E E The Democratic Watchman, BEILLEIFO NTE, NM' A P, GLLY MEW, EIII(TOR A PROPIIIIIITOR. /OUR P. MITCIIP,LL, AiISOCIATIII ETWOR. FRIDAY MORNING, MA11614 6, 1868 TIIRIIIB.-62 per year when,pild in ad ranee, 2,50 when not haW. in advance, and *lOO when not paid before the expiration at the year -THE unavoidable absence of both 'the Editor§ of tpo WAreum moat aeoount to Onr readers for the lack of oar asual-iirriety.of 0441131. reading matter in 'this week s issue. 'We - do not often feel called opton to apologize for our paper, and immure our patrons thafire will nial.c up in the future for all deficiencies. ()Niger Ahead Smoke, Smoke—nothirt but emokr I What are we to make of it? Ftr several days past the whole eonntry has been alarmed by the cry of "Fire! Fire! Fire!"—the bells have been everywl-erLyinging the people to the rescue —the engines have been rattling over,the, streets— the hoarse fire trumpets. rousing the sleeping from their slumbers, have rung their discordant, tones, "Give way there! Give way!" upon the night air—all has been , rli•vnay, bus tle, confusion and lo I the summing up of the noise, the hurry scurry, the fright, the excitement, is e;;;;? - iVe,' smoke, smoke—nothing buttho suffo cating 1 , 41110ke or difty waste paper burnt at, WitAhinatan. Se, at least. our philosophers tell us—those good. easy Feels, who see only calm and sunshine in the roar of the tempest. and cannot tell a hawk from a horn is southerly. " But is there not truth in the adage "where there is much 80/131(e there must, be some fire?"'and ate we for ever to be inade the . dupes of the blind. the marcerw, or the eeward ly—of men Whb were born like pup pie,,, with their eves scaled against light, and who continue as they were born—or of those who measure their patriotism by the Wall street stand ard, and value gold above liherte,--or of those whom nature, by mistake or in SUMP mad freak, has given the Arm And rtatnre of' man with the at tributes of the hare'? Are we, the people, who havt haul left, under our guardianship a great treasure, to shut our eve-. lock up our minds, aril trust to the sialit and apprehension of others in th ilestharge of our solemn outy as ,•etititiels over that treasure? Are we, wh,oi we, see plainly the ra ging fire spread.rig and consuming all in its wty, to tiL, rho iv iris of phil osophers, or fouls. or specul.u.ora, or cowards t rr it, ftgain4 the evidence of our own ~•itkee, that it is all smoke, and dance to Nerds Ell lling while Koine burns? If-so, we shall, doubt less have a merry time of it while the darer goes - on, hut very little proper ty worth owning left when It is over. Not more certainly does the volcano give evidence of approaching erup tion by the smoke and ashes emitted from its mouth, than the Mongrel Cone-nes does by its deeds and its pretensions of' the momentous strug gle at hand between, the friends and enemies of eotetitutional democratic Overnmerit. Who does not see (ex cept the wilfully hltrid) revilution open and undisguised in every politi cal act of the usurpc'hs at Washing ton, and dot each new movement transcends the preceding in boldness and infamy? We do not mind the halleinjahs, the insane shouts of joy with which frenzied fanatics of' the Mongrel-Negro •party Lail each sue cessive act of of Cotgressional ag• gressien, because we hiok for nothing else from men who would rather ace ,he devil himself rule than Democra cy triumph ; and - when these madmen talk of safety, seourity and regeuera lion, of the political Utopia about to spring up under the magic wand of Stevens, Sumner, Wade and compa ny, we disregard it because they are madmen. Bat it is not te`when, with a full knowledge of the critical condi tion of the country', - we see indiffer ence or an sr parent sense of safety manifested by men of our own politi cal persuasion. Then we confess, we feel mortified and grieved. to blindness or indifference to -pending danger, such false on of ettouriti an the part of the people when the sword of r:estruotion hung suspended over their heads by g single hair, has been the cause of the downfall of other republiesland will be of ours unless there Is a sudden awakening to the realities of the • satiation surd corresponding. action. No, believe its, the recent occurrences at .Nash- i nig kin—the inoubordiontiun afire - tit. the tlefiant,attituda of Stanton, ()oiler welled and