=ll The Derpocratic Watchman, TE, _ PA_ _ FRIO/kV MORNING, MAY I, 1868 Afrioanizing America -Amid the intense excitement caused ,by the bold attempt of the Radical party to depose the Preside - tit Wad change our whole form of governmewt we must not forget Oat thp.oolFne of the same dan gerous facliat 'or 7ifriennixing a-portion of the Country is being pushed forward with untirtag industry In-all the South ern States; Loyal 'Leagues are busily at work collectin i tie 9Fgroes into !tome ile7,aillotering to (herd such natirrwit will WM:more their action, ;Miming their passions against the white race.and thus fillimoltom for action at the polls and elsewhere. Large sums of money havo been collected mud appropriated by the CongTeroional ocomiditteo al Wash ington-for incurred in Manipu lating the negroes of the South, and promises made to them of the distribu• lien of the lands in their favor when tile proper innitient arrives. Artful agents ...I the "Kemp" aro now • in' the South prociainiing to the negroes' that one ef feat of dsponing Andrew Johnson. and placing bl.r. Wade in hi, place, will he to hesfefi The peried when they cinn take possession of what property still remains in the hands of white Men in that sea tion, and rule supreme, as they - do an Ilayti and other places where they are in the ascendency The effect of such a entirse of nation fie that pursued by the party in power with reterrneo to tie negroes of the Southern S•ate•, can he seen in the con dition of that section In all the con ventiore negro delegates have been ad milled, and their action has brought dis grace and ridicule upon the nation. Propositions of the most indefensible and monstrous character have been sub 'tinted and arguel by These men, while all the material interests of the States are suffering, trade, commerce and ag riculture langutehing for want of proper attention Two ideas - seem to control the negroes. One is hatred to the white people among whont they reside, the therobtaining a living without labor ['hue they are preparing to make the foundation of the negro policy of the south At the ballot box they net upon this plarr, in the constitutions formed by them, it in time vital element, and in ev ery life they carry out thin platform tiutragee upon white men, women and children-are common in all the South ern stales Scarce a paper that comes from that section that does not contain acdounis of the commission of offenses by negfoei, at *lnch the heart sickens anti the blood rune cold; Lesser crimes -.nob. as, pasty larcency Ana aaaault and battery, are multiplied tenfold since the inauguration of the negro equality poll cy Hands of idle, ,worthless negroes pass through all the south,, plundering, destroying and burning They cannot • ••• * • • piniahe • t to offered, they add insult, violence and murder to the oataluuge of their crimes Behind euet, desperadoes stand the Loy al Leagues. and then comes Congress and the,radical party Clothing and food are supplied them by the Freedmen's Bureau. and thus equipped, they are prepared to act as the ready and n tllutg tools of the conspirators at Washington In the meantime, no business mai be done to the South. Laborers cannot be rocured, and capitalists are afraid to invest (heir funds' where the Hill lair afford' no security for life or property. The few negroes that would labor are deterred from doing so by the, threa , s of those who are in the plot against the white people of that section If a negro votes the conservative ticket, be is mob bed, perbeps murdered , if be labors far his old master, the dissolute of his ,wp rate appropriate the proceeds of Iris In dustry As the Inevitable result of this Mate of affairs, the crops of tit: South are falling off—cotton, rice, and tobacco are diminishing in quantity and mg in price' the North is losing the vast trade of that section, and many /of the farmer., planters, and merchadte, are preparing to seek homes in' woe other locality each year the area of land put under cultivation is becoming Ices, while mills for grinding grain or cuting timber are unproductive,on account of the difficulty of proeuridg hand., and the falling off in the demand for what they produce. From the Potomac to the Rio Grande the ruinous effects of this Africanizing scheme can be plainly and nfully seen, and yet the radicals are determined to push on the negro column over all obstacles and in defiance of all facts Why ! Because the need the negro rote to sustain 't heir plan fur destroying this form or government. The North is preparing to oast off the chains of folly and fanaticism All the elections tak ing place show ibis fact. In Maine. New llampsbire. Connecticut, New York, and in m , ny of the western Slates the altered tope of public opinion in of the most convincing character. But white men are to be trodden down by negroes. The votes of the Africanined Southera States are to be counted for Wade Or Grant, or some other candidate of the radical party, for President. and thus the votes of millions of intelligent . white freemen in Pennsylvania, New York, and•Obto, made of no effect This is the radical scheme It Is a a twin brother of iniquity with the im- I peach-west project. They need Wade in tbs white hones to make the conspi racy perfect. This part of the plan is now being developed, but while gazing on thTinew Bern of the beast the white men of the nation must not forget that negro equality Is one of the Issues in the p t contest,—Ays. —Greely is compelled to acknowl- edge Dist , the Democracy st the next Presidential election poll . more votes Ilea say party ever yet did in presidential election." That. (hay w,W po, end then good bye radicalism.: Bet ter times and a bettor days will then down. -God toted it —When the President wsi "swing ing round the circle," in 1888, we were Reid by the liedlosi prise tl•nt General Gauss got'"disinsted" et Cleveissid sod roam; round on the Late of Detroit by himself. It turns wit new, to pit KU plain lbiliglisge; that the Dotterel woe en 9 -1)4 batter," Timely We The Democratic plitrty has been acous ed with favoring.iteptitliation, and it hap been--very--ebetitif- poraiat4d..that. iLibe Democratic party weVe to get control of the Federal Government. the Public Debt would, beyond a doubt, be repudi ated The success of the Dernacratie party in the ensuing Presidential con teat will alone Lave the country from the hurbiliation of repudiation. When Jour , oats like the Yew fork Herold take bold of Repudiation and discuss it familiarly, it is time for the people to put on their thinking caps. The !Jerald utteis but' the truth, when it says that “nations,' like individuals, may be driven by the stress of eircutnstances.to take ad•nn toga of a bankrupt law, or—what is the seine thing—to practically make'such W for themael•ew " Tivesilevertisfet the folloiriog inquiry, vrhich it follows up with pertinent - renth'rker,, which we commend to our re 'dent for their con Hideration Why is it that real estate in this city and elsewhere is being purchased co ea gerly at est raorilinary prices while Gov ernment Wilds are falltng Evidently there is a want of confidence The re duction of the revenue by the passage of the Manufacturers' bill, to favor a cc:* lain class and for political effect, and of other bills reducing the revenue, while enormous expel yes Ida the army, navy, reconstruction, Freedmen's Bureau, pen sions, Pacific railr,ads and nrimermis olhcr things are kept up, threaten 111 with a bankrupt Treasury llad the dominant Radical party in Congress wished to bring about repudiation they ' could not very well have done more to accomplish that object By the time the Heat report of the Secretor) of the Treasuay is mode out, and perhaps be fore, we may expect to sea a Jarge amount of our securities sent back from Europe and coosequently a rovi:dstcline in them It nt all very we Orley we are a rich country and - able to pay the debt . This or any other country, how ever rich, may t non be ' ruined by inca pacity of the government, x t ravagancos end' mismanagement of the finances. The plvent tumour+ financial policy, or Tether want of policy, cannot be follow ed lung The American people are pc culler in this, that they bear evils pa tiently to the - litnit of forbearaio, sod then, as we sew in the ul risinx tst the war, they move stnlderilr, itle iornal and sweep all before them We vr 11. it our reckle.s end extravngo t Congress, the grasping limplltoblere, greedy,manu lecturers and na , ional bank toonopolisTr, against provoking the overburdeued peo pie beyond the limit of endurance Get us have Pendleton far Preen,lent and the ituccerkful inauguration of hie Greenback theory, and all will be well Stand by the Tried Conatitntion The few - Tor' Trorfd Turtiltetteeit emir; Radical Constitution—a Constitution to author] re Congrese to I. everything one, an outside of which, Stevenn 111.1 hie followers could never find Stich:on ni•trionent to hardly necessary to men - tterwrroxmweverritipectireverbestrivie v t sod who have already broken every legal and moral restrain! Stevens was cut out for n revolutionary leaky . . and has always been seeking. opportunities it , t gratify Vie ruling pae , ione In quiet times be was of no account —• mere cy 'pher in Copt., , treated with universal contempt, or abhorrence Civil commotions cast up to the cur face a new claim of men, of bean nature, fitted to follow such as Stevens men who he've no public cause at heart. but are solemnly bent on private gain, of whom Covode, Moorhead, Ashley. are specimene. They eon, at best, work only am mere perm ma ries W tit few exceptions, in like Cameron and Butler, they hare:not been guilty of great oriol es but it is only because they have not energy at mind to rite to any height of wickedness They are not tiawlitt or kites , they are only a rabble of Misters ble fowls whose flight is not shove their dunghill or hen roost But they trem ble b fore the superior audacity of the authors of the sufferinge now oppressing the country They admire, and they obey. them with servile officiousness'. and gather spoils on all sidee,with insatiable greed, unobserved amid revolutionary COMMOIIAM. They are of mean and ab ject nature, formird for sycophants to audacious conspiikawre like Stevens There never was a mean an abject mind that did not admire an intrepid and dex terous villian In the bottom of their bm.rts they better such hardy miscreants to be - the only men qualified for great affairs; they are made to be the jackalla fog much lions, sod are content to follow them and to Wan on the public C&I'00213 torn by them Constkutions are no hindrance to. the ,onward march of these destroyers, who are ,the fungus growth of a diseased community Let the nation be restored to its wonted health, and They will be supp d, and superceded by men who will respect the boundaries of the Con stitution framed by Washington and Franklin, and find wikhin those hounds ries all the powers needed for the con duet of a free enlightened g_overnment. We are, therefore, opposed to the new Radical Constitution, as antirely norms armory. The good old ns‘rument—the sacred shield of liberty--las big enough and good enough for this nation ; whilst it was obeyed the people were prosper ous &tad happy, and such evil men as would wish to do anything outside of it, will not be long permitted to take part in the management of public affairs. —Ex Custooc—The New York Times, (Ile pnblioan) in alluding to did rejection of negro suffrage in Michigan by 80,000 majority, says ..it is 11 little singular that in spite of the very strong deter mination of the) Northern States to im pose aril I negro Nuersge upon the South, not one of then has voted as yet to accept it themselves. That they may be 'educated' to do so in time is quite likely, but it is Aar that considerable training will be required meantime." it *Amore singdlar that, despite the tact that every Brats in the Union, North or South, East or West, is opened to negro inalfroge, Congron ehottld en deavor to tom upon ill the people. Ibis odious measure. ' —The party layover obtained it on e, the Abolition bobby. They hare abol ished the Col o totior—ebolished nine Stites—aid goer abolishing sent step will g the Nbe to abolish themselves . Wagee to a Pauper Standard The ultimate resul' of . a triumph of Radicalism - will be despotism—the few ti Lt py t tp,....thp„tnt.oy,,t.o .abeyi The .bal loS-box, corrupteraiTailbitiWw ne gro balldte into a metetoni 6 for dema gogues, will be powerless for good: the taxes, *rung from the people by a horde of revenue officials with armed soldiery at their haok.will used to buy power and corrupt the weak; whilst wages for labor will fall to the pauper standard of Europe Every day of Radical rule hrjnge still closer this diinetrous con- BUMlTlation Laboring men's incomes now are not proportionate I al he intgease in the prices of the necessarieslind cam forts if life Wages are mostly only double what they were in Democratic lIMCP, and rarely triple, yet - T ue costa elt toelikj_hr eo times, butter from four to kir. time.e, - an other thingsln.pretty much the same proportion The poor are rendered poorer, while the rich are made richer Capitalists unite their wealth• tend not control-the labor market. tint they buy 'egiSpitures and control government, Politic officials and lawmakers no longer regard themselves es public servants,but as rulers. MeMbers of the Legiedaturh and of Congress look to the capitielisis for election rind hove no constituents but those who wield the pow of woal.h The working mosses mayhand thentselses together to secure oder - loot! wugee for 'heir toil, but capital nia,ltes. common °awe iigarnst then and they are forded It succumb They may select filen to make laws for their ',mop. but banded enpital stops in and buys their legklf teri 1, , 0k en the statute books of your State toil deny this fuCr, if you can Thus every year of Radical doming lion in State and redt•rattun shows tin alarming downward telolcory work ingineit's intere4is ant pro , pectn ;or are created , sal tries are ,rnisi.l, apprOpriation lidla are on oiled IJ warm tic proporrions , (relit" irises ore added and the whole bill of expense+ eventually cornea down to be woke,' out by il.e maqsos flow lung will ii 1,”; under these circhnininnees, before the European paupei standard of wages is resehedi - i11,.w long before nutmnl fund will from t..e workingman's 'tattle except t•int l / 4 •, and until I.lithlreu d st-ereel:, out el Inf racy will be t..re, I 11, , , 11. e matting niroo.pliete of nu, I 1 . / , ;1 , .1 - .01 To hell , eke out the , mean y .... 1 161 , denett of o-k the workingmen of 'Penn.) lin stn t, pond , r Thewthinga'' We n. , ic thorn to ceonfoue the present with the juice thereby of the futur'e under the measures. and political . poll- Cies of the now patty —Pi trot oud I.:nwn Dangerheld those crimes 'were not PO numeral& efIRLIOSe' o f OA te: , , was sen tenced only in be whippet Trom Oldgate to Newgate, and from New . gate to Ty• -- - . 1v - bur n, T , l , Te ., ant le red ~,h the execution of the In ate U. S 5eii,...../. few days sincson sentence, and watt finilly killed by a man the course of the d, ~vie on the bill ap- named Francis, who taunted him with propralting one hundred and seventeen hits whipping . and hawing reversed a thous•r4dollarti (or the contingent ek- curse in response, struck bun over the 1 ,,0,0e or the Senate. Simon Cameron, face with a cane, injuring the eye, from Senator from this State, rose in hie the effect of which be is paid to have place and charged that t'orney the died. From the timehe received his men Secreiaty of ay.: Senate. was a defaulter fenc e he wan in an agony of despair lo the iftnoun nt S. . . , .... - --sodim Den cap "Set kßogue to Catch A Rogue " created a nutter in the Senate Finally a Senator attempted to defend the dead duck by trying to make it appear that Forney's confidential clerk, a Mr Wag ner. was the chief Cameron rejoined, defending Wagner, and repeating - Mr first charge After considerable debate the Committee on Contingent Eapensee was ordered to inveetigate the matter It is well Iknown that Cameron and Forney have no love for cacti other , in deed, they are bitter enemies. hence it in that Cameron is watching every opportunity to punish Forney Ids now believes be has the —dead wood" on the dead duck, and to the face of the Senate and the people, he brands him • defaul tel ' Thus it to and has invariably been that whenever two Radicals fell out, they at once brand each other as thieves More than this, they generally prove their accusations true It it much wonder that these robber* of the government are so anxious to re tarn power' Is it surprising that they Je•ire to see ten States unrepresented to Congress? They fear exposure. From the very hour that Lincoln set foot - in the White House, the so-oalled leaders of the Radical or Jacobin party have been fleecing the government. Every now and then they ••blow', en each other but not one in a thousand of these defaulters and marauders hove 'been exposed Bo long as they hold both Houses of Congress by a two-thirds vote, they are comparttively safe. Cen it be that the people, by their votes,Will continue to assist these thieving scoun drel' to cover up their defalcations Let them be unearthed and exposed, and when this iv done the people will be con vin..ed that they have been aupportallg and sustaining ■s great a set of rogues as ever went unhung —Ameritcfn Volunteer —The war between those "twin relics" of radicalism and rascality, John W. Forney and Simon Cameron,promises to be Interesting. In the Senate on last Wednesday, in a debate on (be condition of affairs in Mr Secretary Forney'. of fine, Senator Cameron made known the fact that a few month* ago Forney's books showed • defisloatt6a . of $40,000. Mr. Cameron said be knew it had been said Obit Mr. Wagner, one of -Mr. For ney's relatlves,said et that tjme hiscon fidential clerk, was- the guilty 'minion, end it had been said that Wagner bed confessed it, sod that Forney had ado restitution. lie did not believe Oils however. lie knew Wegner very well, and be knew him to be ea honest and upright man. -He twee confident thet a proper investigation wo uld fik thiscrime, if there -wee any, upon some one else Two Senators spoke in behalf of Forney and said that Wagner had confessed In writing that he had used the missing mousy for speeplative ptirjposes, that 'Forney had made good the. loos out of his own pocket.. But Mr. Cameron in- sisted that inch was not the fact, and as Kited yesirdiy, the irestigation was ordered. .•When rogues fell out." 80. —The Radical eonspirabrs are scarcely more hostile to President John son than to Chief Juggles Chalet . The Washington correspondent of the Phila delphia Eu makes the private see rotary of the Chid Justice say that the ohoooding" of Mr. Chnae.by the. Radi ail leaders had forced him sad other friends of the Chief Justice to determine never again to rote the .Republican •tickete The History and Fate of Perjured Wit nesses—A Warning to the Holt-Stan ton ConOessional Tools There is a moat uncertain and gloomy Mate of Things .on both ends of the Is land of Hayti." Indeed such is the ob amirßyilipt it. mail It tteriptnralrt deft , ned to be the Tiiiitiktiesi - Fraimmar --- Ir is &chard to tell what Mr. Sumner and Me. Stevens' clients are aiitielly doing As it is to lay your hands on a blaok oat in a deep cellar after dark. As near as we can learn, the military chief, Selnave - after constructing cabinetu and playing It Constitution', for several months, has concluded thut it does not pay, and, is about to hero himself declared In name, the dictator which he lias been in Not; 1 so Hayti will he ready to fraternize with p us t4iA your and next more strongly w than ever. She will have set aside all 'M pretense of law' and constitution,' and t h, : ~ i will have inaugurated the regime of the 1 ,1, .1..y1.,,,,,, . _ In noticing the rent indictment of lodgert, woe of -t4re—seitneseesaga.lus the President in the impeachment for perjury, oecasioni is taken by the press to refer to ttie late of Conofert tinker, and others who were concerned in the perjuries gotten up by Stanton and flott, by whiolt to use the words of one or the manigors If ihe impeachment toward another of the managers,'"iin in - nm.ent womin was hung ' .„ Iltsiory here, :n other important events, in thel.e jibes of Puritan rule Arid fan.11.1.31.M, hilt repeal tug itself in its most horrible shape • Ail readers of English history are fa miliar with the events of that period . , shout two centivie% ago, when perjuty proairFeirTfie retails Irr utacry . Inoro_rt persons on accout of a fabulous .‘Popish p . m" RgRllll9l the State, (which had about R 9 mach foundation •tte the lies . • • . -plots - of the pent lime) irhich oHgi nulett.wllli am , Ontes The WII:I(..PCM 111 i iiL day, by whose . perjured emtlinony so runny innocent vrcnmen were FlRCritied 10 partisan mal -1 ice. were five in hula er, mulled aspeo- Lively. Oates. Ileillee,•Dugdale,Carstairs and lbingertipid Of these, liedloe alone (lied n natural death in his infamy, un putii•hoil on earth, without one sing of -home or remorse. llugdale was driven mail by the furies of no evil con•cieuce, anil died, with loud shrieks. implering Ihove who stood around HS bed to lake !away Gord Stafford who& bin perjury had murdered 1 ho end of Caretnirlit was, also, °tie of itorr,.r lie begged with his last breath, pay. But net, to he thrown moon duel,. like a dpg, fur he Vrav not ht tosleep in consecnityq ground II tie% was conricied en two l/11.. of in dictment for-perjury,(teen only 3 tuts demeanor,) Hound against • by the litul Jury and hectinstl his Odense sr.'s, in a turd -mur der, sentenced to ..he striped of t his clement habit, pillared in palace led round Westrninister Ilnll, walls an irtscripo ion .I'm:hiving his infinity over liis heed; pilloried again in front of /loyal Exchange: whipped from ()agate In Newgiiie , oiler an interval ortwo days whipped 'team from Newgaie to Tytrorn, kept it clo.c prisiuner for life, and five mules every year broUght 'forth fr, , in lit% dung COTI and c.xpo•ed . in the pillory in ditto exit poms tikti • capital Terrrble as the yen It nee wan, irweria rig orously executed, nod a 1111,11 who count rd the stripes Rt. his second whipping said he remelted as high an seventeens hundred ! —,rontena-n4 -Inesie--44asis-,- Denger6eld was "cruel and unlace'," but considering the enormity of their crlinee they have never been pitied, though in these days they have found imitators But it has only been since Radical rule - arni - maitce hoe been in the ascendent, The chief conspirators and suborners of the perjury of tbe present limes twee not yet receivrd their doom