The - Democratic Watchman iIRIII4I3N‘ VINA. It GRAY - Editor FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 18, 1888 ——- - TERMS.—!r2 per year when in ad nines, 2,50 when not paid in eilvanee, and SLOB when not paid before the erPiration et the yeat, National Damocrati6 Nominations Foit vitEsiDENT, • •HORATIO SEYMOUR, OF NEW YORK FOR VICE•PRESIDENT GEN. FRANK P. BLAIR OF MISSOURI PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS ELECTORS AT LARGE W 11.1.1111 V. M'Onkrni. ELECTORS. 13 leo C Ammerman, 14 wi n I' Withinloci 15 Wm K Gorges 16 Wm P Schell (ISCISKIII W. CAL, DISTRICT 1. E Kamerly 3 Chao. M Lesenz 8 Chan. Ituckwaltet 4 George It. Berth! II P. Coggmholl 6 Reuhen Stabler 7 B. B Monaghan 8 Dar Wenderick Bernard M'Grau 10 Wiiban) Shirk II A Broadhead 12 John Blandig 17 Cyrus I. l'ersh Ing 18 A C Noyes ii 9 Win A Galbraith r?) Jean R Prekerd 21 JainesC Clarke 22 James Hopkins 1 23 hderard 8 Golden 124 Samuel P Wilson -0-- Democratic State Ticket FOIL AUDITOIO, uENKRAL. _ HON. CII ARLES R BOYLE, of Fayette Coudty FOR 8 URVI. YOR. GENERAL, QEN. WELLINGTON 11. ENT, of Colutnbis,Couuiy. District and County Ticket. FOR JUDGE, 0. A. MAYER, of Lock Haven. FOR CONIIRESS, L. A• MACKEY, V' Lock U&veo FUR AesEmBLY, P. (MAY MKEK, - TOR 1,13 T R -te l. ATTORNEY • IL F. STITZER, FOR L'OMMI' , “ONEt JOHN LUNG, FOR AU urroit, JOIIN RISIIEL F)R COUNTY SURVEYOR WM. P. MITCHELL, BE ASSESSED ! It Is but • short time until the elec tion. You have but a few days to be Assessed in and unless you attend t• it at anon, you may be deprived of Voting. GO TO-DAY AND BE AS SESSED. Make sure alit. Have the Assessor give you a certiflste of As sessment Don t be put oft Attend to it at once. gee that your Neigh bors owe is upon the list also, and when election day comes be ready to deposit your ballot in favor of white supremacy and equal taxation Democrats t• Work I Dernnei?ats the news is cheering! Glorious tidings come in Prom ,ever}* quarter. The tide rung in our favor. and if we work weIVTLL win Pat your •honlders to the/ wheel and help along. Gt." TO WORK IN KARN EST, See that all who vote the Democratic ticket are assesse4. Hoe that the wavering arc furenana with proper reading, and thlt every wan i ready for the brat onnteet. TO WORK DEM ormATs -JOHN HICKMAN, we notice, has been tasking Cstaerr and Courax speeches for his party in Chester county. And it is right that he should. Ile represents the real feel ings and spirit of that party.; little better than most etutn speak ers, and has the courage to say Oat the others dare only think. It was this Sallie .1041 N HICANIAN, Dow stumping eastern Prirt.ylranla for •GBANT and Cot,P.ti., who said in a speech in the Legislature of this State last winter, that -7714 aelrovn flhs :ouch lad a idler insult m you Arm the IG NODA NT AND DS PRA VIC!) MIND AND DUTCH echo owe .A6emocrelfir tteket." —z—The Had iculm of the State arc eirohlating a document headed "Oem 4iiiatio Frauds," which pretends to give an account of the manner in which /ion. S. T. SIIUOVti was elec ted last fall. From beginning to ead it is a VILLIANOUS LIE. They know it. And they know too that it cost them [arty thousand dollars, to buy the radicals on the committee that ousted Mr. SIRJOEMT, to decide in favor of Robinson his competitor. If ho was not legally and fairly elec ted, why did they have to pay forty demand dollars to get a committee of their own men to so decide ? How Much for Your Leg,? flaw much for youi - lfg lf It if to yow wcunded and maimed veteran—you who are hobbling abdut, crippled for life, supported by crtitch es and a wooden leg., in place of the bone and fleoh and muscle. that you left buried on some of 'the battle fields or taunt the hospitals in the South, that we address the inquiry, How much for your leg? - . You sacrificed it to p'reserve the Union of our fatLers—you suffered the pain and agony of the wound to perpetuate the government you were taught to love—you gave up home and friends for years, and came hack crippled and helpless for life,and now, we ask What hove yros got for it Look. down where your foot once was—where the flesh and blood the good God gave you should be now, and answer us honestly and fairly. Was it a Union with ten of the States controled by bayonets and ne groes that you fought to preserve ? That is the Union Radicalism gives us to day. Was it a Union with Texas and Mississippi and Virginia, that gave the country a WAstu:soms, a J iF- Yrßsom, and a PATRICK HENRY. stricken off, that you fought to pre serve? That is the Union Radical ism gives UR to day. Was it, a Union of States crushed by militlity_pojer, disgraced`with no gro legislatures, controled by Realm wags and cOnvicM, that you fought to presdrve That is the Union Radi calism gives us to-day. Was it for Oat you gate your leg ? . . Wei it for 1 governtncut whose ,xturts arc filled with negro junirsi, whose law makers are elected by ne groes, whose taxes are taken to feed negroes, whose legislative halls are filled with thieves and representatives of negroes, and the chief object of which seems to be the oppression of the labonng masses for the hone fit of the negroes, that you fought to perpetuate? This is the government Radicalism gives you tg-rirty. Was it a government whose tax col lectors meet you at every turn— a government that promised you gold and paid you in greenbacks—that ex esnpts the rich man who staid at home ,from taxation and co.npells you, who Ilea health and limb, to pay his—that gives to the negroes of the South ease and indolence, and to you toil and taxes, thegovernment that you fought for? This is t' e government Radi calism gives'You to-day. Was, it a government, with white eititens disfranckiSed and black' citi Lens made voters—with white men toiling to pay taxes to keep negroes in ease and idleness—with Ishorinv men working their finger ends sore to keep rich men living in luxury— wish the bone and simw -f the emit try mortgaged for years to pay tri. bate and taxes to thcives and negroes —a government tan( of white men but of black men and bondholders, the government you fought for? This ix the goverment you have to day. far Warm gave your leg I You went into the war earnestly and honestly—you fought nobly and 1,1.11 you came back sod what do you end? Rich men who urged you to go but who staid at home themselves and /osovi the government their money IE;XEMPTFItOM ALL TA X ATM N and you, who wetti and °siva the government YOUR LEG, compl'lled to pay taxes to humid roads for them to ride over —tobuild school houses and pay teachers to educate their ehildren—to keep the poor for them, to pay courts and jurors and (Anent to protect their properties and persons. xt•tir home, if you have one, is not exempt, from tazaiion —their bu-ds are. You have property worth per haps a thousand dollars, it 18 tared. Yon know how much. The bondhol• der .bas ten, twelve or twenty thous lkod•dollars worth of bends, ho phys Itb Onus. You have to pay your pro portion of his. Was IT for this you gave your leq And it does not stop here. The bondholder loaned the government his mosey 'and it is exempt from tax ation. Von gave - tie government, your leg or arm and you are taxed. For what the bondholder loaned the govcrntneoto he rceeires WALD IN- T.ERBST. For what you gave the government you receive PALTRY PENSION er GREENBACKS. Wir not your leg as valuable to you, and as serviceable to the government as the rich man's money? Why then should be GET GOLD FORUM MORIN AND VOU ORS WISINDACKB FOR YOUR LEG ? We ask you in all earnestness to think over these things. To post' up the books, square up the accounts and tell us what. Itadicalisor has given yens for your leg. You know what it was worth. You know the suffering and pain arid /teeny you endured %hen you lost IL You know the Union you gave it fur is not restored,nor the kov ernment fo'r which you sacrificed it preserved. What then have you for it? If you believe you'thould pay taxes and g•t greenbacks and the bondhold er pay none and OCT then vote . with the party that la vo this doc trine fur (ILtANT and Cot.FAx: but if •or think your leg was a 4 good to you ss tic bondholders gold V/ O.Y t o hint; vote for Se.Y.AotAt i and the candidates of the party whose rult lug cry is "one eurren .y fur all." A Black Sink Hole if litii)n a I Tens a mullions ! nandreils of millions 1 And what's that? It is the amount that the GRUNT and Cot.F,tx party nutke% the'lahor ing white men of the North pay to feed, cloth and educate the negrons of the South. It is the amount that is taken from the purses of the loor white men of the e9unery. to give to negroes who • put in their time sun ning themselves on cellar doors, vo. tang the radical ticket, robbing hen roosts, outraging white women, dan cing, fiddling and enjoying theMselves generally, while the white men here in the North arc drudging, and work ing until their bones ache and their fingers are sore, to pay these taxes, There arc three millions of laboring men—farmers, mechanics, miners aud day laborers—in the Northerit states. These men paw• the taxes. It is out of their incomes that the fitly millions of dollars that goes directly into the freduteit's bureau atid the one bun dred and fifty inillions,that ins eaten up Hitty the army to boss the hureau, ista en. It is from them, in fact that all mica arc drawn, and it is easy to e.dimate what each titan's share of the expenses of the Freedman's Be - reau is. By our calculaticp we make it, 66 Dollars ani, 66 Cents per .year for every laboring man in the North. This is not drawn directly from 'him in taxes, but he pays a por tion of it when he buys his sugar, his coffee, his spices, his flour, meat, and other articles necessary for tho exis tence of himself and family ; when he gets his muslin. calicoes, satinets, boots, shoes, shirts, &c., to clothe them, or when ho tries to enjOy him self by lighting a taxed pipe with a taxed match, and sits down on a tax - cd chair, to send forth puffs of smoke from taxed tobacco. Three millions of toiling, sweating white men with sun burned brows, blistered hands, aching hacks and wea ry limbs, working from day-light till duhk, in sun shine or shower, in cold or'heat, to pav two hundred millions of dollcrs yearly to keep four millions of Diggers, in idleness, and to pay • few lousy officials for watching them sleep on cellar doors or dance under shadb trees. Pretty picture is it not tax-payer? Figure it for yourstelves tax-payers and see that nur statement is correct. Divide two hundred millions by three millions and you will find just what we have said SIXTY-SIX DOLLARS AND SIX TY •SIX CENTS as each man'e ' , hare of the negro bu reau expense. Think how many lit tle luxuries fur your family this amount you have to pay to keep ne. gross in idleness, would procure for your families. Estimate how long it would take yon to purchase a neat, comfortable little home, could you but lay by every year this sixtyseix dol tars that negroes and negro overseer's eat up for you. Imagine how long it would keep you in flour, how much meat it would buy, how long it would pay your store bills, or furnish your stoves with fuel. flow many days rest would it five you? The average price of a days labor here in the North is $1 50. Some get more, some loss, but this is the average. Figure a lit on this and you wilk find that you WORK OVER TWO MONTHS EVERY YEAR to pay this tax lev ied upon yon te maintain this outrage upon the laboring men of the North, the Freedman's Bureau. Are you ip favor of continuing tills Bureau and bureau tax? If so, vote for GRANT. Ile has not a supporter of any influences anywhere whO de nounces it. His party fastened it up on you and his party if successful tend keeping it fastened to your backs. If you would get rid of it; it you would save to your families what the negreer of the South are now taking from you, vete for SITAIJIIII and BLAIR., who will abolish this black rink hole, and save to each of you, to every laboring man in the North, in this one item alone, NIXTY-131.1 LAM 01P TAXIS eta TZAR. "Look out for Malmo?" Such has been the cry of Jacobin politicians and papers thoughont this state for the past :three weeks. We have "looked out" for Maine. We have watched its pol&cal nianceuvers and waited for its political action, until time and the election have shown us shat we looked for, and gave us what we expected a paticht waiting would bring—a r eduction of THOUS ANDS UPON THOUNANDS OF THE HAD• ICAI. MAJORITY iN TrtAtBTATE. Th e last Congressional' election in Maine, gave the bondholders party 27,690 majority. That. wag but two years ago. The returm orate election held on Monday last, indicate that thesamo party has estried the state by about. 114000 Mnjori ty, or ALMOSTTEN THOUS AND I,Es:I THAN IT DID IN 1?I6. In "looking out for Maine," did wo not as Democrats see something to re joiee ON cr. If inongrelism cannot hold its own among the bondholders, and spiritualists away eas'," what Ivey it expect in Pentisylvaida and the Western states. If, in a voting population of 120,0100 the Democracy gain 240 000, what will a proportionate gain give us in a vote of 600.000? Just five times tell, or PIPTY THOUSAND. Pennsylvunia then, taking the date of 1h66, and guitihig only in proportion, to the Derntitcratie ;gin] in Maine, will give a Democratic majority of at least THIRTY Ftvis TitousAtin. "Look out for Maine." • ry • 1.• and we have seen much to rejoice the heart of every patriot in the land.— We have seen thousands upon thous ands of honest men who have hereto fore acted with the mongrel party, flock to our banners , we have seen a streak of light come in from the far cast and lighten up the blackness of a mongrel administration ; we have seen our Democratic brethren if Maine re joice over their increasing numbers , We have seen a radical majority of TWENTY SEVEN TIRMISAND SIX lIUNDRED.AND NINETY, REDUCED TO EIG lITEEN THO lI SAND , we have seen hope and vie t:l)FY /or the Democracy; and despair and defeat for their opponents , we have seen all that. was necessary to see to give assurance thst the days of: fanaticism and mongrelism, and abo litionism, are ended—to insure victo ry to the Democratic hosts, and to bring peace and prosperity and union, to our country. Armstrong —*lackey Do pm want a CotAresetrnan who will vote to continue the Freedtneu'e Bureau—a cost to the tat-payers of the country"( over two hundred mil lions of C6nars per year? Vote for AttasTitowt Do you want a Congressman who says Pennsylvania should be controlled entirely by Congress and not by her people? Vote for ARsorraoNo. Do you want a Congressman who will vote for the outrageous Funding Bill. that will saddle upon the backs of tax-payers over two hundrsd mil lions oldolleirs per year for forty years as interest to bondholders? Vote for ARMSTROMO Do you want a Congressman vho despises the laborer, who teduses,only when a candidate, to shake hands with a working man, and who says a man "who cannot make money with out working with his hands has not sense enough to vote ?" 'Vote for Anwwritowo. Do you want. a Congressman who is an aristocrat, a bigot, a fanatic and the enemy gibe laboring men? Vote for Atthwritom.t. Do you want a Cougrevsman who will vote for the immediate' abolish. meet .)f . the Freoilinen's Bureau, and save you two hundred millionv of dol lars per year ? Vote fur 111 tCKYX, Do you want 'a Congressman 'who will vote to restore the Dillon of+our fathers and the graven:merit, as it was handed .down tl us by the patri ot; of the revolution 1 Vote for MacKtlr. Do you want a Congressman who will vote against negro suffrage all the time and under all circumstances ? Vote fbr MACKEY. DO you want a Congressman who will vote against the infamous Fund ing bill, thatueeks to perpetuate and increase' the .debt now upon the country ? Vote for MACKEY. Do you want a-Mngressnattn who knows the wants and wishes of the people and will take care of the in• cereals of this District? Vote for MACKEY. i Do you want a Congressman who has over been the friend of the work ing men, and will vote against exempt ing the money of the rich from taxa tion? Vote for MACKEY. ' EMEIMiI —A vote for Loan AILMsTILONG is a vote in favor of $5.000 Jig wages to Congressmen. A vote for L. A. MACKILT is a vote in favor of $3.000. White Mon Pay Your Taxes The monthly statement; of the Sec retany,pf ,tho Treasury for August and September, concludes as follows : August. September. Total debt ' 4.2,543,258,289.01 Anent In Tres.* y Coin • $l3 409 9093 92,570.901.21 Currency 211..614 358 15,07%070.77 ...$116,054,270 14 $107,641,971 98 Am'uot of debt leo cae.b i Tress'y $2,57.3,534,480.67 $2,535,614,313.03 showing an increase from the Ist of August to the Ist of September, of $12,079,833 36, 71telre millions, sei;enty nine thousand, eight hundred and thirty three dollars and thirty six cents. It is a nice piles, taxpayers, o add in one month to the enormous load that is bearing you down. Twelve mallow; per month. Doe hundred and forty four ntilliona per year ! Look nt it ! Figure it up 1 This is not the debt but the IN CRHAS h: of that debt. The amount that is added to it yearly. The ra pidity with which it grows 14 it not startling? Does it not savor of the slavery of the masses or the repu dittrion of the whole amount ? How arc you bit payers of thr country to get rid of the load that is now bearing you down, when in plane of being decreased it is daily being increased. year robbed you of . 500 millions of DOtars, in the shatto of direct and indirect taxes. And yet with this enormous amount of money collected from the toiling taxed masses of the country- six times VIA ranch its a Democratic ad mil istra (ion Cost you—it still fa llt short of paying the expenses of a radical administration. 144 IY/1111-nsof Dollars ! Herr long enn the country stand thin kind of iquanderinh , ol" the public money? [low long can it affurd to pay thuiving offmials and lazy loafing iiegrooA per year 644 DZlllioas of-Dollars 7 For it is these two elas:.es that. the moat of this ex horbitant sum goes TJie actual, real expenses of the gov eroment need not be over one hundred millions of dollars per year. The Democracy carried on the government, maintained Peace, Union Prosperity, and the greatest amount of money ever expended by them during any one year, Aumihed up hut , 81 MC 'Mons of Dollars. We have peace now There is not an armed enemy within our border:. There.is not a threat of war from any power There 14 not even an imailin ary danger in any quarter. Why then, in the name of High [leaven, should the expenses of the govern ment be what they are ? Why should five hundred millions of dollars he wrung from the people annually to carry on the gc,vernment, and one hundred and fourty.feur millions of of dollars be Yearly added to the pub lic debt What has breorne of the,rnoney? We want the party that is 'Kilian dertng it in this outrageous manner to answer We'know that there is a Freedman's Bureau to feed and clothe and school and enfranchise negroes. kept up at an expense of fifty millions of dollars per year. We ktinw that there is an army maintained to prevent the people of she South returning to their agricultural and business pur-uits, at'an expense of one hundred and fifty million; of dol lars annually. We know that there is a Navy, used alltnost exclusivel y to carry lazy officials land theivi ng fol lowers on pleasure and excursion trips over the Atlantic, at a cost to the people of about five millions of dollars per year. We know that the Interior Department of the goverp ment costs about fifty millions per year. 'We know that eighteen mil lions of dollars in gold, is taken from the public treasury yearly, and given to National Bank controllers. But what become., of the ballance alter pay. iug the interest of the bondholder This is a question that tax-payers ask. ' It is a question they demand to be answered. it is a question they want an answer too now. Bui they wilt not gee ie. The supporters of GRANT and Cot, LAX fear to answer it. They know that it is STOLEN FROM THE TREASURY, by those whom they have placed in power, and used by .corruption committees, to carry elections 4vith negro votes. Do you believe in this manner of conducting public affairs? Do you believe in this Radical mod a of Bean ceering, by which you,the tax payers of the country, are yearly ROBBED of five hundred millions of dollars If you do, if you wj to continue a party in power that costs you six hun dred and forty-four Will ionscfdollars annually vote for (PUNT and COLFAX. If not, elect Szvatoun and 13,,Ala,and the government will be adinkpistered as it was in the good old !hays of Democratic peace. and prosperity, when the entire expenses of the .ad ministration' for one year amounted to but 't . f . thly one millions of dollars. _DEIVIOQRACY_ ALL RIGHT 1 -4 Democratic Victories and Democratio Gains all Round. DEMOCRATIC VICTORY IN COLO RADO! Radlesti hajority 1 Ntalne Decreased 10,0001 Democratic Victory in Alton, Illinois I CLORY ENOUGH FOR THIS TIME The ItarlicabArave been churning (hal they had carried Colorado by an in ereaned majority, 4( the Clam an _,T_____ the Democrat lc Teritorml (7ommittre tel- egraphri l'rt.sident .Johnson thitt the Democratic candidate for Congre4s hay been elected by 860 of a majority. At the previous election the !radicals had 870 majority Kr L 0 1 ,19, Sept. 11 —The charier elec lion in Alton, 111., on Tnerftlay, reBtille,l In & Dirmocratic victory. The vote bow a Democratic gain or over 200 liAN,lOlt, MAINS, Sept. 1.6 turns from the Mute are nearly all in Tbey give Chambeartn, Radical mull date for Governor a majority of about 17,000 Two years ago Ida majority aas 27,00 The official vole will show Dernocrstic increase of almost 10 000 over 1868, and 12,000 over 1867 The vote was the larger( ever po led lo the BEE Look out for Lies!'. Already the opposition are eireula• ting the most villianous lies alslut our candidates and party intentions They arc driven to desperation and seek o°- prevent an overwhelming defeat Li bare faced falsehoods and down right lying. They are concocted by vaga , bond. about county towns and cocu lated throughout the country by pet tv tboliticiana LOOK OUT FOR THEM BEWARE OFTUEM ! --Senator FISIIER, of lAncaster county, who is now one of the quinp spealers of the GRANT and Col ,FAX party. declared in a ~ .peeelt in the State Soate, hurt winter, that the "iatelltlieet lie!/e° o/ Squth mashr tuperwr to the R S KI NO BEER GUZZLING DuTcii... Ia there a German 80 10Mt to all re spect as to vote for a party whose leaders and apeakere thus heap insult after insult upon hint. Aratsritovri, the Itadi eat eundidate for Congross,ts extreme ly polite arid courteous just now. Ile shakes hands with every one he meets 'Ten minutes after the polls close on the 2nd 'Tuesday of mat month, he will turn up his nose at any laboring man who would have the audacity to speak to his high lICM. In 1856, NO. G. Fttv.r.moNT carried the State of Maine by 28,159 majority and the Same year Pcnm.yl vania gave a Democratic majority, to her noble BtieliANAN. Thili year Maine gave only 18,000 againet us.— Canknot Pennsylvania give MOW more than skin did in 'M. If we can gain ten thousand in Maine,can we not in Pennsylvania? —The first tomb or lamp light procession that we have any account Of was the one led 'by JUDAS when he betrayed (Inaba; the last, are the ones led by the "tanner" GRANT, to betray the people ...if this country. —When the Democracy succeed ed in ytting, a maturity of the board of• Commissioners in this county, the county debt was over atre hundred tnousand dollars, it is now, loss than twenty-fire thousand. —LORD ARMSTRONG, the special pot of Bondholderti, and radical thieves; mays that "a mina is just as good as any working -man." —The ro