REVERIE. rin=e3 Daly a few more yrare Weary years, Only a few more tears, Bitter tearet And then—and then, Bile other men, I crate to wander—cease to weep : • Dim Dbadiorx o'or toy way shall oreep, And out of the Day into the Night Atid Into the Dark and out el the Bright go—sod I), ath 'ball veil my fare, And the feet of years shall fast efface By very hems, and every trace I W if e on earth ; for the stern years' tread, grate the names of the gone and dead And then—and ihen,like other men, I cloth my eyes, and go to sleep ; Ah! sus! the grave is data and deep Alas! alas! How soon we peas ! Aud, oh ! we go Butler away l When go we must From the light of ,Life, end the heat of strife To the piece of Death.and the eild still dust, We go, we go, anti way riot stay— We travel the long, dark dreary way ; Out of the Day.aud into the Ni g ht, Into the Darknerti, out pt the Bright, •And then—and then, like oihrr men— 'WS chore oar eyes And gu to sleep— W e dos our eyes and go to sleep, Ah! ine,dhe grave is lone and deep I I saw a floWer ' ltt morn No fair; palled at eve—lt was nut there ; I saw • sunbeam. golden bright. I saw • cloud that eunbett. shroud ; And I 814 W N ight Pit rag lbe grwre of Day, The Day took oft her golden crown. And sadly, elowly meld it down ; And Dsy, at morn the Hun's fair bride, At twilight bent her brow aud died. A n d e, alas! like Day, we pass— At morn we laugh, At ere we weep, At morn we wake, e .At night we sic k en ; IYe cl,ae our eyes and go re ateep , — Ah we, the grave is still and deep. How Da You Likg The Picture William B. Reed of Philadelphia, re eently drew &e fuUow ins ungtoesed pie lure of the Cimino:7nd eituot ton : Need any one wonder that the Butler &evene doctrine of paying /lie funded debt in greenbacks is popular with the n)arsen' Let ui ,we how practicallyand in a homely any it worke A unto of limited means devoting, in Awl, 1861, in a savtiiis institution, $l.OOO in Kok, —all hie bard veining!. in April,lB63, he draws it out. unil is compelled to take principal and interest, 1,080 in paper, worth at that nate es , oily $l3O The poor depositor kerb S4G 1, a pretty severe ltz fur patriot min and confide:nee But who profits by the operation! The corpillwaod keeps Age gold for the same iwo years auu then sells It for $2, 00 in paper„ with which it buys a Government bond at liar, gels gold in tared so long He it IM held and then le paid the onocip l to gold, worth at pro sent rates any likely to ba worth $2 HMI, Making a neat profit of over $l,lOO This profit the institution never dreams of paying beck to the depositor. Ii don't even make dividends It goes Imo brick and mortar, and granite and fine dinners Need any one, 1 repeat, woe der that the pOot titan is not content The case of the l anki g luelilulions which have at ockholders in not (Intel so strohg, but the depqrttLtr ge , e porrr comfort (ruin large tftridettli paid to others out of the sale of the gull he, in Fite airoptteity, put iu for 4•rafakreping." No one eau titea.ore the contagion which the financial iniquity of 1861 has spread It has debased individuals It has aorriipted commonwealths. The Btate of New York promised to pay its interest in gold, and for all years it has "loyally" paid it in paper Pennsyl vania borrowed millions iii gold, and has lately paid hot principal in paper, and her chief financial officer grossly insulted a creditor who asked not to be •¢audit all Nay, more--and this tact hover has had the prominence it deserves : Theolluttsil Slate* of America borrowed gold—actual gold—in 1861 or 18G2, and in 1864 or 1865 puid it oil in paper. though. as with the five-twenties, itict . , the Secretary orihe Treasury promised gold Still, as I bare said, the Democratic party 18 responsible for none of this and I, for n , , nut old 'fashioned enough to wieh to see the debt paid, as the creditor wishes it to be paid, if it can be done, As the most natural means to th ie end, does it not occur to the ansions bond holder to think a little, and milady and dispassionate*, on the graver, more 'perilous problem underlying sll othe social and }wildest and economi. oondition of the great Soul rn Aceldams from the Pot. t Rio Grande t Does any sane Ilan be love that the pub- Ho credit is safe, so long as the South rooming as it, is ? Is the enfrsnehisetl negro a sure auxilittry to the bondhold er? Are the disfranchised, preeeouted white men of the South to be relied on in this their agony to maintam the pub lic faith ? There was a time when being interested in a species of property which' In one respect resembled our Federal securities, inasmuch as 0 i 3 as the ob ject of prejudice, and ( 1 ndel on the sanctity of the letter of the low, South ern men were the stsumpli supporters of the inviolability of contracte. W 'IMOD; dueoement have they now, befseouted, proscribed, disfranchised! "TakeNthe foot of the negro from the white man's neck," said an eloquent friend • few days ago; "and we will talk to you about bonds and greenbacks. but thy don't concern us now" Still, the an elan) instinct, of honor caisto. The 89uth restored and contented anti grate. ' - ontTrr ~, r VOL. 13 . fiil—the white men is hjedue position— 'he negro'eubordinated not to slavery, but to the control ore superior race—the great Southern staples brought 'to life nein, and no one can doubt that the public credit would stand on a surer basis than it has at any period during the earth quakes of the last seven years. But there to another perilofthe Nita* ---and to it the oapltal!ete had better turn his attention—and this, too, irres pective ottpolitiosl,feeulu. In fact, the danger is greater ifißedioalism prevails and negro domination be perpetuated. Wee it ever part of the constitutional compact %Thiel' crested the Uoion,either its original text or he modern glories, that - the State of Penttervanis, whet 4 none bht white men are allowed to vote or hold office, eball be joined a corpora tion, of equality; with the negro states of Alabama or Louieina! Is this *art, of our compact now? If en, when 'was it interpolated? It May Butt the mor bid eeniimentalism of New England to heeirlhthing in this hideous contact, but but no one who knows the population of heee_Middle States—its fixed inveterate aversion to negro equality, can doubt there will be a sharp convulsion when Pennsylvania and New J ersey wake from their lethargy and find themselves per pewit partners with the negro. A con vulsion like (his, produced in the North, -will be more fetal to the thing celled "public credit ' than any agitation we have yet known This disturbance, moot serious in every aspect, is sure to occur, if Itatlybelisin is party-lusted." Gen. Grant and Jett Davie Some years ago a certain young Uni tehhafes officer wits wild, and as on popular among his army comrades 119 he was reckless During the great Crystal l'3Jacti exhibition in New York city he distinguished himself by riding a horse into a hat store, and performed several tuber feats which at last brought him to a court martial. The court assembled at Fort retie Monroe, the officer was tried and the finding given, but not published —guilty of conduct unbecoming an officer and it gentleman " Informed of the finding,and anticipating its approval, be captain, for such he we, went at once to Washington, called upon the Secretary of War, and made a frank statement of the case Ile acknowledged his fault, but. if nuotahed by the court in the manner he expected, he would be forever dieracrd. In consideration of his posttinit as an Ginner and the circum stances connected with .fits family, be begged periniamion to resign The Sec retary of War informed hint that snob a thing as a resignation after charges had heed preferred was unheard of in the annals of military law, and contrary to the rule and practice of • Gni service. But the officer begged on, and finally the Secretary yielded ; the resignation was allowed ; and the soldier became a civilian arid merchant. That officer was General Glyses S. Grant, and the Sec retary of War, Jefferaon Davis. These Nola" are furnished by an officer of the United Stites army.—Ex Tuur or Iv —Fanner, mechanic, workingman—and especially you who have heretofore acted with the Republi canc party you have now until November, to think of a matter that concerns you and your obildren. Will you rote the Redioal ticket and pay the bondholder's taxes, or will you vole the Democratic ticket and make the boudholder pay hie urea taxes ! Every dollar added to the x duplicate 'relieves you. The Demo cratic platform demands that bonds shall_ be taxed the same ae other property— the saw as your dwelling house. The Republican platform favors the exemp tion of the bondholder, says:in effect, that he is a privileged charaoter, and shall trot - be taxed onlfht beads. Which be right t 'Throv aside your party prej udies, and think of it I—Es. —Wunder le a cardinal principle o f Radioallens. Mr. llawee, 4. Republican mem))er of Congress from Massachusetts, said upon the floor of the Mouse, that his party had stolen more in one year than the whole expenses of Mr. Du- • ohenan's administration amounted to in four. Mr. Dawes was right, and if Grant and Colfax should be elected, the Radicals will hove a new lease Of power, end thieving will have full swing for four years longer. The people oan save the nation from further disgrace, and prevent millions of additional taxation, by declining tb elect the tools of the Radical party•—Rr• "orrAwa zr.zaups AND TEDZIRAZ 17N107ff." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY AUGUST 21, 1868. NO: 33 Conversion• toDemooraoy. Prom the Ripon, (Wis.) Represe'ntatlve.] For tha t past year we have been failing slimly and surely failing, and to day we give up the ghost. We have'not, in these twelve months, been failing In blialth, nor have ke suffered pecuniarily muoh loas. It is politically that we have gone up. We fail to see that the Republinin party is what it 'should' be, or what many of its friends in years past supposed it was the intention of its leaders to make it. The ghost whiob we have given up is Radical Republi canism. 'From this day henceforth And forever, to the time when we are planted beneath the sod under which all Repub- Roans and Dkemoorats must sooner or la ter lie, we shill advocate in our hudible way the principles of Democracy. -We want it dis4inctly underetbod, as ate wigt to receive all the cursing from the lte blicaus lie !moues convenient. There are many causes that have led to thie deoided change in this paper. The prime irtuse is the total failure of the party to do a single thing toward the reconstnto lion orthe country. The leaders ap pears to us not to care a continental what happens to a State if ebe det4l.' oast a Republican vote. The govern ment supports negroes in idleness, be cause they vote the Republican ticket and starve white men Beconae they not This, men cannot- allow. ,ey wilt not allow it - A RKOZNICRATID RADICAL.—Nisny of our readers will recollect Olon. F. B. Barkus, of Cleveland, who made speeoh es during the war, full of fire and brim stone against the Deluca:Min parlJ. Well, who would believe it 1 B. hive renounced all his old heresies and come out a full fledged Union man at hat ! made a speech at the liey mour and Watr ratification meeting in Cleveland, of which we give a few ex- roots to show its general spirit "Fellow—aye, ',temperate That has been a hard word for me to mouth I• For a quarter of a century I hare been trained as a Republican, and it comes hard to designate myself as a Democrat ; but when treason at the South has-been hushed, and treason rises up at the North, after the flag floated in triumph over rebellion, when, for the unholy purposes of the party in power, - the Union has been kept assunder—the Union that, all fought for, only to have. it prove an lull,' fetus ; when...gine third of that Union to day is subject to a power, in time of peace, unrecognised by the Constitution—not to secure •io tory, not to render the triumph for all time but for the selfish purpose of pre serving in perpetuity the power of a party unlit to wield it ; when all lb, se years, Chat party hes been laboring, not to heal sectional hounds and the bitter ness engendered by war, but to see by hat assumptions of power they could prevent the South from homing back as DernooraCie `Stales, and thus keep in place the party that is rioting in spoils —I soy when such conditions have ex is top for three years, he that would stam mer in pronouncing himself a Democrat —whose party is the only one to which we can look for succoor from these woes—is no man for the times. [Deafening cheers . 1 , And I say to-night, that I have never said before, that 1 stand here a Democrat—a Democrat ae defined in the platform of the Newt York Conyen• thin. lam willing to fight under the banner of Dye Democracy, and, God willing, we will achieve a •ictory.— [Cheers. j * * * * How DID ()RANT MAKI Ills MOM.— General Grant, at the begining of the war, was mashie to purchatie his uniform. Now, acoordfig to his father's story he is worth four hundred thousand dollars! hii pay during the war was $5OOO per year. Rinse itaXolose he has - received $O,OOO per year. Dila amounts to some $llO,OOO altogether, including his oxpeales. Where did be get the °ilex $250,000 Had he anything to do in the cotton speculations, or was he in the oWhialtejt.lthig f" We would be glad to have the Radical organs explain this matter. He has made a huge fortune out of war. The people would like to know bow It was done, and whether it comes out of their pockets in the way of perquisites, as it is - called f Our Radi cal friends will greatly oblige the people by explaining Ibis metier.—Ex --The nick RepubUses press base nothing to say about •Grauts's ootten siieculations dada/ the •war. A Union of Hearts and Hands. The people want pesos ; they base nothing in common With politicians and the purpose of a party to retain power at every cost, and they will nedessarily select that patty and those men for office who offer a reasonable. rational and en during peace, and the prosperity which always followed the footsteps of the old union of hearts and of heads. That union, now out of fashion with politi cians, but still living in the beams of the people, is that for which the Democracy are arrayed in this con test, and the people know that no other party has the power to bring it about, Wa is more easily inaugurated than The Republican party was competent to get up a war, but it has preyed the utter incompetency to bring about peace. it esulti set on the dogs of war, but it cannot withdraw them. That work is the mission of the Dense° trier, and without it - lit Wry delegated to secure peace to a troubfed Country, torn by passion And faction, no pesoc will ever come to agate hiese this people with its uptold wealth of fraternity. union, and respect of law. The Dernoa redy offer a permanent fraternal peace for the discord and seoqonai dieeensions of the hour ; they der a union of hearts and hands for one 'of bayonet domioetion ; they offer the old Unlock under wligob we prospered as no other people have ever prospered, for the Upton of gall and wormwood now forced down throats that cry peace ! peace I peace ! —"peace, be still!" Three years of Jacobin rule since the war has ended is all that any ersne people need to assure them - that pedeele sot to be made by that party, and that to secure the bless ing.' for which tlOO,OOO, lives were given and three thousand millions expended, a change of actors and agents must be made We present to the war-cursed, wealth robbed ; and bayonet-raaked peo ple of these dissevered States. as their agent, jhe great statesman, scholar and patriot. lionavio Sivisoue. Ile is not a roan of war, but an agent of peace, and we appeal to them to lay aside the prej udicee of the hour, acid weigh the ques tioce before them with meson, honesty and, candor. Is it not better, teenier, ' workingmen, thinking man, toitignin try a statesman of that party. which guided the destinies of s nation born of bank rapt celonies, on to a grandeur attained by no other people he (he same time in the history of nations, than to continue on warring over spoils, and at last gn down in a sea of night with none but wrangling factions et the helm Come, come, be men —lel the patriotic blood of your ancestors vindicateyoor patriot ism and good ems° !—Ceuncel Bluffs Democrat. An OUTKAOII ON 11111 II IMPLISS.--- rhe /lagerstown (Maryland) Nail says "A friend residing in this county, who fins.. had fo . ur children in the Columbia Institute of Washington oily, an institu tion where mutes are educated, informs us that negroes are now admitted as pupils, add that they are placed at once on the same footing with the while pu pils. Not only do the negtoes nit side by side with the whites its the school room, but the white pupils.are obliged to sleep in the same bed with the ne groeg, and are often compelled to hiss them. Thus are we progreseing---1100ill Quality, in the mute seylum, were nal a word of objention,can be raised," ---Sberreans new funding 'scheme proposed to lift the 6-20's and give new hoods specifying to, pay In gold. The 20's amount to one thousand four bun dred.millions, payable in currency. To pay this in v oid would like at least two thousand millions of greenbacks- That is Sherman's scheme and it vretuld rob the people of six hundred minima more and give ISO the Bondholders: NOih lag when people get used to it —When the laborer receives • dol ler he receive' but severity cent!, when the bondholder receives at dollar, be re ceive' one dollar and forty cote—the former being paid in passbook", the latter in gold. Such inequality be. tweet' the currency of the poor man and that of the rt.*, the Clrant party are striving to continue. The Demooratic party declare" In fairer of one pi / Tam for ash -Ms stated that the east of every soldier in the army is two thousand dol lars- Thy' soldiers lin, Is *boat one. tenth part of this amount, 'Who gets the rest! if mat CAMPAIGN RHYMES Dentoeratio Airing Swish With Seymour so Blair Welt meet the Reds mere, Till their eyeballs pop nut of their s-ckets Their bonds shall be paid, As the contract wait made, }bane Jaeohitt raid on Our pockets CHORVI—Theo throw out your banners high With Grout and Colfax And the terrible tax That wodld surely succ,-ed their etection ; The country would go Ole tont% ef" woe s With no chance of n new resurreetion Cuckoos—Then throw out, de. Then roue►, boy', end relly, From hilltop end Your country pave from oonfopion, While with bennere unterletl, Well chow the whole world Our respect fur uur lured Constitution CUOR"6---Theri throw out, 4fc Than hip, hip, hurrah ! For good order and law, With peacro and good w illthruagh the nation; Lot Itadicaht rant About Colira eta Grant, But our Seymour's tie country's ealtatfon Cuoniie—Then throwput your bennera brgh 00 in tl4 air. Let your flags MAI at UIOTU, TIOQT. end even. And out y,tori , us cause, so up right and fair THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER Increasing—Democratic enthusiasm Popular—Democratic poie raainga. tieing iloorna r tiolil and Grant stock Numerous—Deruocretio victories. Failure..--Grant - and Colfax meetings The "Mining Men"—Schuyler Colfax —lf reconttruction is • success, why Isn't the %my withdrawn 7 —lf lhe'Radtcale ratan equal rights what do they put the negro above the white MID for —Grant's peace—arrelog the negrd and taking the right to vote for President from the people. —Seven of the new Southern members of Congresi, were formerly oodatittients of Mr, Burlingame, when be was a Congress man from Mu,6arbtretts ,The Radicals hung the keeper of the Anderionville privon, Capt. Wirt:, suit gave its founder. ("overlain it ranti,a glad VIOICA/11.0 to the Chicago C niention, —Later silvices from the Kentucky election indicate that Sterenaon, the Demo— cratic candidate for Governor, will have a majority of 100,000. —The crowning outrage upon the ped pie of North C,arolins has h. en consuonatett in the ■ppomtmeot of a negro mayor of Ilillaboro% by tbo wan who wntes himself "Governor" of that State. —The Senate of A labama ban passed a bill tali ing from the people the right to vote for P residential electors, and gir tug it to the Legislators, and it V. said the bill will tut douhtedly pass the House. —Thirty four negroes and ten degraded white Radicals, were ,arrested In Dedfoi'd street, Philadelphia, for disorderly conduct. Grant and Colfax will carry that neighbor hood sure. 'Rah for Grant. We Polked them once, We Pierced them well, And then w, Bucked them sere ; And with Frank Blair, Well make them stem, That they may all Bey-moor. —The hest way to secure poses is ter whip the Radicals so badly that they will not be heard of again for ten years, for they are the ones wbo have provoked civil war in this country, and Miy are the ones who wish to renew it. —These who Indorse Thaut Buttar.'" hanging of Matuford, and Bloghtun's bang. log of Mn. Barlett, will vote for Grant and Coitay. Those - toPpased to murder ond robber, will vote for Seymour and Blair. ilearytoody seems to ho ..•banyial up with the hope that that country will day-MOUr peace and prosperity alter the taming Presidential eleotion than thee ha* been grant ed to it linos the good old days of Democratic rule. —"Rabat"-4ho watchword of Treasury thieree. Rebels"—Two-thirds of the white p‘eple of the - country. "Loyalty"— the Itsdlcola apology for public robbery. "Traitor" . —a radical argument which lost tbacountry $609,000,000'a ,year i 4 Use. of peace• —There would be some Congestion for the boa rily taied laboring menottbe won. try, if the money witiolt fa wrung from them yea applied to tie ilquidatlezt of th♦ notion al debt.. Bat 0; L sot. Itgage to swell the 'elan of etook-Jobbors, 'oentraotoge, and other pokier Oongrege. •p to the alr Let yonr flags float at morn, nova, and even. And our glorinue cause, so or. right and fail Shall be smiled on and prospered bp Herren-- Shall bn fmilcd nn and proepernd by 11•na.n • Shell we have Another Civil War? That the Itedicel lestlere, says the Harrisburg Patriot, ere preparing to in stigureLte a new OtTli get, ie naitnifeetly eppea'reni. Ssy what you will, enter st the idea ee you mayiiitiievrrtheless true. They ,establlshel a swat military organization, known as the ..Grand Army of the Republic," banded together lty the obligation of au oath, and entire ly under the control of their political leaders, They have resolved upon arming the negrots in the Southern States, and s hill looking to that end, has already plotted one of the houses of Congress end will be passed by the other upon the re assembling Pl,Polllrees in Sept, They have passed, and are still en gaged in enacting, militia laws in the Southern States, that give the control of the State troops, whiob will consist principally of negeoes, to carpet-bag gers, spots of the Freedmen's BtireliU, and other adherents and tools of their party., Hark's thee arranged the machinery by which thr . k , hope to carry through their contempleted rim/Glutton. *key are writing to excite ill-blood between the xi Item of the South and their negro and carpet-bag masters. To ibis end nothing le tett undone. They have diefranohised large mum, barb of whites, Including the moat 'lntel hgent and influenti.d. They have imposed upon the people of the south, by force—of aims, not merely negro suffrage, but negto , login latureP, negro executive offioeri, and negro Judger, and when they put whites into office, they effected men of the worst character and those most odious to the large Majority of the whites... They have organised the negro,' into secret leagues. in order to combine them &game the whiter, They have stirred up the negroes to riot nue/ incited Them to blood-shed, by incendiary . .elppeals to their wand and most brutal passions. And now their bogus legislatures T. engaged in usturpiug the eights of flas enfrartrAmed, at well ae disfran chgeed, by declaring themselves author ized to cast the electoral voice of their States f.rr. Preimieot rad 'Vine President! All this means WAR! The Radical lenders know that the people of this country, North as well se Routh, will not tolerate outrages like these, and th,zy hate perpetrated them in ..order. invite rreistence. When that ,comes they expect to declare Martial law and to take forcible poeaession of thh govern meet far an indefinite period. But they have a double purpcse If they fell in exciting a conflict before the election, they have . determined to in augurate it themselves immediately af terward. They have resolved that, should Grant be defeated by a small ma jority in the electoral college they will allege fraud and resort to arms to prevent the inauguration of Seymour. la view of these things, what is the duty of the people! The Radicals must. be foiled in their attempt tecreate an other civil war. There is but one way to dp it, and that is'to make the Demo cratic majorities" so overwhelming in the yorthren Stales that the contemplated Radical frauds to the South mill have vie eifect.upon the result This is the duty of the people, if lb!) , would save the country from the awlurperil of Radical revolution, anarchy and blood. ?theta/tuts Contour —The 'Radical papers are glorifying over the fact that Mr. W. U. Russell, the celebrated nor ' respondent-of the London 'Tema, is op posed to Governor Beymour's oleetion. She same lying vagabond was opposed to Aim Union troops tful-hig the war: At the first battle of 801 l Run, he belt tied everthing and every act on the part of the Unihn troops, while be magnified everything on Ili part of the "rebels." —The aristocracy of England never liked the Democracy of America, and the Democracy never asked for their sympathy. Lot the Radicals have thin sprig of Royal aristocracy in welcome, while the Democracy of Areeripa will go torSeyrnour and Main fizoso'rOvraaoss.—Outrages by ne greei are getting to be no common, un der the management and teaohings 'of 00041[11 Howard and his Bureau agent*, that something will hays to be done. An outrage was perketrated week before, last in Washington, under the very eye* of the negro police. Capt. Queen, of the Quartermaster's Department, was waylaid, robbed and murdered, in a va cant lot not fir from the Presidonga Mansion, and yet no arrests haves been made. He Is only a whits Man, and the piens piayers of Q 1 Howard oast hardly reach him or his kin. "IL is net a mere party triumph w• seek. We eve trying to save oar coun try froin the dangers which overhang it. We visit to lift off 04 perplexities ant shvikles which, in the shays of bad laws and of crushing taxation, now Paralyse the liminess cad labor of oar load. We hope, too, that we aaa give order, pros perity cud happleese to those seetioas of our *Quaky tritleh caloric deeply to day In thelitotatar; 'and In all their In dustry, from the unhappy-.events of the last eight yeare."—lioretht Bsymour,
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