But itw ill come, for "truth is omnipotent and pub lic justice certain "—Can Enqutrer. C7necticut Representation. The New Haven, Connecticut Register remarks, ''the queetion will often be ask ed by our friends abroad end some at home, how it ii, that Connecticut is able to elect a Democratic Govenor by twee ty five hund,red nuijority, and is yet not able to secure both branches of the Leg islature by a pr oportionate vote The fact is that under the rotten boratigh system of representation, a.minority in 41,ie state is at any elections as liable to get control of the Legislature as a ma jority Here is an astounding fact that will scarcely be credited by persons un acqamted with it New Haven hie a population of over 5 000 yet has but two representatives in the House, while the countries of Winh•m and Tolland: with i population of only 55,153, have forty five repfesentalives, Think of that! Fifty five thousand person. rep resented in a reifies] section of the state by forty fire representatives while a Democratic section with over fifty thou sand inhabitants, has but two represen tatives ! Apd the radicals will ,jot lift a fitger to change this system, because they get so much advantage from it l'et ity z dairy plate of their, devotion to in ly suffrage and equal represent•- tianX;,_ --'lll, system is that each town, boro or city, has two members ; so that a lit tle township with 1,000 inhabitants (or Iota) has the same represenat ion as New Hawed, with, 50,000! “The election in Mouth Carolina hat resulted t in a great Republican victory,” says the morning mongrel orglin Good Lord, what sbamelesenes! A "prat Re publican victory"-t--achieved .for negro candidates, with negro cotes,, and by the d'efranthiselpent of a majority of the most intelligent ant! best white men of the State ! Oh, how the' Radical 'party has "stooped to conquer"—stooped to the use of all corrupting, diabolical and tyrannical niaehinery within its reach Shame upon any one calling himself a a man to glory in pooh a victory ! Register board of Georgia have struck tjte name of Aaron A. Bred ley, the Boston mulatto, from the regis try, roll on account of living be con victed by the Brooklyn City Court in ifidi of fellony and sentenced to two years imyrisonment. This is the same Brad ley who served as a delegate in the black and tan 000000 tion and assisted in draft ing the Georgia "constitution," and the same whe lately Issued a Manifesto to the "loyal" leagues to tally in arms against the "rebels:" Of end' Is the leadership of the Radical party South. —Grimly le of opinion that if Bea. Wade is placed Wale Pro.ldeat's chair by the Rump Senate, a mat rise to the price of whiskey will immediately fol low. No doubt of it. The Perpetual Revolution , if we were wise. sle,mightlat least learn this lesson, flint while { - iconic can not live to Hayti under lha tragio and ohronio ef the negro for self government. How long do we suppose• that the Africanisation of the Southern States can be endured by our own race and co lor . and antecedents ? But to re turn to Hayti, or rather to the Domini eau Republic at the-icier end of the Is land. We understood long ago that Cabral was - peat down and Baez was put up. The truth seems to rhe that Hun grea the Baez General, had won a deer" ice ciclory, and, after hanging his op patents, had invited flgez to come back; but the wary mulatto scholar and diplo mat oin ii . nt Curacon and goes not t tithe possession of hie irrew hollers lle is no much afraid of his own inland ea in (ly of a griddle lle will not set foot eu it. llow his anxiouo constitu gene gel on in his ab.ence, we ore with out eircumminntial nil•lee: but • we will wager that ihry :yre go lig cut of one reviilutiuitt into mother It( all the whirligigs, this effort to fmiol *table mid 'reiitesentative government among fincnii4, or any or die mixed ritces, Is theLmost excentric. le will nut stor.uor yet will it. go on The effort to give it the benctit of our naturalittlimi (Intent in the Southern State((,' will prove the very same ignominious failure, because it is only a contest perpetually renew4l, hut never s uccessful with the conditions of bunion nature, and the 'fixed laws we call-Providence.-- West te South. . The Reaction Steady and Sur The ic.ult ot the State election in Con necticut se 1110r11 gratifying to the fend of free int-motions, and unfettered, un lazed indwitry ft shows that Grant has no .trength with the f euple which can Puccessfully aid the dacobine in carrying their load of Iniquity, that int, peechmeut is unpopular, that negro euf frage le unpalatable fta late nuajorny of the white men of the Norih, ant that the people will have relief from the envy -weight of tkivt and teigat•on from 'Which they are euffering so severely, The municipal elections, - 3,there•er held, are equally encouraging Nearly every where the ga 1119 to Democracy are large and the verdict of the people to iulionislr But what ells!l we say of Michigan. which, at the lasi Slate election, gave a Jacobin majority of twenty-nibe thioue and, and has now voted against the pro posed negro suffrage Gonstitutidn by thirty thouland That State has been regarded by the Jacobins as cure for tbecu on any quee lion! They bad no doubt of carrying negro ■u ffritgo at Lite election on Monday, without difficulty. am; by a large major ity Behold the result Such a verdict as that to Michigan, directly upon the vital issue of Mongrel ism, involving its very origin and exis tence, opens up a bright future for the frittelae of white supremacy in this coun try The Black Idol IP overthrown, The country is Caucasian, and will be free! The people are, after all, sound at heart, Intl will stand . 1y their own bright blood, and high•hearted, grand, imperial race—the conqueromoivilisers, rulers of the world' The ''tidel wave" sets strong, and ri ses high, for 'iberty truth, and justice TIL people declare against negroirm and bondum They will have back their freedom, they mill . have have the government skid tinion - wjtich their fathers left them, they will have laws which Mill secure thorn the fruits of their industry, they will leave their children free from political and pecuniary bondage, instead of transmitting to them an inheritanoe of oppression, shame, and beggary —1,4 Cruise Democrat. WINN VENN NCI A,L POLICY—(GOLD IN T wksußY.-- tiedretary McCulloch, we observe by hie April report of the public debt, continues to keep abbot $100,000,00X) in gold in the Treasury This gold converted into flegaldenders. would take up SW/00,000e five-twen ty bonds, upon which the people are nbw paying an interest of sit per cent., which amounts to $8.280.000 a year.— This would be a very hindsometowing to the tales bf the people. But McCul loch prefers to keep his gold and let the bond-holders have the lot on the bonds, which th'e gold ought to psy. This is called wise flainelering by some .peoples. It is wise. certainly, Ifor the bonded interest.—En2utrer THY. BOND Daur.—From March 1 to to April I the gold bearing interest bond debt of the 'United States wan increased from $1.921 4 .000,000 to $1v044,000,000. Upon theie $18,000,000 the annual in din t will-be over $1,000,000 In gold. The debt bearing ourreFey in terest has been decreased $16,000,000 in the same month, and the debt bearing no interest $10,000,000. The policy of those who control the Government is to reduce as fast as possible the debt that costa the people 'no Interest, "or the debt-whose interest is payable in omen cy, while at tile nuns time they increase the gold Interest debt. Alms the people continue to be robbed for the benefit of the money shark. of Wall streel..—Bn• quint. -11ileotions tickets in Ohio must hereafter be printed on white paper. as well as be"oole4 by white man. —The New York Tr:pun', speakin g of inch an e mia as "'President, beinitof one party and Congress elanothei, salya "We defy any one to show bowls to •happen, unless the President suit betray: - desert - and - tern - hbroffiehttpvio: or against 'those by whose favor and votes it was confided to hien. And, whenever that shall . happen,' wo trust the President will be impeached end kicked out—the sooner the better " There is law and wisdom in "solid chunks." A Preeident ought to bo "int reached and kicked out" for relining to follow the gyrations - of a political party, Does he not take an oath to "support . --- protect and defend" the polities] party which elects him to office ! The Chief liTagisteato 9f the United Stales' iv only the tool of a political canton—q, puppet to be moved about by the hands of the This iv tlie'"-wiedsm. virtue and intelli gence- of the Tribune. And it virtually ounfenses that riesident JohusoliCit 'only crime in in retaining to follow the dicta- Con of the Afrinalt party, For in n t onn i that :Ilene, Was he impeached and brought Co trial. We confess we Imre very ittle respect for a President wh o would bu impeached and brought to trial by etieli a body av the Ramp. It Is n 3 much the ditty of the'Executive to pro tea his office froM destruction and over throvr, an it in to dischnrge any ot't,or ditty embraced in hie oath to defend the Conatitution olthe Untied bltatev Tho Rump is the real criminal in this cute, and the President ;l oub! linveno treated it from the very start utits ti3urpation e Does any one imagine that, bait o n An drew dackspn been ,in the Pr;eid en t chair during these inturrition3, t h e body illegally acting an congress w ii have icon aliowed to have tatiel iJo it, revolution twenty folly hours • No after its ,oilittetts blind had been I,,c y It would have I r twenty-four town tee —ON 1;140,1 K.R.; 11 1 ‘Ttil AN.Ir 111.1 11. k _ AC egelllit Ilntrn of retur.o, , , Unton moldier who undertook i en 3, from V ickmburg to Waph tno. a Union Hag, w ithou I money. uud 1. depend upon ttre.kicdriens of Itie peopit on the rout'', arrived ut Womb ington on the 140. Ile wee met at the Long bridge by a large clncourse of citizens Among them was Senator poolAttlo of 11,e , n ein. who welcomed tho Sergeant In the federal capitol Ile subeequenily rutl en the Executive Mansion, and el% warmly greeted by the Preaident nn reaching the Metropolitan Hotel, he we again welcomed to the city by llon .1 Eldridge of Wiscoinin. • After re• inakiing • few momentsOlie was escorted to^e Capitol for the purpose of Fuer his Hog on the dome, byt the radical po llee in chap/a of the - ibulldmg refufed him admittance even to the rotunda, al though a swarm of negroes who had fol lowed the ovoid, -werik-ailtaittad. . Thus, after being kindly treeied al, through the south by the foMner rehrls whom he helped to defeat - , he only finds enemies in the radical eMntention at Richmond, and among the impeachers CALIIIMENPI—''T:Ce people are calm Very calm. Acting upon the hypothesis that Otis quiet indicates content, the Radicals are playing a bluff genie - They see the nation wearied mid et haueled, after a strife of eight wig weary years, add trusting that ibis let eitude may last lont enough to their purpose, they ake bent upon bied• us firmly in chinge Cuntnngly, one by one, are they removing the safeguards of the people against des pot tern so that when the hour arri•es, a coup rt . Oat may render us powerless for resietance—helpless slaves. It will not do to pooh I fincih! away the shadows that are in our path The fulittartcr at hand, and untiring we remove that, we shall coon find ourselves unable to re shit its power The lessons of History are before un ...we would do well to at tend to their teaching If see mistake not, the calm we speak of is not real We think it is the lull that preceeds the storm, and wo be them who provoke the power of an outraged, deceived And up pressed people —Columbia Herald. Saving SI6T6CII. A corporal, named Ilenderson, attached to the garrison of Columbia. B't who wee tried by Court martial and found guilty of milking Colonel Guenther. while. on duty. was 'sentenced by the Court to be reduced to the rank!, drummed out of camp,tu, bars hie head ehaved,to forfeit all pay, and to be im-prisoned for three years at hard la• bor.in Fort Macon; and during the term of hie iroprinooment, to wear a ball weigh• ing thirty-two pounds, attached to a thirty six kith chain.—Ez • ---The Income Tait is needed to pay for a standing army in the South. Re move thitt.aamy, and the tax will cease White mini ol the Nortb, don't you think you have Jbern burdened long enough with this odious tax, merely tbit the tg• norms( negro may be made a voting ma chine to oontiaue Radical demagogues and adventurers in officei Remember that every dollar of income tax wrung from your hard earnings goes to bolster up-this Radical outrage. -----A Boston letter writer bee been to nee Henry Ward Beecher. and tells the public that he "never saw him in such good .spirits before." That le probably because the unnatural wretch's father is dead. During the first year of the war he said : "The Constitution is the father of all our troubles " So now that that father Is dead, the *retch feels himself free from all his •'troubles." — Old Guard. —The negro party. Forney or. "The eleotion in South Carolina has fe suited in a great Republican victory. The blacks were victorious and the white men were defeated. This is the issue before us. ' Rhall the black man triumph lover the white ? What say you reader! —lt le said that Forney is mitd with the impeachers because fhey neglected to enumerate among the...high crimes and misdemeanor. " of the presideni,.his bar ing called him a dead duck. Cbteigo iletory troubles Um mongrels exoeeditgly. Their Willits lo white TOW, elections has grown prover ' •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers