The Dej-04rati.Watchman, BELLEF'UNTE, TENN'A. P. GUY MEEK. 'EDITOR ti. PROVIVISTOR Jaan P. MITCHELL, ASSOCIATE BDITOR FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 19,1868 'TERMS.—i2 per ;car when,,p4idi in ad vance; 2,50 when not paid in advance, and 43,00 when not wild before the expiration tke year. Democratic State Ticket FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, LION. CLIARLES L. BOYLE of Fayette Couuty FOIL SURVFFOR, OHNIMAL, OEN. WELLINGTON 11. ENT, of L'biumbi• County. Demootabio County Committee The llemoorittio County Committee tfc Centre County will meet in Bellefonte on FRIDAY, JUNK 19th, MIS, at 2 o'clock P. M. A general attendance of thn member* Is requested, are butfiness of Importance 'will be laid before deem The following ere the mimes of the mein here et .he *finding Committee appointed by the lett County convention- Joseph Wilson—Banser ; R, Johnpon—Boggs ; B Veid6.ifiq Birneide , Devid Brickley— Crirtin ; .11,hu Errp , —Forguso* , R R Doek—Oregie; Fred. Kurtz-.-Ilailfea. W Cruse—Half Moon , Frank Brown-111'0.th NliChael Packer - Howard ;_Antob Kline-- Iluston , T. S Lingle-I,l4serty , J. S I:rine—Marlon ; Y S. Bier Dr. Jobn M. Mr.b—Dutton ; D. A. Af miser —Penis I). R. defile— Putter ; Jo,. 1911 fiessis-LRush ; 'Jae. Bedding- Snow ✓3hoo Spring; Jaeob Snyder-- John Sweeny- Taylor, Jacob Kepler--I'bilipcborg Win) Umeo•dle T. 010•11 Jacob Putt Rgru ve —Milestourt: Jamey Wb iteman —Howard borough , JOHN II OItVIS, Chairman Twenty Millions More 1 Not content with the taxes now lev ted the peeple.;_het satiaSed with taking-from tke laboring masses and giving to the b r ondlioldor; twenty. five millions of dollars annually , not satisfied wish the , speculations of national hawk controllers, the leaders of mongrelietu ip the U. 8. &nue, have introdsced a bill authorizing the issuing of twenty millions more of na tional bast currency ° Upon this amount of "proteiht to pay, - th . at is placed is the hands of government bondholders to loan oat, at six.eight, ten or twelve per . cent.—they reeiev lag the prafrts—the people of the •otantry who pay the tales -the far mers, mechanics, laborers and mer chants— pay over nor hundred and for ty-six Maas /2 dollars interest, annu a* whiah gees into the pockets of the fiumied few, who have bought tax-exsnuptcsl bonds and deposited theta in the Treasury of the gent ral Government, SU security fcr these bask totes that are to ho issued for them to speculate upon National bask notes are nothing but the representatives of the tax exemp ted !ands. They are, plainly speak ing,oothing but a swindle based upon a swindle, apd sae of the most gigan tic swindles ever 'perpetrated upon any people. The whole polity nanceering as adopted by those in power, has been to benefit, the rich and oppress the poor. Tho govern ment derives no advantage from it: ; the people as a massare taxed double by it, and the public debt ix daily in creasing, instead nf If the patty giow..ostiteollior the affairs of this government, desire to increase the volume of currency in t'le country, why does it not issue legit tenders, or "greenbacks," as they are properly called, instead 4f nations bank notes The people have to pay no interest on the former, while they aro oomiielled to pay au exiinekiitant interest on the latter—a double inter est we might say—one on the bonds upon whioh these notes are baseil,and anodise Oa the motes when go t out of the bauks they arejteld by. It would jut be as easy for the government to issue "greenback-CI" to the amount of the bends represented by these na tional bank notes, as it is to ishme them ; they would cost the people nothing but the printing orthent,and nave to the tax- payers over twenty-five millions of dollarsaenually. 13 t this would not put money hi* •the eta of the rioli fast enough I It Would not furnish the few who sPecilatevp. on the necessities of the government an opportunity to fill their long pur ses. It would not build up that aria tociloy of wealth, that mongrelism has labored ao assidoodulf to oitab dish. It would in &small way sad to _lt certain extent, be doing indict) by the maim!, and that is precisely what throe in power luiVe to idea .n.f do Tiorniy millions more ! - One hundrod and forty-six thous and dollars more, annually, for the toiling tax payers. to earn for the na bobs and shoddy aristocrats! It's only another straw, brother laborer— another bite out of the mouths of our children and we will stand itas patient ly as Job did the boils,and vote fordo men whn aro using us in this manner won't we . Perhaps not Sympathy for Ireland ! The t welfth resolution of dimration alunionrepublican platform upon which the bondholders of the country have placed GRANT and CoLPAx, reads as follows • This Convention deel.tren itself in Yympathy with ell oppressed people drug Wing for their rights. It sounds sweet • to hear words of sy4athy for the oppressid—it is no• hle to stand bravely by tilt . , rights of the down-trodden ; but that Irishman will give mongrelise) any credit for its pretended love for them, is more than we aro ready to believe—just at this time. For a party that only thirteen years ago, burnt the church es, (i,tracist.d and tried to diafran. ohiae the air people for whom it is now so sympathetically resolving, to attempt to secure their favor and seVage, is not only the basest of by pocracy, but the meanest of 7 Do the old Know nothings who con trolled that convention, believe that Irishmen and Germans have no more s evil, than to into power the men whom but a few years ago took solemn oath, to support, defend. patronize and assist, no noes but "Americans by birth ?" Do they be ieve that their cowardly cry 'of "down with the foreigner" ha,' been otten ? Do they think that the taunts and insults heaped upon them, because of birth or ieligion- are to be buried honeath a little flattery or pre tendedk-sympathy,2 Have they, an idea that the honest, hardworking foreigner, is to be gulled into the support of a party that when-it could not prevent their having a voice in the 'affairs or their adopted - govern. nient.tried ti overcome their power and influence by pitting ignorant, de prayed negroes against them? Let Irishmen read t h in hypocriti cal rc4olution and thee remember who Burnt their churches in Philade' CZ MI Drove their ministers from their pulpits Imprisoned Sisters of Chatty ! Called them "greasy minions of the pope of Rome!'' end liteaped every Ina* every epithet, and all the di,gracc that malicioui hearts and venerlloll , 4 lipt, could )uvent, upon them, and then make up-their minds whether they call be bought to support. by a few meaningless words the very mew who thus out raged and insulted them Scum LAR COLFAX', Clue of the men, whom this party, that has now so much sympathy for oppressed Irishmen and down trodden Ireland, has honored with a nomination, was one of the great leaders of Know nothingism in 1R54. His soul is black novrwith the infamous oath he took to rest not until this -country was "purged of papacy and its ad herents," and had he and his co la• borers in the unholy cause succeeded no Irishman, German or other for eignors, would have a voice in the government of this country, not even in the seleetioh of the lowest officer who controls the affairs of the bor ough or township in which he resid es Foreiguer.„ if you can vote for ,the man who in 11154 swore to Alo all in his power to reduce you to a level with she negro --to take Rae ballot froni you or drive you from the soon try, walk up to the polls sad vote-for SCHUYLER COLFAX. It was him and others like him who, hypocritically expressed their sympathy for you in the above r9iolution. We know you too well,--llnow your independence, honesty and honor,- are of to high a character to be bought by any such maudling pretensions. the radical• candidates for Congress in Virginia, one is a full. 41 u oded Congo. and seven of the oth ers are traveling yaokees from New isinglasid. The "mother of states men" will have a beautiful delegation if Ifu MN/fa:TT and BUTTS and UND ZEi wool) and the colored manbers of the natiowaluhionrepublicao party succeed. -141edman's Bureaus—tax-ex empted bonds—higher tax —white slavery—disunion—monarchy and p - litioal damnation is what the man votes for whp caste him ballet for GRANT and COIA'AX:' Grant and the JeWs The supporterir of the Mongrel ticket arc just now trying to explein sway the following infamous order of GRANT, expelling the "Jews as a class" from the lines of his army: lI.ARQMARTRRN 2:313 ARMY CORN!, DKr AAAAA AT ••1 . YRS T Darwin. IMis.. Deoember 17, 1862. [General Order No. 11;) The Jews no a Hass •Inin In every tog ulatom of trade estab lolled by the Treastify Department, aloe dipartteent order's are hereby expelled from the department within twenty four hours (rum the receipt of title Order by-poetcotntnanders. They will Nee that all this aloe' of people are furnished with passes. and required leave; RIM any one retnrning after annh noiitieetion will he a-meted and Irld in confinement until an opportunity otisure of sending them out an prixonera, -finless fur niiMed with permits from St ele belliquar. ten.. No p will be Oven , this people to visit headquarters for the purpose of mating pereonal application fut trade permits. y urtlgr.ur • MAJOR ORNE'RAL GRANT Jour' A. itIAWN4I. A. A. O. • They-find it very difficult task to fur nish a satisfactory explanal of this "outrageous edict. and w e imagine that they will find it equally difficult to induce any jew who respects him self or his religion,• to support the man Rho has thus insulted and at tempted to disgrace them in the eyes of the world Some of their papers Clink they can smooth the matter over, by saying that the order only tifeant to apply t the "mean men of the Jews," and not to them generally. It tlril is so, why does the first sen tence of the order read, "the Jews as a dam violating every regulation of trade &e , are hereby expelled from the department ?" I f it was intend oniy for a 'certain portion of them, why was it wrison so as to iitelbde all persons belinging to that class of people? If it was designed to effect poly there violating the regulations of trade, why does 11 not ,ay so?— ' There no way of explaining it on this ground, for it won't bear an ex• planation; the language is to plain, and the distinction th it Mongrel sup porters,of GRANTlMlkehetweert those "violating the laws of trade," and those who did not, cannot be squeezed out of the order,.for it makes no such distinction. It imply a wholesale ostracism—driving them out _as ."4 Moss" -expelling-ALL because a few, following Or, example set by christian camp followers, were violating the "regulations of trade." tier can it be white-washed, as oth er papers of that party are trying, by asserting that, the order was issued without the knowledge of fittat,rr during his absence—and that the offi cer issuing it "was reprinianded, and the order revoked as soon as General GRANT returned to bin headquarters." If he issued-an order reveling it,why don't these papers furnish it? They could get it among the papers of the department, just as easily as the orig inal order was secured. The fact is, GRANT was not absent, there was no reprimand j aad the order was NEVER REVOKED. As long as GRANT was in corn man l i of that department,Jews sere not allowed to enter the lineupf his army, even to see friends who Tem serving under him as soldiers. ilia hatred of that "class" of citizens, who hate been decided and abused the world over, on account of their religion, is as bitter and malignant as that of a majority of the party that supports him is of any and all classes of foreigners. - —A beautiful fight is just now going on in this congressional district between the diffeieut aspirants for the mongrel nomination for Congress. They seem to fight as bitterly about it, as if the nomination secured the erection, and opened up to their en raptured gaze, the holes into the pnblio„treasury, through which- the preeentati yes of' that party generally stanage to steal enough of the peoples money, to enrich themselves and their debcendants for generations. it d ' t matter much to us `who nweeeeds in the fight, for we intend to beat who ever they trot out,but aa "Urfa ANDY” wants a place and as he didn't hap pen to get to be Vice President, may be he would consent tii; fill STEVII i WILSON'S shoes, if the people of the dif,trietwotild so will it.. Nkaarn NO PLATFORM. —lf the Mongrel party had placed their can didate with each foot newt a skull, a eigar is his month, a bottle of whis ky in his hand, a bitch pup fawning upon him, and a stud horse in tho distance, iy would have made him feel more at home,than upon the platform they have plated under him. It would have been a hippy hit for him, and was the platftwarguitedl to his taste. is said that' the barbers o New York trawl raimd the prioe. of shave ilst the leaders ef the Mongrel party shcitit that-place, to fifty °Ate, in 0 - onset/nonce of the length of their faces, since the arminatkon of Ortitts and the publication of the platform upon , whieh he stands. • When You Can Have If ~/ Who la Colfax 1 • "Let us' film Po;od."—U. 9 . ,'There are hundreds of people S- Such in the closingthroughent the country. who knaw set !once Grant's letter aoeepting the noyainals, no more about Solitrtura . COLFAX, tion of the National thieves,and tax- than toky do about a half hostler at exempted bondholders,2rho.met in a country hotel. Although he has convention, in Chica-g'o on the 19th represented a certain portion of Indi ult. "Let us have peace," Hays the na iu ti ti ) C r ongresa of the United farmer, mechnoiti, the merchant, the States, awl been the editor of a news minor,—"Let oa h ave peace," say , paper from the time -be was old the whey) clam of toiling'-taxed peo _ . enough to chose the wrong that it might lead a affluence,yet, so meagre pie, yllfo are growing stooped under are his abilities, that ho hag never yet the 'weary lead of taxation, that mon• accomplished a single objnet to !a fire] malignancy, and radical turmoils and tronblel have fastened ;mon tract the attention of‘he public gen them—"Let as have peace" bet not orally. True, he hes been speaker such a "peace" as you offer us 0 , of the House of Representatives, .but drunken Hod of crazy fanaticism!— he was chosen to that position be cease he was one of the "ring" of tilt "Peace'' , but not such a peace as you, corruptionists about the capitol. As tanner of hides and murderer of thou sands upon thousands ore& friends Speaker, he has filled the chair, hut BILLY Toon, the speakers page, has and country moo hold out to us !" been the speaker in reality— has done We want '`pease," but will not give all the labor attendent upon the posi honor, liberty and right to secure it. No Sir t We are battling for the ei°n• right and have no compromise to Scouvt.tot wm , never able to do toy thing itu t take care oft is podke t, when make with wrong. If you want "peace," order the,rapscallions who deuvcrit'g so lecture full down and worship. your star, tin- "Across the Continent," and to or sel and title, who aro now co ntrolling, ganize Know-Nothing Lodges, which this, a government established to be business he turned his entire oven ruled by honest mori„ to hear our de- Lion to in ISA. Hero are a couple mends, and heed what we have to of the oaths he took at that time, sap - which we commend to tire earnest at vie of foreigners generally and, Yon can have no peace until get the governuabilt established b y our Catholic friends in particular our fathers I • They will, wry.) to call up a few recol lection4 of' burnt churches, of' ostra cised Irishmen, of imprisoned Sisters of charity, and other little matters, which the partynow asking the sup port of Irishmen, accomplished,' when they became so careful of' their government Here is his platform. In the Cock-loft of the Fixchangel Hotel. South Bend, Indiana, oti the night of the 17th of dune, 1H54, he took the following oath . "lo the presence of Almighty lied and these isitneesan I de solemnly promise and No peace, until a Union of the States is secured, No peace until the negro suffrage that you have granted whereever your power has oxtended,is blotted out,and tho )vhite man• is recognized :as the sovereign and ruler of this republic I No pence until your brutal bayonets are taken from the breasts of bettor men than you, and the gillant peepl• of the oppressed South enjoy the blessings of a free government ! No peace until your thieving bar• 0.10 are abolished, and white men liberated from the burdens of taxation you have imposed upon them,to keep ,lazy, worthless Degrees, and thiciing, depraved officials! No peace until your bondholding aristocracy pays its proportiortuf tha expenses of the geueral goverument ! No peace until every bond you have issued, is taxed to the utmost farth- ing No peace until- the last vosilge of your infamous bastiles are blotted from the land they have disgraced ! No peace until strict justice is meted out to the petty tyrants, who have done your bidding during the past five years ! No peace until the rights of the people, the rights of communities and the rights of States are restored I "No peace until you and the misera ble thieves, drunken vagobo s, and debauched wretches who fill plc of power and gosition, are consigned to the prison houses for which you were intended or driven from tha land you have despoiled and disgraced I We want "peace" but we want our rights more -we love "peace," but not without liberty—we pray for "peace," but it must coins with ju' tine. We have no compromise to make with treaion or with traitors, aqd until honest, upright men fill the position you and your drunken limo- Oates now fill, there can, there will, and there should be "no peace." —The copperhead •iotor iu °moo, over which the rebel sympathltem are crew-- log so loudly. srnounU alter all to but very MM.—Mew-a ExcAssige. We remember of reading of a fel low,. chin deep in the deluge. without a sight of land, and with nothing but clouds and rain, who concluded that it Was nothing but a "little show er" after all. —The Democratic party jut now, Ii PO anaioes tur a realist:OW candidate that it will aceept awybody.—Pau. ?After your own party nominating • man, the principal part. of whose life has been - spent raking bitch pupP,and riding mules in s w oiretis, we should think that decency would dictate si letioe on your part, as to anybody else's anxiety about candidates. —The report of the Secretary of tha Treasury. shows aniserease of ten millions of dollars in the public deb!, for the month of May. Dive doll) in your pockets tax-payers, Mongrel ism will have your last three cent scrip, *ad when it row out, it. will "go for" your "niekles." the Aires Missouri delegates to the- general ttemeoratie Conreittion, are PLIDLITOM men. Mirsoari, like Pennsylvania, ,goes is for the pare stripe , / • -Over throo-fbirdia of the Penn sylirmia delegates are' Psnouirom pan, and •foar•eitha of the sassosirof The party th this date are prayiiit fOr his nomination. swear that 1 wiliniut vole, nor giv• coy in ritience,ii airy matt fo r any tylire in the gift of t e people, unisex he tie an A merican born rithenon favor Au:tem:lane ru ling Amer lea, nor if Aelit n Roman Coeval's " "sitoorin D/RG az r.." thi presence of Almighty (sod 'and thesis illnesses I do solemnly and sincerely swear, if it may be legally does. l Will.Wilken elected or appointed to any official station eonferring on me the power Undo so,- remote all forrilmer•, mien. or MINIM n th ,, /1 4. • from othee-or place, and that j will if. Co ra te appoint .ucA to any itAre or place in nay yJt Foreigners and Catholics will see in these oaths the - evidence of the sympathy, this candidate for ViCe President has for them. It is over whelming aint it? How ungrateful for any one who happened to be born outside the limitz , of this "the best government the sun +0 •er shown upon,"to turn his back upon Co IYA X -- to refuse to support him, after all that he has done and promised for them I Peabody Set in the Shade The "Widows and Mingle Womens Home," at Trenton N. .1 will no douhteast its influence for the Kangv roo tickot, in consequence of the obli gations it is under to BCIRTYLEtt COL FAX for his eminent efforts in its be half About a month ago that insti tution needing money very badly, wrote to 111P,got.rikx, asking him to deliver a lecture for it, the proceeds of which were to be used especiallyto purchase Monte additional bedding for the orphans department. The would be vice president consented, and ip due time went on to Trenton where? he had been extensively advertised, and drew heavily (?) a house amounting to rb07.23. The next morning before leaving the city, he was called upon by tbo managers of the institution who desired to return their thanks for his labor in its behalf, as well as to pay Vie expenses of i bis trip from Washington to Trenton, -when they were very politely informed by him that he did not live on thanks and duo his price for the lecture was two handfed dollars. ha managers a little non-flusaed, paid over the amount, and returned to the institu tion. with seven dolars and twenty oents left, out of which, gale rent and janitor fees, had to paid. Schuyler went to Washington with the $2OO in his pocket, no doubt aateulatin ho r, many new stars would be- laced in his crown, for bin humanitarian efforts in behalf of the widows and orphans of Trenton One hours work—two hundred dol lars for self and $7,20 for the poor Wasn't this philanthropy? ,Don't it show a big lteatt and noble mind? What's the use of talking of Peabody when we have CoLrax ? Out upon such foolishnem I If Trenton don't oast a unanimous vote, men, women, and children, niggers and all for this benefactor of the poor of that city, What should be the verdict of the World. 0, Philanthropy I 0, Cot,- pAx ! 0, Two hartdred dollars. —An advoo!te" of right—the WAreiimAN. pray $2 per 'year. Judge linn'stfiesigneti3n ' The rumor that has been current for the last two or three year:s, that Judge Linn was going ,to resign jn a very short tire, his been recently ' revived, Stiethis time apparently with more, prospects of its fulfillment, as we are informed that the Judge himself Lae officially Almon - need his intention of resigning in time for en,ciection tkis fall, and - that his announcementS hex ben made in every county of the dis- trict Without deninsing any disrespect to tlie Judge, we state our oatulid 'with( that nothing ciao which he could do would meet such -universal endorsement in the district, as to resign. This has utuloubt ly long been the 3eneral wish of itt peop'e No one now objects or has ever objected, hut a small cabal o r bigot e d fanatics who have no MOM of any official I position, hilt its emolument*, and the control of patronage which it gives. The ideas of this class of fellness tare sufficien tly sieved in the following extract. from an editorial on ibis subject in last weeks I "Pre "The Judgo being sleeted as the Itrpub linen candidate. the lieptibliesne bare a right tu claim that he represent them for the entire term. or that hie resignatiod hi such that it will ensure a represeniatiae of 'their choke in that Ales CPr the entire judt alai term." ' To this ism rep'y. JAL That Judge Linn, in Mit, did not run an the eandi dale of 'he Republica party Ile wee brought out as an inilopend int, no•party eandidiite, by means of a letter It Id relleied Lk, him liy personal friends bolo %nig to both parties. In hie answer to iliat lei ter, agreeing to be a candidate, lie placed himself niprirely upon th oiled tom tho judicial other ehould be kept tree from the control of party -einethinet) and of political organizations Ile was ihus a candidate before tko people, with his "platform of principles" elerr'y weeks before any republican convention met in the district. 2nd lie was not elected by the repub lican pally in the dintrict, for the inogi: p dent reason, that party had not the power either to 1839 nor at any tune, - before an s-nee, uoaided,to elect &judge. Thin in clearly dertionstr4ted by coinpair ing the votes cant in the district for Audi tor General and for President Ju'lge. - WItIOBT C 00311411 0•11111.1 Lien Chatfield 14113 1129 14.:2 1259 Centro 2233 2146 19M 2711 Clintorf• 11190 1224 1516 ,1111/ 5281 4199 4984 5385 1799401 I ' Major !ties 482 481 Thus it will be seen that while Rich - arthion L Wright the democratic c.iodi date fur Auditor flaneral had LIEU ir ity his republtean °competitor Thom as E. Cochran, Judge Linn had 461 over Judge Getrihie in the name eountien, difference of 913. Thin result was not reached by reason or any unpopularity on the point of judge (Limbic the Demo• cratic candidate, but, becomes prominent dtmociats in every mainly of the diet:rid confiding in the avant-atm of ,\lr Linn, and admiring hie prot l •estonal capacity, supported him at; the no-party candi date. 3rd We are sorrow that too many rea eons Lain linen ssixert. 1v authorise the intimation containedin the extract from the .• Press" that fur' nine years Judge Linn has rep ted the republican y orgy on the bench. This is not °lmplant .intary to "his honor," but when his own parti sans allege at, he has no reason to tind fault with us for repeating it And be sides even if his friends denied it, the pe iple could not forget the ranoour mani fested by 'him on many omission :during the lats war toward hole who did not come up to his standard of •illnyalty" to the ••government,":--uuliniltett confi dence in the infalibality of the" late lamented" and his innumerable under strapperai who imprisoned citizent, stole private property and prepftrated every other known outrage ala mode Beast Butler. Nor can they forget in 1868 the Judge stumped portions of this county for the purpose of organising the Infarn• ous "Loyal Leagues" and attempting again to impose upon mistreating dem ocrats, by pledging h nor as a judge and his character its:a:ma , that it was not a party dodge, and that there was no politic. in the movement. • Instead therefore of the fact thatjudge Linn has so far been a "representative of the Republican party" being a reason why helhould not resign the office he holds, it is the strongest reason in tit*, world why he Xhotill, for he well knows that he has held it ever since he com menced deviating from his no-party pot icy,in direct opposition to the wishes of a very large majority of the tleople of the district. We have always been op posed to permitting politics to be carried one the bench or in the jury-box,and we are Sorry that any °melon should ever have been given no for writing what we have,And we hope Judge Linn's sueuessor who ever he may be will avoid altreasons for such strictures. —Whlte'mets supviet, tAeir 'own intereate, t,t role, tor' the Peozer critic nominee. The `peke opposed to Democracy is the opponent, of the white race. --If you want a live paper—oub 114eiriber - for the WATOtiIIiAN, 8