are leaving Cuba 5 Question being asked : Who was at Bamuel D. Wykofl, of Rlanchard, The supervisors of Harris, in anoth- It is admitted the Democrats will will this Large crowds from this Union valley county fair Jenks’ speeches cause consternation Quay camp like 80 many dy- The American flag was raised the Hip, hip! The Coburn flag still waves high in mountain gap, though somewhat battle with the winds, There are 1,143 soldiers’ orphans be- Alger keeps catching it all around— yet McKinley won't ask Al- This week the congressional confer- will complete the Democratic We regret to learn, and so will her W. W. Bpangler, of near Pot- MifMlinburg still has a number of ty- as we learn from Miner's apple evaporating establish- tosevell on Tuesday was nominated y 218 for Governor Black. The safe of the Farmers Bank, of Mrs. Garis, of near Pleasant Gap, Spain is making a war threat, if our A Parisian on the R. A Bamiller, of Millheim, after N Tapping the new water mains w Tuesday's deeds of violence the Re At Maryville, Mo., a wo- Mary King, of Philadelphia, at- Wm. J. Bryan is sick in Washing- The boro’ tax notices have been ob