The Democratic Watchman', BELLEFONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, APIL 17, 1868. Minority Report on the Robison-Shu gert Contested Election Case.' res report of Gf 50..-LL_4acksan and R. Linderman. Me folio/11y of the Conn o r lee, swore; to try -Ny -matter o/ the eon tested eleNton in Nye 21st Sontortal iris trim, belereen John K Robison, rootre tans, and Samuel T. SAngert, sittnnt number. Respectfully showeth, that the elec tion returns in said district. which 1 4 composed of the count it' of lanir. ('en tre, Huntingdon, Nittfiltn; Juniata. and Perrv,save Sum') T Stitieeri,l 1,1 21 rote• and John K. Robison 11 102 cotes till!, giving a majority of 22 once to Shtottel T. Shurgert the Pitting member. The committee were sworn nn the 9t It day of Jenuary, 1868, —to try the matter of the petition and to give trite . itidguieto thereon, according to the evidence " ' This to us seemed clearly to confine the ocinmlttee within the charter eiez ed in the petition. then presented to the Sbnete. Several days after sworn, a paper scent% to hove been left with the clerk of the comtnitte", which waa never presented to the committee. or read, and which contained corny chargea in addition to tho-e the petition, which we were • worn to try The sitting member moved t that paper, and strukt g l ut all of the mai ter cantnined in the feetimony under the lame for the ((dinning .re.t.11,1 FIRST Be thr so rolled e ments" were no,; signed by the P P.ll required by the tan.ole, 16 a l l "By at least, twenty qualifi(d electors or 'be district " SIWOID 'Seemlier the nlirged • • "turn I multi" arc not ace..mitnnied by nn UITI gevil taken and pubseribed by nt Irn•I five of the Petitioners. that She melt herein awed are true to be,t of ink ir knowledge end belief, as rcqu:r.d 1, ) the euatute• Titian Because the alleged •• ‘ineni mews" Ire not accompanied by a t • .. ,' i cafe from the Treasurer, Piton!, ,;i iII or Commissioners of the c mot) Eh. le the Petitioner• reside, .ottinz f ,rah ii,ll the e•iol Petitioners, al the lime ~f r 'O - the saute, were qualified eleci,,re ..: the dietrict, .a 4 required by statute FOURTH because the alleged • %- amendments" to the petition were not proven ed to the Senate within ten di's after the organization of the Legt.latute next succeeding the election. as required d by'ilme at atute. to give the Senate Juri a diction i 1 he case: which statute pro viden. and enjoins as follows : _'But no petition complaining of an undue elle Lion or fa se return of a person elected Governor, t•lenator, or Member of the House of Reprirdentatives, shall Le acted union by the Legislature" unless- the foregoing reeoisites Are complied with Firrn Because this Committee has no power, right or authority in law, nor discretion in equity or otherwise, to permit, allow or ...unaeut, that the °rip nal petitotti presented to the Senate in this case. shall, may or el n be =rneno , t d lb the manner proposed in this CAPP, or in any other manner whatsoever, as the Committee have no jurisdiction or am lrol over the question of •.Arnendinenta . to the original petition. Strait Because the issue in ails cage between the Contestant and Respondent Is founded by and upon the "petition. and answer, which can neither be en larged nor dimtuiihe•l by the Commit lee Sxviesrtt Because the Committee ire solutoly bound, by the oaths they have taken in ibis case, -•to try the matter of the pennon, and to give a true judgment thereon according to the evidence, uti lises the Committee be dissolved." .lituitrit Beams* the Committee are not sworn to try or decide any o rects eel out in the so-called ••Amendments to the Petition " NIPITII Itecinee even if the etatute were not inventive in forbidd tog the Committee to exercise jurisilicitco in al lowing amendments to the petition, it would be both inequitable and unjust to allow or act upon the amendments in this case, for the reason' that the Com m•ttee have refused to allow emend enente to Respondent's answer, or hear evidence c? facts not set out in the alp wer. to aupport of these reasons, the stat• ute in refe'rence to contested elections is oited—ket of July 2, 1539, per. 129, Pimph Ltws, .1,27 • Pur Dig p. otifi, pl 16/3;and pl 166-179 • COCNTY, as ' Samuel T Shugert, being duly sworn, deposeth and saith that the facto eet forth in the foregoing "Reaoons," are true to die beat of hie knowledge and belief, SAMUEL T. SHUGERT. Sworn and subscribed before me, this 2.-lib March, 1868 • ()LIVER EDWARDS. Mayor of the city of llarrii6urg, Pa . We were off the opinion, and are now of the opinion, that this motion should have been allowed,. The evidence given in support of tliiv paper, failing with it, and neither being any part of the case, and both being be yond our jurisdiction, the case of the contestant utterly failed, for under the petition we were swore to try, the pre ponderance of evidence was largely in favor of the sitting member. This result becomes to us apparent in view as• well of our maim as of the words of the statute, and the clear Poll cy of the law in restraining charges . of this character within (10) ten days of the meeting of the Legislature. Here, In our •iew, the cue should have ended with a report in favor of the sitting member. The majority of the committee having, decided otherwise, we proceed to detain the evidence as it came before us. • The whole committee agree in ignor ing the question of the jogality of alleg ed deserter votes, and ietc"fteving this class of voters where the g I elec tion returns have placed them. The whole of the , committee units in throwing out of the return the whole vote of Taylor township, in the county of Centre, for the reason that the elec tion was not held at the place fixed by or the gherirs proclamation ; the majority in that to for Ills COll I the litor buitling, and contestants al testant, was eighteen (14`, %rite.. which t + l I.crdlh-trfir.y Iwo persons whose namee to h e deducted froth the whole 'mintier, 1I n , give. were unmaturalized for of •oleii girth for Julio K Itohison, the et those pone. The contestant.p u ll limitof built of these districts were The x 'fling niendrer 'proved tilx l ys pi oilirt oil, rind e.lobliehed the feet that richly 411011.1 votes cosi (or John K. but Nivea i.flltr persons named, voted Itoblioin, the coniemitint. in &fief-situ lat tlio.t• pious, three, thereof, ,to wit: ports lit the district, compruilng Michael NloDonough and tinder nee, tint paying ttres, •uluqut in Rush township, and '11.1.-te4tden's. t watre in the borough of The contestant claimed io have pi oven if toil of these twelve. John twenty three (211 . ) vote. of Oily eh iric , er oil Follow s Were proven tit different parts of I ritnriim of Ittiti4psburg, and -did ( ihere were but ltsii (.1) VOlO4 .11,0 h wire i.iit the, railroad gang, , Certi. I clearly pr;;vi n to - tore been and .Ir ion were produced three inereol were not prow, it to 101.10 1 1110 seal of the proper officer voted for Ilse muting member I 11011 sin of those voting in PhiJ- Uoder branch el the cute, 11101, 11,011.1 y, 01'1 ollegell to be e ll eeteeelited, ore ~111) three (63) %010.4 WlllOll %non' I 0,10 11.0111.11.7.4 6 . 117141 W Il wan pro be deducted (ruin the return of K 1 veil Corrigan, who was al- Robison leged ip he did vote and Rte hod no reason for I , 'l s •' , l Itiirii l ilican ticket Of the re the reque.l of the contridant to lhrda. I 111. 1 “ 1 ;')... `Oll wlio voted in these two dis co( the vole of :lie [OWII.IIIIIOI - there 0110 110 proof 115;10 how they in the county el Iluniing , lol viiirit wit 1. , r whom they voted, but the het I hotel, the Itosh towniihip shown that [doer tired by low': there wlsi net , livr 'l' Shugart had . pine votes l ess ett:irgewir evidi•ore of 1,1 rrt il,it !hat; shss, no d had for Su hero 111 folding the 11110111 meld...lodge and it was proven tha,s in olliciinit hoe atoiOi,nwl thii l'hitipsfaig two men voted on na•tural voter( and 0.1,1110 Ion" a j nin groyne,' in the Stele of • r i ee , tally Inn e folio I a. New lof Is . , end several others on papers curd rejoin ot C Elk'Counticti,— wade froth 'nouart 1111.1 pr, diir,d I. Wan .0.0 14101W0 llntL one of these •o -h• rote the cow,. lhi.g township •oted , on a paper, Ti e A...oe•Soe of hut district w..c'dl''l'(el l 4hl.l 11 lhi Slole or New York. and sivi'orti, sod lire if swiping lilec•ition of fraud ly env 11. 1 .i.t oholge I in ri re, cure Iv. theme two ear re ., l et il,o , en:l 0 1,' 1 .• 1 r', d n'. .ire not ruidaitiefl iv the , 0 4 1 ,1 11, 0 , The , ; ii; tin the ease, ,deuce to tillect. Joe pint w,. #l,l .10 ~It. II .11..1 to 11.417 were but ,tonesWel, open du. u¢. Illt. •I.