Site iCottrr jPrtitotvai BfiLLEFONTE, PA. Tlia Lnrgoit,Ckoapflit nil Boat Paper I'UHLIaIIICD IN CKNTKE COUNTY. TILE CENTRE DEMOCRAT ia pub i-vory Thurw con ■•dorr.l In advance. A LI VIC PAPKR—iloTotril to tho I liferent* of the wliolo No will lp illwaDllntiod until arrearage* are paid, except *t option of puhlthr>r*. I'ttppm going out of the county niuat bo paid for In RilVAUrp. Any |H*roon procuring u* tencanh will bo icht a copy froo of rbarge. Our ntriniT* circulation make* thl* pftpor on un usually reliable and prnfltftble medium f"T unvertining* We nave tho moot ample faf*il|t|* for JOB WOIIK ami are prepare! to print all Mini* of tlO"k, Tract*, l'rograniinna, Pwt*n,Cuinm<*rcUl printing, Ac, in tlu ftneat tjle and at the lowest pu*|tde r*t*a. KATCft OF ADVKRTIMIXO. Time. | 1 In. | 2 In. 3 In. j 4 In. jft In. In in. 201 n. 1 Weak. II OO ti IX) S3 Ooj 4 00,13 0" Js o 2 Week., I 1 40 3 ai 4no 400 (' I) li lit OO 3 Wrak*. 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Two of the important events of the last week, in which no one acquired great renown, occurred in the villages of Harrisburg and Philadelphia. In one place ex-Attorney General Lear was lionized and in the other was a hrutal prize fight. In the one case the parties got their eyes bunged, and in the other tjiey got —wined. THE feeling seems to be strong in Congress to let financial tinkering alone for the present. This is sensi ble. • The country can survive, even if all the crazy theorists are not given the opportunity at the extra session to air themselves and promulgate their insanities. A little patience ami the improved business of the country un der Democratic ascendency, will regu late finaueial affairs, without the in tervention of the " bloated bondhold ers" or the stupid essays of expan sionists. EX-SECETAIIY GORHAM, in en lightening Senator Wallace's commit tee as to the amount of money he forced out of the employes of the government to carry the last congress ional elections, credits Secretary Sher man and other notables with liberal contributions, hut makes no mention of tho liberal contribution promised by the White House Fraud. This is un kiud. He promised it and certainly •lid not fail to perform. If he could not draw upon Tilden's barrel to show his liberality, he could upon Tilden's salary. > BENATORSAMBU KYof Delaware hn got himself into un inquisitive mood and wants .Secretary John Sherman to inforn. the Senate what moneys were deposited hy him in certain hank* and thus withh<4Fl from circulation. He wants also to learn hy what process of fiuanceering a favorite hank can inake over a million of dollars in a few mouths 011 a capital of six hundred thousand. It would not be surprising if the impertinent curiosity of this old Senator would induce a desire to know the amount of John's personal gains in these operation*. SENATOR WALLACE'* investigating committee put in two full day* of ex cellent work in Philadelphia last week. The time spent there was not sufficient to enable the committee to make a complete exposure of nil the republi can election debauchery of that city, but enough evidence was taken to give the public a slight insight into the workings of that part of the machine ry manipulated by Marshal Kerns. This gentleman was at last compelled to produce a list of the deputies who served at the November election, and a sorry set of scalawags they prove to be. The list contains 773 names, and is almost entirely made up of well known rounders, repeaters, bummers, thieves and convicts. The Marshal seems to have gone over the city f# the especial purpose of finding disrep utable (rersomT to appoint. As they were expected to do dirty work, it was probably just as well that they should be dirty characters. Yet, in endeavor ing to secure the repeal of a law that give a U. 8. Marshal the power to ap point creatures like these to debauch elections, the democrats are "revolu tionists/' Not much. "Tin: Republican senators," Hays the Washington Pout "seem to dwell with peculiar delight on the events of 1801, and never tire of depicting the retirement of the Southern senators i from the old State chamber. One i would think, front the constant recur rence to that mournful event, that they indulge a hope vtf seeing it repeated, lint this hope, if it exist, will prove a delusion. The South has conic hack to stay. The institution out of which grew the war and all its sad results, is among the things of the past. There arc now no conflicting interests of sufficient importance to create section al disturbance. The fact that the South is solidly Democratic is due, in a great measure, to the policy of the Republican party, which has compell ed the white people of the South to combine in order to tho more effectu ally resist oppression, llut the at tempt to impute disloyalty to the Southern men in either branch of Con gress, as was done in tho Senate Mon day, is transparent folly. Not a word has fallen from the lips of any South ern Democrat, in the Senate or House, since the war, not an act has been com mitted or proposed by any one of them, j inconsistent with most sincere devo votlon to the I'nion. On the con-! trary, they have invariably voted for those acts of generosity and justice to wards the men by whom tlu ir armies were defeated, which they must have opposed to the bitter end, had they cherished the spirit of hatred that animates the stalwart heart. SENATOR WAI.I.ACK is doing some good work and bringing to light the enormous expenditure charged to the government for the employment of rounders and repeaters to rontrol and carry the elections in Philadelphia. Marshal Kern acknowledges to having appointed T7d deputy marshals in IK?*, and about the satno number of supervisors, for which they received SIU each. A large pro|Kirtion of these appointments were made from a very discreditable class of men. With these men added to l,or 1 ,* r 00 political policemen, all actively employed, is it any wonder that the rogues maintain their ascendency in the Quaker City ? The Marshal was forced to admit that the deputy marshals wen.' not necessary to maintain order or obtain a fair election. UNITED STATES MARSHAL KERNS, savs tho Philadelphia Record, did a creditable thing before the Wallace committee in frankly acknowledging that no need exists in Philadelphia for United .States Supervisors and Mar shals as guardians of tho purity of tho ballot box. Of course ho could hard ly have said anything else, but it is none the less gratifying to have tho testimony of a well-known United States Marshal on the side of n repeal of the law permitting federal interfer ence with the progress of elections. ♦ MR. GORHAM, late Secretary of the Senate, and also Secretary of the Re publican Congressional Committee, was • alled to testify before the Wallace Committee, and was closely examined as to his a-tc*sments upon the officials of the government. He admitted that he succeeded in extracting from them *03,000, to aid in the election of Re publican congressmen at the last elec tion. The a*K4-**mcnt.s ujon |MS|mas ters was one percent. ujHin all snlnricx of fcl.lHH) and less. Above that a proportional increase. GEN. HANCOC# is looming up as the strong man to knock the fire out of the Grant movement. If the Amer ican people are disponed, after the Grant experiment, to risk another military commander, they could not do letter than to take this honest pa triot, who not only has the brains to do right and conduct the government as a statesman shouid, but the courage to say and require, as in New Orleans, that the military shall be subordinate to the civil power. —-■*- - Tyn Kansas people, it seems, are lxtonming quite excited at the influx of Negro emigrants into that state. It is difficult now for a colored man, with money, to buy a projmrty, ao bitter is the opposition to his settlement there. The colored man's true friends are in the South, and it will not be very long before he will realise that fact, but who would have expected "bleeding Kansas" to be the first to go back on "the man and the brother." Election Marshals. Krotn 111 1 ' IMillmMphl* TIIUM. Tho partial development* made be fore tho special committee of the Sen ate, at tin- hcuritig had in thin city, in regard to thi" cliitriu'trr and icrricoi of the deputies appointed hy Marshal Kerns for tho Into election, must make uny Senator or (Vmgresßman of either party blush when ho assumes to dofonil tho oonlintmnce of such irresponsible officer* to attend our nntioonl elections. Whatever limy have been tho ronl or apparent necessity for HUch officials in tho Mouth while tho reconstructed Stilton were tuibulent under tho rule of thieving carpet-baggers, it will not ho pretended that there in now, or that there ever wan, the shadow of an excuse lor tho appointment of six or eight hundred Deputy Marshals in l'hilndel iihia. Tho complaint In* uniformly iicen that these Deputy Marshals have been, a* a rule, the most rock loss parti nans ; that they have heen the fruitful source of disorder, crime and perjury in the South during the last eight or ten years; that they have wantonly op pressed legitimate business to attain fraudulent political ends; that they have intimidated lawful voters, falsified registrations and returns, and that they have, in very many instances, been the mere ercaUnus of tho side thai paid them to promote fraud. That such has been the general character of the Dep uty Marshals ill the South, has been abundantly proven by evety election since 1872; I ut it has not heen known how shamefully the authority to ap point thetu has heen abused in the North. Marshal Kerns niu*t he credited with a wholesome disgust for himself and his own work in thu selection of his depu ties for this city. lie has done about all that lie could to mitigate his late offense against law and decency, by frankly confessing that the deputies were needless; and the fact that he was so heartily ashamed of his round ers, repeaters and convicts that he con cealed his list until it was forced before tho public by a committee of the Senate, is a plain admission tlust one of his most important oflicial acts could open dis grace only hy ■< aping public scrutiny. And when the list is presented to the people of peaceable Philadelphia, they must bear the shame wantonly llung upon them by Marshal Kerns. 1 f-r- i* a Republican judiciary ; a Republican Mayor; a Republican police of twelve hundred men ; a host of Republican officials wielding all the poor of the municipality ; thousands of Republican contractors, dependents and expectants to tight the battles of the party ; a large majority of Republican a*<-or to register the votes; a Republican Tax ' tffice to facilitate the i|Ualification of lb-publican electors, and four fifths of the election boards Republican to ac cept or reject doubtful voters and to computeaind certify the returns, while the minority party is powerless, save * fraud can escape the vigilance of the multitude of Republican safeguards in a few localities. To summon Deputy Marshals in this city for the protection of the majority party, even if done with the utmost integrity, would have heen an unpardonable abuse of public trust ; : but to prostitute the authority of the Marshal hy the selection of nearly eight hundred deputies, most of them mere partisan dependents and very many of tln-tn so disreputable that they would not he allowed within sight of a shop man's till, was a violation of the plain letter and spirit of the law and a re proach to Philadelphia, that should not only demand the repe.d or modification of the statute, hut that should dismiss Kerns from bis office in the disgrace he bis delil>erately invited upon him-elf. If Marshal Kerns had heen content to abuse his power to the extent of se lecting reasonably reputable p-artisans to act as window men, distribute party tickets and bring out party voters at the cost of the government, it might have been regarded as a waste of public money that could he pardoned on the* ground of political necessity ; hut when lie called the thief from his den. the rounder from his stums, the convict from his haunts of shame and the bal lot stuflVr from his low rum mill relrest to wear the badge of the national gov ernment and violate the law in the name of the law, he committed a crime against every decent ritiren of Philadel phia, whether Republican or Democrat, and made the law that is presumed to protect honesty in elections the instru ment of its own degradation. And when it is considered that these hum mers ami criminals are empowered to interfere with the most eacred rights of ritirens without process of law, or any restraints beyond their own dishonest or brutal instincts, tho outrage upon the people of this city is one that can scarce ly he portrayed in adequate terms. It is violently reversing all rules of order and public safety l-y making the thief and the bully masters of the lil>ertiea of reputable dUsens, and conferring UJIOII them fhe power to pollute the hallot box under the protection of the law itself. We do not (Minns that this ahuae is exceptional because Republi cans happen to have the ptower to day. 11 aI the Marshal of Philadelphia been a Democrat of the average partisan stamp of the age. it is quite probable 1 that like wrongs would have heen com mitted, so far as possible in the face of Republican means to counter act it; hut tho fact that these terrible wrongs have heen comroitteed hy one party and may hereafter lie committed hy any party that happens to IHI in power, should arouse the people of every political faith to demand the re peal of alt such authority and to agk that only legitimate judicial restraints shall be employed to guard the purity of elections, The one redeeming feat tire of the official conduct of Marshal Kerns in the case is, that he has so out raged honest public sentiment as to make it impossible for any Marshal in this city to appoint deputies for future elections. As it is t.ie only shadow of credit that he can gather from the offi cial infamy he has brought upon him self, let him not be denied an offset for the good that must oome out of his reckless prostitution of the authority of the national government. Frince Waldemar, third son of the Crown Frtnoe of Germany, died Thurs day morning of heart disease. Election Fitiihl* Investigation. THE IKTERKSTINti I)HW'I/>B('RK)I MADE EV EX ItCRBTARV <.UHIIAM llEniltK THE wai.i.ack committer. From |||iolr|i id (tin Ttio !lworl. Wasiiinuton, March 26.—Mr. florham who was Secretary of the National Con gressional Campaign committee, was on the witness stand before the Wallace committee (or over an hour to 'lay, and let out aoruo interesting facta concern ing the niangement of the hint cam paign. For aome time he was subject ed to cloe and nliarp examination try Senator McDonald, in which lie admit ted that the famous circular lent to all the olllccrs holders in the land, inviting contributions for the conduct of the carnp ign, wan submitted to the Presi dent by ti member of the Congressional committee and was approved by him. 1 h<- history of the circular, according to Mr. Durham, is as follows: Oorham wrote it himself, and, being fearful that, in view of the civil service order, many officeholders would refuse to respond, he added a final clause to the effect that the system of voluntary contrilu lions solicited met the approval of the Executive. The circular was then sub mitted to the President, who modified it with the words that such "voluntary contiibutioim met the approval of tin executive officers of the Government." It was developed that the Congressional committee raised $106,000 through as sessments ; that members of the Cabi net, foreign Ministers, Senators and iteprcsen tat ires contributed Senator* £IOO each and li--j rtnllv<•• #.'iOcacli. I lio largest stun sent to any one State was $'30,000, to Ohio; tout, >i* (iorlmni •aid, into the close district*. Si nator McDonald thought he discriminated against Indiana, but Mr.Oorham retort ed facetiously that the Ohio people had a better way of pulling him than the other*. W AMIINOTON, March 27. 1!* Score Uiry of the Senate (iorhain produced book* of subscription* in the depart ment*, and the bet o) money sent by the ddl'erent Stale* to the national com mittee. He aided nineteen Southern Congressional district* with an average of soi','!, and fifty eight Northern di< tricts, with an average of 1712. No aid we* given to two hundred and twelve districts. The contributions of Federal otlicer* in Wisconsin went to the State committee.* Subscriptions in look and in the Treasury Department are headed by the name Secretary Sherman ; the I'ostofllco Department by the Second Asistant i'ostinaster 'ieneral; the Ag rieultural Department by Commissioner 1." Due; the Sixth Auditor's otlice by tbe Sixth Auditor. Money sent to In diana wa* put in the hands of Blair, with witness' recommendation a* to it* use. In regard to the general |*>licy to devote money to close district*: About nine district* in Ohio were thus helped. The librarian of the Senate helped (iorham to compile a sort of a Republican campaign text book and was paid s'2io. The work did not in terfete with hit official duties. No de duction was made in hi* salary as libra rian on account of hi* working for the committee. Witness thought the sub scription* of the Treasury Department might amount to #12,000 or $13,000. in stead of $7,000 or ss,oOo a* M ite l yes terday. Afxuit $2,000 were subscribed in the I\*toflice Department. .'awl M. Kern*. foiled State* Mar •hal for the F-*torn Iitrict of Penn sylvania, testified he thought • far as Trilled State* Stipervi*or* and Marshal* are concerned Philadeiidiia ran do with out them very well. The ex|>ne* of the foiled State* Supervisor* amount to $27.4-10. Special attention wu paid Itandall * district because it was in a had part of the city where riot* fre quently occurred. -♦ A tr Trlfifrajili ( ompnnj. TIII nic# rtoviuM M u*K nr a* ougaxua* TLOJF JFR M AUTII IS FTT* TOFCK. Fr*tn lh# Yr% k*isir.f Ff Within the last month a new tele graph company ha* hnen organized in tin* city under the title of the Ameri can Rapid Telegraph Company. It* otllrr* are Kdwm Reed, ex-Mayor of Hath, Me., preaident; Thonia* Wallace, of Connertirut, vicej.resident, and Ma jor 1.. S. Hapgood, of Ito*ton, treasurer. The company is *aid to have a capital of $3.000,01.10, and it intend* immediaiely to construct a line of double telegraph wire* connecting Ho*ton, New York, Philadelphia, ilaltiinore, Washington, ''hicagoand St, I Ami*. The wire* will tie of ea#t *teel. plated with copper, and are the invention of Profeaaor Mo*e* (J. Farmer, of Newport. The company control* a number of other novel in vention*, in telegraphy, which will en able it, a* claimed, to transmit 1,000 word* |>er minute over it* own patent wire* and half that number over ordi nary wire*. Among the feature* of the proposed system *t the following : Firt. Kxpre** Message*—To be dis patched instantly at a uniform rate of 25 cent* f..r thirty word* to all station* east of the Rocky Mountain*. Bocond. Mail Message*—To be dispatch ed within nno hour and delivered through the nearest post office or by roetsanger, within two hour* trom date of mVwage, at 2'J cents for fifty word*. Third. Night Message*—To bo delivered before 9. a. m. at 16 con (a for fifty word*. Fourth. Fres* Iteporl*—For rultuire publication in onn journal at 10 cent* for ono hundred word*. Fifth. Stamped Message*—lt U propos ed, under an arrangement with the Port '"" w i b> t*uo *tampa for moMago*. A correspondent in thi* city can then place a letter of fifty word* in an envelope, put on a twenty live cent stamp and drop it into any lamp-po*t bo*. The letter-carrier* will make collection* every half hour, and will at once deliver ucb letter* to the tele graph company. The latter will bind it self to deliver copie* in Chicago within two hour* of the time of posting. In the latter city the copy will be *ent to tba poet office and will be delivered by the letter-carrier* there. The company will pay to the post office authorities 1} cent* per letter for collecting and 1) cent# for delivering. It promise* within three year* to telegraph ordinary businae* letter* to and from all point* of the country for 10 cent*. The company also intends to estab lish pre** bureaus in the principal cities. In building the lines the poet road* and highway* will be followed, aa a United States law, paaesd in IB6fi, ia understood to give fres right of way over those routes. It ia designed to bare the lines completed and in working order by .lanuary I, 1880, The New Fee Hill. for the Information of our readers we give herewith the reduction of fees in the following named offices. The new bill took effect with the advent of the new officials, tut it out and past., it up where it will oe convenient for consultation: It Is iislMTinted that the reduction In the I'rotlionoUry'• ollhe will b- f r „i„ :jo 86 per cent. S exceed ®K*i. Ihe fee .if executing a death warrant remains unchanged. An fsrsjic Foiled. Through the seductive wile* of a woman, the weakness ol man and the hope of a large reward, a bank burglar who is serving a ten-year*' imprison ment at the Eastern Penitentiary was in a fair way of escaping from thai almost impregnable jail bird cage. The prisoner, a man named Holland, was arrested in Oh am her* burg ab.nu one year ago. for breaking into a bank in that j.iacc, and after conviction and sentence succeeded in cscijing from the .it by cutting through the roof. He tied to Chicago, and there, after a prolonged search, an ofliccr attached to i'lnkerton* detective agency picked him up and returned biro to bis old 'luartera in Cbambersburg. The an thorilie* of the prison were satisfied that their institution was not the place for such a man, and transferred him to the big institution on Cherry Hill. About Christmas time, an old watch man at the jsenitentiary, who has en joyed the confidence of the authorities for years, was caught in the act of con veying a bundle to Holland which was found to contain a nicely roasted chirk n. It was thought if be would violate hi* trust to thi* extent he would go further, and accordingly a strict watch a* kept ii|.on hi* movement*. These suspicions were shortly ascertained to have been well founded. About a month ago the prison authorities de cided to search the prisoner's cell, and, after a dilligent in vest iga (ion, discovered a light, strong rope Wider, arranged with hooks that would have provided an easy escape over the frowning wall* of the prison. A number of tools of ex ■ jiiisit.. make, such as files and saws, were also found secreted in out-of-the way places in the cell. That the pris oner had fully studied out his plan of escape was not only evidenecd by the tool*, but by a plan carefully niajipcd out on a piece of |>aper written in sym pathetic ink. These articles had all been expressed from Chicago to this city by the wife or friend* of Holland, and were conveyed to him by the watch man at night. In their search the pria on authorities destroyed a shaving brush used by the prisoner, and were astound ed by the discovery of forty diamonds of different sites secreted in the handle, which had been dug out and filled with the rich treasures, and then reseated in a most skillful manner. It is believed that a portion of these gems were to he the reward of the watchman's infidelity, had the escape (seen effected. As it is the watchman knows no more the place that has suppoited him for so many years, and the prisoner is confined in a stronger cell, and is guarded with more than ordinary care. A letter from Bangkok, 81am, dated on the 17th of March, aaye that the King of Hiam ha* *ent an autograph let ter to General Grant, inviting him to viait Siam and become hi* guest. Gen eral Grant was expected at .Singapore about the first of April. The American i'ounsel at Bangkok, accompanied by tba King'a aid de camp and one of the Frinoes. will proceed down the Gulf of Hiam on a Government *tearner to meet and welcome General Grant, and escort him to Bangkok. Wallace's Tradncer*. Kcnator Wallace, of Pennsylvania, come* in for a goodly share of criticism j rind abuse from the npj.osition jire. I ho We*tche*ler •/. 'ffertonutn says, thi* | in an evidence of Mr, Wallace'* worth ari'i enlrrj.riso a* a .Senator. lie in a positive representative man, shrewd and energetic. Such men cannot pan through the ordeal of public life with out attracting the attention of both friend* and opponent*. If the latter *<•<•111 vindictive in their attack* at pres. ent it i* but a Mire evidence that they fear him. ' oncervative men of all j.ar t)'", however, will not fail to give con sideration ami approval to hi* effort* a* Senator. Marly in the late session a resolution of inquiry wa* made by the House upon Attorney-General Ihrven*, fiie.noo t.f 11 ooj.s at the jM.ll* and to repeal those section* of the revised statutes which nulhoiize ti.e appointment of chief su pervisors and ilepuly marshals for elec tions. I lie sulye.-t Mas very generally discussed by the member* present, and the sentiment was unanimous in oj.jks posit, .n to the progratotne arranged by the democrats. Garfield and Knfer Ohm., Will.mils (Wis.), lielfort ' o|. . i ,ng..r Mich.) arid other* made lengthy sp.-echc* sustaining the view* ahoVO lodioaU I. aiid it was finally agreed that every endeavor should l*i made I.y ti.e minority to jrevent the passage of the bill, unless they shall be relieved of the legislative provision* in <|U< ation. ihe sense of the caucus waa (hat if the I ><-tnncrat should insist uj the nomi nee of the l>erooo.rat# and replied, with particular emphasis, " Why 1 uden and Hendrick*, of course! Some pco plcthink we have caught him on the cipher dispatches, but mark what I nay, the sly old coon will come out of it all smiling. And if he don't catch some of our men I will lie d—d glad, I tell you. I know him, for by , 1 had to fight him in '7G I" " Tildcn and Hendricks," aaid he. " with a solid South behind them, have only to carry New York and Indiana to win. and who doubt* that they can do it T I tell you gentlemen, (and a*-he aaid t hi" he stnu k the table until the glasses jingled). I tell you there is no use of trying to get New York awsv from Til den. If he is nominated all hell can't beat him in that State. I verily be lieve that if we were to nominate Conk ling for President and another Republi can from that State equally popular for Vice President we would find that Tib den would nevertheless carry the State. We have but one chance to nest Tilden and Hendricks, and that is to divide the sold South. And the sooner we be gin to think how this is to lie done, the oetler it will l>e for ouTorganization.'' The Rhode Island Democratic state contention met t the State House at Providence Thursday. Nomination* for state officer* were made a* follow*: Governor, Thoma* W. Seaper. of West erly; Lieutenant Governor, J. I). Bailey, of Woonaocket; Secretary of State; 1 id 8. Baker. Jr., of North Kingston, Attorney General. Charlea H. Pope, of Scituate; General Treasure', Patrick Farrell, of Pawtucket. Reaolutiona were adopted hailing with joy the re turn of the Democratic, party to the con trol of enngreta and ferreting that fraud, bribery and perjury kept the Democrat* from the executitre depart ment. A letter received In I-on don from Bangkok aaya: "The Knplish surveying party which left Upper Hurraah several month* ago, constating of fifty men. with twenty elephant*. ha*ju*t reached the Tochen river, and ia expected at Bangkok in aliout a week. Tha arrivals of American good* in Siatn arc increa*- ing, and they are much sought after, both by foreigner* and Siamese."