neat, S. T. SHUGER’ I'& E. L. ORVI 8, Editors. “EQUAL AND EXACT JUSTICE TO ALL MEN, OF WHATEVER STATE OR PERSUASION, RELIGIOUS OR POLITICAL, ed efferson TERMS : BL50 per Annum, in Advance. VOL. 6 BELLE FONT E, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 2 ay 1884. NO. 21, ——————————— "The Shai Denacrat, Rasmus 81.50 por Aunumin Advance uy authority for the ‘declaration that lon, who returns from Europe to-mor- | { Mr, Hewitt's tariff bill, presented last DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. CONGRESSMAN-AT-LARGE, GEN. W. H. H DAVIS, OF BUCKS COUNTY. THE ELECTORAL TICKET. ELECTORS AT LARGE B. J. Mctiramm H. B. Plummer, DISTRICT BLECTONS L John Slavin, 15. George 8. Purdy, ~ John P. J. Sevsendorf,[16. P. K, Ackley, i, Jolin W. Lee, 7. John P, Levan, . Herbert J. Horn, hs. Eira). Parker, . Richard L. Wright, 19. E. I Mumma, i, John H., Brinton, 20, A. BUD, . Wm Stahlor, 21. Franklin P. James, 8. Charles ¥F. Rentschler, '22. J K.P. Duff, , HH. M. North, 23. Joan Swan, . Harry G. Stiles, 23. A.B. Winternitz, . A.J. Broadhead, Jr, wo Jubn H. Hill, 2. F. V. Rockalsliow, 2. Wm, A. Farquer, 3. No cholee, * 125. AJ Greenfield, . George IL. Lrwin; Richard Vaux, Tie Democratic State Convention of New Jersey, speaks for the old tick: | ot, Tilden and Hendricks. — A A——— { { i { reduce the tariff would be useless this | Ine | is seeking additional strength. | {first in lin Chicago on We [if he can warp in the { Prohibitionists and ! | | | | | hiracetves quite merry | the first National Convention of hosts of whole country, -> Tur Evening Star of Washington week, will not be reported from the | |W ays and Means Committee. The | Committee profess to be satisfied that | any attempt to pass a bill that would gassion, a Ay A— Mays. Gx, Bex. the field. He has captured f the nlizts, wh met 5 last. Now Greenbackers, | organiza to act | season, the Anti- Mon other | tious, too wise and goody-zood friends throughout the | | Saturday, bas this to say: | i i F. Burren is the | | | | | A WASHINGTON correspondent of “Senator John Sherman went over ¢ Philadel- phia to-day to see Senator Don Camer- hung this tale: Thereby is | Blaine, having concluded that he con- row. not be nominated, or that if nominat- { ed he cannot be elected, has determin- He i given to understand that Don Camer- {on is for Logan, with Arthur for sec- ond choice, and with a strong feeling against Blaine. He will Sherman for Arthur his second choice, knowing very well that Don as |C ameron’s first choice cannot be nom- | inated, | with the leading political parties of | | the country, opportunity to display the versa tility of his talent. PORISRIOIRPRTC Ea “Republican make SOME papers and bappy Frep GRANT expresses the opinion | over the dispute of Democrats on the that he and his father and brother | tariff. It is no doubt funny, as ‘well Bevjamin may bave a; | weeks past, However this may Arthur men are more confident and the Blaine men more uneasy than The Southern Press. The Free Trade journals of the | North, and particularly that portion | were great fools to entrust all they pos- | as foolish, but our Republican friends | sessed in the bands of a reckless spec { do not seem to he much better united ulator and a comparative Very few persons will doubt the accun- racy of this opinion. rn Ap AGI—— A caLL for a mass meeting, signed | | by several hundred of the business men | | of New York, was issued last week to | Prominent statesmen and presidential endorse the addsinistration. There js | probabilities as a set of thieves and some evidence that Arthur is pot will. | corruptionists, |clusively to our umited, ing to surrender his state to Maine and Vermont without a struggle, i cs tA MA Tae Sevate Pevsion Committee have decided not to confirms the ap- pointment of Ho Mi Vauderslice as Pension Agent at Philadzlphia. Itis believed that the appoivtinent will be given to A. Wilson Norris, if the re. moval of Gen. Sickles is insisted on by Col. Quay. —— GY A———. Tae financial avalanche swept through Wall street, N. Y. week, was alarming while it lasted, and left some disastrous and hops wrecks in its track, but the panic has now passed and the “bulls” and “bears” will again bob up serenely to their ac- customed occupations, nnmindful of the failures of the avaricious imbeciles who risked their all to attain sudden and unearned riches, A ————— I — A PETITION very numerously signed has been presented in the U. S Senate, praying that Geoeral Fremont be placed on the retired list of the army. Gen. Fremont may have de served well when connected with the array, but he left the service over a quarter of a century ago, for other pursuits. , Gen. Graot did the same however, and if his case a meritorius one so ought Fremont’s to be. ee———— GETTING AWAY WITH THE SUR- PLUS! There is added to the Indian appropriation bill, as passed by the Senate, $35,000 more than the amount reported by the Senate committee on appropriations. This makes the whole amount of the Senate's additions to the bill $865,000, and the total amount appropriated for the Indian department $6,300,000, about $930, 000 greater than the appropriations of last year. The surplus must go. less Harrier Lowe Jounsox, she who so gracefully and so acceptably presi- ded and did the social honors of the White House, during the administra- tio her uncle, President Buchan. be reollected as a lady of hand Bpome prescace and rare attractions, who immediately after the death of ' Mr. Buchanan, married Harry E, Johnson, a popular Baltimore banker of high character. Two years ago they lost their two only sons, whose deaths occurred within short time of each other, and now the husband, af- Wo weeks of illness of pneumonia which | stranger, | {on the vexed question, if their leading | {organs in the east and west are to be | considered exponents of Republican Besides, the Democrats 00 occasion to denounce their sentiment, have This is reserved ex- harmonious opponents— Blaine, Edmunds, et al, SENATOR Saprx, chairman of the Republican National Committee, is announced as one of those who went by the bosrd in the financial crash. Au obscure man from the West, with- out experience or training in political bitelee, Te was Seiad “@hairman be cause of his reputed great wealth and the convenience his barrel would be to the party, now that the grand old , last | party is somevhat hampered in its us His failure will be quite a disappointment to those who expected the sivews of war from the liberality of the million. aire if, in their resentment, they do not require his abdication of the hon- or. Crash is the motive powcr of Republican politics, and lame ducks will not count much as leaders. Tae report, remarks the Pittsburg Post, that Don Cameron favors the nomination of John Sherman for President is a confirmation of the maxims of his father, pever forget your friends. There is nothing like keeping a good thing im the family whea you can, and in this case it would be a safe harbor for the Camer- on dynasty, if successful. Don could be provided for in the cabinet, and his numerous friends find good places in which to earn an honest livelihood. But the young man will soon be on the ground and able to speak for him- self, not only on the political situation but make good his margins on stocks, as he has been to some extent a dab- bler in that uncertain lottery. As re- sults prove, he shows better judgment in going for Sherman than he did for Grant, so 80 far as financial matters go. Ir is very “probably a fact that many of the brave men who are mem. bers of the Greely relief expedition thought much of the fame and notor- iety that would attend the success of their efforts when they volunteered for the lservice, It seems not unlikely that the mefchant marin. may fore stall them. Stiraulated by the offered reward of $26,000, two whaling ves- sels have already started from New- foundland on & search for the Jaan. nette survivors, and two more are about to follow them. Experts de clare their prospects to be excellent, and as they will reach the North wa- ter near the extremity of Baffin's Bay some thres weeks before tho govern- ment's vessels, the friends of the naval search party are rather Sespondont sal resources by civil service, {obo ge vas lure, | ments of the south on the Morrizon the | | daily circulation of the Southern press | | as essential that the innocent depositor i H § i {and his followers. { Mobile Register. bill. Beventy-five per cent. of condemned the policy of Morrison Says the ¥ Lynch- ¥ burg Virginian : » * » we would urge car repre | “sentatives in coogress to address “themselves to the work of securing | “the repeal of the internal revenue | “Jaws.” very Northern states which refused to accept ihe tariff policy of the new Kentucky statesman. * Take away from the Southern democ- racy, those who favor such protection as was demanded by Clay, Calboun, Clayton, Polk and Jackson, snd we will find every Southern state in the hands of the Republican party.’ — “It appears from & | look at the situation, aud his supporters are determined to rule or to ruin the party. not so much in love with the tariff bill | batched by Mr. Morison, as they are in love with themselves and their own conceits, Had they the real interests of the country and the absolute suc- cess of the Democratic party at heart - * = ¥ inetead of their own selfish ends they | would listen to the voice of reason and show a willingness to meet their Democratic compeers on safe equitable ground which would be acceptable to the coaservative men of the party, the masses, and especially the business io- terests of the country.—Atlanta Jour- nal, Speaker Randall was right when he said that the Morrison bill was a pal- pable confession of inability to han- dle the intricate problem at issue or else a rash eagerness to do what was at ounce uncalled for, unwise and un- fortunate. It appeared to be agita- tion only for the sake of agitation— always a mistake.~Augusta Chronical and Constitutionalist, The democratic platform of “Free Trade” Virginia, demands the “uncon: ditional and immediate abolition of the internal revenue system, and a tariff for revenue limited to the neces sities of the government economically administered and so adjusted in its ap- plication as t~ prevent unequal bur. dens, encourage productive interests at home and afford a just compensation to labor, but not to create or foster mon. opolies. Let our contempories be fair to their constituents in this matter, Mis representation will net win a bad cause. The South is not a free trade, and never will be, her industries are us varied, though not us extensive as those of the North, her policy as rep. resented by he great men of the past is clearly stated by the 6th oc 7th plank of the Virginia platform. That she is iz favor of an adjustment of | the tariff that will Snvase asthe dy anlage of all is ji nally i | 18 | i ask Don | { Cameron whether he cannot substitute {own account or forming be, the | | by Benator Cullom’s bill, 10r | officials, especially inclusive of the di- | | rectors, should be held | countability for the Is lefale | . “ » : . 0 Ie r gelaica | of democratic press, which inclines in | 779°" ¥ | that direction have wilfully or through ignorance misrepresented (he sentir | ! guarded, dol {shall be protected. “And now | “The democracy cannot elect { a President except by the aid of the that Morrison They are | { Tue flarry and financial scare which run so high on Wednesday of | week, in New York. | last has subsided— ington Post sees in this experience the | necessity for more restrictive legisla | i | ti on upon all these banking concerns, | {It remarks: “It is a singular finan { ed to support Sherman, and the latter | | cial anomaly, indeed, that a National | | Jank of the United States should not | | be as safe as an ordinary State Sav. That it is not 0 indicates the that cannot be too speedily remedied. {ings bank. | a radical defect tn system Not only the president, cashier and teller of a National bank, should be prohibited from speculating on their any specula to a stricter ac- due performance of their duties and placed under such rigorous disciplinary regulations as to ions and failures impos sible. 18 It is not enough that the public on the "¢ the cent holder shall suffer no loss, lar for dollar, nnd . It culation of a bank, so that 18 He | money in a government bank, | his own risk, but with the | that it will be held as a sac-ed and in- puts not at | violable trust. It is incumbent upon i the Government to see that his ac | count is made secure against spoila- of one per cent., to make good the | speculative losses of a bank president | out giving to this matter the attention | itso much deserves. The relations between the pedple and should be those of confidence aud not | suspicion, of safety instead of or.the president's private bucket shop. | =o presideticy Congress should not adjourn with- | | | but all bank | | nee d” is ir- | his | Assurance | | service for his country. i { for 8500,000 and other . . . ! vanced on tive partnerships outside, as proposed | The Lesson of the Failure There a . i s {a1 sy of } f Carn n | many of the speculators and rotten | the failure of the firm of Graut and | firms having collapsed. But the Wash: | ; | ious re flection. | Ward which afford material for ser. The abilities are set “The will fall cheifly upon individoals who h the firm” ock eniid as high as $10,000,000, Josses have invested money wi the men iY Ie statement of its St “Some g men, are in for still lar a . 4 a: ger sume,’ says a clerk of the fallen house, A publican Evening Post that Ward in the LJ “prominent banker | Cirnnt were y habit of pledgir 1 oor ' “4 i the securities hypothecated with them for loans larger than the amounts ad. ' ro gUuch secur. OF #4 cured by dis CUssl | Ward's trans which heard { in Wall street and elsewhere actions are , the words it. .0ns. ip ! : ‘swindling’ and ‘robbery’ are freely the assertion of Post in its article on the The y il These are painful stories. lustrate in a striking manner the evil | that of that toadyism to distinction, hero-worship, that passion for power, | | whil that insatiable greed for wealth, that its that recklessness in its dissipation, unscrupulousness in acquisition, which have grown upon the country | as a result of arrogant and igal prod Republican rule. As a soldier Grant did magnificent | Grant engrafted semi-imperialism upon | | his party, and planted the seeds of a | tion to the amount of even a fraction | {1 have since bad an alarming growth. When be stepped from the high el- the f Wall street, why did ooseness of official morality which into muddy pbol « | people flock around him there and lay | {of his inexperienced sons? Because | re lessons in the details of | 8 1 Exchange ] [| been closer As president | | Bound Business Principles I Rule. the Amd prev all the excitement that throughout the week there have been no nore fail- bias ailed in financial eire'es ures in ie gitimate business than usual. who are engaged wr . Meo in honest and who have been prosecuting en. terpris their business on sound principles have fear: oi this is just now the rule United little reason for and outside |} LOCK operators the Miales to a H Ail { thao it has been 1 I'bere ha of evniits mun business y " or Y Years, been bo peril extension « ven, and sh jong ax there is not we can inno dan ge rof any widespread com 1d or industrial depression. ———- Items of Interest. * A — The Parke rel 1, editoro f Lhe irsg [ron W rk shave lhe Media American in that esses to have rcea a ghost resides resjaer f Christi 4 an Horst, town, banon rot bed o Lehigh Va ley coal ( ompany ried to hay county, £100 in gold. i5 | 10.000) a¢ in the ¢ purchase and res eoal | Snow Lambin le hunting Harry 24 By 13 ' in Corry, aged recently harged his rifle and mor- wounded Miss Kate Conners A Lewistown lunatic set fire coal oil that hed escaped from a barrel { and was runnin By years rats sccidently disch tally lo BOT OC g down the gutter | good luck a big Gre was averted, The Cambria Iron Company has re {ceived an order from the Cinciannati New Orieans and Texas Pacafic Railway for 15,000 tons of 60 pound rails. | Dr. J. Nelson Clarke, a prominet { physician of ITarrisburg, hat been arres {ted and held to bail for hearing on the | charge of taking illegal fees in Sve pen- | sion claims, A paper read before the Forestry jeongress on Thursday estimated the "the Macks | thein savings aL his feet modethe feel | cost of the milroad tips, used in the. United States every seven years st | they were talented, shrewd and cau. | $14,784,000, danger: | tiok Otherwise the sooner the national sys | | tem is disposed of “the better. > Tug officers of the New Eng and i inaugurated a movement to secure the tobacco. to unite in its favor, Co-operation from the New York To- bacce Board of Trade have been re ceived and a movement ) i for coalition with southern and west. ern politicians and tobacco men. meeting to complete arrangements will he held at Hartford on Saturday. It will favor abolishing the tobacco tax: the discharge of 2,000 government employes to save $2,500,000 expenses and an annual $30,000,000 revenue. The New Eogland growers have an association of over one thousand, and and ample funds. They are embold. ened by securing protection against Sumatra tobacco, which saved Ameri: can growers over a million during the past year. Barkis is Willin'. Bosrox, May 16.—~Gen Butler has written to Mr. Shively, of South Bend, Ind, the secretary of the National Anti-monopoly committee, as follows: “My Dgar Sir: I have your let ter of the 1st inst. which I found upon my table upon my return home from an absence from the state, I am in this state of mind: If there is any portion of the people of this couniry desirous to vote for me for president I shall not oppose their doing so, and they may do it in anyway they see fit, for it is their business to vote as they believe and not mine to direct them, Therefore while I do not deem it prop- er for me to take any part in putting my name before any body of men asa candidate for any office, I shall great ly appreciate any action of the peo: i i ———— repeal of all internal revenue taxes on cial ability. The growers and packers in {cident of their father's presidency the trade throughout the country are {might have been respectable dry. Assurances of | goods clerks in Galena. 18 financiers? Notatall, Wea | told by the Times that while Grant | bas a fortune of 8250000 and an in. re | come of 815,000 a year untouched, he | Tobacco Growers’ Association have is hopelessly poor and irretrievably in | Hence he cannot possess finan- | His sone, but for the ae- | | debt. They { no qualifications as successful specu. | lators, has started | i i { built up on a name. i Aj | vietims are flunkies'—N. The firm of Grant & Ward was | Its $10,000,000 liabilities were due to toadyism. Its Y. - A Voice From the Tomb. That eminent political eadaver, says the Harrisburg Patriot Hon. W. M. Evarts has risen from his grave to recall to the public memory the fact that he was the fraudulent Secretary of State in the stolen Presidency of Ruotherford RB. Haves, Fraudulent in public life he is false in his utterances from his political tomb, This ghostly emanation from the dead and damned administration of the usurper Hayes revisits the glimpses of the moon to say that the panic of 1837 and that of 1857 were produced by a departure from the theory of a protec. tive tariff. Anti-Democrat and notably whig his. torians give the lie to his ghostship, These tell us that the panic of 1837 was produced by tho battle made by Andrew Jackson against the United States bank, As for the busines depression of 1857 everybody knows that it was caused by a bank panic started by the failure of the “Ohio Trust Company” on whose affairs the tariff had sbout as much effect as a fireman of the Sublime Porle. We put Ihe testimony of another dead man against that of the defunct Evarts—one physically aithough not politically dead, for his name is yet ter. rible to the Stalwarts “as to the Mos. lem was the Cigl.” James A. Garfield declared ox the floor of Congress in re- iv to Judge Kelley that the country never prospered as it didunder the low tariff of 1846 for the ten years succeed: | have World. | | —George Goczy, a Hungarian, liviog {in Johnstown, thrashed Michael Zerhin {another Hi ung ian, be { to pay $40 wh the disired to marry, Tus its B® erook edness {ficial ause ho refused demanded as whom Zerbin rich Gracay price of his sister, New York Feeni Hg Post 4 informs epublican { that one half the of Digine as a public of has not been told, although it is satisfied that what the people kaow al- | ready would de feat bim asa candidate, | This is serious talk for a Republican | organ of such ability and influence ag { the Peat to use, Ace to the following statistics this State is improving in morals. The | court statistics of Pennsylvania for 1883 | show that there was a decrease in the | number of persons charged with crime over the preceding year of 371, a de- crease of the number of trials of 921 and a decrease in the number of con. victions of 100. It cannot be said that the last was a particularly unfavorable year for crime. On the contrary, human nature was just as human last year in Pennsylvania as ever, and there was more of it, as the population increased, There was greater deprescion in business than during the preceding year, more hands thus being idle for Satan to find in mischief, In spite of these untoward circumstances the eriminal business of the courts declined about 2 per cent. in the number of crimes charged and over 3 per cent. inthe number of convictions. Pittsburg Post Tax Towaxva Journal! saysthat s mum: ber of tax-payers in Bradford county have filed exceptions to the last finan’ cial report o/ the county, and that an investigation is to be held. It claimod that some of the charges brought against the county Ly the com. missioners were illogal and should not have been paid. The Journal says “that t is not expected that any large errors or discrepencies will be discovered dur. ing the reign of the present officials, but it is intimated that from 1879 to 1881 there was some crookedness and that from eight to ten thousand dollers dis appeared annually, aed no satisfactory r. haz ever been made,” In riends ORDING