~,~_ utociatii;itattiman Q ,P..IY MIKK,, Eprrox aim Paoritproa 0 Blith.LlCl,e()N T CtUNIS:--4112 pot youir wiesopill In savages .ohoen tat pail dahsare; siml $.1.00 whoa b&s, theizpiadlon _oLtiktAar. MOCATIC STATE & CO. TICKET. ArNTOR GEXgRAL, COLWITL W. W. - TE DATTS, NCR FR rOR 9ENS RA L, LIEUT. COL. J. P. LINTQN A ssEmoir, FREDERICK KURTZ, TR EA SURER, • J. DUNLOP SIIUGERT CO.V.VMS/ONE - R, JOSHUA POTTER DISTRICT ,1 TTORNDT, 11. Y. STITZER, AUDITOR, ' JOHN B. 'THOMAS ROLL ON . THE BA:LLY RALLY ! IREEMEN, RALLY!! („*. • - DMITOCRATZO faimigrzige! A grand meeting of Lbw eititens who are Op poerd to negro equality, unequal taxation and official eotroptinn, will be held at the COURT 1101: AR in Bellefonte, on ~_-~eu Gain ecteasx ;ate -pax Lot there Lo an. outpouring of the friends of thethite man and the goyernment of our fathers, Snell AA will atrile . terryr heath' of the political demagogues, who ail, now Peek ing to degrade the nhite race to a level with the Afttican, and attempting to prevent arc-nn ion of tie - Staten! Como one, come all COLONEL W. W. 11. DAVIS, Democratic candidate for Auditor General will be present mid address the meeting SOLDISIALS, ravoierand hear • °ramrod° , in arms &reuse the great ireaes of the day. .'By order of , the Committee W. F. REYNOLDS, "County Finanoes.' The column and a-half ; under the abcrirer Piceerbwire in trinsic evidence of its authorship. The personal feeling manifested, as well as the labored attempt to jiistitY the acts of the last abolition attorney of the %lard of commiasioners,,we think justi fies us in assuming that; this gentleman, Mr. A. 0. Furst., is the nether of the article in question. We shall, therefore, treat this article as having been written or dictated by hini, and as being his best defence of the republican adtnin s tmtion of which the subjeetand himself are capable. We shall not follow 3lr. Furst through his entire article, but state the simple facts of the case more minutely than we did in our issue of the 22d ultimo. On the 7tlt of January, 1861, ovary county office was filled by an abolitionist. The Commissioners were Thomas Hutchison, Ira usher and JohnbleCelmont ; Clerk, S. M. Irwin; Attorney, James 11. Ran kin. Auditors, Jeremiah Mayes, James C. Williams, Benjamin Schrock. Trea surer, W. W. Brown. lasistant-Tres surer and Clerk to Auditors, George Livingston. On that day, January 7, 1861, this abolition board of auditors settled the account between W. W. ' Brown, Treasurer, and the Comn wealth, and made a report of their t r.r) tlement to the Auditor ,Greneral. In this report thOse auditors sa* that on January 1, 1861, there was State tax outstanding and uncollected in Centre county i amountin&la $20,885 41. This - statement was untrue. At that date the amount of State tax outstanding in the county was only $10,992 64, or $9,872 77 less than these auditors reported. At this time no debt or account had been charged against Centre county in the , Auditor General's office. Whe ther , it be tru3 Or net that other auditors had made mistakes, in previous settlements, iis43 - not know, nor ma any difference for their mistakes,-if any, were not acted upon the Auditor General, and in la..,way contributed to tia this county for the $9,872 77, which were wrongfully charged against it.— This mistake of the auditors was not discovered during the year following by the commissioners, their clerk, or attor ney, awis evidenced by the fact that no appeal wad taken from the settlement, on behalf of the county, which might have boon done airy time within six mowtha ; and no effort was made after wards to open the aettlernewkby an act of the Legislature, although the LIME Rev. Adam B. Barlow, aholitinnist, us" the ',matter, in-itesa of Mr. Barron. Another ovidaMo that the mistakc was unknown wei hare 17. the Lc't that at the auditors' settlement aii January, 1862, the same'error it repeated, tbs auditors reportiag.tto`atiouut-of State LIS out-. avoilat ID tai:lt',o2 l 7 , sD'ufsteati of tho &dualOritiout,:44:4l;o9o. Before this latta*rtisittroord A. 0.-.lfurst - tad boon aPpoitita(aftorspy,for'iliV Mu*, whose business Warns' to intichltis inthr, este and see that no such mistaken were 90$1814betl- . On the 7th of February ' 186 2 2 the Auditor General settled an aseonit against Centre Ming. Maki*, the nettlemnfit, a debt die from the went , to the State „of $99,870 39. lb his ar ticle Mr. Furst says $14,000 of this as sumed debt wis chat:god against -the _ • • • _ - •• • rge made by oatstic commissioners and auditors from 1848 to 1859 ; while four-fifths of the other $15,900 consisted of the defalca tions of an, democratic treasurers, Fil m,' Gilliland and Morrison erroneously cLarged to the county instead of their ball. through the negligence of -demo cratic officers ; •and that none of Brona's dcfnleation was flnalty cffarged to t. e counti,"in donnoquence of the 'efforts Mr. Furst and others. Why Mr. Furst should so rashly hazard a statement false in every Si-dealer, when ho might have refreshed hit memory by reference to thh records, we are unable to_oomprehend. The account, as settled, by the Auditor (general, is as follows : Amount of State tax outstanding as per =flaunt' report of January, Taxes wooled for 1861 •_. i - - as,ielt t Dy commissions to collet tors, to . - $2,041 08 .11y*En't timid by Brown in ' 1801' 2,555 b7....4,390 03 of what, now, pray, Joesthis amount consist? the actual amount of State tax outstanding Jason*. 