BY MEYERS & MENGEL. TERMS OF PUBLICATION. TBK BEDFORD GAZ*TT is published every Fri j day morning by MEYERS A MRNSEL, at $2 00 per annum, if paid strictly in advance ; $2.50 if paid within six months; $3.00 if not paW within six months. Ml subscription accounts MUST be settled annually. No paper will be sent out of j the State unless paid for IN ADVANCE, and all such J abacriptions will invariably be discontinued at tbe expiration of the time for which they are , a j,i. ( All ADVERTISEMENTS for a less term than j three months TEN CENTS per line for each In- . sertion. Special notices one-balf additional All j resolutions of Associations; communications of limited or individual interest, and notices of mar riages and deaths exceeding five line*, ten rents per line Editorial notices fifteen cents per line. All legal Notices of every hnd,and Orphans Court and Judicial Sales, are required by lam t be published in both papers published in this j place. ty All advertising due after first insertion. A liberal discount is made to persons advertising . bv tbe quarter, half year, or year, as follows: j 3 months. 6 months. 1 year. ..g 'j'" !S It w • Quarter column - • 14 00 20 00 Half column - - - 18 00 00 * One column ---- 30 00 4a 00 80 00; ♦One square to occupy one inch of space JOB PRINTING, of every kind, done with neatness and dispatch. Tee GAZETTE OrrtcE has just been refitted with a Power Press and new type, and everything in the Printing line can be execu ted in the most artistic manner and at the Lowest rates.—TERMS CASH. |y A1 ters should be addressd to MEYERS A MENGEL, Publishers. #ob iMutiag. rpHE BEDFORD GAZETTE POWER PRESS PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT, BEDFORD, PA. MEYERS & MENGEL PROPRIETORS. Having recently made additional ini provements tr our office, we are pre pared to execute all orders for PLAIN AND FANCY JOB PRINTING, With dispatch and in the most SUPERIOR STYLE. CIRCULARS, LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CHECKS, CERTIFICATES, BLANKS. DEEDS, REGISTERS, RE CEIPTS, CARDS. HEADINGS. ENVEL OPESI, SHOWBILLS, HANDBILLS, IN VITA TIONS. LABELS. Src. lye. Our facilities fer printing POSTERS, PROGRAMMES, Ac., FOR CONCERTS AND EXHIBITIONS, ARE UNSURPASSED. "PUBLIC SALE" BILLS Printed at short notice. We can insure complete satisfaction as to time and price rjMIE INQUIRER BOOK STORE, opposite the Menge! House, BEDFORD, PA. Tho proprietor takes pleasure in offering to the public the following articles belonging to the Book Business at CITY RETAIL PRICES : MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS. N O V E L S. BIBLES, HYMN BOOKS, AC.: Lsrge Family Bibles, Small Bibles. Medium Bibles, Lutheran Hymn Books. Methodist Hymn Books, Smith's Dictionary of the Bible. History of the Books of the Bible, Pilgrim's Progress, Ac Ac., Ac Episcopal Prayer Socks, Presbyterian Hymn Books, SCHOOL BOOKS. TOY BOOKS. STATIONERY, Congress, Legal, Record, Foolaeap, Letter, Congress Letter. Sermon. Commercial Note, Ladies' Gilt, Ladies' Octavo, Mourning, French Note. Bath Poet, Damask Laid Note, Cream Laid Note, Envelopes, Ac WALL PAPER. Several Hundred Different Figures, the Largest lot ever brought to Bedford county for sale at prices CHEAPER THAN EVER SOLD in Bedford BLANK BOOKS. Day Books. Ledgers, Account Books, Cash Books, Pocket Ledgers. Time Books, Tuck Memorandums, Pass Books, Money Books, Pocket Books. Blank Judgment Notes, drafts, receipts, Ac INKS AND INKSTANDS. Barometer Inkstands, Gutta Percha, Cocoa, and Morocco Spring Pocket Inkstands, Glass and Ordinary Stands for Schools, Flat Glass Ink Wells and Rack, Arnold's Writing Fluids. Hover's Inks. Cartaine Inks. Purple Inks. Charlton's Inks, Eukolon for pasting. Ac. PENS AND PENCILS. Gillot'a, Cohen's, Hollowbusb A Carey's, Payson, Dunton. and Scribner's Pens, Clark 's IndeTlible, Faber s Tablet, Cohen's Eagle, Oflice. Faber's Guttknecht's, Carpenter's Pencils PERIODICALS. Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Magazine, Madame Deuiorest's Mirror of Fashions, Electic Magazine. Godey's Lady's Book, Galaxy, Lady's Friend, Ladies' Repository, Our Young Folks, Nick Sax. Yankee Notions, Budget of Fun. Jolly Joker. Phunnv Pheliow. Liapincott r Magazine, Riverside Magazine, \Saverly Magazine. Ballou's Magazine. Gardner's Monthly. Harper's Weekly, Frank Leslie's Illustrated, Chimney Corner, New York Ledger, New Y'ork Weekly. Harper's Bazar, Every Saturday, Living Age. Putnam s Monthly Magazine, Arthur's Horns Magazine. Oliver Optic s Boys and Girl's Magazine Ac. C instantly on hand to accomodate those who want to purchase living reading mattter Only a part of tbe vast number of artielez per taining to the Book and Stationery business, which we are prepared U seli cheaper than the ch-apeet. are above enumerated Give us a call Wo buy and tell for CASH, and by this arrange ment we eipect to sell as cheap as goods of this class are sold anywhere jan29,'yl 3NisrflUrarotts. jp L E C T R I CI TELEGRAPH IN CHINA. THE EAST INDIA TELEGRAPH COMPANY'S OFFICE, Nos. 23 A 25 Nassau Street, NEW YORK. Organized under special charter from the State ■ of New York CAPITAL $5,000,000 50,000 SHARES, SIOO EACH DIRECTORS. HON. ANDREW G. CURTIN, Philadelphia. PAUL S. FORBES, of Russell k Co., China. FRED. BUTTERFIELD, of F. Bu tteifield A C New York ISAAC LfVERMORE, Treasurer Michigan Cen tral Railroad, Bos to*. ALEXANDER HOLLAND, Treasurer American Express Company, New York. i Hon. JAMES NOXON, Syracuse, N. Y. . 0. H. PALMER, Treasurer Western Union Tele graph Company. New York FLETCHER WESTRAY, of Westray, Gibbs A Hardeastle, New York. NICHOLAS MICKLES, New York. OFFICE RS. A. G. CURTIN, President. . N. MICKLES, Vice President. GEORGE ELLIS (Cashier National Bank Com monwealth.) Treasurer. | HON. A K McCLURE. Philadelphia, Solicit* .. The Chinese Government having (through the Hon. Aneon Burlingamei conceded to this Com pany the privilege of connecting the great sea ports of the Empire by submarine electric tele graph eable, we propose commencing operations in China, and laying down a line of nine hundred miles at once, between the following port s. viz : Population. Canton 1,000.000 Macoa SO,OOO Hong-Kong 250.000 Swatow 200,000 Amoy 250.000 Foo-Chow 1,250.000 : Wan-Chu....' 300 000 Ningpo 400,000 Hang Chean 1,308.000 Shanghai 1,000.009 Total 5,910 000 These ports have a foreign commerce of $900,- 000,000. and an enormous domestio trade, besides which we have the immense internal commein of the Empire, radiating from these points, through its canals and navigable rivers. The cable being laid, this company proposes erecting land lines, and establishing a speedy and trustworthy means of communication, which must command there as everywhere else, the commu nications of tbe Government, of business, and of social life especially in China. Sho has no postal system, and her only means now of communicating information is by couriers on land, and by steam ers on water _ _ (ua , large country, in the main densely peopled ; but few yet realize that she contains more than a third of the human race The latest returns made to her central authorities for taxing purposes by the local magistrate make her population Four hun dred and Fourteen millions, and this Jls more likely to be under than over the actual aggregate, j Nearly all of these, who are over ten years old, , not only can but do read and write. Her civili zation is peculiar, but her literature is as exten sive as that of Eurepe. China is a land of teach ers and traders ; and the latter are exceedingly quick to avail themselves of every proffered fsunli ty for procuring early information. It is observed in California that the Chinese make great use of the telegraph, though it there transmits messages in English alone. To-day great cumbers of fleet steamers are owned by Chinese merchants, and used by them exclusively for the transmission of early intelligence. If the telegraph we propose connecting all their great seaports, were now in existence, it is believed that its business would pay the cost within the first two years of its suc cessful operation, and would steadily increase thereafter No enterprise commends itself as in a greater degree remunerative te capitalists, and to our whole people. It is of vast national importance commercially, politically and evangelically. stock of this Company has been un qualifiedly recommended to capitalists and busi ness men. as a desirable investment by editorial ; articles in the New York Herald. Tribune, World, Times, Post, Express, Independent , and in the Philadelphia North American, Press, Ledger. Inquirer. Age. Bulletin and Telegraph. Shares of this company, to a limited number, may be obtained at SSO each, $lO payable down, sls" on the Ist of November, and $25 payable in monthly iDstalmenta of $2.50 each, commencing December 1, IS6B. on application to DREXEL & CO., 34 South Third Street, PHILADELPHIA. Shares can be obtained in Bedford by applica tion to Reed A Schell. Bankers, who are author ized to receive subscriptions, and ean give all ne cessary information on the subject. sept2syl I I 'yyTE combine style with neatness of fit. And moderate prices with the best workmanship, JONES' ON E PRICK CLOTHING HOUSES 604 MARKET STREET, . GEO W NIEMANN. PHILADELPHIA. | zepl 1 ,'98,jl | 1 J4IY YOUR NOTIONS ! of j dec 4 B. W BERKBTRB6SER. I)LASTER. —The subscriber would . J recpect/uJIy inform the public thzt he has just reczived from the ci'j 6u l-jdz of bet Nova ' Scotia ROCK PLASTER. ; and will continue to receive, at hi* stock ditaiuiih ee, until the firzt of April, which he will grind, and have for sale at Hartley's Mill, and will sell az cheap as can be bought for cash. Wheat, rye, or corn, at the highest cash prices taken in ex change for Plaster Remember, only until the Ist of April. Thankful for pas'favors he solicits a continuancenf the same daelSuiS ANDREW J MILLER. Tooflanrt's (Column. YOU ALL UAVB HEARD OF HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. Prepared by Dr. C. M. Jsckson. Philadelphia. Their introduction into thie country from Ger many occurred in 1825. THEY CURED YOUR FATHERS AND MOTHERS, And will cure you and your children. They are entirely different trow -a- the many preparations now in the country cal I—l led Bitter* or Tonics. They are no tavern A JLpreparatien, or any thing like one; but good, honest, reliable medi cines. They are The greatest kiioteit remedie* for Liver Complaint, DYSPEPSIA, Nervous Debility, JAUNpI 3E, Diseases of the Kidneys, ERUPTIONS OF THE SKIN, and all Diseases arising from a Disordered Liver, stomach, or [MPURTTY OF THE BLOOD. Constipation. Flatulence. Inward Piles. Fullnes of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea. Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Full ness or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eruc tations. Sinking or Flattering at the Pit of the Stomach. Swimming of the Head. Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at the . Heart, Cooking or Suffocating Sei.sa I 1 tiocs when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of V,* Vision, Dots or Webs i before the sight. Dull Pain in the Head, Defi ciency ot Perspiration, Yellowness ofthe Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc., Sudden Flushes of fleat. Burning in the Flesh. Constant I magi, nings of Evil and Great Depression of Spirits. | All these indicate diseases ofthe hirer or Di gestive Organs, combined with impure blood. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS is entirely vegetable and contains no liquor. It is a compound of Fluid Extracts. The Roots, Herbs, and Barks from which these extracts are made, are gathered in Germany. All the medi cinal virtueus are ex tracted from them by a scientific Chemist. | I These extracts are then forwarded to this VJ country to be used ex pressly for the manufacture of these Bitters. There is no alcoholic substance of any kind used | in compounding the Bitters, hence it is the only Bitters that can be used in esses where alcoholic i stimulants are not advisable. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC is a combination of all the ingredients of the Bit ters, with pure Santa Cruz Rum. Orange, etc. It ; is used foT the same diseases as the Bitter 3, in case i where some pure alcoholic stimulus is required, i You will bear in mind that these remedies areen i tirely different from any others advertised for the i cure of the diseases named, these being scientific ! preparations of medicinal eatraota, while the oth j ers are mere decoctions of rum in some form The ! TONIC is decidedly one of the most pleasant and : agreeable remedies ever offered to tbe public. Its , taste is exquisite. It is a pleasure to take it, while its life-giving, exhilarating, and medicinal quali ties hare caused it to be known as tbe greatest of j all tonics. DEBILITY. mere is no medicine equal to Hoofland's Ger man Bitters or Tonic -■ in cases of Debility. They impart a tone |-< and vigor to the whole ! system, strengthen J- the appetite, cause an enjoyment of the food, enable the stomach to di fest it, purify the blood, give a good, sound, . ealthy complexion, eradicate the yellow tinge j from the eye, impart a bloom to the cheeks, and j change the patient from a short-breathed, emaci ated, weak, and nervous invalid, to a full-faced, j stout, and vigorous person. Weak and Delicate Children are j made strong bv using the Bitters or Tonic. In fact, they are Family Medicines. They ean be administered with perfect safety to a child three j months old, the most delicate female, or a man of ninety. These remedies are the best Blood Purifiers ever known and will cure all diseases resulting from bad bload. Keep y>ur blood pure; keep ; your Liver in order, -w keep your digestive organs in a sound, I healthy condition, by the use of these remi- 1 d dies, and no diseases will ever assail yon The best men in theeountry recommend them. If years of honest reputation go for anything, you must try these preparations. FROM HON. GEO. W. WOODWARD. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylva nia. PHILADBLI-UIA, March Iff, IS6T ' I find that "Hoofland's German Bitters" is not an intoxicating beverage, but is a good tonic, use lul in disorder? of tbe digestive organs, and of great benefit in cases of debility and want of ner j vous action in the system. Yours Truly. GEO W. WOODWARD FROM rtOS. JAMES TAOMPSON. Judge of the Supreme Conrt of Pennsylvania. PfIILADELPaiA. April 2a, LSflfi j I consider "Hoofland's German Bitters" a valua ble medicine in case . of attacks of Indiges j tion or Dyspepsia. I A can certify this from tny experience of it. il Yours, with respect, JAMES THOMPSON . ; FROM REV JOSEPH H. KENNARD, D. D , Pastor of the Tenth Baptist Church, Philadelphia. DR. JACKSON — DEAR SIR: —I have been fre quently requested to connect my name with rec ommendations of different kinds of medicines, but regarding the practice as out of my appropriate sphere, I have in all cases declined, but with a clear proof in various instances, and particularly in my own family, of the usefulness of 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 plaint, it is a safe and valuable prtpara tion. In some cases it may fail : bnt usual X a ly, I doubt not, it will be very beneficial to those who suffer from the above causes. Yours, very respectfully, J H. KENNARD, Eigth, below CoatesStreet. CAUTION. Hoofland's German Remedies are counterfeited. The Genuine have tbe signature of C M. JACK SON on the front of the outside wrapper of each bottle, and the name of the article blown in each bottle. All others are counterfeit. Price of the Bitters, $1 per bottle; Or, a half dozen for *>s. Price of the Tonic, £1 50 per bottle ; | Or, a half dozen for $7 50. The tonic is put up in quart bottles. Recollect that it is Dr Hoofland's German j Remedies that are so universally used and so highly recommended;-w-,. and do not allow the Druggist to induce I lyou to take anything : else that he may gayJUis just as good, be ; cause he makes a larger profit on it These Reme dies will be sent by expressto any locality upon ; application to the PRINCIPAL OFFICE, At the German Medicine Store. No. 631 ARC 11 STREET, Philadelphia. CHAS. M. EVANS, PROPRIETOR. Formerly C. M. JACKSON A Co. These Remedies are for sale by Druggists. Store keepers and Medicine Dealers everywhere. Do not forget to e sea mine the artide'you buy in order to get the genuine. tuay'6Syl BEDFORD. PA, FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 12, 1869. Sufrrnri- Constitution** Amendment. SPEECH OF HON. GEO. W. WOODWARD. OF PENNSYLVANIA, In tho Hons* of Keprosz-ntntlvv. February 20,1809. On the joint reeolution (S. B. No. 8, proposing an i amendment to the Constitution of the United } States Mr. Woodward. I wish to say a j few words to-day in behalf of the peo ple of Pennsylvania. The eonstitu- ! tion of the State of Pennsylvania of 1 1790 was silent on the subject of negro ; suffrage. A diversity of opinion and j practice to a limited extent grew up under that constitution. In some spo- : radic instances colored men were per mitted to vote; but at length the ques- j tion came before tho highest judicial 1 tribunal of the State, and it was de ! cided that the constitution of 1790 j rightly understood, never permitted negro suffrage. That decision was based upon this ! ground, that the negro race never had become a part of the social compact of I this country, a conclusion that was de- j duced from the history of the negro j race, and their introduction into this ( country as slaves. It resulted very logically out of the great principle of 1 the Declaration of Independence, that ! all just Governments should be founded ! in the consent of the governed. A sub- j ject, inferior, ignorant, and idolatrous 1 race, introduced into a country against their will to be slaves, would be great- ' ly wronged in being treated as having consented to the government of that country. The African race has never i consented to the government of this ; country. They are exotic, they are j alien, they are strangers to the Com monwealth. They were brought here ' iu violation of the lawsof nature; they were thrust upon us without their con sent and without ours; and according to Pennsylvania taw they never lie came parties to the social compact up on which all our political institutions are founded. The people of Pennsylvania pene trated with these truths, which their judiciary had thus recognized, amend ed in 1837 their constitution of 1790, and in defining the qualifications of electors inserted the word "white" be fore the word "freeman." This was not only agreed to in their constitu tional convention after great delibera tion, but that amendment was submit ted, with other amendments, to a vote of the people of Pennsylvania. And, sir, it is a part of the history of the times that those who were opposed to the reform of the constitution were es pecially opposed to this amendment, , because of tbe popularity which it gave to the other amendments. I point the House to the fact that the people of i Pennsylvania, thus through their ju j uicial tribunals and by their own pop ular elections, decided a^ r £olemnly as j it is posssible for freemen to decide that the negro race was no party to the social compact and should not be ad mitted to the suffrage. Now, Mr. Speaker, that decree-has never been reversed. On the contrary, ail political parties have recognized it and submitted to it. The republican party, as often as they have been charged with intending to take out of the foundations of our State govern ment that corner-stone, have asserted that they were slandered; that they in tended nothing of the sort. They have pointed to the Chicago platform in con firniation of their assertions, in con sequence of this disavowal they enjoyed in the last election, and in all the late elections iu our Estate, a very large Welsh vote, which, I tell them, they will lose from the day that they force negro suffrage upon the people. They have enjoyed that Welsh vote by reas on of their persistent and apparently consistent denial that they were for negro suffrage. The Welsh do not like the Irish ; there is a lack of congeniali ty between tne two classes on account of religion and other causes. The re publican party, while they cannot car ry the great body of the Irish popula tion, can carry a large proportion of the Welsh so long as, and only so long as, they can persuade th.it people they are honest in their professions against negro suffrage. The effect of the proposition now be fore us is to change the fundamental ! law of Pennsylvania, to reverse the his- i toricand traditional policy of the State, to introduce into the polities of that great Commonwealth this alien, for- j eign, unnatural element, which down j to the present time the republican par- • ty have told the people never was to j be a part of their policy. I ask of ; the gentlemen from Massachusetts and of this House that before this change of policy be adopted the whole people of ' Pennsylvania be allowed to pass upon the question. What answer does the j gentlemen give to this request? lie: has answered, sir, in your hearing, that he cannot allow the offering of an a mendment looking to that end because the Constitution forbids him. I stand ing here asking the gentleman from j Massachusetts to do an unconstitution- ; al thing, when I beg him to submit j his amendment to a vote ol the people! Weil, sir, if the gentleman from Mas sachusetts had never done any uncon stitutional thing it wou'd undoubted ly be a very great sin in me to tempt him into transgression. But, Mr. Speaker, let me tell the gentleman from Massachusetts that I asked him to violate no constitutional provision! when I asked him to submit this a mendment to the people of Pennsylva- ' nia. And, sir, within five minutes af ter he refused to entertain my proposi tion, lie stood in his place and declared, as the report in the Globe, will show to-morrow, that this constitutional j amendment was fo be submitted to the people of this country. I deny that. Its submission to the people, in the fair sense of the term, is exactly what I demand. The present legislature of j Pennsylvania was elected last October. It was elected while the republicans! were complaining that the democrats were slandering them in charging them with intending to introduce negro suf frage. That charge was declared to be a defamation upon the fair fame of the republican party. And yet it is to this j present legislature the gentleman in sists upou submitting tbe amendment. A legislature not only not elected to consider any such subject-, but elected in the midst of profuse denials that ' such a subject was to couie before them. On this question they do not represent the people- were never chosen to rep- > resent them. If the gentleman will say that this legislature was elected to consider this or any similaramendment I will give up the discussion. Nay, I will give fcim anything I have togiyelf he will haaaid ihat statement. But he will not, and the fact must remain un challenged that you are about to call upon a body of representatives to ratify your amendment who do not represent the people upon this question. The ratification might just as well be sub mitted to any other body of tnen—it might Just as well not be submitted at all. What I propose is, that the amend ment shall besubrnitted toa legislature, the most popular branch of which shall be chosen alter this date, with this question before the eyes of the people. The gentleman from Massachusetts says that is unconstitutional. Why? Because we cannot select the legisla ture to which to submit our amend ment. I deny his premises. I say that the Constitution devolves upon us the duty of selecting the representa tive body to which we shall submit amendments. When I read the words of the Constitution you will see 1 am right. It is as follows : "The Congress, whenever two-thirds of both Houses shall deem it necessa ry, shall propose amendments to this Constitution, or oil application of the legislatures of two-thirds of tbe sever al Suites shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which, in eith er cose shall be valid to al! intent* and purposes as part of this Constitution when ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the several States, or by conventions ir. three-fourths there of, as the one or the other mode of rat ification may be proposed by Congress." There, sir, is the constitutional devo lution of the duty to exercise our dis cretion as between the legislature and a i convention to pass upon amendments. The duty involves the power. If we must choose between thelegislatureand i a convention, we may choose a legisla ture or a convention elected last year, or ; to be elected this year. The constitu tion does not shut up to legislatures ! now in session. We may take I any legislature that shall fairly and reasonably represent the peo ple. And the ground on i which I maintain that our discretion | should be exercised in favor of a future instead of the existing legislature is, that the people may have a change to choose representatives with a view to this question. What right had thegen tleman to say that the amendment was to be submitted to the people ? It can not be submitted to the people by be ing submitted to the present legisla ture. Nobody knows that better than the gentleman Jrom Massachusetts, When you have matured the form of your proposition, throw it before the legislature to be chosen next fall, and let the people understand that when we democrats charged you republicans with plotting for negro suffrage we did not slander you, but spoke only the truth. Put your amendment be fore the representatives of the people chosen after you have shown your hands, and if they ratify it I will agree never to raise my voice again in op position to negro suffrage. Having said thus much in behalf of an amendment which the gentleman from Massachusetts will not let me offer, I improve the opportunity to add a few more thoughts on the general subject of n gro suffrage. I have shown the House what has been tbe fixed position of Pennsylvania in alj time on this subject. Fur more than thirty years all parties have acquiesced in the rule of white suffrage. So far as I remember no public man in Penn sylvania has proposed a repeal of the rule. Even the late Mr. Stevens, whose opinions were extreme ou all subjects, never brought forward any measure to alter our constitution in this regard. He would not -ign the constitution, as a member of the con vention, and no doubt he would have voted to bis dying breath to expunge the word "white." So also, had he been spared, would he have lifted up his eloquent voice to persuade the people of Pennsylvania to change their fundamental law and give the ballot to the negro; but,sir, I persuade myself that he would not have been guilty of the insincerity and duplicity that have characterized the conduct of the republican party on this question. Having denied again and again that this issue was in last fall's election, Mr. Stevens would have said, with characteristic! candor, the representa- tives then choaen do not necessarily represent the people on this question, let it go to the next representatives they may choose. Not only have all white men in Pennsylvania acquiesced for thirty-two years In the ruieof white suffrage, but so also have the black men. I cannot recali a single instance in which any representatives of that class of our citizens have asked for a change. The colored people of Penn sylvania are a quiet, orderly, and re spectable population. They enjoy full protection of ail civil rights. Penn sylvania abolished slavery in 1730 by an act whose preamble is often quoted to attest her abhorrence of the institution, but whose substantive provisions show that she was no more unmindful of the rights of sister States than she was of the rights of the negro race. With us the negro is esteemed according to his ( individual merits. If he is industrious, sober and honest, lie is respected and patronized. 1 have many friends a mong them, and cherishing only the kindest feelings for them, I am in capable of doing anything in my rep- , resentative capacity to their prejudice But, sir, the ballot will be no boon to them. The assertion that it is necessary to the protection of their ! civil lights is false, and, so far as j Pennsylvania is concerned, is slander ous. The negro no more needs the ballot in Pennsylvania for his security than the women do for theirs. The j whole history of ihat grand old Com monwealth shows that the weak, the ignorant, the poor, the dependent have j bevn cared for ty her with a maternal solicitude. Look at her common schools, her colleges, her asylums for I the blinu, the deaf and dumb, the in- 1 sane; her hospitals for the sick, houses I of correction for the erring, her prisons for the guilty, her laws for the poor, j for married women, her system of in testacy. What can Christianity or civilization do for the lowly, the poor, ! and distressed that Pennsylvania has j not done? Who dares to stand up and j accuse her of robbing the negro of his rights? Who has the audacity to as sert that the ballot is essential to the negro's safety and welfare? Founded by deeds of peace, Pennsylvania has j been just to all men, whether red or i black or white, and he wrongs Iter j grievously who would undermine her S institutions upon the poor and false pretense that her citizens of African j descent are oppressed. It is not so. But though tiiis amendment if un- ; called for even by the negroes of Peun- 1 sylvania, and is subversive of our fun damental law, it is supposed it will be a step toward universal suffrage which ; gentlemen speak of as a great and beneficent reform. I cannot help j thinking, sir, that such opinions are j founded in a misapprehension of the } nature of suffrage. Having on a form- j er occasion stated my views somewhat at length on this head, I will not en- j ter again iuto the subject, but will con tent myself with saying that suffrage is not a natural right any more than any other municipal regulation which experience has shown to be expedient. It does not belong to manhood in the | sense in which the rights of life and liberty do ; but it is a political trust which the majority may bestow where it will best subserve the gereral wel i fare. It is a conventional aa contra distinguished from a natural right.— Its bestowal, limitations, and exercise are regulated by the law of conve nience or expendiency. The question, always ought to be, will a proposed extension of suffrage promote the peace and welfare of the body-politic?— When Louis Napoleon, in the coup iV etat that made him a despot, decreed universality of suffrage, he demonstra ted how this beneficent reform of which we hear so much could be made the instrument of an inexorable tyran ny ; and the same reformer who ex j tended the basis of suffrage at Athens brought in with it the odious ostracism by which the greatest and best men of the city were banished. These and many other examples that might be cited ought to teach us that when suf frage is hastened or extended by force or fraud, iustead of growing up out of the experience of the people, it is a | cure and not a blessing. Our written constitutions are theout croppings of our national life. Until j lately they were formed, not on t he wild . dreams of therorists, but to record the i conclusions of experience. What the i common mass have found to be good for | themselves they have secured in their i constitutions, State and Federal. Suf frage has been left to each State to be j stow or wlthold according to its discre tion. Nowhere has it been extended to women or minors or unnaturalized for ! eigners. Why? If a natural right, a God-given inheritance to manhood,as it : is sometimes called, why should it be witheld from these classes? It is with held from them on the same reason it Is in Pennsylvania withheld front negroes | —expediency. Human experience has | proved that the trust could be best executed by excluding these classes, and, as in all other trusts, the selec tion of a trustee on the ground of ex | pediency is no affront to those who are not selected. Everybody except those strong-minded women who, not just representatives of their sex and : "most ignorant of what they are most assured," c'.airiorfor "woman's rights," | would probably agree that it would be a ' degredation tothe female sex tolnvoive them in the responsibilities of the bal lot. Universal experience attests that they are not suitable trustees; and therefore, by an almost universal con sent, they are set aside. The reasons ' for setting aside the negro are stronger : and better than those which apply to females. Between him and the white man there is an ineradicable distinc tion that must forever prevent that free, social intercourse on which alone pop ular suffrage ean be based. This distinction if it be not enflamed ; into hostility by bad legislation, docs not prevent the two races from dwel ling together harmoniously in thesamo community, assisting each other in the ; labors and the charities of life, and j contributing their mutual welfare. ■ But when you attempt to force them ; into social and political equality you inflame the passions of both parties and destroy the harmony of their relations. < mt of these conflicts tbe weaker must inevitably co ne most Umaged. It is iuipossiblo to provoke a conflict oe tweell the African and the Anglo-Sax on races in which finally the African will not be worsted. For a while you can force a sort of equality upon him ; by astandingarmy and the Freedmen's Bureau ; you can oppress your own fel low countrymen in the hope that the • Afria... .vill keep you at the public crib, VOL 64.—WHOLE No. 5,482 but as urely as God has made inte!- : kscfc superior to matter and the white man to the black, the country 111 which they dwell together must be governed by white men. They will not, they cannot, maintain a peaceful partnership in this matter. Call it : predjudiceor what you will, philoso , phize and moralize upon it as you may, the fact remains that one is black and i the other is white, and therefore they 1 cannot co-operate in exercising politi ical trusts. Ido not say that one may enslave the other—the superior may be compelled to respect the civil rights , of the inferior race—but they cannot long be co-trustees of suffrage without riots and bloodshedding. If the time ever comes that the political destinies 1 of this country, even for one presiden tial term, are controlled by negroes, it will be the darkest day that ever ! dawned upon that unfortunate race. May God in his mercy to them and us ' avert that day! j Now, sir, it is from considerations of i expediency that 1 oppose negro suf frage. It is the good of the negro as well as of the white man that prompts my opposition. It is my desire that ! they may live together in peace and j happiness, as always heretofore in ! Pennsylvania, that leads me to depre ciate this amendment. And especially i have we in Pennsylvania, a right to complain when, in violation of all pre j cedent, of constitutional law of your own party platform, and of the peace of our commonwealth, you repeal eur j constitution without giving us a right Ito vote against your amendment. If j such a high-hauded wrong docs not ; wake up the people of Pennsylvania I to the revolutionary schemes of the republican party; if they can be be guiled by fair speeches into the support of such a measure as this ; if they are ready to have the negro thrust into po litical partnership in contempt of their solemnly recorded will, why then, sir, a sad and sickening degeneracy has come upon my native State, and, for the first time in life I shall blush to own myself her son. Africa never so demeaned herself. The hardy savages of the mountain slopes in the interior of tlutt continent never debased them selves to the level of the Bushmen and Hotentots of the Cape of Good Hope. No, no, sir, they could be torn from kiu dred and homes by the cruel slave tra der, and tfcjmeaway to distant lands to be slaves, but they never would or nev er did, voluntarily surrender to an in ferior tribe of their own race, much less to an inferior race. And have we proud Americans, so lost our ancestral tradi tions that we can no longer be inspired even by African example? We have seen in history the proud Roman refusing citizenship to the most illustrious alliens; we have seen Goth and Hun and Vandal trample Roman granduerinto dust; we have glowed over the struggles between the Nor man and the Saxon, the Cavalier and the Rounkead, the Briton and the Scot, all of them jealous of their nationali ties and ready to shod their blood in defence of what they had inherited from their ancestors. But now, in this nineteenth century, we are to be ! held up as the first example in the world's history of a great people sur rendering political trusts to one of the lowest and feeblest races of the world's population. The Anglo-Saxon of A merican decent giving up the inheri tance which has made him great to the African? Not to the wild African in the freedom of his nativejungles, but to the enfeebled, timid, ignorant descendant |of a race of slaves ! And these are to be made voters and law-givers, to he our judges and representatives. Is tiiere any profounder depth of selfdeg redation than this ? If there be I have not courage to explore it. Every citizen owes to his family pro tection against business disaster or sud den death. No one, however prosper ous, can avoid the risks of business.— A panic may sweep away the proudest fortune, A war in Europe may ruin houses as rich as those of tbe Roths child, Hope and Baring. The South ern rebellion, for instance, threw thou sands of wealthy families into desola | tion. Life Insurance presents to every citizen, no matter how poor, an oppor tunity of securing his family against want. The most ordinary prudence will enable a man, in whatever situa tion of life he may be, to place upon that life a policy of from one to ten thousand dollars. At forty cents a day he can secure to his family ten thou sand dollars in case of his death, and in this country ten thousand dollars will ; be enough to support for a great many years an economical family. This ad vantage is given to us in many Insur ance Companies, but in none more j clearly than in the National Life Insur anee Company, whose prospectus is published in another column. It is managed by men of national reputa tion, and has a capital of a million dol lars, Its rates of insurauee are low. Its dividends are really given in ad vance. There are no unnecessary re strictions about the policies—they are non-forfeiting. No citizen can well refuse the many advantages it offers. ( I.KAN INO OUT OF FENCE ROWS.— Seize every available opportunity f< r grubbing up and cleaning out the wild growth that infests the fence row.— A double purpose is thus effected —it adds to the neat appearance of the farm and prevents the adjacent fields from being overrun with noxious plants by the scattering of their seeds from tire fence rows. ASHES ANL> SLOPS.— AII the wood ashes made on the farm and all the slops of the weekly wash and all the refuse from the house, except such as food for hogs, should he added to the compost heap as being rich in all the elements that constitute the food oi plants.