The Democratic Watchman. ~.LLEIFONTE, PA MORNING, MARGH ‘ 2O, I868:1 GM The Radical Relrolution Articles exhibited ISy the House of Representatives of the United t3tatee, In She name of themselves and all the peo ple of the United States, against Adreit Jellison, President of the United Shiites, -akentlintenance and support of their im pesehmeht against him for high crimes and misdemeanors in office: A yousi, That paid Andrew John n, President of the Utiiientates, on th °at day of February i in the year of ' our d 1868, at Washington, in the District f Columbia, unmindful of the high dueinienf lGie office, of his oath of office and df ilte N requiroments of the Con stitution that he .should take care that the laws be faithfully executed, did un I'4olllly and in viola 'on of the Consti tatkon and laws of the ited States, is sue an order in writing fo he removal of Edwin M. Stanton from t office of eiesmatary_for the Department al War, and said Edwin M Stanton havini„heen therefore auly appointed and 'coin ginned, by and with the coneent'or tbo , Senate of the United States, as snob Secretary ; and said A,,ndrew Johnson, President of the United Stales,. err the' 12th day of August, in the year of odr Lord 1807, and during the recess of the said Senate, having suspended by his order Edwin M. Stanton from said office, and within twenty days after the first day of the next meeting of said Senate, on the 12th day of December, in the year of our Lord aforesaid, having reported to Amid Eenalcsuch suspettaion, with the evidencp and reasons for his action in the case, and the came of the person designated to perform the duties of ouch office temporarily until the next meeting of the Senate, and said Senatelhereafter wards, on the 14th day of January, in the year of our Lord ltuiS, having duly considered the evidence ant reasons reported by said Andrew Johnson for I said suspension, did refuse to concur in said suspension, whereby and by force of the provisions of an act entitled "An i act regulating the tenure of certain 'civil officers," passed March 2d, 11467, said Edwin M. Stanton did forthwith resume 14te funetione of his office, vehement the! said Andrew ,Johnson-had then and there due notice ; and said Edirin N St,nion, by reasons of the premises, on said 21.11 lay of February, was lawfully entitled •to hold said office of Secretary for the; Department of War, which said order for the removal of said Edwin Al Stanton is in euhatanee_aa follows, that is to say. frt , TIYT, MARRIOV, WAttnitmene, C Feb. 2lrt, laoB j Sin . —By rirtue of the power and au thority rested in me as President by tpt- Constitution and law" of the United States, you are hereby retnored from of fice as Secretary for the Department of War, and your functions as ouch will terminate upon receipt or this communi cation. lou will transfer to Brevet Ma ,tor-fieneral Lorenzo 111011111 P, kibutaut General of the \rimy, who has this day been authorized and empowered to act (01 aecretrary of War, ad inter.m. all rec ords, hooks, papers, and other public propeEly in your custody and charge Itespectfilly Yours, ANl.llllllr Tu the Hon Edwin M 1 4 1.1m0n, Wit.ll logton, I) I Which order was tiu'awfull . i issued, with intent then and there to violate the act entitled "An act regulating the leo ilre of certain civil offices,' passed March .d, 1567, and contrary to the provisions of said act, and in •ioittion thereof, and contrary to the provision of the Consti tution of the United States, and without the consent of the Senate of the t nited States, the said Senate then and there being in session, to resnove the said Ed win M Stanton from the office of Secre tary for the Department of War: where by the said Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, did then and there coma it and was guilty of a high misde meanor in. office. AaT. 2- That on the 21st day of Feb ruary, in the year of our Lord 1868, at \Vaabington, in the District of Columbia, said Andrew Johnson, President of the United States. unmindful of the high duties of hie office, of his oath of office, and in violation cf the Constitution of the United States, and contrary to the orotristons of an act entitled aot regulating the tenure of certain civil offices," passed March 2d, 1867. without the advice and consent of the Senate of the United Stater, said Senate then and there Wog in session, and without au thoiity of law, did appoint one Lorenzo Thomas to be Secretary of War ad interim by issuing to said Lorenzo Thomas a let ter of statbarity, in substance as follows, that is to say: El ICUTI V• MANSION, IVxmailiaropi, D. C. Feb. 21, 1868. J Sin: The Iron. Edwin 7q.. Etanten having been this day removed from office as Secretary of War ad 1 interim, you will immediately enter upon the discharge of the duties pertaining to that office. Mr. Stanton has been Instructed to transfer to you all the recordi, books, 'papers,, and other pablie property now in his custody and °barge. Respectful,/ Yours, Asonsw Johnson. To Brevet Major Sneers? Lorenso Thom as, Atijataset General United &Meg army, Weep. ingten. 14 0 .. C Whereby raid,.Andrew Johnson, Prel- Ment of the Milted States, did then and there messiah and 'was g tIHy of a high niledesseasor in °Mee. — hot. 8. That' said Andrew 'Johnson; President of the United States, on tits 2121, day.of February, in the year of our Lord, 1888, at Washington, ip the •die triot of Coltunbin, did Domain atil a wia gttittp tif ildsdissesnor in. OW,' in this r Thi.isanikiiitalialotity *I Mow, while** Mutate of the United • POWs was thin and there in soden, he did ap point one Loretto Thomas to ,041' tarj for the Department - 4f Wit+ ail fitter:: without the advice and consent of the Benet° of lib* United States, no va dinoy having happened in sahf office of Secretary for the Departtnent of War du ring. the recess of the Senate and no va cancy existing Td eSYd eppintotant 110 made by the said Addrow Johnuert of the said I.evene.-Themse-is 18.4 ; • • • 1111 follows : Ex arortv a 21aseiox, WASIIMITON, D. C., 1 February 21,1868. Sir: The lion. Edwin M. Stanton hav ing been this day removed from office as Secretary 'folF the Department of war, you are hereby auth . orized and empow ered to act as Secretary of war ad interim and will immediately enter upon the dis charge of the duties pertainin g to that office. ?dr. Stanton has been instructed te-drimmter4o--y-eu-a-U-tkeksecordard,inalkar. papers, and other public property now in his custody and charge Itespemfully yours, ARDaztv JOIJNHON To Brevet Major General Lorenzo, Thomas Adjutant General United States Army. Washington, D. C. 'Art. 4. That said Andrew jobheon, President of the United States, unmind ful of the high duties of his office and of his oath of office, in violation of the Constiltilion and lawn of the United States, on the 21st day of February, in the-yeer-of-varr-DmJ 1868,—at—Washing • . n, in the District of Columbia, did un laiefully conspire with otts Lorenzo T.lto and with other persons t• the house oNtepresentalayes, unknown, with. intent, by , „intimidallon and threat, to hinder and prevent Edwin M. Stanton, then and•tbere N tbe secretary for the de partment of war, duly appointed under the laws of the United States from hold tog said office of Secretary' for the de• pertinent of war, contrary to anti in vio lation of the Constitution of the United. States and of the provisions of an act entitled "an act to define and punish-Cer tain conspiracies," approved July 81, ISGI, whereby said Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, did then there commit, and was guilty of a high crime in office. Art. 5. That the said Andrew John son, President of the United States. un in:ndful of the high duties of hi, office and of his oath of office, on ilie 21-,t doy of February, in the-year of our Itttift, and on divers othet days enetttui7l in .aid year before the said 28th day, February, at Wa'shingtpn, in the Dis-,I trict of ,t;o,lumbitt, did unlawfully con spire with one - Lorenzo Thomas, and with other persons to the house of Represen tatives unknown, by force to prevent and I hinder the execution of an act entitled "an act regulating-the tenure of certain chit offices," passed March 2, tau, and In pursuanoe of said conspiracy did at- I tempi to prevent Edwin M. Stanton, then and there being 'Secretary for the le , pertinent of war, duly Wppeinted and commissioned under the laws of the Uni ted p`tiateo, from holding said office, whereby the said AndrewJobtison, Pres ident of the United States, did then and there commit and was guilty of a high misdemeanor in office Art 6 That said Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, uothind ful of the duties of his high office and of hill oath of office, ou .the 21st day of Feb , in the year of our Lord, 1868, at Washington, in the District of Callum his, did uqiwfully conspire with one Lorenzo Thomas by force to seize and take possession of property of the Uni ted States to the War Department, con trary to ibe provisions of an sot entitled "An act toand punish certain consp;racies,"l4Vroved July 31, 18G1, and with intern to violate and disregard au act entitled • Iti act regulating the tenure of certain civil offices," passed March 2, 1867: whereby the said An drew Johnson, !'resident of the United States, did then and there commit a high crime in_office .l Art 7 The aid Andrew Jonson, President of the United States, unmind ful of the high tinges of his office and of hie oath of office, on (he 2lst day of Feb , in the year of our Lord 1588, and on divers other days in said year, before the 28th day of said Feb , at Washing• too, in the District of Columbia, did un lawfully conspire with one Lorenzo Thomas to prevent and hinder the exe cution of an aot'of the United States en titled An act regulating the tenure of certain civil offices," passed March 2, 1587, and in pursuance of, said conspir acy did uulaifully attempt to prevent Edwin M. Stanton, then and there being Secretary for the Department of War, under the lasts of the United State,. from holding said office, to which be had been duly appointed and commissioned; whereby said Andrew Johnson, l'resi dent of the United Statee, did then and there commit and was guilty of to high misdemeanor in office. Art. 7 That said Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, uninizzd fol of the high duties of hie office and of hie oath of i ftioe, on the 21st day of Februetry in the year °Tette Lord, 180, at Washington, in Uri Districtof Colum bia, did unlawfully conspire whh one Lo renzo Thoonse to seize and take possession of pruperty of the - United States in the War Dertartment, with Mich( to violate and disregard the act entitled ../in act rsfgu -lating the tenure of certain civil ufßoes, putted March 2, 1867, whereby said An drew Jolfbson. President of the United States, did their and there commit tibigh misdemeanor in office. Art.'it. -That said Andrew Johnsoh, President of the United Slaies, unwind ful of the high duties of hid anise, and of his oath of office, with intent unlaw fully to control the disbursement of the moneys appropriated for the military service and for the Department of War, on the 21st day of February in the yoor of our Lord 1888 at Washington, in the District iteOlufabla; dfd unlavifully and eontrary to the ' provisionetif an sot en titled "An aet—regaletinirthir tenure of certain eicil (Pooh!' paned Month- 2, 18437; and in ifolation of the Constitution •f the Mitited•fitates, tad without the &d -ebased cetersatof the Senate of AA U.S., And ships the Sleatitemos then And there in seesion, these befog no roomer in the °Sitio or Secretary for the Departipent of War, appoint Lorenzo Thontall fiseie-' tory of War ad &Idris*, said then and there denser, fos : raid &now Thomas a Y atter oftcuthority mr,i,Sni. onh. NUM* pe folars, quo tosay NI DTI ir yAllllOll,‘ AS III! ilpAlr, D. CI Unitary. ISO& , ' Skit •th' having this day reomved from office as Secretary for the Department. of War, your are hereby auttiorizedand empower ed to act es Secretary of ; War-ad isgairfies, and . will iMmedistelt-ist ter polt the discharge of the duties pretaining to EitUolfide: - 3Eintow - hair'bcsn — trt. structed to transfer to you all the re cords, books, papers, and other public property now in his'custody and charge. Respectfully Your., ANDIUM JOHNSON To Brevet Major Genernal Loren Thomas, Adjutant General United States Army; Washington, C. Whereby said Andrew Johnson, Presi dent of-the United States, did then and . misdemeanor in office. Aet. , lo. That said Andrew Jo',neon, Pesident of the 'United States, on the of 22d day or February in the year our Lord.lBGS, at Washington, in the Dis trict of Columbia, in disregard of the Constitution and the laws of Congress duly enacted, as commander-in-ohiet k of the army of the United Slates, did bring before hirneelf,..then and there, William H. Emory, a major -General by brevet in the army•of the Hnited-Staten,actually in command of the department of Wash ington and the military forces thereof, and did then and there, r.s such cotnman• der-in-chief, declare to and instruct said Emory that part: of a law , of the United States, passed llfaroh the 2, 111111 entitled "An act making appropriations for the suppm of the army for the year ending June 30, 1868, an,cl for other purposes," especially the Pectin(' section thereof, which provides among other things that "all orders and instructions relating to military operations issued by_lho President or Secretary of War Shall — Ms issued -through the General of, the army, and in case of his inability, through the next in rank," was iincon sktutional, and in contravention of the commission of the said Binary, and there fore not binding an him as an •officer of the armt-of the United Slates, which said provision of law bad been • fore duly nod legally promulgated by genet at order for the goveinnient and j tiIITC!,,II of army of the I oiled) L the said ithlrew.klinson thmr and there well knew, with intent there by to indtice wild Emory in 11114 othcial capacity as commander of the Depart ment. of Washington to violate the pro visions of said act, and t 1 take and re cieve, act upon and obey such orders as he, the said Andrew Johnson, might make cod give, and which should not be ts.ucil through the General of the army of the United Slates, according to the provisions of tide ear 1 rid whereby said Andrew Johnsoo, I'm t•solenl. of the United States, did 'ilea and there coniniit . and WWI guilty Of a high misdemeanor in clime. And the (louse of Itepresenlatives, by pi-Dir....Winn, saving to themselves the liberty of exhibiting at any time hear after any further articles or other no ousation or impee k shment against the said .Intlfew Johnson, President of the United States, and also of replying to his answers which he shall make to the 'articles herein preferred against him, and of offering proof to the same and e• cry part thereof, and to all and every other article, accusation or impeach ment which shall be exhibited by them as the case shall require,dodemand that the said Andrew Johnson may be put to answer the high crimes and tnivolecnean ors in office charged against him, and "that such proceedings, - examinations, trials and judgments may Lbe thereupon had and given as may be agreeable to law and Justice. 'Whipping the South." The only thing the Mongrels can offer in defense of their horrible oppressions in to appeal to the hatred and revenge of the baser sort of society, and declare that "the South has not yet been whip ped enough " Well, it patedot be denied that the South is sy thoroughly "whip ped ' that both the staples of our com merce, and the chief market for north ern wares nre almost entirely destroyed We have therefore "whipped the South" so thoroughly, that we have wnipped over 250,(X)0 northern men and women out of employment In the single city of Boston 2V./flO men, women and chil dren are dully fed on soup at tbef puttlic charge That is what comes pf "whip ping the'Soutirv - While with cappahats money is plenty, labor has nothing Co do, and the poor must be (adv.' soup to grat ify the malignant Stowe' in the sweet revenge'of "whipping the South." And every day will come less employment for the labor` ng classes and greater abun dance of pauper soup, while the Christian work of "whipping the South" is allow ed to go on. Some years ago Mr Seward, always a demagogue, came back from a visit to New Orleans, and made a speech which electrified all the fools in the North, by showing that the South was so helpless that it, depended on northern mechanics fir nearly all its wares Go• ing along the streets of the Southern cities, he "saw no hoes, harrows, ploughs, boots, shoes,ready-made cloth ing, &o , that were apt glade in, the North'." this was said ass slicer at the South, which was eagerly swallowed by every human ass in the North, But now, Seward tied his band of malignant fool', have "Whipped the South" out of the weans of buying our wares ; and in the same ratio that we have destroyed our southern market we have established pooped soup louses in the North. - Now if Seward were to go South be would Sad no more these splendid stores tilled with all kinds of wares of northern milt ofseture t 'and then he. retains& hortui be would find plenty of sow Aeon*, 44 the net result of "whipping the South " And Miasma tribe 'of /*intern noodles wants td Put governioent, dome:taros' aid industry. In the South into the bands of the tegroes, whiqh will elfeotrony pre vent hist., section front ever heooming a inat it'for or wares, 4.44 would ren ds nel:soup • houses a permanent 'Death , that in the North. Bea how ion 'will the pow of bibs Berth .ponseist to Ise fed od sopp ~.to &rod& the devilism the liliosgyebsart) . "wlapplng the Smith T. If ISO 4 Attars post bit will, by and by,pbestitroat mitthig. esamsthere.., Nat .id not be' the threat 4 ow d o pokt iug keop i tst ly . 