7, 1861, $lO,- 992 64, the amount of error then perpe trated by the abolition board of aud;- tom $9,872 77, and a portion of Brown's defalcation, consisting of the taron real and \ por,.onal property, $8,7u4 98. which the law authorized the Auditor General one dollar of mistake ever made by the auditoricritibMihe settlement of Janu ary 1861, nor one dollar of the defalca tion of any treasurer prior to W. W. );hown,,_ entered-into-41mb -settlement in" February 1862! The settlement was perfectly correct, as far as the Auditor, General was concerned, and its result only erroneous because the county had been charged with $9,872,77 as outstan ding-State tax, which existed only in the imagination of the ibOartl of aboli tion auditors. now they ever made the mlWake, neither they, the commission ers, their clerks -nor attorney were e' e er able to explain, and the error was not seen after exposed for more 'Phan two years it was made. Mr. Furst says that Browq:s defalea tion was not finally charged to the coun ty, and that the other mistake was cor reeted Mr. Alexander, who simply com pleted the work commenced by Mr. Furst! Let us ace what the record shows. The c o py of the seta:ad:mt• made by' thp Auditor General, February 7, .1.:Z1`), now on file in the commission ers' 1./ILA of' i:lo — "'nntst, was certified February 8, 1862, and we presume 7. 4 " 0 4 received by the commissioners but a few days afterwards. We make the follow ing extract from the county minutes kept by S. M. Irwin, commissioners' clerk, under date of Monday, February 24, 1862. Chairman MONDAY, Fee. 24, lB62.—Tbe eonimissioners directed their clerk and attorney to proceed to parrisintrg and examine the liiscoonnts tjlt ivir agalnet the county, as it is belie that corer eight Thousand dollars hare bees eh . to the minty that ought to have been chary to the fate Treasurer; and if this should be found to he the ease, the said clerk end attorney are tonne their utmost endeavors tn,get the account resettled so as to Ill i ve, the *aunty this heavy low, and they are fully empowered to nee mach means as to them shall a, year boat for this purpose. It would appear from the above that the commissioners supposed that the Auditor General had no right to charge the county with that portion of Brown's defalcation consisting of the tax on real an II property, and Mr. Furst, ei; attorney, instructed thorn no bet although the action of 'the Auditor General.waa expressly authorised by law. Messrs. Furst and Irwin were • therefore sent to Harrisburg to correct a supposed error which did not exist, but not to examine and correct the real error of $9,872,77, which existed at home, and hruf 'been acted upon by the ' auditor I General. What these gentlemen pre tended they did at Harrisburg, is seen try the extract given koclow, from the county minutes of Marell. 11th, IgO2 - MAN.'S 11, 1862.—Ctimmissioners met, a full board in attendance and attended to their du ties as a relief beard. Font and Irwin reported that they bad went to Harrisburg, as directed by the board, aid obtained a settlement of the county accounts wile Ilse Nate whereby the county seas oared a key of $8,677 21. The Commiesioners allowed Furst and Irwin for their traveling and other expenses, together with their time and labor in effecting said set t 111ent.t.herfum of our hundred dollars. If Messrs. Furst & Irwin accomplish ed what they reported they bad, their Lion, ((.1„00,, wow rorWnly rea i sonable, and no. payer ought to com plain of it. But 4 they do it? Neith er the records in t e commissioners of fice of this counyor in the auditor General's office, t llarrisburg, show any re-settlement of the account at that time nor at any time during that year! And as tbit sB,l*-7,61 which they say they released - the county from, (being a part of Brown's defalcation) was legally chargeable to the county, and has since *race been paid by the county, we must. infer t,at these gentlemen,. haring ae witnplishowl nothing, on their ratan from I larrisburg made a false repOrt to the yommissioners in order to got the ode hundred donate. That their report was .141.0 in reality, is prewen by two facts: at the end of that year, on again settling the accounts between the county and State, tit° same Auditor Getorni,-Thos. E. coara, _4oliadmisii - °w ad .f°- laird the babk. of the — j(die before taint 60-00,04/ I 5P,67.0,49, which. Se surely would not haridette if be bed ' ilk *emcee time corrected the former settlement by striking out of the. char 4104 Wins& the county thelarge sum of $',617,61! The only change in the ac count seed in Jantiary 1883 from that sbttled in - Fehrtuiry 1_862. in this reaped thit the balance of the former - year is stated to be *29,580,39, tea dollars asbre than *I actiogy fres/ How it in- Creased ten dollars we cannot now ex plain unless on the theory that it was a renem or thejmnoyaneo and trouble i Furat and Irwin had giien hint uselessly 1 The other fact is, that shortly after the set tkimentln Jannary_lB43, in ghLthis item of *8,677,61 was retained, the At torney General notified the county com missioners that InTwould institute pro oeedings against _pie counkx - for the ) atnoitneof its indeltedness Vo the State, unless it was paid,: and under this threat the :bominissiotiers raised the - money, - and on the 13th of Deelniber, 1863,paid to the Kato Treasurer, that portion of Brown's indebtedness, which thecounty was liable for, and after months of liti gation in the courts of Dauphin county, obtlined an order of the court marking the amount of the judgment the State had obtained against Brown's hail.for the use of Centre county. This sum whick the Attorney General compelled the county to par• was , the same sum which Furatand Irwin reported theihad saved the county from• .. Mr. Furst, further intimates that ha endeavored— to get Mr. Barron,' our member in the legislature for the' ses siou of 1862, to pass an act authorising a resettlement of the accounts between the-State and county, in order to cor rect the other error, but that, Mr. Bar ron refused for party purposes ! This insinuation is unworthy oven of Mr. P., for it is utterly groundless, and does gross injustice to anlionorablegontle-, $20,84s 41 - 13,30/ 03 $29,570''59 '`r7'""•"""" • - e • r. Furst knows full well that during the year :1762, he was entirely ignorant of the facts which rendered such an act of • Assembly necessary, and never knew_ them until mOnths after official term bad expired. When the settle ment was made in-Janury 1863, Mr. Al exander hail just succeeded Mr. Furst as attorney for the county, and he (Mr. A.) comMenced the investigation which finally late the detection of the error actually existing in the report of the county auditor's settlement made Janu ary 7, 1861, of $9;'872,77, and sent a bill to Harrisburg authorizing the Auditor general to resettle that account, which Arr. Barron had passed through the Legislature, as he would have done any bill sent him by Mr. Furst. An attempt was made to adjust the accounts under 'the authority given by that act, but the new Auditor. General held, that althOugh he was authorized to open and resettle the account settled in the Auditor Gen eral's of February 7, 1862, yet he was n ot anthorized to receive any evidence of the amount o f State tax outstanding: in Centre county, January' L 1241,be yond the report of the county auditors, which ii"%s. conclusive on the subject. At the next session of the Legislature. Mr. Alexander, who was thee the member, passed a supplement to this ac:, author... , izing auditors to be appointed by the court to correct the error committed by the county auditors in January 1861, and making the new report conclusive upon the Auditor general rind State Treasu rer. To show that the allegation that Mr. Alexander included in the bill pas sed by him authority for the auditors provided for them to review the acts for the last twenty years, is false, we here insert the entire act, with the pre amble, found in the pamphlet laws for 1864, page 212: i'Vngpaxs, It is alleged, on the part of the county of Centre, that the hoard of county audi tors, in the report of January, one thousand eight hundred and sixty one, committed error i• the amount of state tax, outstanding, and uncollect ed, which amount, so returned by the Itottia bf county auditors, was charged to Centre county by the auditor general and stale treasurer, and this alleged error was not discovered until too late to correct it by appeal : ad whereas, The auditor general holds, that the act, to which this is a supplement, provides no sufficient means for swoertaining, or deter mining, whether such error was committed or not, and, if committed, the amount of the same; now, therefore, SECTION 1. Bs it enacted by tlit'S'rutits and HOW of ReprellelltatiVe• ,„10/ fk l , C 0 mm......1,4 0/ P..ne„Ora.ia i. Alieral Assembly met, and it is kereby .11704 . 11 by-the authority of toe same, That the court of common pleas of Centre coun ty litall appoint throe auditors, whose duty it shall be, after having been severally /wont and affirmed, to faithfully discharge their duties, to . proceed and examine the auditors' report Wan-. nary, one thousand eight hundred and xi y one, and the be and records of Centre eon y, and ascertain, and determine, what amount f state tax, then remaining uncollected, and outstand ing, and make repoft thereof, a! soon as finish ed, to the auditor general; which report, so made and returned to the iiuditor general, shall be final and conclusive evidence of the smeunt of state tax outstanding, In Centre county, on the first day of February, one thousand *lot hun dred and sixty one. SECTION 2. That the auditor general and state treasurer ha and they are hereby authorised, and required, upon reeeiving,the report of' the auditors, herelabefore appointed, to open the account of the commonwealth and the coueitof Centre, settled in'Januaryoine thousamrbight tlundred and sixty one, and re-settle the same, charging Centre county with only the real amount of state tax outstanding, so ascertained by the auditors aforesaid ; and, further, to cor rect, and amend, all subsequent mettkmeata In accordance therewith. _ Under this act the court appointed J. D. 13htigert, J. H. Orris, and Wm. le . Kealith auditors, who oorrected the re port of the county auditors made Janu ary 7, 1881, and th; e rtthituents at Har risburg were aprre in accordance with their repok The accounts against the county see ded at Harrisburg for four years are as follows,; 1862,424,570 89; 1883, tg?,- 622 07 ; 1864,420;500 28 ; 1885, $4,387- . 4911 One word as 'to, ifie defalcation' of democratic treasurers, falsely asserted in ,the article as hailwg been char ged to the county marmakieg a pad of the $29470 39. No part oft ions per shtuved•to tie county in aisy SIII42Mter at Narrisbtsrg, and every dollar of it has been. paid by the iraltsigfres although not y e t, all repelved by the State, The amount owed by Mr, Furey, some 11200, was collected out of ids es tate and paid over years age. A judg-• mint was obtained by the State agaipst Mr. Gilliland for the imount Of his. in debtedness, which was a lien against his Property when Mid by _ ; the sheriff, in 1858 Dr 1859, and the amount appropri ated_ by the auditor to that Judgment. y , t been paid thr iy has it not been paid to the State Treasurer I Because the purchasers of prikperty, four leading Repub lican politicking of the county, A. G. , C u rt, ' 1 Jae. T. hale, Samuel Linn; and 'Ednrund Blanclffird, did irot pay the purchase money to the sheriff, but still have is their hands, a large portion if not all the amount appropriated to the judge ment in favor orthe commonwealth ! Mr. McAllister, as administrittor of Judge Btirmside, who was one of Gilli land's bail, has endeavored for six or seven years to 'get thil money out of the hands of these abolition • gentlemen, h but so far without success. e Gover ner can, probably,under the remnstan ces, best explain why the At rney Gen- . oral has not proceeded against the , bail of Mr. Gilliland. Mr. Morrison 'placed in the hands of his bail, • Mi. Broker ' hoff and Judge Hate, securities sufficient to more than cover his indebtedness to . the State, which hate best, all collected or nearly so years ago, and7ffut for the sudden death of Judge Hale would have been all paid to the •State last spring. So that the allegation that the State or the county or any individual has lost even one dollar by the thAflcation• of any dernecratic•trcasurer is as false 'as the rest of the statements contained in the Press article. 1 . As to the present condition of the county finances we have a word to say. Sow .---z-..........:......i.....iimmiwiar county in 15 arch. 1862. may be gathered from the following extract from the county minutes of March 11, 1862: Wanne♦s, The county is deeply in debt and interest annually accruing on Bald debt, and r iehereailgo present anion M -6 es ie at least Thirty thowaed dollars, 'which, if collected and paid into the treasury, would ena ble us to pay of a large portion of our debt and stop interest thereon. 1 This statement of the commissioners was made after Furst and Irwin returned "from Jlarrisburg, and sho*s that then 1 they did not know that the auditors' report was erroneous, for they state the ' amount of county tax outstanding over 'BlO,OOO greater than it really wrs. But at $30,000 it would only pay a rtion of the then county debt., This debt was increased to over $lOO,OOO before the democrats had a majority ollf the board of county commissioners. The accruing annual interest for the last two years has exceeded stir instead of four thousand dollars. During that time the county has paid off the State debt including that part of Brow,s defal cation which it was liable to pay, amour ; ting altogether to over $19,000. It has anticipated and paid the State tax for 1865 ampunting to nearly $15:000 al. though little if any of that tax is yet collected, thereby saving the county $750, It has paid a large amount of county debt, being borrowed money, for which ~‘; poii:', ?!. th e county had been given. And there is noW hi the treasti ry $20,000 provided as a fund to pay off county bondlibwhich will fall duo in the next year ! ! The hooks and recor2lsof the county arc open to the in inspection of every body interested La county affairs, and if it can be sho that even one dollar has been lost,, adored, or misapplied A t since the demoor is have boon in power we will give up the question. We have been thus lengthy and pt . mite in order to show the tax-payers of the county the facts from the record, and if they bear hardly on some persons, they must blame themselves for forcing the subject on the public. We do not believe Mr. Furst or any other officer intentionally involved the county in the difficulty - they did, for there was no mo tive. He was young, and as a lawyet. had little experience, and none what ever, we believe as an accountant. The blame rests on the ‘coni,missioners for, employing an incompetent legal adviser. Do you want more mistak,tt of the kind to havelq,;ll9 yomoliant the 'cou ,debt increased through Clio care r , ~:,..,„„f 6 lic offi.cials? If Etb vote tle ,'..liticatf oket, and place in power again that pa ty that fastened upon you a debt of $29,000 through ignomncewnd carelessness, • . To the Polls ! The tour is at hand, the contest is here, DEMOCRATS AWAKE! From almost every portion of thu eounts, the . news is of the most. cheering ehdiaeter. The tide that a week since seemed run ning against us, is now rolling strong in ,our favor. Our majority which was threatened to be redueed, is rapidly in 7 creaming ; the prospearie., arp, growing brighter, avid scores are . ftpeking to our standard daily. One niorjeffort,Demo orate and then TO,THE POLLS. Get glare wig, and ;see that every one ie. provided 'with means of • getting out. Dorilrwva ANY axwiwn. The enemy is die d, disorenised, and , one well directed charge will put him to tight. Up then and at him ; all depends upon the vigorlieth which you butt le from now until tits Polls close. We have a chance tolbdeem Pennsylvania, and if toe but do our duty it will be clone. Many of the Abolition papers have given up the State .but we should not loose oar determina tion on this aeootret.- We must get out our full.vote, we mita. get it out early, and have it polled, and-then work upon thew..4ain we say TO THE POLLS, GO KA Y min WORK TILL THEY CLOSE.. , DON'T yORGET, thst in voting tße atm. lition ticket, you vote to exempt from taxa. lion, the money of the rich and to make your own taxes the heavier : ; How GOOll It Tax-mere? Toll us, honestly, tax—payenor (Yontro oounty, how do yOu like the practical working of abOlition ism ? Has-the man ner in whioh it has oondueted the affairs of the country benefited you? Is pay— , tax on - every sheep, on every hog, on every cow ,you kill enriching you? Is paying out a large portion of your hard .earned,dollars as 'en income tax, helping you to maintain your family, and " la. up a liEtle" Fora "wet clay?." Is keep ing.up a horde of tax assessors and col lectors at enormous 'wages, inuring to your benegi? r rinaboring day and night to pay your -share towards kETping , 1 thousandi 'of worthless negroes that have been turned loose in the South pleasant business'? Is making' a SLAVE of yourself, to feed and .fatiMli 'the "slaves" that bah beenstolen froni the Southern masters, the kind, of work you like ? Answer us, and then glance at the following comparison of prices and tell us which you would-rallor-haver r --- DEMOCRAntIe RULE-Is6o. Cpffee 121 t 0..... 15 contort pound. en d0.....100 do do do Drown &mar.. 5 do 8 do do u do d 0..... 12 do do do' d 0...... 75 . dp do willon. Tobacco 1.1 do 25 do do pound. 111u!dino 0 do 15 do do yard. o,llcoeo 6 do_... 12 do do do .. • • REPUBLICAN RULE-180. Coffee 38 t 0... 44 cents per pound $1 20 difil.s2 50 do do do Brown Sugar 15 d 0... 18 do do do White 22 do.:. '25 do do do Etynip.........51 40 .d0...51 80. do do gallon. Tobacco $1 00 d0...51 25 do do pound. ittnalAng 30 d 0... OS do do yard. Caliooe.. 25 d 0... 37 du do do Which tio N you prefer, laborers, the democratic or tekublican prices? Here is a little more ; a of taken from the you like it! ' Four hundred and fifty thihikandne-, grocs in dirt, lice, idlencia and Ree4iti outmost'. Four hundred and fifty thcia sand-negroes-yea-moat-now-soppott who once helped to support you. s FILE hundred and fifty thousand takonrfrom the producing fields, and with their wives and children stalling on you through the Government for support. Four Lwidred• and fifty thousand acres of rich land multiplied by ten, growing weeds where once grew' cotton, sugar and rice. Nigger on the fence, white man in the weeds. Nigger exempt, white man bowed down with taxation. Rich men hold bonds—hold offices. Poor men pay taxes, clothe and feed the rich men—clothe and teed the negro— clothe and feed office holders—clothe and feed the army—clothe and feed themselves, if anything is left! Working men how do you like it? Old man with bending back and hands hardened with toil, how do you like it? Old woman as you labor and' skimp along, how ,do- you like it.? young man for a life time your earnings must go to pay for this freali of abolition generosity: lisow do you like it?' Less pleasure— fewer buildings—more taxes—harder work. Ts-not the doctrine of abolition ism a good ono. When the tax gather er conies around, stop and think of these little things, brother working man, and Coco answdr us if you like it? If you don't the" romecii Is ill your hands; on Tuesday next, vote the Peutocratit.' ticket. Democrats Awake! Democrats, you have as it were, but a few hours left to work ; but a few hours 'to accomplish the greft, result that we look for at, the polls. Have you seen your neighbor and impressed upon his mind the necessity of_going_with you and voting the WHITE MAN'S riewnr ? Have ydiftpfltißtd your committees to see that your full vote is out? Remem ber that on coolly, sworn and secret, is battling against you; that. everything an unwary and unscrupulous foe can do, is being accomplished ; and that the only way to _thwart his designs is to worm ! worn( I ! Worm I ! You may have accomplished much during the cam paign, and through a little negligence now may loose it all lethangy on your part now, may lose a glorious victory, which is within your grasp ! Shall it be so? Shall our majority over abolition ism be reduced in "Old Centre?" Shall Democraoy loose ground in our county, when in every other it is gain ing? It is for you to amtwerl Mato- CRATS BE UP AND DOING AND ALL WILL* BE EIGHT. "Our Answer. t Udder tie above caption, tg * tvho spew ont the': spleen, weekly ilwough--thwetrinnuonstthe ted last week, almost a ceirtlmn of low slang and personal abuse tb the editor of)his paper." We have simply to say, that when we get through with the election we will have time to attend to small things, and then we shall pay our respects to them. Don't Scratch your Ticket. Degromta, don,t cerateh your ticket. you ye good _men to support from •Davis down to Thole - as, and have „prin ciples to maintain, that are of more im portant* than many may imagine. Every name crossed from our ticket is that much gain to abotitiontlon. Don't switch a man off if you ,would have the friends of the white man summed. Lying M•M Sipe 2 The abolitionists are preparing to flood the county with LYING RAND stets; Voters be not deoei4ed by them; the chamois !tnenesertions they contain aro so false. that they feared to i4retdate i them until >7 tow too late to tontradiet them pnbh:efg, and they no at the. lain, hour, hope to deviiii you by bare-faced . plain and-positive lying. • , Disappoli!tad. - Tho abolitionists are no little disap pointed in finding that their candidate (len. Beaver, in place of runnine ahead will fall behind their ticket. Ins popu litrity they expected would add strength to their party, is found o 4 among the friends of the banking firm, and bond holders which be represents. With the soldier ho is "no where." Durin: a short tri t b rou Awotewn- ships in the upper end pf the county, on Saturday and, Monday last, ,we found no less than TWENTY SEVEN PIERS, all belonging to hisregiinent, the 148th, who dedare th - e,v mine( tote fur hint. Flom other portions of the coun ty we hive the, sable news. By, these brave boys, as asoldier Le was loved aid respected, but a. ad Abolition candidate, he is despised and will be defeated. He•l represents "" Negro Equality," and "Boyd ..4ristocraey,'' and that is epo!lgh for them. They have mean enough, of -the-aftro r -and-will- vote -ahnost musty against a man who says that "Degrees . and whites are equal and should enjoy the sante privileges:" - It is not alone in the soldiers' rote thy{ they feel they will be disappointed, but in the support they expect front the poor men or the county—those who earn, their bread by the sweat of • their brows who they said they could "hay with 'a drink of rum: a bushel of Wheat, or a small bill of the first 4.Vational Prink airs Bellefonte: . They have fou'rAntt Mkt the laboring men of Centre county are not to be "bought," and that Beltver's money, and the money of the banking establishment, which he is interested in, will not induce them to desert their grin• sae') or (.1 -- " cipies or degrade thenocrvcs 'by voting for " universal suffrage " and " negro equality." They will throw back the insult into the face , of the miserable demagogues that intimated they could — pufc !lased , aid will - 3-0 - ter — un eNird= tingly for the party that has ever been the frinil of the poor Mans Up then with the of Democracy and let the idiodyites, "Bond holders" and ad vocates of "Nem4,F,guality" know that there is 110 sympathy or them among the honest laboring, masbes*X dui coon. Look out for LW I Driven to verge ofdespair, by the cer tainty of the defeat that await them at the polls, the abolitionists arc .circula ting all manlier of LIES about our can didates, in the hope of cutting down their majorities. Listen not to them, they are fable in every partieuher. Men that are low enough iu the scale of hu manity to believe in negro equality, are false enough to tell anything, in oiler to accomplish s their detestable purposes. Again we say HEED THEM AT, THEY A/LE POLITICAL MEE ! . Beware or Fraudulent . TIOk etc 11'e cannot caution the voters df our county um often in regard to frau/Went tickc's, which the abolitionists are ac tively engaged in circulating. Before you voto,i/Extnotams, examine well y o ur ticket and see that the names that are at the head of our paper to odes are ever? one upon it. If you aro not ac quainted with the ticket, take it front no one that ie not known to ho a good and reliable Democrat. THE BLACK ISSUE fte Abolitionists in Valor of 'Po es READ ! RNA BEAD! READ! "(live to the blacks that right which bolonge tot utary born creature—Abe right to take part tit, in d ormining the laws, the ruegletrucies. and the üblio policy under whieb they and their obit. Ten are to lisp." "I Advocate, then, the giving lb all men black and white, the right of suffrage, 'knot, because It belongs to them ; nerond, becemse it is safe and benelletal ; and, third, because only in this May can we have peace. Then for their heroic Military services ' I think the blacks have de served the right of suffrage. And here let me tell you, that for picket duty, for guard duty, for the march, and for assault, the colored diem are surpassed by none in the world, and equalled by few. They are store faithful than white soldiers ON guard duty. The breed uf the army under the bayonet of ch< black was is safer than under the bayonet of the white man. And it is not long lo be disguised or disputed that these men make as good soldier+ as soldiers need be. It in Said, too, "If he may vete ' then he may be voted fur; and may hold oIllee." Why not if anybody wants to vote for him, and wants to put him to office? lint, IC is said, "ifyou take such steps as these, and give tithe sensbip to the 'hacks, then all distinction will be abolished, and miscegenation will be the result." All that I have to say is, if it must be done, let it Le done lawfully, by marriage, and not by adultery, That is riff insist upon. If any man will hors a blink senates fur a cowpan imy there ought Nut to be any law to present but he should marry Aer. Ido net undertake l i p say that the mingling of these lice* will detest- . one or the:utha.--- L-aus-M--faver of -two lowa lint, that, if a man does nut wish to mar ry a black women, nothing shell oompel him to; and, mmond, that, if a man wants to marry black women, nothing shall binder him."— Henry Ward Beecher, in the Pulpit at Brook ipt, N. Y. Resolved, That 11 the. oanwpor this Convim lion that the word "white" be skunk from the State Constltutkm. That the eleotive franchise can be more safely entrusted to the lotoliigent freedmen than to those who have spent their lives thus far to overthrow this Repubhmin ov ornament ; that we ask those whom we hove, put in nomination, to support these remlullAs.— Miasmata Abu t Woo State 011uvation. "Although we have no new theories in re hatlon•tomegro suffrage, we oppose allowing the elective freaohise to rebel soldiers and traitor ous politicians, while loyal black men who have borne STUN and abed their blood in the naslou's defame are ezeluded,i and declares "that Cou pes/ ebould utalutain the public faith toward the freedmen, while It providei far tharpeace and security of the eountry."—Natures IlassacAs scth Stem anumitins. .That with props esibignsals , lbegbe parity or the ballot boa, Out oinctive,ljninehiso should be based upon loyal(' to the Oonstitntkui sod the Union, recognising sod affirming the -EQUALI TY OE ALL MU before the low i therefore we MO In rani.ate/sanding the Fiore gonotita or our State by STEIKIEG OUT TES WORD WHITE' in the stitch on X—Piogforia . t 1 loam. Abolitios State. " That wit* iii4evere mid tionor *aleutoty of the .It sohilee wbo,bea ' fallon ia.deftststa pf hie eoutitry.-we tosetelot Corset the 144 who sartashusiladthridtolits-cattaa, sad jetatfas *- wands that the clacidne intnakies Ac ma/at - rad u p... Aim . rho 'mime satrpan tool traii , e."—Abodu .Leland Altolition !Mutt Platform - • e Thobig 001116 n M a r! ar t Pl a ftra support negro eiputilttr Pour, rhilsololphli City, (7apite, rittoburg, Allegheny county. ommrrehat, - Divots*, if 7'elerg raja, ilarriburg, Dauphin county. Examiner Lancaster, Lancaster county. Recont,dissading„Barim county. - Democrat, Kittanning, Armstrong county, Alleghenian, Khensbnrg. Candiridirouuty, Ite/wrter, Towanda. Bradford aounty. lhepateh, Mercer, Mercceoomaty. Gement, Sunbury, Northumberland county Americas., 'Murillo. Manton; county., fitroid. Norristown, Montgomery county. iferobi Whig, Somerset, Smacrset °guilty. Wertora Advocate, ("mine county. it,portrr d• Tributes, Washington eminty. Pottstillsu oomn, Vittogr Ilreore r l, Wad Chester, Chester counti. Awerlron R s oneklitaia._ •._ Ilegisier,llolll , layetkurg,:bl; Ir county. Itriaohliens, liksatroso, linsquohanas emu ky Norti,era i'caosyfetto.Man, tlusquthassaa coMit, "The fact that we celebrate the fourth ufJuly rather than the adversary of the induction of eur prevent. Government, Is proof that them iinfilortal principals; (al/ mew ors created rquold are greater in our estimation than the moms ye have meet to eitablish them. As welting, ntril• yet (ally applied Mess to all no, l'Oldntry, , and as VII TAX AND GOVERN AIANY STILL WiTIIOET CONSENT, would it not be teal at this time; when we hare Joel suerceded In bringing it mac top au orpc the etas and of the immortst„decituation, to empsialer liae question, Phial make it entirely oonsistent•with these principles. a • • ult nil men be free. and equal in our coma -try henceforth 7 F.hall unialienable riglitt Le enjoyed :daft ereriwhere under the gee aro have vindicated ? e S 1t Al I, oar people lehu ore gorehted /lore nn VCICA L verve in an( Government) Ap ounanswer. so our future." —Bellefonte cEN TR AL PIIES4', Juno 23,1885. The Thalmann of the Democratic, State Cen. Mal Cutrunittaw of Pen,nsylvanta publishes an address, in'which he says that In that State the real home is negro equality and negro suffrage. • • • • Negro suffrage I. a matter belong ing to the laws, and to ho derided by the pea pie. It is pertinent for the people of Panusyl. •ania to pass upon it, and we had hoped, when we rend the circular of the Democratic Chair man, that he had .toted the is.ue phdnly. The Republican hairmen. Mr. Cessna. la cenrert from Democracy of about two ycnro artandin., ?testator at the time Mr. 'Ant kaliew was ehoseu), denies this allegation, and says Ant oegro sat [tugs Is not 'and eoula not poSsibly Le an Imre in the October contest." lie are sorry to see Mr. Cessna shirk a point ou frsubly mid Justly pressed upon him. if rfeyro suffrage t• not an jostle in 1 e ybyniu~tee _. Aa*ii - Ma - y--#aem A.—Nun; lions Tatarto. .Land nod the ballot are the true foundations cr all Governments. Intrust them wheret t'• ksalty Platte, to all those, bhgek and tekire, who hare upheld the flag. [Applawser.] Reconstruct no State, without git IDR to every loyal man In It the ballot, , I scout all limitativne of knowledge, property or race. [Applause.] Untrersal aut. (rage for me. Let freeman vote, black or white, whether he run read or not:* ...e• The need of giving the ops a ballot ..• *Ant we mast pref. no the President'. 411011101, To reconstruct now, without giving the negro the ballot, would be a g rrater blunder, and, cousid ening our better light, a.greater sin than our fathers committed in 1789; and we should been no right to aspect from ij any less disutrous regiulte •• Wendell fthfiftip• at Tritmosit Tropic, April SJ, IaGS. .The 141.1 r ad/riving we eso in regard to negro Nulrrsgei v.itit that they are not Allalt. le 1104 intelligent to eterCi+o properly t' e right of ro. ling; but if we ard4o exclude thin, on this kroulo, by parity of rriteeen and justice, at least bait of Me au called Dedtticratic party, he excluded (corn the priAllege of the ballot box." "The ectonaon PCIISO or the ietple Is fast overcoming a foolish awl cruel li:retail/re, and they are rapidly coming to t tombiarog that, awn who are fit to fight for the country ate tit to vote et ill elections, aid that If- Ignorance it not a positive liar to the tight suffrage, kot at. salt/Met, on that score at least, but ti ag good is doing go the err t!/ the bailor as hart tha lower clams of eiitiperhowl '•Wc are umphatteally opposed to ditfranchit log any of our liras° defonders, whether wit's., or Liar 01125371.1,1411: 3 0, '-in the new - MOIL loyalty to the flag will bo the test of citiLonship, and the wholly frivolous nut ruperyirtal distingtian If color grill be dirrg yttrtliii. • * We do not write these words merely hot-ante we whili it to he so, but Molloy was know IL sill certainly be ro. • • • * They are e..neerned aboie all to settle their po litical *Rhino that elaveholders shall aeries re gain power In tho land. and thorn la no web mire way of &fleeting this o..pset oe by extdogAny nU eiril rights to the eafroaehiaad slaree."— Jonytroivx Tnianve, Home Organ of Campbell, abolition candidate for Surveyor Uta - eral, May 5, Iscs: • "(live notice that tine black lrooriioill accept no otAirr ternn+ than that they, their wit es" and children, shell he on RP eipiality with tee: elte*. and will not ler down their arms and let the country t Mate every doctrine of the ilerelaralinu Or Independence, *nil ever) principle that un derlien American inttittitinas" • • • There shall be nu paid...a/piece until it ten beinado on ouch *ems no TM Once the now, uu an rquatity witA tAr whits wan."—Jt Dtlk KCLLIY, abolition m e mber of t'ongnms Pon "Loyalty to the government should be the °tag test of the right of suffrage—those who hkve fought to preserve the Union On the field of battle, whether white or blark, ere certainly worthy and lit to protect it through the bullet bo.r—it I. unworthy the age in which we lire to deprive men of voting wiln sustain the gor• ernmen t by their treasure aud bloud.—Ceau lord ['manly 460/iffy's Conrcrtiop„ ' , The worst troubles are yet to event. Sla very Is abolished ; but that by no a 5..,,. settles the question. The only true.policy la, the ritual ity of 01l colors, the enfroneliteenient of all wen. white or blisek."--hlohisho A. Grow, as-abolition Speirker of L%..5. HOW, of Representatisiut. The Republican party was organised to .se cure and perpetuate the principles lai,h down in the Declaration of Independence. sod that its work is nut done until via/ political privileges ore extended to ALL weal—[Resolution of Sul livan peaty Abolition Convention.] To the uegroen of the Southant States &heal.' be conceded sill the rights of eitoenship, inclu ding the elective frenuckies, on the saute ter.ce and to the rune extent' es they way be guaran teed to the white people!—[Allegany County Ab olNlatforot.] W the colored peo_p_l• of_thit _Ninth ore =Orono teed there' will be eight hundred thou• send votes given for the Republican- talon ticket, as not one black is a hundred coati be coaxed into voting the Democratic ticket.--Vra York Tribes. "Note to be plain, ne know sessral dooes colored men that les world sootier see march to the &Moe box and east 40de ballot 5404 an silted tatotber of Copperheads oos edn wanse." — * rid/FORD iNQVIlipt, Juno 2', MISS. Wo need the VOTES of ell the colored peo• plc. It le NUMBERS, not INTELLIGENCE , that COUNTS at the ballot bon.—i/Smey Win ter Domes 4th of 1•4 oration ft aioasro. "That neither • saws color. r•e4 nor birth" Piero take away lila political sights. That tie portion of our subjects aban remain degraded.' —Susquehanna CoserriAitPlatimi- roieserstiors; "Tbe abrogeilon Oral Ppecitalt laws Egaiatt. men of hay nee or dolor shoukl be.suarsiotoc bic°""P"'Pal Olio* atstary botilion Cuswasition. " Ilk .11%101 We have 'weak seitarteth brutes : 0 , 13 ° 1 " • we have' 44ery 'reason •to Ireileiti„ohauld know, that Gen. iterivei•wbila a oolOetil and in QBl2Bo=ll' of the 141801,,Ldo4lered that ilte pont& tab es rtrinuatqf inegrqes and drtd Shemin two ii*Xivoad be I"" (1. jfeient than any two tvinsentsVisciift setditre that equil be foun4 in the Service. TI108 . 1; lib° west a good accountant, ao bonsai, faltbrul man, for Comfy Auditor. will vole fin. Jour B. THUNAII. 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers