The Democratic Watchman. BELLEFONTE, ,PA.' FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 11, 1868 Speech of'Mr. Pendleton, at Bangor W. give below the coooluding portion of the speech of Hon. George U. Pendle ton% made at Bangor, Mine, on Thura day last : -MT FeleNoe: You cannot build your ships, bemires every article that enters into their construction is taxed so high that the Britian colonies undertiell you alirays. You cannot employ labor, be close labor is compelled to pay these tames, and the bones' and sinews and blood of men cannot work to pay taxes to be neither feed hoe clothed. You can hot carry our Western produce to other seen ries, because when .'no have' paid our labor and takes and triansportatiou there is nothing left to email abroad You cannot entry the Southern produce ; because under Radical reconstruction farms have been destroyed and the labor system kite been deranged; three mil lions of negroes hate been converted in to politiciand; cotton, rice and sugar, have ceased to be staples; a garden has been turned into a desert. - A liberal system is the life of your commerce, as it Is the hope of our industry ; yet the tariffs must be kept high to pay interest on our public debt, and the deity expen ses incurred by Republican policy, and Ana it slims the rich nttuvinn snit of omr_fertile •alleys to make the sterile rooks of Massachusetts to side, it des troys your shipping and palsies your in dustry, that her msnufacturers may be protected I have stated to you that the last official report of the Secretary of the ' . 876 60. Of this amount fi fteen hundred d i and eighty three millions one hundred and ten thousand dollars are In five tweaty bends. I maintain that those bwoda are payable in legal-tender lilies. Fits law under which they issued-ex pressly declares that the legal tenders are payable for every debt due from the Government except interest on the pub Ito debt; the bonds say they are payable in legal teudertnotes Senator Sherman says so. Senator Morton says so, Thad. deus Stevens !vein so, the funding bill says no, the Democratic conventlons of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana.' Illinois, Missouri, Wieconsto, lows, Miunenota, and Michigan say so; the Democratic commotion of Maine says so The great council of the Democratic party at New 1 ork says so. A year ago when I asser ted this theory I had opposition enough to justify an argutuett—now I have aut. *do net know-how it is with your Its publicabs in Maine, hut in Ohio and In diana they (the people) are so ankrous to get on, that they threaten to j istle me off my own platform [Great laugh tar and applause.] A year ago the leading men called us copperheads and traitors Now they politely say the theory is true,, but alto gather impracticable Not .at. all my Mende. Pay these bonds wa they be come due Save the interest—bale the 1 premium on gold Now, where will get get the notes? First The nau tili banks have out a t circulation of three hundred millions, beet/red by beads.— You uoderstand thik operation very well Three men buy one hundrel thousand dollars worth of 'bonds. They deposit them in the Treasury, they get their six per cent, interest in gold ; they get ninety per cent in bank noted, mud this they corny home here to luau IL l en , or fifteen, er twenty five per cent , as they may be able to expect from the tip - Oessii les 01 the borrower The Govern ment pays a x per cent in gold to /bees petrel:Wm fur Lice burden ..,1 lending ...money at twenty Break up this sys tem. will in that circulation, issue green backs in its weed, take up three num'- , red millions of bonds and save eighteen millions of dollarr in gold annually by way of interest This will retinae your debt, reduce your interest, and enable • you either to reduce'y our luxes or to in . your payment tht next year. Your 'income to at least five hundred milituns,a year Be holiest, he ecuno =lent. Let the thefts be stopped, let' robbery he punmheil Expend one hundred and fifty millions e year, twice as much an President Buchanan capon. ded+—rur more than - general Jaukson ex 'pended in any four years of his admin titration Add one hundred and fifty millions for Interest, and yet you bare More than two hundred millions a year, and /lint sum constantly increasing by • a large amount, with which to pay off the public, debt In this why it can be paid, every dollar of it, principal and interest, by the time it becomes nue, without adding one cent to int. circula tion. It is thought ad•ittable:tile taxes wan be reduced and the payment lorolong ad for ten years. I hear it elated that this is uryust to the bondholders. Not at all; you pay him all be gave you. pay him high Interest :- you pity him all you promised Show me a single bondholder who, if you 'pay him to day in legal tenders, with gold at 008 hundred and forty per cent , will not replace his out lay. and I will show you fifty who, in addition to twelve per cent. interest, have added in five years forty per oent to their principal The question is not whether you will pay the bondholder "list you owe, but whether you will rob the people to pay the bondholders what you do not owe. [Applause 1 I hear it stated thie_is unjust to the people. When this legal Muter law leas passed it eoutecaled two- thirds of all the in debtuems of the country. The man who had a note for one tbousandjklollars in gold wait compelled to take ode thousand dollars io paper. The men who bad leased. a house for four hundred dollars in gold *staid pay his rent with four hundred dollars In paper. I knew an instance In my - city A man sold hi Neighbor a lot for $20,000 The porch ser was a thrifty trader, veto (mold mak' more than sixty per cent, from his money.—The seller wag& thriftless trader, who could set makeo much. They agreed that the r lee r should pay , when he ity ? please but in the meantime should pay six per cent, lie waited till gold was two hundred soll Off he' look his SP.IIOO in gold, bought $60,000 legal lenders. paid $20,000 to the seller, in vested $BO,OOO in twenty bonds, has draWO eighteen , hundred dollars in gold a year interest, and now is a most loyal .I l patriot rind the loudest clamor for, pay ment of the hind, in •guld. Of all my eequaifilances [applsolettj, be i* a rem sonabl gad Man. ''They . shy . if e Id Chriethly man, and they say that every night, as he goes It bed he prays hiod that he may dein Whey mein as ho motild bare otheettien do to him, and when he raises hie blinds Ist praydr, that Ood may deliver him from all his enemies. he prays especia'lv tenet be may he masted from that public enemy who wants to Nay the five twenty bonds In greenbacks ['Loud laughter and applause 1 I hear tt said this system will depreciate flir currency and cheat the lithorer of its Just rewards. Not at all. Every dollar of the public debt which to in any war paid will relieve the properly of the country from the pieta gage which is upon it, add by malting the greenbacks thttre certain of redemption, will increase their value. No, gentlemen, pay these five-twenties in legal tender notes the moment they become redeemable Y. ii will reduce the debt. You will save the intereet. Ypu will relieve labor of its burden. [Applause.] Couple with this the taxation of cap i tad to [bosoms extent as you tax labor, stop the extensive contraction of the currency ; expend it, if nectiesary, to re cover the business of the country from the prostration which it now feels, and you will make capital profitable —You will make Intlontry contented. Your ehirvards will be alive again, Our fer tile fields will yield a boontiful harvest Labor will perform its accuat °mud work, and hewing a nheerfull head to it burden which Ittalways heavy wilt presa forw trd with higher courage and loftier step eers. Do not mirentlersittocl me, I did not vote for the legal tender law. T opposed it I thought it very wnmg. I was then, and am now, a hard money man I foresaw the mil tiTan expended and depreciated currency , but the law was passed. The evils were contracted, the have been endured h the people: ittl. am now n it or o ex rac ng from the system of-all the good which Can be gritien out of Applause ] I Kara no hostility to the bondholders. They are doubtless worthy and est rmah'e gentleman I would do them exact . ..plat ice. Where we proTised gold I would pay gold Where wet.promise , l paper I would pay paper (beg of them now t o be jael and wise I 'Would not threaten. but they may go furibegand fare worse Labor is suffering, it may heemne reit tiVe, The Republican party has upset this whole policy It insisted upon pay tog the debt in gold, and exempting the bonds from taxation The funding hill expresses" the whole Idea It peened both Douses It would have become a law except for the adjournment. It pro vided that tha present bonds should be ()banged for other bonds bearing four and one half per cent interest. pays tile in forty years, principal nod. - toter est both to be paid in gold, and to be ex empt from all State and Friters' t gat ion thiM stands to day at upward of 1-I0 This bill adds it once Nil hundred mil lions to the debt. It abandons the right of taxation, and thus gives up more than twelve millions in gold It postpones indefinitely Ile payment If payment is postponed Corti years, ibe debt will never be paid at all It will become one of the permanent. institutions of the ,eotintry If the debt should he $2,600,- 100,000, and should be funded at ten Aar per cent , the annual Interest would reach SI G 0,000,000 In gold, and [hie must be raised year by year from the labor of the country for forty yearn How many of you will live that long' How many of your children will live that long? And yet year by year, as long ari you live,ae they live—out of their blood end out of their bones and crtiewft, out o f their breaking hearts aid dying bod ies, those one hundred millions must be earned. [Applause] Do you know what a Lailonal debt means , It meant, hard labor, scant clothing, brown bread and no meat. It means that tics rich "thrill he richer and the poor shall be poorer It means Ina( untaxed capital shall pamper the idle with luxuries, while squalor shall preside in the cabins of the poor, and •ufFeriog shall make his life a con stant death.—[Renewed applause. ] I see before me tmany young men Are you willing to perpetuate • policy which will forever prevent you from me nis above yon present oondit ion !—1 oat look forward to a few years of labnr.snd they hops to devote yoarself to trading with thie capital which your indumry and fruWality shall here saved In your dreams you see a snug cottage lighted with the smile of love, and ,sounding with the babble of infest tongue., over which plenty sod tionleutment cast their cheering rays.—[t:knit applause ] Are you willing to give up this bright proe m'', and be cost/tot forever to pay to the tat gather all your earnings beyond food and clothing?' (Cries of no !') Ettend the debt. and pay the Interest, No. gentlemen ; pay the debt soil *synths interest. }tedium the tares equalise the burdensy•nd industry will he stimulated; business will he restored, enterpriee will be active, and labor will reap its jolt end adeqvite reward , TIM TALUS /1143011117lUCTIA A. essential step in this moiement is the restoration of the prosperity of the Southern Stites: - They constitute' an agricultural community. They are pro dooers Their interest are identical with yours; their staples will furnish business for your oteroantile navies tarnish wealth for era all They ougheto pa" their share of the tax and of tie patina debt. ?bey wlTdo if eililly if order is established in their houses, and security is felt that "he who sows shall reap." Beery instinct 'of selfish nese, we wells. patriot tem, demist& that the policy of hatred and oppression shell NINO, sod that thaw States shall be re 'Weed to their rights, and the people to latest [Applause.] COMOLO.IOII Fellow-Democrats, ere you up end active, •nd well organised fur the strug gle before yea? The eyes of the whole country are upon you. The hearts of ! t he Demoersey, of the conservative men everywhere, ars with you. You will fight the drat battle of this campaign, If you win it, you will give us the prea. Hp Of victory ; we will carry the coun try. Per twenty years the elections of Melee have fershadowed the result in the West. We Leek always fir'you with isthmus 'Mufti Oar hearts, our hopes are with ytet. Seed us In September , the news of ear vietory. [Cries of "We will."] Obits. lodises, Illinois, will fol low; Seymour will be elected, [tre- tnontloto4 npolAugo,l nod thr.boute of our rej.iring will be toowerud us from Heaven, as when of obt, the angle, choir Ailuouneed: --ikettte•on Rood will to lien ". ITrt•utetoloun ii,ittplientie.l Wade Hampton's tfpeeohes. I The Charlowlon Memo?, publishing tbe following citron Irom a - wrench of Wade Hampton, before the South Carolina Deriiaerm lc Con.erti ion : I am glad that the reference made by the gentleman from Nlarion afford. me an priori unity to sty a few ' , aurae con cerning myeelt If t helm m ipeepreeents Hone of language which, I have uttered if the pert/el-o.n, of facts which I have *fated reflected only upon me. I ph .nabl Oat only hear the tull'ction with patience hot trig! it with the contempt tt 'leveret>. When however, I am told that theap falechoieli are n source of injury to our tutor, 1111 4 1,11141 they weaken the Demo oriole party— hat party up whiolt MP life ititil.salvailoti depend—l am glad to hove on opportunity 10 111 1 10011/00 1 hem and their anthers MC infainous I have said more to the people 'of New York tlmu 10 any 'Southern hudience I told them that we believed we were Tighe but that we were willing to accord to °there what we ntalmerl for owreelves, els; pet foot eiticertly to our cou•tati Ate II lid tiotiorntioutefl tlevotdon to price pie. I thltrltte Nor , hrrn people that we spoke with no d•othle tongue, that we were earnrett and truthful in our det.tee to euh pert ibia linotta mid the Gohatmuthat. nil to that npirtt we otheepird the band no freely extended to ale by the great I.lemoorocy of-the North. , I Ibpsh wn w»nrrd she Conant, non reeiurecl. „Dunn iiIIS look like rev° luilun I tivelart.tl 'bar we waatel peso , bat tante.' or rPeel V rIK pe..ce, wo hate no' •only been eitoirgett with hetng rerulntrnn datent effort tin drag ter into some r outbreak which would afford theta political capital at nor expense have recently Peen what purports, In he a qiiotation• from a apercfi made in Charle•ton. not at an ordinary meeting but in acknowledgment of a compliment serenade given to me by Inv oil aol titers I um 101 l that in the New Y trk H era t,/ it le puhiuMed that I aunt, • rho flax 114.1 bete preserved, and I one day unfold it anti cull onion.] me the Men who used to follow that banner tie the field " I need not tell you that ibis eitatement is in ever) reepect Woe flit the contrary, when f spoke of ine flag of the Confederacy, I remarked that ti now was furled (,rover, to be hunted in the grave of oar lost canoe I did make an eilinuton in another flag, which had been followed by many of the men standing around in& It was a flag that had been worked by -the damentlants of lievolu 'unary patriots, mud preanuted to tie by. the noble women of South Carolina through the hands of our then Chief Nlagmirnie, a flag which hail fl fitted amid the make of many a de•nerate bat ile-field , which had been horn by my own hero son, and which enshrouded him when he was carried to the tomb I told them that flag wan resting with me, for I knew that they would tee glad to hear tiding, of a banner that hail long been familiar to their eyes, and whose ample folds did not ountain apace enough on which to write the name," of all the engagements in which it had floated in front of battle Because I told my old comrades that that flag of • single regi meal had not heen burned in the wreck of Ctflumhta, theme Radicals of the N tri p perverted both language and sense f lir purpose of produrtng bet 11 , t ti ••• 1., they would had, seen ilia( I said ilia even that flay was furled forever. to be buried in the grace of our lost rause l should not have noticed these gross misrepresentations', had they not been brought to my notice to a direct manner by my friend from Marton ; bus mince lie has afforded me an opportunity of doing so I use it not only to denounce these state ments as false, but to reiterate here as I Lill 111 every pl ice, that am fighting is, ear nestly in the interest of peace as I did an war In Paying this, I recognize all of the issues Involved in Mier cionteet, and glen recognize, to the fullest event. the kiudoese exAnded to us at the North by (hos e who met us on • hundred battle fields, anti who, standing arouni a cam mon altar which they wished once more to naiad exteod in faith and k undoes., the right hand of friendship. l oulik you what more can I dot Everywhere I have urged our people to come forward in this contest,and be as true eoldiers in the cause of peace as they were in the canna of war This is all 1 have done and it to what I Onlll continue to do, not withstanding the mierepreeennit itin• 1.1,4,1 may he given to Übe world What ever may be the character of thg„..4White hoods circulated, I intend to pifreue aa even course, and will not be provoked to say one word that is acrimonious or of tensivel 1 know the abject which lIIC Radicakt have in view, and I urge the peop,le not to give way to prejudice or paiWion. Let them in patience endure the misfortunes they cannot control, avoid all conflicts with the negroett, give no political capital to our aneroid', triad to the Democratic party, fight tkuis great struggle with peaceful agencies •looe, and there is every reason to believe that we phiall witneells the reetoratiop of the government, and the supremacy of the Constitution of the United States. —After the election of Seymour large reductions will be made in the publio expenditurle. Iniorest will be reduced by paying the Bve-twenilee in greenbacks; over a hundred mil. lions a year will be saved in till's item alone. The standing army to subject white people to Degrees will be disluiss ed the Freedmens Bureau' will be abol ished—the cap f the navy cut down—the estravagance and prod foal waste in.congress will be stopped, and in other respects large reductiong will be made in the publio.expenaitures. Radical papers are filled with reported saylags of "rebels" favorable to Seymour and Blair, bat nue n word do they tell the people about the $478,000,- 000 spent last year, or the attempt of their leaders tt force the people to pay the National debt In gold, by the pas• sage of the Funding BM Oh, no! The people are to deeply Interested in what the rebels say, they don't think of the money.that is taken from their pockets In the shape of Asee. Will tho People gear the Enormous Taxation I _Derele probably no greater anomaly In modern lima than is seen to thin country ; that • pet pie under a popular republican government— • government chosen by themselves and changed every new years—phalli,' submit to a burden taxation without parallehin the world. That they submitted iuthitcolearfully In nme dot great civil war fur the sake of preserving the life and unity of the re public showed their pairintikm. They were willing ion, to give the government • reasonable [stile to adjust the hmthces old to discharge the fl,,ating 'obligations %rising from the war. Hue is It likely .hey will continue to bear war is:inland expenditure* yenta alter peace has been established! Over three years have stared since the war endpd, and the , axes amount to more than four hundred ,std slay millions of dollars • year—a larger rtfin tbau't bat raised ant expend ed by the most costly monarchical gov ernment in the world. It lie muumuus rue peop a are Incoming restless alid di.gu.ted, end 'will certainly seek A remedy et her in a change or their pub Ito aerosols or in repudiationof the debt. Unions ebb r and Inure lamest men to elected to Coilgt - 414--men who will nee the neopesity of economy and Lave the c‘iurtige to cut down till unnecosiary ex pendular!' lied bring them to some bring like whit they were before the war—it will nut be long before they hill hear snguitluact aml deep mutterings of repu ion Iron" one end of the country to the taller. The present Congress is without whit. I , y ro group ihe of noional n trice arnitnsadinn, rind ts wtthal reek leendy extra vagstric In rusk tug appropraa irony Jur \ell sorts of tlougs rod phs. Eve,' wheel it took oil atom( a hundred inilhono et Iniatuut, t hl t. wawdone for the hrwofft ol nI mnfactnerrs, and for the tonnufsot art rs of New England especial- mutiny The people gruerelly will not tee! the reduction. The effect will he inirely to incren-c the profits of the manufacturers. lied the lux on lea, eittfee, sugar and other articles of prime iteees-sly nod general u•e swung the Is h wing cheers been greatly reduced or, the people e•ery whore wtoild have hero belief tied 'Riot woukd have been lessening the burden of ittuttion in way to he felt by every working insii's faintly Hut the late sets of Congress [educing taxes will he of advaninge to only n few innutifsmurers C•wgress begun al the wrong end It tool nu use, however to reduce nixes while the eX penilif ores ire on enormous.for Oat will only bring a depleted Treasury nud hooaruipt government The first thing to he done Is to reduce the expenditures two hundred millions or more. The whole emit of the government in all do• partments and expenses, independent of the interest on the national debt, ought not to he over rt hundred minimise year Indeed it ought to be less Two bun fired nod fir y milltnue revenue to ample Vet we see it was oser four hundred and sixty millions last yenr Thu, is the grelat question for the American people now to consitiv And in the coming Congressional elections they shoubl take care that the incapable. reckless end ex trnengant members of Congress may be left it Itome to cltltNata potatoes, which they may understand better, and that fresh and more capable men be slept to Washington --N Herald "Let us have Peace." It is no* nearly.four years nines the hint rebel gun was fired. and yet the Romp Conitrese 18 still tiring ill with a standing 'Amu of 55,000 ! '•Let us have pence ' It is now nearly four yearn since Gen Urant reported to Preenlent' Johnson. and through him to Cougree, that the rehellion being ended the Southern pen pie were willing to accept their situation to good faith under the Constitution Mud haws; and yet the Rump Congress has enablisbed military governments in the Southern States "Let us bane peace '" The negro,* and earpet-baggere in the South are now asking for government arms to put into the bands of the blacks, for the pu(poee of Indiscriminate slaugh ter "Let us bare peace "' Already under Radical Reconstruction 'ha carpet-bag legislature of Alabama 111111 attempt a new revolution, by depriv ing the people of the right to rote rpr President and Vice President "Let us have peace!" Already breve Radicals declared that the Southern States shall be cirritil for Grant and Colfax at the point of the bayonet ".Let us have pe•t6 !" Aye! 'let if brve peace 1" —not the peace of a large standing army- -not by military instead of the civil govgroment --not by neg'n insurrection --not by violating the Constitution and belying thco,nrpooen of the War—but by rector Inc, to all its eremitic and power, the U 1310121 of sovereign &atm end tnalung int once more a free, united and, happy people! And !hie can hb accomplished mly by the election of :Seymour and Blair.—Ebbensbury Freeman Gov. Curtin on Gov. Seymour • .( Gov Curtin of this St►le, Wile asked the other day, in the Union League club house of Philadelphia. what wee his opinion of Seymour Ile replied • "Well sir, if I were asked to mention a man who, in my estimation, possessed (he at tribittes of a - iterfeet gentleman, a cilia witted seholisr, a thorough statesman and a sincere ehristien. I would, with out hesitation, name Horatio Seymour of New York." "How about Seymour's Loyehy." "After the dispatches that I sentitleymuur at the time of the rebel raid ib Pennsylvania," replied the Our , ernor, "it woull hardly become me to Impugn hi. loyalty ; the fag) is I have never doubted it I uhrtirstand that Belmont Is having all tbellispetches sent by Stanton and myself printed, and I have no doubt they "fill be in the hands of every Bemoan - thy stump speaker through the campaign}. We bad better give up attacking Saymour's loyalty, Sol the opposition hold the trump oard in gat matter," —lf lbs poor man ie satisfied that grepnbacks are pod enough for him and 'ha gold should be paid the Aoki bond holder. he will of course vote for Grant and Cons.. '.•One currency for all" is the platform on whioh stands Seymour aid Blair. The Privihiged Classes. . The following constitute some of the privileged classes under the present Radical dispensation 1. The bondholder. Ile is exempted from all Stile add local taxation. Ire reoeives his interest on his bonds in gold while every body else has 'to tae their interest in legal tenders. 2 Tbe , Natiorial -banker,,, who le re ceiving some twenty-fise , or thirty Or cent. on his investment, by virtue of the valuable privilege wh lob the (lovernment has given hire—to provide a National currency lo the people. A. The Southern negro, who has .)ti Freedmen's liureau to look after his in tereate, and to feed and clothe him if be don'oaboone to'work. 4. The New England nAnufauttirer, who receives ao immenee bonus' in the shape rf protection to birrfabries, ell of which comes out of the pockets of the laboring classes, who art et:impelled to buy them. 6. The railroad monopolists, to / whom Congresa_baa granted tracts of land large enough for empire', out of which they can build their roads add hare a great deal to 'Tare! A few favored Men have thus voted for them, free of expenee, a great railroad, 6 The Congrettomon and legislature who eustain•lbeet privileged claimed in their raftcalities upon the people, and who are made partners on that account in the rohbories. 7 The munenee army of officer Ito!. dery who lire upon the unclean drip ping. of the Treasury ti It le the party rpponed to the Demur ratty whiab, by the ant..._of its leaders. bee brought into being these privileged classes, and upon which they mainly rely for their continued existence It is no wonder thvi, with such immense in ter,dit rationed upon the body politic, and drawing its heart's blood, that the c‘muir has ceased to flunrish, and that Is great resource.; a• . The great Issue now i•, whether the people have intelligence enough-whether they etitheiently appreciate their own interests—to rise in their might. at the coming elections, and put an end to these privileged classes and conditions of men. The latter are struggling des pet ately to maintain themselves, and are recoiling to all the appliances of corrup tion for that purpose. Where there to a „I I venal pretty, they lain it ; where there is a speaker or riter of purchasable material, they.. nitre to have his aid The sots of Congress and 'marl) , of the high (Aileen, of the Government ebow that they are mortgaged, body and soul. to these pi-lettered classics of men. They are powerfully In la all the strongholda of the country. BLit the) can be beaten if the people so will it—if they are not led astray by cunning demagogues .who Are their party preju• dices and intflatne their party passions, in ortlea--that they may out recognize thliir true interegts, sod continue to be hereafter;.as they are noel, the vatis.ls of those who are no Itrie•ously oppres sing them! —Cm. Eng liver. --Governor Seymour, to his great speltelt says our remedy for present tax ation is "to use the public money to pay the public deht." The Radicals take the opposite; contending that the herd 'mined dollars which are wrung front lie reluctant p4okets of lb,. working people of the North shall be applied to the meinteinsoce of a standing army in the Smith and t o the support of that most iniquitous of stll Radtoal intquiten the Freedmen . "' Bureau. The people don't see it in that light, arty longer They have adopted Seymour a Idea that the public money mt.( he niecdto pay the petathcSebt and R ., their is nn posit hility of securing this result through Radical rulers, they have revolved to take the matter in their own hands kick nut these co: rupt ofticialii, and put bonesi'men in their place.' —The Radicals talk incensently shout the •'fruits of the war." Well. don't !key enjoy them? They lia•e the meal_ togs of the FreedriFien's - Bureau ; ”unis cellaneous expenses" of Congress. amounting to nearly two millions of dollars per year, and s i ll they can plun der from the South l'itkst more do they demand? Why the election of Oeneral Qrsnt • in order that theme toothsome ••fruits' may continue to fall into their haaketn % hen a Radical talks aboni the '•fruits of the war," ezamine his "carpet-bag," and lock up ihe spouns ---A carpet bag Senator from Ala Kama went to draw his allowance of tow lionery. etc 'lle affeoiod foolscap, let ter, plain and gilt edged, thick and thin Hole paper, Melding was gut it pen knife red tape, cologne for his wife, moil there was a goodly pile. The attendants nonsidered they had dune the fair thing for the carpet bagger and enough ; but to their Fut-prise be began puJling off a parr of home, rereailug a corresponding pour of duty feet, and inquired if he could not have lit bums holt•auled some where in time Cougreseional menagerie. Such are the ingenious ideas of th. t•trooly toil " —Hiram U (]rant has rightfully rained the title of "A ent's-tail-atate giet," o at:mount of, when in the battle of the Wilderness. when Grout had Insi mote men than Lee had in his whole army, Hiram U. plea/Andy remarked that ••it is only n Kilkenny oat.dight. and the tail of my cKi is the longest." Thin little remark showed what a very tender regitrd he had for the lives of his soldiers, • The workingmen of the Welt are near ly all spine Grant and Cutfax, because they are the nominees of a party win' bolds to the doctrine that "a national debt is a national bleeping" that the legislation 6 . f a country 'should be %tub a view eit "protect the rich and the rich will take ears of the poor.'• The work invite oan't 1100 it in that light and have concluded to squelch the party that would build up a bondbolding aria• twee; at the expense of the men who earn their bread by the sweat of their brow. —lt is said that twenty. Alve preach ers were presectLaLa reoent ()rapt meet log in Ohio. Preachers are present at ezeoutiooe, but that does not saes the criminal. Hon. L. A. Mao*ay. The nomination of this gentleman an % candidate for Congreee, was not entirely unexpected to Ottitl- people i and ,white there wee n strong feeling in favor of th e selection o f Mr. Elliott, all were prepar ed ohedifully,to yield,to the judgeo mit of the Conference, and accept the candi date presented by it as their candidate, and to enter at once upon the Work of securing his election. -Since the return of the Conferees, the action of the Con ference bee been made known to all the Democratic Clubs in the county, hod in every instance the nomination was hailed with enthusiasm. The Democrats of this county will work for the election of Mr. Mackey with all the vigor they po s . ness, and it affords us pleanere to add that they will have the aid and assietnntie of many men heretofore voting the Re publican ticket, who refuse longer to vote for oandidatee in favor of negro equality, and pledged to a eontion toes of the extreme messureil of the Rump Congress. We attended the Conference in Look Haven, and had the honor of au Intro. dilation to Mr. Monkey, and the pleasure of listening to his brief speech. We ales had the pleasure of (masoning with his neighbors, men of both pnifies, all of whom spoke of him in the highest terms lle started out in life without fot tone, and by energy and strict integ rity has acquired great influence and amassed wealth. lie Is to-day noe of the foremost men in the West Branch •alley. Ills burliness wutocultions ore eitenei•e, and he is well known in coming and Centre counties, stud will gain largely from the Republicans, in skim locale/Liza- _Though. not Lis-•oen lion, he is educated in die law,—bar ing abandoned that profession years ago for titre active pursuits lie i t a spenkerN gentleman of pleasing address and will make friends wherever he goes Re will visit this county before many days, and discuss with our peoplo tho In justice to Mr. Markey, •c should !lay that ho did not desire the nommo- Lion, but accepted it at the urgent soli citation of the Conference. Having ac cepted it, he will go into the ctinecas with all hie energy. and when it clo , et on the night of the I:3th of October, be will be the member of Congress elect from the lAth Conterenetontri Ultimo of l'enneylvania IVellahoro Democrat Another (novenae, of.the Public Debt The forthcoming statenient of the pub tic debt for the month of 4u¢tnt will ehow anothrr enciease; and that to ut erine of the fact that The receipts from customs during the month were evrior dinartly large The importations for the (all trade come in dur!ng August How much longer do the tax-payer, intend to Veep slyarty 40-power- which eritieriders over four hundred millions a year, while the national debt continori to increase from month tu r inth • Will mill rot he the bondholders Radical ticket I If they do the r ay is not for dtetont when their choriehel Freon , lee will be absolutely wort Ideal No notion can long maintain an credit, when, with every Interest taxed as in this country, the matins debt continues to iii , in stead of being tliminiebod Let :he ino nopolista remember that —The people own theme United Slates Eight years ago they let then to the Radical party in good condition, producing well in all the departinetii , of industry The lease is about expiring and the lessee apply to biter' a rene•ed for four years Will the people agree' Lel them look at the littered condi , lon of the premises The tenants have bro ken down the fences. impoverished the lands. stolen all ebb proceeds of the crops and loaded the f ruperty with 111C11111 hrttleeg uuttl. at the present time, the yield ,! chi whole esta.e will hardly pay th e tares. interest. and current expenses To he sure the tenants promise to do better Nt the future, but they have Gm Iced such pledged itir often that no reli ance can he placed upon them They should anti will be ejected, and Uncle Ham's farm re-let to the old tenaet—the Deurooratio party—who tilled it for six ty years, and brought the land to the highest aide of cultivation. while the nub-ionstrits dwelt together in harmony, anti reaped the rich rewards 'of their own industry The Radical party might ns we , l prepare to move. there will be no reuewal of their lease —One of the recount rooted ipetubers e carpet bagger, named Tiff, was sworn pet *even minutes before adjournment lie recerreil $5OOO and mileage far his valuable and protracted s eances -- Whereupon Butler remarked that —fteing carpet bag Congreasmau paid better than atealing " He ought to know Tbia is a fine comment upon the seventh plank of the iteptiblicatl platform •`The Government of the United Stating should he administered with the SM.:fleet coon• My." ---The Radical edflors and orators do not like to see the official figures er hitoting the wasteful and reckless et ptuditure of the public money during the lasi seven years. They moat face the music, however. With all lbw squirming this fact stares them in the lace that their party, has robbed the government or at ieltilt thousand wi llow!. Rah' for reconstrueliell an d the Negro Bureau I vt Galosh& Grow sap that if Sey mour and Blair are elected there will be "war." Do Grow and hie friends, mean to make the war! Do they want IS scare such of their own party se are dis posed to vote for the Deno:wrath" candi dates t "Gb slow," Gatushs. Slop Oil kind of talk. You art not carrying on a Reno speculation --Jay Cooke's income last year was $174,982 Before the war he was s poor men. Where, bow sod of whom did he get all i t hie wealth; Do the people, the laboring masses have to pay him! And he wants his bonds paid In gold and therefore supports Grant and Colfax. Are the people willing.that he should hive it? If so they•wallglg• the Radi eel ticket. -Tbe,Chlosom Republican adviree. bat everrisegro Isbell be armed to thee eel b Pq all btfourikojage and iocominge. 'Let us have peace."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers