The Democratic Watchman. DELL,EPONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 15. 1888 The Alta-Vela Affair---Lette of Judge Black to the President on the Subject. Ma. reeling:cr.—Your determination to determine nothing for the relief of the ewnere of Atte Witt makes it impels • Gible fur me to serve you longer as °naut ili' in the Impeachment case. They cannot allow their rights lobe trifled with, and I cermet advise them to sub -tilt in silence to the outrage perpetrated • Upon them They must seek eisoWbere for the justice you deny them, lam sure ' ph will admit that I have never urged this upon your attention until yen ,had a full opphrtunity of esatnioing it, nor asked you for a deeittion until you expressed the opinion that the title wits just and legal. Mr Seward ' s little lin ger, it appears, is thicker than the loins of the law. lie nod the thdpree whose interest he has guarded so faithfully are w elcome to the short liveer •iel.pry they have wou. My retirement from your case will not i thia atone - ea of its success When you first expressed the desire that I elloutti het one of your counsel' I gave some reasons d by ii might be better for you that 1 should not cot sent on Messrs Curtis and Steel:pre these considerations had some weight, but you ovetruled them without hesitation. If you will reflect upon them agate you will trobably See that you have nn IeAVTTI to regret my present decision to rotro Ilut to me it IS cause of eieeere grief that I cannot a•ti in the struggle you are making for truth, justice and the conat titit ion of our coun try. I. do mout dovoutly believe that the now made accusation egainst yen by lite Iletile of Itepreeentatives is un founaed in fact and law, and thatlyeur defence mutt be ftegarded -as conclusive by every impartial mind. I know it will to presented with enneumniate abil ity. I hope 'you see plainly that I have adopted the only possible mode of re lieving tn) Pelf from the embarrassment and complications which would he wholly, nadenialily if I del not get rid of them in some way. t Otrf,'N'r 1. S 15A5111:167W 4 . MAI - Ch 12., ISGR Ma l'emitutsr --A dispatch in the Baltimere Run of this morning may lie worth your ettention as well as mine, because it is supposeeto come fiorn a gentleman known to be much in your confidence. It is so incorrect thaCJ am surf you never atithorlted It" It look; like another of Mr. Seward's efforts to - rake a false defence of the outrages per petrated on his countrymen at the is land of Alta Vela The whole statement is false co far it concerns the Motue of the C/100, the nature of the right whioh the American owners possess and the character of the opposition to it. It is epeemily and particularly Wes in this—that ii Is the existence of a counter claim by St Domingo, whereat', in truth and in fact, the have never at any time pretended any right or title whatever ; when formally tasked to chow their right they alleged none ; they have never ted any. They are naked wrong doers by their own confession ; but Mr. Seward instead "of lintlicatthg the honor of hie country,' keeping the pledged faith of hie govern _ men‘antiguatffill.fAleitlM viable of his fellow citizen', has taken the other side; and has been engaged for years in try ing to make • defence fur the Dontlni cane ; and the defence he ban made is no fri•olous and unfounded that they had not the impudence to act it up for there itel•en They were out ebernelees enough to adopt it even after be bad made it to their hand Itut my °kite:o is now to assure you tbat, although I thought it your clear duty to prefect these persons its the law required by restoriug them to their Lawful possession, I did not ;lei you to dJ no as the condition on which I would appear we your council in the im peachment cave I never even referred to the embarrassment which it might Ornate until after you had given what I t o ok for your last word on the subject I told you, too, verbally and in writing that I did not ink it on the tours of per sonal kindness—for it' wag no kindness to me—but sis a matter of justice to the unfortunate men who were robbed and •ruined by Mr Seward's proteges The tronble is that your decision, or rather your refusal to decide, places me 14 situation where I may be compelled to do what your (*counsel cannot and ought not to do Thte dispatch says the whole subject is bpfors einagreee I think if Mr. Seward takes that tact lie will do you a great injury I repeat whet I have said before—that I have the most implicit faith in the law and justice of your defence to the impeachment. ao,d l I believe it will lee presented with abili ty which can leave nothing to be desired. I am - p erfectly sure that ,ourcase In not one whit injured by my retirement from It. " I are with great respect, yours, &et , J. B. BLACK I(irExoellenay A. Jostasom. MAceu 24. 