1!h Bedford sa?ctte. l Mciuiuf, JUarcli 34, IH7U. THE GREAT TAX COLITCTOt. It is tlie peculiar boast of the friends of the present national administration, that the tax laws have never been so rigidly enforced as at this time. The republican press teems with praisosof the President for his close collection of the revenues. The trooly 101 l may dif fer in regard to the foreign policy of the administration, as, for instance, in reference to Mr. Fish's cour.-e on the Cuban question or on the Alabama claims, they may vary widely in re gard to Boutweli's hobby, the Funding bill, or even fail to harmonize as to the necessity to re constructing recon structed Tennessee, but on the subject of the efficiency of Grant as a tux gather they are perfectly agreed. They are anxious that everybody shall ad mit that the administration is an en tire success so far as its business of de pleting the pockets of the tax-payers is concerned. We most cheerfully ac knowledge the fact, for it is a fact that t ; e present national administration collects more taxes from the people than were ever obtained by any of its predecessors. We go farther and ad mit, also, that no preceding adminis tration ever c pent as much of the jeo ple's morey, in the same period of time, as this one. Doubtless, in the next presidential race, Gen. Grant will be put forward a.; the candidate of those who intend that the people shall bleed freely under the lancet of taxa tion. Mis claim to re-election will be bas-d almost entirely on bis success as an exciseman. Radicalism will ring the changes on the successful phleboto my of Grant's revenue policy, and loy alty will bawl itself hoarse in wild huz zas for the re-election of the Great Tax Collector. THE ItKTi'KX OF SPECIF. The probability of an early return to specie payments is not at all, as our radical friends would have the people believe, attributable to the sagacity of the President, nor the wisdom of Mr. Secretary Boutwell. The return of specie and the appreciation of green backs simply furnish a marvelous ex ampleof the recuperative power of this great country. For the last eight or nine years corruption and extrava gance have pervaded every depart ment of our government, an incalcula ble amount of indebtedness iias been piled on the country and the public coffers have been drained to the bottom dollar. The return of specie payments, notwithstanding these great draw backs, is due only to the reviving in fluences of the material industries of the country gradually recovering from the shock of war. These may yet save us from the legitimate effects of the mad legislation and intolerable oppres sion of an unwise radical administra tion. The bouefieen t a rrangem ?n ts of nat u re ami the physical necessities of the Southern people, are fast restoring the productive industry temporarily destroyed by the war. Cotton, if not king, has again become Chancellor of the Exchequer of the empire of Trade, la spite of radical malice, in spite of reconstruction and military usurpation, the great Southern staple again takes the place of gold in balancing our com mercial accounts with other countries. As the production of cotton has in creased, so has the price of gold de creased. Had the policy indicated by Lincoln and adopted by Johnson been sustained by Congress, had the South ern States been permitted, at the close of the war, to send representatives to Congress and to enjoy self-government so that labor might have been peace fully and properly organized within their borders, their dormant energies would long have wakened into activi ty and the return to specie payments would have come at least two years a go. For this vexa'ious delay, this cru el suspense, we are indebted to the radical schemers who invented the deviltry of reconstruction to plague and harass the Southern people. No thanks to those je.-.tilent conspirators against the public peace, that Southern indus try is at last reviving to save the cred it of the government. SCOTT, the carpet-bag Governor of South Coroiria, made a speech recently at a m eting held in Washington to invent some sort oi" punishment for Georgia, in which he gave.the follow ing advice to the loyal members of the Georgia delegation: "I -ay to the mem!ers of the Legislature of Georgia when you go homo pass such laws a w ill give your Governor the power to arm every man in the State, to make an appropriation to buy all the Win chester rifi -s that he can, an I one hun dred rounds of ammunition for each man, and demand a fair election. I teMyou the Winchester riileis the beat h.v.* you tan have." Certainly. Bul lets and bayonets are the strongest Radical arguments. Take them aw: v. and there is nothing left. i THE Inquirer hopes that the Air Line Bail road Bill, now before Con gress, under which a line of railway between Washington and New York, is to bo constructed, will pass. We hope it w'iff not pass. ATI the railroads in existence, save the Pacific Raii road, have been constructed under charters from State governments.— The several Pacific Railroad Compan ies would not have been chartered by Congness, if the territory over which their lines pass, had teen formed into States. Certainly the power to charter railroad companies, is not co-ordinate in the Federal and State governments. Both cannot possess and exercise it at the same time. Endless confusion and interminable litigation between com panies organized respectively under the State governments and the Feder al governments, would be the inevita table result. StipjKjse for instance, that the route of the proposed Air Line Railroad from Washington to New York, so far as it passes over the soil of Pennsylvania, is covered by a char ter to another company granted by our State legislature. Could the for mer oust the latter and take posses sion of the route? Certainly not. If they could do that, they might with e qual propriety and justice, seize all the railway lines within the State, if they chanced to be in their way. The In quirer very naturally forgets that any rightsare left to the States. In its dis torted idea of our system of govern ment, the right of eminent domain has been swept from the States along with the regulation of the elective franchise. We shall not be surprised to find it ad vising, some of these days, that Con gress shall establish a Law Depart ment. and informing its readers that they must go to Washington, instead of Harri.-burg, to obtain patents for their lands. ARE we to have a colored Associate Judge? This question agitates the minds of the "Republican''leaders in this county considerably at present.— The negro element in their party asks to be represented on the county ticket, as an earnest of friendship, for the Af rican "man and brother." They are too shrewd to be satisfied with the empty promises of future preferment held out to them by the 'Republican' politicians. The question is one of grave importance to our political op ponents. How they will settle it re mains to be seen. THE Great Tax-Collector, U. S. Grant, now figures in the lobby of the United States Senate as a borer tor the ratification of the secret trea y with Baez, of San Domingo, for the pur chase, by the United States Govern ment, of that island of earthquakes and negroes. Should the Senate yield to his iuiportunings, he will collect the federal taxes more closely and rigor ously next year than he has during the past. A feeling of ineffable pride must swell the bosoms of republicans as they contemplate the spectacle pre sented by the administration when G rants goes lobbying in the Senate for the San Domingo treaty, and Boutwell is boring in the House for the passage of the Funding Bill! THE Radical journals are making cal culations that will give them every State in the Union next fall by the ac cession of the negro vote. Had they not better also make some calculations as to the number of Republicans who are opposed to negro suffrage, who vo ted against it whenever they had a chance—how they like Congress to as sume to do for them what they refused to do themselves—and what kind of temper they may be in when these same Congressmen come to ask their votes next fail. It may IK- well to make some allowance for disaffection here aim there. WENDELL PHILIPS is out in favor of giving the Indians political rights e quivaiem to those recently accorded to the negro. Philips is to be commend ed for his consistency, If not for his wisdom. Why leave poor "l.o" out in the cold ? Perhaps if we give him the ballot he will sheathe the scalping knife and bury his tomahawk. Once in po!'ii'e he will have little time or taste for at y other sort of excitement, or she.!! '-*"0 say depredation. A RKSOM TTOX lias been introduced into the House of Representatives at llarrisbuig, appointing a committee, consisting of the Governor, Auditor General and Attorney General, to lay before Congress the claims of the citi zens of York, Cumberland, Perry, Franklin, Fulton, Adams, and Bedford counties, for damages sustained by the rebel raid in 1863, Tiik strongest advocates of the San | Domingo annexation treaty are per sons who have bought up, at a L>w figure, the evidences of indebtedness issued by Bites! and his financial agt nts. General Grant is urging the eonflruia ti jn >f this scheme. Tile asylum* ot the South are erow ' ded with crazy niggers. The laboring wliite man must pay for all this luxu i ry for niggers. mm ou&fttfe ma* "AI.. WASHINGTON, March 22. The Senate yesterday, at an early hour, went into executive session and confirmed the nomination of the Hon. .jbv JJtadley, of New Jersey, to be m associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. A memorial was presented from colored citizens of the lower counties of Maryland, set tiny forth that while they are nominally free, they enjoy none of the benefits of freedom ; that they are in poverty and destitution. They >licit Congress to enact such legislation as will put in ac tive operatien the fifteenth amend ment. A bill was passed providing for the distribution of arms to the Southern States. The bill to change the usury laws of the District of Co lumbia with theHou.se amendment, was called up and referred. The consider ation of the Georgia bill was then re sumed, and a long debate ensued. In the House, Mr. Swann of Mary land, presented a petition from John \V. Baughman and forty other me chanics of Baltimore, protesting a gainst certain changes in the tariff laws, aud.praying for a reduction of duty ou necessaries not produced in ibis country. A bill was passed to amend the census act so as to allow the census to be taken, and striking out the section in relation to the ap portionment of members. The bill to incorporate the Washington Steam boat Company was passed; a bill was also passed appropriating $20,009 to re build the orphan asylum of "Our Lady of Mercy," at Charleston, S. C., in con sideration of attention paid Union of ficers and soldiers there during the war. The tariff bill was (hen discus sed at length. WASHINGTON, March 23. lu the United States Senate yes terday, Mr. Harlan from the commit tee on Indian Affairs, reported a bill reorganizing the Indian Department. It provides for the appointment of five inspectors of Indian affairs, who, with the Secretary of the Interior, anil the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, are to constitute a board of supervision. The Senate discussed all day the report of the Judiciary Committee rejecting General Ames as Senator from Missis sippi. Mr. Conkling made an elabor ate legal argument in favor of the re port. If is evident, however, from the course of the debate, that a large majority of the Radical Senators will vote to admit Ames, so as to secure his vote against the Bingham amend ment to the Georgia hill. The session of the souse of Representatives was occupied with the consideration of two bill.-: the Sutro Tunnel job, and the anti-Polygamy hill. During the dis cussion of the latter, Mr Ward (Rad j, of New York, made a sharp speech a gainst the Mormons. A motion to lay the bill on the table was rejected by a vote of 40 to 121, most of the Demo crats voting in the affirmative. Mr. Cox, of New York, explained that the Democrats did not intend to indorse polygamy by their vote, but to pro test against measures of prosecution, which always defeated their object. Mr. Hooper, the Mormon delegate from Utah, was speak i g against the bill when the House adjourned. The Cuban question has at last as sumed a positive shape in Congress. The House Committee on Foreign Af fairs have agreed, by a vote of 8 to 1, to report in favor of authorizing and instructing the President to maintain neutrality "in the contest now exis ting between the people of Cuba and the government of the Kingdom of Spain." This is virtually recognizing the belligerency of the Cuban insur gents. WASHINGTON, March 24. In the United Stales Senate yester day the case of General Ames the mil itary commander in Mississippi who applied for admission to the Senate was debated nearly the entire session. Mr. Carpenter, of Wisconsin, made a speech in defence of the report of the ' committee, in which he rebuked his party associates for their zeal in tram pling the Constitution under foot. His speech was really a good demo cratic speech, arid indicates where the eloquent Senator is drifting. Mr. Da vis of Kentucky, also delivered a forci ble argument against Ames. A vote will probably he reached to-day. In the House of Representatives the dis cussion on the bill to prohibit polyga my in Utah was resumed, and Mr. Hooper, the Mormon delegate, conclu ded his remarks. He claimed that polygamy was taught by the greatest of all law givers, and tnat monogamy originated among the Pagan nations. After the bill was materially amended and modified it passed the House by a vote of 04 to 02. The Butro Tunnel hill was up, but after a short debate was laid on the table by a large ma jority. Mr. Scofield, from the Naval Committee, reported the bin for the emoval of the Brooklyn Navy-yard. WASHINGTON, March SJN. The United States Senate was in ex ecutive session all day yesterday upon the San Domingo treaty. Mr. Sum ner made a four hours' speech against annexation. Tne success of Presi dent's Grant's efforts to force the ratiti caiionof the treaty is in great doubt. Both sides areconfiih nt, hut it is believ ed that the House w ill be almost unani mous against making tl.e necessary appropriations, and thus the Baez- Grant job wilt fall through. The Sao Domingo lobby in Washington is in fiuential and loaded down with mon ey, grid iias the free run of the White House, In the House yf Representa tives yesterday, Mr. Logan, from the Committee on Military affairs, made a general report on the sale of cu detships, recommending the dis miss! of (ieu.ral Schropf from the Patent Oifice and the court-martialing of Commodore Upshur for trading and buying cadets hips, and iutroducing a bill making requisite in a cadet a two years' residence in the district from which be i appointed. The bill, a tuended so as to make the residence one year instead of 1 wo, together with the resolutions, was passed, and the comtwßtre was dbchargCfi. The House then went into Committee of the Whole, and discussed the Tariff bill during the alternoon and evening ses sions. The gentral debate on tfe bill win rinse to-day. WASHINGTON, March 20. Congressional jiroecedings yesterday were without marked importance. Mr. Wilson introduced the Army bill in the Senate. It reduces the number of officers and enlisted men. Mr. Cole from the Post-office Committee, intro duced a bill to provide for a semi monthly steamship service between San Francisco and ports in Japan and China. Mr. Sherman introduced a joint resolution appropriating SIOO,OOO to the Hall expedition in search of the North Pole. The Senate took up and passed the bill to fix the point of junc tion of the Central Pacific Railroad Companies. The House of Represen tatives devoted the day in comioitttee to the Tariff bill. So many members have speeches to make that the gener al debate will hardly be closed before next week. The Senate was in execu tive session several hours on theßaez- Grant San Domingo job. Senator Morton madean elaborate speech in fa vor of it. ELDttllHili OX "I.OVAI.I'V." Mr. Eidridge, of Wisconsin, is not particularly enamored by the radical cant of loyalty. The other day in the House, he Said : The word "loyalty" 1 have always despised. I despise what is called a "loyal" man; 1 hate him from the crown of my head to the sole of my feet. I once undertook to illustrate to the House by a story the meaning of the word "loyaltyand as the House may have forgotten the incident I wish to repeat it for the benefit of my friend irom Massachusetts. The question wa-asked why a friend of mine could not get the contracts out of which he could make money during the war, and who was able to get contracts and make money ; a loyal man told him the reason why lie could not was be cause be was disloyal and the reason why he could was because he was "truly loyal." My friend says, "Now what flu you mean by loyal?" "Mean ?" he says; "why it is a feeling which pervades a man, that influences his whole conduct, that make him re ally what he is, or what he is not." "But," said my friend, "what does that mean?" Ho replied, "It is a feeling." "Well then how do you feel ? ' "i feel loyal." "But what is that feeling?" He then replied, "I feel as though I wanted to steal something or kill somebody." [Laughter.] And that is loyalty. You have made that word take the place of the true and nobleold word, the foundation principle of the republic and of the n i ion—to take the place of "patriotism." I am pa triotic, but I am not "loyal." It is a word which does not belong to this country; but only belongs to Massa chusetts. [Laughter.] WHEELING, March 21.— Thomas D. Carr, the murderer of Louisa C. Fox, was executed to-day at St. C'lairsville, Ohio. Tiie town was alive with for eigners to witness the execution. At one o'clock and twenty minutes, the prisoner was taken upon the stand and made a few brief remarks in which he blamed his father and whis ky for this sad end of his life. He offered a short prayer, in which lift briefly sketched the many errors of his life. In twenty minutes after the trap fell and the man was hurled into eternity. His neck was not broken and he was strangled. A written con-, fession was made, in which he says that he was the perpetrator of four teen cold-blooded murd rs before the killing of Miss Fox. The confession is full, the rehearsal of his 1 fe era bracing an entire history of the T rrieh murder which was perpetrated near this city in 1867. QUINCY, 111., March 24. A terri ble accident, occurred yesterday after noon near the depot of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincv railroad. A freight train coming down grade broke in two—the brakeman being on the detatched portion. The engineer re versed his locomotive too suddenly, the cylinder heads were blown out and the train rushed forward utoan accom modation train just entering the depot. All the passengers of the latter jump ed off, except three, and these were caught in the platforms ami stiockiug ly crushed. One of them has died and another is not expected to recover.— The third is maimed for life. The cause of the mishap wrs a faulty coup ling iron. Sir Clinton Murdoch has sailed from England for New York for the pur pose of making extensive arranginents for the landing of emigrants this year. Accounts front the principal ports of Ireland show that emigration to the United States has reopened this sea seas n with great vigor. The steamer Guidon, from Memphis to Little Rock, snagged and sunk to her boiler deck in the Arkansas river on Wednesday last. No lives were lost. The boat and cargo area total loss. In reply to a young writer who wished to know which magazine Would give him the highest position quickest, a contemporary advised a 'powder magazine,'if you contribute a fiery article. A showman at Omaha exhibits one of bis eyes, preserved in a bottle, which he tells tlie audience "was gouged out in a free fight in the early days of this yere town." A contemporary pities the verdancy of people "who think that a seat in Congress is a passport to good society.' An Ohio murderer, who escaped con viction on the plea of insanity, now refuses to pay hi- lawyers for the.same reason, Many of the New York churches de cline to renew the engaigem&nls for choir singers at the high prices paid them last year. The Prince of Wales regrets John S. Clarke's prospective return to this country, and told him so at a recent interview. The M irquls of Westminster is the richest man in England. Income tax four millions a year. Advices from California r-port the Apache Indiana as plundering and murdering defenceless whites in every direction. The Liverpool people havs reached the conclusion that the steamer City of Boston has bten sunk hv a collision | with an iceberg. Minnesota is reported to be complete ly snowbound. j Isabella the ex Queen, is said to be I growing gray and fat. There are eight daily newspapers | published in New Hampshire. New York has 6,000 vagrant children ! who never attend school. Thursday, April 7th, is to be the Massachusetts Fast Day this year. Chicago expects to be the most pop ulous city in the Union in 1890. Out of 40,000,000 people in the Uni ted (Statesonly 250,000 pay an income tax. SPECIAL NOTICES. ANT L i > WAN 1E J J 575,000 175.000 M E N ! BOYS! to attend the Great Daily CL O T HINO SAL E S —OF— BENNETT A CO. TOWER HALL, 518 MARKET ST Half-way between sth and 6th Sta. £jP"Your time will not be wasted. We engage to give greater bargains to purchasers ofolo thing thaucanbe had elsewhere. Call and see what we can do before purchasing. CLOTHING BETTER FITTING CLOTHING BETTER MADE CLOTHING BETTER CUT CLOTHING BETTER FITTING AT TOWER HALL, AT TOWER HALL, THAN ANYWHERE ELSE. Half way between ) BENNETT i Co., Fifth and '• TOWER HALL, Sixth Streets, ) 51FT MARKET ST • PHILADELPHIA octM'fi9yl To CONSUMPTIVES.— The Advertis er, having been restored to health in a few weeks by a very simple remedy, after having Suffered, several years with a severe lung affection. and that dread iisease, C insumption, is anxious to make known to his fellow-sufferers the means of cure. To all who desire it, he will send a oopy of the prescription used (free oi charge,) with the direc tions for propariug and using the same, whinh they will find a sure cure for Consumption, Asth ma, Bronchitis, etc. The object of the advertiser in sending the Presoriptios is to benefit the af flicted and spread information which be conceives to be invaluable : and he hopes every sufferer will ry his remedy, ai it wi 11 cost them nothing, arid may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription, will pieaaead dress Rgv EDWARD A WILSON, Williamsburg, kings County. New York raayl4vl ERRORS OF YOUTH.—A gentleman who sufiered for years from Nervons Debi ity Premature Us ;ay, and all the effects of youthful ndiscretion, will, for the sake ot suffering human ity, anud free to all who need it, the receipt and directions for making the simple remedy by which hewascured Sufferers wishing to profit by the advertiser'soxperieoce can do so by addressing in perfect confidence, JOHN B. OGDEN, No. 42 Cedar street, New York. mayldyl Schenek's Pulmonic Syrup, Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills. willcnreCoti sumption, Liver Complaint and Dyspefsia, if ta ken according to directions They are all three to be taken at the same time. They cleanse the stomach, relax the liver, and put. it to work : then the appetite becomes good; the food digests and makes good blood ; the patient begins to grow in fiesh ; the diseased mat'er ripens in the lungss and tbe patient outgrows the disease and get, well. This is the only way 'o cure consumption To these three medicines Dr J H.Schenck, of Philadelphia, owes his unrivalled success in the treatmentof pulmonary consumption. The Put monic Syrup ripens tbe morbid matter in the lun/s. nature throws it off by an easy expectora tion, for when the phlegm or matter is ripe, a slight cough will throw t off, and the patient has rest and the lungs begin to heal. To do this, the Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills must be freely used to cleause the stomach and liver, so that the Pulmonic Syrup and the food will make good blood Schenck's Mandrake Pills act upon tbe liver, removing all obstructions, relax the ducts of the gal.-bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver is soon relieved ; the stools wilt show what the Pills can do ; nothing has ever boon invented ex cept calomel (a deadly poison which is very dan gerous to use unless with great care), that will unlock the gall-bladder and starts the secretions of the liver like Schenck's Mandrake Pills Ever Complaint is one of the most prominent causes of Consumption. Schenck's Seaweed Tonic is a gentle stimulant and alterative, and the Alkali in the Seaweed, which this preparation is made of, assists the stomach to throw out the gastric juice to dissolve the food with the Pulmonic Syrup, and it is made into good blood without fermentation or souring in the stomach. The great reason why physicians do not cure consumption is, they try to do too inuoh ; they giveinedicine to stop the cough, to stop chills, to stop night sweats, hectic fever, and by so doing theyderange the whole digestive powers, locking hup te seore f ions, and eventually the patient sink and dies. Dr. Scheuck, in his treatment, does not try to j stop a cough, night sweats, chills, or fever. Re rnov e the cause, and they will all stop of their own accord. No one can bo cured of Consurap. tion. Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Cataarh, Can ker, Ulcerated Throat, unless the liver and stom ach are mate healthy. If a person has Consumption, ofcourse the lungs in some way are diseased, either tubereleg, ab sceses, bronchial irritation, pleura adhesion, or tbe lungs are a mass of intlauimatior Lad fast de caying In such eases what must be done ? It is not only toe lungs that are wasting, but it is tho whole body. The stomach and liver have lost their power to make blood out of food. Now the only ohanoe is to take Sohenok's three medicines, whtich will bring up a tone to the stomach, the pa ient will begin to want food, it will digesteasi iy and inako good blood : then the patient begins ot gain in flesh, and as soon as the body begins to sgrow, the lungs commence to heal up, and tbe pa stienl gets fleshy and well. This is the only way tocure consumption. When there is no lung disease, and only Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, Bchenck'g Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills are si ffioieut without the Pulmonic Syrup. Take the Mandrake Pills freely in all billious complaints, as they are per fectly harmless Dr. S jhenck, who has enjoyed uninterrupted health for many years past, aud now weighs 225 pounds, was wasted away to a mere skeleton, in the very last stage of Pulmonary Consumption, his physicians hav ing pronounced his case hope less and abandoned him to his fete. He was cured by the aforesaid medicines, and since hisrecovery many thousands similarly afflicted have used Dr. Schenck's preparations with tho same remurkabto success Full directions ACCOMPANY ing each, make it uot absolutely necessary to personally see Dr Schenck, unless the patients wish their lungs examined and for this purpose he is professional ly at his Principal Office. Philadelphia, everv ftuturday, where all let ers for advioe must be ad dressed He is also ptofeseionally at No. 3280 nd Street. New York, every other Tuesday, and at No. 35. Hanover Street, Boston, every other WEDNESDAY. He givesadviee free, but for athor ougk examination with HIS Resplrometerthe price isss Office boors at each city from 9A■M . to 3 P M. Price of the Pulmonic Syrup and Seaweed Ten . io each $1 50 per battle, or $7 M a hulf-doxeul Mandrake Pills 35 oents a box. For sale by AL druggists. DR J. H. SCHENCK. mayjftyl 15 N. 6th St. , Philada , Pa. 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