The Democratic Watchman BELLEFONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1868 Bureau for this. Febridatlon of Negro Votes What is called the Freedmen's Bureau, or more properly a machine for the man ufaoture of negro votes, has been exten ded for another year from the 16th of July. It will be remembered that Gen: aril Howard, who has had the profitable direction of this vast political seamy, and has been the richly endowed benefi Mary of its large emoluments and per quisites, recommended in his last report that it should be closed at the end of'the term to which Congress had then bur thesed the tatpayers with this iniquitous lord. • Even he could gee no further pre- Wit for upholding so costly and unneo misery an organization at the public ex• pease. 'it did not require much time, however, for him to change his mind or to repent of his hasty advice, if it was ever seriously given. Mi assehuseits. which enjoy, theMlargest share of the profits and pickings of this establishment became earnest for the pensions of her to-called eohool teachers and employees as the time of shutting up the bureau ap proached; so Mr. , Eliot, in the House, and Mr. Wilson, in the Senate, put their beads together,and seconded by General Howard, they got up a "loyal" appeal to the *.humanity and justice" of Congress to continue this tax upon the people by exseuding the bureau for anMber,yeat. Of all the barefaced frauds perpeTrated here, this bureau is one of the.moet shimeful and inexcusable, even accord ing to the showing of the Radicals them selves. They have just pissed the re construction iniquity, it. direct defiance of their own laws, because It is admitted that Alabama and 'Florida have not com plied with-the conditions imposed,and it was stated by Mr. Manager Butler that be and others voted for the bill as a rust ler of "policy" only—that is to say, in obedience to the dictation of the party. Most of the reconstructed States are given over to negro supremacy The whites were disfranahised expressly to recemplisli - that object These negroes may possibly decide the fate of the Prow idential eirto•on, and thus materially of feet the fuii n condition of the country They are deckr.d by Congress..compe• tent to govern States, to make con stitutions, to ti,4` , laws for ten millions of people, to res.,%ce the rights oflirop , aril, and to Lake their place among the enlightened'communiiies of the Union, All this and more 111 solemnly announc ed in the tecorunructinn acts by the •otee and •oices of the Radical majority in Congress They substantially affirm ed that the southern negro, fresh - from the cotton sod rice fields, and from a state of pentibarbarnim, is superior to the educated white man, and they clothe him with all the privileges of political power This in the declaration made iii one breath, and yet, to the very •next they demand that these same uegroes, who have Just been charged with the very highest responsibilities appertaining to soctety,shall be kept In iutelage under an organized bureau, because they are milli unfit to take care of themselves, and obeli become a burthen upon (he na tional treasury, bemuse they are too Iszy to work such is the proposition when divested of its selfish pretences The uegroes are made a preferred close over our native and naturalized citizen, elevates them not only to the same political and social equality, but it besides "You need not earn your bread by the serest of your brow,as the white men moat do; •ote the Radi cal ticket, and _we will vote your subsin tepee out of the people's treasury." The inot_tee of this proceeding is nut even disguised fiow that the Fleenor; •'reconstructed," the mtlua•y despotism, which nave subsisted in the Knuth since the dos. of the rebellion con no longer be maintained with any show of right, though the intention wee to have con tinued them had impeachment succeed- od The game, therefore, Is to substi tute this Freedmen's Bureau as a politi cal organisation through the Soutb,with a stiew only of directing the nggro Yule of. the presidential election For this purpose the people of the United States, who are weighed down with taxation,are required to contribute to the maintenance of orgroes who claim to govern, but will not labor, and for the benefit of an army s of Radical office holders, who swindle both the government and the negroes In the whole hlstory of this _country no fraud so monstrous has ever„ before been attempted While industry is op oppressed with taxation, and the honest, toiling masses fled their labor indiffer ently compensated. Radical Congress puts its hand into the public puree, and filches tens of milliohk, cuorted from wor.by white taxpayers, to pamper in •ice and vagabondism the degraded in struments of their yens' despotism These Jacobins give the balatice of pow er to ignorant and debauched negroes, who without property or intelligent:4,o.re to legislate for, the great interests of the white race of native and adapted oitr gene; and to more their favor they take .the taxeb of these white citizens to bribe their black followers. Opp d and outraged taxpayers, this is a speci men of Radical legislation I. it aur prising that the public debt should be what it is, when plunder has absorbed at least half of its aggregate, an 4 that the war was continued Iwo years only for the profit of shoddy contrsotore and a corrupt Congress? That debt Is in -etr urawatvisifymmetk-- - • • • while'untold millions are added to it to keep up electioneering bureaus and manufactories of negro votes.- 7 -,Xotional Intelbgencefr. —An' Exchange says that George Wilkes and his friends "are out $200,- 000 on impeaohment." That's nothing. Old Ben Wade lost the Presidency, Hor ses Greeley loot his temper, . Charles Sumner lost a foreign mission, Woolley lost his liberty, ten thousand radical offioers lost their chances, Miss Vinnie Ream lost her studio, Conover lost his pardon, Montgomery lost his commission Ashley lost control of his distriot, and the entire Radical party—save "the seven traitors"-,-lbot what litga. pro tease to dectoooy it ever had. —Subscribe for ibis paper A Republican Senator on Gen. Grant. -fn the United States Senate, may 6th, in reply to Mt l : 7 Sherman, of Ohio, speeLlog of the battle of Pittsburg land ing, Rev. James Harlan, Senator from lowa, Bald : "From all that I can learn on the subject, I do not think that General Grant is fit to command a great army in the field. * * ' * * The lowa troops have been in battle repeatedly übder the command of Gen eralnOrant. They have no confidence in hie capacity and fitness Yor the high position he now bolds. They regard him as the &Who'', of the useless slaugh ter of many hundreds of their brave comrades in arms. It. is not necessary, or is it right, to compel them to .un der trim. The speech of the Senate s !. from Ohio. might, if unnoticed, Sadao° those in authority to continue him in the field. I understand he has been virtually suspend%d, that he cow realty has no command, that each division and - army corps of the Western Department ta un der command of another General, and the whole under the command orGeneral lialleck, that General Grant is second in command of the whole, which is, of course' merely nominal. In my opinion. he ought not to have multiplied thou sands of men placed in his hands after the record which he has made And the only praotical tendency on that part of the speech of the Senator from Ohio, would be to induce the President to as sign him an active command This I cannot consent to have done in the pres ence• of no eountrymen,, _maimed tad slaughtered, as 1 believe, through his carelessness or incompetency. 1 'Nay the not on acconnt of any public or private grievance of a personal nature. • * If my convictions are correct, it would be a crime for me to remain silent, and puffer influences to originate inlthe Senile chamber whist may resuitzlii restoring a General to an active command'whom 1, and the people I in part represent, deem unworthy of snob a trust. • * a * And he shall not with my consent be continued to command. There is noth ing in his antecedents to justify a furtliA, er trial of his military skill. At Belmont be committed an egregious and unpar• donable military blumkr, which resulted in almost annihilating au lowa regiment At Fort Donaldson, the right wing of - our army, which was under his immedi ate command, wee defeated and driven back several miles from the enemy's wades- ,The battle was restored by General Smith; the enemy's works were stormed, and thus a victory was finally won And so on the battle field of Se'lob, hit army was completely sur prised, as I believe, from all the facts I can procure, on fitunasy,* and nothing but the bravery of men fighting by regi ments and brigades saved thearmy from utter destruction The battle was after wardeentored by (leers' Buell and oth er Generals, *Uri came on the field dur, tog the evening and night, and our forces ultimately succeeded in routing the enemy 'Now, air, with such a rec or,,ihose who continue General Grant in an active command, will, in my opin ion, carry on their skirts the blood of thousands of their slaughtered country men With my convictions, I can neither do it myself, nor silently permit others to do, it. (See Congressional Globe ; 2d Session, Thirty-seventh Congress, pages 2,o:tfi, and 2,0,17 Wan not Sens •r Harlan right ! Did not hie miegivin 4 prove true ! Did not those who continued General Grant in active command crimson their nittrts with the blood of thousands of their el• , ughtered countrymen ! Read the hutiory of the reckless, cruel, unpardon able and brutal slaughter of huddreds, and thousands of their countrymen in the battle of the Wildsenee* So great WWI the elaugtter of Northern soldiers !but it 1148 been truly 14111 , 1 'Grant enter. ed Richmond of er a bridge of human bodies Verily, the prediction of Senator liar lan was fearfully paid An Offer to Bonner In commenting upon the recent series of pal ere in the New Xork Ledger called "scenes in the Early Life of Gen Grant, by his Father," which were recently in terilicted by somebody and the old man's twaddle '•suspended in mid •olley," tbe editor of the Franklin (Pa) Spectator says "We venture to say that we have a doses had little boys In this communi ty, *huge hu graphy would make Gen Grant's earlyPlife tame and insipid We have our eye on one little chaq, whose fondness for the circus is unlimited, and whose means of gaining admittance dis plays what Grant always lacked, and that is the strategy of the first ordefr. This boy, is great at marbles ; magnifi cent at base ball; bully at jumping and food of horses. This boy will play ball nid suddenly the whole game will come to a stand because the ball will be miss ing The lost ball will be in the lily's pocket; 'but nobody ever saw him put it in, and few ever saw him take it out The other boys held a meeting, and re solved not to play with him any more, unless hie pockets were sewed up. He has been known to orawl under the can vass of anircus,whiah Ite , calls getting lob's private entranoe, sisteeh times in ono afternoon, and get the price of ad'- mission refunded by the door keeper.be cause his mother was suddenly taken sick and he bad to leave the show, He could have fooled Andy Johnson worse thee Greet did. Circuses, which to oth ers are expensive. are to him a souroy,f eight or ten dollars a day by stealing in and getting obeoke as he mime out,which he sold at a reduction froim the regular price. This boy is modest, too. He doesn't run after phrenologists to get them to feel his head and tell him what he was made for, because he knows. all about it himself. He has great ability keeping his mouth shut He is modest and doesn't expect to ,be President, even of a 'base ball club. We hare lost sight of Jim (that is his name),fora long time. He is vow third mate on a stern•wheel steamboat on the Upper Mississippl.and bail no father to write his life. • . "It Bonner wants hi■ biography to supply the vacuum in the Ledyer, caused by the sudden stoppage of Grant's Life, we will furnish it to him in sixteen obap tars for the slim of $lO,OOO, half in hand when ' the contract is signed." Wo' shburne—Donelly•-Grant Mr. Donelly.onoekof Pdrilatielphia,and now of Minnesota, has had hie obarantsr eery cully repaired from same damage it sustained in a family quarrel with his brother Ratlimas._ Attorney General Brewster, of this State, has endorsed his obaraoter for truth and sereoity. In "my two papers, both daily," the follow. log has appeared. The Press Copies it from the Datly Chronicle:. ..The special committee appointed by the House of Representatives to investi gate the charges against the lion, Igna tius Donelly, of Minnesota, by lion. E. B.Wasliburno,of Illineig,matle a in speech yesterday afternoon, thi substance of which appears in to-day's Congressional proceedings. It will be seen that , Mr. Washburne retracts the first accusation, charging Mr. Donelly with corruption as a member of the House, and declines to substantiate the other, relative:to the causes which induced him to leave Phil adelphia. We congratulate Mr, Donelly upon hie complete and triumphant Vin dication. We have known him for many years. bong before fie lett Philadelphia his native city, where he always sus tained the best character, and in whose High School he graduated with distin guished honors, he was regarded as among the most prominent of her young men; and his remarkable in Min omit& has been •sort of satisfaction and pride to thousands who knew his rare talents, and who predicted for him • most brilliant future when he took up hie home in the great West " nnowing, now, licirt reliable hie !ant mony is, we may as well recall what came from a source ao worthy of confi dencii. fie says Washburn° owns Grant —carries him in hie breeches pocket We reproduce Mr. g i.:onelly's rearks: "There is a simple explanation whic is given Min my district, anti is open the 'great arguments why they ■hould send the distinguished gentleman's brother so this House—that he owns Gen eral Grant; that he carries Ulysses S Grant in Ins breeches pocke'. We bad Gin. Grant up in Minnesota, and of course the distinguished gentleman from Illinois stuck but head onto( the window and thanked the crowd, and when they rode in an open barouche together and the crowd hurrahed, the gentleman from Illinois laid hie hand upon bin heart and bowed his prohund acknowledgments The people out thane were in great doubt which was Grant and *Hob was Wash burns, and they came to the conclusion that the quiet little gentleman must be the fourth class politician, and that the pretentious, fussy indi•itinab must be the conqueror of Lee Laugitter Old Jesse Grant, it is said, remarked on that occasion, "'Pears to me that Washburne thanks lie owns 'Lyneen, but he don't own me—not by a darned Bight [Laugh ter There is a proverb that amen is known by the company he keeps. Much more is ho known by the man in whose pocket he is carried. It is of vital importance, thcn,to the public to know who and what the man is who has in his pocket - the Radical candidate for the Presidency This information we have front the truthful, reliable, well endorsed Radical, Donelly. Ile says ofiVashlutrue. "If there be in our midst one low, sor did, vulgar soul, of barely mediocre in telligence, one heart callous io'e•ery kind!! sentiment and every generous im pulse, one tongue , leprous with slander, one mouth which is like unto, a den of wild beasts giving forth deaillYedors, if there be here one character whieh,while blotched and spotted all over, yet r and rants and blackguards like a prosti tute, it is the gentleman fr-un Illinois." Thpi 1,4 the mau wh curl lett Ulyese4 S Cir,nst in his breechex pocket ' Anna Dickinson on Gen. Grant The gentle Anna is one of the ablest and moat copula} orators an the pay of the Radical party. She has done good service for the party in times past. JUNI now she appears to be stumping it in be half of those Radicals who did not favor the nomination of Gen. Grant. Anna spoke at Elmira, N. 1., and took occa• sion to bit the man who does nit talk some severe blows. She warned and ilitestened in her loving way• She said . The Radical party cannot live upon the memory of its good deeds. You' works in the' past won I Have you. You Medicate shirk the unpopular ne °amity of putting the ktlack race for ward You want to cover up the negro with Grant. Unless you give the Northern negro the ballot you won't get. the support of the negro South. Ma not sufficient that Grant was a soldier. McClellan was a soldier—Fitz John porter was a soldier, It is not sufficient to write against any man's name—soldier. By nominating Grant you show ,our• selves cowards and poltroons Grant is no standard•bearer when prin• oiples are to Oe fought for. You want Grant without a platform for the sake of expedienoy and winning the next election I wou dal. have a. personal quarrel with Ge val Great. I dare to say what d great any are thiukiug. "Speech is silver Siiilloo in golden , ;' Grant's silence ii leaden. He mueCapesk before he get• the oleo lion. You oan't hurrah for Grant and win on flat Issue. Shame, shame on those Republicans whose:"l believe the black man ebould vole in 1.0 , 110404, hut ender un eitelini stances here le Elmira " , Disintegration stares the Radicals in the face because they are ashamed to come out boldly hadopenly for negro suffrage. Don t hide your prinelrett,lf you have got any A bellind the smoke of one man's algar. Wby widower like I bowie in a elate of dilapidation ? Because be ought to be repaired. Corruption vrt Ciongteto A oitoulsr fuel leaned by Capt. Ward,' as president of the national manufactur ere' assooiations. gives some facile vouch ed (or by a. committee. of the associal ion mentioned, of whioh committee Capt. Ward is the chairman. All the members of the committees are republicans, and no man.will question the credibility of their testimony, sr far as it tells against , the party to which - the menibers or the committee belong The facts given are worthy of more than a 'liming no lice. It is important that the tax-pay ers of the United Slates -should realize them. To render them more conspicu ous, therefore, we repeat the in para graphs, using substantially the same language employed by the committee: The enorrnous'estimales for public ex penditures to which the country became accustomed during the war have been kept up in many depurtmeals solely to avoid discharging vast hosts of official idlers The estimaterof 1868, for the merely miscellaneous expenses of the govern ment were fire and a third times as great as the actual expenses of 1860 There are now 41,000 offioials requir ed by the executive department alone to execute the acts of Congrest, whose ag gregatd salaries anually amount to over thirty-ono million dollars—these offioials bein paid-fromsl,ooo to $13,000 a yeorg each. The entire expenves the officials who preformed similar dutias in the last year of Mr. Iluobanan's administration amounted to only five millions dollars— less than one-slxth the amount now paid. _Alaut.fifteen million (idlers are Net to the go•ernment annually by the fail ure to collect the whisky tax. .4' About Mean million dollars are- lost to the government annually by fraud in the collection of the lobacmo tax. About fifteen million dollars are squan dered on junketing expeditions st sea and elsewhere for the entertainment of navy o(ficers, By reducing the ',truly to 17,000 men, the people might save twenty million dollars eery year. The Indian bureau is a source of vast needless waste and expense The freedmen's bureau, which Con gress has just voted to extend another year "has done its work - and should be abolished—the sooner the better." There are twenty, United States judi cial districts,maintainel by congress at a cost of ortr four hundred thohnand dol lars, iri which Ib3 whole a mount of buniness transacted does not equal the cost of maintaining them. The official estimates fur the eipendi turee of the witr department, navy de partment and civil eervicee equal near ly two hundred million dollars for the present year Tbe weal. and south -now have lose bank currency than before the war, while the eastern and middle elates now have two bupdred mil - ion (Jailors more than they had beforellie war. Such are the facts certified to by Cap tain Ward In addition to these, the telegraphic despatches of yesterday in forms us that the national debt increas ed nearly ten million dollars during the month of May You Do, Eli? “I endorse the reeolutione ” $o says Ulpinew Grant But will the people of the United Staten endoree b:rn" You "endorse the resolutions," Mr. Grant You ' rndurPo" the vile tyranny of Congressional li,consiruction, the cowardly forcing of Negro Suffrage , up on an unwilling people, the monstrous attempt to put eigtft—sat4hona ill white people under the domination of four millions of ignorant blacks. the 'Grout uus wickbdness of the dtafraochisement of hundreds of thousands of free white American citizens, blood sucking policy of the freedman's Bureau; k (that Nation al boarding school for worth lees black lasarane,) and even the shameless shall trig on the greet vital financial quer. two which to day interests so deeply every Than and woman in the United States. Inu , •end,,rse“ all this, god cooly add, let ue have peace ' Yes, you would "make ♦ liesertaland call it peace!" You will put the white man in tho power of your block tools, you would put the tiegro'e torch to the white mane dwelling, the negro'nlitife to the while mane throat. You would make another St Domin go of the Southern Statno, trample 00l what the war has left of the arts of mei Illation, and leave in its stead the demo lation. the howling wildernesa of Afri can barber min Or, ea the only •lternelt•e, you would keep your standing army of fifty batta liune quartered upon the pegple, to den troy theirethbarttea and eat '''out their ritbstonoe " These things, Mr. Grant, would be the ine•liahle consequence of your en forcement of the resolutions which you "endorse." If you were Ulysses 8. Grant, multiplied seventy times seven by your own multiple, the Ameriean people would not sustain you upon such e platform As it is, Gee. tieott's late is but • slight foreshadowing of whet is in storo_fdr you —Patriot --I—Why is It! We aak the oarelul reading, by every qualified voter of either political papy of the following questions : Why is the burden of taxation ito-op - • - prcseive, and employment scarce? Why are there today hundreds ,of thoneand of while men and women in the North living in dread of starvation ,TlTTErpiTrenTsi-eril Why are thirty millions of white men taxed for._the special benefit of • class who pay notaxes on the great bulk of their property ! '"Why should there be over two thous and million of dollars exempt from lista tion 11 pogroms are tit for freedom, why has a great pour house spitein fur their sop• port to be kept up at the expense of Northern Industry I If war wee pr ssecuted for this p - station of the Union, why are ten States kept out of it? Let the answer, as your own heart and Intelligence suggest, be giren•in Novem ber next. I~theChieago.Convention w Slott nominate Gen Grant there were nifie leen negro Delegates. The ftrpublloan Party---What one 'of `lts Members Thinks. Doti Platt, a well known Western Rad ical politician. writes id the Cincinnati Commercial, concerning the Republican party. He says many 'spicy things. Alnong others Ilk says that the party is dead, and !fiat , the immediate cause of its death was dyspepsia, aggravated by whisky." He then proceeds : 'But the treed' of weakness and dis ease were planted in its birth. We be gan a party of rk(orm, or agitation, of aggression, and wo took into our em braces WO old Whig party, that was a party of conservatism, aggravated by great dignity and timidity. Tliti result has been internal dissentiona U lira re form_ party cauld_nol,digest the coneer vative lump, an] we have been afflicted with cholla, so to speak, that well nigh destroyed our usefulness.—Otir actions, In consequence, have been contradictory. While at Fie time we create John Brown, and glory In John Brown as our greatest and beet belovedl organized huge armies, fought out big wars and liberated a race, on the other hand we have been smooth ing our war's *rioklad front with the de oiled plasters of past wrong doing It is called compromise—which means to give the devil your soul in a dignified. peaceful manitetr.'" Of reoonstruction and impeachment be remars s : "The people have expected that in our bands reconstruction at the South would progress With reasonable speed, and that unhappy region be restored to • state of quiet and prosperity The expectation might not be unreasonable for the - blind bigotry that Ureic& us to a bloody war has developed in Site that, with stupid fury, casts elide all social and legal restraint. But we an- swer that our wise acts oflegislatioViave been rendered null third void by an Ex ecutive that plant/itself squarely in op position to the raw•making power Now, Meters. Feteetiden and Trumbull vote •not guilty,•' and the accused goes ab• quilled. • '•We awaken to the unpleasant fact that not Andrew Johnson, but the Re publican party has been on trial, and the sentence ia a aeniace of death, rend ered by our own Senators, who have grown (at, rich and let through our nrganizetion. To have such a trial, with such a result- (and Motives Fee cenden and Trumbull knew as well at the beginning as they4tl at the end), is a great blunder—a blunder vr ,, ree than a crime it may be that the di.'guat fell by the country at large for ilitt-Dao cratio peace party may call luta exis tence a new organization, but' the Re publican party is dead, and we may as well gracefully admitt the fact and ac cept the situation." Ott Tate Luta, ALL lituatuat.—Juat. for the truth of history, and so as not to muddle the weak braille of future Bun crofts, we beg,pur Itepublictn frlenda not. 10 quote in the cinvae d Crane!' state men, "I shall ffgbt it Kt. on thus line if it take!' all autooter " How otherwise will the possible Ban croft save hie whits from dozing when he discovers Quit Grant abandoned "this line" after losing more than one and a half times as many men as Lee had, and more than six times as maw men a Lee lest'? And what will cave lite poor fel low from lunacy phen in the midst °fall this hullabaloo he iiiimovern that Grant having abandoned "this line' found him self at the base of another line which 'should have been reached wohout the lose, of a roan--the lion from which the Army of the PotomacAlaa once coiled. .Iml nothing hut suicide, Purely, can console him for the disco•ery, which our Repuhilan friends must perceive that he will make, (Lot Ilrant not only took all that Summer, but the next fall, and the wittier following and ihe spring too, before hid swooping off of eta Sonliern ecoltliertfor every Southern soldier bad been "fought out"—N tro r A li LCONCILIATION —Butler has let last brought Grant to terms ! Grant was fearful that the Lowell Cynoc•pha lus would do him injury during the cam paign, and makes an earliest/won ip re gard to his celebrated remark that Butler was "bottled up" at Bermuda Hundred He lakes that book , is absolutely sorry that he ever said it ; in fact he deeply regrets that ho ever offended the "Beast!" Oh what a glorious rosition for the General of our armies—for the Repub lican candidate fur President of the United States— to be compelled to get on his knee• to Ben Butler! Butler ha s nuodeedeti in hilmilating Grant, he repents that he sent back to Grant an invitation that he sent him to a party. Hereafter Butler will attend all Grant's parties, This will neminato additional watchfulness of the General's ts over his—silver spoons!—Plain 'Dealer F{XINII IT vox Time —The Radicals of Washington basing failed to elect their candidate, Congress le to fix it for them, just as It has fix so nyiny other little matters of that sort —The soldiers not haying Voted as the Radicals wish ed,eongrees is to ignot 0 the •otes of the soldiars. A Washington dispatch say. that "Congress 'r ' , slated cautiously in reference to Lb.. ...log of Otse t /14er., because it did not choose to the President to carry important elections at different points by concentrating troops there." What will btleome of the loyal - 1111rallt If the etude - cow carry arrelcotto—n— they choose by "concenirsting troupe I" Something Is the matter with the "boys o In blue"—or with the itsdioal party. ; .ion 411 r; _lli WAY 7Qa PUTILCO DIM? is 81-INa 1Na MANACIIID.—Mino• the lit of Pobru. art the Gottl bearing Bonds have ..been inoreased7 hundred and right millions, tour his i n dr l end siyhty thouland and eight &it? red dollars-b-addlng thereby to the interest on the public) Debt about three millions and a quarter. df dollars. This is not done to benefit the people. It. is done to benefit the Boudholtlists. I. there to be no end of this buel6lo) t If we can only have Pendleton siftb his Dreenbaok specific, this business Will be brought to an end.-Blaiestnan. —A man tiling near 4)bany fool ishly wiped the• olimpnue oil from the bowl of a piprot d spelled it to a burn on the lip of his little dnugbter. . --Centre comity, will be good for 1000 majorily for the while marls ticket. Negro Rule.. Whenever you put a stamp on a cheek or reoeipt it is paying two Cents toward s supporting lazy negroes whosi labor formerly supported themselves and loaded their owners with wealth—en abled the latter to live like nabobs, the abolitionists said. Every stamp used; every dollar of tax paid, every additional cost of living. goes to the same purpose —to the amount of some ninety or a hundred millions annually- Sweat a n d labor, white man- ilve in idleness, crime and filth, darkey—you both be. lieved the crazy abolitionist, and verily you have your reward,:, But bold ! sips the Radical platform, the negro must govern, too ! You Week ltde of the North (Says Mr. IttidiesTr m or may not let negroes vote with y , as you please, yet Mr. Bambo must and shall govern you, and dictate to ' you, and at his will wring the evreat from your brow fo support his "bureau" —the dollars you earn for your littler ones, to feed and clothe those of your family, must go to "the Government" to he squandered on negro bureaus and Standing armies to maintain them. That this 'theme of fraud and oppression may prevail, the Radicals' place 'the whole power of the southern States in the hands of the negroes, and these States will dictate who shall control_,Congress. Wherein does this differ from making the negro the sole ruler ! True, the white man may vote in his Northers State, but the negro overbalances his majority by op.sting the vote of the South ern "reconstructed States" for the mn didate hod party who will continue to pamper Sambo This once glorious Federal Go_vernment of ousa_undsr 11, 4 4_ ioal rule, will amount to nothing more than a machine to enable negroes com pel white men to pay taxes to cuppert the former in idleness, @rime, filth, and voting ! MIR ton Democrat. A "Loll" Delegate ; He Is Recognizes by a Wisoonsin Soldier as a Rebel Guerrilla. • The Stevens Point Pouiy relates the following interesting personal ineideet that incurred during the sitting of the Chicago Convent ion : Among the "loll" delegates to the late Chicago Convention was a red hot one from Arkansas, between whomiand Ilso James S Young, °tibia oily, a recogni tion took place, us surprising on one side es it yae disagreeable on the other Mr Young saw-and recognized the ar dent "toil" delegate as a former notablftl;, guerilla bushwhacker,whom Mr Young had assisted in capturing in Arkansas during the war. The following conver Ration took place between them • Mr Young—You tore from Arktumine I believe Delegate {panspoutily)—Yes, sir, I tin - one of the loyal delegates to the Nation al Republican Convention Young—Yes I thought I knew you I saw you during the war. Delegate (alarmed)—Whore' Young—When I was in the Union army you were a rebel prisoner of war , I helped to take you The hypocritical adyrioate of "Intl negro equality stood dumb with amaze meet for a moment, and then broke through the crowd like a quarter hone for reluge nmeng his Radieal «mfr." , where the tent of loyalty is lip service and negro equality Could a mere striking ease toe repre stinted ? Young, paseed through a long and houorableeery ice in the Union army, and ie called a copperhead because he votes against military rule and negro suffrage. While this rebel birshwhacker, who fought ue, and upw for the sake of office and spoils, Joins the Radicals and ahouts for negro equality, is called not only loyal, but he is a delegate to the Radical Convention rive la humbug ! MLLIZNTO Or ru■ WAIL —There IS pre nerved in the State library of 0111.), small quantity of meal, a little riJe, and pinch of eel!, labelled . "The rations of a Union primoner •t Andersonville, presented by the prisoner to whom it was leaned " There is another memento of the war somewhere.in the North, that should be procured by the loyal Government of tbe State of Ohio, and. planed beside the above The following would be an ap propriate lable for u . •'A gold chemise loutton, captured b) a party of seventy Federat soldiers,froko the person of a Southern matron, while confined to a sick bed in Damiettalle, Arkansas " The nude of the lady will be furnished eo application to her bust:Tad—the ed itor of this paper. Lexengion(Ala i ) ()6" rIZIE3 —We know a soldier who is minus an arm sod who was left on the battle field for dead, who was nominated by the President for the position of Asses . nor of Internal Revenue for this District, but was nevertheless rejected by the Senate, simply and only because he was • Democrat, for his qualifioations were undoubted. Such is the ..prid , they take in bestowing civil offices upon men who booorably and efficiently served .1!--Nets Al bany Ledger. —The Rdootution id •ery hard o" Is • man without enemies, beoause he is 4a-man without ideas. Ila•ing no prin ciples in private life, no political opin ions in public life, there is nothing 10 afford vitality to an enemy." --.—Colfax wishes It expressly under stood that he is neither writing a book or going to be married. We suppose he does not think himself of the one, and I• afraid •of the other.. There are other moo just like him ; in other words, men with very little talent and no courage. --Some of the Virginia —Unionists," who were sufficiently "loll" ,to take the {ron•oled oath and hold office, have been senteneed by Judge Chase to various terms in the penitentiary, for swindling the Gdvernment, ip collusion will' 'swot Solid sooundrels. •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers