CAMPAIGN ISSUES- THE PLATFORM AS ADOPTED KY THE DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION. The following is the platform adopt ed by the Democratic State Conven tion last week Thursday : 1. We, the representatives of the Democracy of Pennsylvania, in con vention assemb'ed, renew our pledges of devotion to the principles of our party in the country at large, as de clared in the platform of the national convention of 1884 and 1888, and ap proved in the election of those years by a majority of the American people. We are, as we have always been, in favor of honest and enconomical ad ministration of public affairs ; of limit ing expenses and reducing taxation to meet the actual necessities of govern ment ; of a sound and stable currency based on gold and silver, coined and circulated in such proportions as will keep them on a parity ; of a reform and revision of the tariff; of liberal, but just, pension laws, and of all well considered legislation tending to in crease the rewards and lighten the bur dens of labor. 2. We realize and affirm that the state election of 1891 in Pennsylvania involves no issue of federal politics ; we appeal to honest patriotic citizens, regardless of past party affiliations, to unite in vindicating the honor of this commonwealth and redeeming the fis cal and auditing departments of its government from official abuses and . corrupt practices. 3. We arraign and condemn the . Republican legislature for having re fused to enforce the constitution, by . appropriate legislation, for having fail, ed to pass honest and equitable appor tionment bills as required by the con stitution, for having ignored the de mands of labor for relief by law, for having denied the righteous, popular demand for such laws as would distri bute the burdens of public taxation equally upon all classes of property, and for having refused to reform long existing abuses in mercantile appraise ment laws, as recommended by the Democratic executive in 18S5. .CONDEMNS THE REPUBLICAN LEGISLA TURE. 4. We arraign and condemn the republican legislature for the enact ment of vexatious, oppressive and vic ious legislation, against which the exe cutive veto was interposed for the pro tection of the people. 5. We arraign and condemn the re publican party of Pennsylvania for electing men to state and municipal offices, by whose neglect of duty, complicity, fraud and plunder of the public treasury a million and a half dollars of the people's money have been stolen and squandered. 6. We arraign and condemn the re publican auditor general for having permitted John Bardsley, the republi can treasurer of Philadelphia city and county, to embezzle a half million dollars of state tax collected by him, which he was permitted to retain for a long period after the same was due and payable. 7. We arraign and condemn the Republican auditor general for having permitted John Bardsley, the Republi can treasurer of Philadelphia city and county, to embezzle more than $360, 000 of state license moneys collected by him, which he was permitted to re tain for a long period after the same was due and payable. 8. We airaign and condemn the Republican auditor general for having conspired with John Bardsley, the Re publican treasurer of Philadelphia city and couny, to appoint and retain corrupt mercantile appraisers, who abused their office for their own private pecuniary advantage, robbed the state of its just revenues and imposed upon the commonwealth hundreds of thous ands of dollars of needless costs, and we demand the dismissal of the mer- cantile appraisers of Philadelphia. 9. We arraign and condemn the Republican auditor general for having conspired with Johr. Bardsley, the Re publican treasurer of Philadelphia city and country, to speculate in public ad vertising, and for having received from the publishers of the same bribes to influence their official conduct in plac ing such advertisements. STATE OFFICIALS ARRAIGNED. 10. Ye arraign and condemn the Republican auditor general for having failed to promptly collect the taxes and claims of the commonwealth against delinquent and defaulting public and private corporations. 11. We arraign and condemn the Republican state treasurer for wilfully and knowingly permitting John Bards ley to retain in his possession over a million dollars of monev collected for and owing to the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, by reason of which de reliction a large portion of the money has been lost to the p.eople. 12 We arraign and condemn the Republican state treasurer for having conspired with John Bardsley, the Re publican treasurer of Philadelphia, to secure to him the payment of $425, 000 of the public school funds, long in advance of the usual time, and when Bardsley was already known to the state treasurer to be a defaulter for over half a million dollars, which sum thus improvidently paid to Bardsley, was by him embezzled, to the loss of Philadelphia city and the shame and scandal of the state. 13. We arraign and condemn the Republican state treasurer and the Republican auditor general for having conspircu to pay John Uardsley, the Republican treasurer of Philadelphia tity and county, on December 30, 1S90, $150,000 out of the state treas ury, ostensibly on account of Philadel phia country s share of the personal property tax ; but actually before that tax had been paid into the state treas ury, and when John Bardsley was al ready a defaulter and embezzler on ac count to the amount of $622,013,11. A PARTY OF OFFICIAL CORRUPTION. 14. We arraign and condemn the Republican party of Pennsylvania for having fosteied, encouraged, protected and continued a reckless system of official speculation with public moneys whereby state and city treasurers have enriched themselves, corrupted the public morals and robbed the taxpay ers. The practice of using public funds for private gain or political ad vantage is to be condemned and should be completely and thoroughly eradicat ed. 15. We arraign and condemn the Republican state convention, recently assembled, for its condonation and de fense of faihless Republican state offi cials guilty of these derelictions, some of whom sat in its councils, influenced its action and dictated and controlled its utterances. 16. We pledge the candidates this day nominated to make such investi gations and give such informati&n to the law department of the common wealth as will enable it to bring to punishment those guilty of malfeasance in office. 17. We denounce the corrupt and shameless domination of Senator Mat thew IJuay in the politics of the state, and arraign and condemn the Republi can party for its servile acquiesence in the leadership of a man who has utter ly failed to defend himself from grave charges against his official conduct and political record 18. We heartily endorse the wise, statesmanlike and patriotic administra tion of Governor Pattison ; we applaud and approve his fearless vetoes of partisan vicious and ill considered leg islation ; his recommendation of salu tary laws ; his rigorous investigation and wholesome correction of public abuses, and his determination to en- J force the constitution, punish offend ers and secure public reform. SYMPATHY FOR THE WORK1NGMEN. 19. We sympathise with the just de mands of workingmen for all such legislation as will protect their inter- J ests, and for such speedy amendment to the constitution as will secure to them a free and secret ballot. 20. We oppose the repeal of the mercantile taxes, and insist that they shall be fairly and equitably laid, hon estly collected, and that the money arising from them shall be paid into the sute treasury, and not stolen by its agents We favor the repeal of such provisions of law as requ'ie advei tisement of these taxes, and the in curring of cost of collection where there can bt no recovery. We favor the abolition of the office of mercantile appraiser and the substitution of some certain, economical and expeditious method of assessing and collecting these taxes. 21. We approve all legislation look ing to an honest registry of voters to the end that every qualified voter may be secured the exercise of his franchise and that the list may be purged of all names not rightly thereon. 22. We believe that the right of free, honest and secret ballot is the right preservative of all political rights. We rpprove the largest measure of ballot reform and believe the whole advan tages of tne Australian ballot system should be secured to the electors of Pennsylvania. The ballot bill enact ed at the last general assembly was a step in the right direction, but it needs to be supplemented by measures, to secure reform in registration. To this end and for these purposes only we favor the assembling of a constitutional convention. Worth Pive Dollars. a bottle, but sold for only one dollar, and guaranteed to benefit or cure, or money refunded the genuine Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discivery. Fraudelent imitations of this medicine are sometimes offered and sold at 60 to 70 cents. To protect the public from such im position, the genuine is now sold only through druggists, regularly authorized as agents, and at the uniform and long established price of $1.00 per bottle, or six bottles for $5.10. But each bottle of the genuine Golden Medical Discovery carries with it something that makes it the cheapest bloodpurifier and liver-invig-orator that you can buy. It's the print ed guarantee of its makers that, if it fails to benefit or cure you, they'll re turn the money. You pay only for the good you get, with this and with all of Dr. Pierce's medicines. You pay the one fixed price but if there's no help, there's no pay. It's ''value received, or your money back." That's the way its makers prove their faith in it. With an ordinary medicine, it can't oe done. Dealers not authorized to sell . the genuine medicine, are likely to offer spurious imitations, dilutions, and sub stitutes, at lower prices. Beware of them. Children Oryfoi Pitches Oast-r'a BRIEF MENTION OF NEWS Happenings of the World from Pole to Pole. TOLD U A IEW SEC0SD3 OF TIME, Tka Development! of Itaclt lmj During the Week Caught Kreali from the lluay Wlree and Carefully Ktllted and C'oa. dented for Unr Header. At New York Mymlert Stnrln was hp reteil for contempt of court, mid vpoa hit promise to pay KoMer & Dial' wing bill wa paroled in the cmtoily of hU law jet. Socialist Al:ier broke Daniel O'Con tior' arm during n rljjht nt (Jnttenb-nrg. N. J., and abot and vriouljr Injur! Con atabla Kern atnl a citizen named Jia Oentrom when they trial to arret him. Terrorite tu totted in buried nhelli at Fort Hamilton, N. Y., the three charge blowing holes, of from thirteen to fifteen feet In tha earth. It baa been decided by the United Statoi government to abandou the cane against tha steamer Itata, which curried arms t Chill during the recent trtwMe. Judita Lorenzo Srtwyer ilid midden ly of bronchitia la San FrDrNT, Cal. Judg Sawyer wan born in Je9jrmi county, X. Y., In ISai. In iwa he wan elected ius ticeof the supreme court ii California, and In tha la.it two re.tra inr vn chief Justice. The hearing on the vr 111 nt Mr. Hrmktns- Searlea was postponed. Thrri talk of a compromise. It U claimed that M r. Senrle was a spiritualist and that Searies fw-caiiK medium und acquired mental jaceo3anci oer Mrs. Searles. The Association of InternatrmnlTceket Agents met la convention at St.. Irani, jrexterday. George II. Loring. cx-mlnUterta Portu gal, Is rapidly recovering from his- recant aevera illness. A Cbicagoan suggests to Secrefarv Rttsk that his rain producing npparatsK be used to create fogs, which will prevent in jus? fraia froat. At Grace (Eaish LutheranV clnirck. Chicago. Colonel KUiott 1'. Slirpuri prophesied the financial ruin of Vila Chi cago fair if opeatxi Sundays. BeiUy Dean ami Hill Dulton were an runted near Tnevcm. Cal., .Sunday night, en suspicion of having taken part in. tht train roblry at Ceres, Friday night.. Two convicts in the penitentiacs at Frankfort, Ky. foiacht, and both ol them. with a third convict who tried to sepnr&u them, were fatally Injured. The people of Ctawfordsville, Inl arc moch exercised over a winged mouxtei which has been hovering over the town foi several night It ia believed to beanew airship. At Xew York Henry Prince, burglns;. as taped from Jvtfsraun Market prisuee in brovl daylight through the unrepaired window outoX which, Eugene U'liara jra iously made his exit. Emperor WUhelut baa pardoned Afc-s. O'Neill, wUa of General O'Neill, wbc elaimed to nave been an officer 1b tht United Stale army. She shot and danger ously wounded her husband ou M i last, and ha since then been iu prison. The Bask of Frauca has offered. It hv auid, to take the Kassian loau of liajac 000 at 4 per cent. A bill to prevent boodllng, lntrotCueed into the Canadian senate Thursday,, poa videa taat civil official or uietiibeua. 04 their families accepting bribes shalC bt fined $100 to tl.QUO or imprisonmens foi six months. Between TOO and SOU miners are o stirik at Braceville. Ilia., to secure the beneOu of the weekly pay law. Three men who were caught bj cattle men In Custer county, Mod., cbangins brands on cattle, were all hanged to tht same tree. Frank Dunforth, who cnt bJ wile'i throat and throw her dead body into th river on Juue 28 last, was banged at Augusta, Go. Attorney General Tabor wl)l apply tc the United States court on Oct. 4 for a dis missal of the stay of proceedings and tht appeals in the cases of Murderers McEl wain and Treaa, both of whom are In Sing Ring. Rev. Dr. Ward, the aged father of Fer dinand Ward, the "Napoleon of finance,' died Aug. 11 at Claret) a, Switaerland. The tobacco crop of Lancaster county, Pa., which 1 nearly all harvested, is th largest ever grown, the average reaching 13,500 acres and tha yield fully 30,000 cases. Two train robbyri held np the Lot Angeles express a few miles south of Mo desto, Cal., shot Detective Karris, blew open the express car with dyuumlte and then fled. By the sinking of his father's yacht, Dr. J. B. Eggleston, lute of Albany, wai drowned. Sixteen men were blown to atoms by dynamite explosion near White Pigeon, jiicn. Mile. Vacaresco has consented to leave, the Queen of Roumanla and the king ha started to join the qqeen. The withdrawal of the young woman probably ends tht romance of Prince Ferdinand. A. R. Patton, of Sau Antonio, Tx., wai killed by a burglar who entered his house. Superintendent Kimball, of tha life sav ing service, has put on 100 extra tirewt along the Atlantic and gulf coasts. Eleven members out of fourtceu of In diana's atate Democratic committee favot Cleveland. The others want Gray foi president. Five thousand acres near Grand Forks, X. D., were swept clean by a prairie fire. Tbebedyof Mrs. Richardson, of Long Prairie, Minu., was luid out for burial Tuesday, but she revived and recognized neriricuas. While train was running at full speed .near Denison station, A. T., Tuesday night, a car of powder blew up, killing Brakeman IU W. White and .Stockman August Beckman. Miss Mary Lincoln, daughter of the American minister to itogland, Mr. Robert T. Lincoln, wna married In London, Sept. to Mr. Charles Ishaua, a wealthy young lawyer or -Ne-.v lork. Secretary XobW baa directed the pay ment of (370,000 to the Sisseton and Wan peton Indians in South Dakota under tha treaty mulled by the last congress. M. Zola declares that France is bow ready to revenge Sedan aod sweep tha German empire out of existence, and Ger man newspapers admit that Germany must soon light again to bold what she won in 1870-1. It is reported that England will send a Oaet to the Dardanelles to watch Russia. The agtut at the Canadian Paciflo rail road station at Nelson, B. C. was bound by au raed robber, who secured 1,014 and the money of man who entered tb, Ill XT vxivmiir w KJU 1 1 111 i. 1 VI 1 J 11 1 J. SALTZER'S SAL With many years experience in buying and selling musical instrument and sewing machines I can guarantee to my customers the best in the markets 1 lanos and urgans purchased or me, can be relied upon. If anything get. out of order, it can easily be corrected, and a great deal of annoyance saved. Instructions given to all purchasers of Sewing Machines, how to ojeratc them successfully. The STKCK PIANO is the best made. Its tone is surpassed 1 .... . ry none, iou raafte no We bave also the ESTEY and the STARR PIANOS, And The-r ESTEY, MILLER and UNITED STATES ORGANS. We sell Piaaos from $250 to $600, and Organs from $75 to $175. In Sewing Machines we can m m m rm ii si i .m m "- a We sell the best Sewing Mach ine made for $19.50. JV Salter, BlQQmsMrgfJ Fa. Don't fail to briug your Watches, Clocks and Jewelry to J". C3-. "WELLS if you want them repaired Promptly, and Guaranteed Rest : . .... lavuiiics sui uuriiiiii; uw, BARGAINS IN CLOCKS. Wm. Gilbert Ticli,from$ 100 up. " ,r ! $daytyi hour strike, Walnut, Ash, Marble, .00 up. 5iist got in a. Silverware GWATCHES FROM S5.00 UP.D FINEST Bings, Chains and (11 B. BOBBINS, DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic WINES AND LIQUORS. Bloomshurq, Pa. trcr WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF ue up TO THE MARK ! NO LAUNMUmO. OAN Bt WtPtO CbCAN M A MOMENT THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOP COLLAR IN THB MARKET, nniiTi-ri Ml. if liUi li mm mistake it you buy a Steele. II give you the Celebrated J " WHITE " The best Machine in the world. taj AJSW UUA1E5T1C, The ROYAL ST. JOHN, The STANDARD ROTARY And the NEW 5IOME. wori in mis section. Fine Line of LINE OF Watches ia County. THAT CAN BB RSLIBD OH XOt to Split ! JVot to Pisooiopi B8AR3 THIS MARK. TRADP QXuio PSlIlPg.' Spring days are at hand and premonitions of Marm weather bring with them a desire for cooling dishes. We shall keep Ice Cream of many flavors from now on, and will serve it in our parlors day or night. Families and parties sup plied. Get our prices. The Cafe is open, and the kitchen is in charge of an ex perienced cook. Catering for parties, lodges, weddings, etc.. a specialty. rresh bread and cakes daily in the bakery. M. M PHILLIPS & SON. Proprietors of "PHILLIPS' CAFE." Bloomsburg, Pa. KESTY & HOFFMAN, TVe repair Engines, Boilers, Sjw Mills, Threshers, Harvesters. Mowers and all kinds of machinery. WE HASDLK TEAM PIPE FITTMOS, VALVES, STEAM 6A8GES. And ill kinds of Repairs. PIPE CUT TO OllDEK. AGENTS FOR CriiQld fcjesar Co., Garfield All wk done bjr us is guaranteed K give satisfaction, and all work ia cur line mil be promptly attended to JHOPS - atbaadCISTBE SHEETS- 0LLEGE BfMNESS MAKES THE LIVING. Practical aaslnoHs trutalnz la ta moxt vital part nfeluot ion. The luxuries of kniinltxfee may he acijatroJ t cveiiieni-a. TlioroiiKli training, uunu-tivi-ly jten. lathe utronx point of this m hovl. i'on)Htrnt lacDHy; inutile luctl Itlea. Ik-si systviu of Book-kteplnc, fliortIinf , bnal iicm PcuniRnMpat Tvpc. -writing. For both aoxes, Ham at any time. Writs tor partlo uhtra. . LEWIS BALDWIN,) ,.,.,,. May 8 lyr. A. W. Mo, ( I'rluclpaU M'Killip Bro's. Photographers. Only the best work done. Fin est effects in light, and shade; negatives re touched and modeled for sup erior finish. Copying, view ing and life size crayons. Over II. J. Clark & Son's store. BLOOMSBURG. Bupturo . Uivly cured of Kuittur by 1r J u i i vvw ten As.it 1'r I ,Llrrii"n, ""tiling, New Hlngvold, ? 'Tm ' "V,A' wf"'","fr. IouhI Dal-s fa., rnJSniTUi;,P?;,M,-.M- Lelnbaih, MM Waali. liEL """'''''''v. O- hVelin. Doug- Practical Maciists. station la Urns to b betd up.