SHUGERT & TAN ORMER, Editors. VOL. 4. Ike tf mftr jgewMwat. Terms #1.50 per Ananm,ln Advance. S. T. SHUGERT & J. R. VAN ORMER, Editor. Thursday Morning, August, 31, 1882. Democratic State Ticket. FOR GOVERNOR, ROBERT E. PATTISON, of Phila. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, CHAUNCY F. BLACK, of York. FOR JUDGE of the BUPRKMB COURT, SILAS M. CLARK, of Indiana. TOR SECRETARY or INTERNAL AFFAIRS. J. SIMPSON AFRICA, of Huntiu'g. FOR CONORESSMAN-AT-LARGE, MORTIMER F.ELLIOTT, of Tioga. Democratic County Ticket. FOR CONGRESS. Hon. A. G. CURTIN. of Centre. [Subject to Uie dectsiou of the District Conference.] FOR STATE SENATE. Hon. C.T.ALEXANDER, ofCcntre. [Subject to the decision of the District Conference.] FOR ASSEMBLY. HENRY MEYER, of Miles, B. F. HUNTER, of Beuner. FOR JURY COMMISSIONER. ,T. H. TOLBERT, of Walker. FOR CORONER. H. K. HOY, M. I)., of Bellefonte. The Democratic Platform. Tie Democratic jiarty of Pennsylvania, holding fast to the faith that ail power not delegated by tbe Con stitution is reserved to the States and the people; up holding the sanctity of personal liberty, the security of private property, anil the right of local self-govern ment , demanding honesty and ccouomy iu the ad ministration of government and the enforcement of all the provisions of the Constitution by the Legisla ture and the Courts of the Commonweal til ; declaring against monopolies and in sympathy with labor seek iug iu protection, and In favor of the industrial inter ests of Penuiylvania at alt times, do solemnly protest against evils which the policy of the Republican par ty and the insolence of Its long possession of office Lav, thus brought upon the country ; therefore. First—We do protest against what is called the boss syst m, and also the plundering of officeholders by aaseisments of money for political pnrißisci. Public offices are the property of no party, bnt are open to every citlwn who is honest, capable, and 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 politician*. Third—We denounce albrepudiation. State and Fed eral, because it is dishonest and destructive of that public morality upon which are founded the existence and perpetuity of our free institutions. It should he made odious, 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 of crimes, whose acts were flagrant subversions of official trusts and wrongs done the people. Fifth—We believe the Republican party, as now or ganised and controlled. Is based on fraud, force and corruption, and there can be no hope of true reform except by the force of the ballot box excluding it from place and power. Sixtli—The Democratic party demands of tho Leg islature an honest jnst, and true apportionment. Seventh—Upon these declarations we invite the co operation of all honest citizens who with us desire ■ the reestablishnient of honest government. " I* HOC MONO VIYCEB. " THE prohibitionists of Crawford county played a sharp trick upon the party candidates for the Legislature iu that county, by pledging them to favor their constitutional amendment, if elected, and then held a convention and nominated their own men. All the candidates of Crawford county are therefore a unit en the temperance question, and the prohibition party must triumph in any 6vent. IN this Slate when Democracy was in power, practical measures for the relief of theworkingraen were enacted. The first homestead bill was a Demo cratic measure. The mechanics' lien law came from Democratic hands. The law abolishing imprisonment for debt was of Democratic authorship. The S3OO exemption law was passed by a Democratic Legislature for the benefit of labor, and the "anti-store bill" act was drawn, presented and pushed to passage by Democratic leg islators. THEY FURNISH THE ISSUE THIS TIME. —The Democratic party is some times described by its enemies as a party in search of an issue. If that description was ever accurate, the enQsaietr 6f the Democratic party have "now rendered it inapplicable. The issue of the present campaign, and of the next, has been supplied by the Republican leaders in Congress. Kel ley and Kasson and Keifer and Robe son and Reed and Iliscock by mere folly and mere jobbery have done more to show the country that a change in the political control is ab solutely necessary than could have been done by the wisdom and the in tegrity of an equal number of Demo cratic leaders. No Political Dictatorship. The paramount issue in the ap proaching stale election, says the Harrisburg Patriot, is whether or not the people of Pennsylvania will en dorse the political dictatorship set up by J. Donald Cameron. All other political questions are temporarily subordinated to this, not only because they are of less importance to the peo ple of the state, but because they are to a great extent involved in the main issue. Caraeronism stands for every thing that has made the politics of Pennsylvania a reproach during the last decade aud therefore with the downfall of the Republican dictator must perish all the political evils that have recently atHicted the common wealth. It is not disputed that the will of Cameron has been law for many years to the leaders and politicians of the Republican party in Pennsylvania. Republican conventions have assem bled simply to register the decree of the senatorial dictator. A majority in those bodies in spite of the instruc tions of their constituencies has in variably been found willing to execute the plans of this political autocrat, lie has thus controlled the legislature and the executive; liasspokeu for the state in the nomination of the candi date of his party for president; has wielded the power of the state in the formation of presidential cabinets ; has distributed the patronage of the feder al government within the state and made the proud old commonwealth to all intents aud purposes a mere mano rial estate of which he has been the obsolute political lord. Nevertheless it is not simply against Mr. Cameron's absolutism that protest is made. The oue man power would be as odious under any other name as it is under that of Cameron. It would be as unrepublican, dangerous aud hateful if exercised in the same form by another. While in the whole his tory of the state the name of Cameron is unique as the synonym for usurpa tion of political power, the struggle is not merely for the overthrow of the present dictator but to redeem the state for all time from the personal domination of any one man, or clique or coterie. The battle is against what in common parlance is aptly called "bossism" and against Cameron as the reigning "boss." Political leaders there will and must be—men whose intellectual gifts, high character and profound learning will entitle them to distinction and respect —but there will and must he nevertheless an end of political lords of the manor with their retinue of spoilsmen and sycophants fit only for the court of a despot. COOPER'S circular demanding blood money from the Pennsylvanian em ployes both iu the general and state government are flying about freely. He will doubtless raise a large corrup tion fund, with which to boom the boss machine ticket, but he will just as like ly disgust many reputable Republi" cans, when they compare the platform of the 10th of May convention with his mode of collecting campaigh funds. Here is the plank. "That we condemn compulsory assess ments for political purposes, and proscrip tion for failuro to respond oithor to such assessments or to requests for voluntary contributions, and that any policy of po litical proscription is unjust and calculated to disturb party harmony." A RUMOR prevails that Secretary Lincoln of the War Department, is to retire from the cabinet of President Arthur in consequence of existing complications between him and promi nent army officers. Judge Advocate General Swaim and Quartermaster General Ingalls, are said to beat open war with Secretary Lincoln's strict administration of the aff'airß of the War Department, and have brojgbt strong influences to bear to force his retirement; but it is not likely that the son of Abram Lincoln will be driven out easily, except by his own choice to get rid of disagreeable asso ciates. "EQUAL AND EXACT JUSTICE TO ALL MEN, OF WHATEVER STATU OR PERSUASION, RELIGIOUS OR I'OU'nCAL_j,. fl( . r6 , JIJ BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, [o THE OVERNOR. " " v . V' CHAUNCY F. BLACK, of York. THE active participation of the lead ing business men and manufacturers of the state with the opposition to Boss Cameron and his machine, tloes not bear out the declaration of the veuera* hie head of the dynasty that the Inde pendent movement is a free trade con spiracy. The venerable Simon knows better. He knows, and realizes the fact intensely, that the movement is nothing more nor less than a rebellion against the usurped authority of the "Cameron Dynasty"—an effort to re cover from the degrading serfdom in which they were held, by asserting the right of the party to voice its action aud choose its representative. The old politician has not grown so stupid with age as not to see that the power has departed front his house, and that his successor, the junior boss, can no longer order who shall be the candi date for Governor, or to fill the other offices of the Commonwealth, and re ceive a slavish obedience to the man date. This was intimated to him a year ago by the defection of 50,000 from his party, and it is now to be em phasized by the entire overthrow and defeat of the stalwart boss ticket thus brought forward. Some seem to in dulge the hope that our neighbor Gen eral Beaver, by virtue of his own good character aud blameless private life, may he able to stem the torrent and reach the goal of his ambition, but the case is scarcely a possible oue, aud has little, if any probability, attached to it. He represents tbe very worst and most objectionable feature of this one man boss power, ngaints which the manhood and the intelligence of the best element of all parties are arrayed to overthrow and destroy. His nomi nation by Mr. Cameron and the an nouncement of his caudidacy many mouths before the convention conven ed to ratify it, gives prominence to him as the Cameron" machine can didate, which bodes defeat and not success, against a contestant so formidable as John Stewart, or of Robert E. Pattisou, if Mr. Stewart were not in the race. A CALL for a public meeting, signed by thirty-two of the most prominent colored Republicans iu Philadelphia, is published in the papers of that city. The meeting is to be held ou the 4th of September, and is intended to "give a mauly expression publicly of their views and purposes bearing on the coming contest, to be addressed by eminent speakers in sympathy with the Independent Republican tnov raent in Pennsylvania." The colored Republicans are also seeking emanci pation from the bondage of the ring bosses. And why not? They hnve served them long and faithfully, aud have received nothing in return but neglect and contempt. DID Conkling attempt to bribe Cor nell, the Governor of New York, in the matter of releasing the elevated railroad from taxation, seems to he the absorbing question of discussion in the newspapers of that Slate. It appears the Governor furnished the data upon which his Albany organ makes the charge. Conkling and his friends pronounce the charge false, and urge the fact that the Governor was not bribed as conclusive proof of the false hood. It is very certain that Cornell is quite anxious to obtain a re-nomina tion, and that his chances of success is not encouraging unless he can break the force ofConkling's opposition who appears to herd the lions in his path way. This, however, is only an in cident in the general fight prevailing iu the Empire State between the stal warts and half-breeds, similar to that existing in the Republican party in Pennsylvania, between the boss-rings ters and the Independents. There the stalwarts wield the patronage and co operation of the administration to ob tain the mastery over the half-breeds who represent the Garfield-Blaine division ; here it is the stalwarts aided by the same patronage and co-opera tion to coerce the Independents to sub mit to the dictation of a boss, and acknowledge his right to direct the movements of the party and control the personel of its representatives. Conkling and Arthur claim to bossthe Republicans of New York, while Don Cameron as heir apparent to the "Cameron Dynasty," is assigned to supreme commaud in Pennsylvania. IN tho last "stand and deliver" cir cular of "my dear Hubbel" issued to tbe trembling officials, scrub-women and laborers, he urges them most pa thetically to come to the rescue of the "grand old party." Yes, the "grand old party" scarcely out of its swad dling clothes, is ii) peril of dissolution, bankrupted of honor and decency by just such hollow-hearted robbers as Jay Hubble, Tom Cooper aud Don Cameron aud the methods they adopt to maintain their personal control. They may force tlueats from their vic tims, but it will not save the "grand old party" if they can find no higher motive for its existence than public robbery, and a contempt for law and decency of legislation as developed by the last Congress. Boss MAIIOKK of Virginia, is even more hoggish than Cooper and Cam eron, in making assessments upou Gov ernment officials and laboring men. Mahone demands five percent, of the Virginians, while Cooper's circular only claims two per cent, of the Peun sylvanians. Not to be out-hogged by the Virginia boss, Cooper will doubt less issue another circular. This is nil additional to the Hubbell steal. Ihe Washingqn Post. speaking of the injustice don\ t 0 military heroes claims that we to si few th e glory that manv, that we I have permitted heroes, live iu ohscu- : rity aud die under aclyid while others no more worthy, have hen set up a 3 National idols and says "In no in stance has a distinguish*] general, nominated hv cither of toe r neat par ties been defeated by a who ! j had no army record. In no it tances have great generals been defeatsd by smaller ones, but those results wet\ due ! to other causes than the failing iJulu- i ence of martial prestige, h'cott W- ' beaten as the candidate of a morihuqi i party, and Hancock, after a splendid] race, was beaten at the close by the} unstinted use of money. Our politi- j eal history shows conclusively that the soldier is the idol of the masses. But we have been cruelly unjust in our treatment of soldiers who have de served high [daces in the affections of tlic people. Take, for instance, the ' case of General Porter, who, until his I destruction was decreed in older to save tho reputation and gratify the i malice of Pope, was one of the foremost! figures in the army of the Potomac, ' We need not git into the details of the terrible wrong inflicted on this man. If General Grant is good authority, if the generals who constituted the court of inquiry in his case are honest men, General Porter has suffered injuries worse than a thousand deaths. And still lie is denied justice. This deeply wronged hero lias been compelled to sue for a pardon as if he had been a criminal, and any further reparation is denied him. The country has had three idols, Grant, Sherman and Sheridan, and iu the worship of these it has not seemed to care how many great and proud souls were ground in to the dust of humiliation. Another cose is brought before the public in a most pathetic light by this recent tele gram from Newport, R. I.: It wits known soon after the death of General G. K. Warren that the financial affairs of the household were in a deplo rable condition, entirely the result el tbe great strain upon the general's re sources to pay for plans of the ground which was the scene of the battle of Five Forks, the collection of testimony and the general expenses of the recent court of inquiry. The state of affairs was made known, and the result is that a committee to raise funds for She general's family has been formed and it is expec ted that a large sum will be raised. Iu the annals of the human race since time began there is nothing more deeply tinged with terrible pathos than the story of General Warren. He had fought the good fight and kept the faith until the last hour of war, when, almost at the moment of final victory, he was disgraced in the presence of his gallant corps. From that hour to the day of his death he vainly sought to have his name cleared from unjust re proach that he might leave it thus as the heritage of his children. * We mistake the people of this coun try if the family of the dead hero, the hero whose deeds are written ou the hearts of his countrymen, are not plac ed above the reach or fear of want. Gen. Sheridan has a terrible re sponsibility in connection with the treatment of Gen. Warren, that will some day require him to rise and ex plain. AN Independent branch has split off from the Republican party in Maine, aud like their brethren in Pennsylva nia, declare that they have been bossed by the demagogues quite long euouglt. They announce the following as the platform of principles to guide thciu in the future: 1. Thorough and systematic reform in all branches of the civil service. 2. Faithful execution of the laws in all parts of the >State, including the liquor low and the laws for the observance of the Sabbath, having temperance without hypocrisy and prohibition without drunkenness. 3. Strict economy in the expenditure of public money, and a consequent re duction of taxes, 4. Opposition to machine politics, "boas" rule, political assessments, bribe ry and fraud in controlling elections and conventions, TERMS: $1.50 per Annum, in Advance. Tin: Labor convention which met in Philadelphia on Tuesday last, en dorsed the 1 Greenback candidate for Governor, Thomas A. Armstrong, of Pittsburgh. A HKI:T< IF of the life and character of the next Governor of Pennsylvania, will he found on tiio sixth page of the DEMOCRAT this week. IIL'BBEM. is out with his second as s(ssment already. Things must look blue for the River and Harbor thieves, or Hubbell could afford to give the scrub women and messenger boys, a longer respite from his exactions. Tin: HON. J. SIMPSON AFRICA, who i.> to be the next Secretary of In ternal A flairs, gave the DEMOCRAT a Wileasant call yesterday, lie spent the Vy in town ami received a cordial g'Wting from our citizens, many of I wlVm are attending court. -l\E Hon. C. M. Slielley of the Fouriji Alabama district, whose seat in the present Congress was vacated by the Vmjority in the process adopted of weakbg opposition to the passage of , their theiving jobs, has been nomine. | ted both for his vacated seat in the | present Congress and for his succts sorship in the Forty-eight Congress. IT is said the uniform ami equip ments of the late General Burusides, including the sword presented him by the state of Rhode Island, are held in security by a Boston artist for the pay ment of a clay model statute of the General, for the preparation of which they were furnished. Certainly the war and political friends of the Gener al will redeem these relics. CONGRESSMAN Harris of Massachu setts, has suddenly become euanored of his law practice and will not seek a re-election. He voted for the River Ilarbor steal, and is satisfied with the glory he achieved by the act. There are many more Congressmen of his stripe who will see the necessity of giving more attention to their private business hereafter. THE conferees of the Eleventh Con gressional district, comprised of Mon tour, Pike and Columbia counties, and part of Luzerne and Lackawanna, will meet at Mauch Chunk on the 6th of September, to place in nomination a candidate for Congress. The aver age Democratic majority in the dis trict is 8,000, and as a nomination is equal to an election, an animated con test may be expected. Each county will probably present a candidate. Columbia has named her distinguished statesman, the Hon. Charles R. Buck alcw, whom it is to be hoped will,hold the winning card. His experience and great ability in the Pennsylvania delegation to the next Congress is much to be desired. Important to Democrats. Election this year occurs on Tuesday, 7lh of November, ISS2, Polls open at 7 a. m., and remain open continuously un til 7 p. ni. Voters must be assessed and register ed TWO MONTHS preceding the election, this year on or before Thursday, Septern ber 7th. Voters who have not paid a State or county tax within two years next preceding the election must pay on :or before Saturday, October 7th. Wed nesday and Thursday, September 6th and 7ih, are the final days for assessing and registering. On each of these days the assessor is required to be at the polling places in his district from 10 a. in. until 3 p. in., ami from 6 until 9 p. Hi., to perfect his list. Any elector has the right to examine the list and require correction by adding qualified voters names or striking off disqualified ones' I n case of neglect or refusal by the reg. iater the court is required to issue the summary process to compel correction. Every person'aJded muM be assessed. Nat uralised citizens must produce their certificates, and the register record them. Persona intending to he naturalized may be so registered, but certificates must le procured on or before Saturday, October i th. i*l he list is required to be exposed at the polling place from and after Au gu-t (lit, fur ex xninlio by electors, NO. 34.