BY MEYERS & MENGEL. TERMS OF PUBLICATION. IBK BEDFORD GAZBTTK is jablished every Pri .iay c rr.ing by METERS A MEVSRL. at $2 00 per notum. if paid strictly in advance : S2.SO if paiJ within six months; $3.00 if not paid within six months. All subscription accounts MUST I* truled annually. No pper will be sent oat of the State unless paid for IN ADVANCE, and all such nbseription? will invariably be discontinued at the expiration of the time for which they are aid. All ADVERTISEMENTS for a less term than three months TEX CENTS per line for each In sertion. Special notices one-half additional All resolution# of AasociatJonJ; communications of limited or individual interest, and notices of mar riage# and deaths exceeding five lines, few cents per line. Editorial notices fifteen cents per line. All legal Untie** of every h ad, and Orphans Co -t and Judicial Sales, are refit red by law t r* published la both papers published in this pi are All advertising due after first insertion. A liberal discount ia made to person# adverting by the quarter, half year, or year, as f A tows: 3 months, ft months. 1 year. ♦One square - - * $4 00 sft 00 S.O 0t) Two squares - - - '> "0 SO!) "" 11 00 Three squares ---5 00 32 00 20 00 Quarter column - - 14 GO - GO Half column IS 00 2 - 0 - 46 t) V_ the Cor ier. the Justice* of the Peace, and Constable* in the different Townships in the Vault, of Bedford. Greeting: KNOW YE. that in pursuance of a precept to me directed, under the hand and #••! of the H n. ALEXANDER KING, President of the several Court*of Common P!Tl<,'E. —All per - :.s interested, are hereby notified that the f-.i! wir.g accountants have filed their accounts in the Register's Office of Bedford county, a:- ! that the -•.line will be presented to the Orphan- Conrr. in and for said county, on Tue- lay tbe #;h day of 3pt.. next, at the Court House, in Bedford, f r r.firmation : The. OCCOUEU of Samuel L. II AM alter ami J Piper Smith, a im'r? of the estate of J -hn Smith. I of Schellsl-urg borough, -iee'd. The account .J Duncan McYicker. Esq.. trustee for the sale of the real estate of Samuel Hull, late of Napier tp.. dee'd. The account of Isaac L Snyder, adm'r of the est.-te of Samuel Snyder, late of Middle Woodbury tp.. dee'd. The account of J. If Dilling and George Hoover, adm 'rs of the estate of Martin Hoover, late of Lib erty tp., dee d. The account of John P Ake and Abraham Hull, adaTrs of the estate of John Ake. late of Union tp.. dee d. The account of Michael S Miller, admr of the estate of John H Miller, late of St. Clair tp., deed. The account of William Gepbart. adm'r of the e-'ate of Eve Staekey. late of Bedford tp do. 'd The account of John Louderbaugb. guardian of Joseph Catharine and Peter Garlick minor cniMren of Kaehacl Gariiek, dee'd. Tho account of John G. .-mith. guardian of Franklin Kegg minor son of J-.hn Kegg. dec'-l. The final account of Levi Hardingcr iiduj r of the i ,-tate of Jonathan C. Dieken, late of Cumber- j land valley tp., dee'd. The see-unt of Peter H Shire? and Samuel Stall), adm'r# of the estate of Wm Stahl, late of Bedford borough, -let -J The account of P. ¥ Lehman, E-q Exe -u lor of the last will and testament of Mary Hy--'ung late of Londonderry tp.. dee'd Theace-iunt of Lewis M Statler. adm'r of the e.-:atcoi'Joseph Brinkey late of Juniata tp., deed Tbe account of Geo I>. Shuck, one of tbeexecn tors of the last will and testament of Josiah D Shuck, late of Bedford borough, dee d ALSO —The final account of Cyrus Penrose adm'r. of the estate of Wm. Penrose, late of St Clair tp., dee'd., f->r confirmation on the lath of Sept next, at an adjourned court The act uut of John Major. Esq . trustee to sell the real e-tate of Michael Reed, late of Liberty twp , dee'd. aug.l3w4 O E SHANNON. Register. (IST OF CAUSES put down .or j September—Adjourned Court—l4th day. 3>l. Dieken vs. Muses Dickens Ex'r Wm Rogers vs Riddiesburg C A I Co Paul S Mock vs Josiah Burk is S Fluck et al vs Able Putt Same vs Jas Bowser Riddiesburg C A ICo vg Broadtop C A ICo Simian Waiter, et al vs Joseph Helsel, et al Thus Ritchey vs Jacob Lingenfelter Fredolin Smith, etal vs Jno Cavei. ler. et al Jno Peterson vs Jas Heffr.er. et al Simon Walter vs Jno B-.yer, et al Sophia Hook, et al vs Thos Growden. et al S L Russell. tru-tee.Ac. vs Elisabeth Beeler, et al A C Yaughan, Ac. vs K M Trout, et al Pan! S Mauk vs Josiah C Burk Michael Ritchey vs S S Fluck John Metzgar's adm'r vs John Corley et al John Cessna vs Jonathan Bowser Heed A Schell vs Aaron W Reed Fredolin ftrnith. ct al v? Alex Fletcher Wrn S Fluek, Esq. vs A J Snively lien Bridenthal vs Rich liazefett M ills A H"gue vs Thomos Johr.s Hester ft Barclay, et al vs Win Hoffman Isaac L Fickes vs G T McCormick et al P G Morgan, Com, Ac. vs Danl Harshberger Isaac L Fickes vs G T McCormick, et al B R tiarretson vs 'ieoTroutman isaac F Grove vs Wm ftumner A Co Micbl Ritchey vs Homer Neice Ji W Garretton vs Philip Little et al Mary Ann Hammond vs Wm Koontz David Over vs G W Kupp, at al Thus Growden vs Arch Blair, et al VS Mary Wigfield ot al Certified Aug. 17. Ift6B augfflml 0. E SHANNON, Prof v. i • - rpEHMS for every description of Job JL PRINTING CASH' for the reason that for every article we use, we must pay cash; and the cash system will enable us to do our work as low a? it can be done in tbe cities PVEBY VARIETY AND STYLE "F JOB PRINTING neatly executed at low late? at TUB BEOFORD GAZETTE office Call and eave yeur orders. fT*HE BEDFORD GAZETTE lathe JL best AdvertD'vg Medium n Southern Penn sylvania 4 RA RE CHANCE IS OFFER ED f\ ALL PERSONS To display their Goods; T< sell their Goods: To gather information; To make known their want*; ! Ac., Ac. Ac. Ac , Ac., Ac., Ac., Ac , by advert isingin the columns of THE GAZETTE Wk* HrHfovU 2ioofland's Column. VOU ALL i j HAVE HEARD or HOOELAND'S GERMAN" BITTERS. : j AND IIOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. Prepared by Dr. C. M Jackson. Philadelphia. r Their introduction into this country from Ger . many occurred in Ibid. ' THEY CURED VOIR j FATHERS AND MOTHERS, ) ! : ' And will cure you and your children. They are entirely different from TTTT 'he many preparations n w in the country cal I—l led Bitters or Tonics, i They are no tavern ♦ preparation, or any thing like one : but good, honest, reliable medi -1 cine? Tbey are j The greatest IMOWM remedies for - Liver Complaint, t I DYSPEPSIA, Nervous Debilitv. JAUNDICE, Diseases of the Kidneys, ERUPTIONS OF THE SKIN. , • and all Diseases arising from a Disordered Liver, stomach, or IMPURITY OF THE BLOOD Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles. Ful'nes ' of Blood to tbe Head. Acidity of tbe Stomach. Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food. Full - ness or Weight in the ftt- macb. Sour Eruc taiicßs. ftfnking or Fluttering at tbe Pit of the Stum&ch. Swimming of the • ( Head. Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering at the / . Heart. Caoking or Suff eating Set.sa f Iti -ns when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of' " Vision. Dots or Webs before the sight. Dull Pain in the Head, I'efi eiency ol Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes. Pain in the fti-le. Back. Chest. Limbs, etc . ftu ldeu Flushes of" Heat. Burning in the Flesh. Constant Imagi nings of Evil and Great Depression of spirits. All there indicate di*ea"s of th■ Liver or Di gestive Organs,combined with imp ire Hood. HOOFLAND S GERMAN BITTERS is entirely vegetable and contain? no liquor. It is a cmpc-uni of Fluid Extra,-ts. The Roots, f Herbs, an-1 Barks from which these extracts are made, are gathered in Germany. All th? medi cinal virlueus are ex . traded from them by a scientific Chemist, f ft These extracts are then forwarded to this v/ country to be used ex pressly fur the manalaeture of these Bitters. There is no alcoholic substance of any kind used in c mp.iunding the Bitters, hence ii is the only Bitters that can he used in esses where alcoholic stimulants are not advisable. IIOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC i is a combination of all the ingredients of the Bit ters. with PURE Santa Cruz Ruin, Orange, etu. It is u#el for the same disease# as tbe Bitters, in ca-e where some pure alcoholic stimulus is required. Y'- u will bear in mind that these remedies are en tirely different from any other? advertised for tbe cure -f the diseases named, these being soient'fie ers are mere decoctions of rum in some form. The TONIC is decidedly one of the most pleasant and agreeable remedies ever offered to the public Its taste is exquisite. It is a pleasure to take it. while its life-giving, exhilarating, and medicinal quali ties have cause! it to be known as the greatest of all tonics. DEBILITY. There is no medicine equal to Hoofland's Ger man Bitters or Tonic in cases of Debility. , They impart a tone |d and vigor to the whole system, strengthen -I- the appetite, cause an enjoyment of the food, enable the stomach to di gest it. purify the blood, give a good, sound, healthy complexion, eradicate the yellow tinge from the eve. impart a bloom to the cheeks, and change the patient from a short-breathel. emaci ated. weak, and nervous invalid, to a full-faced, stout, and vigorous person. Weak and Delicate Children are made strong by using the Bitters or Tonic. In fact, they are Family Medicines. They can be administered with perfect safety to a child three months old, tbe most delicate female, or a man of ninety. Thrn remedies are the best Blood Purifiers ever known and will cure all diseases resulting from bad bled. Keep your blood pure; keep your Liver in order: w keep your digestive organs in a sound, I healthy condition, by the use of these reme * J die", and no diseases will ever assail you. The best men in the country recommend them. If years of honest reputation go for anything, you must try these prep-arations. ~~ FROM HON" GEO. W WOODWARD. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylva nia. PHILADELPHIA. March IS, 18-37. I find that -H-iofiand's German Bitters is not an intoxicating beverage, but is a good tonic, use ful in disorders of tbe digestive organs, and of great benefit in cases of debility and waut of ner vous action in the system. Y'ours Truly. GEO W. WOODWARD FROM HON. JAMES TAOMPSOX. Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. PHILADELPHIA. April 2ft, 1866. I consider "Hoof!and' German Bitters" a valua ble medicine in case . of attaeks of Indiges tion or Dyspepsia. I \ can certify this from my experience of it. -iTY. Yours, with respect, JAMES THOMPSON. FROM REV. JOSEPH U. KEXXARD, D D., Pastor of the Tenth Baptist Church, Philadelphia. DR. JACKSOX—DEAR SIR:—I have been fre quently requested to connect my name with rec- j i-mtnendations of different kinds of medicines, but 1 regarding the pi active as out of my appropriate sphere, l have in all cases declined*; but with a ! clear proof in various instaueos. and particularly ; in my own family, of the usefulness ot Dr. Hoof land's German Bitters, I depart for once from my usual course, to express my full conviction - that for general debility of the system, and es pecially for Liver Com m -r- plaint, it is a safe and valuable preparation. In some cases j it may fail ; bnt usual-i-v ly, I doubt not. it will be very beneficial to those who suffer from the ab ive causes. Yours, very respectfully, J H KENNARD, Eigth, below CoatesStreet. CAUTION. Hoofland's German Remedies are counterfeited. ■ The Genuine have the signature of C, M. J vca- ! so.* on the front of the outside wrapper of each bottle, an-i the name of the article blown in each ; j bottle. All others are counterfeit. Price of the Bitters, $1 per bottle; ! Or, a half dozen for $.3. Price of the Tonic, ft I .30 per bottle; | Or, a half dozen for ft7 .30. The tonic is put up in quart bottles. \ Recollect that it is Dr Hoofland's German ! Remedies that are so universally used and so ! highly recommended; w-v and do not allow tbe Druggist to induce I ftyou to take anything else that he may just as good, he cause he makes a larger profit on it. These Reme- , dies will be sent by express to any locality upon j a j-plication to the PRINCIPAL OFFICE, At the German Medicine Store. No. ft.il ARCH STREET, PhiUtelphia. CI I AS. M. EVANS, PROPRIETOR. F irtcerly C. M JACKSON A Co. These Remedies are for sale by Druggists. Store keepers and Medicine Dealers everywhere. Do not forget to tgamin* the article, you bmy [ in order to get the geumu*. may2ij'teyl fhs IMfflfl j DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL NOMINEES. FOB PRBSIDJSNT. HORATIO SEYMOUR, OF SEW YOBK. FOB VICE PRESIDENT, FRANCIS P. BLAIR. OF MISSOURI. A.VfI'AIGN SOStt. 1 A CONTRAST BETWEEN DEMOCRATIC AND RADICAL RULE. A IR—SUftA NX All. Our fathers made a government. And fixed it up all right : The people then were all content, Their taxes were so light : The Democrats then hs-1 the rule. The laws they made were just : They also had another rule— "ln God wc put our trust." Chorus. —Then oar taxes Were so very light. We always had the cash on hand To pay them off at sight. While Dtmt craiic mtn did rule, Our income was so great We had a '-surplus revenue' To give to every State ; The people then were rich and gay. With plenty were content, And every patriot dii say, God bless the government. Cho. —Then our taxe?. Ac. Now Radicals have made a debt More than we can figure : And they will make it bigger yet In Bureaus for the nigger ; For now one half of all we make With plow, or spade, or axes, In the way of Luxe# Cho. —Now high taxes Are daily growing bigger: He pay a million every week To feed the idle nigger. But working men of every class Have now made up their mind To give the Radicals a paus. And leave them all behind ; It will be done now, you may bet The buttons on your coats. Then we will pay the nation's debt In legal-tender notes. Cho. —Then our taxes. Ac. WE tell our Democratic friends to compel political opponent- to contest this canvass on facts— not on personal ities. Tell them we go before tiie people on the great issues. Shall we restore the Constitution and the Union of our fath ers ? Shall wo restore ami preserve the supremacy of the white race, or make the negro the ruling element ? Shall we preserve and continue the immense National Debt, to please the Bondholders Shall we continue a large standing army to support the negro power south Shall we continue the I "reedmen's Bureau to aid the despotism south and the carjict baggers? Shall we continue to give the Bond holders gold and other people rags worth about 70 cents on the dollar? Shall we continue to vote all these and thus vote over five hundred mil lions of taxes upon ourselves? All persons who wish to continue this condition of things will vote the radical ticket from the President down —those opposed, will not so vote. Choose ye between! In lftGl, when the Abolition party came into power, the public debt was only seventy millions. That party has been in power eight years, and the debt is Twenty-Jive hundred millions. During Buchanan's administration die expenses of the general government were about seventy millions annually. Now, under Republican rule, they are over five Hundred millions a year ! This is the honed reform party!— Facts are stubborn things. In thrusting Virginia, Mississippi and Texas out of tbe Union of tbe States, and placing them under the sword of the military, the Radicals are guilty of revolutionary usurpation. The act is au outrageous violation of the Constitution, and will surely be re sented by a free people. Under our federal system of government, there is no place in the Union for subject prov inces. "Let us have peace," says Gen. Grant. His wish will be realized next November, when he will receive his ev erlasting quietus, and through the elec tion of Seymour the country receive the peace it so greatly need*. BEDFORD. PA.. FRIDAY MORNING, ADGDST 28. 1868. The Radicals are fa#t urging the country to the very verge of a new and terrible civil war. In thrusting three States out of the Uuion, and in attempt ing, through the action of carpet-bag Legislatures, to deprive the people of two other States of their suffrages for President, the Radicals have carried their gigantic usurpation far beyond the point of forbearance. When the war, wantonly provoked by Greely, Forney and other Jacobin incendiaries, shall come, they will not be suffered to lurk in the rear and shout, On to Rich mond ! I have knocked you down, I have bea ten you, I have spit in your throat, I have picked your pocket, says the trooly loil man, and now if you heat me back again or attempt to deprive me of my hard-earned gains, I will cry out revolution, and everybody who isn't a rebel and a traitor and a bloody revolutionist and a disloyal man and a repudiationist will fly to my rescue. Let us have peace ; ami now, my good friend, for another dig at your purse. ■ The speculators, traders, and Indiana gents ha^veagainsuceeetled in provoking an Indian war on our Western frontier. Dc#patches from Kansas state that the Indians have mustered iu force vari ously estimated fiom Goo to 1,500 men, and have threatened to sweep the re mote settlements. Women and chil dren arerejtorted as fa.#t coming up to the denser settlements, for protection. In one of Chief-Ju#tice Chase's let ters he Mivs: "Four years more the rule of such men as are now dominat ing Congress will leave u# little of mor ality and Republicanism worth preserving." This, we suppose, ans wers the question, whether Mr. Chase will support the Democratic nominees. And it ought to answer the question as to whom thousands of conservative and fair minded Republicans will sup port. The recent victories in Kentucky, Oregon, and Montana are having their effect upon the Radicals, as powerful a# that upon Belshazzar when he saw the mysterious writing upon the wall. Already there is wavering in the ranks. As they hear further Democratic in roads upon their ranks they will break and scatter in dismay. Their no-poli cy reader nud u-uxainuumnce among the intelligence of the country. Our Democratic exchanges are going into the chicken business again, over recent victories. Talk of chicken choler! It hasn't visited Democratic coops. Even the appearance of a Rad ical political preacher wouldn't affect those roosters. They look defiant, and are doing a wonderful amount of erow ing- The Democrats are showing great spirit everywhere. The genuine en thusiasm of the country is with them. It rests with the active workers to bring it out. Raise the true issues of the day, and thousands of our old friends will leave the Radical crowd. The Democracy and Constitutional Government is our motto. The Tribune adroitly resorts to the Robinson election case in Pennsylvania to direct public attention from the stu pendous frauds in Florida, by which a bogus Legislature takes away from the people of an entire State the right to vote for President. Who are the peace-makers? The ex-rebel Generals Cheatham and For rest, who implore for peace, or the truculent i adical Parson Rrownlow, who sent an armed negro militia at. the throats of the people? The Pittsburg Chronical answered the other day. The Pre*# shamelessly persists in its advocacy of the usurpation of the car pet-hag Legislature of Florida, in choosing electors for President, in or der to defeat the will of the people. The Radical tariff polioy increases the burthens of the people, diminishes the receipts of the treasury, and en riches ttie capitalist, but does not in crease the wages of labor. The Radicals claim that the carpet baggers have repealed the disfranchis ing laws in Alabama. Yet they require every voter to swear that he is in favor of negro suffrage. The substitution of the National Rank currency for the greenbacks of thefJovernment, costs the people $lB,- 000,000 annually in interest. Gen. Grant will be about as success ful in riding into the White House on his mule, as Fremont was on hi.swooly horse. The bondholders have their interests atstakeupon the next election, llut their interests and the people's are not the same. Cotton is grown in thirteen of the United States and one Territory OUR FINANCES. JIHI?? Thurninn on Bcbl ant! Taxation. The Hon. Allen G. Thurman, cf Ohio, addressed the recent West Vir ginia Deniocra'ic Mass Convention, following Mr. Pendleton. Judge Thurman was the Democratic candi date for Governor of Ohio at the last election, and is the United States Sen ator elect who will take Ben. Wade's place next March. The Public Debt. Judge Thurman said the public debt amounted to $2,500,000. What it was exactly at this time was difficult to say, from the fact that the Treasury De partment wat quite dilatory in making its monthly statements. Perhaps this neglect arose from the fact that at the last monthly statement the debt bad increased about nine millions of dol lars in a single month, and that the next month will show an increase of twenty millions—a monthly expendi ture sufficient in the days of Jackson to run the government for six months in ali its department-, while this is sim ply the increase of the public debt for the short space of one month. The speaker read from the printed report of the Secretary of the Treasury to prove the correctness of hi# estimates. Taxation Then and -Voir. What a contrast this condition of na tional finances presented with that which ex islet I at the time that Jack son made his proclamation that the United States owed not a cent in the world ' Why wonder these Radicals sought to avoid the issue, and declared the only question was whether we should have another civil war ? This cry might do to frighten a few —the speaker was about to say obi women, but he would not—it might do to frighten a few wavering men, who could be frightened out of the country by a few old women with broomsticks. This terrible second civil war was put forward now to divert attention from the public debt. Compare our debt with that of Great Britain. Our debt was two thousand eight hundred millions, that of Great Britain four thousand millions. But while our population was only 31,0Xi,- 000, the population of Great Britain was 30,000,000. The rate of taxation in Great Britain was ninety cents on the hundred dollars, while the American people were taxed at the rate of $3.03 on the hundred dollars: more than three times as much as the taxes im posed on what we had been in the habit of pitying as the poor, tax-ridden people of Great Britain. Some one might say, "You are mistaken, Mr. Thurman ; 1 do not pay $3.03 on the hundred dollars." It might not be the ease with individuals, but such was the rate of taxation on the people iu the aggregate, upon their jtersonal and real estate. Who Pays the taxes I It might be claimed that the labor ing poor paid no taxes. That was a great mistake. Labor paid all the taxes. [Tremendous applause.] How was it that labor paid all the taxes? The problem was simple. It could be proved from tlie Scriptures: "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou get thy bread." It was the mandate of Heaven, that nothing was produced without labor. Not a particle of wealth was created except by labor. The lit tle poverty stricken boy of Western Virginia, who followed tiie plow, con tributed more to the material wealth of the country than did the richest boddholder who rolled in luxurious ease. [Applause.] The grain of corn dropped by the little boy would grow and benetit the world, but the inau who did nothing but live on the inter est of his bonds added nothing to the wealth of the country. Suppose some ambitious young cop perhead should take it into his mind to be the owner of six shirts—but If this Radical government continues much longer, you won't be able to make so expensive an investment. [Applause.] This ambitious young copperhead goes to the store and pro poses to get eighteen yards of muslin, for which the merchant charges four dollars. "How is this," says young copperhead, "I used to buy eighteen yards of muslin for two dollars?" If the merchant answered truthfully, he would say, "It is true we now charge you four dollars for the same quantity of muslin you used to buy for two dol lars." The reason is this : There is a tax of three cents a pound on the raw cotton. The manufacturer who buys must add this to the priceof the manu factured article. Then Uncle Sam comes to him and says: "Dear Mr. Shoddy, I bought shoes of you in Mas sachusetts which lasted my soldiers only a few days ; you sold me cloth to make them pantaloons, which were not whole any longer after they had stopped to drink from the brook the first time. I put a little tax on your business." Mr. Shoddy puts that lit tle tax on the manufactured goods and charges it on the merchant. Then comes Uncle Sam to the merchant and says: "My dear fellow, I know you are truly loyal (laughter and applause ; you must pay taxes on your sales." Or, if he is not truly loyal, so much the more necessity that he shall pay, and this is clapped on the price, and when he finds young copperhead comes to buy his six shirts he finds three separate taxes on the goods, which he has to pay. You see now who has the taxes to pay. It is the la boring man. And so he will have these taxes to pay until the Radical party is dead. Judge Thurman dwelt at some length upon the draughts made upon the peo ple's pockets by trie government. A national debt has been pronounced a national blessing; but the problem had failed to besolved satisfactorily to tho. e who suffered the effects. The aggregate value of the property in this country was below what it was in ISGU. Then the negroes were put down at a thousand millions. Lands can now be bought in the South at five dollars an acre, which were before the war worth fifty dollars per acre. We have in this country the most inexorable system of taxtion in the world. It follows a man into every nook and corner of his business. If bis wife has made a pound of butter, it is put down on his income list. If some old grandmother ha# plucked the feath ers from an aged and forlorn goose, the feathers and the poor eld goose must be taxed to support the govern ment. These iuquisatoriul tax-gath erers have raked this country from centre to circumference to find every particle of property that can be taxed. TAX OFFICE SCENE. Tax Collector—Now, Mr. Jay Cooke, we arc ready for you, sir. Your "mon ey# and credits" show $120,000; your household furniture, office fixtures, horse and buggy, and some other lit tle things, foot up $4,575 more, Total, $123,000. Deduct $120,000 held in 5-20 Government bonds, which are not tax able, and the balance is $3,575. Your State and county tax on this last a inount Is $71.50. Now, Mr. Bellows, I have your re ceipt ready. Your "monies and cred its" show $050; shop fixtures and tools, $1,875; household furniture, fts-30; horse and wagon, $275. Total taxable for State and county purposes, $3,9-30. Tax $79. • Bellows—llow is this? Jay Cooke's personal property amounts to $123,575 and he pays ouly $71.50 State and county tax, while I, with less than sl,oo<>, all told, am asked to pay $8,50 more than he. Jay Cooke—Ah, uiy good friend, you see my $120,000 in bonds are not taxable. Iu the country's extremity, with other truly loyal men, I came to the rescue with my greenbacks. I loaned my bleeding country, threaten ed with destruction by rebels and cop perheads, my moLey, and with that gratitude which becomes a grateful people "engaged in the interests of God and humanity," I am exempt.— Thus it should be with a magnanimous christian people. Bellows—And I, in ray country's real extremity, had no greenbacks to loan, but I shouldered a musket, and gave my hotly to the cause, a leg of which I left on the field of Shiloh, as you see, but a "grateful people, engag ed in the interests of God and human ity," have no tax-exemption for me. This may be all right, hut 1 don't see it. Jay Cooke—But you see, Mr. Bel lows, mine was a voluntary act. I could not have beencompelied to fur nish the money. You volunteered, it is true, but you could have been com pelled to go. Bellows—Yes, sir. 1 did volunteer when mv services were needed, but your voluntary act was after the act was done—when you felt sure your in vestment was safe. The policy that exempts your hundreds of thousands from taxation and taxes my few hun dred# is founded on villainy, sir. You loaned your greenbacks worth less than six cents on the dollar, and are now claiming dollar for dollar in gold in payment. I risked ray life and gave a limb to the cause, and when I came home to my family, and to work for their support, I am made to pay full National, State and county taxes on my little possessions, while bonds, purchased with depreciated greenbacks, are exempt. This nice little game of "God and humanity," superfine loyalty and pa triotic disinterestedness, is downright robbery, sir, and they who uphold it are no better than thieves, sir. With our ballots next November, we will sink any man, or set of men, who stand up for it, so deep that the sound of Gabriel's trump will never reach them. Do you mind that, Mr. Jay Cooke? Exit disputants. Tax Collector, solus— lt strikes this individual very forcibly, that it ain't all wind that blowsoutof that bellows. SENATOR DOOMTTEK'S INDICTMENT OF THE RADICAL DARTV. In a single sentence Mr. Doolittle has crowded a terrible indictment of the Radical party. He is no Democrat, but a Republican of the Lincoln school. He went with his party until it struck wildly for despotism, and then he left it to its fate. It has no stronger antag onist. He says, in the sentence refer red to '• "IP violation of the Constitution ; in violation of the pledges made and of ten repeated, from the first battle of Bull Run to the end of the war; pledg es to the North toget men and money; pledges especially made to the Demo cracy to get their support in the field and in the elections; pledges made to the South to induce them to lay down their arms and to renew their alle giance; and pledges to foreign pow ers to prevent intervention—in viola tion of all these solemn pledges, upon which we invoked the blessings of Almighty God upon our cause, and by which alone we gained strength to master the rebeelion ; in violation of the natural and inalienable rights of the civilized men of every State to govern themselves, and in violation of the clear provision of tbe Constitution, which leaves to each State for itself the right to regulate suffrage, this party by expost facto laws, difranchised hundreds of thousands of the most in telligent of their citizens, and has for ced upon ten Slates and six millions of our own Anglo-Saxon race the uni versal and unqualified suffrage of sev en hundred thousand ignorant and, in the main, half-civilized negroes." Quite a large party of English tourists have congregated at Niagara Falls. The tariff policy of the Radicals robs the people of millions annually for the benefit of rich monopolies. VOL 64.—WHOLE No. 5.457. cruris os SEVSOIR. Some two or three weeks since we published the telegrams that passed be tween Secretary Stanton, Governor Curtin and Gov. Seymour, at the time the Confederate army, under Gen. las? was invading Pennsylvania. It will be remembered that Lincoln, Stanton and Curtin all expressed themselves highly grateful to Gov. Seymour for the prompt and efficient aid rendered to Gov. Curtin in the hour of his ex tremity and distress. We are glad to see that Governor Curtin still adheres to the good opinion he then formed of Gov. Seymour, and is manly enough to avow his admiration of our gallant candidate. We ask those Radicals who are accusing Mr. Seymour of <7/.*- loyulty, to put the following in their pipes and smoke it: Said a gentleman to Mr. Curtin the other day, as they sat in the reading room of the Union club house in Philadelphia: "Well Governor, what is your opinion of the Democrat ic Convention "I think," said the Governor, "that a stronger ticket might have been selected, such as Hendricks and Hancock for example." "But," continued the questioner, "what is your opinion of Governor Seymour?" Mr. Curtin replied : "Well, sir, if I were asked to mention a man who, in my estimation, possessed the attributes of a perfect gentleman, a cultivated scholar, a thorough statesman and a sincere Christian, I could without hesi tation name Horatio Seymour of New York." "How about Seymour's loy alty?" "After the dispatches that 1 sent Seymour at the time of the rebel raid into Pennsylvania," replied the Governor, "it would hardly become me to impugn his loyalty; the fact is J have never doubted it. I understand that Belmont is having all the dispatches sent by Stanton and myself printed, and I have no doubt they will be in the hands of every Democratic stump speaker through the catnpaighn. We had better giveupattaekingSeymour's loyalty, for the opposition hold the trump c-ard in that matter." Exactly. We do hold the "trump card in that matter," and we intend to prove, out of the mouths of their own witnesses, that all the mean, slander ous, miserable charges now made by the Radical Party against Mr. Sey mour, are the basest fabrications that * ever poluted the lips of the most un conscionable liar out of pandemonium. I.IKUE I.\< KKA.Ni: OF TIIK \ ATIOX AI. UEKT IX JII, V. The official statement of the public debt hasjust been published. It shows an increase, during the month of July#of Thirteen Million, Two Hundred and fifty-eight Thousand, Five Hundred and Ninety-three Dollars, and ; Ninety-three Cents,. What has become of all the money raised by taxation ? How has it been squandered ? To what purposes has it been ap plied ? The debt haseonstantly increased for months. Is that to continue? Are the people to be taxed as they now are for all time to come; and never to see the debt reduced or paid off? When will we see economy practiced by the Government ? When will some wise financial k.vh tern be adopted? How long are we to endure the rule of the set of thieves and public plun ders who are expending all the money wrung from the toil and sweat of the masses, and constantly increasing the debt ? The people are asking themselves these questions. There can be but one answer to them. Not until the Radicals are turned out of power will there ever be a change. Let the tax-ridden masses remember that when they go to vote. A WALKING CAR.— A man in New York has invented and patented a de vice for the propulsion of hand vehicles I and vessels. The device is to make a carriage move forward on its wheels, turning against the carriage, and not I against the ground, that being touched | only by a series of feet which come to the ground and rise from it with the j rotation of the wheels which run on a | sort of endless rails under the carraige ; and attached to it. The contrivance is | believed to be applicable to farm uses j and heavy freight, as well as to ordi nary passenger carrying, and to be ' specially adapted to swampy and bog gy lands, into which wheels sink readi ly ; for the feet of this carriage, which alone touch the ground, can bo made as broad as necessary to avoid sinking. It is the solemn duty of every true lover of his country, to come out now against the aggressions and usurpa tions of the Radical party. Let no per sonal or selfish considerations, no mere party tie, hold him back. If Grant shall succeed, the country will be ruled by the sword and by a vindicative Radical faction, led by Ben Butler, in Congress. The Supreme Court will be crushed, the Constitution utterly de stroyed, and the liberties of the people trampled in the dust. Why are most good looking ladies like inveterate topers?— Because they are dreadfully fond of the glass. Why is an unwelcome visitor like a shady tree?— Because we are glad when he leaves. He that has a great nose thinks that everybody is speaking of it. Who stumbles twice over the same stone deserves a broken shin. He who would stop every man's mouth must have a great deal of meal. He who defers his charity till he is is dead is rather libera! of another man's than his own. Look within, then look without. You'll know mankind all around a bout.