• 0 10 Ill.l'ho-e polled in ISIiG, wh i l e wh,l.t toe v , ii . w , re t0...,g .110...1 'he t.llll . lellllllll.lti of It recenily ihe i i rvideise ~f I w'. C rill% .3, and tea growing and front, n 1110 i I .I'll 111, I :II !lII' „ ring tut I g o !hey are 11'1.01 1111.111 WOO , OIII 0111 dlirtne the election 'I here 'ht. -111,10.111 it tole Nllellßel U \kora, io i•ct•li Ili it \t IN 'I. Nil 111.^11 in c e. ,„, i o iir II before the nor er .V.ll v t.. 1 nn I syn.' , Lemon, to ref. Tenet. 10 11.10 vole o'- 00 evident...ll.a' sal hot pi, ; ,,,h; , upon Lhe r iilrond. v o l e ,0.,1 i,eriv. I in the 01....ent a 4,1 11 e irg...l for 011 , e011.1110, On the burl it otii•••.r. 11 , 1 et 2101 14 Srpiru,h, r liefore the election Hence prod •coil t =hew tha , the 11.1 mg/ply y,-.x ten I - c, - 11 1 , 111 he .w. , re tlatit he al led 111 111 tole , forhi.ll,l by the clerk to the tirteeitoiz the poll-'t number of Irish 'County CM11,111.,..n.1n. 111 , 11 n, whit-e nituiev lie gli•e. true There were fit , d by ptoof, that five of t. 0./ i; I v •I I , i tiie •ill I bail vote lat re.ii't of rr • : tzuri matter lota- vtiala.o.llWri , id punt,' e Inn let Lie .l I wt t e 11.0 Ilium 11.. job al the a a well to 'b a t a-n ihe e I. the I let •11, hot Irti been II to- I t Iti r[ iio, ,it I, LI I we. k. before and were pot in I I, h the at ell ; that Jamen Cl•' n e t ai,;Tic, t'n it \lt U , 111 1 .1, %lin woo ..tle of them W/1.1,1 of atomt three hundred nod .Ixby Ziven I cilhot to the stand and Iwatifiel that he vi ter , all t.t wbtel. under the tlo, iI -I hot toe in enure , or Rush trine contended fir I t !be Cir •.ivroal k ip but that he did vn e to Brad the r vre it LI c townitlitp Clearfield county, and threw 7,10, awl we are cletrly vit , the Republican treket likteed in !hie n01 , 1,{ by the decttitoti t.l. Wit ile•+ei wen, prwitice , l from every the rontnwtle• - , the ul.lj , ,rity of which - •nlity m whlpti (I %Tenni Imidhe hitti W.f. , ' to receive trnlunnnv to r•iiiipiri of InrJ, ilt of who'll tirietin iu number— the allegatleina of ri-p,m:lvlo. pro, It.tti to 6• Ui had charadler —that the tjection officera in Taylor or credit. It wad B' Ccpiinly. weft , 41.0 promo, that lie, n Mettra. reCti•ed a, required by law. • the proof of which moot, iti 1 tie-natio. of 11, arrangement. we , eca.ll to tie previiiced but the ma in ofe before the election prone 1.1 1...1 el.n If I ti,re rr,der. The ientiniiiii! 11119 man war ace -0,71 nlr thez, pi II ti•re n•,l nuorn,' cepttfal y • mpeached, anti eboulti not be such an r goive,:y rp- r fluor Mr I t ken itito consideration in determikang the o tie W ishout it, there was no ev- It rkat ly proven thrit in Porter iilettee of forged naturalisation papers or townolip county; all of the any one coming to the district in refer workmen t Ilsrree Forgessuil Ilaifi. d's euce to the Tote of the Irish railroad iron Worlo4 voted without having first hands patil n si Its or runny . ) , int, -- as required l Ttiere wee ;roof showing that "up by low, ix r, not op' wards of eighty" Irish I stlroad hands pear ppo.i , e the name of a pongle •Olen were sent to Philipsburg and Rosh town on the whole 1:10, llbleh conisins three ehtp for the purpose of •ottng The hundred rod thirl) four (3311 names contestant's petitt.n charged but 42. and itilbougli it wan nbown.ibat•ery runny of the proof austained but lb vote, to both them voted on tax If WWI Riker clearly awl-tots It was distinctly proven lbw proven Hint the ballot box of Lincoln they were taken there, to complete lbe town+Rip} Huntingdon COUIIIY, wen not work at lbw. point; that the location lett in the custody of a Justice of the and flatness or the ground prevented the peace, &11 required by law, but dtas left work being do ne , earlier, and that the with a men mime I B . and that the right of way, •nd change of ilia bed of election officers refused to gt we that boil tim creek were obstancles to earlier to the justice of the peree when be called completion of the Work There was no fur it proof that any of them were d be 1 1, It was proven that at the election in fore they came into the distri t James Union townbhip_, Huntingdon County, McDonald, • Republican, to ' ed that the doors w.re open , and persons othee be was present when James Col ns and than the officers were in the room 411 Gorman directed the men to g i s Ph+ day ; that the ballot boxes were exposed spstrurg, and be directly contra toted the in such manner as to give ample oppor statement msde by 0 Mears that they tunttr fir muffing the same, and it, was were sent there to vote the Democratic proven by one witness that he went ticket There was evidence of small twice to the window to vote, and found tickets hiving been voted, both by rail• no officers in charge of the ballot boxes road hands and others, ■nd the proof at either time. and when he did vote he was that the Republican ticket used that was oblig-d .o call the officer! together day was similor in size and appearaoce to receive it , that be went into the room, to the small Democratic ticket It liras found a crowd of persons in there, but also proven that the said small tick-ts did not recognize any of the officers of were generally circulated through both the election among them d istriets, It ice proven by one of the inspectors The judge of the election of Rush tosin thit in Dublin township, Huntingdon ship swore that but six Irishmen voted county, the election officers left the at that poll all day, and the poll list house and closed the polls for nearly 110 shows that but three of those were of i il, hour, to violation ofJ aw ; that during of the number charged as fraudulen, by the election the room a full of persons the contestant. This number, even if having no authority here, and that fraudulent, which is not shown, is no whilst the votes were being counted the small to cause the rejection of the entire room wits crowded with those per.ions, poll who surrounded the table and hindered The board of eleotion'of that district the officer. thereof in the performance was legally constituted, the judge was of altar dolma. elected by the people, sod the inepeolor . . . . It was proven that In Cass township, having the ntytt.to the higliest number Ilmittogdon county, that one Clarkson I of •otes being strut, the person having noted as clerk in the absence of the sworn the next lighest number of votes for clerks , that he kept the tally hell while; judge, acted as tpspector under the law, the ballots were being counted, acd that and the othet illspectar Was `appointed he was not an officer of the else- by the judge according to law. We can . our sworn.; that acmes were added therefore See no reason for rejecting the to the hilts of voters after the palls were entire poll on this ground In our opin elottfd, and the votes counted; that two ion, there is no sufficient evidence either of the officers were absent at times, and of the use of freudulibot naturalization •otes were reeeived in their absence, papers; of illegal voting rat hole the that the doors were open to all comers alleged fraudulent voters did vote, or cod goers, and that crowds of Such per- of limb substantial rregularities in eon sous surrounded the foible whilst votes ducting the elections in the districts of were being received and cogated Philipsburg and Rush township, Centre We cannot asaeot to the doctrine that county, as to ewes either the whole poll, the legal •oter'i' to he disfranchised by or any pint of the individual votes, to the act of the fraudulent voter; nor that be thrown out of the count whole districts are to be throw out upon Upon a recapitulation of the facts as trifling irregularities, on the part of we find them, we Sod the following to erettion offieers, but if this doctrine be the result, to wit: were sustaftied, we feel mewed, that ►n Himmel T. Shugart received as per impartial investigation of all the feels omelet re t urn sari ounding the condition, of thepoll in John K. Robison, as per °facial re the several townships of Carhon,rorter, turn resolved 14,102 Lincoln, Cass. Union and DublinNin the Deduct Taylor township,_ county or Iluntingdon ; Taylor and °lntro " 18 votes:. Rush, in the county of Centre, and Tay- Deduct difference for in the county of Blair, will give to in 11 / 4 81 ‘ 1 " t368 63 " the sitting member, Banel T. Shugart, his seat by more than two,bundrad ma- jority. For these reasons we cannot agree to reject the poll of the townships of Car bon in the county of Huntingdon; and Cur like reasons we cannot a silent to throw out do whole pedal the township of Rush in the *aunty of Centro. The tows of Rush ►pd district of Philipsburg; AR eonneoted nod vote in Leaving • Wear Majority for Samna T. Shugart - of 1111 vows ; All of which is vespectfail submitted. f °SOROS D JACKSON. R. 8. LINDSSIIAN. Ohio legalstare ham passed a Er.str.p6than polio. bill. Grant and the Jews The °lsraelite," the Western organ of the Jews, has dragged to the light; the Welliremembered order of Gen. Grant in felatiou to that class of people. It palls upon the Jews throghout the nation to condeion its author at the polp. We apprehend, that there is not one of that sect, who will give his support to a man who could thus Wantonly Moult. and pro scribe ••this people." -4111ADQARTE119 13711 ARMY CORM - - Door, -or. Tux Tx-IsI.:MN _ Oxrono, )lise., D e c. 17, 1862, General Order No 11. The Jews, as a chisel, violating ever,y gelation of trade established by the Treasoryl,Department, also department orders, are hereby expelled from the de partment within 24 holies from the re ceipt of this order by poet command ere, They will ree that all thin clams• of people are furnished with panties and require] to leave; and any one return• ing after ;melt nut ttirition will he tirres led and held in confinement until an op portunity oceur, or .4emling them out am prisoners, unless furnished with permits from these headquarters. No passes will be giten this people (0 visit headquarters for the pnrposo of making personal application for trade pert:nits Jons A. It MLINO, AFriPtant Aiijutant General Grant will disco er that these men, whom he expelled from the Depart ment of Tennessee within twenty-four hours from the receipt of this order by the post commanders. know how to re sent such aII igrant outrace The Jews are n power in this emniry. Many of them posses , . immense wealth and exer cise a large influence Their support as a domination is not to be lightly est ima te.i Immediately upon the 11AR - cation of this order,Mr Pendleton, then simem ber of Congress. introduced in the Rouse of Representatives, a preamble declaring the order Tyrannical, cruel and illegal," closing atilt the renolut ion, "mita( the said order deservepe the earnest condemnation of ibis [louse and of the PresiTent, ne Commander in chief" sr ,+ tabled, by a cote of OH to 53, Mr Colfax, the present Speaker, •oting in favor of the and thns,express ing 'hill censure of Grant's conduct President Lincoln, when covinced that Grant had really tsucl this orde , te vokedit, and took occasion to enpress his hearty indignation, at the outrage The article in the Israelite closes an fish • •- lows . ••Vie hive to say this: AR a Jew, we cannot and will not vote fora man who has done na a morn phamele•s injustice than any man in power, in this century. has done in any civilized country Therefore, we hops and tape& that the entire Jewish presa will come out bold ly end justly agairiaLthe movement Jo no urinate General Grant qa President of' the United Stites — Valli 'N'peril .PAYRIOTIC - 6cprrenons like the fol lowing, from the Wazzihacie Argue would no doubt be regarded by many at the North as eminently disloyal We think, however, they, are patriotic as well as just. and that the right sort of men at the North will indorse them, and consider them much more favorable to the Union than the allience of any such feeling or interest on the pat of the South could be The editor is speaking of radical policy :—Ez But when we look at these thing* from the stand point from which they are viewed by foreign nations, we feel humi ilaied, degarded, and ashamed, of our American citizenship. for as American citizens we are all viewed and al alike held responsible by the world. To tor op; nations, then, we stand in a post iton to be viewed as a people continually boasting—arrogantly boasting of , our constitutional government, and the per fect protection it gmes to life, liberty and property, and yet, at the POLITIC time, wilfully, deliberately and avowedly vin listing that constitution , inflicting capi tal punishment without legal trial, jut prisoning without warrant and refusing the write of habeas stirrp., and destroy ing property by violence. fraud and con fiscation And as if this were not enough to disgust a christ tan world,and complete the picture of shame and 414.. gradation, wedeliberately seek notoriety in infamy. Witsos Tette a Lie —Senator Hen ry Wilson, of Massachusetts. has pub lished a letter, in which he declare that Urn Ursa is not the habitual drunk ard he is represented to be. Indeed, according to .Wilson, the great smoker is an advocate of temperance' Verney publishes, in his '•two papers, both' daily," Wilson's letter, and' expresses the hope that it ••will be read in every temperance lodge in Pennsylvania and the United States " sow, both Wilson and Forney, 10 attempting-lo represent Omnt as a temperance manAnow that they lie• Wendell Phillipe, Rev Theo dore Tilton and other Radicals. have seen Chant drunk on the streets ()Wash ington,iin Sundays as well as other day. and Alm nave published what they Caw with flieir- own eyes, and bar dared contradiction. More than this, it is notorionsithat Grant has been 1 hard drinker for the last twenty-five years, and had to reitign hie commission in the army or. account, of his habits We don't know' that Grant's weakness inthis respect will injure him with the promi nent MOO of his party, nearly all 'of whom drank to excess, but yet they should not atteopt to represent him as a friend of the lei:utterance cause when they know that he has been a sot for a quarter of a century Such a palpable lie will only be laughed at by those who know Grant. He is a _drunkard, and everybody about Washington knows this Corliale Voluseiest _ 14,124 —We have two horse riders as can didates for the Presidency, Dan Rice and Osumi! Grant,. We. propose, that in order to a sorryt decision us to their respective claims, there shall be an ex hibition of their respective powers.— Their respective friends can agree upon the time, place, and conditions. We cannot consent to act as owe of the judges, as we have already expressed our opinion very stronly la favor of Dan. Bat impartial —jadges esa un doubtedly be had. -1 Js. Si -14,031 Stanton on the Stand.---Possible Ex am(hation, and the "Sticking" Wit ness Struck,. Mr. 'Stanton called on witness . stadd: Counsel for President—Are you &c -rater, of War? Sinaloa am. C, for res.—lly what authority do you hold your office? B.—By appointment oirresident Lin coln, confirmed by the Senate Jnnunry 13, 1862. I have a commission of that ditto. • - -C.4Swr Prea_.-Adatit'rtiag_the consti tutionality of the Tenure-of oliroe acW witen, by the terms of thatvict, - did that commission moire? 8 —The 4ttf of April, 1865. The act provides that the Secretary of War(t°. gether with the rent of the tlabinet) shall hold his office during the term of the President, by whom he was appointed; and one month after C.—for free —Have youleett appoin ted by President Johnson and confirmed by the fienal&eince that date N•o C —for Pres —Admitting that Presi dent Johnson is only serving out Presi- Lincoln's second term, were you appoin led by President.Lincoin and confirmed by the Senate between April 4. IPlib• and April 14.. the day or Lincoln's death N o. C. for Pres.—Can you show any war rent or commission for holding the offleo at the present lime :I^—N o for Tres —Does not the Tenure of Office act expressly provide that nothing in said Oct shall be construed so as to prolong the term of office of any person beyond the term for whiz!' he wee on gutsily appointed and npnfirrned S C for Pres --You are, !herefore, no eotilority for holding he office S C for Pres —Why do you preniat in hplding on to it 'S.—llecaume I ant an obstinate mule, and Sumner told me to stick, and (stuck C for Pre+ —Him you no other war rent for holding it. S —ti-o C._ for Prer--You may w it down --Not;rithetanding the radical claim That their party is mane up of the “pre virtuous rind temPritie." of the country. it would appe.ir from the following, th.it they have trouble with one of their lend ntg Caitlin, II S Senator Richard Vet cc Or Illinois, Richard has got to be a very bad man—he will get drnnk very drunk' RAO RS his party can't keep his drunk• conc.'s any longer a secret, they go for him rough, as the , following from the Chicago /curried, a leading radical pa• per would indicate : "lie In Intoxicated nearly all the time, day and night, anti unless he cliaoges bin course ecion, or renigne, the Semite sill expel him lie bee net been in his seat once since the opening of the im peachment trial, anti on Revere' OCCA atone his vote would bare decided im portant question; The statement of these painful fame will sadden many of the friends of the once beloved nod hon est CI ..•ernor Yatee, who, it Is now evi dent, has lost all self-respect, an well an the respect which is due to his constitu ents and to the body of which be in a member If he will not resign, the sooner he is expeldd Cie better. Mi nute must he fully represented in the Senate the final vote on the impeachment trial is given The present is no time to trifle with the patience of the Senate end the people of Iliin•is are in no tem per to-ji . stify encourage or tolerate the I disgrace course of a drunkard in a public office if trust and r..sponsibility ' Richard intimates that perhaps be nrght reform if he did not have to ammo elate with eucth *leading radicals as Chandler, Spragusirltlye, Wade antl'ettlt;. er Senators lie hints that such .1111140- elation@ would corrupt the very btrst of men, himself not excepted Richard doubtless belime in the maxim that • evil association will lead to bad hab Richard's nhilosoph in good Tilt itICOIRTRATION LlW.—Tbe Radi cal majority in our State Legislature have forced th.ough a registration la• modeled after the most improved Yankee pattern Toe Harrisburg Patriot it Union says: "The mate feature of objection to the bill, sit far as we tan arcerisin from a casual inspection, is the obstacles whiab iuterposes to the exercise of the right of suffrage, and the loss of time which it eutailv upon the working elites of peo ple aud naturalized citizens The bill - require, the easessor and board of elect tkm to meet, too days before each gee eral election, for the correction of the registry lists, - betzeen the hours of 9 • , and G p in Of tours.. wog kingmen will have to lore • day's work to tend to getting registertit At the final meeting on the last Thursday proceeding the election the hoard sit between the hours of aud 10, a in and 6 p m , again re quiring the loss of • day's work. In addition to this, every applicant for reg istration on that day must bring a friend, a legal voler, , and both must sign stride •tts setting forth his claim to vote Af ter all this loss of time and trouble the voter it still subject to challenge at the polls, and there required to again sub mit his proof of a right to vote. Naturalized citizen, are required, upon all occasions, to produce their papers, and their certificate of !letup-all:mho is to be produced at every poll, so that the board may write ••vcted" upon it, with the date. Then again, at every general election the polls are to be opened be tween- the hours of 6 sod 7 a. m. and isloso at 6p. m --again requiring the loss of time from the working man " —Every now and then report' are transmitted tb Washington of sitious troubles in Tennessoe, accompanied with an appeal to General Grant to order General Thomas to interfere with the troops under his command. As this State was reconstructed (tweedy in art oordanoe with the Radical theories, and so effectually that at• its last g I election the Radicals polled 74,484 votes of a total vote of 97,082, W 6 beg to ask, in the words of the late Artemtut Ward. "Why ia_this thus 7" In the eyes of the Radicals, Kentucky and Maryland are rebel States, yet we -hear of anj disturb in them so serious as to require the interference of the milita ry. Will the -7'ribens plow inlighteu the men and brother* on this subject.— Clarion, Denuolftqz. Applying the Ong to Rob the Treasury 1 1 The Harrisbnrg `Latricd and Unton, in • retiring-to the legislation wbitfh m I tug inapted at Harrisburg, !tip the Ap. propriation bill, which was on ilv fin a l passage in the Ben•te. voted out of the Treasury four in anions and n h al f ‘4 Intuney to all sorts of purposes. IVi.e n . it (tame up on third reittiing in the Sen. are, on Fridwy,Senator Wallace nnett,pt, ed ko obtain the node to lito•e to go tote committee of the whole for special menl, and to reduce the size of the bill Akho,tia4oo,ooo, as shown by hie prolo. :ea ameodmenlP.f 'l'6e Wppen rt. tetti.ed i - give him the floor, and yielded n to Connell, Ertel, Iridgway and oaeri, who called the previous quest ion 1.11 (he bill, thus gagging the ntlempt in r dim e the nemenee and unnecermery ani tr „ or. aliens On motion In sustain the_ p r ,._ stout, question the Democf min void 'Ito" and Meeerti 1111:'Ingtelt, of Laticc.ti,r, and Brown of Mercer, voted with but the call for the previ , tic ttue.tn n was sustained, and the tutut,riry °tie thereby gagged The motif que sr 1 , ,n then came up--Shall Om hill 1, and on that quesiion all tit- tstim.tHo, sod :Messrs. Itidg way, Slunli lit r, 1111110, Hillingfelf, Cowles nod S , ll l / 1 4,1n Rsidiods, voted “no," only the hill Irlt by a role of yens 12 Dais 20. Thee to the brel lime huts the prrvo ue gnomon hoe been bll+lo.llii.l in the oie upon the Approprmiimi 1,11, I ill happily, iliegrocs thug Wit Led ham met us deceived Into in de feat of the bill usell 11 nto In 'mi,' ohm those who voted ligni.".t Iho hail will Ino“ lottii.k a ttvely Oki! from it every iipproprinimn 1101 1, 0 „,„0 nrput vi.irraohd by the or reqUireuirolm The ittirrovl ul i p licit of the Radicals 1, lot! through VVlllintil snowing St f ,ir d mon 111 regaid to its plovt•)ot WIII 11,11 Le/iv p 1.4 details Let a6e ;41uriul.1,)y cativusned, I Lerelure,l{L,l it II 10 I, bat nuy.Bl.tottor, or -nog ' of MI rode irond 111 i.obn „,, hid II rx. petiPe of 11,t, I L . beta up to pubic pcorti GKAAT AC A CIII.IIICII GoLit Itadical papers anomie,. Wlllll3 11 1, 11 - 1-h of trumpts that Grant live I ikon a I. w in Dr Sunderland's church I u s.. he has shown 1.11.1 citiplete tr. nip to the party which promISPS 100 ,0 1111 We him for the Preardency. 'Chia Dr derlaud Ia the tame individual who,when Chaplain of the Senate, was ret uki I by by q Conservative Senator in Ilia f frig resolution: Resolved, That the Chaplain of the senate be respectfully requested, litre alter fo pray to Almighty God in bur behalf, and not to lecture Dim, 10,4111 [lllll what to do, or slate to llim under pretence of prayer, his, the said Chap slain's opinion in reference to ll.s duty as the Al:night, and that the said rhsp lain be further ri quested aforesaid not under the Jo rmof prayer to lectureilie ate In reterence to questions b.-fore tl.at body. After endosing negro mufTrage and eating-any amount of dirt to events the radical nomination, Gen. Grant could not more fitly finish up his record o shameless subserviency than by making a pretense of piety an joining Dr Sun derland's church —Lan Intel NIGIJIK ON Till BILAIN.—John dick man, sumo time ago a member of Con: !areas, now a member of the House of itepreseamtires at Harrisburg, from Chester county, recently used the fol- Joiring language in his speech in favcß of striking the word "white . ' from our Stare Constitution: ••I may possibly see the day that I may walk side by side with a c)lored w . otnan I have seen • great many col ored women that I would rather walk with than a great many white men I know s great many negroes who I think are better entitled to vote this moment than a great many -white men who do vote, and who have long exercised the franchise " Mr Hickman Is unquestionably the abet Radical member of the House lie le regarded ea exrremely Radical now, but in tie words just quoted, he has simply uttered the key note of the Rad ical party. Ere long, the leaders will all openly take his position, and seek to "educate" the m into the support of the same doctrine. Let white men open their eyes to the fact, that negro euffrage and negro equality are lire is sues in the great contest between the two parties of the country Volley Sp. (I A few day ago the Radical jour nals announced with great glee that (boy bed elected their candidate for Mayor in Memphis, Ten . But'how 1 In the first place over four thousand white men were disfranebised by order of Browlow and the Radical Legislature. In the next, negroes were brought into the gity from all parts of the Biala and their votes county for the Radical .can didate. A glance at the result will show how the white and negro vote was dis tributed. Wiokershim, the Radical nominee,•reoeived 902 white and 4,213 negro votes Woodward, the Democrat ic o•R4didete, was voted for by 2.430 whiteen, and 93 negroes. Thi■ con fiiaLbetween the races, at all elections, with the victory in favor of the negroes, is thought by the Radipals as excellent way to secure union and har mony.—Age. —The New York Comoier, on *hose editor's' staff le Dr. Thomas Dunn Eng lish, gets off the following good thing •on the prospective candidate for the Presidency : "People curious ,In aneodotes will pima to take notioe; that it wee (ten Washingtcn, and not ben. Omit, who caid in hill Yool—You kiwi I cannel tell a lie, peps."' —When - a dander is circulated about a Demoorat, he is expected, if sufficient ly important, to deny it over his signa ture, but that is Sot eirpeeted it appears of Oeneral Grant, the Republican poPer s be nerlir been in. the hibit_,...ol wasting hie powder in--that way • ill. oomuilltee will-do the denying.—Port. =II MEI