£l)c Centre iHfe. Democrat. BHUUKKT & VAN OHM Kit, Editors. VOL. 6. She Ctnfrt democrat. Torino t1.50 oar Annum In Advance, 8. T. BHUGERT A J. R. VAN ORMER, Editors. Thursday Momine, July 26, 1883. Democratic Stnto Convention. The Democratic Stfttc Convention will m**t I" lII® o|wrm houn*. Ilnrrisl'Utit. on Wwlniwl*), An;. I, *t I" a. in., to nominate a omdMat* fr Audltor-tlencr*! and a tan delate for .Stair Trm*ur*r, and to trans*, •uch othrr loiaitiras a* the convention majr dctannine. There will al> bo prwcnUd t the wnifntlon a resolution which has born adopted by Ihr Slate Com mittal, changing the rub'* of the party *o it* t< t;v the tint# of the annual mooting of tli State ■ inmlt t.- at I |> in , on the Wednesday after the third Moll day of January, tn*tea com- J rnunicnte hi- change of purp -e t"> me lor to Mr. l'assmore. Niles was saved hv the so—u■ o— ot' my motion to n rui- I nate the State Treasurer fir-t, which I was made in pursuance ofauumhr-! -tnmiing with hi- -upp -rt- r- in the northern tor i p!. v tie N.i- v> !e n_'aiu-t tie gat : i . ; i Run nel. It a'-i w-rv' 1 t!ie jm r: e of showing th ban Dof the' diih .-int j candidates f>r Auditor-' icm-ral. "It i i. : likely that the Camerens j look any par in ti. eaiivn,. hut here after 1 -hall take rare n ver to mum with tlnCnmei n bounds uti!<--- the Snator i- pn -- ut to tak> j-a r t in th hunt. Tiie st -ry of an nrraugeinent botwun Magee and myself i- the 1 sheree-t of nonsense." Win x" it i r- ali/. i that th' R. pub licans mut gain a numher of states to have the slighte-t chance of "iicecs next year, the ontlook is not one t-> : inspire a great deal of enthusiasm t" llulwll's "grand old party." Rut when it is al-o realized that the D niocrat may meet with - rioiis 10--> an i yet emerge from the campaigns' serenely ahead of the enemy, deli rmiticd to in 1 augurntc a Democratic I*r i lent, law fully, honorably, and without allowing fraud appliance- to intervene, it will he -imply stunning to the thieves of 187G or the ballot purchasers of IMO. | im • m I>' reply to a resolution passed by the Senate favoring immediate adjourn ment and n-king coneurrence of th" House, on account of the exjienses of the session and thecontinaeil disagree ment, Representative Sharp, truthfully j and properly remarked "That a wan ton insult to the constitution of Penn sylvania, and a deliberate violation of its mandates in regard to apportion ; menu of representative* among the JK-O pie, would he far more costly than the expenses of an extra session if it continued nil summer. In this senti ment the House concurred, and the resolution now awaits the action of the Ways and Means Committee. The mandates of the Constitution and the oaths of members arc equally irnpara tive in demanding apportionment. Failure is therefore incretisabfe and criminal both in law and morals, and ' the conspirators against either, should, , and no doubt w ill bo held to a fear ful accountability which adjournment will not relieve. Gentlemen, give us an honest, fair constitutional appor- , tioument of the representatives. You ■ are sworn to do so as representatives ( of tho people, not as mere representa- , lives of party or faction. The respon- j sibility of delay and the expenses fob ( lowing will Ira duly placed to the , credit of those who earn it j Tn K Telegrapher's are still holding out for an increase on their wages, wc hope they will get their demand, 1 Tin: great victory of Gen. Crook over the Apaches, is now considered by many n.s a great hoax. It is pretty certain that the savages he did not take and bring in, arc still marauding in force the pu< ilied districts of Gen. Crook's operations. Mlt. AUTIII r.'s administration has made a splendid test of the civil ser vice reform. When the lav. and the rule prepan-d with so much lloiirish went into i-fli-cl the other day, then was just one vacancy to lie lill< intmcnl < f ; Tom ('oopi r as chairman of the State Republican committee, i- vol' i "a | stupid blunder" only c--jtial!• <1 bv tin I adopti- n of Rarker.- < mmunistii jilank in the platform. 1 m ami his a-- ssuicnU and circular- was < rtainlv a failure last year, n- w 11 a a bon • I but who knows wbat greatness ho may i arhii vc this y-ar when put in pur-nit j'.f the public revenui by Rarker. < Hen t' fore tin stealings have hem by i dril now it i- to be wli >lc-ale, and ! the os-ociatiun of thieve- enlarged. CNITOIT t AIU. M IN I;/ feels moved it' remark that "if the I tern -erati' ! party does not carry the n> x! I're*r j :'lnitial election, it hn- no vitality in lit; that tire American j pie are.]. I terminid not t" tru-t it nr. i r m y ' circuinstanci -, and that it ha i IwtU r lisband." Wberi-unt • the R -t n /' ' r'-p nd-: "Well, hardly. I• wa not because of lark of vitality that the Democrat# failed t carry the el< • ■ ;i n in I**o, but Ix-causc the Repub j bean party spent from fli'Mt iro • t• • *l.- I 'HK),OOO in buying v- tes. It :- jio-si !>!<• that the Democrats may fail in D s 1 for a similar re an." While it must be admitted that a repetition . : the puri ba-c game of 1 $BO i- j -tible : r bd, it is rhe. ring to ri-fb < t that the diflioulti' - now surrounding "tin grand old party" arc much greater I than they w re four years ag > —greater, I iii tact, than they have h--u at any ; jsoriixl of its existence, if we except ihe time betwe en their loss of the ele c - tion in 1 x7 and the ir c apture of the Presidency by theft a lew mouths i later. Tin: nnmitUc of the Massachusetts lepi-lature who have been for some ; time investigating the Tcwk-bury almshoti-e, have made a report white, j wa-liing that delectable in.-tituti n. It is signed by the Republican tie mix r> of the committee, who severely r• u -ure ' iov. Rut'cr and pronounce "the : main charges of hi- excellency as, ' groundless and cruel." w.'.h gr.ci bef -e the people and they quietly admit that the democrats liav- hone tly aimed to carry out the ' -trict r< juircmenU of the constitution, i Thi l.ul a i nfirrnation of the demo crat. cos . from the 1 . ginning, to do the w >rk which by their <>a!hs they have sworn to do, arid which tbc repub licAns of the senate I y dilatory tfin n ivros, havo viotatsd and brokso.— II J'aV ■!. The Opeu lte "hopeh sly democratic." In the latter part of September, however, he had 'completed his organisation and had le.arm 1 "the influence# that could be brought to bear on each voter.'* Then, he says, the mm of four hundred and thirty two thou- and dollars, contributed by (lie funding yr. In ate, w.a- osing partisan ; it is the I open boast of the principle oonspirators. It is not a piece of startling news, for < the vice president elect made an almost ) equally candid avowal at the Dorsey banquet in New York after the elec r tion; but it completes the certainly c that as the "visiting statesmen" stole f the presidency in 1876, so tho bribing fl statesmen stole it in 1880. 1 lu support of the revelations from I TOMS: #1.50 per Annum,ln Advuncr. Horsey * budget it in asserted that the written memoranda exi*t to prove that the Jtepublican candidate for President in PWJ agreed to appoint Levi I*. Mor ton Secretary of the Treasury and to intriut the large funding operations of the Jrca-ury to a syndicate of New ork ban Iter a. It ia further asserted that a written agreement was made with Jay fiould to put Stanley Mat thews on the Pent h of the Supreme Court. in return, Morton, at the bead of tho bankers, syndicate, and Jay Gould pa. 1 an enormous amount of money for the election of Garfield. ' '>' :>) that tho syndicate alone i i (our hundred thousand dollars the disLur-eiiH-nt of which was made in the Indiana and Ohio election. In con sequence of complications that rubs<- quently ero-e Morton was made Minis t'T to France instead of secretary of i the J rea ury, L .t Manloy Matthews was j j.o.rited Jubtice of the Supremo Court and i >nfirmed by one rote after a b.tter contest. If such proofs of flagitious politic;.' corruption exist they mu-t be known to a number of person-, and ,t is time now to produce tb< :i. 1 orey cannot jro due them, for they were not confided to him, but his ml.mate knowledge of th" operations of the campaign, as its rot trusted manager, enables him to a- ■< rt that the written agreements were made. Tho nia.n charg' which these urnent-. are .1 t. j rot'- were made , long ago. but neither I,<-vi P. Morton i; r ay I - >uld, nor any one of the par tie. who taunt have knowledge of their existence if tln v were ever written, has made the -l.gblc id r,.il. I) .rscy gives from bis budget the enormous amounts of money that were, expended in Indi ar.a and else where during the campaign of under l.i supervision. and there is no other account than that which ho g v * a- to the manner m which the money was raised. If the declarations of Horsey in re. gard to the written agreements with Morton and Jay Gould be accepted as true in the absence of any denial by the persons most deeply interested in 1 'proving thern, they reveal a degree j i.cul ,ni ; ;;ty an 1 corruption ex ling tho crime by which the Presi. ( ier.cy was stoon in 1-70. In 1-70 tho juie.net ;<> is were und in the lie j turning I' ardsof Louisiana and Flori da to count out the electoral votes of tin- e two States. It is true that John Sherman and other prominent party leader- who superintende 1 the trai.si.c lions in Louisiana and Florida became beneficiaries of the crime Put If. P. Hayes, the chief beneficiary of the deed, had no share in it beyond his con sent until it was fully consummated. In i--'i the candidate for President, if Horsey is to b<- believed, went to New York in tho midst of his campaign and bargained ofl" the greatest offices in hi* ! gift for money to secure his election, j He agreed to turn over the treasury of the people to a ring of Wall street money changers and to put upon the Supremo Bench a Judge named by Jay Gould. I'hilu Keeor-i. The Indiana Purchase. Put tho worst criminal can make a truthful confos-ion, and even Brady tnay be bclived when he relates the story of his own rascality. He no doubt speaks the truth in relation to the $40,000 raised by him from the Star route men to carry Indiana in Xovem her. after the great bribery in that state in October, General Arthur "was wil ling tn give written authority for the collection of the money,'' Brady says, but a letter from tlarfield was demand ed and secured. "1 do not think I needed better authority," continue" Ilrady, "and I raised the money at onco." We are not left in doubt as to how this money was expended. It was used to make a second purchase of the state of Indiana. "We had really as much of a fight there in November as in October," says Brady, "because it was necessary to follow up the victory. Where a two dollar bill sufficed in the former month a five dollar note had to be expended in Oxtober, and as I'orsey say* they were crisp and new and seem ed like a shower from heaven to our people." This it how these precious republican rascals defeated an bonorrble, honest candidate like General Hancock for the presidency and elected James A. Oar' field. This ia how they purchased in 1830 the presidency they had stolen in 1876. NO. I'll.