THE BEDFORD GAZETTE 1 IS PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY HORNING BY MEYERS A .11 EXCEL, At the following terms, to wit: $2 00 per annum, if paid strictly in advance. $2.50 if paid within 6 months ; $3.00 if not paid within 6 months. subscription taken tor less than six month 9 paper discontinued until all airearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. It has been decided by the United States Courts that the stoppage of a newspaper without the payment of arrearages, is prima facie evidence of fraud and is a criminal offence. 02?" The courts nave decided that persons are ac countable for the subscription price of newspapers, if they take them from the post office, whether they subscribe for them, or not. elect po 11 rn . WHEN THIS OLD HAT WAS NEW. Before this hat was made, King Georga was on the throne, bur Fathers all were rebels then And fought with Washington; The Tories cheered for old King George The Revolution through; And bragged about their loyalty, F.ro this old hat was new. When tbU old bat unz.t new The sons of that base crowd Revived the cry of "Loyalty,"' And bellowed it tUoud ; The Government our Fathers made For them would never do ; And they have torn its bulwarks down Since tbis old hat was new. When this old hat was new There was no public debt, No Greenbacks took tbe place of gold Xo millionaire had yet Ilis pile for Seven-Thirties spent On which no tax was due, But each man fairty paid his tax When this old hat was new. When this old hat was new Elections still were free. And every wan was thought to haio A right to liberty : Arrests were made by course of law, Trials were speedy too, A.nd Sew ard rang no little bell, >V hen this old hat was new. _ When this o.d hat was new This land was in i s prime. Miscegenation was uutaugbt In all this happy clime; And white folks then were thought as good As Samßo, Gpff or Sue ; But thing" have sadly changed about lSir.ee this old hat was ucw. When this old hat was new The poor white man war free, And every year a bran new boy ♦>uld dandle on bis knee; But now, for ever} child he has, H'.'j taxed til! ail i blue; But things 1 tell you wore not so When this old hat was new When this old hat was new Golu dollars did abound, And not a stamp in a.l the land Could any where he found But now you dare not ki,=3 your wife Unless you stamp her too; But things X tell wcio BJI so >Vhe this old hat was new. REPUBLICAN SPLIT IN WISCONSIN. I The Wisconsin Radicals are so dissatisfied j with the action of the late Republican conven tion, in that 9tate, that they have decided to bolt'. They have called a new convention to meet at Janesville on the 27th. The JMttly l\'iscon*m, the foremost Republican paper of tbe state, says this new convention is called "by the friends of universal suffrage" —which is its euphoristn lor negro suffrage. Tbe same paper goes into a general exposi tion of the grounds ot dissatisfaction with the action of the regular convention, at Madison, in which, it say's, "a very timid policy prevail ed." We quote: A considerable proportion of the delegates, and many of them men eminent for character and ability, were resolved that some positive declaration in our favor of universal suffrage should be included in the platform; and though the majority of the convention were eviden'ly tin anxious not to say anything that should ap pear to condemn or oppose the policy of l'sesi dent Johnson in the Southern States, there prevailed, as we think, among them a willing ness to adopt any resolution that would have stated tbe universal principle, without direct ly finding fault with the President. But this was not allowed, and, mainly through the ex ertion and the influence of Senator Doolittle, the platform as it stands was finally adopted. It is not surprising that this result has giv en satisfaction to the more advanced Republi cans of the state. CURIOSITY OF THE WAR. Among the curiosities brought home by the j 35th lowa is a wooden mortar, used at the re- duction of Spanish I-oft, hear Mobile. It is oot a "Quaker gun," like those which fright ened General McClellaij at Manassas, but an I instrument capable ol formidable execution, i It is made of tire famous "gum tree, and Is j constructed like other mortars, the whole be ing of wood, except iron bands near the end ol the mortar, to make it more secure. It can throw a twelve-pound shell. The idea of con structing these mortars, we arc told, was bor rowed from a yankt**, who first used them to throw shot into Vicksburg. Tweuiy-tive were j constructed for the pioneer Corps, and they did good service in the attack on Alobue- Ihtee men could carry and manage a mortar with ease, and they were used in rifle*pits and nos-; itions where they could be used without ex posure to the enemy's fiie. THE I, VST So.*: o' ' writ of liuoeas corpus was bv the President of tb* united States himself, in the case of persons charged with stealing Government horses. The General who made the arrest said there was no objec tion to turning the men ever to civil authori ties, ''if they couiu be ti.ed immediately! Ihe General eertaninly could not have been a mem ber of a court-martial with which it usually takes from four to five months to try a single case. The use of the word "immediately" was probably ironical. THE CROCS in England hare turned out bad-' lv As the wheat crop in the United States is twenty millions of bushels short of an average the supply irura this cpiarioc cannot l>e depen ded upon-, without largely ""hancin? price Out corn cmp, which lias been .-irgc. may pos sibly help England out of her difficulty. VOLUME 61. NEW SERIES. THE REPUBLICAN PARTY ON A DISUNION PLATFORM. Democratic journals and Democratic Speak ers cannot recur too frequently to the discus sion of the antagonism manifested by leading radical Republicans to the restoration of the Union and the pacification of the country. This antagonism is openly avowed by the bolder di> | unionists, and is day by day made more palpa ; Me. The recent speech of Tiiaddeus at Lancaster will go far to convince the roost sceptical that he arid such as lie are opposed to the restoration of the Union, either with or without slate-ry. No man in Pennsylvania has a better right-to claim th position of leader c r the radical Abolition party than Mr. Pleven's. By reason of ability and long service lie lias acquired the fight to speak by authority. It lie has been consistent in ore thing, it is hatred o F the Southern people, lie has been a Fed erlist, a Whig, at: Anti-Mason, a Know-Noth ing and a Republican, but under each of these party narr.ee he lies always been an Abolition ist—eager at all times and under all circum stances to lead a crusade against the Sou h. His Lancaster speech is in perfect keeping with his character. The result of the war has not satisfied him. The suppression of rebellion, the utter extinction of hostility to the General Gov- j ernmcnt, the reiterated expressions of willing-1 uess on the part of the Southern people to ac cept the issue of the war and return to the Un ion, are not enough to fill the full measure of; his detestation of tkeSouth ile must have vest-j gtaiice without mercy. 1 lis malignity will be satisfied with nothing less than entire subjuga tion —until the white men of the South are \ made to feel that they are conquered aliens, and the women and children arc beggared by con fiscation. There is something melancholy in the sight of an old man, past the utmost limits of the average of human life, seeking occasion to ex hibit bis hard hearted malignity and blood-thirs ty cruelly to the world. But this speech of Mr. Stevens would not require mure than a passing notice, were it not for the fact that lie is now the re ognized leader of a party which aims to plunge the country into new ditfteulties, and render the war, which has cost so much blood and treasure, prolific of interminable difficulty and contention. Mr. Stevens prepared his sp eth ccrcluily, intended that it should bt general!"' read and evidentlyjiesigne^y * {'resident Johnson. It forms a very proper supplement to the resolutions of the Republics' State Convention. The speech and the resolution should be read together. They mutuaiiy .'brow light on each other. Stevens was a member of the convention, and the resolutions show his handiwork. Indeed ho takes special pains to tell us that he was the author of the resolution proposing the confiscation of the property ot all rebels worth over 5"10,000 —and as they show an unity of design fi< m beginning to end and that design squaring with the views ex pressed in the speech, there is no mistaking their paternity. The Republican party of Pennsylvania stands upon a platform dictated by Thaddeus Stevens, and that platform is one of uncompromising hostility to the reorganization policy of President Johnson, which affords only prospect of a speedy restoration of the Union and permanent tranquility to the distracted country. Mr. Stevens states the issue correctly when he says: There are two theories prevailing. The one, looking at the revolted States as never having been out of the Union, proposes that they be regarded as restored thereto so soon as their people shall reconstruct their State government the other proposes to regard them as subjuga ted aliens, and their territory as foreign terri tory conquered by force of arms. The ffrst theory is that of the President and the Democratic party —the second that of the radicals and the Republican State Convention. Let any man read these resolulions carefully, and lie will sec that they commit the party to the second or Stevens' theory, and go so tar as to assume that the overtures of the President to the Southern people have been already re iectc I—a 1 —a falsehood industriously piupagateu by the radical press for sinister purposes, for which they were most emphatically rebuked by the President in his late speech to a delegation of Southern men. We have not space to review all of the man ifold absurdities of the Stevens' theory. They are patent ami lie on the surface. It the South ern people are "subjugated aliens" and their territory conquered foreign territory, then they became foreigners by the several acts of State secession, Which were valid instruments, and accomplished the purpose for which they were designed. ?r. this view of the case. there can | bo no obligation upon the government to re ' cognize the existence of States at all; but Con ' "ress may disregard former local divisions,and 1 treat the South as so much territory and so I many people, conquered by force cf arms, to be governed and otherwise disposed of as the vic tor-. may determine. Why not appoint a mili | tary governor, at once, for the. entire South, I and why allow the people to exerc-sany civil ; functions or hold- any property at all ? Since we are called upon to agree tha* accession not i only destroyed the Union, but also obliterated i the States, and left us nothing tut a o nanny . people arm so much property to be d.sporcd of iat our pleasure, what need ot alio wing any | portion of this conquered people to take part iin the government? And by what right can 1 ; we ask them to rwear allegiance and loyalty to a government in which they have no part or interest except that' of obeying and suffering ? Disunion could net have been robre thoroughly i and effect ual!y r acc<>inp!:shed by the ertsbksh . meat cf the tAbr.federi.cy than by tl:c operation of the radical theory The former sought to ' uiake us two nations —ike latter would in ef fect make us two peoples, with separate inter ; ~s ts— the governing victors, and the governed Freedom of Thought and Opinion. BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 29, 1865. vanquished seeking the first occasion to throw otf a hated foreign yoke. "Mr. Stevens boldly avowed his belief," savs the report of his speech, "that the very exist ence of the Republican party depended upon the I rebel Statu* being l:cpt out of 0# Uepon for cu ■ while." All, there is the trouble. If the Un | ion is restored—if the Southern States are per- I truiled to send representatives to Congress, it i will not work well for the Republican party. The interest of the Republican party is para mount to the Union. And this from tlie rep resentative of a party that has treated us du ring the past four yea'rs to so many smooth word about subordinating the interests of a | party to the Union. At iast we (iud that the j Republican party conies before the fJnion. Hut iwe are not surprised. The Republican party was placed belore the Union in 1801, when the I Crittenden Compromise was rejected, because it might damage the party, and why should it not retain the first place in the affections of the | same men in the year 18(>3 I "l'crish a hun dred Unions rather than abate an iota of our | principles!" was the shibboleth of the Tribune in | IS6I. The Union has perished, according to Mr. t Stevens, and must stay perished for the pood of \ the Republican }*irty\ This is toe watchword I of the same old disunion leaders in 1805. The truth is so plain that no man can mis tak< it, that the Democratic party is now the or.iy organization in the country in favor of the restoration of the Union, and the only par ty that is giving the President :t heartv and .-ul cere support in hi" efforts to restore the Union j and re-establish the supremacy of the Consti tution. The radical are now as hostile to the Union as ever, and the leaden of this faction are everywhere sounding the notes of prepara tion for a vigorous onset upon the President and his measures.—Jige. ~\Frotu the JV. Y. Times (Seward's organ) j The North and South—The Speech of Hon. Thad. Stevens. There are a great many Southerners in this city trying to make arrangements for a resurnp- i tion of businees. As r. general thing, their : conduct is manly, frank and sensible—calcula- I ted to win the confidence and respect of every generous and jdst community. Nine in every ten of them have been utterly ruined by the rebel l ion. Must of thein cast their fortunes in to tbe struggle fur a cause j t0 and finally defeated. TUT i have lost pur. ten, influence, property, phjldren, fnends—everything which makes life desirable, j Under such circumstances, weak men sink down into abject despair, or drag out the rest of their J lives in the safe obscurity of foreign lands - ; The defeated Southerners meet their calamity in a more manly style. They s'>o\v in their defeat, as they diJ in their struggle —courage,! desperate tenacity of purposes and that high spirited readiness to meet all the responsibilities of their conduct, which never fails to command the respect of the world. _ ! It may not seem wholly in keeping with this ! courageous temper, that quite a number of these , persons, on reading the speech of Hon. Thad. Stevens, have abandoned their business projects and gone home discouraged. They say they , cannot face the desolation which his plans pro pose for the South. They cannot put their farms again in order, clear them of their in cumbrances. rebuild their ruined dwellings, plant fresh crops and get a new start in life for their children and with the prospect, at any moment, of seeing the whole swept a wav by a ruthless confiscation. They cannot work with heart or hope while such a sword is hanging over their heads. We cannot blame them fort his feeling, buttiie fear out of which it grows seems to us quite unwarranted. There is nothing either in the j past conduct or the present temper of the North to justify the belief that any such policy as ihat recommended by Mr. Stevens will be adopted. True, Mr. S. is a prominent and influential pub lic man. His ripe age, his long experience in public life, and his position as official leader in the House of Representatives combine to give , weight and importance to his view scf public affairs. Hut as a public man he belongs rather to the past than the future. He is universally known to be extreme in all his views, some times to the verge of eccentricity; and while Congress and the country always listen with attention and respect to his expression of them, they are never allowed to shape, t<> any consid ablc extent, the practical conduct of public t --fairs. Mr. Stevens insisted throughout the last Congress that the Southern States and people should be treated as alien enemies ; but Con gress never concurred in his opinion. In the Raltimore Convention he urged the exclusion of delegates from eveey .Southern State that iiad been in rebellion. —but they were admitted by r. vote of two to one. So we venture to predict that if Mr. Stevens should introduce into Congress bis last grand scheme fcr a sweep ing confiscation ot Southern property, he will not get twenty-five votes in its favor. President Johnson'., speech to the Southern dclerati >n the other day, ought to reassure Southern mer. upon this point. His authority is certainty quiie as high as that of Mr. Stev en?, and hi; influence upon the coarse of hgis hition w.ll he ten-fold greater. Ire assures the Souih, in the most emphatic ternao, that ihey will not be persecuted nor treated harshly— that their welfare; will be consulted —that their past sufferings have atoned for their past offen ces—that we, regard them as me tuber* iko i same great family, alienated and betrayed into' fearful crimes lor a time, but still bound to us by t'es of r.P etion and to be trusted and cher- j ished upon their return' to the authority they j have tried to overthrow. This is the language I of a generous and magnaniinous statesmanship, j and it finds an echo in tiie national h°art. Ihe • ' people of the North are not revengeful. I..cy j have never hated the South. Even in the inidst, of the war they have cherished kindly senli- ments toward the people they were compelled I to light; and now that the war is over, the} have no thought cr wish to crush a fallen toe. h'or tiiey know perfectly well that the people of the .South must come to be our friends, —that as the nation is one, so have all its people a common welfare, —only to be secured ly com mon sentiments of respect and of mutual re gard. Nobody anywhere, who has any just conception of the duties and necessities of the immediate future, dreams of stripping the al ready impoverished people of the South, as a means oi promoting and building up the pros perity of tiie nation. The great mass of the Northern people, without regard to party, will sustain, heartily and vigorously, the policy of the President. They went into the war re luctantly, but they have fought it oit victor iously ; and they accept the extirpation of slav ery, the perpetuation of the Union, the increas ed consideration and respect which we enjoy n broad, and the self-reliance and courage which it has developed at heme, as an equivalent for the sufferings, burdens and sacrilices it has in volved. And much as we detest their cause, we Lave no reason to be ashamed of the man ner in which the people of the South evinced their devotion to it. Their courage, their de votion, their readiness to sacrifice everything dear to them in its behalf, do honor to the A naerican name. We trust the people of the South will pros orute, with continued energy and confidence, j their efforts to renew the prosperity of the | Southern States. Let them heed the President's j vurning and pay no regard to sjiceches that i may seem to breathe a spirit of hatred and re- j Tenge. They have their fate in their own i hands. If they will take hold promptly and j properly of the task that awaits them, appre- i eiate aright the new relations, political, indus- j trial, and social, which the war has brought a- ' bout, and act with wise reference to the neeee- j sities which those changed relations have crea- j ted, they can easily disarm all distrust and com- j matid the hearty and effective sympathy of all the people in the Northern States. DEMOCRATS i-THE DUTY OF THE HOUR. The following well timed article we appro priate from She Greensburg Argus: • i At 'lie last sesrioo, (18t>/>) an Abolition (verv J -y !} legislature, VOTED THEMSELVES fcjlON—besides mileage. ~. The session commenced on tiie 3d cf Janua ry, and closed on the 24th of March — eighty one days —a little over §l3 20 per day. Lut Forney says they were in session only titty-one days actually, which would be about §2l 30 PER DAY ! In this calculation we have averaged the mile age of the members at S3O. It is well known that many of the members were absent a great ,leal, attending to private speculations. But still worse. The Constitution prohibits members of the legislature from accepting any office created during his term ot office. In the early davs of our State, the members did their own graying.—Latterly, the. ministers at Harris burg, by invitation, opened the morning ses sions of the house with prayer. Last year the ministers being of the b'ack-:opperhead stripe, refused to pray without being paid for it. The Rev. B. S. 11111, a member of the house from Erie, wn® elected, or chosen in the luce of the Constitution, to officiate as chaplain, and our very "loyal" legislature paid him three hundred dollars for "extra services!" A very cunning v. of "whipping the devil around the stump." Ten days of the session had passed before lie was elected, and very ofteu he was not present to officiate. lie could not have prayed more l' an forty days. He received therefore, about $7 50 PER DAY for not more than forty prayers, of from two to threo minutes in length, let this same black copperhead legislature, and this Rev. B. S. Hill VOTED DOWN A BILL TO ALLOW JURORS ATTENDING COURT, TWO DOLLARS I'RR DAY. As the last legislature voted themselves and their offices about §153,000 compensation, and passed only forty -seven laws ot a general na ture, making sixty-two pages, fltteen of which are the appropriation bill, (the laws ot a purely j local character are many, and make a large volume) so that each law of a general nature costs the taxpayers of the State about eleven hundred and tifty dollars, besides the printing and bindjng 1 We have glanced at but one of the many a buses of the black copperhead party. It is a corrupt party. Oh ! tax-ridden voters of Bed ford. ' Pennsylvania, will you longer tug and pay, and pay and tug, or will you dismiss your faithless and corrupt servants, nnd vote for those old-fashioned Democrats, Davis and Lin ton, C'olborn and Smith. Seriously ponder o ver this question Our candidates are honest, fearless, independent and incorruptible. 'rt on the following day. This resolution was defeated, every Republican Senator vv\ "7 against the same, and thus an increase of the pay of the soldiers was prevented. — Age. MTVCLTNG OF THS PACKS. —WE learn that the Miscegenation theory has en practically commenced in a small way attire right place — Washington. A big black wench has been ap pointed to a position in the iemale apartment of the Treasury Department together with some "white trash." The white females it appears, board in clubs, at different houses, and the colored lady having made application to the proprietor for one oi those club houses for boarding was at once as signed to proper quarters- —When dinner came, the "white trash" and colored lady all met at the same table for their rations; but the white guests having no other mode ot manifesting their distustc for such social progress, gave the new boarder room enough at the table to ac commodate ten boarders. V< e hope that either Stanton or Ilolt, will issue an order compelling the "white trash" to sit close up to their col ored sister, and if they refuse to obey, appoint a military commission, and try them for trea son. Let them know that we have a govern ment, and that darkies have rights, that must be respectvd. WHAT DANIET. WEBSTER SAID.—We can not publish too often the following prophetic language, uttered in Faneuil Hall, Boston, iu 1850, by the immortal Webster. Said he: If the fanatics and abolitionists ever get the power into :bir hands, they will override the Constitution, set the Supreme Court at defiance change and make laws to suit themselves, lay violent hands on those who differ with them in their opinions, or dare question their infallibili ty, and finally bankrupt the country and de luge it with blood. How fearfully, in eveiy word, has the pre diction come to pass! POST THE BOOKS —Within a week or so ihe following huge robberies have come to light; C. Winsor, Mercantile Bank § 275,000 A. 'I ownsenu, New Haven Bank. ... 115,000 Smith J. Eastman, Produce Broker. . 500.000 Henry B. .Jenkins, Phoenix Bank... 300,000 I*. li. Mumford, Stock Broker 130.^00 E. M. Ketch urn, Banker 4,500,000 Unknown Cashier 100,000 Total §5,920,000 Political crime and private immorality go hand in hand. The days of Republican suc cess are those of stealing and robbery. Horace Qrecly, in an article denouncing matrimonial advertisements in a paper, says of women, that — "Besides priding themselves upon their per sonal attractions, and fancying them of more value than they really are, women are art less a 1 1 unsophisticated and easily deluded." i If the r e is any -woman more "unsophisti cated" or more "easily ddu led" than Horace | Grceiy himself, it must be Greely's wife ' There is not another one sure. Hates of 2tt>otrtising. One square, one insertion, $1 GO One square, three insertions, 1 30. One square, each additional ■ 50 3 months. G months. 1 year. One square, $4 50 $0 00 $lO oft Two square;, 6 00 9 00 16 0G Three squares, 800 12 00 20 00 Half column, IS 00 25 00 40 00 One column, 30 00 45 00 80 00 Administrators and Executors' notices, $3 00, Auditor's notiees, if under lOlioeg, $2 50. Sheriff 'e sales, $1 75 per tract- Table work,- double the above rates; figure work 25 per cent, additional. Estnys,Cautionsand Notices toTrespassers, $2 00 for three insertions, if not above 10 lines. Mar riage notices, 50 cents each, payable in advti.ce. Obituaries over five lines in length, and Resolution* of Beneficial Association', at half advertising rates, payable in advance. Announcements of deaths, gratis. Notices in editorial calamus, 15 cents per line. [J7p"N T o deductions to advertisers of Paten Medicines, or Advertising Agents. VOL. 9, NO. 9 A RADICAL PAPEIS BOLTING.— lire Troy (O; 'Juries, a radical Republican paper in Miami county, is not satisfied with the action of the Republican State Convention in indorsing Pres ident Johnson. It says, after quoting the in dorsement : "This of course settles the matter here in Ohio until the next Convention meets. Those i who telieve in supporting the President in his wholesale pardoning of rebel. and in refusing the ballot to colored soldiers, wifi of course support the candidates that stand upon this platform. For our own part, we support no such principles nyr the men who advocate them. "MISCEGENATION,," —A singular case of mis cegenation caine before the police court in New \ ork on Monday, when it was discovered that Charles Henry Ila use, a colored waiter, had not only married a white woman, but had de serted her and afterwards taken to himself an other. By both of them he had children. The women were seat to Black well's Island forsix months. WHAT WILL COME? —If the abolitionists re main in power the following will come. In some of their States while men unable to read are already prevented from voting. The aboli tionists are now striving to give negroes votes. The next move will be to prevent men from vo ting unless they possess a certain amount of money, as in England. Then the ballot-boxes will only be accessible to the rich, while the poor are excluded. Such is the policy of the abolitionists. They are tearing down the dis tinctions between the whites and blacks and building up distinctions between the rich and the poor. This they call "reconstruction." A CAPITAL EVASION. —Two literary ladies were lately witnesses in a trial. One of them upon hearing the usual ques tion asked. "What is your name ? and how old are you ?" turned to her companion, and said: "I do not like to tell my age; not that I have any objection to having it known; but I don't want it published in all the newspapers*" "Well, said the witty Mrs. , "I will tell you how to avoid it. You have heard the ob jection to all. hearsay evidence; tell them you dt n't remember when you were born, and all you know of it is by hearsay/' gar The Abolitionists of Minuesota, in their State Convention, a week ago, read one Andy Johnson out of thfiir nartv. Won't Andy feel don't behave tumseli. Our opinion is that said Andy will read "the paity" out of power if it don't soon behave it self and support "the government." persons who call themselves the "Un~ ! ion party" are the only or.es now in the coun- I try who are opposed to Union- The Southern I Stu'es want to get back into the Union; Presi ! dent Johnsen wants them back: the Democracy want them back, and every conservative man, i North and South, wants them back: but the I "Yunyun party," with Simon Camerou and Thaddeus Stevens at tiieir head, are determin ed tlmre shall be no Union—"for awhile"—un til ihej get their "hands strengthened" with perpetual power. "Union party," indeed! Ridiculous —unless : hey mean u union of col ors. REPUBLICANISM VS. THE PRESIDENT. —The Republican party is coming into open hostility against President Johnson. Their Pennsylva nia State platform —framed to suit Thad. Stev ens, Grow, fcc., says: "That the people of the Southern states can not be safely entrusted with the political rights,, which they have rejected." - But Andrew Johnson writes to the governor of Mississippi that "The people must be trusted with their own government and, if trusted, my opinion is that they will act in good laith, and restore their former constitutional relations with all the States composing the Union." : Man cannot serve God and Mammon; anu Republicans who wish to sustain the President cannot vote for the tickets nominated hy the ring-leaders who oppose the President's restor ation policy. LOTAI. AND DISLOYAL. —The late Republican convention in Minnesota refused to endorse the restoration policy of President Johnson. They voted down a resolution to that effect. That was loyal. The Democratic convention of New York held on the same day, fuiiy endorsed the pol icy of President Johnson for restoring the rebel States. That was disloyal. And so we go! THE only way a voter can declare in favor of the policy of Andrew Johnson, is to vote a gainst the Republican candidates for State and county oiScc-s. WAITEB —Please, sir, how will you nave your steak cooked ? • Serious gentleman— '.Veil done, good and faithful servant. fcjrln Connecticut no white man can vote un- I less ho can read the Constitution, and yet it is I proposed to vote on the 2d of October, in that State, on an amendment to the constitution I giving negroes the right of suffrage. The ab olitionists contend that '-any man who opposes I universal suffrage among all men, whether j white or black, is a sham and a cheat," and ! yet tiic noses of the abolitionists of Connect i icut are so long that they cannot see beyond, , them and observe the inconsistency of their po ! siiion on this subject. <3*lf you aro poor, sit down and growl a boot it. By so doing you are sura to get rich and make yourself particularly agreeable ' everybody.