THE DAILY E,iiiNG TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 18G8. THE NATIONAL DEBT. A IXrrenne or S02 Millions In Throw I'cnra Important im Inlcrcntiiix Factn Kpcech of lWlwnril Atkinson, of jtoaton. .... At the Massachusetts UepubUcim Convention l Worcester, Mr. E lwnrd Atkluson, of Do9ton, made to It the following hnportant speech upoa the finances. He proves conclusively that the Actual debt of the natlou tins been rert.icei during the last three years by more than $soo, f)0i),0()0, or one-fourth of the whole, and tti-tt, even aiter the recent larere reductions of taxa tion, tbe payment of the principal will continue rapidly enough to extinguish the whole early la the next century. The contrast between the reckless extravueance ol the Inst Domocratlc admlnHtraiion ana tho economy of the p-esent Congress nowhere appeals more clearly than la thee oillclul fisure. Tbe net result of tblrtv-Uve months 01 eco nomy and tHxmion Is tbh: Debt ol the United States:- AnifiiKt I, IflflB $n,297,733,329 June SO, 1C08, .... 2,45,000,003 Eeductlon $802,739,323 tJentlenieu: Jn a short nd dress I propose to Justily. not to deleud, the lineal policy of the tfepublicuQ ptrtv. A the honored Chairman, of our State Central Committee bus wetl said, its fiscal record needs no defocso. It is a record of which we may well be proud. In speaking to jou 1 shall pa rapidly" over the details, but jou will find all my statements verified In detail in the printed reports. If there Is any merit in the following analysis of tho expenditures of the lat three years, I can only claim the plan and method upou which it is plrced before you. All the data have been furui'hed me by the Hon. David A. Wells I long siuce perceived that the statement com monly accepted as that of the luixiuium debt of the United St itrs wps not one which covered the liability of the Government on the 1st of August, 1BU5, by many millions of dollats. 1BE DEBT IN 18G5. I knew this from the fact that the manure turtuf? coiporaiions with which I am myself con nected, held at that date several millions of dol lars ot claims upou the Government through the contractors to whom we had sold material for the tents and clothing for the army, for which they had theu had no settlement. These ac counts were afterwards allowed, a id we took our pay In 73-10 note?, most of which we sol i to the various Havings backs of Massachusetts from whom we had borrowed tbe money to enable us to do the work and furnish tbe good". These notes were, of course, converted into 6-20 bonds by the savings banks, aud now form a portion of the debt which the Democratic party proposes to repudiate by issuiua greenbacks, or In other words, substituting lailei paper bear ing no Interest, for a debt not yet due; the avowed purpose of the Southern wins; of the party, wro at least may claim the meed of praise for their bold avowal, being to render the greenback valueless and tbPn to repudiate it. In this scheme they are led by George H. Pen dleton, aud covertly supported by Horatio Sey mour, it being now asserted by his supporters that he has retracted his previous vie vs. and that there Is a substantial agreement between himself aud Pendleton as to what should bo the fiscal policy of the country. DI3 STATEMENTS ARB OFFICIAL. 1 have said that I have been able to make the statement which are iucludedin this address by the uid of my lrieud, David A. Wells, special commissioner of the revenue, to whom I applied in order that I might have the force ot an official statement to prove my position, ot the value ot his official statement you are well aware. No man stands higher in the coniidenco of the people, and no man deserves that con fidence more. With a single eye to the truth ha cives to his work the force or aa enthusiasm rarely to be found, and hence the power and value of every document tht comes from his band. For the use I have made of the figures which he has given to me in answer to my questions, I alone am responsible, aud 1 desire that he shall have the credit of all the facts here stated, and I invite the blame of those who will charge me with perverting them to party purposes. The Democratic puny fears the truth, aud will make this charge. 1 trust this may not long be so. The name of Democrat, in Its true 6ianidcauce, is one which I houor and cherish, and 1 hope the day is not far olf when it shall no longer be prostituted to the purposes of a party which denies every principle indicated by in name, and which has been the party of despotism and of oppression ever bince it came to man's estate; a prrty which now rests its chance of success upon the iguorauce of its followers aud proposes to inaugurate war, fraud, aud violence, under the lead of Seymour and Dlair. We demand peace and an honest RflminNtration, and under the wise control of General Grant thjse we will liave, CONFIRMED BY MR. BOTTTWELL. I also desire to say that I did not fully realize the great importance or the force of the state ment of tne real maximum debt of the United Biates, at a given date, until I read tho speech, of Hon. George 8. Boutwell upon the Fundiug bill, in which speech is a compact statement sub stantially agreeing with the exhibit I am about to make. The condition of active war termi nated with the surrender of the Rebel armies in April, 18G5, but the condition of passive war did not then cease, nor will it cease until every citi zen of the Southern States shall be safe under the protection of loyal State Governments, elected by the ballots of all i'reeoicn or freed mee uee not only from tbe chains of slavery, buMrom the fear of violence or fraud by which they are now Intimidated. WHAT DID WB OWE IN 18S5? The ascertained debt of tbe United Slate on the first day of Api.ll, 18(15, as entered upon the books of tbe Treasury Department, amounted to $2,360,955,077. Four moatns later, on the 1st of August, 1805, the debt represented upon the books amounted to $2,757,689,571; and the latter sum has been assumed ot late to have been the maximum debt of the country at any one time. But such was very lar from being the fact. These figures represent only the amount of debt actually entered upon the books of the Treasury Department, but there existed at that time a lia bility for a very laise sum not then entered, but for which the Government was bound as much as if tbe bonds had then been issued. A liability Bince recognized and since paid. At that time tbe Democratic party leaders asserted what they now find it convenient to forget, viz: that the burden of debt imposed upon the country by the war was three to tour thousand million dollars, and for once they were right; the true liability of the Uuitcd States, caused by the war Which the Democratic party of the South had waned upon the Government, amounted in the year 18G6 to the sum of $3,287,733,323; aud since that date tbe republican party has paid over $fl()0,000,COO, or one-quarter of the principal of the entire debt, besides paying the iutercst. COW IT WAS REDUCED. In proof of this statement, let us now review the financial history of the Government from April 1, 18C5, to June 30 18G8, the close of the last fiscal year, a period of three years and three months of quasi peace. AND FIRST AB TO REVENUE. The receipts from the customs hare been as follows: April 1 to June 30, 1805 . . $30,014,387 July 1, 18GS, to June 30, 18,10 . 17t,048.651 July 1, 1800, to Juue 30, 18U7 . 170,417,810 July 1, 18G7, to June 30, 1U8 . 163,600,003 Total $517,078,818 INTERNAL REVENUE. April 1, 18G5. to June 30. 1805 . $12,508,820 July 1, 1865, to June 30, 1800 . 310.900,1)81 July 1, 1800, to June 30, 1807 . 205,920,474 July 1, 1807, to Juue 30, 18G8 , 193,000,000 Total . . . . . $812,330,278 MISCELLANEOUS SOURCES. The receipts uuder this bead have been derived from tho following sources, enumerated in the order of their importance: First, Premium on sales of gold. Second, Hales of military and naval stores, and of captured aud abandoned property. Third, Dnect taxes. Fourth, Public lauds. The receipts from the last having been comparatively inconsiderable, April 1, 1RC5 to June 30, 1865 . $10,995,955 July 1, lH(ir)tO " 30,1806 . 69,750,154 " 1, 1866 to " 30, 1867 . 48,188,660 " 1, 1807 to " 30, 18G8 . 49.800,000 , Total . . . . . $178,713,719 RECAPITULATION. Customs. ..... $519,978 538 Internal Revenue. . . . 812,i3fl,278 Miscellaneous .... 178,743,709 Total $1,540 053 533 Tbe above total therefore repreenu the ex'tet amouut which the Tieasuryot tbe United States has received from cources other than loans Bince the close of tbe war. WHAT BECOMES OF TUB MONET f And now we oome to the nuin question. In what manner has this sum of money amounting to three-tilths the present amount of the public debt been disposed off This is a question which tbe people have a right to ak, aud which I pro pose to answer to auswerln the most simple and straightforward manner, and in a manner which can be verified by any man who will take tbe pains to examine tho finance reports of the Inst three years, issued by Hon. Hugh McCul locb, Secretary of tho Treasury. Although active hostilities virtually ended with the sur render of the great Rebel armies in April, 1865, the expenses ot the war did not and ot necessity could not cease at ouce. The military and naval forces were at that time in a state of the greatest efficiency. In number they approxi mated to a million of men in active service, arid preparations had been made for prosecuting the war at all po'Ets with the gieattst euergy durln the cnsuii g season. WaB EXPENSES AFTER THE WAR. It was obviously impossible for the Govern ment to say to its million ot soldiers and sailors the moment the Rebels laid down their arms Col we have no further use for youl To the sick, wounded, and disabled take care ofyour-r-elvesl To the owners of half constructed vissels, and to those who had contracted in good laith to supply food, clothiugaud ordnance we rcpudinte our contracts and refuse your supplies 1 No; all thche matteis were to bo set tled upon principles of justice, honor and hu manity; but to accomplish such a result the treasury found itself in a position ot embarrass mentKud dancer which few eitter knew or ap preciated. The credit of the Government had become greatly impnircd, the 7 3-10 loan was seliirgat less than par even in currency, and all other means adopted for raising money during tbe preceding year had proved or were theu proving comparative failures. There were in April, 1865, arcounts passed tor payment aud overdue to the extent of over one hundred aud twenty millions of dollars, w hile ull the avail able cash funds, coin, aud curreucy, which the Government could tbca command was less, all told, than seventeen millions of dollars. OCR CREDIT LOW. Treasury voucher, issued lor supplies to the army and navy, were buing sold with difficulty by their holders at from ten to twenty per cent, discount, the pay of the army itself was aud had for months been largely in arrears. Horatio Seymour and other rich Democrats were then refusing, as they bad always refused, to sub sciibJ lor or to hold the bonds of the United Btates. In short, the Treasury was so near to absolute bankruptcy that the old officials, to whom almost alone the-e facts were known, dreaded the collapse wtiich they feared might come at any day. But fortunately the sjstein of Internal revenue, the establishment of which, bad beeu only too long delayed, was beginning to prove effective, aud the receipts from this source aud from the renewal of subscriptions to the 730 loan tided the Treasury over a most critical peiiod. The inevitable result was, how ever, that large paymeuts, the liability for which actually existed during tho time, and which were properly part and parcel of tho ex penses of aciivo war, were carried over into the year succeeding the war, and were then largely paid from tho enormous receipts of revenue of that jcar. BACK rAY OF TROOPS. This liability for back pay, for the pay of the troops to the date of their possible discharge for their transportation, and for the settlement of contracts, formed a part of the debt of tho United States on tbe 1st of April or on tho 1st of August, 1865, as much as if it had all been settled and the bonds issued and entered upon the books of tbe Treasury Department. These disburse ments, under tbe direction ot the War Depart ment, from the 1st of April. 18C5, to the 30th of June, 186G, a period of only fifteen months, were as follows: April 1 to June 30, 18C5 . , $114,196,377 July 1 to 8eptember30, 18G5 . 165,369,237 October 1 to December 31, 18G5 . 68,122,541 January 1, 18bG, to Juue 30, 166G . 50,857,023 Total 15 months . . . $698,510,078 During the tame period the expenditures made under the direction ot the Navy Department were as follows: . Apiil 1, 1865, to December 31, 1865 $53,847,889 January 1, 1866, to Juue 30, 18UC . 17,461 881 Total 15 months . . . .$7(5,319,773 It thus appears that the disbursements made under the direction of the Atmv and Navy De partment during the mteeu months immediately succeeding April 1, 1865, the month in which the Rebel armies euritndered, amounted to $771,865,851. WE OWED TH13 IS APRIL, 1665. It is estimated that a very largo propertion of this sum, not less than $100,000,000, was on account of expenses incurred and accounts rendered from three to twelve months prior to tbe termination of active hostilities, and which had been allowed by the Treasury to remain unliquidated, simply by reason of great financial embarrassments. The remainder is made up mainly of the following Items: Pay of the army 15 months. , $206,000,000 Commissaty and Quartermaster's Department for subsistence and transportation, about . . 60,000,000 Medical and Hospital Department 17,337,000 Arrears of pay of discharged or de ceased 6oldiers .... 16,189,000 Bounties ..... 10,429,000 Prize money paid by Navy Depart ment 3,875.072 It is therefore not only legitimate but strictly in accordance with tho lacts, to assume that this large expenditure ot nearly eight hundred million dollars from. April 1, 1865, to June 30, lb06, was in every sense a war expenditure, and that it was a liability on ths 1st of August, 1865, tbe date on which our debt appeared to beat its maximum by the Treasury books, as much as if 7 3-10 notes or 5-20 bouds bad been issued and entered upon the ledger; and this expenditure is to be measured and estimated by the same standards as thOBe by which the expenditures of the active war are adjudged to have been necessary and unavoidable on the one hand, or unnecessary and inexpedient on the other. THIS IS NOT ALL. But the liability which existed nt that date was even more. There were tha debts which humanity and honor alike have imposed upon the country, and which Congress has recognised and paid. We were then liable for pensions, for the equalization ot bounties, for further arrears of pay of deceased soldiers, tor the claims of States, for the property of loyal men destroyed, for additional prists money, lor the reconstruc tion of the Rebellious States, for the care of the fieedmen, and for tho burial of the dead. The amount ot these liabilities which have been recognized and paid, and which are not included in the previous statement, is as follows: Pensions $62,828,955 Bounties 49,382,859 Prize money 1,642,099 lteimbuwlng States lor war expen ditures 12,330,183 Claims of loyal men . . . 11,111,300 Freedmen's Buieau . . . 6,617,000 Miscellaneous, including all ex penses of reconstruction and national cemeteries, estimated . 3,000,000 Add to this tbe oxpme of the army and navy for 15 mouths, as pieviousiy stated . . , And we have a total of . . And In this total we have the sum to be added to the debt as it stood upon the books of the Treasury, April 1, 1805 Making the aggregate of $115,012,101 774,805.851 $920,778,252 2,366,955,077 , $3,287,733,329 which was tho actual maximum of tho war debt, being the expenses of the war not paid as they wers incurred. . TUB DR11T THEN AND NOW. Bear In mind that these figures are all official' carefully prepared tor me by Hon. David A' Well", in order that I might defend the credit of the United States against all comers. WHAT IB OUB DEDT NOW T At tho end of tho fiscal year ending June 30. 1868, it was . . $ But in this amount there were In cluded $26,000,000 of bonds loaned to the PuciQc Railroad, and to be paid by them .... 2,511,000,000 23,000,000 Net debt .... $2,485,000,000 WE HAVE PAID off $802,733,329. Thepresent debt, deducted from the maximum debt in 1865, proves the actual payment during three jears of qnasl peace of $802,733,329, or about one.quarter of our entire war liability. Our net debt is a little more at this date, owing to the Alaska purchase, the further advance of bonds to the Pacific Railroad, and the reduction of the revenue lrom the frauds ot the whisky riag before the tax on whisky was reduced. And now wo begin to ee to what purpose tho reve nue of the past three years bus been applied. But another great war liability has accrued in that period, viz: the interest upon the war debt, amounting from April 1, 1865, to Juno 30, 1868, iu coiu aud currency, to $133,484,883. We can now strike the talance between our Income and our war expenditures: Income, 8J, years . , . $1,510,038,583 War debt . . . $802,733,329 War interest paid . 438.484.e83 1,241,218,212 Ordinary expenses . . $298,840,371 Including the cost of the late Indian war, aud about $10,000,000 paid under the direction of the Engineer Bureuu for river uud harbor im provement. NO EXTRAVAGANCE. This is the sum and substance of all tho charges of extravagance and waste. If it shall be claimed that the whole problem should be stated In currency the result is not changed, only our income and our war interest will each appear a little larger. The premiums on sales of gold having been iucluded in the miscellaneous receipts, the ouly addition we have to make is to add to the war interest the premium on about two-thirds ot the amount paid in gold at an average rate of forty per cent., say $112,000, 000. Oui statement will then stand: Income 34 vcars . . . $1,510,033,583 And value of premium on gold in terest paid 112,000,000 Income in currency . . 1,652,058,583 War debt paid . $802,733,329 Interest . . . 438,484,883 Premium on gold . 112,oou,000 1,353.218,212 Ordinary expenses . . . $208,840,371 or a little less thau $92,000,000 a year. The expenses of the last fiscal year under tbe Democratic ad ministration of James Buchanan amounted to S73,841,000 equal to a currency equivalent at the average of 110 for gold, the rate fat which our expenditures (should be takcu if our curreucy expenses be reduced to gold, to , $107,577,400 THE GOVERNMENT CHEAPER THAN BUCHANAN'S. It therefore appears that the expenses of tho Government UDder the direction of a Republican Congress, hampered ty a hostile Executive, have been at tbe rate of $15,600,000 less per annum than the expenses uuder the last year of Demo cratic rule. We claim that ihey might fairly have exceeded any honest expenditure in 1860, for we have five or six millions more population and a vast extent of new territory to guard and control. If it shall be alleged that we have in eluded all the expenses of the War and Navy depaitments for tilteen months after April, 1865, as war expenses, and that there would hive been a moderate expenditure under any circum stances, we will admit It; but the expenses of the Indian war, estima'ed at $30,000,000 to $40,000,000, and the amount expended on rivor and barboi improvements ($10,000,0C0) for which wc have made no allowance, but have included as ordinary expenses would fully offset this claim. It would therefore appear that when partisans charge the Republican Coneress with eAtravagauce they charge the last Democratic administration with far greater. WniRB BUCHANAN'S MONBT WENT. But we are fully prepared to admit their charge of excessive expenditure agalust boto. administrations. Tb expenditure made uuder J aines Buchanan, of $77,841,000 in gold, amount ing to a present currency equivalent to $107, 577,400, was largely used to arm and equip the rebel Sia'e9 in order that they might wage war against the Government. The extravagant expenditure of the last three years lias been made in consequence of the appointment to and maintenance in office of corrupt clhcials by Andrew Johnson. We will now close this branch of our subject, but let us lirst recapitu late our figures, TABULAR STATEMENT. We have proved that the ordinary expenses of the Goveinment for three years and a quarter, including the suppression of Indian hostilities, aud nearly $10,000,000 for river and harbor improvements, have been at less rates thau during the last fiscal year prior to the war. We have proved that to the alleged maximum debt, August 1, 1865 . $2,757,689,571 There must be added a portion of the liability ot $920,778,262, which existed April 1, and ot which there was still unsettled on the l6t August the sum of . 630,643,759 And we then bave the actual maxi mum debt $3,287,733,329 IN WHAT FORM WAS THIS DEBT? 1st. Du wahin three years. 1st The liability not then entered upon the books was all recog nized and settled within three years, and most of it was due and paid within one year . , . $530,043,758 2d The debt upon the books was mostly due at short date, and consisted of the following obli gations: Overdue, on which interest bad ceased 1,503,020 Compound Interest notes due in I860 and 1867 .... 217,024,160 7 3-10 Treasury notes dus iu 1867 and 18G8 830,000,003 Certificates of indebtcduess due In 1806 . , 85,093.000 Temporary loan on 10 days' notice, 6 and 6 per cent. . . 107,148 713 One and two year totes at 5 per ' cent. . , . . . . 33,954,230 Suspended requisitions ... a 111,000 6 per cent. bOLds issued before the ' war, aud due lu 1867 aud 1868 . 18,323,592 Total debt due with In 3 years, $1,825,201,473 Due Debt on Dtmand. ' Notes known as Legal-tender notes or "greenbacks" which the Re publican party now recognizes as a debt due on demand aud has paid iu part or proposes to pay or to fund in interest bearing bonds . . . $433,1C0,5U9 Fractional currency . 26,344,742 $t69,603l7 Less cash In Treasury 88,218,055 $371,297,258 Funded Debt, Old five per cents,, due in 1871 and 1874 . $27,022,000 5 per cent. 10-40 bonds due in 1904 . . 172,770,100 6 per cent, bonds due in 1882 aud 1884 . C0C,CC0,E00 Bonds issued to tbe Pacific railroad, due 1896 .... 1.258.C00 1,091,244,600 Maximum debt ; . . $3,287,733,329 FORM OF THB DEBT IMPROVED. If we analyze the form of our debt as It existed June 30, 1866, amounting net to only $2,485,000,000, we fiatl that it wa all Bub9tao. tially consolidated Into long loins, the pivmnt of none of which can be demanded before 1880. except the currency debt represented by the legal tender demand notes amounting no to only $356,000,000. And for the I undine of these notes the Republican party pascd an act which failed to become a law by the laches of Andrew Johnson. THB PARTY OF HONE8TT. We then claim that the Republican party has proved its intention to meet the liabilities of the country by honest payment, aud to remove from tbe people at the earliest moment the curse of an inconvertible paper currency. I have never been entirely convinced ot the necessity for the issue of the letrnl-tender notes as a war measure until 1 en'ered upon the review of our finances, of which 1 am now giving you the results. I challenge any one to deny that this exhibit prove that the finances of tbe country have ben manaced b.v the Republican pnrty witn a succets never before koowii in tho history of the world. Would that I nad the eloquence of Olndsione, that I might exci'c In you as much interest in these dry details as tueir importuuee demands. RESULT j ATTAINED. From this review ot the finances of the last Ihree years It is manifest that if tho nation has submitted to excessive taxation, and ha? mada an extraordinary effort to free Usolf from finan cial embarrassment, it has something real aud substauiinl to show for it. It hu secured rud 6tnnt1al relief lrom the burden ot debt in spite of that wont form of taxation upon consuaicrs, that Involved ia tho n-e of inconvertible paper moaey forced into calculation nnder the diro necessity of war, and which tbe Republican pnrty proooses to remedy by doing i istice to the noteholder?, and making their lea il tender notes as pood as gold, while the Democratic party propose 1o continue indefinitely this burden by iesuiDg greenbacks until they become worthless, TRUE POLICY OF FUNDING. Here let me enlorcc the point so w 11 made by Governor Boutwell in hi speech upon the Fuud irg bill. Congress should never authorize a loan even at a low rate ot interest upon over ten years, without retainini; tbe right to pay It at its option after that period. We seem to have lost our financial couraee since the war ended. Duiii.g tho war we issued five-tventy and ten forty loans, assuming that we should want to pay the whole or a portion at an early dnte. The fraudulent proposition of the Democratic party, seconded by a few weak Republicans, to substi tute bonds bearing no interest lor the five twenty bouds, thus defrauding our creditors without paying our debt, ha, for the time being, prevented us from availing ourclves of the privilege of real payment and has kept our rate ol Interest very high; but let us keeo our faith in the nation and not give up the idea of paying the debt within twenty or thirty years. We have paid $800,000,000 ot our debt in the last three years, aud at least $209,000,000 of extra lnttrestor guaranty, the latter paid in couse quence of the dishocest purposes of the Demo cratic party. One Republican member of Conuress in Maine, one iu Missouri, and I know not how many more, have been or will be rejectid by their constituents solely becanse they were weak enough to be misled by thefaUe counsels of false leaders. THE REVENUE LAWS. We have collfcted this billion of dollars under tax and tarltl laws wh'iso justification is in the revenue they have yielded. Judged upon their own merits they appear to have been enacted in haste, ill devised and calculated to make the burden of taxation much more onerous than it need be. The internal revenue law has been revised and made simple, the tariff needs yet more to be simplified, in order that as much or more revenue may be derived fiom it, with less injury to the people who pay the tax imposed by the tariff, viz: the consumers of foreign go ids. If, then, under all these difficulties, we have in thiee years paid one-quarter of our debt, shall wo take fifty, forty, or even th'.ity years to pay the other threo-quarters? Let us not listen to such a proposal; let us not put upon onr child ren a burden we can so easily remove. We have groaned under heavy taxation, but had wo not paid war debt and war interest had we bor rowed instead of paying our debt would now be over $3,800,000,000. SEDUCTION OF TAXES. We have reduced our faxes $167,000,000 per annum, and when George H. Pendhston alleges that the trxes now amount to $500,000,000 a year, he wilfully asserts wbut he knows to b false. We may well repeat the pertinent question put, we believe, by Hou. William Whiting, "Are Pendleton and the Democratic leaders intcntioually attempting to destroy tho credit of the nation, in order that we may be unable to obtain tbe means to put down the new rebellion which they propose to inaugurate?" But what is far more important, we bave reduced expenses yet more. Jor the year ending June so, 1863, tbe ex.- peusea ol the War Department wwr i oci.T'3 000 For llit yrer eudli.K Jaueau IStW, tlie eu tire expenses or the army proper, ex cluding bounilefl. State claims aaa other legacies of the war, were 50,018,090 Fit tbe current year the est mtues are If ss than 4),00ft,000 TheezpeDsea for the Navy Deparimtut lor tbe year ending June 80, IS6S, were... 123,ono,ooi Tear ending Juneau. loti8 .., 277ii,otio JiKtluiHte lor the curieut year 17,3iU,WX We are charged by Mr. Tendletou with heavy deficiency bills, but we reply that they are ren dered necessary by the frauds ot the honorable Democrats ot the whisky riug kept in office by Andiew Johnson. STRENGTH OF THB COUNTRY. We have ceased the rapid reduction of deb, and our taxes are not now excessive, but perhaps ill-adjusted. At the present rate per head of less than $9, our antiie debt, with intereet calculated at six per cent, for the next five years and at flv per cent, thereafter, and with an allowance for ordinary expenses for greater than we are now payiDg I say making all these allowances, the rate of $860 per head will pay our debt before the year 1884 has ended. Whv. Gentlemen, we do not begin to realize our power we do not begin to know our strength, we are scared by a mirage, ana we propoie to put on twenty, thirty, ave. even filtv vears. what we can easilv do in ten. We do not need to issue a long loan to obtain a low rate of interest. Canada has just borrowed 7,500,000 at 4 per cent, and $2,500,000 at 5 per cent., and the whole amount was taken on twenty years by the Rothschilds at 105J. Tbe finance minister ot Cauada expects to placd la Wlrt turn - - 9iu,uuu,uuu more on stui oetier terms. WHY INTEREST IS HIQH. All we pay above four per cent, interest is tho guarautee charged ut by capitalists because we indulge ourselves in the luxury of Democratic party leadeis like Pendleton, Seymour, hainp tou, Forrest and the like. I have said that we don't know our strength, let us try to realize it by a glance at soaio of tho elements of oar luture prosperity. WHERE STRKNGTH COMBS FROM. First Immigration. Since tbe termination of tbe war, as I am informed by Mr. Wells, over nine hundred thousand natives of foreign coun tries bave sought a permanent home in tie United States, There Immigrants are known to bring with them specie, or its equivalent, to the average amouut of $70 per head, wade their average value to the country as producers Ond It is from production alone that we can collect taxes) cannot be estimated at less than the ave rage value of an able-bodied laborer in the South, piior to tbe war, via., $10JO per capita. Immigration, therefore, since the war has added $63,0(10,000 directly, and $900,000,000 ludirectly to tbe wealth aud resources of the cmutry. And here let me point out an effect of the Pa cific Railroad upon future immigration. I be lieve the force of Chinese laborers who are now constructing the Pacittc eud ot that road are but the advance guard of a mighty host who will establish a new "central flowery kinsdom" upou the dry plains between the Sierra Nevada and the Rocky Mountains. Theo plains can ouly be cultivated by irrigat od, in which method tbo Chinese are tbe most expert people lu the world. BuUtUl fuitber aud more important ytt. While tbe white can and tbe black does cultivate cotton, I believe the Chiuese will per. form the work more cheaply, and that they will settle upon the rich cotton fields of Arkansas atd Texas now cultivated to the exteut of ouly half of one per cent, of their area. To the cotton climate and to the method of cultivation the Chinaman is perfectly adapted. He is tem perate and frugal, and his persistent Industry Is exactly lilted to the light but continuous labor required in the production of cotton, INDUSTRT GROWING. Second, illers let mo again quj'.e the lin sriiapo of Mr. Wells, n I hive his hiuh authority for the statement: "Since the .termination of the war more iron furnaces have been erected, more pig iron smelted; more bara rolled, more steel made, more coal mined: more lumber sawed and hewed, "mora vessels b-Ult upon our inland waters, more bouees con-tructfdt nrre manufactories of diflerent kinds started, more cotton spun ind woven, more petroleum col lected, refined, and exported thau in any equal period In the history of the couu'ry, either before, during or since tho war.'1. RAILROADS EXTENDING. Third. We may say that during the war, or Btioi after its commencement, tbe railroad system of the North was made a unit by trie completion of various connections, and it will never be known how much this added to our war power. But I will aaiu quote Mr. We i is; he fays, "Since the termination ot the warov?r rive thousand mihs of new railroad hav beeu constructed ntd opened for use iu the United States, to say nothing of the lines in trie South ern States which have been restored and re opened." Gentlemen, when you bear us who arc buslners men complaining ol dullness and ifiipnatlon, please reier ta tne tables of the comparative recepts of feveral ot the great railroads which are given week by week in the Financial Chronicle, aud when jou see hovthcy increase jcar by year, aithou'ib raie are lower, nt who exchanges ull tbejo commodities on which the IreigLl is paid, and inen consider whether the use of paper money may not have induced too many men to engage in exchange, or to become tracers rather thau praduceis. AGRICULTURE MORE 1'RO JUCTIVE. Fourth. The agricultural products of the United States have steadily iucreascd both In quantity and value finrettie termination of the war, and the product of agriculture increased iu qnnntity all through the war. We aro rapidly rcstoriLg the number or aulmals, both hor-cs and cattle, to their normal proportion. It may be that this year the crop ol gain will be in full proportion to what it would have been hud there been no uunatuial or lorced stimulus to manufactures by which labor has beeu diver .el from tigriculturc. THE SOUTHERN STATES. Fifth. Lttusplunce at the condition of the South. It Is alleged that the reconstruction plan of Congress has been a lailure. Let us test it by economic result. It is alleged that the South has been ground down unuer a military despotism; that there has been no labor that could be relied upon, and lastly, that tUey have bad no capital. The last allegation we will admit, because wo know that the tendency of Northern cnpital to the South has been checked by its insecurity. The crops of this year a-e, therefore, free from mortgage, for no one would trust a planter this last fpnue. Now let os see what is the result. If the South has hod neither labor nor capital, thtiir crops must be tbe s ponlaneous production of natiue, and they have Firs'. An annual supply of food for the con sumption of the whole population, say 10,000, 000 to 12,000,000. Second. A crop of cotton which promies to equal or to exceed that of last year, which has been proved by the Investigation of our Cotton Manufacturers' Association to have been nearly or quite 3,000,000,000 bale, or much more than tbe compilers of the comrneiciul tables will admit, and more than three-tilths tho largest crop ever raised be.'orc. Thirl. A crop of rice which the Charleston Daily JS'ewB asserts will prove sufficient to drive all imported rice out of the home matketduriug tbe coming year. Fourth. 50 to 100,000 tierces of sugar. Filth. A crop of tobacco so large as to make it one of our mala dependencies' us an article to be taxed, THEY ARE RICH ALREADY. In short the South has a salable surplus of the aggregate value of 400 to $500,0(.0,000, and all this with their harvest of food is, if we cau trust the evidence of their Democratic leaders, the spontaneous product of nature 1 What may not be the result when General Grant is elected, peace nssiued, labor rendered elTectivc, and capital safe ? THB WAR WORTH IT3 COST. Let me express my profound conviction that, as a purely economic question, the war will pay for itself, since tho increased production of the Southern States, which will follow tho abolition of slavery, will in the next twenty years more than pay the entire cost of the war by which slavery was ended. The question ot taxation is therefore a mere question of distributiou of the burden, and we must see to it that the late Rebel States do not throw off all the burden and reap only the benefit by allowing them to uid the Democratic party in repudiating the debt. Like the Titan of old, this nation has been bouud to a rock, and scathed within the lightning of Jove, but the Prometheus is unbound, and to us may be applied the closing words of that noble poem of Shelley's. In the past years we could havs said thttt it was our fate To Buffer wo s which hope thinks foBatte: To forgive wronga darker thau death or night: To delay power which seems omnipotent: To love aud btar: to hope till hope creates From Its own wreck the thing It cOEteoiplatos: Neither to change, nor taller, uor tepeut. This, like thy glory, Titan I U to be Uoud, great, and Joyous, beautiful and free; 'ibis Is alone Lile, Joy, .Empire, and Victory. RELIEF ASSOCIATION. SHIPPING. i E. OFFICE OF TIIE MAN II AT TAX CO OPE. BATAYJB KE&EF ASSOCIATION, JS. m WALNDT STHEEr. PHILADELPHIA. Object. Tbe object ot this Association Is to secure a casu payment wuhiu forty days alter the death of a member ol e many dol an as there are members lu the class to hicn he or ahe belongs, to tue heirs. ILLUeTKATlOiS; Clas "A" baa froo male members. A member dUs. Tbe Association iaa over wltuia forty days tseus to the widow or heirs, and tbe remaining members forward within thirty days oue dollar aud ten tenia each to the Association io re imburse I. Fading to send this bum, they lorlel. H the Association all moneys paid, and tbe Association supplits a new member to fill the place of tue retiring oue. IJlN CLASSES FOR MEN AND TEN FOK WO MEW. Clabsks. In Class A all persons between the ag'a ot j6 and 20 ymrH; in Lilacs 11, all persons between the ages ot 2U aud !U years: lu Class C, all persons be tween the ages of 25 aud SO years? lu u abs D, all per sons bet weeu the agesol so aud H5 years: iu Class Kail persons between the ages of 85 and 40 years; lu Class all persons between the tges ol 4u aud ib years: lu Cilass U, all persons between the eges of 4 aud 50 el; lu class H, all persons between ihe age of 50 aud 65 year o: In class 1 all persous between tue agea Ol 65 and W years; lu Ulass K, all persons between tue agea ot 60 and 85 years. Tbe tlasses L r womeu are the same as tbove. Kach class la limited to &)otl members. Escb. person pa s six dollars upon be coming a rxeuiber aad one dollar aud teu cili each time a member dies beluugl g to the same class he or she Is a member of. One dollar goes aired to Ihe h-lrs, ten cents t, pay tor collecting. A member ofone cia caunot be as.essxd lb a dol'ar II a memberot auolher ciass dies. Knotx class U Independent, uavlug no connection wltn any oilier. To become a member it Is necessary To py Mi lollura Into tbe trensury at the time of luaklbg Ihe application; to pay One Dohar aud Teu On. a lino tbe treasury upou the Uealh of each aud auy member or Iheciai-s lo which be or she belong, wlihiu Iblrly day alter date ol notice ol such death; lo give your Same. Towu.C'ouMy, Htate.Occuuatluu, etc.; aii-o a midlcal ceiiiil ;tue. 10 very minister la ankeu lo act as agent, and will be paid ivguiar rates i Ui Drt. Circulars win explain fully lu regard to iui.de and investments. Circulars giving fun expla nation aud blank tonus ol application will be seat on ii quest or upou a persoual application at the oUl m of Ihe Association. 'JhUsTEKS AND OFFICERS. K CMCR1Y. P,e.ldet. E. T. WKiUHT (President Star Metal Co.) Viee i resident. W. a CAltM AN (President Btuy veaant Bank). Trea surer. I.EWla SANDKrtS. 8ecretry. I), it, A-AivUtM (I'reslilnut National Traat Co,) 1). H. IjUNCOMB. o. S flue street. The trut"t funds win be held In ti n it by the WATlUtiAli THUSl' COMPANY. no. a&i Uroidway, New York. Agents wanted for this city. Ail'irms WILLIAM LIPPINOOTT. GmvtrI ent, Maubattan Oo-om rullve Henel lusoclaiion, 9 2'm No 4W vVALMU' (Street, Puliad. XCffills LORILLARD'S OUTSIDK LINE. FOR NEW YORK. From and after this dale, tbe rates of freight bj this line will be ten cents per ion 1m for heavy goods; four crnts per foot, nieaniirenient; one cent per gallon for liquids, ship's option. Oue of tbe Hteamtrs of this Line will leave every liiendav, Thursday, and Bator Cay Goods iccelved at all times on covered piers All goods fotwarded by New Yt rk ageul free of charge, except enrtsce. Fur further miormatlon, apply 03 the pier to 2 m JOHN F. oaL. FuK LIVERPOOL ANIVQUKBNS StUaimMiZi TOWN.- liiinaii Line ol ilall oteauiera ai. , pi, titled (o Mi ll a ii I'uwc: CI 1 Y OK LON UHA, Isitturilav, Heptember 12; CI 1 Y OF liALlTMOitU, Haturday. rteplewber 15; HI Y VI? NKvV Iukk, Tuesday, Hepleujber ii CITY Ob' UO HON, f-aturday, f eptember 2l. ano ai'h succeetili g HaniitU) and alternate Tuesday, at 1 1", W,, lrom Pier 4ft, .Norm hlver. HAII.S Oil' l'Asblllli nv THB MAII, STSAMEB SAll.fNO ItVuItY fA-ll'RlJAV, PRJ'sblo i" Ooid. pnvabia in Currency. FJIiT CAHIN......M....Uio,alEKHAOK.... M to London... ICR to I -mutou... ....... 40 to Pari .... HC I to Paris . 4f r ASK AUK 11Y THK TlitsUiV BTKaHKH VIA hALK.X, HhhT CAItIM, eTEKHAM. Paj able In Wold. Parable lu Currency. Liverpool ?!X) lAvt rpoui $30 JlHIIlHX.. M. John s, N. K I by KraLCh Strainer. lUl.lHX "t. John's, N. ! y Hraucli M IS - I go PitaiiviiKerN nls i rwuriltu to liavia Uatuouru. iira- tne ii, etc., ai reduced rales. '1 Irkels can be bnueht ' by persons Rending for tbtlr Irleuds, at mndeia e tales eor tt.roier lniormutiuu upply at the Company's Ollit tH. JOHN G. DALF. Accent, No. 15 BRJATWA Y.N. Y. Otto O'OOiNM-LI. dt PAt'LK. Aaenls, . No. 411 CHI- U I Btr.-tl, Philadelphia. v M.,w iXPHiosb lineTtu a lex-4 wiUteaudrla. Oeorgelowu, aud W fMilngcon) L c , via Cbes -peake and Lclutv..re Ca al . Kl con nections at Alexandria from the mot 1rct route lor L) urhourg, Bristol, KnoxviUe, lSaahvlllt), Dalton and the Ptinhw tst. Hteamers leave resnlaily evrry Batflrday at noon from the Unt wharf a ve Market street. Freight received daliy. , WM. P. CLYDE 4 C'T,, , No, 14 North and tj.wib Wharves, J. B. DAVIDSON, Agent at Oeorgelown. M. ELDiULUifi A Co.. Agents at Alexaudrla, Vlr gl' . 61 sri a i i' irr D KL A W A K K AWDRARITAN CANAL. KXl'Hhoii blKAMUOAT COMPANY The bteam Propellers of this line leuve DAILY lrom llrsl wharf below Market street, THHOUOH IN 24 HOURS. Goods forwarded by all the lines going out of New Yi-rk. Ni nh, Ka.il, aud West, free ol commission, i I eights received at our uhurI low rates, WILLIAM P. CI.YDK SS CO., Agents, . Ku- 14 WHAKVJfia, Philadelphia. JAMFS HAND, Agent, hu . ISo. 119 WALL street, corner of Potith, New York. -rffff NORTH AMKItlCAN STEAJI3HI1' sftrtaaVlii'i.ai.COMPAN Y. ahrottgU ldxt to Callforml via Pastam llallroad. HEW ARRANGEMENT. ' ," Hailing from Mew Yo.k on tbe 6th and 2oth of EVERY MONTxi. ox the uay belore wheu tueae date tail on bund ay. Psage lower than by any other line. ' For Information address D. JS. CiARRINQTON, Agent, Pier Ne. 46 NORTU KlVElt, itew York, Or 1 UOMAB K. H&ARLtfi, No, S17 WALNUT fetreet, Philadelphia pa, W. H. WEbR. Preslden. til AS. DANA, vWpre. OCice 64 EXCHANGE Plac-. New York. S9ia TASSAGE TO AND VUOM GBBAT ii olEAAHSHlP ANll 8AIL1NU PACKKT. AT kklllllCN'TI HA'l'h4 ' DRAFTS AVAILABLE THKUUUHOUT JTVO. LAN1, IKEUAND, bCOTlaAND, AND WALE& For particulars apply to TAPnCOrrr, BROTHERS A W No, 86 SOUTH Ulreet. aud tio.Zi BROAnWAY, . Or to THc-MAH T. bEARLB, 11 No. 217 WALNUT atroet. -Fi PHILADELPHIA, KICHMOND AtafcktffiSM AND XvoKf OLK. bTEAMbUIP LINE, ijtlKOOUH . FREIGHT AIR LLNAi TO THB bOUTH AND WEST. EVERY SATURDAY, At noon, from FIRST WHARF above MAItKIT Street. THROUGH BATES and THROUGH RECEIPTS to all points in North and South Carolina, via (sea board Air Line Railroad, connecting at Portsinouta and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee, aud the West, via Virginia and Tennessee Air Line and Richmond and Danville Railroad, Freight HANDLED BUT ONCE, and taken at LO ER RttTUb TH AN ANY OTHER LINai. The regularity, safely, aud cheapness of this rout commend It to the public as tue most desirable me dium lor carrying every description ot Irelghu " No charge lor commission, dray age, ot any expense Ot trausler. Steamships insured at lowest rates. Freight received dally. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., d rr,; "North and booth WHARVE8. Point roB'li!'R, Agent at Richmond and Uty T, P. CROW ELL A CO.. Agents at Norfolk. 6 lj p.rflCT,N' F0K NEW YOKK SWIFT-SDRB sain Viani i Transportation Company Despatch a u bwiit-btire Lines, via Delaware and Rarltan Canal, on and after the 16th of March. leaving dally at 12 M. and 6 P. M connecting with all Northern and Kastem lines. For ireU-ht, which will be taken on accommodatlns terms, app.y to WILLIAjI M. BAlHD dfcCO., . 1 li No. liM S. DELAWARE Avenue, n e, COSCEJiTRATED LN1)I(J0, For the Lauidry.-Free from Ox.Ulo Acld.-8ee Chemist's Cettltlcate A Patent Pocket Pincushion or Emery Bag In each Twenty Cent Box. 7 147 mwlum Tor salt by all respectable Grocers and Driufglaut,; STEAMBOAT LINES. tnT BRISTOL LINES BETWEEN NEW YORK AND VIA JiiilaiOL, BOSTON, For PROVIDENCE, TAUNTON. NBW BEDFORB CAPE COD, ano ail points of railway cou.uio.uiGa tlon. Euat and North. Tbe new and splendid steamers BRISTOL and PROVIDENCE, leave Pier No. 40 NORTH KIVERj toot of caual street, adjoining Debrassea Street Ferry, New jerk, at 6 P. M dally, oundaya excepted, con netting with steamboat train at Bristol at 4 So A. M.. arriving In Boston at t A. M., In time to couneel with all tbe morning trains lrom that city. The moat da eiraule and pleaeaut rome to the Whit Mountains, Travellers lor that point cau mske direct oon sec tions by way of Provideuoe and Worcester, or Boston. blale-rooma and Tickets secured at Otttce an Pier la New v ork. 0 1 8m H. O. BRIGQS, General Manager. 1 ' I i i .i i- paICTJt PHILADELPHIA AND TBEtf. t in bteamooat Line. Tue steamboat i.t w i. unities i leaves Alien Htreet Wbarr, tor Trenton, stopping at Tacoay, Torresdale, Beverly, Burlington, Bristol, Florence, Rob ulna' Wharf, ami White Hill. Leaves Arch Street Wharf I Leaves South Trenton. baturday, bepU 12, 8 A. at Saturday, bept,U. U af. bunday, Kept- Is. to Burlington, Bristol, and Inter meutaie landing, leaves Area street wharf at 8 A.M. aud 2 P. M.: leaves Brlbtoi at luii A. M. aud P. M. Monday, bept 14, 10 A.M , Monday, Sept 14. 2 P.tf Tuesoay, 16,11 A. M Tuesday, , S P.S weuaay, i i.umuay, " Weo'uay. 1 bursa ay rrioay, It). 11 17. 12 18, 1 AM M P. at Friday, la. s P.M 17, 4 P.M 18. 6 P.M Fare to Trenton. 40 cento each way: Intermedial: places. 86 cents. in R-1C Fult CUIiSTEtt, HOOK, AND tgsil im!G WILMINGTON At 8 80 aud 8 60 A. M, u. 4 oo A". AI. Tue steamer 8, H. FELTON and ARIRL leave CHEbNUT btreel w barf (bundaya excepted) at 8 80 and rfeoA. M and S'oO P. M., returning leave Wil mington at 6'60 A . M l'i au, and -W p, m. Stopping at Cheater aud Hook each way. , Fare, 10 cents between all points. t Excursion tickets, 16 cents, good to return by etthet boat. tUm rtA$ZKD OPPOSITION TO TUB COM aJTrTftsaA -laTrTli in im railroad ano rwer ihfcw. UA AA. 1 . Steamer JOHN SYLVESTBR will make dally excursions to Wilmiugtou (Sundays excepted), touch ing at cheater aud Marcus Hook, leaving ARCH bu eet hai f at lu A. M. and 4 P. lU.i returning, leave Wl mlnrii r at 7 A. M. and IP. M. Light freight taken. u ".Bragk, DAILY EXCURSIONS. TUB a splendid cteamboat JOHN A. WAU- i.NU. leaves CHEbNUT btteet Wharf, Pbllada at I o'clock aud 6 o'clock P. M., for Burlington and Bristol, touching at Rlverton. Torrexlaie, A ndatnsia, aud Beverly. Returning, leaves Bristol at T o'clock A, M. and 4 P. M. Jfare. 6 cents each wan Excursion 40 Ota. lltf PAINTED PHOTOS. NEW THING IN A li T. BERLIN PAINTED PHOT04, A. S. ROUINSON, No 8.0 CHK8NCT Btreet, Has ust received a superb collection of B KB LIN PAINTUD PHOTOGRAPHS OJT FLOWF.RS. They are exquisite rems of art, rivalling la beauty, naturalness of tint, and perfection o1' form a great variety of the choicest exotic flowering plant. They are mounted on boards of three slaea, and sold from 26 cents to nd $4 each. For framing anil tits album they are Incomparably beautiful. A5i