fbc Centre ills Democrat, BHUUKRT & FORSTKR, Editors. VOI,. 2. ®he fiCftttw scm octal. Terms $1.50 par Annum. In Advance. S. T. SMUOERT and R. H. FORSTER. Editors. Thursday Morning, September 9,1880. Democratic National Ticket. roa ratsuisxT, WYXVIKLD SCOTT HANCOCK, of PotmsjrWaiil*. roa sirs ratnntxT, WILLIAM 11. KNULIBII, of liiJimia. KLXCTORB-ATL \ K< • K. ft Kminst Mouse ban. WlllUro 11. Plsjford. KLHCTORB. Dint. Dirt. 1. John sirrlii. i v Ororßr A. P.~t, I. K,loiii A. Pur. 16 A. M. Benton, .1. John M. Camjibrll, 17. J. P. Linton. 4. tllllw Pallrt, 1. John S. Mlllrr, John N. MoM, 19. J. O. Santon, B. K.tttin Waldon, >. C. M. lo*r, 7. Nathan C. Jam.*, ifl. I. A. J. Bnrhatian, H Urorico Filtwrt, ti Christopher Mk<*. it. Jaiuw (I. Mi'Spartn, Kl.RohortM Oll~.fi. !. Alfred J. Martin, it. Thonuu Bradford, 11. Artm Ominser, 'A'.. Harrr W. Wilson, I'J. Frank Turner, 26. Sainii.l Orlffllh, LI. P. J. Rirminaham, 27. J Ko Thompson. 14. II r.. Daris^ Democratic State Ticket. roa si rains jftxis, UKDROK A. JKNKB, of Jefferson County. roa ainiToa osxsau, ROBRRT P. PECIIKHT, of Philadelphia. TIIK Republicans will rejoice in a great victory this week in Vermont, and, no doubt, shout lustily in escap ing a sound drubbing uext week in Maine. Ix?t them take comfort while they may. Their day of doom ap proaches. THE United States marshal for Col orado, under Grant, C. C. Thompson,- a delegate to the Chicago Convention, has been arrested and required to ex plain a slight discrepancy in bis ac counts amounting to the sum of 818,- 050. He was arrested in Virginia where he was employed to advocate Garfield and reform to the Rebel-Brig adiers in the benighted South. GEN. GRANT has addressed a letter to " iX'ttr General Logan," iu which he says, " it will not do to be beaten now," no doubt having specially in view the campaign to come off in 1884. He is to take part in the present can vass, and wave the bloody shirt in the face of bis utterances in Texas and Illinois before the Chicago convention, on the loyalty of the Southern people. THE charge of the De Golyer bribe of SS,(XX) to Gen. Garfield for his influence was first made by fad ing Republicans in his district. Its truth was affirmed in the courts of Il linois. The law making the ]>enaUy for such offences two years' imprison ment and SIO,OOO fine was passed by Congress, of which Mr. Garfield could not have been ignoraut, but he braved the penalty to receive the pelf. THE Thompsons seem to be a popu lar family with the Democracy of Massachusetts. Tbey have nominated Charles P. Thorn pson for Governor, ; and Alpha E. Thompson for Lieuten ant Governor. This event marks the return of General B. F. Butler to the Democratic party, from which he has been wandering some years. He fa vors the Thompsons, as he also does the election of Hancock and Euglish. THE Bellefonte Republican evident ly believes in the principle that a lie well stuck to is as good as the truth any day. It copies from the Chicago Tribune, in its issue of last week, the exploded story about an imaginary conversation said to have been over heard by the head waiter of the Girard House in Philadelphia, between ex- Gov. Curtin and several gentlemen while at breakfast at that hotel. The sable gentleman promptly denied hav ing heard any such conversation, and his denial appeared in the Philadel phia Time* the day after the original lie had been published in the New York Tribune. The publication will not avail anything .here in Centre county, where Gov. Curtin's attitude in this campaign and his opinion of the De Golyer candidate are so well known. Btill common decency and a regard for the amenities of life, would have dictated that this lie should have been omitted from the columns of our contemporary. There would have been that much more room for some other eaually good invention that has not yet oeen contradicted. False Issues. Secretary Thompson of the Navy Department, in a speech the other day, admitting that the question of secession is finally settled, and not now eutertained North or South, claims that the great question to be solved in the present contest is "wheth er the National Government shall re tain to itself sufficient power to pre serve its own life, or whether it shall humble itself at the feet of the several States and surrender the rights with which it is iuvested under the Con stitution." If this is not the utter ance of a demagogue it is that of a blind partisan fanatic, who ' cannot tiud it in his heart to do justice to his political opponents by stating facts as they exist. There is no such issue in the contest. He cannot lay his hands upon the utterance of a single Demo crat iu this broad land, either in Con gress or out of it, expressing a desire to take from the National Govern ment a single power or right guaran teed to it by the Constitution. On the contrary, the Democracy, without exception, advocates a sacred adher ence to every provision of that instru ment in its bearings upon the Nation al and State governments. But there is an issue involved between the par ties which the Secretary does not sec lit to refer to. It is that of the at tempt of the stalwart Republicans now iu possession of the Executive De partment, to usurp authority for the National Government not delegated to it by the Constitution, but reserved to the States. They want what is call ed a "strong government," with unlim ited controlling power in the National Executive. Prominence is given to this fact by the assumption 0i the Executive to control the action of the last Congress, as well as the thinly concealed desigu of making the "civil power subordinate to the military," as illustrated by the action of Gar field as leader of the Republican Congress, to prescribe and remove Hancock from his command for up holding the couverse of this proposi tion in obedience to the Constitution which he was sworn to maintain. In the passage of laws providing Federal and military supervision of the polls in direct contravention of the rights reserved to the Btatca and the people to a peaceable and uncontrolled choice of their own representative*. To the power assumed to invade the Legisla ture of a State and by military force to determine who shall or who shall not be members of that Legislature. It is this tendency of the Republican struggle to centralize power not given in the National Government at the expense of the rights of the States and of the people, that the Democrat ic party take issue, and the conceal ment of this fact by false pretense in thrusting forward one which has no existence is disingenious if not hypo critical on the part of the Secretary. But as the Republican party do not meet any fair issue presented in the present contest with manly candor, we should not perhaps expect a member of Hayes' cabinet on the stump, who holds his place under the most stupend ous fraud and usurpation known to the civilized world, to be an exception. THE Republicans of New York and elsewhere are greatly she :ked at the lack of principle evinced by the De mocracy in failing to continue the fight of faction which was so serviceblc to them last year. No doubt the cor dial union between the Tammany Hall and Irving Hall belligerents is a source of sincere disgust to tbe Re publicans as it squelches any hope they may have entertained of carrying the Bute for De Golyer's attorney, or pro fiting in the Congressional representa tion by Democratic discord. The New York Democracy being now a unit and the Htate assured for Hancock and English, are not pleasant facts to con template from a Republican stand point. BQUAL AND KXACT JL'BTICK TO ALI. MKN, OF WHATKVUR STATIC' OK PERSUASION, RELIOIOUN Oft POLITICAL."—Jtffenun. BELLEEONTE, FA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1880. Rebel War Claims The foolish clamor of Republican newspa|>ers and stump' orators,of high aud low degree, übout the payment of what they are pleased to call " rebel war claims," should thb Democratic party of the United States succeed in electiug Gen. Hancock to the Presi dency, is ouly additional proof of the des|>eration to which the supporters of tlie present administration of fraud arc driven in their frantic efforts to maiutain their hold upon their present ill-gotten lease of power. It is a worn out calumny, and served the purpose for which it was invented years ago, aud common decency, if not respect for the intelligence of the country, should have permitted it to remain in the dirty receptacle of slander to which it was consigned after its use iu the lust National contest. These silly alarmists, with that model Pecksniff of the times, John Sherman, at their head, figure out fabulous amounts which they say will be paid should the Democrats gain control of the government. Pay for the liberated slaves; the assumption of the rebel debt; pensions for rebel soldiers; re imbursements for the destruction of property, enter into their speculations, and they then draw a most startling picture of the ruin and disaster tbat is to follow when the government takes upon itself these burdens. This kind of absurd bosh may pos sibly frighten a few ignorant people here and there into voting for the Republican candidates, but surely it can produce no effect upon the citizen of average intelligence, save that of ojien and pronounced contempt for its bold and uublushing deceit. In 1876 the Democratic candidates for President and Vice President re ceived a majority of nearly a quarter of a million of votes, so that the Item ocratic party comprises a fair majority of our voting population. Is not this majority as much interested in the welfare aud prosperity of the country as the minority ? Have those who make up this majority not as much at stake ? Is it not as much for their advantage that the government be honestly aud economically adminis tered in accordance with the constitu tion as for the advautagc of their op ponents ? Why, then, should a Dem ocratic Congress and a Democratic President desire to bring about a condition of distress and bankruptcy iu which the members of their party would be at least equal sufferers with their opponents, and that, too, by the payment of claims for which the gov ernment is in no way liable ? This is a phnae of the question that Republi can spouters do not attempt to explain, simply because it cannot he explained upon any ground satisfactory to sense or reason.* But a complete answer to this charge of the payment of rebel war claims is to he found in the fact that all inch claim* are forever barred by the Constitution of the United Statet. In support of this assertion it ia only necessary to quote the fourth section f>f the fourteenth amendment, which is in the following words : " The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorised by law, including debts incurred for tbe pay. raent of pensions and bounties for ser vices in suppressing insurrection or re bellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any Bute ■hall assume to pay any debt or ofdioahen incurred is aid qf insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave,- but all such debts, o>>filiations and claims shall be held illegal and void." This section of the fourteenth amend ment is a part of the Constitution of the United States, aud is as " valid, to all intents and purposes," as any other article or section tbat it contains. But, say some of the gentlemen who speak with such glib tongues upon the subject, " when the Democrats come into power they will repeal the amend ments." They fkil, however, to tell their hearers of the difficulties that would beset the attempt. The man ner of amending the Constitution is prescribed in Article V, and a pro posed amendment only becomes valid "when ratified by the legislature* of three-fourths of the several States, or by Conventions in three-fourths there of, as one or the other mode of ratifi cation may be proposed by the Con gress." Now, in the face of this pro vision of the Constitution, and with u Union composed of twenty-one North ern and only fourteen Southern State*, bow dare any of the howlers about rebel claims and compensation for slaves, assert that the thirteenth, four teenth and fifteenth amendments will ever lie changed or rc|>ealed. But there is one point more. It is the attitude of the Democracy towards these amendments. In 1872 the sec ond plank of the platform upon which the Ik'mocracy went before the people made the following promise: "We pledge ourselves to mnintain the Union of these States, emancipa tion and enfranchisement, and oppose any re opening of the questions settled by the thirteenth, fourteenth and fif teenth amendments to the Constitu tion." This pledge of fidelity to the amend ments was re-affirmed by the National convention of the party, which met at St. 1 smis in 1870, by the following resolution: "For the Democracy of the whole country, we do hereby reaffirm our faith in the permanence of the Federal Union, our devotion to the Constitution of the United States, with iu amendments universally accepted as a final settlement of Ike controversies that engendered civil war, and do here record our steadfast eonfi donee in the |>er|>etuity of republican aelf government." At the National convention of the party held aVCincinnati last June,the principles embodied in the platform of 1876 were re-adopted, and Gen. Han eck in hia admirable letter of accept ance avows his determination in no equivocal or uncertain terms to up hold the < WMtDition in all its parts. He sap: "Tbe principles enunciated by the convention are those I have cherished in the past and shall endeavor to main tain in the future. The thirteenth, four teenth and fifteenth amendmcnU to the Consti tution gf the United States, embodying the retullt qf the war for the Union, are inviolable. If called to the Presidency I should deem it my duty to resist with all my power any attempt to impair or evade tbe full force and effect of the Consti tution, which ia every article, lection and amendment it the supreme law of the land." The position of the Democratic par ty and its candidate for President upon this question of the validity and in violability of the amendments to the Constitution is therefore plaiu and unmistakable. Standing before the couutry, therefore, in this attitude, with a standard bearer whose devotion to the best interests of the Union cau not be doubted —whose whole life is a pledge of his honesty and sincerity in whatever he says or docs —this flimsy fabric of rebel war claims vanishes into thin air, and our stalwart friends may as well devote their time to the discussion of some issue tbat has more substauce in it The intelligent voters of the United States will not be fright ened at a shadow. Aa a sample of the economy of Republican legislation during the time that party had entjre control of Con gress, the waste of the public domain is a fair average. During the time the Republicans held a two-thirds majority, a period of several years, they gave away to corporations and squandered 21*6,000,000 acres, covering 294,580 square miles. The extent of this land squandered fotnhe benefit of rings and and Congressional speculators, can scarcely be realised. It will ag gregate more than it embraced in the Bute* of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecti cut, Rhode Island, Delaware, Ma ryland, Ohio and Indiana. Tut Hayes circus is on its rounds, and in imitation of the Grant hippo drome, is about to exhibit in Califor nia. The fraudulent character of the Hayes' show of domestic snimala is not likely to be as successful in draw ing the crowd as the hippodrome fresh from foreign parts. How to Elect Hancock. The Doylestown Democrat perti nently remarks that "those who wish to elect Hancock must not forget that harmony and hard work are necessary to do it. It will take a good deal of both, but it can lie done. Harmony in the ranks and among the leaders will consolidate the parly to a single object; while work will give them the necessary drill and discipline requisite to bring the voters to the polls in solid phalanx. Harmony in a political party is just as necessary to achieve a great victory as it is iu an army, and without it cither can be easily overcome by an inferior force. From this time forward until the first Tuesday of November, the Democratic aud conservative masses of the couu try should have but uue object iu view, the electiou of Gen. Hancock. They should give the intervening time to the service of the country. The thieves and villains who are now living on public plunder do not mean to be shaken off until after the most hercu lean effort to hang on. If we wish to save the country, we must drive out the rats which are gnawing away the timbers of the ship of Btate. Remem ber that harmony and hard work will do it." PROMINENT among the events of the past that the people should flot forget in easting their votes at the approach ing election, is the Presidential fraud of 1876-7. No one has the temerity to say that the fraud was not perpe trated, or to justify its euormity. It was one that cannot be condoned by the vote of an honest man, whatever may be his political predilections, with out making himself a party to the crime and the disgrace and wrong it entailed upon our Republican in stitutions. Is this stating the case too strong? Mr. Tilden was de prived of the Presidential office to which he was legally elected by the people, and James A. Garfield was prominent among the men who pro cured that result He was one of those who visited the South aud participated in procuring a false return of the elec tion by fraud and perjury of the most bald and shameless character. With full knowledge of these frauds and the manner of their procurement, by selec tion of Republican mcmltcrs of Con gress, he subsequently served on the 8 to 7 commission under an oath to in vestigate the alleged frauds and decide according to the facts. How did he perform this duly ? Not by investiga* tion, certainly, but merely by declar ing that it was inexpedient "to go behind the returns," a* fraudulently made for the occasion. This man Jas. A. Garfield, with elastic conscience, is now the Republican candidate for President, appealing to the people for their votes to justify his acts aud con done the great crime. Can they do it without sharing tbe guilt which at taches to the acts of the conspirator? J. M. KKTLKR, Esq., a well known former citizen of Centre county, and present editor of the Forest National Democrat, pays the following compli ment to cx-Gov. Curtin in his issue of last week: , "The Democracy of Clinton oounty have instructed (or ex Governor Curtin for Concrete for the twentieth district. No doubt Centre and tbe other counties will go and do likewise, and thus plaee one of Pennsylvania's best heroes in the Halls ot Congress. The great war Gov ernor would ho a tower of strength to the Democracy In Congress, and a man who would always have the best inter ests of his district and State at heart." Bo far as Centre county is concern ed, we are glad to assure oar friend that it certainly " will go and do like wise." RKAD the campaign circulars of John Cessna, Chairman of the Repub lican Btate Committee, to be found on the fourth page of the Democrat. They furnish interesting evidence of the tac tics that Cessna expects to employ in the contest. Clap-trap, cash and the bloody shirt are the staples to be de pended upon. TERMS: $1.50 per Annum, in AdTinre. THE We*tern Union Telegraph Com pany, under the direction of William Orton, Esq., wan run in the interest of the Republican party, and while there were no palpable attempts made to influence the employes there was an invisible pressure felt by them that caused many whose natural predilec tions were Democratic to act with the party in whose succeas their chief had great concern. Under the efficient and business like management of Mr. Green, the present president, things are somewhat different. Mr. Green is an active and hard working Democrat and is enthusiastic for Hancock. This is notice to bis army of employee that they can vote as they please and need not fear official displeasure. Mr. Green runs his great corporation on business principles and believes in every one voting to suit himself with out dread of feeling the executioner's axe for so doing. THF. returns from the State election held in Arkansas on Monday indicates a Democratic majority of 60,000, and the defeat of the amendment to the Constitution repudiating the payment of certain State bonds. In the Vermont election held on Tuesday, the Republicans arc success ful by about their usual majority. Of course, for the purpose of influenc ing the Maine election, they will claim for a week or so, a greater majority than the actual returns will give them. This has been their usual course in the past and they will do the same thing now. Gov. KMUM&H, of Connecticut, be ing interviewed by a correspondent a few days ago, in New York, expressed the opinion that Hancock will carry | the State by a much larger majority than Tilden did in 1876, which was 2,900. He says the canvass is pro gressing satisfactorily, and he has no doubt of the election of the entire Democratic ticket. "DON'T forget the canal boat." So says that immaculate patriot, John Cessna, Chairman of the Republican State Committee. Well, our Republi can friends didn't forget it. It ap peared in their procession, mules and all, but we believe Garfield with "his trousers rolled up" was not visible. LABORING men of Centre county! arc you prepared to accept John Cess na's measure of your intelligence ? He says you "vote through your eyes." >See his letter of iustruclions in anoth er part of this paper. Ex-Gov. (YRTIN went to Clearfield on Monday evening. He was booked for a speech at a Democratic mass meeting at Dubois City, in that coun ty, on Tuesday afternoon. WORKING MEN! how do you like Genua's insult to your intelligence? Bsixr AND POINTED COMMUNICATION. —Tbs following communication is so plain that it will not be misunderstood : M smas. EDITORS : History informs us Ihst Potter towjiship is among the oldest townships its the county. The lies of the first papers published in the county and those or the present time inform us that Potter township invariably gave the larg est Democratic majorities, but neither his tory nor papers inform us of Centre county having ever made a selection from Potter township to represent the county in the Legislature. It is true Simon Wolf lived in the township s few years and wns nom nated and elected by the party, but did not liva to take hie seat. Wears no* asking tha nomination for an old citisen—John Shannon, KM. He was born, raised and educated in Potter township, and has been voting as a Democrat in tha township of bis birth for two score of ymuv, ana in •very instance for the Democratic Nomi nees We have other reasons for asking tha nomination of Mr. Shannon Ha is eminently quail led, la ramseed of legisla tive ability, to strictly hoaeet, and a man worthy toe confidence of toe people. POTTER. —Tha Hancock Cadets of Bellefcnto, hare been organised by Chairman Spang ler. The following are the offioer*: President, E. X. German ; Vice Presi dent, Charles McCartney; Secretary, K. J. Brown; Treasurer, George Schnell; Captain, George Fasig; Assistants, J. McCafferty and W. Gerrily j Eaecutive Committee, W. Gerrily, O. Meyers and V. Koonu. The cadets will meet Mon day and Thursday evenings of each week. NO. 37.