"BY MIND BY." ne the parting , very bitter Was the !rend clasped vary tight le a storm of-tsar-drops tailing From a lime all sad mid white ? Think not ot•tr, in the Mars Calmer, Jailer days are nigh, Gate tot backward, but look onward For a sunny "by aed IPS:" "'"Were gonna wiftepesed words too Mier/Med vie the touch of lips too sweet 1 Are two souls ono* Belted together Newer. newer town' too Moot 1 ' • Newer hers, earths poor, •ain position mewl, smouldering martinet die ; Bet its uhss shall return you dosathiss purer "by and by." Mir the priceless lova you Welshed Sought for, played with, and then slain were its crushed and riubering reginants Calmly thrown you beck again Calmly, too, the redinante gather Bring thew borne without 11 ;$lO3, Sweet returns they yet shall bring you Ina coining "by and by." To your frail boat tossed and battered With Us stile all torn and wet, • crossing o'er a waste of waters Over which your sue has set? To the shore all calm and sunlit, To the smooth feud weetzt_and dry, Faith shall bear your shatterirel vessel Befely, surely, "by and by:" A re 4e,eyislids.eory weary„. Does the tired bean long for`rest, Are the temples bot and throbbing, And the hands together pressed flops shall lay you on her bosom, Cool the poor lips parched and dry, And shall whisper, 'Rest is coming, Rest /Drover 'by and by,'" And when calmed and oheered and freshened By her arti-tnsplriug vateeri Then look up, the heavens are bright'ning, Cease your wailing and rejoice ; Cry not for days departed, None will bear you, none reply But look on where light is break in; O'er a brightber "by and by." - THE FINANCES. Spoonlt of Hon. Geo. H. Pendleton We make the following extract-from the' able and powerful speech of Hon. George H. Perrdleton,made at Lafayette, 1 Indiana, on Thursday last : I Bald gentlemen, that the llnpublican party had bankrupted the country. In three years before the first day of July, TellB—the.first day of the present month —these gentlemen had collected from the people of the United Stites more than $1,400,000,000. $ 1,400,000 4 000 collected is three yearh ! Why, gen tlemen, $ 1,400,000,000 is equal, or very nearly equal, to one tenth part of all the property, real and peremai, ur every kind, cheroot's and description- 7, lands, houses, farming utetielle, money, bonds, stooks, railroads, everything—in the United Stales. In 18(30 the official returns from these who collected the census showed that the property of the United States was less than $16,100,- 000,000. 1 will not pretend to tell you what was the 'destruction of the war, or what has been the gain since—Ctiithe it has been enough to supply the place of the whole mom lost or not— , but $l.- 400,000,000, collected in three years froln the earnings of the people of the United States, is equivalent to quite or r nearly one tenth of all the property of the dountry. In ltitlG the amount of tat collected from the people of the United States was $ 500,000,000—0ne - year. Some gentleman, the other - day,correcied me, and said that I had made a great' mistake, and that it was only $370,000,. 000. Well, in order that I may accom modate anybody here who thinks that I have staieJ it too large, I will take it back. It was not $590,000,000 3 it was $570,000,000. That was a hundred mil lions more than was Collected in England that year. That was one hundred and ninety millions more than was collected that year from the 'people of France. ' The public debt of the United State, is, in round numbers, more or lees—l will not be exact to the figure—s2,soo,ooo 000 Thatshas been created within six or eight years. It is ohargable upon a basis of less than $10,000,000,000 The public debt of Ors"( Britian la $4,000,. 000,00(1, which has been created in two hundred years, and ie chargeable upon • basis of more than $40,000,000,000. The amount of money collected from the people of the United States for taxes, I Slate end Federal, each year, is $BOO,- AOO,OOO ; $800,000,000 collected for the purpose of auppporxlnq the two systems —State •and Federal. Gentlemen, do you know what all the earnings in the United States in eon y ear amount to t Put it at eight per cent. ; eight per cent. upon all the capital In the United States, all that is alive as well as that which ii dead, end then take frhm the earnings the $800,000,000 that are col hutted year by year for tares, and you have the pitiful sum of two per cent. left for the use of ids people of the eieuniry. Two per cant. is what is left for the enjoyment of th e labor that pro duces it after siz per cent. , bas been squandered by the Republican party In' our government. 1 said to you gentle melt, that the public' debt of the United States was $ 2,500,000,000. $ 1 ,7 00 , - 000,000 of that' amouut is ocnoPoeed of what is known as the fist-teventyd,pods, They are els pet s tient. bends, payable In twenty years after their Sous, but redeemable ,by thg. government, if it shall sea Ilt to do leo, at any time after Out tepee 'Of five • years. Those bonds We payable In legal' tender oorraney of the country. [Applaues ] A year ago ' have ban vecessery, to argue Ask question. A year ago when I had lAA-, C-/r . N•ww---d-- ---- -. , ..,, . , ; ,.. „ .. e . [ , Ai r, tut I f 1 . - c , i[f-. c /__ __• . / ,_ / //_r-7V_ ew: _ . 11 . 11 alr // l ti Wt , L . t i tr 4 , „y 4D , 14 VOL. 13 the honor to put forth that statement, 1 was denounced as a repudiator and cop perhead. [Cheers.] It Is too late to require an argument on it now. The bonds say that they are payable in le gal tenders ; the law says that they are payable in legal tenders ; Senate'. Sher man, of Ohio, says that they are paya ble in legal tenders ; Senator Morton, of Indiana, says that they are payable in legal tenders ; the State Convention which sat at Indianapolis-ISe -ltepubli can convention--deolared that they were payable in legal tenders ; and the fund ing bills of the House of Represents- Oyes and of the Senate of the United States also deelares that they are pays. ble in legal tenders [Cheers.] Why, at the time the legal-tender notes were issued there was not one of these hoods in existence ; they were all issued after this legal lenders sere ; and those legal tender nettle bore upon theft Molt the inscription whit Ate law said they should bear theti—that they were payable for every debt due from the United States, except interest on the bonds, and were receivable for every debt from private persons, or from the United Staley; except duties on imports. [A voice, "That's correct, sir,"] Why, some gentlemen say that it would be a very bard bargain [At thie point a mart pressed through the audience to the front of the p:atform, bearing aloft a banner with an effigy pkinted upon it, representing on one side a laborer, lean and cadaverous, with a spade in his hand, and on the other a portly gentleman, wttii feet en table, cigar far mouth, and - bonds In hand, while over his head wan the in scription, "Bonds don't pay taxes."] 1 suppose, my fellow citizens, that the mei represented there with a spade in his hand is enjoying that extreme fe unity which Wendell Phillips said die people of the United States ought to be willing to enjoy in consideration of the great good which their sufferings had done to the pe`epitl'of the country lie" id that the people of the country ought to he willing to work one hour earlier in the morning and one hour la. ter in the evening during the whole pe riod of their lives, for the benefite T that fly Republican party had conferred up on them. There is a specimen of how happy he is.[Lau g hter.] I was lay ing to you that at the time these bonds were issued and exempted from taxation at the tune they were towed, this legal tender currency was in 'imolai ion There it is written so plain that ft man ,need not be deceived • "This note ix payable for every debt of the United States, expept the interest on the public debt." And yet they have the effrontery to come here and tell us that it would be a great hardship to compel them to take back. In large proportions, the tame kind of money that they themselves ' ' p a id for the bonds. ' At the lime the law was passed, there was a vast deal of indebtedness from private individuals throughout the country. I saw what Senate'. Ilendrioks said the other night in Indianapolis, within his own experience A Mall owed $lO,OOO, He had borrowed it from his noliilthor in gold ,net before the war ; his contract was thathe should pay in gold. He was to keep it six months or a, yeai, with interest at sev en per cent. This law was reflood. Ile takes Ws $10,000; they werolo,ooo in gold ; they were what he Lad agreed to pay his neighbor ; be did pot pay them; he took the $lO,OOO, gold was at $2.50, and invested $15,000 in these five-lwenty hoods; ha has received six per cent. on $16,000, six per omit. in geld—s9oo a year L—upon his investment, and the man from whom he borrowed $lO,OOO In gold got back but $4,000. And yet that geo• Ullman is ready to 'tend up end say that Hr. Pendleton and Senator Ileodricke, end , Idr. HoDonald and Mr. Petit, are all repudiators, for be. is a ;sod loyal man, anti ought tp be paid stmording to the spirit of the la*. ['Applaueee] I know In coy own 04 a case of a man who bought it piece of property ten years ago. He was to pay $20,000 for it. It was a gold 'entreat. He was to keep the $20,000 at six per omit. inter. alt as long as he wanted, and was to be at liberty' to pay It up at any time. The legal tender sot was patised. He takes s2o,ooo . iri dold and bought $50,000 in legal leader note'. He paid $20;000 of it to his neighbor, and he Is now one of the most howling men In favor of-hsv log his $BO,OOO in gold. Do you ever hear any of these gentlemen speak of that 'herb - hip I [e. vales ."-Ploall of "STATE 2,1G312 1 15 AND IPZIDED,AI. UNION." - BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY AUGUST 28, 1868, NO. 34. hem.") ,110 they ever tell you tbet see men ought all to be paid nocordlng to the spirit of the contract as It was made originally, arid that. it is a wrong and a hardship to take advantage of the legal tender act I Not one ; net one. And yet these gentlemen who appeal to the country, who say that they tore not in faior of repudiation, who say that they state favor of sustaining the °red it of the 'United Btates—theee are the people who to-days 'in favor of paying in gold, dolar (oi . l gollar, these bonds, which, as I. have illsown you, are paya ble in legal tentlemy. They say that if we undertake to4lazhein in legal tea:* dere there will be egr4Qt Clpapei94. Of the currency. Well, now, expansion of the currency is not at all a necessary part of the payment in legal tenders Commenoe and do the duly before you VOA hare gel , $550,000,000 in bonds, whiCh are hold by the hanks Of the United States in the Treasury of the United States as asectuetty for the banks' ciroulai ion. Take them up. Pay them off to legal tender notes, and make the legal tender notes supply the place of the national banks. [Applause That don't increase your currency a dollar; and yet you will dace eighteen million dollars year by year) . which the 'people of the lin - tied States now pay as a bonus to the national batiks to lend their money at fifteen or twenty per cent. But I do not propose to be frightened front my poeition by any cry in relation to the expansion of the currency. lam a hard money man; 'I am in favor of bard money; I always was—since I have bad any knowledge of this euhject—in Meer of it. 1 voted •gaieet the legal lender act ; I unposed it with all my might ; It was passed against my wishes But the people of the country hare endured the dissavantages arising from it., and now I nm io tairor of sticking to It until we get out of it every possible tiLtivantage that the people o.ltl derive from IN Anti Just so soon as vee have got all these ad vantages, and can get bank without suf fering any di§asjer to our original, non• atitutidual, hard money, then I am in favor of it; and have been in favor of palming a law making it a penal offence for any body afterwards to issue soy pa per money Then we bear a cry come up frorn-Iliese people so to the great iisadvanlage that. labor would sutler under that expansion of the currency Weil, now, I know the evils as well as any map, but I know that there are some 'hinge that are not unmitigated evils connected with it: and I know that there is no peopli under God's ILeavento who suffer lea' from an expansion of the currency made under the condition in whicd we are, than the agricultural people of Indiana and Illi nois Recollect that they compare this expansion with an expansion of the our.. many which satinet a legal tender cur rency, which would not pay taxas,which was irredeemable. But retitollect that behind this wliclo currency, which they depreciate so much stanch at least fur eve - ry t dollar that has bees issued ten acres of ai good land as ever crow ien over It is all open for aeLtlensent Worldn't it be a •ery grent'hardehip, if, under a system of expulsion, judioious expansion, which would stimulate husi nese, which would bring taxes in your treasury, whiob would, without injury, make everything prosper and thrive— wouldn't it be it very great hardship, ti stiy, for the people of Indiana if, under that system, they, could sell a bushel of corn for $2,50, lied with that $2,50 go out to Kansas or Nebraska, and enter two sores of land? You would suffer very much pouldn't you? And yet,these gentlerneeiropose in the floe of this condition of affairs, they propose to fund the debt of the United Malec What i• that ? Those fiveeewenties are six per cent. bond.. They life exempt from municipal or Btate taxation by the law. They are redeemable in fire years, but they may sun for twenty. They are re- ' .tkirstiablestuntx, la legal-tender notes at any time after - five year.. Now, what de theee gentlemiiia propose I They propose to fujd that debt; in other wore* to issue bonds which shell be payable in gold, Interest payable hi r • gold, exempt from taxation, which will have forty years to run, end pay an in- serest of four nod a half percent. They ask you to give up the privilege of pay ing theme hoods in greenbacks. Why, gentlemen, it the prices of gold to-day, that makes difference of $780,000,000 to you. They ask you to give op the right of Federal taxation. Why, Lou siestas, at llta. rats. .proposed is the House' of Representatives Reptibli cans themeelvea,that has givintg up $lO,- 000,000 a year. They ask you to give up the right to pay them within live years, and stop the interest. Gentle men, that means to perpetuate forever the public debt of the United States. That means to make it a permanent in stitution. That means to fix it upon' us and upon our ohildren.. Forty years! Row many of you will live (bat long! now many of your children willilve that lone If the debt be $2,600,000,000, and is then funded at four and half per cent. the yearly interest'w ill be a hund red millions of dollars ; and these men , pr2pose,iristeadof paying In legal-ten• dere, instead of paying in fire years, in , stead of paying when you can, these gentlemen propose to extend it for forty years, and during every eno of these forty years to extract from you and your children a libtideed viillibms of dollars interest Forty years I $4,000,000,000 during that time collected in gold. and at the end of that, $2,500,000,000 more I to pay in gold. Where will they get it-; Out of the sweat of the brow of the peo , ple of the country : out of their bones and'munclus; out of their sinews and fleet ; out of -their broken hearts and dying bodies. [Applause.] This is where they will get it. And a perpetuit lion of this means not only this of which I have spoken ; it means wiled It has entailed upon every country on which the sun of God ever ehone which had a national dent, which makes the rich richer, the poor poorer. It means the exemption of capital and the putting of burdenitupon labor. It means luxury cud wealth for those who are wealthy : it means brown brad and potatoes with the absence of meat fur the laboring poor. [Cheers ] It means low wages ; it means scant employment; It means to put the neck of the laborer under the foot of the capitalist, [Loud applsuee.] It means all that is bad in Government, all that is tyrannical in society. It means the absence of all that makes life lovely and God's gifts blessings, And this is the system that they prd pose to put upon you. That is the law, ] , f I am not mistaken, which was passed within the last few daya by congress Gentlemen, see to it, you who have to elect Congresemen—you who have ,to elect legislators that elect Senators— you who have to put the government of your State in the hinds of faithful men, Kee to it that the verdict which you give on the second Tuesday of October Shall be against this system of funding, and in favor of paying honestly, fairly, ex actly, the public debt of the country in the greenbacks of the country. '[Ap plause.] I know, the spirit which I see in this meeting, that I need not exhok the people of Indiana to be up and doing [A voice: "It's all 601.1 I thank God that it is indeed! Remember (bat your election comes on in October. Re member that the Presidential election comes in November. Let me recall one thing in the history of your State„ ,In IBM Junes linchanan NN a a running for President against John C. Freeman,. The October election oath Upon that election depended the result. Pennsyl- Iscisi the native State of Mr Buntline° trembled In the balance, and gave an unoertain sound. It was the ten thous cod majority t hat Indiana gave for Willard that inspired the people of the whole oountry. [Cheers ] Don't forget the Presidential election, Don't forget i next Odtober. Remember that every vote you give for Governor adds to the vote that Seymour will have for Yield dent. [Cheers'.] And gentlemen, if you, on the night of the second Tuesday in October, shall rejoice, and shall re joloe Ole people of the country by the fsetihat Thomas A. Hendrick' is Gov erner of lndtana, [cheers;) if you can rejoice your hearts with that news,,then on the first Monday in November you may go to your beds in peace, knowing that Oxalic , Seymour is President of the United States. (Long eiontinued ap plause.] WMMfg —if Graalbook4 ar4 good enowie to pay the Jarmo:Me mechanic, Ow loiortr, the merchant, (At aoldier 1114 widow who , Pay !axes, t i t a s p a good enougi (agog itAo eondAotder ni)llopart no krxes.— Dnieocratio Doctritso... Tbe election for Congress to California this year will.not take place until No vember. The table pf crowing election* Boating through the country pspere,set ling it down for September 8, wrong. —Our eit-devileiolii our devil Prueu I;21 A Remarkable Coincidence A gentleman, to one of the Departments at Washington has made a discovery whieh develops. one of the most remarka bly colneidenees to be found on record —to the superstitious, one abeolutely sthrtling, • Many of the rulers of the' earth were arm bell in destiny, and long before there rise felt a confidence l in their exslation thot nothing could impair. Napoleon and his first wife had their' prOpheo les and omens which were singularly fulfilled; but neither the I realisation to these two oases nor in any lothers now of record were so remarkable as the coinoideboe developed IV the die , 'every Of the - cOmblitatiOn of figures made by the gentlemen in Washington, which in publiclein the National In tellegencer of last week, which we give below, In the first place, the gaiphabet is numbered. from A to I, 2,3, &o , up to 26. A iepreitittlii 1 and , 28, Taking therefore the letters in the name ,Seymour and Blair," and repreeentlog each letter by the numb it represents • in the alphabet, when i ire added up the whole we find the tot sum produced Is 177, Then (ski the words "Grant and Colfax" and add up the numerical re presentatives of each letter, in like man ner, and the aggregate product is 140. Add together 177 and 140, the total of two electorvl tickets for the Presidency and Vice Presidency, now in the field, and we have the aggregate 317, which is precisely the number of votes in the electoral College, for President and Via. President, The following In the table from the , intriiijencer 1 B 19 G - -7 8.... 2 11 5 R 18 C 3 X 25 A 1 El 4 M. 13 N 14 8...... 5 0 15 T 20 15 11 21 0 7 A 18 A • 1 N •4 1 9 A...... 1 4 J 10 ..... 14 1) 4 0 1 1..... 12 0 15 AL.,..13 11 2 1. 12 6 o_ls A 1 A I 1' 16 9 X 24 Q 17' B 18 11....,18 140 s 19 177 'l' 20 140 217 The 'number of W 16 votes io electo- X 7.4 ra.l ooDegs. Z..-26 But to carry the comparison still fur ther we have classified the vote as it 18' now calculated it may probably stand from the light before us at this time, sad we find exactly the same result: 177 votes for the Democratic candidates 'end 140 for the Republican ticket. No other elesification of the votes can be made which has greater plausibility thin this. It will be even that the Radicals have all the benefit of the chances of their oppressive measures in bliasourt and other Slides : Seymour 4 Malt. Qrant &Colfax Alabama 8 0 • Arkansas 6 -0 CaMoroi. 5 • 0 Co nee ticut 6 0 Delaware 3 0 Florida 0 X Georgia U 0 Illinois 0 16 Endlrmo 0 13 lowa 0 8 Kansas 0 3 Kentucky 11. 0 Lam islana 0 7 Maine 0 7 Maryland 7 0 Massachusetts 0 12 Michigan 0 8 Mln natant* 0 4 . Mississippi 0. Missouri U . 11 Nebraska 0 1 Nevada 3 0 New liessipsh ire d !•5 • NOW Jersey 7 c -7: 0 New York. 33 ' ' 0 North Carolina 9 0 Ohlo 21 0 Oregon ' 8 ' 0 Pennsylvania 26 ' 0 Rhode Inland II ~ I. 4 • Bdhth Carolina 0 6 7 . 0000116110 , 0 . .'.O Tana/ . , o 4 0 , Vormorit 0 - b Went Virginia A 0 Virginia 10 0 Whissirsl, fs , . 8 . * , • 1. 1,.' , . 174. - • 140 Geleabathe' ape reed twaweyh to pay the fanner, as ijilchattie, the taboret, the merchant, .04 soqie'r'and s9l4krt widow who pay taste, they arn/oed enomph lope, the botedhokkt who pap M tastes.l—Dena. era tie Doering. ' ' ---The deity of Thuglens , Moine Immo the Red's'', without W"Wet. , Who **Seeds— Duller, OrWel). ir4hil lips t Lal us know who we iuroe $e bs4L Whother the beast, the hyboarllo or the round*. • 7pntior ono, if/10u or 11` t in of Gestloamy of tht :an you for IX Institut suppose my' c here, w man who is alters sumo!' &high depreda tion in society; a mat. m all on you respect and esteem for - his many- good qualities.—yes gentlemen, a oar who never drinks more nor a quart bJ liken • day — oar you I 56 7 5 , for in Wien! dis pose that this ere man would be guilty of hooking a box of percussion cape'? Rattlesnakes and Goon-skins! Picture to yourselves, gentleman, a faller fast • sleep in his log oshin with his bulimia wife and ortihan children by hie side ; all native husbe& in deep repose, sad nought to be heard but the sputtering of the silent thunder, and theltofterini of bullfrogs ; then 4 imegine to yourself a feller sneaking up the door, like • des picable hyena, softly entering 'the, dwel ling of the'peareful and happy family, • d to the mostmesdasious and dastard ly manner, hooking a wbolo box of per oushuuns. Gentleman, I will not, loan not dwell upon the merit ferocity of such • scene. f y feelings turn from such a picture of turpentine, like a big woodchuck would turn from my log Rose. I cannot for a instant barber the idea, that; au man ,in these diggings, much less this ere man, would be guilty of each a rantenkerous an unextrambled dieeretion. And now, gentleman after• this brief view of the ease, let me re treat of you to make up your minds ean- I thdly and unpartially, and give us such I a verdict as we might unreasonable sae- I peaL from a delighted end hetollerant body of fellow citizens ; remembering that, in the language of Nimrod, who fell in the battle - of Bunker is better than ten Min should estrape,rather than a guilty one should suffer, Judge, give us a phew tobacker. ---lf Greenbacks are good eaoulh to pay the farmer, Me mechanic, a; taborer, the merchant, the soldier and the soldier's Usidow who pay taxes, they, are good enough to pay the bondhoV er who pay no lase,.—Dernotratie Doarme. Mortgaging the Labor of the Country for Forty Yuan The Senate, Sunday, passed Funding Dill, which will probahly pass the House to day. Two claming of hpetits, one payable in 40 year. at 41 per Genii. In terest, are to be issued. Both principal and interest are-lo be - fiald in gold, and the bonds ire to be free from all taxes except the income, which will not reach foreign bondholders, (as the tax is not to be takeO from Coupons,) nor one half of the Americans, for only through the coupons eau the inoome be coilested. The past history of this country shows that the United States bonds have run ep as high as 130, or over; and du ring General Jackson'. time, the tbree per cents of the United States sold at par. Notwithstanding !het!. well known and well produced facte in Congress, by e Democratic members, the rump now mortgages ue all for 40 years it 4 per cent and 30 years at 41 per cent with gold interest and principal, and no toter it was shown, too, in debate in the House, that in forty years, nay, in less time, by A. D. 14100.—,the population of this country would be 100,000,000,—and that these one hundred millions of peo ple, under good Government, 'would more easily pay the.two and one-half billions of debt, we owe, than did the Democracy, under General Jackson's administration,the debt of the dewier tion, and of the war of 1812. The Rump, awe, it seems, hat not on ly run us into debt $2,600,000.000,1tut hatteold ue, for 40 yentas, to- the bond holders, at gold interest and Principal, —with no loxes —N. I'. Egress Radial"le talk a great deal about upholding the pieblio Credit. During the war they upheld it by de treading the government. Soattered all over the country we and Itemlicala who Were poor or in very mod.rata oireum claims when the war commenced, but are rich now. Now did they acquire the weeltk t They supported the gov ernment with their bawling months and at the same time plundered it with their long fingers., itadieal bras s iere in office eenopired with Radical briwlere oat of office to rob the government they Pre tended to . This is why the pato lie debt ran up to Inch an enormous amount. It the Radical party had ad ministered the government honest/3i, the debt would not be hill cc large, es it, le, and the puidie credit would not be in` a sinking condition. It IMO their *array apace mkt oorruptitn that stink the brbdtt of the government 40 tow that three dollars in government Money own waded/ only one dellartyt gold.-4s. -7—lf-Greenhtteks are good StA to 'ow thafaraolor, tiodonic, the aborer, the werehani, tAo soldier mad the oaldier's widow who pay taxes, they are good enough iay the bondholder who pay no taxes.— Pernocratie . Taxod on ortootwror is plat/Ott e 91 141 144 To boar, to wall, to tool or to be. Tats t total t acitiiing but tango t Grinding our nionoo ai sharp ohs axis. alio warm •111,11111 TAMA ROA t beFritid man's Hem* So keep in pipit r, So that Radical loafers van *wit iia4n bare a eitair.• 0 ---.--I m
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