backed by the lllongro,l Congress, and the impeachment of the President by that body because, in the discharge of a soletnrheath bound duty he , tried to ,"preserve, protect and defend the constitution" —these transactions are not all smoke; and he who believes they are and keeps on tripping it to the music of the conspirators' fiddle will find, when it is too late to retrieve the error, that he is 'dancing on the ruins of his country, the grave of the constitu tion. the tomb of liberty—and that he himself will be consumed by the very Imes he would not discover. and 'perish . amid the general w. eek. ' Wtuld you, sAme • y0p01.0.5? Ac tion I OrganizatiOn alone iltl do it— organization that will prepare the masses to battlti with the ballot or the bayonet for the prueotion of their liberty, their country or themselves ! Arouse I Be ready ! , the times are ominous Unjust Sentences .. In the daily Age of the 21st iti , t. Under the caption Lanitt. INTEI.I.I. °INCE, we have a "teen of a cause argued before the Supreme Court of this State, in Banc. The case of KEAnsta and MstimY and also the writ nt . pistons Corpuß were argued "The writ of error was taken up. In the presentation of this ease the At torney General addressed - n circular letter to the several eresident Judges of Criminal Courts throughout the Sts te.. to which he has received re plies." In his reply one of the . it' ges, um mg other things, says. "I have sometimes, for Lake of exam ple, imposed ULLA offenders lieti4 sentence., more severe than in my judgment necessary for the reforma tion of the part,cular offender.— Whet) he had served out- part of his sentence I recommended his pardon. II had an understanding to that Mica with the executive." Now we object to this, that is to imposing a heavier 4ntence Than the Judge himself , think, necessary in the individual case. WILY not leave each one bear his oivn . burdft, suffer - his own pun ishment for his own crimes. The Judge having a secret * understanding' with the ceeetitive that the sentence is not what it purports to be on the record gives no notice to the offen• der that his sentence in not as severe as it seems. He suffers the addition al mental agony superinduced by the ant icipatimi of the whole time, for which he was sentenced, being the measure of. his .punishment and not port of the time. It strikes us as a pet Ilona position fer a judge to place Lituself in, who loves tuercy tut well as just ii'' Ile paste, a heavier sen tence upon a poor, unfortunate offen! der than he thinks is demanded in the individual case.' The term closes and the offender goes out of his juris diction. But I c has an understand ing that before he suffers the full sem tt nen he, (theJu Igo) will recommend him to executive clemency. Had not the .Judge better be sure that lie is not a tnemtenent at will, and that he may go the way of all the earth before any part of the sentence is en durod 'oy the offender Had he riot better make sure that the executive too is not liable-any minute to "shu fle off thLtmortar coil." We object to Nue% se n tences. Let every thing and very ,b.sly be what they appear to be., 'ln the Narita of God, Let Go!" At one time when the Tyrol was invaded, the Tyrolean peasants gath ered on the" mountains through the gorges of which the invading army must pass, and felled trees and col lected messes of rock, which they fix. ed upon the edges of the precipices and held back by ropes and 'chains until the moment should, come tor discharging them upon the invaders. When the enemy had advanced far enough in the gorge, the leader of the peasants cried out, and the word passed along the whole Hite, the name of God, let go I" and the death dealing avalanche descended upon the Our country is not distressed, nor our liberties tbreatend by the inva sion of any foreign enemy, but we have among us, and in power too, an enemy more ruinous to the prosperi ty of the country and more danger ous to liberty than any foreign invader would be. This eosin, is the mon grel Negro party, a patch-work eon cerq made - up of all the dirty rage of all eolors that -Could be aqvaped to /tether from the oast-off clothes of all the parties and faotione that have. 'at various amok existed 1* the country within the last thirty au Away years. Its sakes* 'in 1860; thfougli diesea- Wits in thealemiteratic party, wee the most witheviqg curse that ever feP up 'on any rieople. Its reign has been one of detastation and ,blpoclabed, of treason, robbery, murder and defiler *fixation.. From first to 11410 t has been 'vile and execrable in all its cm captions and sedans. It is leprous from crown to solo. Liar is branded on its foreheacrand hypocrite is writ ten in glaring capitals all over its rot ten carcass. It heart is the recopta ell' of every vile thought, the labora tory of every unjust, evil, cruel, intl. ignant:infitinotis and deiolish AMA. Like a rain pyre it is sucking the blood from every vein and artery of the governmept. • Like a ghoul (not sat. srt.h depredating, upon the liv ing) it exhumes and gluts its buzzard appetite upon the bodies of the dead. It is a living, moving, breathing curse—a walking pestilence by day aryl by night; and its death—the po litical death of the body, and the 'na tural or unnatural death of it:s . tinist prominent members, the double -dyed villains who have strazied and put in operation its policy—would be a blessing for which we should th ink Homo with groatful hearts.. This enemy has ievad6d our dear[ rights ; it has entered, with felt design. the gorges that lead to rho eitidal of Lib rty. Is it not time to' cry to the peasants on the mountain tops who hold the astalanr he of death in check, "In the IMMO of (.Ld, let go ?" The Bondholders There appears to be a goad deal of uneasiness among the speculating gentlemen of the "loya; party who bought treasury issues, otherwise known as greenbacks, at forty per cent or less WI the dollar, and invest ed them at par value in government honk that their securities w i cnt milly I), paid, prineipal and interest, in the saint, kind of currency they invested They me very unanimous in, , • r. limns - IDA , tile L such a prOCedUre IN mild be an outrage upon them and ti disgrace to the government But Why an outrage? Many of them Lave already received in interest paid in gold the full atnount of duet in vestment estimated at its gold value. Resides, have not th, r, pre , entatives of their party in Cotigru , st, made treas ury notes a legal tender for all debts but dutick, cm imports? Did riot the Mongrel negro Legislature of Penn sylvania, two years ago, pass a law to pay the State creditors in federal cur rencyY Then, pray, why should the holders of untaxed United States bonds consider it a peculiar hardship that they should be paid in the same kind of currency that the people arc obliged to take and that the State pays out to its creditors, who paid geld value for the securities they hold, and are besides subject to tax ation? Thloppositiou which these . greasy — Toyisr speculators make to taking the same kind of medicine they (or their party) have prescribed for others, is ungracious, to call it by no harsher name Instead o:squirM ing and retching at the sighs of the physic before it has reached their lips, they had better swallow it down with out any contortion of countenance, and be thankful that,, it is yet no worse ; for there seems to be a public opinion very !Apiary fortu;ng that the wealth of the country, wrung froth the hard hands of toiling industry, should, not be squandered among a set of thieving stock gamblers and speculators in "loyalty'-' and war, whose hands td souls are stained with the blood of slaughtered coun• trymen In plain language, the idea of repudiating the debt altogether is extending among the tax payers of the country with a rapidity, which should admonish the - untaxed bond• holder ofd worse condition of affairs in prospect, than the payment of his certificates of government indebted miss, with doupoos attached in green backs or National Hank currency. --The :Ciliate or the United States was greatly agitated for soul( hours, one day recently, and several speeches were made by Mongrel Sen ators denouncing the •Baltimore and and Ohio rail road company fur re: .quiriog a nigger wench to ride in a car set apart for persons of her color. Tho old "Winnebago" of this state threatened to have a rail road built for the special accommodation of peo ple of his favorite color. Those who have been annoyed by negroes in she best oars in our own' State since the Vougrel legislature passed a lar punishing these who make any die crimination on account of oolor, will appreciate this proposition of Mr. Oanaitost: —We are delighted to announce the assublation of lion. Charlie. R. Boyle, of Netts county, a. Audits, General. He iota every way fitted for the -Wiles, and we have no doubt of bill triumphant eleotioo. Colonel Wellington H. Eas t of Columbia colicky, ibosolostod for Survey or General, le aim aslizeellest. solootion: He was a Captain in th e Math Peentsyl- Tani& Rows's. and rose to lbeemotand of the Regiment before the end of the war. New - Publications. Tna NEW pqtaturtn, r -The March num ber of this fine Magazine is °ern. table. Lt bears evidence on every page that its contents are selected by men of taste and ability, and Judging from the three num bers which hare been issued, we may safely say that it is the best Magazine of the kind published in this oountry :, , Er ory man of literary tastes - ought to have it, and as the editors have evidently been to ireat tessibie and expenno out a'periodical to compare favorably, in mechanics) point of view, with any thing now published, they deserve the sup port of all who can appreciate a work of the kind. We suppose our retrieve, gen erally, know that an 'Eclectic Magazine' undertakes to republish the finest arti , ales from the best periodicals of the world. Of curse the , titltie of such magazine depends greatly on the litera, ry tastes of its editors. In our opinion the ••Nett Eclectic," published in Balti more, is very fortunate in—this rempeet. Aildress, Trumbull tzt Murdoch, No 49, Lexington street, Baltimore. Tun OLD (7 I . 11t1) Pf/ 0 It n. —This nteriing-l!emoorntio etcuial ix a moat Cl. cellent one kinong the contents are '.Secrete Let Out of the Renate Chem ber,•'• y the Editor, 'kittorre a continuation of the Italian Histwheal Romance, tranmlared t`t pressly 'for The ON Guard. "Vend Under the HOW Y, I,y MIS/4 Nellie Marshall. To ?blau,.' by Mrs. Helen Rich. "Slate, Sovereign t} and .Negro Suffrage." • Political Lit erature of Amerira. ' "Types of Nitta kind,- by Ili Van Eyrie “The condi tion of the South, ' -Tut, contntht," "The Soul of 1111.91 C ," "The Southern Ileroie Ural "tail vat ions other irner e%ting articles, wlrieli, 1 wilier with the Editor's and Book Table, make up an attrnotT% e number. Price $3 Jule numbers ati Holton N. Co.. Pub -11.11..1'0;0. 4:2 NaB,iltel,treet, New l'oik n —The March number of this Magazine contains mv enteen articles, from abl. , at it err., rept c sewing eight Suuthetii ;itates. Among the poetic contributors, in this ntimber, are Mes Margaret J. Preston, Dr. F. O. Tici.nor, Judge A. J. It c.iiticr, and .1. Augustine Signitigo Among the prome writers ate, 11ev Dr Dabney, diva Por ter, lien. Hodge, 111un. 11. W. Raveitel, 1. Def.C.on. 1.:‘,9, 4,e - 4obliers will feel an interest in the too mditary arti cles in this number, the Liters of fiction in the two thrillinentorie-, agricultural lets in the article on Japan Clover, liter ary men in the article on Mr. Dickens' Readings, and the whole country in the account of toe Burnirug of Columbia. (tonal . 11 Lapin 1 ka111...n11/1-sEldli known and popular Lady 1 Magacine, is on oor tablo. It needs no praise. ,It it r.ll LllO%, II a+ the be , t tn..hion mag azine to tho country. and is ble In every family Ii is edited by 'AIN, I Sarah J. Halo, awl 1.. A. tioaloy. The popularity of tlie4e la 1111 W placed among the firht ela.e4 mAgtzine of iterm dri,a, L..\ Godley. N. I: Cur. 1111.1 Chem' Str4 , Philadelphia, P.t Termw $3.00, per annum Pt.ressos.'s I,snitts N struts if .l ill 1- r. —The best and elieapept. 111 the world, This popular Nlontlily contains snore for the money E than any in the world. It ham, every year, neatly 1001) page., 11 steel plates, 1:1 double-sized mammoth colored steel fashion plates, and 900 wood engravings—and, all this for only two dollars a year, of a dollar less than magazines of its elan. Every lady ought to take Peterson's Tux f.azer's Pstaszt.—A monthly mag az ne or Literature and Fashion Edited by M". floury Peterson. Published by Deacon A. Peteesun, 319 Walnut street, Philadelphia. Words of ours can add no hang to the well Pqablixlied reputa tion of this Magazine It is tiled from pens of the best writers in the amid. Terms: $2,60 per annum Aaritutes How': MtuAzisc The March number of this pupul...r periodical is now on our tablet. This number has no superior in tpste of feuding or neatness. The engiavings are of the best Steel and latest Fashionable plates. Published by T..S. Arthur, Philadelphia, at the small figure of $3,00 a year. IhiLOU 8 Nisawziiit.—All lovers of a first rla•e Magazine of Literature and &knee, should send and get a copy of this popular Magazine. It contains Clothing but what will be of the greatest benefit to all who.wish a family maga zine, should send for one. "THIS 14114 an _l'llll OuOuitiVr."—The Republican `j are publishing, with great gusto, a letter from onsJudgi Canton, Of Ottawa. 111 , againts the poll. oy of paying the tkra•twenty bonds Jn gold, and also against George 11. Poodle ' to*. The duloago Times thus expleint the "milk in the cocoanut." It says; , It is stated that es-Judge *Canton, of balms. i r n this State--whe has recently written a length ly letter to say that be is soling pie poUoy of redeeming the Are twenty bond., li lawful money—is 1 the owner of the urteinglamotant of$000,• 000 in those bonds, for which he paid aul n ysl69,ooo in gold. The noel of Mr. Canon in arguing that the people ought so be mode to pay Mtn $800.900 In gold for hie kindnes in lending them $150.009 Wield at 12 per mint. interest, betrays doubtless, a commendable anpreolatlon of,Abovitsiiotio saorilloes of Mr. Canon," Special Despatch to the Post. WASHINGTON, MARGO 4 PAURD THII lIIIBICON. i_ The Radicals hare passed the Rubi con, and their impeachment articlek are before the Senate. They are Committed to the measure beyond recall, and they must, now jttstify these extraordinary proceedings to the country as, prudent and patriotic, or stand condemned for their flitrllas and aud4cious acts. The articles, es athended yesterday, witiager mully presented, to-day to the deflate.— The screw- managers- were aintounced, end after them came the Radioed mein berm of the 'louse. The Democratic members properly dedline to partici pate in this mockery of justice. QC= •Mr. Bingham, Chairman, read the ar ticles, but notwithstanding the bnpor lance and solemnity of the oocaeion, it made no more'impression on the Sena tors anti- members or. crowded galleries then any ordinary event. At the begin ning Hendricks reminded Wade of th. courtesy due the Speaper of the House, whereupon old lien took tho hint and in vited Speaker Colfax to be seated beside him. Senators Sprague and Patterson. of Tennessee, slept sweetly during the reading,: =I ii'oo4 _MO fQl* a while with his colleagues, but 'became so ex hausted that be dropped inte his neat. Butler el tams his felt hat convulsively, and squinted more rascally then et4t, if That wan possible, Pomeroy took his hewsprwer. Conkling, who prides him self on hi+ manly hanuty, tett rending Iris hook attentively Featienden chewed hit* of paper. Bout nen, another Munn ger, who had Inken n troth ...pile be tore entering, was more intent on ex lacting the juice therefrom than hear ing the article in question 'Reward, seemed to be studying a communication front She Chief Justice, which was it del• lento rebuke of his °Mei ousneSs in pre paring, prematurely, the rules for the Court of Impeachment. Chandler chug !tied now rlllll then. Beverly John son yawned, %%Ink Siminei looked positively 114 happy as though negro suffrage VMS ihn law of the I .nd and 114 if there never ii''l been a certain Prussian 'Merin in theleKa ion of ‘Vashington. (Wiley and Schenck AlO l l . O there. too, and exchanged approvim4 w inl,4 occasionally: and thin is 110 burlesque of the scene in the Sen ate Chamber I=l thud Stevenii tlot, not conceal Inn ehagrin that h. vram not *irleet'etl chair men Of dim Managing Committee. Ile only obtained Itiv plitee thereon ut hi 3 .•arncnt request EITEM After the reading of the tirtiele,s aua cone! tiled. Vade informed them that ate 4.ctlitte , :ould take due order, whereup on Colfax roan and with one or two ex tra winks put himself at the head of his Radical cohorts, and marched hack to the Howie. On_ the way there, Thad. Stevens said to some of the members who were carrying hint to his chair, "Boys, Wltitt in the Hell will I de whe you are dead won't have anybody to carry me " \nd his ft tends laughed, Atecouse44.--woioe-aw—ataay..---T-o-auttr 14 agreed upon, tit. Senate will consti tine itself into a Court of Impeachment, and the President will be sutnmongd to appear to answer the charges V '(....4311/NICATIoN Chief Jit+tice Chasm's cotornunicalion to the Senate, in dissenting from the rules and rebuking them for their hattly procoe lure, has srou.ed the anger of the impeachment Itadicsl+, and they de nounee him in bitter terms Messrs. Sumner h. Cn , ore I sot on ritliog the Senate in kid them in their designs, but other Itadimils erpres+ ap prehension+ 4(,,,lt4sent I= Chief Justice C'oise will lead to POlllll rouble not hitherto Nlllicipa ed Thi re are ten er twelve Itatlicsl Senators who only desire a decenl pretext to abandon tba rile abortion 11=1 They news of the great Democratic Rains its New York, New Hampshire and MAine, together with the intelligence that the letter State endorsed the West ern financial. policy, and it. author, Mr Pendleton, creates an alarm among the Radicals and a-corre , Tondjag feeling of satisfaotion among the Democrats. =I Judge Curtis, of Boston, and Judge Mack bad a Consultation with the Pres) dent today. fleorgeTtoknor Curtis and_ Judge Thurman of Ohio, are also spoken of ae lii counsel Clear the Deck Last tall Pennsylvania led the- column of Democratic victory ky r tenting George Shorewood judge of the Supreme Court Mr closed entered upon atom -owes! and closed It without diaguvinsfAn opin ion or concealing one. Having been an honest citizen all his life, he bad noth kg to ken book Ills clear ideas about legal tender*, and all the other sins of latter day disloyalty imputed to him. 6 Made no shift vo throw from his soulders His party was as honest as be, rod as disloyal as he, and stood stoutly up for him. The remelt proved that good, stralghtforwad, old fashioned honesty is still a darling attribute in the eyes of the people. One of the drat important criterions on which Judge Shorewood has been called to deliver mil opinion has given neatest. of his quality. The legislature of Penn- , "Timms last winter, sating in the capa city of an employee of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, revoked the abetter of the Pittiihurg & Connellsville Railroad The letter road diverted trade amity from our mousier corporation, and was there fore not to be endured. The Pittsburg a csnuellsville road appealed 10 MS Su preme Court. Now, as Pittsburg an 4 southwestern Pennsylvania were on one side, and Philadelphia and southeastern Pennsylvania on Ilse other. and the goes• don a money qametion, and Judge/bars• wood a Philadelphian, bud his lateoan. tagmist s ?limburger, and as Jugs fillarswood owed hie election to the splendid vote given Mosby Philadelphia. and something perhaps to ate neutrality of the Peensylvania Railroad . Company, I) was clear to the eye pf any .loyal les. pir that belnkrd oaf den de agaiget hie vie lion. But Jtidge Shorewood jusised th sheltie of; the Ileople and- titó - hopee t of hie patty. lie 4eeided very quiokly the , the act of the legislature was illegal; that it hatrassumed powers veiled by the Constitution of the Stole in the sJultei. mei, and the wrongful net is set aside au I substantial jut,' tee dune by an up. right bench. , ' We him, alluded to this mailer, to p distil, moral The lualrd of 'timely and the mire!) of dishonesty fairly at. tooh to which portyloever neleats hone s t or distrobilt - pi:Arise - servants. Iv this time of dietreos it behooves all parties and the Democtratio party moot of all, as d4ubtlens into its hoods will soon be eu , oendered the adminietratton or the government, to nominate f or ar m , none but honest mud OA pahle men. We repe a t it none but honest anti capable men,_ L• t us stick to the Sbarsooodsattern. The time hes attired when meta Aegis to owl!, s hout for contild Iles, end w ea candidol e 4 bog n . lO "mot shout for r o ta, Scheming pers. - no are already pulling" wires and laying pipe. It is therefore the right time for ',sib speak We hare nest fall a President and Congress to elect. We have more than that to d o . Representotive governmetuAtis instituted aninfig us, to to be stisininell or ever. thrown. We have indeed ouch en over• whelming wake in the control that we OHM take no risk,. We amulet s this yMr - of our Lord; carry rho - weight of any unworthy man. The Itepuhliesn party hoe been drown elm tat or quite to the verge of rain by tile in utterable morality; end ei upidity of their repreoen tati•es. In this dtotrici it , as sent It Congress o limn ,1110-P CitpßOily does not go far beyond the pow• r to turn a hood origin. Ilc voice as he lie tro Slov ene •to e; but ten 1n11111 , 141 posseosion of S esitino's imams would be as f ata l to him so a stroke of lightoiog. Thio Intllll I tot term, and mail xis our opponent sore, they cannot oiol upon the people.. more Litt Merritt object. The bolls of Congross toil the State legts ',tures are parked with this kind of inoteriol Out ' , Artie ulor enngriioomen may he little under tie aiternee. hill the war has helped the op. position witn•lerfuliy : The ward T• have gone in on their hortmo, ond ittecountry I. drifting 10.11 , +litiou t..n littler the .linic l ion of tu tlitory Insopahler But the other day, when Goorgo IS Woodward C 411.113 hock from Europe out took his seal in the Notion il lloune of 11,presentati•es, every true hound P, otioylvisolan felt that at lenot we lied 060 titan in that body who could speak 'toil would he heard, antidamattLerttbsoi *pert. throughout country • II is speech un the currency goes , itio obil the na• inuoil debt. was the P 0111 1 ,11.81. talk ills country has yet be trdirom Witshingtin. Ile probed the get brring ucler to the quick, and made the sharp financiers of Wall street prick up ;heir sera, They detected the rung of true metal At loot a 112411 was tatkulk wttonsraeped the subject. Let us siitk to the •Woodward pattern _ Sharewood and Woodward ore represn oti•e men, and con•iaterit Dann,crate Lei tie keep electing represenistine twin and conelstant Democrats. It would lack little of infamy in this crisio of our country's fate to send to Wash ingion some money-making market man to merely spy nut chinks in the 'Freon . o-ret 4rirnae4temeetiasean.-iir-te-divide ir wt;t4y thieves their ill•gotien gain.i. What boot. it to any bat In this congreamional di.triej how much hie retoeseillat ITO Coo filch from it ie ptetel Truantry, except teat be mutt pl/ I l ia pert U 1 the thettr Wan a Congr,t man ever kn two to divide pro rata web his it.mittituents. Ah, no he only dirt des wish bl.l ountedlenties. Heaven knows we have had enough thie•iug.— Let all the pillagers of the Siete 01leak1 be k Let all who erred II til t when a iha,d party 61101 the land with and won'now again cry II tit ! to the ft .trtg sun of Democrauy. stand hick Gentleman. we love you well, but our torn and b ceding country a ow need , . the aer• Ices of her noblest eons. To our Repot:flit:tut friends we now offer the cltoice,and *monopoly of Clint'l among the two-sided and tune-Nerving men ; among all ring and corporation oandtdates ; among all Inc 'porde and dishonest meta; among all men who thick robbing of the Stoic or notion a legiiimate business irons .ction, and the true end and aim of otEuial station The Democratid Dirty is in no temper fur such dandidates. We are (Owing our decks In the coutibg ooritest we must fight with no gun. more dangerout at the breech than the muzzle Ilemocat ()RANT IN Fwvna 4, N 11104.0 BCPRILMI CT —General Grant has at length sold himself. body and coui,.to the Radom!' lie come. nut now, not only in favor of negro suffrage, but infatior om ega sure mart' Nut long ago. General Hancock, removed i nine of the members of the City Council of New Orleans for disobe dience of hie orders Two of this num her were white men ancl'erven. were nt, groa. General Grant bee recently re voked thie.order,and thereby re•ioetnted _theme refractory colored goeNetpen IS their positrons as City Father! To what depths will a man sink himself now-a•daya, in order to gain popularity with the party whose nomination ho tt courting. Cititena of Franklin enmity, you who desire white moo to rule Ather lea, will you support a man for Presi dent, who thus places negroes in the high poeitiond of the land to the exclu sion of whitamen, even when doing so, it beoomes necessary to humiliate a gal lant officer like G Ilianoookl Vol ley Spirit. —*Chief Antics Chase, who bee kepi /WPM as Judge in the pending peaohusent trial of the President bee Oren mortal offence to the Radiant por ildn of his brethren. by pretesting against the assumption of the Senate la making rules to govern it as a court• Ile is of opinion that he has something to os to the Meaning of the Constitn• lion, and inasmuch as 'that ►bowed in strument plants him bo the President!, of the Senate as & Court; he is Some thing more thaws priiiidiag °Moor, sod is unwilling to make deoloione wader rake of which 'be has net been 0040111• td. —fito 'whole beads his 9eear*• Grant fallen ?-41lbetty Arius. The hands fate witielt he has Was are,so infernally dirty that we can't tall whose they si•e.— , Loriastale Journal•