4a are fed 0np, 77 741f r . pf,lll - • ; I,‘ The Ferment at Washington maY In Very perverse in us, Mat, while all the other papers are thunder lug away *hold the results of impeach • , g -the PresWent,,ave'lln ual feel Ake saying a word In regard to It. That we are in,linnainerit *anger V_nnew ohil war, Is trtte; but li' no news to ua — r It is Our Alin tiOnvlition that it will be for the iittereste of the oetibteg., end, therefbre, of the Democratic party, to have Andrew Joeneon told, by those that made him catratingently, President, to get out of the place he acids. 'lt has been We curse of thix. Democratic party, that some Democrats have inistakeu An• drew Johnedn's blab/9410r tutu" exhibi tion of resistance to the revolution that is going on. When the infamous Rump if a senate Asti- ha Vet,' lawleeely, de posed him—if they dare to do it, the e wilt be - inhre tikety than--before-to see the 'abyss towards which we have been hastening. Andrew Johnson, be fore he understood the respbusibilities of the office be has disgraced, was as rabid a radical as lien Wade le. A rad teal, out of power, becomes a "conser vative I" when in place. What mole red-mouthed radical than Seward, when, bidding for the Presidency, he helped to organire fanaticism, in the Black Re puhlioan party. Ile talked` of the inter este of the North and of the' South, as "an irrepressible Conflltt of opposing anti enduring tercel." lie rallied the preach ers, and their dupes, to a fraternity in that party, with blacklegs and political gamblers. Ile told ' them : .-Slavery must bb abolished, and you and I must do it " Seward, after all, missed his mark, could not he President; and, henceforth, has devoted .himself to ren dering the °Riot:contemptible, by theme' , ry-andree icks of those that. hold it Andrew Johnson came on the stage, breathing radical brimstone Ile hanged an innocent woman; he trampled on tho organization of existing and constituted States, Mat Were most anxious , to get beck intoXongress Ilad he recognized them a 9 S.tates, at'onae, and seen the lures ereeuted in securing them their reprcsen tat ion in Congress—by armed force, if necessary—be would not, now, be the object of contempt loan decent men, that • rrivreitittio'Treirtaattrtifftrtalt ; were Men of the mind that the war was over, and that the time had come to make 1)1.11C, with (11.90 that had yielded after a gallant tight.- -Everything wow propit ious fur n good and MI enduring pence. lint Andrew Johnson, hetweon his fll.l of "Incoherence" bellowed about "punish ing traitors, ' anti A=ivaltastg_tre.asou odi. ous." Grant and Sherman, for a while remonstrated against his acts as opposed to the laws of civilized war." lint his utter incapacity for political government, and his demagoguotcal actions ltluca led (Irani, out of a mere soldier into it very stupid political bummer Events have shown we were right in calling on Vemocrats, to discard, and! fepudiate, Andrew' Johnson. And we say, now, when no nominal Democrats! bold to hint except the hirelings that are , fed at iii political crib, that tire le .ii thing that 'can happen to the country,' and to the Democratic party, will he to have the infamous Itump of it Congress displace President Johnson, against all law. It will bring the people of the country, more distinctly, to the vision of the fact that the Constitution, and the traditinna, and the ways, atfd the customs, of our fathers are all run over, rough-shod, by the hell-born Puritan and Table-tipping miscreants of Congress Perhaps this knowledge, and vision, may arouse the people If so, the Black Republican, Puritan, rule will vanish, as a dream in the night If otherwise, then Sundry years of conflicts, sometimes bloody ss bur always disturbed, will be Imposed oil Ile, and on • our children. But, after all, these sad years of strife -be sure of -- Lim original nature of our government will assert itself as a necessity The nature, we shy, not the form It May prove that the form of our govern ment is not adapted to tie netura But the generation of our children—if we Catholics do all God warms up to do—will be • rubueter race than Wo are We have grown up in a period of peace; and and erase, and luxury The coming gen eration will be, or ought to understand themselves as being, brought up under the stern discipline of war, and contest 11 we, in • cowardly and heedless man ner, throw away our liberties, our child ren, if we look rightly to their education in their families, will "recur to firstprier ples," and, through whatever trials— sue& as our foro fathers faced—they,, will re-assert the plinCiples of political self government, and freemen's privile gee, such se we seer, loosely, to be abandoning For the genius, and the nature of ev- 1 ery government is a thing of higher than I human framing. It is the seed that God bee planted, and it will grow —erery seed according to its kind. But it will be a pity if we, who so much easier could manage to arrange it, should leave it for out dear children to work out, af ter.us, with so muoh harder effort Meantime, we are eon•inoed that the lawless displacement of faithless Andy Johnson will give a more "realizing sense" of the situation, to the people, at large, than anything the said Andy could do„ by yelping and.hoyling in the place he disgracce.•—Freenean'e Journal, • .---frOor old Mr. Grant, the father of Glyiees, alias asinule (trout; alias the "botcher general," has been tempted to put hie Ramp to s book of Made-upaneo dotes of hiii horse-loving, puppy-eulo esing, tobsooo•smoking, whisky-drink ing eon. The find example of this new specimen of "Birdied the Sailor.",rolates that when. Sammy was ea infant in his father's trios, his fingers were once put upon the trigger of a loaded gun end pulled hard .enohgh •to discharge .Ibe piece the sound of whish ao 'delighted the intent Marie Ith - ilfo 0141104 0 "Pick it-again !" phi f attier ought in stantly to have changed ebb ydtmg__one's Dilate to .1 .1/tokl-Wagnltt Grint." Udder thti guideline of,the furious Wsebburne, 414-11.-againcircnt",is , likely to tick hitpself far the solindeet popular basting that ever a stupid creature reoieved fare.--r-Dophisok. ; ; ; o 'eri'wee noWiports ot nog roes strewii's 'to deli h In' the ' Synth; *hid' Is one Of eh* nhostarr Id:tended to that rice !by Abair ,m, r ) Onladit. N•go -et 'ysti , g 7 ftw b i n n. 1nP 0 . 2 710d s Soli 4, bb , be and .morality PortY; • , • Serenade—Speeoh of Hon.,Cherlee E Boyle. _ On the return oUlOst. C. E. Boyle, the nominee for Auditorrinffillr frOm . the fitedni Convention, to a hoOtto in_llool3- WWI!, e number of Dentoorati 'formed in PFOoet — iiiiiit — hdadl4l6Y - ' filter - hand, marched to his 'residence and tendered hint serenade.; ,in •responee to which Mr. B. made a short address, which we find reported in the Genius of Liberty, as follows : I feel very sensibly the honor you do me, gentlemen, by coming this evening, inclement as it ie, to testify your appro val of my nomination as the Democratic candid to for Auditor Ut nets]. of 1?*:1- eylvania. Thin endorjemenl I value highlj, because . .. It proceeds from my Metrwltit.Whom L have long been intimate, and many df whom have known me from my childhood; and I regret that; tired by travel pis I eir.n„l s cannot properly Acknowledge it. Gentlemen. we stand upon the thresh old of the most momentous political struggle in whioh the people of this country have ever' engaged. It differs from all that have preceded it in this; that while they involved questions 'of governmental policy, many of them, it is true, vastly important, upon the Jesuit -this . depends-the - ex lettuce- of the gov ernment itself. It is not now u question what the government shall do, but rath er if it shall he preserved from destruc tion. It is evident that the par , which sup ports Congriss is carryiut fot\ward revolution The Constitution veof fathers established a government of three distinet branches—each supreme within its own domain-, aryl each intended to operate as a balance to the others The powers of each were clearly limited and defined ; and until within a brief period, the rights of each were scrupulously res pected •by the others. But thif party agaivat, which we are contending, fatally bent upon its own perpetuation and ag grandizement, and finding itself unable to ontain control of two of the branches of the geVernment, is attempting to con- (Ulm° j4„.tte pAu w i ttietil,..4ll4p con ro power which should be dia -1 tributed ama tt l i he thiTe.. Congress enacts taxi, n unconstitutional, and then tinder( o deprive the Courts of their clear right to so declare - them It etriplithe President of powers conferred upon him I y the Constitution, and as flUtDeg them iteelf or bestows them upon its adherents , • Nroreentent with- that it prefers articles of impeachment against him, puts him upon trial for the commis ' sion of no offense, and not improtrably will deprive him of his office and Val it with one of its own members It has even been proposal to abolish the office altogether. It dissolves the Union by ht - of Congress, - after it was preserved hi the best blood of the laud It des troys ten Stoics some of thins of the uri ginal thirteen, and usurps (lie powers which belonged to them alone It refu ses admission to Senators and Represen tatives fur the alleged commission Of offences, wad immediately therprfter ad mile its owd partisans, notoriously gull ty of the same acts This, I say, is revolution—this de stroys the government of the Coustitu Veit( and sets up auotlisr, totally unlike it. Shall this revolution be consumnis ted, or will the people orrest it, and res tore and preserve the government of the fathers, the eminblisinent of which ban always neen regarded as the grandest achievement of human wisdom' 'there are other great questions involved in this struggle—none greats skpa•o ever been passtd upon by the .tai icon peo ple—but tills tint oveisliadows th e n, all Shall the revolution be arrested' Shall the government he preserved , I wish to speak with no unnecessary asperity of those who hold opinions dif ferent from our own There are good men, end bone.i men, and who love their country devotedly, who do not view the coming struggle as we do if we are right, let us hope that reflection will show thew their error, and the evils lithely to - result therefrom, before it is too late. Thanking you gentlemen, for this manifestation of kindliest, towards my self, and for this viidence of your devo tion to the great party one of whose humble repreeentatives I now am, let me say this' in this great struggle I feel con fident you will be found where you have ever been—battling for the Constitution of your country, and bravely contending' against its assailawis, come from whence they may. —T judge from the doings of the rompers, both in the house and Renate. there to a flied determination to throw the President out of (Mine Should title be accomplished and the people submit to it, then Republiean institutions in thin country will soon disappear. There will be no stability and security An archy and confusion arc sure to follow. Then th is same party,—these rurnpers and their allies—will raise the buy, that the gorernmont must be made stronger, there must be a permanent bead, the people / are too turbulent to elect a President.— Then will be the time when the people will be fettered and ebackeled. Some resistance May be attempted in same quarters, but being without a leader and proper organlzetion, the result will only be a more complete enslavement. That therti is a fixed determination to accom plish their great design—the subversion of our institutions—there is ample evi dence on all sidec—flanoser Citizen. Ban. Weir..—The motion 4; szoln7tre Wade vie oertsinir a very sot in the impeachment Faroe. It was quite funny, is all forties should be. Why ezolnde Wade ? The object of the *hole thing is not tgary the Piweldent, but to get • Radic his place. Let Wadp remain, Let lain vote to establish him- selfas Johnson's successor. re would be no more shameless and indecent thin the average of the prooeadings of Ana mongrel' who now, °antic; the Aninatry„ t would be still better to pass an sot removing Johnson, end another •Watip, or 'a yniggerr.. or emne other Radical in his pleas ,• That "'quid says time sad money, and Money, and aohleVe lireohlely wluit noifiiiingliit for. by this impeadddlittethbak.-17b/nlie County (0.) Arnsw. • I 4 " A couptppikorrepoudent sok! .Whiti. if the Riiinp &deli :low," Kjek ng up • rlimpita; srodurte." • " Governor Snynioli r Governor Seymour Is • great man. But he has made.• great mistake is his course In the New York Convention. li e has committed the greatest error of his imiititrai life: — Bat - fettunstwly,As -- hi, time to iretreet from hie false Position„ .afore mush harm hirdlniti, - 1111T we iiii- - oerely trust he may make haste end're pin solid ground, We look upon Governor Seymour as the Samson of the Democratic party, who feared not the many monsters of Itelloalisin, but who chained them down when he could not• strangle them or break their Piles., But alas! he lise teen shorn of his tirength-giving lobße and has lost his way among a forest of glittering, generalities, He wishes, in the earnestness of his heart, to lead us back into the "happy valley" where "_sterlin_Leoin 'Shell ring again on the "counter of the tradesman, and glitter' "in the palm of labor, and gladden the "heart of the wounded eotdiers" And h ew woulithe hasten that joyful day? iJy economy in public and private el. passes, (which is molt ereelleat) and by levying a tax On Londe_! And yet, Governor Seymour, talks of the dishonor and the discredit of paying the bonds in paper ! The advocate of paying our whole debt in coin, They obtain from the disco terested Jay Cooke a Plausible argument for that idle notion—the advocate of "greenbacks for bonds," has a wilder ness of witnesses to sustain biro porition —but he who pis:Tones to patch up this great issue by taxation of the bonds, net only attempts an impossibility, but com mits a flagrant wrong—and if does not become any man to talk of the doubtful morality of paying the bonds in green backs, who is 'willing to break faith wok the bondholder and tax bin seonritie. It is the old "cry of •'necessity" over again—the continuation of the kind nt legislation that prevailed do ring the wit -let us have no more of a' We moot quote ten words from Governor rtcyinour wherein he does justice to those at ) think with us,---end we indulge the hope that ere lung he will be of the Noll household : NV hile, therefore, we may differ a t, ilia con..truction of the contract with the pill I • creditor, we must not confound the po.itn n. of those who think it right to pay in paper, hilt who battle to wake that paper ar goo ao gold,with the position of thane srlieseeeeo, not only to pay in paper, hut who arc al• destroying the of this paper. I es—there must ben •'hattle" to mai., paper as good as gold "ono - more---44 will not come for mere wishing ' ,111 I we shall no doubt have the giant help of "Govertior Seymour" in that protricted "battle" for pr,trscte4 it must be.-I'll , r. hurg l'o41: The Situation In new of the revolutionary action of the lett4rs of the Radical faction. the Mllliu /fez/Liter appropriately urger Item ocratn and Conservatives to prepare f.r the coming 60111. Your libcrtte• - your property, your very lives are in danger ! l'repare to put a stop to the in fernsl-machinations of these Radical Destructionists, -peaceably if you can, forcibly if you malt !" You hate been too Ion; trampled upon You have borne with insult, and oppression, and debt arid taxation, in the hope that the lilaer (;engross would heed the warn e; of the people, an expressed through the ballot-box The Radicals will not heel --they are determined to drive you to the wall And now, If they wall hive war let them have it to their hearts can ten War is a terrible thing, it brier+ death, and crime, and hardships, and suffering, to men, women and chidiren, and poverty and desolation upon a ewin try engaKed in it lint if it k upon a brave people, they will not climb from the terrible ordeal Ye ultra, Black Republican fanatic ye wormhippers of the everlasting uegr beware what you do ••You ha•e the money, you may - 'What will your greenbacks be worth in ca'e of civil war • Do you knoW that a', over our land swarm hundreds of thous agtla of unemployetl, half starved, half frozen,tax-burdened, desperate meu,who even now glare fiercely at the brown atone banks and palatial resideneet of the bondholder Radical nrintoeracy ' Do you think you oan hire there men slain for greenbacks? In such a war I there can be no hanging back, and form ing "draft clubs," and paying I,lion for a substitute out of the $lOO,OOO you stole from the people You cannot met flown in your luxurious apartmeota and growl about the "slow movements of the army " The movements of the army will be rapid enough for you, for ye° will be in It, or else hidingyour coward ly heads in some out-of-the-way, divinal place, or -reveling" on bread and wow in one of your own bastilett "Every dog has his day," and you have had yours. You may bring up your bugbear of impeachment: but the people 'will attend to that soon They did not expend the beet blood antriiparly all the treasure of the nation to be ruled by a drunken, profane, negro-loving hog, like Bea Wade. The people will elect a Demo orstio President by white men's vote-. and tinny will sea the is obeyed. A Now DIAL —4leneral Sheridan ap pointed eight negro councilmen to take care of the interests of, the greet CRY of New Orleans: General liancok re moved them and &pointed white men In their piano. Om Grant hate overruled Ifautmak, turned out the white. and put in the unroof'. In pie opinion, the proper parties to govern New Orleans are negroes. Grant goes the whole ne gro 1 / 6 9 . 6... 107 f1 1 P—ti f .044", , riidlop.l sensation - Morigiri lard ithil.ed L s Afloat about blowier op that:4llgal) • It weald be matter to lbw wealwweel In so' Si n g ?ern to Me/ them ink! with al tro-g yoerioe. It would save them from Ihvititlitoelen . the! p6Oplier bin November, compared to vitiate ditro-dir Cerise IN a vary baratleaa 0044Poupd• =thongs threat the masa of • malt ithostiempuld taabill Wilk throe ?f °l4l ßn P,Dtt Olfeletag e . 1011, bet la oiliter sapper for tea that, that' fellow Abdlitida ptiaobir' bY'the moo 4 iloyaln'idelps ' II!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers