aljc Centre A Democrat. SIIUGERT & TAN ORMEK, Editors. VOL. 4, ®Jw ffftuftt ftaflttirt. Terms 51.50 per Annum, in Advance. S. T. SHUGERT & J. R. VAN ORMER, Editors. Thursday Morning, July, 27, 1882. Democratic State Ticket. FOR GOVERNOR, ROBERT E. PATTISON, of Phila. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, CHAUNCY F. BLACK, of York. FOR JUDGE of tlio SUPREME COURT, SILAS M. CLARK, of Indiana. FOB SECRETARY of INTERNAL AFFAIRS. • J. SIMPSON AFRICA, of Iluutin'g. FOR CONORESSMAN-AT-LARGE, MORTIMER F. ELLIOTT, of Tioga. The Democratic Platform. Tho Democratic party of Pennsylvania, holiliug fast to tin* faith that ail power not delegated by the Con stitution is reserved to the States ami the people; up holding the sanctity of personal liberty, the security of private property, and the right of local self-govern ment , demanding honesty and economy in the ad ministration of government and the enforcement of all the provisions of the Constitution by the Legisla ture and the Courts of the Commonwealth ; declaring against monopolies and in sympathy with labor seek ing its protection, and in favor of the industrial inter ests of Penniylvania at all times, do solemnly protest against evils which the policy of the Republican par ty and the insolence of its long possession of otllce have thus brought upou the country; therefore, Fltst—We do protest against what is (filled the boss system, aud also the plundering of officeholders by assessments of money for political purposes. Public offices are the property of no party, but are open to every citizen who is honest, capable, aud faithful to the Constitution, qualifications which Jefferson de clared were requisites for office. Second—We protest against the spoils system. It is a prostitution of the offices of the people so that they become the mere perquisites of the politicians. Third—We denounco albrupudiution, State and Fed eral, because it is dishonest and destructive of tin t public morality upon which are founded theexisteucc and perpetuity of our free institutions. It should be made oilious, and the political party that aids it and abets it with office deserves public condemnation. Fourth—We denounce spoliation of the State Treas ury and Immmnity by pardon of those convicted f crimes, whose acts were flagrant subversions of official trusts and wrongs done the people. Fifth—We believe the Republican party, ns now or ganized and controlled, is based on fraud, force and corruption, and thefe can be no hope of true reform except by the force of the ballot box excluding it from place and |>ower. Sixth—The Democratic party demands of the Leg islature an honest just, ami true apportionment. Seventh—Upon these declarations we Invite the co operation of ail honest citizens who with us desire the reestablishment of honest government. " IN HOC BIOKO VIM 88, • THE speech of Governor Curtin on the subject of the reduction of taxes, will be found on the second page of the DEMOCRAT. MR. BRAINARD, of Erie, the Re publican nominee for Congress in the Erie district, is anti-Cameron, aud was nominated against the influence of the boss, who favored Watson, of Warren. THE Hon. Alexander H. Stephens was nominated by the State conven" tion as the Democratic candidate for Governor of Georgia, by a vote of 825 to 8 scattering on different favorites. JUDGE PERSUING, of Schuylkill, announces in reply to the members of the bar of that county, that he will be a candidate for re-election before the people, without regard to any political party. THE Republican papers outside of Pennsylvauia, seem to be almost en tirely against Cameron and the ring management of the party. So they would be in the State were it not that Cameron controls the offices, and with the consent of Arthur dispenses the plunder where it will do the most good to the Stalwarts. SENATOR MITCHELL being inter viewed by a correspondent of the Albany Argus, expressed the opinion that as the parties are at present con stituted in Pennsylvauia, Democratic success this fall would be preferable to a regular Republican victory. The Senator is sharp enough to realize the fact that his party is corrupt and can only be reconstructed and saved from utter demolition by defeat. GEN. CUITTIFL, who as a Federal official was recently convicted in New York for collecting money from office holders for political purposes, filed a motion for a new trial, alleging the unconstitutionality of the Federal statute under which the convictiou was made. The court in banc, unani mous as to the validity of the law, have dismissed the motion in arrest of judgment and refused a new trial. Gen. Curtis was accordingly sentenced to pay the penalty, 81,000, provided by the statute, and be iu custody until paid. "Dear HubbellV' assessments of course will provide the dimes to releive Curtis. The Next Governor. Robert E. l'attison formally ac cepts the nomination iu the following terse letter, addressed to the committee appointed by the State Committee to notify him of his nomination as the Democratic candidate for the office of Governor: DEPARTMENT C'ITV CONTROLLER, PIIILA DEI.ruIA, .July 24, 1882—GENTLEMEN : I have just received your letter of July 21, advising me of the action of the democratic state convention. I accept the nomination for governor, and if chosen for the office by the pople I will strive to perform its duties to theirsatis faction. Respectfully yours, ROBERT E. PATTISON. Mr. Pattisou's letter of acceptance says the Times is a model of what such a letter should be. It is in leess than a hall'dozen lines, but it says all that he had to say and says it well. "I accept the nomination for Governor, and if chosen for the office by the people I will strive to perform its duties to their satisfaction." That is all ; yet therein is a whole platform—honest govern ment in the interest of the people. The Governor of the State has little to do with anything else than this. Questions of national policy are not within the range of his official duties, and all present questions of State poli cy are summed up in just the two points clearly stated in this brief let ter —the choice of officers "by the peo ple,'* not by the machine, aud the per formance of official duties for their satisfaction, not for the satisfaction of bosses or party workers. This is what Mr. Pattison's candi dacy really represents. It was because of his modest but unswerving and im partial discharge of his public duties as Controller that he was nominated for the greater office, aud this simple, business-like letter gives the most com plete assurance that he understands precisely what the Coiumouwealth will expect of him and that the honors he has won or may win cannot turn him aside from his devotion to honest gov ernment. Honest government, enforced by an honest and fearless Chief Executive, is wliatPeunsylvamia wants. A candi date like Mr. Pattison does not need to make any more specific pledge than this, because his record is known of all men and the call that has been made upon him really means that he shall apply to the government of the State the principles and methods that have done so much for the better govern ment of Philadelphia. A single sentence from such a man is worth whole columns of reform theories and political platitudes from the average candidate. GEN. BEAVER said among other things iu his speech at Bristol, that he never sought the nomination for Gov ernor, and that he would "rather give 810,000 iu cash now to be let alone, to apply himself to his own private affairs, to his little family aud to the neighbors to whom he is attached, the manufacturing interests in which he is concerned and the profession which he loves." To please "a very small man" it is cruel that the General should he compelled to make these sacrifices. But the Htalwart organiza tions now so rich l>y virtue of Coop er's assessment, that the 810,000 can have no charms aud he will have to stick aud bear it, until the Democracy can have an opportunity to relieve him in November. THE Republican has commenced to show its teeth and begun its usual growling in earnest. Because Mr. Pattison happenod to be born in Mary land, our esteemed contemporary calls him "rebel " and uses other ungentle manly language when it has occasion to refer to the only mau whom the red-nosed Republican blackguards of Philadelphia ever feared. The next Governor of Pennsylvania can staud this sort of mudslinging if the readers of our neighbor can. Of course, the intrepid Democratic Controller of Re publican Philadelphia was quite young when he was horn and had little or nothing to do with the choice of loca tion. "EQUAL AND EXACT JUHTICK TO ALL MEN, OK WHATEVER STATE OR PERSUASION, RELIGIOUS OR POLlTlCAL."—Jefferson. EKLLEFONTE, FA., THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1882. THE Republicans in Congress still continue their dastardly raids upon the legally elected Representatives from the south. Last week they stole the seat of Mr. Tillman of South Carolina, who was elected by a majori ty of 12,000, and gave it to a negro named Smalls, who had served a term iu the penitentiary, and was repudia ted by a majority of his race in the election. This was a peculiar case of party vandalism, one at which even the conscience of the Stalwart chair man of the Committee on Elections revolted in expressions of its enormity, although he succumbed to the caucus pressure and voted with his party to "throw conscience to the devil." Still this poor negro penitentiary bird is to be com misserated when we reflect that he is to he associated for a full session of Congress, to which he had no show of election, with Robeson and Keifer, and those who follow their leadership. This creditable representation of the Republican in Congress, have now probably completed their outrages for the present session by depriving Mr. Shelley, of Alabama, of his seat. He was contested by a man named Smith, who died iu Washington during the pendency of the contest, and the most they could do was to declare Mr. Shelley's seat vacant. Mr. Beltz hoover, of Pennsylvania, made the speecli in behalf of Mr. Shelley, re viewing the case from a legal stand point, aud citing at length from the evidence to show that the witnesses who testified for Smith were not only ignorant in the extreme, hut irrespon sible, and had flatly contradicted each other. These outrages upon honest representation also brought Governor Curtin to his feet in an impassioned speech addressed mainly to the Repub licans in protest of the disastrous course they- were pursuing, and the eminent danger of revolution if con tinued. If it was decided to punish the people of the south, he hoped the Republicans had accomplished their object and would stop right here. The House was crowded while the Gover nor spoke, aud he was much applauded by the Democrats. THE prosecution of the star route thieves in the Washington court, drags heavily with hut little prospect, if any, of punishment to these public robbers. A Mr. Walsh was placed upon the stand a few days ago and gave very damaging testimony iu the case, prin cipally involving Brady, the late As sistant Postmaster General, which if sustained, would seem to block his chances of escape, even with all the power and influence surrounding him. Great efforts, however, are being made to discredit the witness and destroy the force of his evidence with- the jury. Wealth and parly influence are powerful levers wheu used to protect the favored political henchmen of party frauds, and these fellows know too much of the villanies of the Re publican management, to doubt that that influence will not be used to the fullest extent. Walsh's testimony bears evidence of being straightfor ward and truthful, but we pity him nevertheless. They will make him to appear as a greater villain than the thieves themselves, and equal in men dacity to Robeson, of New Jersey. THERE seems to be a glimmer of hope that Robeson's plunder naval bill will fail to pass before the ad journment of Congress. This would be hard upon the navy officers and put them to some inconvenience, but the country can better afford to in demnify tbem for losses in obtaining their pay at a discount, then to place millions at the inercy of Robeson. His uusavory record is sufficient to damn any bill he engineers or any expen diture he can control. THE Boston Herald , thinks that if Keifer, Robeson Hiid Hubble, are the Republican leaders in Congress, it is time to try another party. A large number of honest Republican, have come to about the same conclusion, but do not confine their* objections to the unsavory skunks nomed by the Herald. CHAIRMAN HENSEL is announced to address the Montgomery couuty Dem ocrats at their annual meeting on the Ist of August. Mr. Hensel is a live Democrat, au able speaker, and will interest and instruct any audience he fore whom he may appear. But, if we may suggest, speech making is not now the business challenging the earn est aud early attention of Mr. Hensel. He is chairman of the Democratic State committee, and as such is charged with the control and entire management of the campaign. The duty properly performed is herculean. To him the party rightly look for leadership and such management as will bring complete victory. Means must he secured, the party organized, pluns laid and carried out to poll the lull vote, with many complications even at this early day foreshadowed by the movements of the eaemy, which will tax the physical endurance of the chairman aud his highest intellectual powers to meet aud overcome. For this he should reserve his strength aud leave the speaking duty of the cam paign to well chosen and discreet men selected to aid him in the good work. The movements of the ring Republi can chairman might properly now attract the counteracting attention of Mr. H. A systematic aud charac teristic effort is now being made by the Stalwart organization to capture the laboring vote, while at the same time they expect by the business cry and the tariff' howl to hold the vote of the business men. The cry of fair wages and good times so potent in 1880, loses its effort to some extent, hut the wily foe are not without de vices to obtain the same results. This was demonstrated the other day in Clearfield, when a trusted emmissary of the Cameron-Beaver ring appears n3 the chrropion of strikers. Nothing but political necessity took the Came ron lieutenant to Clearfield. It was from no respect entertained for labor ers, but purely to deceive those who are struggling for just compensation aud induce them to vote for the men and the party who have ever been their oppressors. THE Fifth Army Corps have made a stirriug appeal to Congress that justice he done to Ceu. Fitz John Porter, without further delay. He has been fully vindicated by the searching investigation of a commis sion of the ablest officers of the army, and the neglect of Congress to restore him according to the recom mendation of that commission is un paralleled for its cruelty and injustice. THE committee of conference on the river aud harbor bill, has cut out some few of the smaller steals and re duced the bill about three hundred thousand dollars, hut still leaves the appropriation over nineteen millions. This is done in deference to the gen eral protest of the people. But the committee retain the wrong end of the plunder, to be satisfactory. It is the nineteen million they should lop off to be entitled to a decent* degree of re spect from the country. THE Supreme Court of Connecti cut lias decided that women Lave a constitutional right to practice law in the courts of that State. The question was raised by Miss Mary Hall, who for several years has been a student in the office of a Hartford attorney, and on examination was found duly quali fied to practice, so far as legal acquire ments were concerned. She applied for admission to the bar, but the court having no precedent for it, declined to admit her. The Supreme Court, hav ing decided in her favor, Miss Hall's admission to the bar will of course be grautcd. Another victory for wo man's rights. THE Attorney General is equal to the occasiou. lie furnishes an opin ion to justify "my dear Ilubbell" in his raid upon the private means of the capitol pages, the laborers, the teachers and maids of the Indian schools, for party funds to elect Republican Con gressmen. Well, there is no reason why the ornamental Brewster should not also he useful. CONGRESS has appropriated §15,000 to aid the President in reforming the Civil Service. Better they had given it to " My Dear Hubbell " under oath to relieve the teacher aud nurse-women of the Indian School at Carlisle, and the poor laboring men upon whom the party exactions lay so heavily for campaign funds. The appropriation sno good in Arthur's bauds. THE eccentric George Lear, of Bucks couuty, late Attorney-General, after all his vagaries for and against the boss rule of the Republican party > now offers to stump the State in sup port of the Cameron ticket provided Cameron will dismiss a certain Fed* eral official in Philadelphia who had the temerity to write him down an ass. Don is a " very small man," but he is not idiotic enough to put Lear on the stump. GEN. BEAVER was*certaiuly indis creet in acknowledging that the Boss of the Republican party iu Pennsyl vania is a " very sma/il man." Intel, lectually it is true, bi/t Don is power ful in methods as well as in stature and strategy, and this may compensate his followers for adhering [blindly to his lash notwithstanding the Republican candidate's disparaging remark. He is the son ,of [his isire and was early educated in the pse of his tricks in about the same way that a mule is trained for the circus. General Items. S Cincinnati Consumed last year seven million dolls/® worth of beer, or about one hundred and forty millions of glasses. An lowa paper urges that the profani ty and tobacco chewing of the boys is not worse, than the use of slang and the chewing gum by the girls. The legislative, judicial and executive appropriation bill, as agreed upon by the conference committee, calles for *20,000,000. k Washington! July. 25th.—The Hous-e to day refusJ^ to Agree to the conference report and harbor bill, and pend ; to reconsider the vote adjcwrred. The Hon. George P. Marsh, the Amer ican Minister to Rome, died suddenly on Monday last. Minister Marsh was a very learned man and has been in the dsplomatic service of the Government for many years. The Independent Republicans have revolted in Maine and are discussiug the call for a new convention. They are holding a secret conference and the re sult of their deliberations has not yet transpired. The cavalry group for the Lincoln Monument, which will be shipped from Springfield, Mass., to Springfield, 111., is ten and one-half feet high and weighs 5,500 pounds. The cost of the entire monument will be *206,550. The four mammoth apartment houses to be erected on the Navarro property, Seventh Avenue, New York, are to be nine stories high, and will be known as the Lisbon, the Madrid, the Cordova and the Barcelona, yielding an annul rental of *200,000. The Arkansas State Gazette takes Alex' ander 11. Stephens to be "a man who can spread over Georgia and a large portion 'of the United States without getting thin in the region of the lirad." John Arnold wrote on an order of the Supreme Court at Indianapolis, "The Court may go to the devil," and sent the document back to the Judge. For this he was sent to jail for ten days. The Indianapolis Times is convinced that " the time has come for the people in their sovereign capacity to uuite for the assertion and protection of their rights against the steady and alarming encroachments of corporations." The New York Star thinks "every right-minded preacher of the Gospel should take plain and (tositive ground with the workinguten in the present struggle against the monopolies." An Arkansas woman who was lined by a magistrate *8 for using abusive lan guage to a neghbor, had no money but the obliging justice took tweut)>one steel traps in full payment of fine aod costs, ami the no less obliging attorney who represented her in the trial took a spotted dog for his fee. TERMS: $1.50 per Annum, in Advance. W. F. Eastman, of Butte Creek, Ore gon, has a tooth which weighs eleven pounds. Ife found it in the bed of a stream. It belonged to some extinct kind of beast. In the First Nebraska Congressional District, which includes the cities of Omaha and Lincoln, there are ten can didates for Congress already in the field. Representative J. I'roctor Knott is definitely announced as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Govern or of Kentucky at next year's election. Ilubbell hns called on the poor work men at Hell Gate to contribute their pittance to the Republican corruption fund. No doubt the contributions would be heavier i( he should assess those in side the gate. A Lancaster county farmer owns a horse which has lived for more than a year without a tongue. The animal was a valuable one, and the owner did not like to kill it, and to his surprise it lived and thrived. It eats all kinds of feed and keeps in good condition, but iB not compelled to do any hard work. Speaker Keifer recently intimated that nothing would induce him again to run for Congress except his duty to his constituents. Gen. Kennedy, who is also an Ohio politician of the Stalwart stripe, has kindly volunteered to relieve the Speaker of the responsibility which weighs so heavily upon his honest con science. Here's a chance for Ilubbell an Cooper. Mrs. Garfield is about to receive the residue of a year's Presidential sala ry. If Indian nurses and scrub-women are to be robbed, why not fire the assess ment circulars at Mrs. Garfield? Mrs, Lincoln unfortunately died before the party tithe-gatherers could strike her, but Mrß. Polk is yet alive and the recip ient of annuity from the government. For the information of Field Marshal Cooper we state that her post office ad dress is Nashville, Tennessee.— Times. The Tax Question. We have the admission of the repub licans in Congrees that there ought to be a reduction of taxation and a revision of the tariff. The House bill for the abolition of certain stamps and the taxes on banks is a recognition of the fact that the people are now subjected to unnecessary taxation and the senate amendments to the bill reducing the duties on Bessemer steel and sugar is an acknowledgment that the tariff needs to be reformed. The bill autho rizing the appointmeet of a tariff com mission is also a surrender of the re publican position on the subject of pro tection. It is a little late however, for the ad ministration party in congress to make these admissions. The Republican con gressmen must have known last Decern, ber, when the reports of the heads of departments were laid before them that tbe revenues largely exceeded the financial requirements of the govern, ment and their first care should have been to alleviate tbe unnecessary and cruel burdens of the people. If they had honestly intended to make a prop er and judicious reduction of the feder al taxes they would have begun the work immediately upon the assembling of congress. But they postponed the matter from day today and from month to month, until now at the heels of the session they propose to rush through congress a hastily drawn and ill digested measure which it may be found necessary to repeal at the next session when the whole subject of federal taxa tion will be considered. The revenue question is decidedly and admittedly the most important that could have engaged the attention of congress and the idea that it should be disposed of in the midst of the rush of business at. the close of the session is unworthy of the merest tyro in statesmanship. While it may seem a good thing to act on principle of the Irishman's advice to his son on the young man's first visit to the fair, ''Whenever you see a head, hit it," and to lop off such taxes as the majority in congress are willing to strike at, yet in vietg of the fact that our system of taxation is greatly mixed and complicated the better policy certainly is to consider the entire subject and to make the revision with the purpose of doing justice to every interest. This might have been done at the present session of congress if the majority in stead of devoting months to partisan matters and other months to the pas sage of bills for the depletion of the treasury had given proper attention to the subject ot taxation.— Harrishurn Patrol NO. 29.