The I:trlocrilic Watch'man, BELLEFO.,,iTE, PA silliDAY ILORNING FEB. 2p, 18U. "A White Man's President or a Fight." Oar neighbor Evans of the Record, wog quire nervous sod eTelie4 over the moon of oar norre•pcindent, “A White Masts tremident or a Fight." W. com Molokiltbint - to the follotelfig eltricr3: - “Our Mono, a Free vote or a Free Fight! Our platform. the Constitution and the Rights of the States ! Our doe. trios Olivia a White Man's Government, - wade-by- While Meg; for White Men. sod Ussirpostertry forever! Down woh the Nigges! Pcy menu of the Natrodal Debt —(tf it' is ever paid)—in reeobacks. A currency that is good e, ough for Work log Own, farmers, %aerobium,. mechanic., artisans-and editors, is good enough fur trbeddyerate ! Dowtrarith the boodkoht - e ra ! Bibnrdination of the Mi,itary 10 civil authority) Down with the natiapto Equal taxation and the rightful repre nnatation of all the States, or soother re bellion! Revolution tenet be met by counter revolution—face by force—•ro Moos by clo sper-. and usurpation _thorn be overt Weskits, it need be by the bayo nett Down with test oaths and reps trai ion ! Fier la , Repul hque How do y , u like it' A Free Vote or o Free Fight Thies just what we mean tie who robs us of our ♦o.e, robs us of the great, fret right of s frretoau, the preuJeet ■nd deftretit of all those —ll,a -liettable rights for which our ebellious grand-slres hauled In '76' Who attompts it , let him be registrar, Judge of Election or Governor, emort.ro CC AIIOT DoWN LIRE A DWI! Illissourtansf Countrymen' Broth el , Democrat ! Organize ' organize" organize!!! lf necensary, form comps pie*, battalsous.yegiments and brigades. acid march AHMED to the polls. deter mined to exercise your blood bought. fisol given FLIGHT—or FIGHT! Match to the polls determina4 to east your votes and free our fraud old Stale from. ber •c,ursed thrsldmn,—..r to die like heroes in the glorious atlempt Prepare ! renolva! and the victory in ours! We'll mash the whole parapher apaa of Jacobluism into such a mess of rule . ; bones, wool. jay bird heel" and hasb. iv m star Gplic4 Gi ver heII•141 once clam woe turned .t..) a tugger or •he linvil -- irarcard - a ftatt - icai - ftt o. Vuldsoator. If They, Wint to Fight, Let us Fight Them! This country is the home and birth Otoe or Democrats They belong in and it belongs to them The) enu.ti tete a majority of one million or Its ye flog and fighting men' Out upon thu base cowardice' It the gremping end arrogant minority want to fight. let us fight them ! Dot tor God's sake. if the Democracy hare rtghre which are trampled. let them not hope to rescue them from the roach heel of tyranny by playing the pert °Mali.° mendicants I Why eh the Demo critic party continue to sue for peace and Justice with soft words and con • tempt-breeding prayers, when their strong arm. and stout hearts may hurl from power and place the deaecratling scoundrele who flit theta • -- Why beg for liberty when Democrats can fight for u• Wby subizit to wrongs beyond endurance, outriare.s without parallel. crimea in nun tale high. usurpat ions he most un blush tog—when we ha ja. the power to set matters right ' Why ask mercy from heartless slid sonlleesrillstn• native and imported—when we m.y hurl them over Ward from the swamping chip of `Mete • Why —cnnetiiale" with rotib re,thier es and plum] ' Why compro mi•e" with di , and entail upon bu WI/ progress the blasting curse of ne gro equality f Why poison the (nun tacos of civilization sod advancement by conceding a part.cle of the rank :growth of Abolition bigotry and devtl try We can destroy our enemies, if wi t whit by subjugating them to the written 11w and 'be mercy of numbers This must c.one sooner or later—better now than when uneerupulooe power is fully eelabliehed The battle of must not end in a bloodless defeat ' If de'eated by power and fraud at the polls, the people moot rise in their might and vindicate their liberty and their free institutions from the grk p of the roh' Pr clan ! Therefore, organization Is imperative ly neceenary. Let , every Democrat in the land. North and South, forgetting all locardifferenoe, enroll himself to bat tle for the r'ghte of himself and of 4r• olflipring—the liberty of his person hearth end B , ate—in whatever form th• battle is forced and waited Let every Democratic organisati n Puma upon a war footing. fnr we are not rash in the opision herd expressed. founded upon the well-digeeted laws of God and 112190 and the histories of widow'. that by Revolution only will American liberty be restored to this Mongrel plundered land I—Senitne/ on the Jh rdet --The northern soldlil4 seem /9/ have made up their minds quite generally •thitt the ••hoye in blue'• will no longer run with 'the pnlitionl machine of the bays m black Tbey discover that the Mongrel party meant to use them for no better purpose than freeing orgroes.and tbat now they want to'yee their rutee‘o bring and keep them down to a level with negreea. The ••beye in blue." therefore. are very rapidly turning po• lineslly white —Puehunge —Radical Senator Nye has left his offiel•l dories at Washington and gone to .rump New Hampshire. '..Tho' loot to sleet. ta memory dear"—and dear al so to the poekets of the.tas payers.— Wit a poor «school° loses • day fen« "'work, by reason of eleknose, or front aey other hides, his entyderyer "desks" blue • d•g's ersiyes. Why ohould not gadLeol Senators. Moves" , tmrn and,offitts:bolders In the same 1111111- ger bd 'Hooked" fn the thlesiopent In political 'perch-making and trickery.' —A Baled paper doese't lik► it beast:tee Goo Heoettok weer. oivillap's drift.. at New Orleans. Most people will look tone the toot as ad indication of kis good settee. ree ab The onto Election--Negrocs Fo to rote for OS Constitu tion—l *gives takowfrom - the,Joils to vote. \ , . Fred Tuesday %mil yesterday black emissaries tbil tinsel bagger* West from plantation to plantation Ihrengh this county. &lying the negro hands employed upon thrui t to the polls • The negroes Intro everywler. gild that no negro who failed td core for The conati tutfon would be permitted to litre her. Those who didn't want to cote wire in iimidated into compli•ticc with the wishes of their new masters. In old times a ehvre-owner was, rarely deaf t. appeals for mercy. rein from a negro who bad deserved punishment ; but the negroes have masie , s now w lusts!. beat Is are nt slime. -. and the poor slit•ra were compelled to quit 'work. 10-e time. and walk miles through rain and mud to vote for Coon, Sarkis. Riz, Conuley. ko We have reason to believe. that the carpet baggers throughout the Aim. constant C??ntruunieati..ne with each whet, with the view it! learning 6011 many rotes were needed at particular plates. their grrangernenta being made 10 have the returns show th'e required 'bomber It is said that one of them .elegriphed trotn l ihis ciiyiriMontgonie rron - Prhfay dust whatever wa• necrs miry would he done here Norri‘ wrote trim this place on the 3let, to a friend in Montgomery, that at leant 3 Boi l water must he thi re—no? that e a ery ether MOPe be made to get out mild, lecal votes I oasible, but that at lea-t 3,890 'twat he pollr.i y Btrutlmr ins, rue I Inns were Pent to the I Collatle3 lo Greenohoro. Owe ner.ruen confined 'n jolt for criminal offence• were iLken I to the polio and Toted on Mitred%) One of tfilm Woo known to he under twenty year. of age Ai Oreen•born, a committee woo op pointed by the C.. * tirret ft" chill leng Ilnlttll known to hp Illegal, but iltr bureau eleciton'officero would not 'emit Ihrm 10 perform 11.14 411 , y, ' Our thopalcheo attributed the , rdrr extending the on e of 'voting to General Meode The Mobile Respiler charg•N it to General llit)den lo ii not poocilde thot no 'her of theoe ofticer• 11.1.11,1 1 , . .‘i lilly 11l e, ti Furth on under yr*. It , I 1 oily IS/411rd ii phonid have been entitled' '•An order to yd in the perpeir4t ton u: fraud,' e helir•e now. th , tt bad the tlecnnu been fairly conducted. , or blimp the us.. of mon, y. and without in Pon no , veer rhlr ihou.stid •utre would bale been rant A week agn we told the New York Tribune that not fire thonenod white men would vote We doubt if ball that num her have 'oh d M= MO The registered ynter• of the Stele were got permuted 40 pet freely 11e 111111 a • re .trsint. - fesr. or the influence of frind " The white not•ters of she loyol !replies dr e w,.. through their etnitotaries. thous nntl.ro the polls who di I not wish to:vote And who would not have voted hut -that 'bey were intimnlnoeil intorloing so In this county we know that men- were ern' from pbtnintten to phiutation in drive the negro,a on them to the poll., end 'hint they told those who hesitsted shout soling 'oat, tr, they did .1101 wore they would he fitted, imprittourd. eurportully punw.hed or &lien from the State A letter before 11, from hunt tier t lirt or the county- ely•. — Mounted negrnes were ...tot to my plat:o4ll°u to tell the neuroep thoit if they dui not vote they would he put Into the penitentiary for seven . years Th• .•x1iv141,41 ' thulge wa. worth 15.- 0(W of the tower cl•t f.tr rwifical tun Told by white men that perjury in ouch • cause wa• righientioneno, negroes had no dtfrteul , y in awe rtng int' votingwa• often ag they were required- and that wan as often tea they could ggt to the ptdlo Eight OW of ten of the •tntro. Pit" votes cnot were (legal, even under the order. lbel linthneleeti Ntcm to be received.--14e/ma Times and Messenger INTieIIIPATING T r tia Ne(thOlte The illontyamery advertiser, says: "The defeated cat pet-haggtre have the impu dance In ehargedvo riven with pre. venting negro.. /rem voting hy intimtda lion. This we have mildly characterized as 1111, ud.ucr. but to porno of (Set tt i. an outrageouv pimple:. The Radical,. themaelvea reverted to e•e'iy imaginable expedtent. however mean or criminal. to force utiwtll ne negrove to •otethe Jaco hiu ticket We could fill our paper with Veritable *commie of their trite doing in thin regard But for want of apace we can ,only mention 111 few illustrative case. In Mobile, a well known porter of R prominent hurine a boume determined that ri not •oiing the true interest of himself and hie race would he promoted Ou Friday night a we're mob went ?obi. house and threatened to shoot him and hie wife if he did not promise in rote But be boldly defied the mob. and the ineolent gang cowered before his denun Mat •one. Among the various items in the Mo bile papers relative to thu election we find the filth:ming ,E•ery means wee resorted to to bring up the negroev They were threatened with violence. and told atilt iF they did not vote they would be put back into slavery. We know of men) instant:tee in thie city end county in which negroee were frightened from their homes by threats that they would, be put in the„penittichin ry if they did not ••vote for ratification ant► the regular tieket." 2,000 115-111DIIRAL 01F/ICICItI AID 101 PIM IN THE MINUS, TO VOTE/ It does not look now as If 2.000 white men bad voted for the (so sailed) coned I 'talon. and we are certain that not one hundred have dohs so who did not hold office,by military appointment or aspire to office lit the new government. We have shown to the World either that there are no -loyal" white men in the State, or that' the "loyal" men here are opposed to negro domination in the political at 'etre of the State, stud as it is known tb it at least twe thousand es-Vederil °Biome soteoldiers,now lilting hers fi lmset to vote, there will be no difficulty in deciding that "loyal" Alabamians bold, autwill ever maintain, that may white ten should control the 'mean meat of Alabonsa.---Se/mtf Messenger. --The Radical' State Coivention meete•at Philadelphia on the 1101 et March. Our Taxes and State flitaaoe. • Among the olmot4 namberleost pee -I,tont that agile,* the• pet Its mho& Imo aseage pe•Jole's oliendinn, tbat of State min and state 6tlaoeey Mali - hot Dr sigbu K levery - Wlier east is/Lives to the tat pAyerrer, and p ilioularry at libel l / 2 1181 era carrying ouch so enoreinue load is is Tublic blee e in g , the wlteerrleytialator will strive be bardeit to lighten the hardens of bio conoilluento, and discrve the op p o ll ot i on of public brnefoctor The 5 traces of reunpylvanit ho•e nor been in en gaud a iontlirion to 'uglify o of saxes for many • -aa at thrs time. If we will look it the figures we shall and that more money is now raised of the p!swle of Pentutylramits,hy taxation, than is required for the ex expenses ofth‘ government interest on the pnhlie debt, and ip reduction When all expenditures are met we Gull that a.large surplus remains on hand— tying idle in the bands.of the Stale Trees rer. In his Lot annual message ale - Governor rap Shin h - or obi al any time for years Leen ler, Man a mdlion of dollars, and as present ornouets to con siderotly otter four mullions of dollars This shows that 'obis large amouht of m,tney I as been 'liken ft. m the pockets the people. over and above what sits r. gum. d• Thin is extortion, and in •rip , pressing the tax payer unneeerran ly Thisetate of things should he remedied. and that without The only w y t o do tide practically - IF (17 - 1 reduce the taxes. The Governor suggests Met' the tour militons in the treasury be loaned out at tour per cent . hut as the Giess moll wealth Ilan no right to htrome ...bey lender, and as the people can manage their own moi ey mature better than the Si ate can for them, let this surplus hereafter remain in their pock eu where it belongs. We really c moot e the sense of the State taking four millions, or meta rums, tram the pock e t s the people in the shape of taxes, in order that it may be loaned out at four per cent which would save two per cent., to them The State Treasurer. in his last an• ',wit report, elates that the revenue will be $1 tittO 000 ier excess-of the expendo. r, in oil, er woroe, That the people ate taxed this I.lllloUllt more than they ttilvdit to he. Ile sees both the just ire at .1 neet s-ity of reducing the eletesi, but hot Tt cammeutLttl n does not -- . g o t ar eriodigh Ile is to f..vor of repealing the ? three mill tax on personal' pr - operty, bonds no.rtgages, and money at interest. except bonds anil mortgagee ItittUed by corporations Thin would reduce the .iurplu• $350,000, still leasing ti million and a quarter on hand Iu addition, let the tax on coal. per act of March 22,1, 1867, he repealed, which amounts to 93G it.l and aitile that mush to the coat of our fuel. Theo we would take oil the tax on deeds, 487 'Xi There would still be a emeriti., .of ',host a **Mitt% over --airolribove Ike ili.bursementa remaining—which can be reduced by repealing various deecrtp bons or taxes, Shat will readily suggest themselves The State debt, under the Careful manairement of the commission ers or the Sinking Fund is now being steadily re.need. but we do not under smud the poUcy of taxing the present generation to pay the whole of it off, which "ill be the ease if the surplus In the :reasury should be •pplied to that purpose Let the debt, be • reduced gradually, so that the beat generation may pay their share of it, and in the meanwhile keep the taxes II the lowest poesible figure. A surplus in the State treasury us always beset by evill it leads to corrupt legislation, and extra,- afoot expenditures. These always watt wi a plethoric public purse Legislators too often Honk it is their duly to get rid of all the mewl un hand at the end 0, the year. even if they have to give it I away "We see ATI example of this now, There is a project at Harrisburg for the Legislature to give a bonne to the"col legen to the State—anmer to receive Saito) and others $3OOO each—which will swallow up fifty thousand dollars at least This in to he repeated every year and is equivalent to the Stale borrowing over eight hundred thousand dollars for t hire colleges anti paying, the interest on tire money. annually Will the lax- Pajers consent that this shall be done! While we are willing to give all legni efittencouragement to learning, we are no. willing to be taxed to support col lects that cannot supoort thernsel•re. We hope the Democratic members of the legislature will address themselves to the subject of Suite tax en and finance, for in no - other manner can they render tnernael•est more popular with the peo ple —Doylestown Democrat An Old Neighbor of Old Thad. Writes film a Letter. 110PIIST L.CI NT FABM. B. , I , 1 Near !Brooklyn, Jan 80 Das. Sta I suppose you will not recollect sue therefore to aid your memory i will awe some circumstances that occurred between Us 'about a ILtrd of a century ago A• that time you will remember a town called the Two, Tar. ems, w b ich 'cent tined also a blackmail' h shop) aboul fise miles from Gettysburg, CM the Baltimore turnpike ; and of your owning one of the taverns, and excliang log it with Rubert•Criswell; my father. of Franklin couivy, for a farm in Path Valley, and of,Jay coming ( i theti t mete bop lo your officolo Oetlyeburg, to ef fect 'an exchange. of title deeds of the properties' Boyne years afterwards celled, on Yeti 15.,Lanoaster ; now you alli•ceoulleet ate. "You are accused of ackocrwledging that you are legislating "outside the Constitution, ' and of lay ing that the rule of the Cone itutlon had gone by, and that the will of the party in power is the supreme law of the laud, Is this true t I hope not, for your sake. I have heretofore always endeavored to uphold you, when you and your meas ure• were spoken against. Some have said the reason you were so bard on the rebels was begans* you were vrodiettive and revengeful, on atmonnt of their burning your Caledonia Iron Works dur ing Lee's invasion of fenasylveeic thereby causing you to lose, $60,000. add them no ; that yob did not care .for the logo of your works, that your only regret was that about two hundred labor ers were thrown oat of eoployousi on account of It. WWI you sonid got them rebuilt again ; that you have always been an abolitionist ; but it WWI that this fondness for the colored race has so grown on you of into, that you may be -aid to be afflicted with that otwldi called ~.Nisyer on ths_brain." as you Isiah to give them rights mid furore de hied to white men. Whitt-emigrants are required to fee a certain length of time in the country before voting; hutynu want to give ignorant blacJke the right .of suffrage inithedtately ind nn learn to make the &milt such a Paradise -for it.ens (in disregard of the interests of the whltes) that, if it will attract some of ' 'heir race to emigrate from Atrial; and the fite-th.rn' Wands Lt that event. I suppose you would weal to have an agent ur the Freedmen's Bureau At the pier toltand each of tlheaitlfeti PIT• 1018 a ballot a they landed from the vessel Why dpo't #ou slime them to eote,and •it on juiiet_aoti bold office in yoyfr own Stale mai iye State t Echo answers. why the Peni.ayliFinian would not allow it, and well you know 1 Bet if you should ancceed in recurinit the negro vote you cannot elect a Wadi cal Preeideni : for you will loan her white 'inlet' for every negro one you gain . yonr popu •r man cannot he elected as a Radical. The•' a I should re, ember that the great hero of not one war only, bui of two, could not be elected President I am only one of tbottaapda that will join Johnvon or the'ennetitutionalpirty. I never voted a Democratic ticket in my life : wait a Whig the same as you. Mr Stereos. until thr Itentibliean,party was organtsee in 1856 then 1 joined it . Irti+ f natural fortis Whigs to elide in to it a it is for docks to palm • So good bye. Mr Steven,' I always have adtutied your great talent Pi, but I think they ire munltrected of late , be you here got 100 many Mack ,liepp in your (look. and a re 100 An xious to increase their number, to vtist toe ant longer I join the o'berflock. Adieu, Agteu R.IIFTIT rIIIIMEI.I The last Card of the Traitors The reckless hand of destructionists tharnow rules in Congress. has Ihroorn another card upon the table, from that hot hed or Nlongrelism—Boston It wa• pre•entri by Mongrel Sumner, on Mon dnq in the shape of .Cp.bottlon to attoli.ln the office of President of the United States I t rimy p tarog •urns to tint that we bare progrt s•ed so far in the Mongrel re‘olution, that we hoot only 1111. one step further to take. And is it not no! Where is there a Republican party journal that has a word to pay against i.? Where is the ItPpublienn - peirty journal that dere lift ita voice against thin In•t cant of the Disuntoniste. or against the traitor Sumner--who has token the lend? Should this proposition to abolish the office President prevail lVhat then? -Would it make the bondholders any more secure? . 1$ it not really a ear) intended by mingrelists to sweepotilay all ,govern ment debt Ltreak up the Go•eiumeol at Wash ington, and who - will be responsible for the bonds T Another step in this direction was proposed on Monday, by Mr, Truce)*lt to eircumseribe ijie powers Rod authority of the Supreme Court Trumbull's bill provides that all etiorts of justice of the United States shall be bound by the act. of Congrene on political (intentions, and that It rants with Congreas to determine what government is the established one in any Slime ; and it is declared that no civil State governments exist in the nit eluded States of the South, and no mo tioned civil Slate governments in such States shall be recogn , zed by either the xeecuti•e or judicial power of the United States until Congrene mball so provide, or ufailaii State hrepresented in the Con green of the United Slates The ltecon etruction note are declared . political in their character," the propriety or •alidtty of which no judicial tribunal is compe tent to question ; and the Supreme Court of the United States is herebj probibi:eil from taking jurisdiction of any ca-e growing out of the execution of said mein in either of said Staten until much Staten shall be representeideto., etc : and such Canes now pending before that Court shall he dieminsed and all note authoriz ing an appeal, writ of error, habeas rbr pita, or other proceeding to bring before said Court for review any Cafe, Civil or criminal, arising out of the execution of said Reconstruction nom are Fereby re pealed.— Weseehester Jeforsoman Starvation in Maine A 11;ddeford journal says starvation eaten in the State of Maine. More than a hundred families in that town are euf feting for food and clothing, and fuel Men go to their homes. Bays the journal, every Saturday night not only with tireu limbs, but with an aching heart and a despstrtog soul Fathers hear the cry for bread from their little ones; bear the requites for a few dollars from the rick. toiling wife, that she may purchase some Role necessity such as . , the sick need but the poor husband replies ttat hie money it gone no work can be obtained and absolute starvation stares bun and hie in the face This is no fancy sketch It is a startling reality in that section. whibh io a portion of nigger•worshiping New England The blaoki are fed by the government, and steal whet they do not get from the, Negro Bureau. IVhite men are taxed into starvation to keep tip ibis sort of thing Poverty is rapidly spreading over the whole country ; min aret , merchants. workingmen and women, are aS crying out. 'give us re lief;" while the kfongretites are keep lug diet? heels upon I.be neck of indus try, and trampling to death the prospere ity of the nation. Will New England awake to the real ization of her share in .he great crimes orthe past quarter of a oentary, spd the still ,greater crimes of the petit seven years t Does she intend to °oarless the worship of the• blade Idol, and (Wally throw herself beneath the oar of bee Juggernaut, and be crashed out of eels lance? Wealth-producers of New l&n• gland, awake before it is too late. Kick to the wind* your felts gods. Qv.r throw your Philips's and your Stunners, and their destruction will be the dawn of your prosperity. .Tell the world in November next that New ilnglited, after thirty Ave years of fansticistit, has at last gotten her eyes opts. and mania. —Premise sore Brownie* ways° to the upper house, in this world, but tb the next be will go to the lower. -" Sedtionili Sellishnesp, The South id to-4114 , 411°re honestly I "titional" than Nitw-tild&pd. EVeri tftiite lighting in flutists tier, the Beath had do preiramme etceit . diedery or de fesir„;: But, while the war was going on. Nue , England was 4100eder- I soy with Canada ; and. if the South had Peen euccessful. ibis arransbment would. l lf possible, bare been carried one. A. New England did not then go in for better or worse, Abe does hot. now, in Ligall pt peace. We mean to say, the South j. will.ng to see such legislation as will pre each section a fair share of pros l ent, and of the benefits of the-govern went ; melte, t,n the - other itstril,-New England wants more than her ifair pro s portion. And, Doctor. chit is - the case. New England operates irtinst the 'tom mon weltare. tier policy is designed to build -herself up at the expense of the rest of the Union ; and. just ad she went tw - -with -Beittsh mailaratios tos---tha. abolition of slavery, so she would new combine with British or any other for sign capitalists in any scheme calculated to build up herself. and that at the ex pence of the West and South. This is wuat we cell an unnatural and anti-na tional spirit Thai ii exists we cannot be'p _believing ; end that it is at the but torn 0(01101 of the recent legislation againet the Sontp, we feel almost cap tain The agent of t t : ' \enuiniana lio%rd of lmtnieretion at Stockholm writes that he had before him recently a small It hrary .or pamphlets, in all languages. published in end for New England, and some of the Northern Slates; and that every one of these pamphlet 'conteinea numerous feleboodscalculeted io prevent i.migrathn from coming to the South They admit, for 'purple. that wept) res. advantages of- soil ant climate. and are anxious to promote immigration. but orclere that the immigrant won!' find no eafety for person or property to Ihr South This is very shrewd. The' en thors knew that material misrepresents . - wine could bawdy refuted ; and choose precisely the charge which appeals most strongly to the feelings of the emigrant, and which,-once fixed, it would require t.Je greatest length of time and the most serious and troublesome effort to re- El= Considei rig all the eireoinstences. Irbil' lea meennes4 of PrifiStlOC.9 WblCh !should beer been imposeilde But there pis one consolation in the mailer—Rini Mat is, the ,certainty Hada when these •neskinz charges shall have been die proved, the result will be a reaction against the cause which has been fur thereil by such means. and in favor of immigration to the Routh. This, however, Is only one smell Vireo( of our general charge. lArgere•ideocee are seen in every part Of be (Ileum:rive policy of New England., She knows that If ;he were to eationaltse fairly. r ber relative importance would be re ,duced, 'and ehe is &lett:Dined lo enjoy \ (more than her share of representation and of the government, even dm igb this requirement vecessitmes • policy which persistently v lola , es the Constitution and, deals out the most manifest and eon untied injustice to the other sections of the country This policy must, tee think, in time produce 41 combination pf 'tbe other sections in their own defense —Galrraion (Tema") Netec —The lime hoe arrived in the poll. teal affairs of one country in which pa tience or farther delay lu .. maintaining the totesrity of the Union smith. rights of the Slates untinpuieed, - ou the part of Dentocra's and ell other good citizens ceases to be • virtue The hivtory of cirtli:atton informs us that revolutione bring to tits eurfice all the knaves with. in the boundaries of a 120 who seek lor ploce and power for the purpose of preying upon the public treasury, and ii cannot he denied that a majority of our public officials at the present time are thieves and robbers, banded together and in league with outside rings for the purpose of plundering the public reve nue and holding on to the power which thri . are thus wielding against the life of our country and the freedom of the people Thieves, robbers and other critutuals are afraid of the laws and of executive [beer!, whose duly it is to execute the laws, and this is the reason why our Congress is trying to ,get rid of the President and the Supretue Court "No rogue o'er felt the halter draw With good 0p..0 ion of the law Our nation is strong. tint no structure erected by man, is of sufficient strength to withstand the undermining infittenee of the myriads of knaves oonnected with our government, end the time'hee army ed when an imperative settee of public duty demands that all who love our country, our Institut lona and their own ireedom, tnueLiake a bold and decided soled for the Constitution • or witness as idle spectatota the death of the grandest St r ugtn e s ever formed to gladden the i cart of men. Beason and arguments have no influence with knaves, they have kept oureount ry broken up for the past three years.-for no other purpose than to keep themselves in power, they have therehy prostrated our home industry. closed up our workshops, thrown our la borers out of employment, inoreseed the public debt, are forcing the government Into ruin and repudiation, and the peo ple to the verge of starvation pieropes and mince balls are the only argentente that will check the d a f revolution ist,. thieves, robbers anti traitors, we urge that the time bee arrived when these articles should be brought to bear upon our revolutionists in Congress. and the thieves ant robbers who are defraud ing our revenue, sad upon any and all others who are aiding and abetting "the power. that be" in keeping our country divided. It is an• everlasting disgrace to the Demoersfie patty that they bare permitted the Union to be divided dur the last three years of peace at the bid ding of about one hundred revolutiona ry k in Congress, and the time has arrived when the ample, of: oar Union be disposed of.---Coistabis Mw .4d. It is Atogbuttes to ere* thrwgb tho beads of B.adlestla esti ; 114 Put that ihe 'strops tsott•}ire• .proposed Congress, will uss•ttle the country rad product, wide spread dimmer, mad protertiaisty.bwollas busies* gift es so mg op to stay the amid ••urea of the sot .)lutitioary body. Stradholders, 3601 t owl. • 1 1 How Mock Mammy bat We Want? ••filiee us money." 10. the •ery or the multitude. In 1860. otlfh tbirly4oo r Stateadm • coadi•ion of bigh tiMatmeeekt health, with proesperity on every bend, and a larger bushier' in the aggreg ate than me,bad ever done is the entire his tory of the colliery, the whole nmetist 01 our circula lotto-coin and. paper, a.e funitglintird an. fifty million.. In 1864, when tie :tett &med_ we had s fit. one thousand tiltl bone of paper, of heti me kinds. oervens as cuerfpncy Subherpn., tly the currency woe contracted, red the national --bank beetles, - Stith tho.e at the government left i• circulation. fool ed up some a e hundred and fifty la w_ lions.. 11 has loftier hem Nelow that figring., In the mearrime. the pot4le at t 1.110. manakins the - caueeoftbelf frock. lea, eupposing that the stagnation which Les fastened upon trade intherestill . bf a lack of currency, cry for ••more itoutoi This to the rock upon which the Com. merce of the cpuntry would split, if we had any eomorbrce to wreck 1, is not intmerrhat we uteri bur row "tienre a, a proof of it. the borrower who con de: posit satiofactory colleteralw can ohtime all the (undo' be may need at f.tur nod flee per teem while the commer r i,l men worth fifty thousand dollars rasa t borrow len thousand on four in mills on Lie own name, igilleSio ender • finally good A lack of confidence in be lit'iore protspenity of the nation,on_the part of capitaliste, it the prime cause of the difficulty Jo the way of making commer cial four mootig' Mane. and that lack of confidence is the fruit of the pree. e i,i, trueti•e legislation in Congress, and the crushing taxation whirti the weilth pro ducers Gave to endure nil•le l to. the other evil of a depreciated currener Tbeee complicated rails toitinot be cured by -more money " The lead. ng p cal econotniuts of the world hare siren it as a rule,in finance. tliat n n woo ~f healthy commie. act ~. riled three &tilers per ; an I 'hit to a slate of aatiunal yr...pertly this %m , ant per capita would change hawk doe, limes per we - eit. the yea- throtich T.. king this data for our Toole. n 11r - qv,' that we have now six times ea marl rtnny. if it ware Round. me tee /teed' Tie • p•picatioti of the United Sive. a' 1/111l.1)00, would demand $lO5 fop) currency. Supposing the circuli, 1-o he saa staled, which wonl.l shim in he efi^ low as ordinary business exchanges make ti. we bare a yearly ..4 if trade for the whole country of :0-1,1,1000 WO, which is protably m ••• than we shell do In .I , H, next five year: Vow, no lorsinees man will on leriske ii -ay. granting that ,hie data to relothle, that we to day wed more money thin we now have, for the meaimring ot the val ues of property, and facilitating the ex changes of the 0 iuntry. for the n-it. five years Take off all superflormi f a' a restore the paper dollar to its old • i!uti of one' hundred cents.. or OD a par with gold_ relieve the wealtb•producert from the pressure of the greet debt. placing • portiett, of it on the Shaul ler. of the rich, by fazing the bond% and it will be seen that we need no more money ewe i•- ay on ad the trade and commerce that we can create Establish confidence be tween money capital and I ihor capital by ihe reforms th.at we ha•e indicated, end there will he no complaint of scar city of money. It may be that pros perity will not come, while the great debt bongo over us; he that as tt may, it to not money that will relieve us for we hare now more than we need and Iho.e who call for ••more money - no w. panacea for our commercial siekneil it not understand the emit* —Day Book --Timis the ItailLal political trick •lero and army,tiummers from the were) organisation called the —Grand Army of be Rept.ltilte," and eery few membe rs . remain The argansz.aton is not umler the control of the real antihero of the late war, hence-it in not a fit place for Jrue soldiers. The political leader. wtri areatietting up tegrO government. in the Routh have full canto' of it and their design is to dupe 0101101dierfl 1010 rot mg the Its.tlical ticket by making them believe th•t, they (the leader., are .1o• ing everything solely for the nold'er•' heperis Let no soldier allow him•elf 1 0 be inveigled by those slivering hypo crites, for, mintier or later, the b tee fellow will find that the scoundrels etc lie like servo/Intend sting like adders -- is riving dearly (or her support of the Radios' party. fier ping interests ere alcuovt totally tie.' riy et' A report just made by s speeivi committee of the Legislature show., that the situation to even worse than rep re Nen' e.l heretofore A reference l•i nfficial document show • the amount of registered tonnage to have been as foliose. June 30, 1859 June 30, 1866 D.cresso in warm 'nano Which is* dreline of nearly iv/01111M , in • comparatively brief period. The valuation of thsfonciage which hex .1,1 appeared in litre short interval is Acme thing like $24.000,000. Will the ceps Whets of that Slate still support the party which is strangling them 4ie —lt is not those who demand the payment of Government bonds in green backs wly• are '•snwoking the national 'o► , edit." bat ri►ose who are •quandrring and efeehng the inflame of the 0 tvern tuent end wider it to carry out schemes for partisan advancement. thereby drain ing lb. Gauntry of its wealth sail paling Ike way for final repudiation. —Barrett is to be tried over again on the 24th of February. which will be another ''erumb" of $5.000 in the pvock• et of Pierrepnint, V.OOO in that olltid die, and sundry ether thousands in tits pockets of other "wooly, loil" shape. Jarndyoe vs. Jikendyce. will be 0441 in to the sbade.eyentually by the Govern mett Burnett. —The prieeipire of the Radios party are eternal. —Nailer) Aver • Yes, stems] ehirust stealing , apd eternal nigger equWj. Finally, eternal perditipa r. , • —The Portised which was one of glimmer fo r b oolo orotio piping! diet hoisted GiSurs warm for prosidsot. rat last hauled It dews with suißato 3l ' disgust. ' 7.1t1 • N0 171 Vol 445 149