1868. —• Radical organs are trying to con vince the stupid portion of their readers that the fievoleason Is a lhatooratio 'or gan, because it denounces Grant as a +mallard and • eharlatate. Their only proof in support ef"thb ,statement is that ooples of the paper have been circulated under Cougresenean—lirook's frankness. The Ilevolostion is under the management pf Mrs. Cady Stanton, Susses B. Mahe- Anat. Waltman, sad other radleal Mcale, end they reprostmt all that is left of the Radical party priwitipies. One of the firm was lately is Washington, Whlii• A" so doubt lead quite a number of cassalesre of bath. parties asides oontri hattnn for .frstilui, es several copies of thip organ have reaeltid thle olive ander tla6 autograph 6f Baikal nien,h6re.— Agkehanye. A Esser Loio. Enforced Negro linErs, the Freedeoin`i Bureau, git /Maud hog A ,eoeting eggniede of Ow Mead red Mill r outs pee mid*, sod w , Nstlooal Debi of Titres Thonesod Millions 9fgoi lsrs. (leeks, grant is to pull this 'load through the great Presiesstial emuapaiga. Bedford Oaten , The National Banks Why should not the National Hank eir• isolation be retired and eubstituted with greenbscha I It is generally conceded that sre are not preparetriust now to return toepettile, payments. and 00,_ the_ ctrculating, me dium of the country eh6bhl not bereduc ed The circulating medium does not probably exceed $700,000,00, Or thin, nearly.. $100,000,000 greerkttacks• and postal currency, and about $3OO,- 0,10,000 in National 'Yank paper. True, the amount of gold in the coun try is of conaidertable importance, but It Iv generally 11, anted up 111111 proof ically of no value to the people for eorninercial parposes. AE a circulating medium the legal-tenders, commonly called green backs, ate just on exceptable to the pee le as the Notional Dank currency;il not morn 00. These gegenbeeks do not eon the peo ple any intereqt The reverse ie true of the National Bonk notes. Ne}tler specieitni raper is money Tile greenback., represent money in one tense , that is, they are promisee of the Government to pay money: They are notes on time, without interest, and answer a very good purpose as a• substi tute for money in the alli.elaco of that very desirable commodity. ttn this contrary, the National Bank notes are not even the repreaentatives of money. They are the promi.es to pity, founded on other promiees to pay ; cred it toioldcd on credit. The farmer or mechanic who is on for: tunate its to have 4, NO in National Bank notes, may npply in vain sit the counter of the in.tilution for their payment. The holder might apply at the martin - et of half a dozen of banks and not find geld rootlet to redeem his Slf - til hill If COUrge t he hank would redeem it paper , ltut litm, and in what manner' Not with money, not "with silver and Fold snit precious mimes, 'hut with oili er bills qf credit, Thai is the farmer or mechanic wha presents iiiwnelf at the bank's counter with .his Dam+, simply ex changes them for othior notes. There is no money in the transaction It in all credit It is plain, ihererore,tital the National Bank currency has no advantngen over legal tenders—greenbacks—hut is at. Septic] with thsadypnl ng, • There is in ci,culstn , i, here, $300,600,0071 oo National currency, which is represented, founded upon, and secur e d by about s33o,oeo,uini bonds.-- [nese bonds bear six per cent interest to gold, ,The interest specie, therefore, would be about $21,000,000 Let us see the pructieal workings of the system. The hank deposit their V 260,000,000 of bonds and receive ' ln tarn perm•ssion to issue thereon ;315,000,000 of their own notes. These notes are loaned out to farmers, mechanics, laborers and others, who become borrewers on inter est The banks time mate a fuse per & en their own promises to pay In addition thereto, they receive from the Government $21,000,000 in gold as in terest on the bonds deposited as collet crabs for their own paper Hut the Government has not the gbh! *herewith to pay Ibis, in erect, and In Gooses - newts toe banks receive their equivalent in nurrenoy, which, at the usual rates, would be about $30„000,q0,) This enormous wan is paickta a premi li urn In 'abbot:cid the pri•elegil of issu• tog paper money for a circulating medi um The bank* receive the totereet h 0 pap. it ? The people—the great working,sod predueiog ditties. The people pay the • • fax- tlxit uare.aL /bats ae• • -awl to addition thereto to pay thew knutkally 30,0110.000 in currency. RR h 'ode le thin right If not right, can it not be avoided ? The people in their honest eimplicily think it can. ' Tkey believe That the $300,900,000 of National Bank currency might he, and of to be retired--withdrawn from cir Crulsrion and greenback/. substituted Thu would ,tetire the bonds upon which the National Bank paper ta fouuded, and stop that amount of interest. Nor a it a small matter to sa•e abe people $30,000,000 to currency every year. Under Democratic rale the affairs of the Federal Government might be ed ministered for $75,000.009 per annum outbid• of interest This •ast earn of thirty mahons saved in-the single item of interest would bo atom' to two fifths of the entire ordinary expenditures of the Government If tbfs thirty millions were still to be etPlleeted front the people in the shape of taxes it might be applied to lb. re Zlomption oflbe other bonds, cud thus would the great and ctushing national debt be gradually reduced Of course It is not to the interest of the bondholder to hove this idea cagtied into practical effect. It is his Isotioy to draw kis thirty millions of dollare annually from the Government as interest, and then draw from his patrons thirty millions more for acoomulodations, and at the same time bare his. bonds free from tax ation Thus be receives from the Gov ernment nine per cent. in Ourrency as interest on his bonds ; dials he receives from the people to whose he loans his credit about eight . per seat, more, and in addition, is relieved froia about ibree , er cent. tax on his bonds, making his aggregate galas end profile about twenty per nest. This, of course, livery inter eating te him . But bow moods the case with ihe pen. pie who are Ike producers aid who arc likewise the puler. of this 20 per cent. What de they mike ? W here hi glee , 20 per bath. -- - • They toil, sweat, dig, from the first gray streaking (dais morning till shades of evening throw a deep covering over the great, and to them the weary porld, satisiled. yea, .thilultfulli that goal and Nay are kept together. There is no 20 per coat. for theta. Saturday clads, it may be, the week's With and terthoith. It likewise claim their ledgers, and !Implies their purses. The street prattling babe may dance In `MuPon that hiberer's kith., hod fondle to his tired arms, bat no 20 per cent. is them. He retinal, seek quiet and re. pose i. the arias of •hiaturs'e sweet re efer)", - he will dot dream of 20 per c at. •N . son of toil, °lotting arms, and stole Marts anti honest purples*, think of thoos things,—Do Ledotr. Subscribe for - ant Weloilis t en and iget the best sad West news. A "Venerable" Blasphemer Tho Tribune read,' Mr. Nelson, Qui of the President's infunael, a very solemn leeture for his "free use Of the nage of the Deily" In him plea fog hie orient, In- Tonne tl,ts °tender that rein ibis pert of the omntry we do not mike thus °heap and lemma - the most sinful — 6T - nillins," and inittgeste that, in• fuinro"Addend to bistpruy hog in private." rt is• 'quite poveihie that Mr. Nelson to *skins the Divine annietance to enlighten the Until bal Senalorn Of the impeachment may have earned Om retort which was made to .Moinvider Pope by the link boy whom that pnreimonious hard rebuked with an old-fashioned imprecation for demanding more than his legal fare "Tout shall have hut ei it pewee," gnoth t he poet...ond mend me!" -1141 i moat you ° ' retorted the'lin't boy, scanning wiHt eentemptueum eye the poet's twisted and uncanny shape; "tied mend you' He'd miter make mix tin" mei:" 1 But awe were hoping against hope fur Mr Selina to look for any operation of heavenly gracettpou such nature+ 'as those of the Drakes and Sumner+ before him,what has the Tribune to any of the fash iAn Which its own favorite-"statesman:' the "venerable Tbaddeue `Steven," thinks it propel for au old man tottering upon the verge of the grave, to speak of the founder ,of Christi This scurrilous and blasphemous septuagena rian actually dared to describe what Ito spoke of tot —Andrew Johnsou'a treason to the party that elected lint — +a bring "baser tlitit the . herrayal by intlita Is cariot ," and this 6n the express ground that treason to the :ittv tour of wank Ind was n alight ntatter,on the whole Herr ore the very.worda in which Oils ropul sive romparken it 1110 r—words which the 7'rtbutte re-publi+hes in full, without ; one word of rebuke tor their autoor •'llaiter than the betrayal by Judas Is Carl nt, ,rho be'rayed only a single indwid waif That Mr Stevens has a perfeot right to treat Christianity with contempt. and it• founder us "oil) an individual," we do not contest We maintatn in matter. religious, in ill Iliattere prttllcii. that Saeeell right of private nionloti which thu TrtGatir :.nil Thaddeus and their I'ol lOwers WI bitterly execrate, and sc9l: ro viudi , li.tely to trample iu,it of life ;tit/ the wt-t of the Aniel ican pvr.ph e h+.4 ,king het, icao Senate to a e.1`11! ,to I tla the impeaelim,,t I t I'/i• • dem i ster , tt not to good only, hot to decency, to ninon from open and iii•olent they al l the things and the tiani3l which are held sacred by millions or I i leneW-elli sen•. The Radical Mansgern among• t ben t hove contrived in the course of tblel lamentable exhibittud to violate pretty much every canon of thetoricAl propro• ty, and every principle both of the com mon law and qe tuition. But thin old-man 'videos, h..- fileattleill feagues,and In u-e his own graceful Inn guage,uttercil by way of au argument to make Senfttorm vote ns he wished ilium tn, he ha 4 finally "fling himself on the gibbet of everlasting obloquy "— World Negro Suffrage Many good men who were upon lain ciplee, opposed to negro suffrage thought two years ego, from the power of the Radical party and the earnestneen with which they urged the claims of the blre'ke that it was a more summon of lime, that al 110 me future clay, two years or ten, that plank of the platform would become the popular one OppoStd_ne they were to Oret measure yet feeling that. •oioe yf the people won the volte of God," they were walling to ' , acorn, their own con•icti , ,tis of right to the wit. of that people, and al though neither willing to forestall, nor h e forestalled to, the ultimate result, wore yet ready to submit to it an a fore grope conclusion If, they argued, uni versal suffrage in the choice of tlle peo ple of the United States, if as everythiug seems to indicate, we are being drifted and drirtn and „unpelled to it—why not at code niihmit —why nqw oppose that resietless tide we see pouring in upon tie!, It is useless to tie to attempt to slay that which must and will be—and quiet ' and graceful submission seems to us to be but what would be required of us as good and law abiding citisene. lint how have their anticipations been met Ilse this hold and deftabt party made good: their bottom that Negro Suffrage would be the rule and opposition to it the exceptlon ! Although In possession of all the strongholds of Government, of Federal end State patronage. brining male one or all the means God and nil tore ',Sneed in their-hands.' the answer conies, an emphatic no Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, Indiana. (,'onneeticeit e Chit fornia, Wisconsin, l'eona/Praths, all the Stales wherein is allowed II free ballot, where the question has been directly or indirectly involved, Hey no. BO what say our Wadies) Hump at 'Washington Nu matter what you of the North want, we will have the negro rote In the South We must do it Our only hope of per• patuat ing our party and power lies in the osegro. We will diafransbise the white men clad enfranchise the 'black in the South ; and thus secure ocreeiree in at least ten of the States. iley do not heed the rebuke that came to them from their cOnetituenoles, more eoatbipg and-nutting than eler dessagoiptebaffia received. But the oowardi that they are • will foroe upon a prostrate peopte.that whtch the7'and their comfit- Ulnae inditsnaatly refused to take 1.4)011 th . emselvec—ifolews County (O.) Farm er. —A prominent. "Republican," pi Pennsaylvan la, whoitas abandoned the /support of the Rump 052 s:—"Derooerat mistake it they sewed that those Re publhans who are cooling over to their ranks want a soft potioy. We who liars hift the Radical party do not want to step anywhere near Its policy. Let the old Democratio party strtkp. the chord that is popular with its own ancient hosts, and we shall fall in, to stroll the throng." That, we are sure is the Irrel ing of every intelligent !'itopublicaor who Ilse mode up h)s ntinkto vote, "lib the Democrats. IL tha7 game -1 • 13 tti Democratic potty, , ,to 4 494 1 • Runip disorganises*. and 'they ors not, so weak all not to see that the true pelt. Djs lee them to go oisan over to apt mocracy, Instead o( !tying to (peso Democracy to fall half way bank to ntima. thew I Results 'of Nirm'aehment Before ibis number of the Defy Book Ireaohes our distant nubseribere, the ye- Ignite of the trial of the President will be made known. What tjLei will be. Ap man ern prediiii with any more certainty (than the itelions of la Natalie may be en itelpeted- - Wet °nit ,know —that all do.. penile upon the Mose of party expediency which may be Opermost in the minds the mongrel Majority of the Rump at the time the vole its taken l'artyjrperhenev, not law and Justice, will rule the, deeli ton. Nobody. not even the Monre'S themselver,"Ltalk of a dictstun acooriling t o 'l o w and evidence " In canvassing the probabilities, almost, the ouiy con sideration 4aamed. iv , “the effect upon one party in the Preeidenttal election " This is all the law there to in the Glen Some of them questlen %Weber Andrew' Johnson, roamiug all over the country. malting speeches, and getting up eym entity among,the people, would not do them niece damage in the PreJidenlird canvass then ho p f oneibly could if nllowed t o N imaiii in the White IlOtise to 1110 end of his trio heiiitate to put old lien . tads- in Johnson's id ice, for fear 'ho will tine its pat voting° solely for him self, and to the detriment of other nspl• rants Ilut not one has any thought about the law We hear in 11. e tily pa pore specillationa about the course of certain no-called "Conservaliir" Alting• rels tat the Senate, Mit 't here ore no such men to the Senate uf that privy. Some may have more judgment, or are less .ri mile-than nillere, hltt —Coneerentire" is not 3 word to apply to any of thrue 're volutionary fetatiee Griinel fir , wit gatte ru crow and 1ii 0 11 , .11 . its teen like Sumner wed 1,314.. They only possibly he shrew ed enough to d end the wild, popular reaction which might follow !hie oxiiii`aLon or Johnson. , , out iftor t' vote airtinsteii:.V:ollooli will l oot he from ri.ateon, hint (turn t, , itabiy in another coil ad (roll r manner than the madder majority are capable of doing Anil thin is all the ground Johnoon and hia friethla have to rely upon for the hope of ei.c . tpc from mete of c3nvielton Ile and box law yers hove been all the time pitching on in the dark in this porticulitr So Jar, its their at guments oi«,1 the public mind' they I— cn useful, and (nay haveigiven s.itne of the less crazy to lurk, under it dread of po oailsr indignation, but :hey have heen. lillterly Its to any sheet they have 11,4,,1up; , •,711) of ilia Seri ale There Is not a Sellator who does not kuow that the whole trial is n Luce, fn t ot, vn,i iilull I,f Law and.justlce. is a political 13(1411bl:1,3, Mill in our ,up town should hove been an frelirvi Jlr .1011119 , Hi . t; ColluNti it w , n well to give ttne legal argument, but they have gone further, and boldly thundered, into the earn of the Saner* mid the putr lic the reel nature of this etnpendoun crime of anetuptieg to Ptirlilie.,_dowtl i executive branch cf (hi Federal Governl meat, and thereby overthrow the last guarantee of liberty and -law In America In modern days no het of ndvocatee have had such an opportunity for the display of masterly, overpowering eloquence sal swan given Mr, Johnson's attorneyx„. It was an aces RlOll to call forth thaistupepid oust eloquence which once fulminated over Greece and shook the throne of Macedon Demosthenes never had suet' an opportun ity for the display of that terrific power which thunders and lightnings in the face end eyes of tyranny, crime and usurps. tion. But unfortunately for Mr John son and the country, all of his attorneys were what 'hi called "Conserrativea." that is logical go-betweens, whose fru-envie power otwietglated by political errors. half way in harmony with the monstrous principles of the Mongrel Senate. This accounts for the mortifying fact that, in this whole triio, we do not hunt a single burnt of eloquence worthy of such an occasion. Do the part of the “Maria gets" there is nothing hut the stealthy 4f/operative verbosity of - COl3l/Clutl, criminals pleading for known criminals, and the part of the defense, have legal skill and dignal, we do net , find a mile° gush of that, startling and' crushing appeal whirl' naturally springs from a brain inspired with a burning sense of assaulted liberty and ruined i civilization. What a picture the whole ' 'trial presents ---$1 pioturti which will be I gazed upon-with amazement, not to 'say with Morro., by all future generations' ore whole branch of the rederalgo•ern moot which can lay any claim to be sot ,ing anywhere within the limits of the ICoustitution is on trial before it co tat-til -1 'nate branch, which is confessed to be wholly outside, and in violation of the Constitution And yet, in rebuke of this stupendous usurpation, this damna ble crizae,"we food no eloquence rising above that of the ordinary courts of lair, where a simple question of ejectment, between some John Doe and ittoberil hoe. Is being argued by a couple of feed attorneys Ttlis whole trial must piles into history as a disgrace and an ever lasting shame to the generation in which we live.—Day Book --We believe that there are some radioale who ooneefentionsly believe that the Sabbath day should be kept neiy, The majority of these gentlemen are in favor of Gen Grant for the Presidency at least they say so. To such we com mend the following dispatch, which we find in the Pittsburg Advocate, • radical paper, and from it they can see what their political ohieftsiu and the leaders of their party generilly thibk of the day that they believe oughtto be kept Holy. ) , Puttanstrwta, May 4:—Clan'l Grant tv fie in the city yesterday [Sunday May a, 1868,1 spent the entire afternoon in private consultation with ex-Governor Curtimand • few' prominent republican politicians. it ilreportml that Grant ex pressed it as his opinion that Curtin would be the Vice Presidential nominee at chit:ago, and hence the visit. The above no "copperhead" slander it comes from radical source,. liar, much whisky 01112 Grant, Gov- Curtin and the "few prominent republi can politicians" devoured on that Sab bath afternoon, this correspondent did not telegraph isuitrwelik (0) Oareft. —The Dentooraoy have married the municipal and town eletitions_in- more than time-quarters of the Wile of Ohio, where the mongrels headed their tickets "Great tied Tiotory." 8011 the prospects of Grant are good for the biggest sort of a rowing up Hale Riser.. Gunboats of mu saved his bacon,dorlng the wart and next time Sale Rriver mums will come to his resoue.—Day hook Democracy vs. Radicalism „ True Itemoornby, in our country, can mean nothing more than n strict adhe rence to Ille,lptrit and .inseam` of the written tAtistitution. Those men wb o constantly eupport It, aro Demoorate, whether they oall thrinselvo• an or not. Conscrentireitepubifenns. itt: Idle tithe, 1 eitnnot hope to retake any headway ntre jut.. Radical misrule and national political ruin, except by uniting with what is called the Dmoorniic organitntion,in op posing tile Radical Itepittbrieon patty. Ail those welt who rustain that potty in 1 their outrageous and unlawful /Theme'', 1 are rent radiettle- nothing more or leer.' Radicalism. under the 'eldership 01 tinsel tipu lons demagogues, 'iris allied it selt to proscription, to tyranny, ten de spitting of the American Constitution, ttt no utter contempt of the people,unti Mimi le to Ilto illegal and complete usurpstiot at all national power and its centralisa tion tn 'the hands of n few men congre gated ithe Oily of rititshingion. 'tad icallein, eons no good to the people sk s.v.‘ It means good to tieltniu leaders null their true ling Ealcllitem. It means n p preesive and unjust 'rotation. II means a standing army, costing millions upon millions to keep tho people in order ; thu ter), peoptc who labor nod pay the taxes 'fur this haeo purpoLo. IL means /1 4 corp tenipluous spurning of our tittered Cort• etittilion, nod ihe I,roing of nrgroes up on ys contrary to nil reason and common decency. It tnosho 11)0 de3pollo will of a few, .ietitcg la di +regard of the lawn will of lie aunt nitypyi imy in the United State' Demoernts.vilien they Phall ngmn- re %time the eonitul Of our ~111 waft] :Atkin+, IxLll lausg Lack tha gave-111410A to Ira 'yrtriptr normil condition, with . dire, ' Forme. r e Llll,l branch... c1111 , 1•411,,Z, ng before', of she Ow Executive, 1111,1 1110 .141- , rich g, , verar 4 ith,41 . 1 by fombho t rital liw which crelic 111011 ttp•ro a eeduOilinn of ihn army awl navy, mat:lndy, to a peire '13114,11,1, and to an econvol eul xdoliei,.trati, n ihroititholit. T.Zee Ileptl. I,p ;1,111 torhilegbiyaealy, Ow faithful folfillmett of every Anerr4 notional obligation. 111/alsr nod duly 111+0 deinanu,llllo, nu more Iban lbe hood 51titTi be fotred Upon the peOpte l'llo rawi.r.l4 all over brOaki la nd or.•, nl heart, nqinrilly ilerrioernt%, And thry are the men Trim pay the lace' Nam!. iriny, 11,0 in. a of we:dill pay n la rge prorotlioli , Lnl Wiat L 11141001 1 ,11111 led rind 41144 aliv4.,otcpriiititute tiAtional wealth, but the 14b.r of the Inkling mil- 14111111 11 the taxe.l corn- finally from labor i'il: , /eiv l'i'ar. The PrOfoundost Speech of the Age At a sat:cling, in New Grenada, South gentleman semmithe resident in ilto United States, expressed the hope hat the ndopt . ieri or k,,i;rltii, ioetitu tion., would The, rotittnbis on n level or Jai the greet Itoptiblic of North A meri ca. /le was himself 12immartly by thirrol'ow tog speech from a full re constrrietedXfolumblan wo quote from the Panama Star Mr , In prop,sing that we should adopt North American institutions, In order that we may rank *monot the most civilized nations of tie world, IMF WINO Is merely ferunting a volgariem against which I do mart solemnly pro. lest. We are represented as an unci v il. fined people , but, air, if to du what. the Americans have done, is in be civilized, then, we are eiathsed ; if to Lev« done helore them ig to he ahead 'of them, then we are :it the head of civilization For what do the American.; boast of They have but recently abol.ahed 'lay cry , we h've atu,1,0, , 1. shivery log ago- They hove poet proc ;tinted the equality of r.tc•e, and are trying to hold up the negro we hare ;reclaimed that equalft3t and held t.p the negro long ago They hate only finished their civil war rendered money cc tree nod made a pa per dollar not worth a dollar We have had dozen , of civil worn ; have rendered money scare, and tootle paper dollars not wortlta dollar long ago. They arebe ginning to tear np their constitution, inn peach then. Preenlent, set up dtctstors : we have done all long ago They ore at last going to the deed are host as they can , we hare gone to the devil long '4s° RADICAL MATURLAL.-WC are told that 8co•toe Tipton of Nebraska was a minister of ' the Gospel—entered the army as chaplain of a regiment raised by General Thayer, bie colleague --that he is about fifty years of age—of sancti monious garb- - ireeps his heir combed hack over his heed —has a low forcheatl, sharp nose, and a mouth like a bulldog That in si speech last year on the ihdtan question, "be proposed to oiler a premi um for scalps as a means of putting clown the savages." • Such wolves in sheep,' olotli log are the very material to teach the doctrines of hate and murder ; and of such inste ps' is radicalism composed, to s very I Meat extent •And yet wo find soot men of good intentions, with honest hearts, who will allow themselves to be gulled and lead by such bulldog mouths and murderous hearts, viinply because they can tillnd their eyps• b; ;elllog "down with the copperheads and up with the negro." 0, that ors would reason, and in place of aliuwiog abc spirit of beta to govern, would cultivate more spirit of love —Ex --The Bpriagfirld, pbio, Adverhier, a Radio:Al concern, says I the Grant biog raphy, by Ida fattier, "le nauseous to up, and we think it will do h a ts to kin dle enthusiasm for the hero of tbb Wil d . There is no use in trying to figure the General Into genius. We hare known many a boy who could ride • male well. Riding • mule does not qualify a Ran for President. Foolish Bonner would much better bare allowed old lather Grant to remain rottoent " —The No! York Foot Moak an tar) confesses that the New Nampehtre and Conneettout elections ought to show Ito party "that they bars not, with the• last year, grown In the god oploion Of Ilse dowry." It may say the fame of the thoeties44_ every Wester. Beate. The Mongrels In COlllOlOllll food Ws truth to ouch a degree that they writhe with the venom of viper.. The Republican Party The New York Triune of a recent dal e SiOninins the following ridiculous pima gteph : ••The laws of d od end Humanity make 1110 defeat of the ItOlitibltean party its possible." .t Upott this subject }L• Nswoaetie Ohem, pion slip, to paint 0 picture of John thi a ilepilet ae ry radical member of Congress drawing 'up imponohment result:liner would be equal in truth, if not in 'pro fanity ! Let us eets.what the Ittpublieqn ptri y has done to merit divine protecilon It has inn brief period of eight yrarq mode onilte valuelees by putting withug prutirete into flit officen, and ty cram. ming them down the throats of unwttling aril protecting milbonc. It has lowered the standard or eit tree t.hip in eleven Steles by forcing Negro suffrage by arms upon an unarmed pie It ban lowered the standard of genet A l 0 " l e l by the moet debasing public prAt t ' It ha., by n practical sanction of 'lc lin,wledged lenders, caused looncnel,4 rptiraln,'and quadrupled prostitution! It bee murdered thousands of truu fuer, and burdened the 'country wql, cru%hing debt which neyer can or will be paid! - it bolt roortgagea every workingthoo form, foetus, DAM!, and body to sutur e gohieit Itibute to Its chosen few Is linS utier)y destroyed the diufteitiry partisan projnilicen and [it t • o nni lintes for Inw, rtnii party nialig ofthry 'for jubl ker.! li h:tp made the poor Inhoring twin 4 nlitvlittucl the rich thavibultior thn• ;el ! It Lax o~tuLlishcd 6ilitary desputt.ri I over Suiot le . lll CIIIZCIIM ut I/UW:I tet I r e; . lottml puttee: In loud IC hag, been guilty o: ev, ; ry crwle in Helps black calendar, and — even nit he face of the lying ,in,,tn'ion that head this article, it in denylng itv do g 's dealt] Its deal is Ineyitahle,nini Ilia only pievfion iv the tnanni.r 01 t ; find eat( front the light of heat the pimple do not rise in angered n,•,) I y and had it borne to lin (oilier, ilo• nionvtrons thing mil flOOll 1.1110141 to tile corruption and slime of ire own err it , lllo--a violin] of its own lepriFy —by disease of 'III, own inception. drawn front the Arcb•fiend, nouriabed by Uteely brotight to ntaturily unit dragged to iiv grave by lie present leader. - Fort.oetti Congress. . Political rine:Tut A tuil-blood African looks tic if but ticae had beep cut off, and yct Ito Annelle I ome of the female abolateniata, alt o expect to repose is Abraham's bosom, grieve that Abraham tati't, a negro. Mr Cur, of the Oregon Jlerabl.rbo to 1110 tlltterat. as 4a spell bls 1141111 e - e-r-P, it on, of the moat insolent Itadtc4l.l to that State Almost every Southern negro would like to here an many eyes as Argue to see things to etent,and as many hood," a t Btiareus to steal them with 6 .A. Georgia paper speaks of the' •cfDu dn of negroes" in that State. These, we take are what the poets oall "fleecy t' Oen Grant keeps his month abut because he has !termed that heti:Lauver opened It to fitly gaol purpose. he is sp ter to learn than stolid people generally ore ' show me a conservative," said& Rad ical to a Democrat, "and I wilt ehow you a traitor. or a dupe." . .Oh. certainly, la% I allow myself to you, and yoU tame roiesel( to me." Mime, negro slavery is abolished iti the South, negro-whipping will goes on there A negro member of the Georgia Senate wee whipped the other day by au other negro tremendouslp The reel policy of those who w9tild make theldnited States bonds payoble in gold is simply this: To letdown the puldto debt at a thousand m iittons inur e than it legally to in order to guard against the repudiation of a , What a curtoue adaptation of means to ends ! Mr. A. T. Stiehl% the New 1 ork met , obant,writes all the way to Ohio lbw toe voice is "4411 for Grant " lies be tele graphed it to the governments of the Old World? If he has not - re should do it at once, for they take considerable interest in the political fortunes of ibis country Campo fps Dryesi. KAMA:ALM( a RXrUDIATiON. - -A 11 over this vast, country the cry of repo citation is being raised, and the man who avows it, or the press that 'advomitss it, is bailed as a publia benefactor. Why ! Because le toiling milluott I are oppretteed under Radical laws that screen the rich and „favored few, and they can see no other end of It•lical power than through• the destruction of public credit and general bankruptcy It le lamentable, but true Yet, to-dos. there icanyot be found one man among the'RadiOal ,lenilars,'bouent or otherwise, who 'emus to care how quick the otholo, fabric of paper money, bonds, and 40,1 shall be levelled to the ground, If only Radical powar be main to Wed. • Let the people nod the men who have money_ and property and bonds answer if the loss of throe thousand millions of Ware, In addition to the lose of free 'government, li not paying too dear for te 00E014000 of Radical rule.—llobnet County (0.) Farmer. 4, ----The Radioed howl about themYth teal Ku Klux Klan is merely to drew public attention from the nightly tree , &Doable dotage otlne Radical secret or• ganisatlens. sir lies now are simply a revamping ophapigihey told about the ()olden Cirol hich we verify believe never hYd ei , k . letentee. Keep an e 76 612 the mongrel. at night, They are fel lows who have not manliness enough to set "above board" individually, 6 " hence league themselves with 'secret oath for dirty work.—Exchange. —,—=When the-Mongrel Convention was called to meet in the city of Chicago, was thought that they would assemble in a ally ruled by their Radical breth• ten. lint the people of that oily have returned to the god of their fathers, and 'Mauvelism will And Itself in the ttareP of the enemy. Chicago, like every other plum where Oita man love their rate, has been swept by a most complete Dem ocratic revolution.—FAchangr. •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers