HAVE YOU HEARD THE NEWS, •r A I s flo‘ll/140 , 11..T, el I •lu\ T'n Blood and thunder.!.what's . got wrong Out In California •'N icier Suffrage" not the song For folks In California , Now Om '•lllockheada" are all rail. And the Democrats are glad . !letter news we never had Than this from California. Gerry, won't you fire the loan ore• California? And bring not your rhnddy lamp. Cr With cheerio f a Callforni n ? Pennrnlnni► ray, the pro...lee, The oil drigr will rosr the border, Yor tlna vua,n 1• a oroririter, Oaf in California Sumner. here'. llir i mire pay Out in ('al . , Horror,' Greeley. ,lap Gut And hear in m Cahn., "The Democrat, hare swept Lie State And *like men every...vb.. elate, ..re cheering at • hmty rate Over Califon... .Andy Johnkon'a got tho start Out In Cahfornta, Thnddy walla with broken heart The news from California ; Alt the Itrok now stand agbont, That they must "come to grin! "al last After the shoddy time. they're pont, All rick with California. —leirirtooele Democrat HARK! DON'T YOU HEAR AN ANGEL SINGING ! Work away dar, n hate folks, For I links you hub de cause— WO niggers and Bon holders Will heareeforth make de laws ! And listen to my story Or we giro you white trash gum For do white mane in de hottdago And de nigger non is Loss' Dey'ro renting, fader A hereto. boberel 1111111011 fools' Day futight to nave do Union And to now bunholders' took So sing %way, , ye darkeye, Our happy days bah roan.— De liberty's got do nigger. .olit de logger's got 110 home ! Den work away Jar, white track, We're got you in our rleusios, To darkeys end BIM holders, You'll now shell out de stamp.' Let soldier. pay dar taxes, And sport de wooden leg For de itarheys make de music. While white fall s work and keg' De nigger's got tie tumor Anti has got de insole track Anillbery white trash work inlnuan Has a nigger on his track ! Den listen to my singing, In which I takes ale prole, And R. you white folks wnnt me to I'll jump en you!' imckitil ride —E.rrhange THE SITPREME JUDGESMI Remarkable Pamphlet Prom Da via Paul Brawnopr Phll•a. What a Leading_Radical Lawyer Thinks of the Two Candidates I)n•id Pool Brown, of Ph dolicipli in Abolitionint and ono or the for most lawyer. of the notion, ban mooed pamphlet of ten pages, etattiled.• The Pres, liteTolltietans, ihe People; and the Judie 1r Brown to a prehmln-ry the ter !more, the poltinsl pnpers or the coot ivy, with ciiimiliiithle biiternesei, fur tb .10111,tuti from ilovir Cohlmnn of every Use ry that dote not chlhodr With Iho pre'co rei•cd 01'IMO. of !heir condliet ore. II is theory iy Om( paper, should preseut argr meats on both emirs of any gtern geesti►n in order that the reader may arrive at a ju. conclusion We gente I &Ma itepaliltenn,an.l have always been floc to ftver of Equal ambit; to the widest sense, and ratu oleo an advocate for ihe best men in the hest nod most appropriate place Of coarse lam opposed, nubject to these views, to mete party proscription, or mere party preference Party adhesion slmuld never control my choice or may vote in regard to the conduit , e of any office when morally And intellectually lie wan more deserving of, that office, and more competent for the discharge of its 110110 P. than nay coMpelllor whom a pOlitleal COll - fitly think proper to Inittlitiate lit easel of equal claim, and equal qualifica tions, of course, as a Republican, I should cling to a Republican nominee. But even thin alight depend upon the nature of thi post involved in the party conflict If the ,post were puiely political, or would involve None principal vital to the respective par tier, of course I should stand by my par talthough the 1111,01111, nominee were in dependently const lered entitled In a pre ference But IQ come to the paint, in the cone of nomination of a Judge of the Su preme Court, or any other Court, I should be governed, not by the question whether the onntlidnte was a Republienti or a Demo crat, but whether he wan best adapted to the fulfillment of his high office and in saying this let it be understood, I would not approve of n party political Judge on either side, nor would I vote for noy for such n penal , n who was bound to any party programme whieli might influence him in the discharge of his high nod impartial funct nom I concur in the doctrine of 'lie Democrot tc progronnne ••that a a ibe, upright and leerier. Judiciary is the greet bulwark of public safety and individual Rigida," and I cone', « leo in the troth of the declaration 'that in the nomination of George Share wood for a paler on the Supreme Bench of the State, they have selected a man who , 1* in nil respects worthy of the confidence ■nd support of those who are in favor of ao enlightened, faithful and impartial admin• nitration of the leo." Mr, Brown diesenis form the remainder of it., Democratic p!sifor.m ; bat ibis does not prevent hie eupporiing Judge Share wood lie eay e .'Judge Sherwood in the year 1851, was nominated by the Whig 'Democratic, Nay — stinitael.Union Temperance, sod Working men'a Conventions, emit of which adopted different platforms. In 1881. be was nom inated by the Republican, Union or Wt . 'pendent party, arid the Democratic con•en mune, each of which had a platform some what different (rpm the others. Yet nobody ever dreamt that Ilto variety and contr., riety of the respective programmes had any Connexion with reference to, or Influence tipon7The-triumphant election of their die tlnguished and impartial oathlidnie forju die's! honors The present opposition, there fore, is a mere party fetch, which run eau- PLC IN ilialH aTHNNn TII SiIoULD =I OiJudge William+, the Radical eandidate of his own party, Mr. Brown says **That the Hon. Henri W. Williams. the Republican homier, foF tee RypreuteCourt, •is • gentleman of good abilities, a man of Wiring. a graduate of Vale College. a native of Connecticut. • mOll of el urscier and forty six years old, (all of which Nis been assorted in his behalf.) we are by no means inclined to dispute We know nothing to the 0001,7 of these reoommendat ions, nor do we dexilthatite - wan elected *Judge of the District Court of Allegheny county, in the yeli 1801 without organised opposition! 13u,t, 'what does tliiettll ,coot to? To no mire than can be said of a dozen Judge. of lb. various Courts of Pennsylvania. How entitle Is all this to the practical proof of gin Penintra CM voiJ.x it the unqu.oioned and undoubted competen cy hfJle Sli ir,wood No !non,' suppose, will mointain th•it Judge Shorewood, ex cept that he was not born in, or descended from, Conleo! legit, but is a native career own 5i,,.., and that he in fifty six yenre old, and that hr hoe spent nearly one-bait of that time fn the able and honorable dis charge of hlo high judicial functions, arid in at this tune ocknowledged to bent least equal to thnoftiest judicial incumbent in this Commonwealth No man, f suppose, will for a moment pretend that there could he nnycomporionn between !hi rival candi daten, not that we disparage Mr Williams, but no man with all his opportunities and minlifientienn could reasonably be expected to possess those claims claims to the office which are fully accorded to the accumula ted learning and approval .41 more than twenty years We have always been op pined to on electika Judiciory. We hare always been °punned to the New York lim itation of eixty yearn, by which Judge Kent and other eminent men were excluded from the Bench. But when a Judge elected es tablistee bin claim to a post, by fidelity and competency, we are in favor of retaining him in preference to making a new experi ment As to the difference between forty-, six and fifty nix years of age. our prefer ence Is for fifty six, years an it implies ten years additional experience The declaration in the platform of the Williamsport Convention that nominated Judge Williams, that the Judiciary of the State must be placed in harmony with Fire eenimients of the Itadical.party, elicits these comments from Mr. Brown : • Thee!tition of a Judge should have no connection with party politics . .., Ile Is to expourrd, and not to make the law, not to expound it as a partnixn, not to legislate upon legolotion, nut to favor the views of one putty or another in the discharge of his duties, not to c insult progrentmes or platforms, as limit tug or efrootlng opinions, but to hold himself aloof from all corrupt and corrupting influence. It is true, he may be nominated by one pert/ or another, or 1 tb paint foal predilec tions may be with one party+ the other— but he is not elected for his prejudicesi or to eubserve the prejudices of a party—but to fulfill the great and ifnportant objects of justice, as he shall answer to this world and the nest. As to yledgmy hinted/ actually unpliedly to •upport one set of polite cal twirl or another, that to tteelf would to etuntyh to rondetnn hyn tn the eye, of all good irbera in on apt illustration of our views upou this subject in a matter involving the preogt, ire of James the First of England. "In a cane Where the King believed his pre rogative or interest wan concerned, and re quired the Judges and counsel to attend him fur advice, the question was put the Judges whether they ought not to :impend proceedings till hie kliijenty consulted them nil the Judges, Riming whom were Lord Chancellor Ellesmere nod Lord Bacon threw themselves upon their knees and prayed for pardon, with the exception of Lord Coke, who when hid opinion woe demanded replied—'when the onset hoppens I shall do lint which will be fit for a judge to do " "Iles non debt rase sub hornier, sad sod der et lege." Such should be tho true ohmmeter of a judge—he should be no trintruei"do pliant tool of power ! And it is therefore altogether objectionable either for the Dem ocrats or the Republicans (as they hamvir Wally done) to expect from n Judge, in re quittal fur his advancement, which no hon est num dares to do- -what no honest con stittielicy should require moil no intelligent community submit. to. The nom who pledges himself in this diversified way, to the political dogmas of any party, is unworthy of every party and totally unfit (or a Judge. The great principals of just ice should be above par ties and Control al l parjlea The conclusion uf this r4imarkable pamph let—remarkable in the fact that while con demning both pantie. it urges the people who desire an independent, fesrleas sod pure judiciary, to rote fur Judge Share wood—we give entire : I have thought proper to n. y thus much upon the principle* upon which judges are constituted, as being pertinent to the gees lion in which wo are more immedietely concerned, viz . thylilitridat ea nt the up preaching Judicial lection I say, then, competency IN everything soil that admitted age iv nothing The first question then should be, who is the moat competent man? s , Now is l hers stuierug . in this community if left to his unbiased rea son, who would hesitate in deciding that question T Ile has all the facts nod daily proofs before him In every essential of a judge, the President of the District Court of this county ben no superior; in calm. nese, mildness affability, moderation, in flexibility and in undoubted learning, he stands pre-eminent in this political centre. vsrsy. But, we are told that he is affiliated with the Demeeraoy. Well. if that consideration should be understood to affect bit unbend ing rectitude and oonsoientious dulj, it un doubiedly would be • serious objection. But in the long course of the elerelse of hisjudiaial functions, though it is possible he may have erred in judgment—for there is but one judge that c to never err—no in stanee can he referred to, calculated to out a shadow on the disci of his fair fame. Now, in regard to his oggretitor—he we are told, is a itepublioarh.: Well, be is all the better for thafij but ps one error should not Mart a judge (if there be one), so one virtue should not woke • judge : therefore mere Itepublicanism cannostbe conclusive proof of competency. Dot what else la said to his behalf? Ile is but forty-six years old I As I haveelsephere Intimated, thin is not an advantage to a judge—long experience is very essential to • Judge. Lord M•nsfeld was over fifty when be took his Mg es ChlefJustioe of England and remained upon the bench thirty-two years, when he resigned in p ion of ill bit faculties,being over the age of eighty years, and surpassed by any Judge in Egg land or elsewhere, Chief Justice Marshal held his post as long, in the full vigor of intellect and power ; and Chancellor Kent, who was legialsiled out of office, died at the age of eighty•fOur, in the possession ofju d Wel faculties which the "combinettleal R ing of all the judges in hi■ Stale sines his time would searosly rival. The fact of Judge Williston being but for ty-eis years old, may be the ground of a presumption that be, by due efforts, may life to he an eminent judge, but .0 are to rely rather upon foots than fartry. We have in Judge Sharswood, the aesuranre of qualities that in the cane ofJudgeWilittlms, at the best, we hero igily the promise of. Whisk then, let me ask, would be the more reasonable choice? It takes twenty years to make a lawyer, and even then be has something to learn. A good judge would require nearly all that time on the score of mere legal competency, and ho should neo essarily improve during that time, in his aptitude for business in his self-control, in his temper and demeanor, for all these things enter into the formation of his judi cial character Now, can it Ins supposed that with the few years that Judge IV has occupied the bench at Pittsburg, hav ing comparatively limited jurisdiction, that he could hate derived those advantages in the formatilfn of a judge, winch were nec essarily acquired .nod fully exhibittd on the part of his antagonist during more thou twenty years. But aro we told also,thot Judge Williams is a native of Connecticut. and was gradu ated with honor, at Vale College Well, that cannot be denied—we do not iltspnrage hint on account of his having been born in another State, or for being educated at another institution of learning. Sufficient *newer on that !sore, is that Judge Share wood is a nation of Philadelphia, and took the first h6mor at the University of Penn sylvania In eon:Melon; allow me to say that for am reasons suggested. I shall veto for Judge Shorewood In doing en Ido not feel that I shall compromise tny,,pripciplen as a Thorough AVational Republican—in noting otherwise, I should carry with me Ilse con scioutinees of doing injustice to A meritori ous nine, and of inflicting a causless and a cureless wound upon the-purity, pertunnen cy and integrity of the Judiciary. My term of life in short, lint the leesons of this day ••• . may their pernIOIOUS nod corrupt influence—auto the • !meet posterity Let the people, then, think of We, do what they believe to be right, and stand firmly by their moral as well an their political faith. DAVID POOL. BROW N WHVARE THEY SO SILENT ? Why are the Radical newspapers so silent on the subject of forcing negro euffrege up on the people' Surely they do not, at this late day, intend to repudiate that great principal of the radical party I They may drop the impeachment of Preside° Johneonon ease they find it will not yogi° go on with it, but hew are they to drop negro suffrage end the thrusting of negro rulers over white people: It is the very life blood Over rauicalieni Without negroisni. radicalism is a nonentity Toe Radical leader. have staked their all upon thie one throw, and if the radical newspapers begin to back down on this vital point of radical ism, what will be left of them I (lave they any oilier principles now presented to the American people than this one of foicing the whit: people to sitcom negrues evety. where 1."14.1%1r equals, and to knuckle to to the-) as their ,superims, where ever by trickery, or with the aid of bayonets, there may appear more negeoes than white men • This is Diu great I+4llll the Radicals present to the peoply of the United States-- for by the aid of negro rotes alone do they hope to maintain their negro supremacy, continuing their plundering, and itscreile °nation. They may attempt to ooeer it up in long wattled addresses, hat there is absolutely nothing In their Republican ad dresses, if it is not aim We as Democrats must accept the 'slue, and fight It dot d. th ,t line .•if it takes all suonoei." • , iVery rote cant is Ueiuber, is to be either tor or against this kind of suplremacy in this land There can be no half wily business It in rule or ruin with :he radicals It is to rule the whites with the nil of negro voters or-it is for the whites to maintain, as they have heretofore, the reins of government the bands of whites ; and this can only be done by !supporting democratic taco and dernocratio measures ‘V,lty don't the Rail cal. talk out ? Clinton Democrat A B y RNING HERO Th e'•lltsion heagite"of this oily, a no said are making grand preperations to received Gen. Sheridan, who is expected here soon Well, why not " Moot of tho lending men of that League aro old.i lines &born (mein and philanthropists. who, like Win Jay, Cullen Bryant and others, were terribly shocked at the Mexican war, nail mourned ore, the hardships of Indian sart.ges whose lodges were sometimes burned in k Z arida But there is a diffetence—Sheridan did not burn the house of Nlexteaus, or the ledges of Indian savages. Ile only 'burned those of Anterioans, Virginians, the descendants of Washington and Jefferson, and did that, too, Allen the wen, fathers, brothers, and hus bands, were absent. and ttius abed no blood , unless ocouionsity that o f 1101. poor old man or beardless boy, accidentally of course. But then he mode clean work of it turned helpless .women and Innocent little ohildren out into the fields, or drove thorn to the forests for shelter, and even burned all the mills as well as houses and barns Day-!look. • THE ADVANTACE OF RADICAL RULE The coat of the State Gorcromeat of Peon eylvanit; has advanced from $57,000 ; un der Demoer►tio rule, to $2.65,000, wide. Wawa rule The ssssss moot of Stale tax in l'enneylra la bag been increased more tbalt - Jos hund ed.theurand dollars, by Radical rule, once The National debt has been Marcum(' from sixty million, artier Pemocratlo rule, to three thottoond aselhon dollars, under Rad ical rule, and still the cry Is "upwards!" Bat let no "loyal" voter hesitate to •ote ihr the Radical ticket on thisaecount. Our august Senators mat's have h supply of -knifes." "pin•oushione," and ••tsork screw..." and our Representatives at Harris burg "extra-pay," and •'pages" to obey their commands; and otitir at memo, to comport with, their position. Taxpayers be cure to vole the Radios) ticket.—go. The Rads stribute their defeat in Cali (orate to corruption and their losses in Maine to cider. To what they lay tbi& , feat in l'ennsylegnia—to the 'colored fume, to the •liquor int e e e e eee or to Judge Wil liams' promise t4rou the SopreuteCourt ac cording to the opiebne of the last corrupt Legislature, whose members petard him In nomination. ~, BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY' OCTOBER 4, 1867 THINGS TO BE REMEMBERgIa WHEN YOU GO TO VOTE. ' • When you go In •qte, eenlncnber Olaf till) Union in not restored. When you go to vote, remember that •ll the blood shed and all the treagura ezpeod ed in the war here failed to purchnee pence When you go to vote, remember that the Union might nolo, prevail, but for we oppo . aition of the leatlera of the Republican par- When you go lo vole. remember that Ike Conelitmion:se being community violsted and constonely sneered at. When yon go to-i r ote,remomber that Thad Stevens openly declares, that Congress is acting "outside of the Constitution " When you go In vote, remember that ne gro republics hole been set up on the mina of eleven of the Staten of the Union When you go to vote.remember that while men hare been repeatedly deposed by mili tary entraps to make room for negro ollii• eight. IVhen you go to rote, remember dint a negro him nirendy been ;nada • Judge in New 01 len. When you go to vote, remember that tie ernea fill the jury boxer to lime South When no go to vote. remember that ne gro Congressmen and negro Senators from the South are shortly expected to legi.dole for Pennsylvania. • When you go to vote, remember that the wasted and oppreened South, once the rich est section or our country, Iv kept impover ished by the policy of Congreers. When you go to vote. remember that your taxes are tkainby vastly increased vvt, n you gri to yote,rotnernber that whsle you are thus krouttd la ite : earth by op: . presetro Insaiion that the holders or $ Bonds , 10 non pay one penny IVIDen you go to tote. remember That St n at or Sunder openly boasts that the negro will be mails ;one equal by unmet lobe pass ed at the next session of Congress. When you go to yule, remember that the Republican papers of this State openly en dorse that proposition When you go to vote, remember that ti Repot,titan triumph in Penneylvanta will ho regarded on a popular endorsement of Gunner's plan. When you go to vote, remember that Hen ry W Williams in vieillgk. to rtiforev , each an enloment. When you go to rule, remember that Con great it corruft beyond all precedent, and that many radiantr of the money Wrung from your toil i . hang Plolen by this body and their 11111110119 {'hen you go to rote, remember tbut Ibe Leg t ,a g t u r, of Ili ie Stnte Lin.. beet. little bet lei t ban n den of thiNvell under Itudrein rule. , 11 hen yon go Co vole, remember that IL is folly to espect economy owl reform uuul there 1.4 n complcio change of inlministra- Utica 5011 g 0 to vote, retaeluentbrr that every vote cast for the Itatlival candidate. vole for 11 011111111111113C1111 of all the abuses tinier which the fration is HO 1 / 1 11..1y ititopressed Ile tare .tiol Cote, and be mire that you keep the catololoutev of the gummy In view when you ilepomt 3 our bullet. - Vote for n change' Vote for reform' I me for louver noire' Vole agadist negro equality' I.lu tcononly to ritagi efts nuil the Stott, hewed/11u, ' ote agoin•l coodallting thte nut ion to the combined role .f the l'untau and the negro ' Voir %ow the Dentoetatie ticket' See that )our neighbor tutee, and I hat he voles Let there he one grand rally of the thoughtful rotert, and the rule of the Ena mel rerolutionuite will be ended nu Penn -/ rr PUSH ON THE CZ.ZUMN The Itadtealv are alarmed! The city preen of that party ' , peak deepoudtngly of their prottoecin to l'run•y leant* after the Demotratte. ',velem, rn l'altfornia• Mame, and tleewhere, and the Itadocal Orel, to the country are !along up the doleful lam cutlet ton. The Johunl own TrlbllPle .. 11on't like the tool, of things ' It 1P CS idittily alarmed ;or the result Fear to lindrealutin IS hope for Ike country. end it behooves every Democrat to "PCSII (IN TIII: COI.- UNIN " No Detnocrat who refers back to the days of good time, and light taxes, to the lime when we were a hapft and united people, under an economical dentoortitio adminta iration of the *tale and national govern• ments.can tad to yearn fur a return to dem• TICINCA3 men nod meaenree, and feel • de termination to push on the Democratic col- Those who have been deceived by the Radical cry of devotion to the Union, and find the dame party throwing off the mask and even rho nom of the Union party, and falling back upon her old Nection•l,dieunion principle., will join the true friends of the Union, and push on the Democratic column. Tlloas who bravely periled their liven In the cause of the Union, and roue! to pre verve theUuten of the Stance under line CO.Til “1100• and who see that the ,Radical theory of suomeseleflattened dieunioveffrill unite with no in pushing on the Democratic column Thorn who hello.. that Congresas ha no right or power to establloh negro no rage in Pennsylvania 'gained the dof r peo ple, will am in si manner be en and Peonsilranlans, and push on the Dome (+ratio °Whom Those in favor of piecing the nabobs on the same footing as the honest fencer and mechanic, by losing equally all the proper ly of the country to par tb• national debt, will push on tk• Demoorstfe column. Those who nre'unwilling to be tined to govern the ten Southern Stales, believing be able end willing to go•ern them es, will push on ths Democratic 1.41- , A • , finally, those who believe that a Judge should be swayed by the laws of the land, and not by pantie., will vole for George Sharswood for Supreme Judge and thus all in pushing on the Democratic eel mon. Albre berg ( Pa ) Freeman: tit 7( 1 atchinati, TO THE RESCUE, DEMOCRATS ! DeTIIOC(CP. Witt( err you doing for pout AP oar neiglii,nro Korot. .Lot 11 1.1 Ilrbt -- couniry,'your psyriy, and your principle. • about iho Aad lttl 1e41.1 it oo of th^ I. I I, o r tel ~,yoh .n, g n op, Have you i nt lists utoment.a clear consttence loturo 11 : "" of urpo I who' ottr° I • I ott tot nrt.ioc'rnt, a loyal soi l th e firm belief g y„,,, have won one lite people of SI., a R t.l g. I —lt polo mode on vote from the grasp of the destroyers of a ProP°%° to give the croon tic" of the cane. b y t 'l t t'et' l eg t'ltt t '"tt ofgaol It ' ttblt e t ' fltt i free couritry—mongrelism! flare you no n 101101 tit,. ',obi, ',toy -.et , how for the pro , ,/ in my illenes• end il! n angle Tel(11 1011, no good neighbor, or tin anti trisi ptrly .10101111 , 1 In %ht. 100111 at , ti It pr.. T.who, andma.% T ma t e nrionlotance among th e dec e ived On the silt ay Fehroitry, IStii i ngree- I in o ' I ItLit the Alnerielin me., erne) , tanks of mongreliem, *lto in anxious tO for- able io order, the atonic •procorled to the In r iuntrieo, n moo to be no ort.l..rrA oinks the wrong and espowte the right who, second reolltig or the bill \o Ini it gentlemen pore all rill. cotton. if talked to kindly, and r e asoned with tied 'to Net to by Eno, any untie , * Intl n little Powell - 41g of ly, would achy mledire hie erromond-tool corporation within tins C011in...7r h to lent, ofgo•cinrorinf../ Ilene it to II tffer fully unite his voice, his influence and 11,0 that shall rxcinde, or allow to lie toehold (tot VI n nlOll 11.... , 14 'l,l tie n nabob vote with our efforts to produce a chnnge by 'be , agents, conduct. , or t.tttllblYre•ti S 1 ' 0 " 13 .0 0 " 4 4160 CAll and help save our nation from the terrible fro. , any PI Their p , sep,gor ror°, one For - for hardlunrn,"r ci t y II." 1" ill 11", Eno that now stares us in the faze I non nr persons otipccount of color or roe, some to one I role iis my carringe to the Only five thy, of tone remain, for os In lay lor plans—and Democrats, beware— five days eta short time torus lode so greet a work—five days would crew an age if we were 1 ;1 deprived of liberty in sumo tuner, thine. —but title length of true will never hear etttnitart•on to the 3 cars of bondage and tenposottruent that our net tend will owl Inll9ldsterrotne Individuelimpntionnient luen s for a spite I combines a certain degree of Put. fl ring - bul ye! nWny in the future be oven light and liberty perhaps aw tiling l iin lint notional iniprisannient. gives the pri;- niter no hope, Budlooks (nrWeril to 110 hour of forgiveness, no tiny of reprieve. no ter mination of punishment and disgrace =I the anion of the people upoi the queation will exhibit whether we will xubinit trill torn who are forging the banilo, erecting the prisons and preparing line eharen Ihni are 10 deprl vt 11 11 Of liberty end 111,1 Iml I . ur Over 1.10 i)ranre band. lady r ttt r lilt , tORTik 0 111 . 011 St 1,1 action, or our 11lierly way be Weebled from ns nail given In the wretched—m..l4.as— worthleas negro,s and their white Ira., -111,0 111111,P m Amon xorme m beset nml blacker 1111\11 himself. Democrat. of ••Uld t•rntr•e," go to work— lure 001 It moment, until you can reel that your duty has hero alone. ismilhat Henren's bright hletaing of liberty is ante Stood firm before your foe— falter riot— fight them to the roil. and .story will he mire PLEASANT THOUGHTS FOR WHITE MEN. It molt ben; reenble for tar white 1011, of Penneylvania, to think flint experience inns nought them that they ore mcnpolile of governing theineelven; and that unless they mill in rho aid of the negroev e•erylli trig will go to ruin Plow plea...tot to think that we hove berm running down hill rot eighty yeare. no but that we have got below lbe level of tire negro race, end 1101, ITC nopit turn to them midplena for mero, stroction and help It a , poelihir a f lanwerer, that many will not readily veld ihitt point, I.ot will en the tenet 01111 it ii only the rank Itepoblleane.who tittle extol the 'trines of the negro , or rather, who begin to feel the neeesesty of calling m hid talent, to aid ur•propeltulg the ortchine which in their howl,. iv becoming etc riq t arty, they dam relies being, disc ntregeil, an,l hogisiontg to dietrow their own alitlitiee, have determin ed to bring to the too:cedar:, IA 1 1 / 2 ,11 oil toorder to guul alt,engtL enough to 1.1.1 the roach.. atilt, anal Cu. toll it ell to pieta.. rather than borrentler la to white Merl In either even!. is Inn-0 he V,ri . if cling the people In know iv nlo.ot do.) I,oro lo sori ender ult it I gb is owl Isherio..ll, in brig of 111,r Isws, obi of all I=l I r nerve 0.1)44 rotnrort you, II our • AC know ledge your meal n..,1, 1,, inferiority your our ratrogrr•••••t lu, )our , deuru.laiom, and then rail to the C nCo 1." I a he r. 'hilt Ci te "l"rag" 1 " guy, the e,lA(tn ) v.ate, ea . ogliteou on In all " 10 ' 4 ° 4 ' l I 0 , -10 1,, the uovt 1 ,, - polo les] vroolum. to corrret y our pu•t meat or ale. South oh rh vt• .1 I Coll tie jou lo emall your caparity, and Co make vol Pk' fool hou•lool ler•li or , li'a N. , la $11,0m1,- Once more a proure...ora pvr.-I,lr IIIt000••1 11 ° 0 - aaaiolalion M relied' di tt N. 11tir $240,000,000. not coscooded In Ole ...Ilea ..•t it he reouton •or •,1 Iltot the ioterekd no low as to be benert6 Ike negro ingt no on the public 41. bt t °nor 5210.000.0.0 • Ity to leach and rescue. t. 'li, n:fuer et and repolly mere k.ong Will have to rurreuder all into Ilse Lau in the .°lttred 13 .) 4 i ti." t:" Inng v they r , Let aho remembered Ilt it thotinttool lopti, but oh m)' what if Ilteyilholi:d i,eurr of the U ‘s i l ,„l ono , in now bbytipperboadv ,) Awl await o glortous re over PuPcilmlion or remlrreclion. ()J. that will $90,000,000 joyful be '—Allentown Democral THE NEXT STEP. ertonent coW only 590,000,1 1110 now. to supersede the proonion , Remember theme (It ingu, he reedy to Fail tng. of the United Sietee• by Oc.• Grimm, lime ere tt is snatch the power from such reek lees halide Radical managers may now be expected to mooPre" posh their impeachment coneptracy with ---- renewpd vigor Republican journals which le IT You •—Radish fro ad, Ire you the have heretofore hesitated to follow the kOl man who Pr.ola'n'd akw 3. ats ago Ord ley-Conover cl i que. are now giving an their whenever the Republic In party favored ne odheeien to ii, while we hoar of various gro suffrage you would leave the party and members of the Rump Congress. who, at vote and act with the opposition the last 'melon, were indimpoemi to cocotte- Are you the men who charged your neigh age the plot, are now.falling in ecujj., ,, !.. hoe with lying, because he claimed that clamor, no doubt, will gr ivr loud. the Repubhe in party would e•entimlly er and louder, as the time for the rens- make that the insug.;..ot d called your God eembling of the Calmat Directory draws to whines , if it over did thoiYiTh'wowideed near. This radical party Sr. determined to your connection with it fore rev , . • hold on to the power, at all hazards. They Yes4ou .re, Your neighbor and friends are alraid of the People, and hence,they do believed you eincere, not intend to wait till the regular Presided- By the line of argument you induced tint eleotion °Tuna alm!g,to obtain scirede so m e of Ab em to vote with you The time (lessor to Mr Johnson, The Presiiientlal you referred to lir.. arrteml What do you election Is aunt. thirteen months remote prop.e ro do a If yin love of country yet, and the People, by that t ime, may he r e, y o ur in no mood to eontittue the 'Deht•afid TAta. th e 1 111 , boa ca me w h el , mho lion party in pow. ,fur another term of etnoority of your word, by noble and mot four years. Hence, they have coneluded to n a akw o ,,. 0011011 W e hide our (tote nevi steal a marsh upon the People, to bee if, by await resorts the prooers of impeachment, they cannot put Ben Wade or Immo other demagogue of &roe' ' ! N. 1411111e11: we that description in the Prehidenital chair sek you a quer Ito. Cerintnly Nhy IV That now would seem tikbe toe programme it that tea, coffee, all manufactured good. The People themselves, meanwhile, can do and wares are not so cheap as they were be something to Lit, and to give the eon; fore the war T Because I suppose the tariff splretors to understand that the making of and stamp duties put upon them for the pin, the President is their business, and not the poem of paying the interest on the bonds, prc- Olostm of s 'Rump Congress which has vent a return to old —Very true Now about . .. valid s claim to represent, and sir, the Democracy propose to par all thane therefore, to speak and Sot for the People— bonds with greenback. and a top the Interest' that Is, the whole People—of Ore United Don't yeti eee that to much event there will Slates, as it Imo to speak 'and act for the he Ile occessity of a revenue to pity nor en- People of Great Britain and' Ireland We armful interest T The Bendholderaileelare should like to b toe these conspirator. put that they will nut hike greenbacks, but tho upon their trial, hems the Publre, at the fact J. that they are compelled to ink, I hem coming October and November Elections to payment of tie debt be.ides if they re• if we mac get a judgment againet them at fuse they are Traitors end should be hung the polls In Hume States which elect in Oa- to a pour apple tree Reflect upon these tuber, It I. pretty eartain a summary check' matters, and when election they comes pun •ould be pus upon the contemplated eon• will vote the Democratic ticket. The Ittie apiracy, Wool the contemplated usurpation, is Netting in, go wi b the current when it is Id Ouotimbur —l.sr, ' right —Fremont Jfissengrr . . NEGROES IN CARS. , tin 11le 11110,10 U ''will the Senate ogre,- to bank I Mk.- aloe: my hide tin box Of the first s t ct ion," Mr Wallace made n Inc- United Stotts bowls. the people's Goo lion to amend the tattle by eirikwg our of gre.. voted ott , opt Iron' alI taxation : I the tenth and eleventh lines, the want some atoney I hold its bands half a words ns follows Or that shall eompeLor I million dollars The int, rest good no t „ c nary or person. to c.f.! 0111 each dolls. T. centa on occupy any plettenlne part or any of thole .J 0 ...s‘t tr of Is tit a metiers as ply cars eel apart for Ono accommodation I tbon•and dolinre it year' I presen‘my bonds people 0 ,, lire qt ,„ t ,„„ --t banker front hie sac hands rne,m) “trill the Sell Ito agree to so outentl; the toidrc. , "very three to net hs line on my yens and nays weep required its foilonv noon, An art•tocratAmerica, 'there 11/1 an. ,yon•" 1,1,1 I any no taxes— I net one bete penny' It. t d i es I Congi ea.., in 119 emit. lea ii it law lb it nil Ut Crates Bonds ohould be exempt r from taxinion The tax collector can't touch me Tao Sheriff prof eels me—the poliaentan looks out for my house at night I the poor men who lin. Ile bonds, pay, for !mg the road.. bridges, COll.ll /11/lell, jells,pri ! eons, impro•ements. fire entitle., pubis, , cisterns, sleek tights, to odd In my petite°. hop and comfort And they pay for school houses and „ho I to tellers that in) children may be eatientett, but not at iny expense. , ono they are taxed In support the pau per, I help in Cat , in my leynlesed raters, of iCe pnnr ' Indeed this is ate beit gov e rn meal the world ever saw —that is, for lazy . W . 1 1.1 10 1 , 0, thieve., and bondholders /brie 0.101 lite money In the bunk to pay ray in!erell:'' I don't know ' That is not my Mistime. am a Itadicol aristocrat—a government leeeli All I know 14 111%1 the money must be there, or 111 break down the govern• men!' I believe there ts an Lateens] or an Infernal Revenue collector. Ile goes about raining money froithe poor people I see him every few drip. but he never come/110 Inefor - dioney 060011ot:is a tax on Stores, mills, bre'wories, horses, cows, wagons, shoe shops. tailor shops, photograph amine, Showmen, lecturers, merchants, &option, carpenters, blacksmiths, lumbermen, far niers, butchers, lawyer., Jewellers,pellillers, printers., cigar makers. distillers, manufac turers of ell kinds of imp - ements and ms chines—from well folks and sick ones, from sound folks and cripples, all of whom are the vice ions and slayes of us bondholders. Ile collects the money—it is sent on to Washington by khe Car-load to the time of n e e hundred and eighty Indium: of dollars a year, and (ions there it to sent out to the Nu wall Banks and put out to us bondhol- Av. If a poor mechanic wnole money, he erns it. If a farmer wants money ,be earns it If . 1a poor laboring man wants money, be morns it If n poor foreigner wants money, he corns it ; and if a a widow woman or a cripple wants money, they must earn it—pay their laxes for the sup. port of its bondholders. and if there is any. thing belt it 19 theirs Thu Is a good gov ernment protects us molt folks—the poor call beg Jar starve II lan has no bus mess to be poor Let turn do as I do—put hot money in Untied Slates Bonds and live on thelntereat Let everybody bold bonds. Let men tell their farms—thew stores— their mulls. quit work. lire on the untaso• ble bunk, and we'll till he great togtther. The theory le good We tux the poor peo ple one hundred and eighty millions of,dol bars a year to support al It Laical twist°. crate, Now i Wooble the amount of bonds—doult internal lox, and make more money Tie people-Id, d ' We might no t; ell rob them of all an of half! flow would it work it all were bondholders who pall no tsxes,‘end nobody produce or paid t saes ' by 'should the people object to support ing in. Bhy not-seed „men to Congress who will vole everybody a hundred thousand dollars in bond, ' Then we all *an be rich No more need dr work for anftiody then. There 1.1 science, finanee.'•'ll,yalty," devo tion to the ••Unton," or whatever you call it ! (17 nholithed that contemptible arts toeritey of the Mouth ' That was a shone artelotrary I It bad wealth le negenee' II paid taxes net the negroes and thA negroes worked as While people worked—we all helped put money into the treasury, and taxation erns light. And we all abolished the aristocrat') of the South, and built up rue fur New England anti her bondholder., and exempted ilia new aemiocraoy frool i•x alien. That was a nice little gag on the working people of the United States Us bondholders own all the pour people now— black nod addle That is better than to own but the black ones Oh, much better ! llow I like t are men working on their farms till their bone, ache. That helps us bondholders We ride by in our carriages, lean back on Bur cushions and laugh 1 I like to see poor women take in washing, peeing, ,ke to help support to ! And its ales 10 see blacksmith. shoo horses till their back( neoc—to nee mamas lug and toll lull their hands are hard—to gee the mechanics going tit mg wide their cold din ners 1111111:0 tin pittliv-Alkaseapeople work ing all day—lo see worts* milfilittc, darn ing, enduing, pitching turning, making over, piecing out. and doing all norm of worn. finm inornmg nil midnight, to sup• purl us Radical arlilli.lotalll You see they noust all ply luxes, first—lookout for them selves afterwards ! Two or three persons sincethe days of Adam have gone from this world shire; but I never beard of one going without pay lug *mead/ therein/bead hold ' If the poor fool. should repudiate the oat tonal debt—oh, murder! Oh, that Is impossible ' The credit of the government --us bondholders being the government ! We mast not let the people repudiate I They reptulhtted 1110 old Continental debt, but that was all right, as war then was carried on to destroy liberty—to divide I the Union our fathers mails—lo build open nrieloernoy for NO,. England nabobs— enrich tit: fest•-ulu do just laud •Aus been And the people mud nut refuse to support or tlftfrll get rich, and us bond holder. will be obliged to work and pay 'stet as honeit folk• do ”Taxation shall IJ moran ,/lala,Jark eda, 11111, ML Can Ile, It.. Set It of Nee and ti all., Deadoerat. -W' en naglly and Hall It 01,1.-I' , tl 4-15, a:I Itatheal.. • Mr Searight then tn,,lto fortheramt i ma by adding the follonittg provigo ••Pro•cl. ed that if such agent. coil luetor or etntiloy• bilol.lll set apart in their it lid cars, com• lable teals el the ends thereof. or sha.ll provide separate cars for the accommoda tion of persons of color travelintr, therein. no Purh Inn nr penalty shall be unposed " The yeas an I n lye were °Mecca, as fol. lows Yr Demorrati lot M Shoe maker Rl , haulm Here wtr n protium which woultrhave secure,l to the negroes all the rights of travelin the Car,. wit bout nosing theta fining the whtte people Certainly they are entitled to nott tore. Vet. the Radicals eoleil to strike out lb iiiainenilment and force then. into the 011100 cars unit the tome seats with the whilee Mr Wallace moved to Nell., amend by adding the following prortsn—/'rortd,d, That nothing herein contained .144111 w con strued to compel the admission of negtoes into berths in sleeping care; or to punish any one for the exclusion of persons of col o• from tire rot apart for the'lud;. of Indies " The yeen were 13—all Democrat Phut Mr Hall and McConaugliy. ,The nays were In —all Radicals Let it ke known and published, Radical Senators of Pennsylvania •oted to let neFroer into the sleeping eare4sed by the white Indies of the. Stale Keep It be fore the people that thin is now the law of Pennsylvenin Ilint the sleeping care used by your wives and daughters are not en• enipted from the prorteione of this law, and the negroea cannot be eschnied train theta On the 18111 of March the above ball was reached in the of Representative.. The Radical members called and nustatned the prevams question, thus rotting off all dtecto.ttonfund atactltment.., mut on final 1/,..ge the >can were Radicals__ nays ill —UR Demo. atm SIICII ig nn w the law lu iuts 6iate. ape negror, con occupy tutu ear nny Fort of nny ear, wheat. r they are occop •letittog eqr, by tile Tr I,lle wtqlten or not :t.l mud] for ra•lic LI Ik tt inn , eo tintrit f. r ntgn, i t i tt,titty in I', nmylv nra Clot- LOOK AT THE FIGURES $14,000,000 $100,000,000 •I it be remembered that iig Done untie reign the oni ire expen+e of rile Gov NO ? 39 SOLILOQUY OF A RADICAI. Anisro EMI! be rrynal. " Ah, that means for poor Mite —that don't loelade u. b•al i theutere Th.( a far the poor i'ainiert - he workingmen, vrbo first must give of their earnings une hundred and eighty millionamryear to sup. port u• bond bolder►—than ills a hundred an•l fifty mtlhoue more tea year to defray he ripen,* of thie, • the best government the world ever now •• Oh, we were sharp ! Cunning cbapa us bond-holdere ! Weyelp ed, howled, preyed, whined, ranted, and preached .••loyally' till we Axed things. We knew heater than to tell people that we intended to divide the Voinn— To build up nur owls little •rtitoersey— To nrske'elavee of theworkingmen— •Nempt one third of the wealth of the f•ntitilr, from .11 f...0i.. T., itrike dorm who hold'un bond. imp pnrt three who dn— And to mart gage • heir farme,their liililren in am Radical ►nrtocr►t■ WEB ! played it nice ' We did Aril it wait we wealth or the country that rot down the rebellion I Good joke' Old nii,ney ling. carried a nineket ' That'. good ' Uld bond .tnek me hard lock'. I . :x.call ersi ' .1101, !.I 4,11.1 41.1 I o loporit•I • Ilm.ha hojsloriehs •• Poor (olk* am tso bid alter all They put down the rebelliOn, and now tAey insist on paying us Gonelliolders tor letting Mein : Bully for the Blares ! So work swey, poor people-1,111 make you healthy ' Pay your lazes without grumbling bill for Gol . gerke don t talk of repudistion ' lVe can stewd your protests our hard palms, your dirty fingers, your coarse cloth., your patched garnieuts. your l•.ng hours of toil. your pour hotness your wan, care-worn wife . your low wages.your 'tripes], for ni.l—can at ind all these with out being stTected in the least:4ol for God's sake don't mention repuJighon—that would make ail of us ltump•prittectedßadicaleri•- i ierrits stet '—La Crosse Dernorri LOOK AT THE ITEMS! What Radical Legislatures Cost We think the lax payer will And in the following oilmen , . which is taken from official pournes, a cause for the late extra demand upon the pockets of the people The difference between the oust of our Stale Goverrelhent now and when to the hands of an edationocal Democratic Administration, we think will open the eyes of those • Who foot the bills " Tax-payer, read • In 18-17 the pay of members wee three dollars per day, and the pay of otffisers two dollar• per day ; the number of officers, pee gee end reporters in the genet,' did not ex ceed 12. ollioern, pokes. reporters, &a., in. the 'louse. about 15 The whole expenses for the senpjon $67,819.19 le 1867 the pey of members was an average of $lO per nay ; the number of officers, pages Sint re porters wae 40; in the lion's the number of officers, pages and reporters was 82. The amount of mosey drawn from the treasury by these attache. of the two Worms for the o t seion of 1867, was 1119.11-45.211.511, being nearly twice the cost of the entire eespion of the Legislature under the Date cratic Administration. This entire cost of lbe'Legislatore of 1867, including pay and mileage?f members t pay of officers, pages, alerts and b►ngers on wan $1105,061.3.6, while that of 1847, ander the adeolnintral ion of Governor Shook, was but $67,819.19, or only • little over one-fifth u great ! We append some of the leading items of ezpenditure, as they appear In the Auditor Genet-eV' report: Stantons' pay, mileage and within cry .....1135.447 00 Reprvientatires' pay, milage and etationery. $10,61 per day 107,608 15 Bailey and Kennedy, Preachers- 600 00 33 Senators and 29 regular oaken-- 28,893 80 25 women ............... ........ ...... 921 00 7 pages...... 1.270 00 reported, each $3OO 800 00 Contingent Clerk ......... 4,633 00 100 members lad 65 regular officers drew 57.300 7 3 359 .50 Women 1,210 00 Postage 9,256 00 Members having been appointed to different committees Miring the sessions, fur which they, charged 15,170 51/ Miscellaneous . 10,601 04 EIMB Think of it! Formerly 27 officers, pager, and repprtere sufficed the Legislature; Dow 122 are employed to do the same work per formed bylaw 27 ! Formerly $57,819 paid the entire expenses of that body ; now it takes $265,061 16 to defray the mime ea-' pulses • Vet, there were in 1867, but 139 Senators and Members, lbe same number se in 1817. —Patriot d• Union. CONVLICr II NOV ENDNO...--11 an exelamatlon of the Moo Mr. Dosea • MC. Mesa •• before some aociety In Sorb:if:Boldt No,—and never will be, as long as a small majority, North, attempt to trample under foot millions of White ~.sople, and subject them to Negro Government. Such a •conflict" will last as many year. l in thin onuntry, as in Hayti and Jamaica,— and, as long, as In lreland.or Belgium, when under the Oovernment of the infam ous Duke of Alen There uo may of appeasing, and got erniog • People. and of seliliog ■ Govern mew, but •flowing them • fair chance in It When cue. the Coostuut tea a cut tones froth, there out be no end to-.••eondiois, ' II rep go back to the plg anchorage ground.— Tux Re—._ The cheering news from California glad: dens ‘the Democratio heart,—and "World"' accordingly exclaims : , •Resd this handwritting on the wall, ye Dl+unioulsterho have squandered a third of tie ;AMA *saith, a million of IU Dna who have substituted • millitary despotism for Republican liberty in, ten of the sever lye States of the Union. plundered the people with your proteolive' tariffs. robbed them with your paper money, and mowed them with a colossal debt. Read this bias writting on the wall and know year (ate. for this is the beginning of the gad of your power." Fnuu every portion of Possaylvasla we have glad tidioge of a :Democratio revi val There I. n: t ; brook is the mama In mg pot tion oft State, Everywhere the greater. enthuslas .4trersila. Tlionsends who before sated with A. Demesnes Intend to vot• for George filiaraweod. the able lower, the accomplished sitimiar, .be upright Judge, and the hrtest mu. laps great battle which to some toles tough! in our Slat t Pennsylvania will oat-strip coo per lest, Male.. Califoroti p er liontaoa. ORGANIZE! *WNW ! OnuAllliss! Now, at ones! Lose set a single dayl Victim; is wiibbkosr grasp. IlViro would stand baek sod loss the long hoped for triumph by his earstiesaews! , Nu true Democrat will stay Cl apse at that election. Let sill turn out—dit—ait.—NLLL and Pennsylvania will be rammed on van as the sus will rise on *lassies day. 4265,861 18
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