GRANT AND 'COLFAX' RATIFIDA-',' TION---GREAT ENTHOBAIBIII. poins UOUL, IiZAR ULOBSigg, OOKA RONK au— a Conic Ramo.' (bittern Ulysses, come home tq your dad, For the clock in the sttplkstrikes two Impeachment's "gone up, add Ben Wade •is stark mad, s And he swears it's all over with you . The Chicago Convention well help you no rose, The Methodist Confareutei won't Pay; • Th e re's the ugliest news thin tile Oregon shore, And to short, there!N the d—ickens to pay! Come home! Come ! 'Come home! .Swiet Miriam Ulystes, come home! Abe Lincoln has gone to the Red Buillhui Springs, And Stanton ean't"stiok" any more Old Thad, in inspair t to his dusky bride While Sumner, the eunuch, fesds sore; Ben butler is Ltealing a look at /his spoons, The bondholders quake for their 081 ; The bands have stepped playing "those toil old tuuss," And I fear my sweet Hiram, your'e sold I Come home, etc., eto, I've a horns and a cirrus for you and Col , far 'Tis the lore that you rode In the South— The monkey stands ready to leap on your br eke, And there's whisky to pour In your mouth; ' So Hiram, sweet Hiram, don't feel very had, When you learn that my tidings are true; Your'e better at home with cigars and your dad ; For the White House ain't waiting for ybiel Come home' Corde home! Come borne ' Sweet Hiram Ulyiees, come home' Tfivsq, N'itw MIK", June 23, 1868. The New Declaration &Independence Adopted July 4th; 1888.—BY the White Republicans in Convention Assembled. When, is the course of human events, it beooines necessary for people to die, solve the political bands which have connected them with others, and to as sume among the parties of the country the separate and equal atalio► to which the laws of nature and nature'a God en this them, n decent respect for the opin ions of mankind requires that they should decline that auses which impel them to separation, We hold these truths to he self evi dent : that white men are created equal to the negro.; that they aro endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rifhtn; that among theme are life, liberty and:pursuit of happinees That tope , -Etna them yiglitt,_ps,rties are instil uted ameng men, deriving their just powers from the consent of tie members ; that wheuevtr any party becomes destructi4e of these ends, it Is the right of the peo ple to alter or abolish it, anti to insti• tote a new petty, laying its foundation on such principles, and organising its power' in snob form. as to them shall seem most likely to effect their moiety and happinmas. Prude:mi. indeed, will dictate that parties long entablinhrd should not be changed for light and transient causes ; and, accordingly, all ,esperionoe bee shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are stifferabie, than to right themselves by abolish tug the, forms to which they a're accustomed But when n long train of abusen and nsarp iiiong,pZittu n vari ably the same object, evinces I t,enign to to reduce them under absolute denputtsui, it it their right, it is their duty to throw elf such party audio provide new guards for their 'Aire security Such bee been the patient auderauce of the white men of that country ; and such is now the necessity which itoostrelos them to alter their former system of party organ ization. The history of the radical um- jority of the present republican party is, a history of repeated Injursra and usur pawns, all baring in direct object the establisymeut of au absolute uegro iy rawly over the Otto meuof atese states To prove this let facts be submitted' to a candid world. k has refused its ►spout to laws the most wholesome and neoese►ry fur the publte good 4 ' it has forbidden legislatures to pass laws of immediate and preseing import ance and suspeuded ethers is their op eration, utterly neglecting the white men of the country, It has refused to pass other halm for the acoommodation of large siumbers'of white people unless thiSse people. would relinquish the right of representatiou in thlt.legislature — a right iesstinuible to them and formtdable to tyrants only. It has dolled together negroee se leg• Islisisive bodies for the sole 'purpose of fatiguing white men Into oompllanoe with lie measures. It has dissoired frpresonistive houses repeetedly, for opposing with insinli aftnistee its Invasions upon the rights of thelsopis. It has refused for a long tints &(lea) (nal diseoletions to 'ewes Others to be. Pleated ; wliveby thy leAtilatite,powltl, hunopabiel of annihilating have retutried to (hi people at ,Istge.fof their oesroiso;; e etati'reitstning in the usenneline ex posed ticati l lhe danger Of itqattion trotn without and aourulsiona it ss'i eitliSlOr3 i ci , proroat Aka pop - 3flMlcrii of the 'ToaitiOto eistee,''for the 4,9 P.9iiil . qbetrl4O4i 1119 l i ar, serial Ri l ,is tour •atimita for the proteaktos of filli4 sea; sad' stpOroprlatiow the lends to Iboi lo I iitiiiiet.' r ' , . ' , • i It hoe übetruated thie au.faiiiletrat I on ttelitelliqd byte foiling ' fie 1118Selli to 11104 e 'l l lo l o l )ithlngjudloievy Yoy ere. '7t "I itittle „ ,J ., 4ll4eii o'l ix,ll,itery Offloeri [ VOL. 13 BELLEFONTE, PA., 'FRIDAY AUGUST 14; 1868. NO. 32 and. made them dependent on its will alone for the tenure or their °Mose, and the amount and payment of their sailer. , „ It has erected a multitude of new 015- . 0011, and sent tbitler swarms of, officers to hams our people and eat ont tbetr substance. It has kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies, without the sent of out legislatures. It has effected to render the walnut:v . , independent of, and superior s to the civil power. • It bias combined with the Degrees to subject white men to their jurisdiction, whicb is foreign to our constitution and unacknowledged by our laws, giving its silent-to their acts of pretended legisla tion It has quartered large bottles of armed negro troops among us, protioting them, by a mock trial, from punishment for any murders which they should commit on the inhabitants of these states. It has eel off our trade with allloarte of the world, by imposing tales on us without our consent. It has deprived us, In many engem, of the benefits n! trial by jury, transport ing us beyond seas for pretended offcn ccc, and confining us in the Dry Tortu gas. without judge or jury. It has abolished the free system of Amerioan laws in the southern states, establishing therein an arbitrary govern menl,add enlarging its boundaries, so SP to render it at once an example and lit •instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into the northern stales. it has taken away ten . of eiVelioVialtu: tient" abolishing our most valuabie laws, and altering funtismentally. the powers of our governments, suspending our own l.gislatures,cud declaring itself n•osted wti it power to legislate for us in all ca ses whatsoever It has abo'ished gosernuasnt in the south by declaring while men out of lie p;otecl tan, and wafting War against t hem as such. it , htta plundered our pockets, ravaged our fields, taxed our industry, nod de elroyed the propirty of our people Jt is at this time supporting Ihrge tie mien of negro mercenaries to colcipte.te the work of death,denJlation and tyran ny already begun with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy roarctly paralleled in the mAit barbarous ages, and Wally unworthy the head of a civilized nation l' has oonstraluml our fellow-oitizeus, &liken captive on the streets of %Yr/wising :on to bear witness against their clients to become the betrayers of the betrayers of the most sacred trusts, or is fall be aessh the power of its vengenee. It has excited domestic Insurrections nitiongst us, and ban endeavored to bring on bit inhabitants of eur southern Iron 'tiers the mercilees negro Ravages,- wiruse known rule of warfare is an undistin guisbed destruction of ail ages, sexes asd coutlitioos. In every stage of beim oppreesions we have petitioned for redress In the n 104( bumble terms. Our repeated politiona have been answered only by repeattd injury. A party whose character is thug marked by every act which may de flue a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people. Nor have we been wanting in alien lion to our lalebreihree. We have warned them from time to lime, of at temple teeth, by their legislature, to ex tend anoanwarrantable juriadiotion over the 'white. race, We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here We have appealed to their oative justioe and-magnanitnlty, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow three usurpations, which would inevitably interrupt our connect lobe end dorrespondetoe, They have been deaf to the 'l'oloe'bf justice and cOnstinguinity. We must, therefore, act quietism in the necessity sek4e we l / 4 de noueces our separation, atrdrhold them ee lie bold the relit rein 'Of mooting. eneollei In politics, fa all 'els" frleolle. We, therelore, White 4lien of the Ile pu'hlfcart Party 'of tha Voiteit !3tatee, of Auaeriok, in geperal.ooneantion assoet bled, appealing to the Supreme ,Judga of the World for the reelittide or bar tentione, do, lu lb. name and )1 , the"*&• 1146friii•of the While People of Alp Uni ted StataN solemnly publish and declare that VigifftVolan are, tied of right' Odell 'to to 'be, ;fre ind lad IPenctop t , ; :thkt ya'are abiolrad , frone sit *Umlaut's to, dig Party; and that all political oonoec tfon it and tia fs, and of , tight ought to be, tpla;li dliacjted, sod that "MITE BxctB7 8 AND FEDERAL UNION." • all political connection betweeu it and UN is, and of right ought to be, totally dissolved, and that as free and Inds pendent While men we have full power to levy Aar: conclitcle peace, contrail( al liancest establish commerce, awl to.tio all (Migraine and th tugs w hichariluOrpen dent peoplemay of right do. And fur the supped of this deolnration.with a nem re liance upon theprotection of Divine Prov idence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our foriuoes, acal our sacred honor. The foregoing DociorniiOn *se signed this 4th clay of July, Ifttift, by— , Andrew Johnnoh, Prep, of she U. S. Salmon I' Chnee, Chief Jussioe S Supremo Mut. U. 8. Snpmetne Court Stephen J. Field, U &Supremo Court, James IL Doolittle, U 8. Senator. JanweaDixon, U. ti Senitor. Edgar Cowan, U. S. Senator ; O. 11. Browning, Secretary Interior,. Win. H. Seward, 5, cretory of State. Alex. W. Randall,' Pol. Manlier Gen. Gideon Wells, Secretary of Navy. Henry Siaubery, Attorney General. Chas. Francis Adainalate Min. or Eng Thome Ewing, of Ohio. late or Gener al Harriann's Cabinet. Int, 0 Wilkitioeu, 14te Ctrouit Judge Frahm(' I'. Blair, of hlimeouri, lato of the Federal Army, •ud 718,614 other white men, all late of dm Republican party. The 1l ti es nag 1W V• ) Rev ts(rr compares the twi natiettal platter/Hs thus truly: 'rho Radical plitforth has one measure - for Ike ate. - MAI: fbe Vemocretto phallitureu has clue weight and ineaeure for North' aid liuuth. The Theltadical platform Len one measure, for a certain privileged clues, hod a air (treat Ono fur all eti.ters. The Demo oratie platform has the same weigibt and measure for all' classes The Radical plat form 'declares COIIIIIOBB has ftbsolul e coutrel of the quantum of suffrage in the Southern busies, hut that iu the Northern States the people of rash Strafe bare control at it. The Deluca:trade p)atturca declares that each State, Nerto or South, hits supreme coutrel of the question. The Radical platform de clares that one class of publre creditors shall he pita is gold, while all others shall be paid in greenbacks. The Dem uerat ict platform declares for a uniform. urreney--for the psyntent of all iu the same looney It says there shall be no preferred creditera—that the bondholder and laborer and the eoldierrstiall all be treated alike. The Radical platform la seamed with class distiettooe between Stales, and destinations between fit ;sane The Democratic plal form recognises in the broadest sense the equality of the Statei and the eqUelttly oL eillieue. eindill pri•tleAe us the hey note of the tne--equelity •f the oilier. (Immix um Ototor.—A short time before tile Chicago Commotion, Greyl4Y to au article. poblisbed to the New York Tribune, got otiothe fbitootnr, to answer to tittle who Were favoring Grantlt nom inal too “They insist that firant shall ho made the Immediate and uaopposed candidate of the republican parry No venture to ask the reason Ilbre we stand with hat in hand, ready to shout, and only too happy to find something to shout over- What is the reason of the hurrah business? says one, "Grant Is a soldier.” 'Good,' we reply ; ohreers fur Grant, Lhe Soldier, OA great, soldier of the war ' And as we go en cheering for Sheridan and sickle., and Pope, and Meade, Sherman and Tbomail, and 'for the, whole Army Register, 11 0 great is our enthusiasm But we cannot make the , mbole Ann Register Presi dents, anti on that list one man Wee good as another., . Thug Ole 'lf Didier' rani son Ails. It our candidele is to bare only se 'piny stars and button', let ns drop twenty names In a hat end draw. , Perhaps we must tans hut we do not feel like cheering over it; oertairdi not so long as great'stateentem remark is oar multi 'Gird Again that because we nap oleo Again that: tlowartity argument, Friends, in there nothing id this great party bat office-hunger ?:. I the chief rad of man the post office ati4 revenue emelt:ter • ' *-astposts (reel 1141111 vomiter, are ,moet,feferelle, sod If the tideeoutlimel Is ci9w, %Plat. O" ,lioveyeiief electlpn,the,triuwith *ribs •Demeesitf will be thi *lest ieeeipteti that trivet 'swept the ooehtty: A Repliblican Senator on Gen. Gran Itt the. United States Senate, Islay 6th, 1862, in reply to Mr. Sherman, of Ohio, speaking of the battle of Pittsburg land ing, Roe. James Harlan, Senator from' totra. said "From all that I can learn4in the sub ject, I do not think that General Grant is fit to command a great army in the field, * * 4 it t * The lowa troops have been i'n battle repeated l, under the commapd of Gener al Grail They have no confidence in his cspacie y and fitness for the high position he now 'ilda. They regard hint as the author of the uieless slaughter of many hundretiii- of - theit.brara eoumatieui to arms. It is not necessary, nor is lt right to ot,mpel them to serve under him. The speech of the Senator from Ohio, might, if Unnoticed, induee those in authority to tiontinue.hini in the field. I understand he has been' virtualry auepended, that, he now really had no command, that each dlelaion and army corps of the Wooten) Department is un der the bouppand of another General, end the whole under the command of General palleolc, that Grout is second in command of the whole, which in, of course merely nominal - In my opinion, he ought to have multiplied thousands of men placed in his hamlet after tbe'r. cord whiah he has nuule• And the only practiced tendency on that part of the speech of the Senator from Ohio, would ho fo Induce the President to siiigu Lim Thitt I cannot cou sant to have done in the presence of my countrymen, maincd and slaughtered, et geifiv 7 e, t ro h ra osserpoaiaees dr incompetency. I say this not on account of any public or private grievance of a personal natant 4 * 0 y r my conviction,' are correct, it would bee crime for me to remain silent, and suf-. ter influences to originate in the Senate chamber which may revolt in restoring a General to en active command, wheat end the people 1 ia part represent, deem unworthy of such a truce., * 4 14 • I An I by shall not witfi'my consent be continued to ctununantl. There in nosh ins in his anteoedenta is justify s fur ther trial of his military skill At Bel mont he committed itn"egrogionstnd'un pardonable military hlonacr, which re •ulted in almost antaihsiatinw an lowa regiment. At Fort Doni'dton, the right wing of our army, which was under his immetli• ate command, woo defeated anti driven hack I miles from the enemies works The hatflu *ea restored by General Smith ° , Ike enemy's works were stern/eddied thaw a victory was (Wm Ily wan. And so en the battle field, of Bhi• lob, lids army wolf ctinipletely surprised, as I believe, from all the fActs (can pro. cure, on tiunday, and nothing but the braver,vof u.en fighting by resit:create and brigatles saved Ale army from utter thastructlon. The battle was atterward restored by Bue/1 enralhot Oenerale, who nantiron the fields during the eve.' bung and night, and our forces ultlmate• ly iluceeetled in routing the enemy. Now, sir, with such a record, those who continue' General Grant in vu votive command, will is my opinion, carry on their skirts the Moo 1 of thoustpde of thousasulo of their slaughtered country mob. With my convictions, loan nelfh. ea do it myself, nor silently permit oth ers to dO it " • [See dengreasional Globe, '.l.lflSestsion, Thirty.eesetath Con% 'geese, pages 1,036, and2,037.] Was not BraSiOr Ilarlan right Dld not his misgivings prove true? Do not those who continue Generat Dram. in active command crimson their skirts with the blood of thromand of their eliugh teed countrymen t 4ead the bis-, tort' of the recelues, cruel, unpardonable sad brutal slaughter of hundreds •od thbusands of their countrymen In' the battle of thb.wildernesk. So great Whe Lite slaughter of northern soldiers that it has. bneu f timisy .saidi •f Groat entered Rfehrisond'en+bridgeiquetatt bens.: '' Veriiy r the pripilloiton of ElOstot nim bi* was learfu)ly ve;11194. '4 Tus'l'oexii7: 2l 4 r iiiikl; td stems by eekseeile *se :$860;1011 'to' trellises $lOO. hiejeet het a' 'dleeco'frted that thee' eery , ' toielopte and 'Breen . men hied hitee - roblifit4 the ,'ltd*- 1 mimeo pt $2OO ter aesils Sew woolly . 4 411 11 4 , qath Pat in, by allergies% hisS se a .freenes44loll west to themes "he:vac ll'Oefirtiels,#‘ll,• baleefre ts • the revitl4•.A4 !tAi#o4 ll4 4lt:: qthul‘it t • .31104( the icatiteeeeal wee defrauded Of seillledirof •doilete he this stasis item ' Li4eitruio vil t , - . , - Jref It , 1 i' , . ) ' The Radicals have 'introduced a new eiemont into Amerlean polities in the form of 760,000 negro,. In shaping the destiny of the Country these negrties are to neutralize the votes of hires goarters of a million of intelligent - white men, In the game of national polities, the military satrap', bureau agents end itinerant demagogues who znanipulate this negro vote, will ply out their unconscious Slack counters against an equal number of Angle Saxon freemen, These negroes will wield (including Tennessee) twenty Iwo •otett in the Senate and fifty-eight votes in the House of Representatives of the United States. -The Senators fr. .. the Nee° States will out-numberljtena tore representing two thirds of the white 1 population of the Union, The Repre sentatives from the Negro States ,will out-number all the Repreeentaltvert of , the great Comnionwealths of New - York and Pennsylvania. These negroes will not only exert the political inpuence aecordod to their own numbers, but will also wield the Influence belonging to the entire white population of the South. The Radical system of white disfranchisement gives the negroes an absolute majority in meet, anal •a practical majority in all of the Southern States, The negro,majorillee Will there fore speak not only fo'r themselves, but for the whole population o( the S..uth. This system of Negros suffrage and white Disfiwochieement is not levelled at the Southern whites alone. It is teent ly intended to bind trod muzzle the white men of the North. It is designed to se eitiTi Titheltebli on . - at Pt4llltlriatistriferro Electoral vbtee II 1, meant to procure majorities to Qoagrese by Negi o con gratuitous! vohni. It is intsoded to give the Radicals an apparent and artificial strength by oountiug negtoes in the po pular vote of the ciountryi le hoc, a is espeoially coasrived to perpetuate the rule of the Radical fttenon, through the agency of negro dotes, against the will of the aukiprity of the whites of tho na tion. Freemen of Pennsylvania, will yon kiss tit& roil and wear the yoke pre pared for 'you•—Lanranrier In tetligincer Facts For The Poor Man. A barrel of IL our used to cost $l, to si . t. Black Itapal;liosin legislation lsasi en eLnnoed It threetfold Thts in s tax up on the brbad , the poor man's children !Ali When,the poor man pants to kindle hie fire lie takes a.msteh from a box on which there is aGovernment stamp : The riolimao may,, posses millions in bonds. but they ars not lazed. The poor man's house, howevir, IV tar ed-.-, sod if the lazes ore not paid the houso will be sold at lex solo over hio head. The 'hooey got from that sale 6ml/11 , gee Into the bondholders pockets, futile way of Internet on his coupons! , u the laboring Man owns no house. still he pays taxes odithe ode ho lives In, in the way of etilloineed tents, which, are the iesit:t of elites legielittlen. The poor man used to get $2,00 to $3 per Jay in gold or sliver. Now , , gets about 1,,e slime In paper, worth shout 70 ceute on iedolle:r. However. be pays more than twice as much foe he fctittd hie fowl lynate. This is t.lie tithe levied upciniiincby Tli rich loan is setting richer and the poor man poorer. Tide la the prise.the poor man won In the ttlaelk Republloan itoussless poor aim, Shut uilartod bondholder bsi your out In his pocket. it in tho maturing coupon on the' eRd nt h is hood ! *lb, boot goooratneut. ,in, Oae world': mesas one where el legiststion it. in Or Itttercet of niggers kpd bondholdel4, oiof where 'woototo po,IF Ithittke toed pe - 7,, tri bute to Yinkoti Nabotto; •Mex.loan , paella : got bi the , Cavalry of iXilifiuent ti# l lo4l+a, vtiti ate dim 'for a toroit oi' yeah ro, .to Alotoca . the poot-, age , to voluntsry tnt,tteryaiittai. , Ike Moolottn poor r end bait. Mb I ^adukaliivr. of ttsX k6arloan t:—/i l z ''' • ' t i '', _I ' — 2 Vbe solol6o' that •Auttered Ile Union alloy and , to dletitted li , the stii , - vies to to 'entitle' tiltnitir , t 'llohralom •or $BO t yotiVVroeivwhil'lrer'eett.' on it eaptritt of$1;111h3f 'Ott that efillme 41111011 it loaned by the ottittillitto the Garet** beet, tbelonclhold redertitt ,. Bll2 pot..- tandem: 'The Matte 1 britobil' Item till' het Mitt the frettbionyettY plaid ttt elatlvo i i bialrelind 'the hoodlioldet hti 101 d: A'l 0 Theiblehdi'liathield+ lift of the , 00111 t 0 latee4 to the advernmettifttlalautifii ihn'tOrMo itottlytrllittile lediey"dt the' tiOndbOtdoti loaned t titrelktetritrioht, , does: to that fair " °•• 0 •• •. • • • ', MEI 750,000 Negrool. „ Dosfikt; of ,ptiftikikift•ori "The perils of fashionable shame ware recently illustrated at : hall km, Parisi. when an elegantly dressed lady found been? wv,ring - only the - Oriel - ,o( her nochlaoi,•the mai pearlalisilnei\Silled entirely sway in the brat. Thrindia tether butterflies, piPpitetors, Ste.,% , are yet more dangerous. At a dinner , party given by a high personage of the ofdoial world,ism of the ladies witeAequally marked' fir the exquisite proportioni '6f bar bust sad the animation of her 0011- venation. Those Who eat near the lady suddenly heard, in the middle Wisner, and of soknO witty sally on her part, a sharp, smell detonation, such as might be produced by the cracking open of a bean pod. No owl took notice of the inexplioabie sound; but it °honored that the lady became much i 161511 animated, that she kept one arm raised anon her bosom and fanned hernia( incessantly during the rest of the dinner, through the temperature of the dining room was by no seesn'too higb. As soon as the sampan; rose from the table, the lady, still fanning herself, suddenly disap peared; bni,as /tertian sharp eyes among her rivals had caught sight of • diminish ed outline as she retreated from the sphere of vision, a good deal of merri ment followed her disappearance. The lady's absence was however, very short, for she returned la' the drawing room in the nurse of a few mingle/I, triumphant the Name - atstelo perfortiatt the t—birti excited so much adrairation'during the eerly port of the evening, and displayed the same aplomb and vivacity which had made her so charming. The tcrewiag of the s4pper, througitlaiich theitir is blown into the class of "fixtures" in quesilon, having been mode this time aufapiently eecurE the charms of Madame D.----,underwilhi no further vicioni tudea through the course of the evening! the charming individuals who adorn thkeennins of Radical Newepe pore with brilliant flights of fanciful rhetoric, any expression of popular will looking to the expelling from . pewee of the Radloal Goths is regarded is the le .augurat ion of "rebellion." Th ey.up b es itatiegly pronounce the propelled suc cess of au opposite party as • declara tion 3l bloodshed and war. They hove made up their allude that • eltnple ohmage of rulers means revolution, fad they declare lhot"lthit - thii - have dole shall hand no immutable 'no the laws Of the Modes and Parsieno. If the peo ple dare choose other legielitortkAud winisterial elimers, the scoundrels sad uiurperh lel• us that there will be war. Pod that their work shall hand !bough every joint and seam is cemented with the blood of an unwitting people. To make their thrmits good, they , now pro pose to arm the vile negrpee,ot the South for a war of hums its that nation, and are'ballying the North with a 'Catitlidate in arms, whom they have tnadecomliati der-in-ohief of the army, Ital. whom they have already enthroned as Autoosint of ten sovereign titotes.—Doeten Olt -.--The /linker's Mimestm gimme the. estimated "net earn's!! of labor &pi net income of capital' In "tbe trtiltedltrare. during the five ,ye . P.ra from 1860 to 1865 acuoun'ing to all annual aeripage of 8t:191,900,600 If we assume this to be nesrly,enfreet, and to be a fair basis of oslculntion (or the last three" years alpo, we shall find that *lisle labor sail capi tal hate been ridding to the nation,' wealth durmig (be years of, peace from 18G., to 1808. the rate of rather less than $lOO,O/0 per year, the party of (len Grant have been annually toasim tog tho national wealth at the tete of more than ~$ 70,000,000 per year' 'Pot these eaerrir;lary patriote, during lbw years of 'peace. bare expeadad, over and wheys $1,609,000,000 raised in Abe Way of revenue, nearly s9oo,ooo,6oo"tfirred in the 'way of loans. CANI . AH ii Ulluira;PAX.— , t i'levir Digits since, a :calculi Radical Wh . o had int (grad ale ak;misoli to . ,becoMe the [ - adept a ele.of more poor whisky tit" good wa ter had fallen Into a doubts !dumber in 00: 4 our ftlilootig and was pact 'leaping off the fumes of thi stlinulent. wilett he wits suddenly roused, by, a noisy ;dic maiden on. politica, and thinking dila tion do) , -,hinte *arrived, .Ye sfacdainend : WS (bin , ) 'ought lb whip (hie) 'ths, Beath (blol sad did :•hip'em,. and now and new them rascally .(bb) Desmarais . are trythg tolet'em back in thip I Lhic) 'Cara't gn for Cheat knd eirowltaa. ' f t itastisa tete Port: l'ause„..t..../ke th e last mettliong ,of the Seymour' olitt la Media, Delaware county, this Butte.; J. Jti• whiso_l4ll bran, tOeetad Secretary of tie °taut Chrlaskthatstios• alisA i J'the OD of Mir Dettiatirldioulliab, rin6rnettl/21,4,11igteolf,taiMDISilitAdi ost party, Anti,instsia aft elogiten OPP poh iti tali* *fibs alststiab etf-Boyasous and lUD.; other jheagetraive we pprlpd miert. n► Mrs "empAtos vat tro'elfift7tlmoll P:;01;1411" t.P• Eltatet, sad Oetober Writ will alSitperel• *tabled*. .Thwrdleore wee 9 4 10 ,1 f0k. utt, ,; witol,l,r+ bss 1 •!411NsigI1t a , Aapgs•la thwpast. Jew• days iv . '" M ' ‘ y ,