The Oeinocratic - Watchman. BELLEP 4 ONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, SEPT. 111.18611 How we are Making the Rich Richer and the Poor Poorer. We havn in our nye Iwo citixonsof this hewn—the one a rich llndloal Boodbold er, the other a well to-do Mechanic-- The first came into possession, (hy mar ariage.) of two fine farms, which he sold in 1862 for 80,000 and invested it -all in to-10 bends. The last. by dint of Lard week, has been able to buy • proper!) anises/ad at $5,000 wherein be lives awl earries on business. That is an the pro perly he owos. Tea years age, if ibis Radical had in sisted his $30.000 in Governmente bonds, be would have received an annual Interest of $l,BOO and paid hie full share of taxes. What interest has be berm getting far theiset six years! Eighteen !Nudged Dollars a year, IN GOLD! That geld be sold ai an average of about GO per cent., realising 11,080 more every year. Add Ois to the $l.BOO and we have $.! 880, as the yearly income from his $3O, 000. Here is a gain of $l.OBO • year, wish regulir legal inieresi, behides hit emir no tuxes to pay,whioh to equal to $11.21X) a year. He keeps his carriage-kind horses, and uses the public roads, but pays no road Ms. The tropeiity e(uhe Aleobari4,paye his share. He sends his Children to the Pub is /Monis, hot pays no Soliool tax. The The Mechanic pays for the education of his Children. He has the benefit of the State avid County governments, Courts, &0., gieiag no State nor Count . , tales. The Mechan ic pays these for him. The Mechanic pays on 'bib properly 4 per cent taxes, on $2OO a year If the Radical lives to keep hie &aide twenty ye.rs, he will heat drawn $56 - 000 interest, and $21,600 premium on his gold—which is a fortune in itself And yet we are told by , Ole !Wheal. that at the end of ilieseet twenty years we must pay him the principal (dims Bonds in gold! This is the Radical eystem of "mak ing the Rich richer--" "Take care of the rich," said the Fede »Bets in the daye °Nubia Adams, —and tisekrich will take caret of the poor " But the poor now a-days preieriahOilt care of themselves. "ONE CURRENCY FOIL A Money that is good enough for the Far -mt.?, the Mechanic and Laborer, is good enough for the Bondholder Take the came of the Journeyman Me chanic What are his wages? From $2 to $8 a day, with a family dependent nn iabir.• noels he get his pay io.golJ 'I Oh no. Saturday aeght conies and he drawn his $l2 or $l6 or $lB. Three dollars of it go for house rent. His toys want Shoes and klualin fur Shot*. besides a good many other articles, !Lai, flour. •egeiables, ceelfee, sugar, Scc., lie or but wile goes tat the 8110e,usi ore, the Dry iloods store and the Urocery lie lode that $lB don't go es far as $lO did ten years ego t this true? Every old houeelseeper keel". that 11. is And why ? Beaman everythinghati doubled in price, in consequence of hea•riamstion. Be crowns the Radicals have kept house so badly,-,..have plunged the Coreetry so enoneuuely ils4o debt—feed lug wane ands of lazy, idle t egroes, aupporling • bugs standing army. —rerionsiructing" Nero :\iale• and other extravagant party project., that public credit is impaired and a dollar greenback N worth uuly GO COWS Now take the ease of the Laborer.— Ilis average pay is about $1,76 per Jay. —On this be mast live. pay rent end clothe hie family ❑ow far will his $lO 60 per week go? Ile is gtbid to Inc in a shanty in a dirty alley at (ruin $BO io $lOO a year. Ten years ago be could rent a Comfortable 11,,nse to a respect• Ws street for $5O. Very few mimeo pies or strawberries do his youog ones re' How many Spring chinskeus, Mr. Work• ingmin, at $1 per pair, can you •ford to buy! Are youlnot glad; Kt the end of L. year. that you have kept hotly and soul together! No gold toierest for you You get your pay en Oreenbaolls , --60 cents on ills dollar ADA remember! Wbf.never you boy a - hat, a coat, a few yard• of muslin or any 'blowy:dee you pry a TAX (or the WREEDMEN'S BUREAU! Are you as well off •e you was leo Years ago, when you worked for $l,OO a day? WHAT 18 THE REMEDY! Simply to help turn iLlie Hadto►l forty out uf power and pot conservative men •t the hood of our Government lobo ore pledged in Savor of ECONONLY and REFORNI. VOTE Nit A CFI AIWE. The Work ingman who rotes fur Grant, votewto op press himself lead hie children —Your condition cannot be made worse —We have confidence libet under the b.wil of Governor Bepnour, it will be easily im proved fur the belie,. —We go before the people ea the greet issues. &ball we restore thetCon slitution sad the Union of our fathers? Shell we restore and preeerve the supre rotor of the white race, or elate awn. , gro the ruling element? Shall we preyerve and continue the thunenMe National Debt, to please the -Bondholder.? Shell we continue a large etandiag err my to support•the negro power south! . ball we continue the Freedmen . ' Be roan to Old tie despotism eolith and the carpet-biggers Blatt we centimes to give , the Bondi holder's gold and. °Ober people raw worth obput 70 cents on the .dallar 1 I Nitall we continue to vote anthem I 'and thus vote over 1,,. bemired nilliimas of lam upon ourselves? All persons whit wish to /motione tide condition of Shies, will-vote the radical ticket from the President dean—ltese opposed. will not so - Oliee. , ---Clhoose ye between! —The reason why Gnus& oldba.style themselves "tanners," is because -.llhe /Ladies' party has proven 'Wear so expert at "skirkiiog" the people. The flondheldes, okAocount with the People of the Stat6s. genitor Sherrnrn POOP , 1111 jllO errtein e l ePuttitrette meet,. hex, ' io pe,.jotp it will attire* lithati. hewer,' hin.the Pawl 11111 into a bete, Vinder thii View of the CARO, And silprantiew the elelitte 1., he dy. ly PNroyeeo. let us lee how the Raceme, will Wend between the people end the 'hondholdhre norme To net rn•rro IN 19OR Th.. United Stater •r to the h ,ndholdera in the f..ll..leing•conv, Interco' In gold sr its rer .root. from t.! 180, on an 'romp' my of $2 500.1111.0011 n iriLr. rrhi..h wakes VIM'. non,noo I n under the Funding fli I FT lorty pry rent.' err rf:• 100.090.000. $•25, ice 000 w year, or 1.5 000'1100.000 for the whole tine. The !Jetted Sterne dr. to the hnedholtere for $2 500,000 000 in greenbeeks, hough! On the rtrertere e. soy at ty sews tom the 4.,,11141 fa 44). 81,250,000,060. Piin.4.p teen to nopa4 in g. Id. $2,- Mia,000,1,011 Exencpti.n fr.m 'tate and 1.,c0il taxa ti..a for f.r.y Mee eoen, mro per rent n 500.0110 I* nn nn illy a onnling in her !tin, to $2,25U, - 100 Tning to rerapitu The lJnitefl S'atom cr U thlmetlhohl pi:l7.j? sr trnno.irror lull r,q, 5,15U0,000,009 'sem'. Mil SIZE MITI Lion... 2,250 000.000 The U. ft debtor to bondholder... • , ,de 100. $10,350 ,übo,uou Thus the account current will stand In 1908. at the contention of the for'' , yenre Provided for the bonded debt to run by the Funded Bill. The people will then hive paid to the bondholder% $lO 33') • 000.000 in guld for the $1 251 001) 000 in gold which they received rue them In other word+ they will hive tot id beck nearly nine dollnr% for every dollar they borrowed. This Intier seem. %I ' t elling i t fill'', but it in nuhniani tally irue. We defy any one to show any Ifintertnl er ror to it. If the Funding Bill pavers, and is ex -1 eau ed. we repeat, it will con, the people of the Hulled Pea r • over $11) 000,000._ boo to phy the $1 250,000,000 they nor rowed between 1801 mud ftliCts. Thin in to be patd, the tire pryers w.ll remem ber, in gold rein. for the bondholder hap a treat partiality for that kind of mon ey. Tii order to head into trilling ruin of $lOOOO l:KX) O(0 over t o 150,000 bouti holdere, we shall have to ilineorer rrrrr al new Celifornias, filled with gold ore Ow tax payer. must not think that thin $10,000,000,000 +bleb they ere to pay the bondholders i■ the next lorry year. will oonmitute the num total of their taxation. Far from it This is in ad. dittos to all the expen-en of the differ ent government*. Federal, State and ltf usl, which will 'Mount to at leant $5l/0 000,000 more per year, or $20,000 000.- 090 in forty ) ear, Thum the tax-payers will be in for $BO.OOO 001) 900 to he paid by two g tiues•of then. It in eaoy to write thee* immense name. but they are really re/great that it requiree a vivid maagiud into to eutlleiently com prehend them. What a frightful mort vote is this upon the industry of the country ! How Is pay it will unpover tab anti beggar the people ! How it would deprive them of many of the molt substantial comfort , of life! Will the American people allow themselves so be ridden by the bondholder. booted end rpurred\ti.t►is manner? Will they &low PO large portion of all their earn ings to be Itched from them by thin-- 'smolt:tolerable i■ cumbers—privileged class? Tet in eider to defeat this scheme of rivithery, what a teed' le struggle will have to be made! When thousand of millions of dollarr are at litaba as the prim. what immense sums the bondholder can afford to, anti will, vend for purposes of corruption ! '" How many member* of one corrupt Congreee will be bought, like sheep in the sham bles. made partners in the etealinge ! How many siewepapers and popular or ator, will be made acquainted with the chink of the bondholders' gold ! A more meestroaely corrupt robeme was never devised than this of funding the greenback banded bebt for forty• yeare, then paying principal and inter. est in gold. and securing for that large interval the exemption of one fifth of the capital of tie country from taxation ! Before .it all the ”rbiskey ring., 'and e'en the land rubberiss,pale to ineignit seance! fl is one of the moot gigantic frauds that the world hies ever mown Creams! t Inquirer. Tuft Rion mimeos litsx—Forney, in his ••Iwo papers, both daily," exaltutgly proclaims that the rich moo of the noun try support Grant. This is very netts. rsl. The sheddyites, contractors, bond holders. Mx, who have fattened upon the government sad grown nob io the hour of its neesseities, will he found eupportiog the party that paved the way for the accuandation of .their wealth. Cootribetiag emoltierg in the way of tax co to aspen the Government , 'bey will, of noires; desire the continuance of that party is power, so that the sources of their wealth may not he curtailed: Arrayed agalest this pnree•prouti aril lowan, will los foes{ tee honest, hard wetting simehasies, artisans and labor er, who have be toil and sweat to pay the bums be support tbe Government, so that theirs., eerruptioniste and dams gorses may thrive and lonrish. But their maddest", neer. The strong arm of isisurby w l smash them Mennen. 1101{ Or PAYISO OV/ , TUN Ikrar..-ling to the Official state meat of fleeretnry McCulloch, the pub- He debt aateted, en the Iflet,of March, 1816. 10 :8,346,966,077 84 ; ort the nit of logy, 1816, the debt amounted to 12,- 62101,180 ISt heroine of the nubile debt its throe years one hundred and fifty. sig fine Awaired end *manly-nine Olemotairfsur Atiestiredssularee dollar, and gAirtrelenre ewe. ?his is the mongrel mode of paying elf the debt. At this rate, bow Mug will it take to swamp all isles& in gesenal repudiation. • Who Cannot Consistently Vote for Grant and Colfax. 1. No iireigner of *lintein.rnidional dy onn'oete the findietal iiiiketitin No r/matey, withow* entiolielng * priusiple, "Pion if adopts* by the goyernment of 'hi. °sentry. would subject ill who come here JO escape from the diaabilltlea and oppressions of the fild World, to * pro, hoittmary term of twenty one years, be f..re they can be invested with the full rights and privileges of AMerican eiti zonattip It hits been proved, and can not he denied, that Shuyier Colfax way, it few Vino ago...* ;etifiing KnotrufAilling, and there 19 no reason for believing that ne Imo ever renounced the Ramona d *trines of that orsrenteation, Br dinger startled Its protiorigiiye oath*: while Gen Grant, by allowing hiself to be a...m etaled with a Man of's prfnelpleo 3 and e.peciolly by hie °rule 7 expelling the Jeep front the It 81.64. under bie com mand, hat.ignifi -(I, with ItufFicieht d'ti itoeine.s, hi. di•portitton to be eAtilly narrow minded and proscriptive 2 No man who oepentla upon honest i indliatry for a lining—whether a fat tner a mechanic, an artietn, or a common it iy laborer—ean, consistently with a just pelf respect, or decent 'regard for trio own inierestn, vote the Grant and I Colfax ticket; for it'is known, and has been 'repeatedly demontutrated, that, wliile the former hay stultified himself by voluntarily declaring that he has "no policy" above that of unquest iuoing nub «ervirncy In a venal Congreas and its pets thebontlhoftlers and bankers-, who bribed him into that degradation by the off e r of Four Hundred Thogaand Confirm by the way of indemnification, the latter ha•, by every itet - fif his publfo. life, rimmed a ready willinguens to favor the rich at the expense of the poor, by ex coupling the property of the hosdholder , I rom taxation, anti increasing lbeir 11l gotten wealth by oantin . g the enormous debt and extravagant expeadit tires of the Government upon the producing IL9llll' 3 No strictly honest man can con sistently vote the Groot and Colfax tick• et ; for those mess are the representatives of and apologist for the conduct of a party, by whose assumptiOne, USllrrnt rxtravagenciee, fraud., dishones• t re awl rescalities, the country has been p'unged into a tiAt almost beyond com putation. amt which is h-ing every boor increased by unnecessary and inexcusa ble expenditures for its own tiggrandize m tit No honest man. knowing there facts, can directly or indirectly, sustain party whosesanditiates arc pledged to continue a couhte of legislation so ob viously unjust and ruinous to the pro diming cl•eres. 4 No one who prefers Peace, prosper i'y and fraternity within the Ot I in and under the Constitutinn, can enna nn ent io, vote for Grant and C u ltag. It i n an es tabliSlied and 'well known fact 'that they tire hut pliant tools in the hands of • party. which for three years part has been actively engaged in the work of es tablishing a despotism of ignorance, at the point of the bayonet, over at least ten independent States, in violation not gob , of pledges voluntarily given, but of the sacred envenaot by which, in the frame work of the Government instituted by our fathers the Ettates were once bound together Until.naten can gather 'grapes of tborna and figs of thielles. peace and contentment can never co exist with high hatided infractions of the fun demential law of the land,or injustice In the admintelnitton of our nattonal affair 5 No one who honestly believes that the Com.filiation of fbe United Staten .11.tild be scrupulously re-pected and upheld as the fundamental law of the land. con closimehtly vole for Grant and Colfax ; for it is well known that they are candit•tes of a party which has violated many of Its provisions, and, in peeking to perpetuate their power, have legialated without regard to i.s require menu What auturanoe can we have that the candidates of a party whose antecedents are so Digitione, wjaniit, if plead in bl , gh nd Influen‘hal poattiona, still °twine., lte'violate that sacred cov enant of the Stales, until not a vestige of It romaine 7 6 No one who regards the reserved rights of the States as the palladium of civil liberty oan consistently •ot. for Oren, and Colfax It is not to he de nied that those men ere tied up to the policy of a party whose object it heat bean and 1., to centralize all power in the Legislative department of the •General Government, thereby robbing the States of their d rights. atin thereby to the full extent of its ability euhverting the (love, nment and trampling under foot its time honored usages 7 No laboring man in favor of jus tice and equal rights, privileges and Immunitlee• can consistently vote for Grant and Colfax ; for it is undeniable that they are both the willing servants of a party pledged to a system of glar ,ng inequality of taxation, and of orimi nal partiality to the bondholders. Uu less the people prefer oppres.lou, and injustice it, impartial and ben.ficent leg i s . iv i on thee will withbniti their gel from the men who would grind the faces of the poi* for the benefit and ag grandizement of the rich while laying burdens upon the'produo.r..f •II wealth which they will not touob with one of their fingers.— Minded ler. FACTIL—WO tell our Democratic friends to compel political opponents to contest this a on facts—not on pereonalii iee. Tell then, we go before the people on the greet issues. Shall we restore the Constitution and the Union of our fath ers? Shall we restore and preserve the supremacy of the white race or make the negro the ruling element. Shall we preserve tied continue the immense National debt. to please the Bondholders.? WWI w• hontinue (be Freedmen's Bu reau:to aid the despotism south and the oarpet bagger' t Beall.we continue to give the Baud holders gold and, other people rags worth about 80 cents op the dollar? fthali we continue to vote all these and thus vote over five 'hundred millions of taxes upon ourselves? All persona who wish to 000tioue thie condition of things wHI vote the Radical ticket from President down—tbose op posid will not so vote. Choose ye between! --After November, the phrase, "the biter bitten," will be superseded by "the !inner Ginned." How a Radical Cohgressman Was Con quered. • A few days since the Democrats of Elisabeth, Allegheny.eounty, Pa, celled en evening meeting and. announced ae n speaker, Alexander Foster,Esq ,of ?Wet burg. Tho Red Male became alermed and called en afternoon meeting, pbtling for ward as their champion, Hob. (leo. V. Lawrence, of Washington county. Af ter speaking some time, Lawrence de clared bimsell reedy to answer arty , questions, and dir, F'outer being present, ached a number of quest i ins which the reader will nee ocunpletely cornered Mr Lestrehc., and fultly exposed the tweak and raseillating positiein of the Rel oil party upon the great questions before the country. The Pittsburg Peer gives the following report : Mr Fn ter asked Mo. Looorience to de fine distinctly what was the meaning of "the letter and spirit of the law." as used in the Chicago platform. Does it mean gold or greenbacks Lawrence.—That isnot apolitical question ; it is to be deoithid by the - C mitts. Mr. Foster —Will Mr. Lawrence ex plain how the quettlion can get into Court thin npy bondholder, oan any one nue the Government? Mr Lswrenee —lnn debate in Wash ington Mr Blaine and Gen Huller said 80 Mr Foster --No lawyer whonA opinion in worth a pinch of enuff would nu) no. Mr. Lawrence continuing to fight nhy, Mr Fouler remarked that Mr L. had stated that 'lie - I•;llittntno - was in - favor of isnuing $1,500 000,000 in groenhac' n at one time, and slid thin was,newn In him. Mr I, would oonfer a 'arnr by ntrlting to which of Mr Pendleton's niMeches Mr L alluded Mr LaWrence could not nay. and finally ad mittedibat he had not read it In any of Mr ' , osier asked him if he was in fa •or of or opposed to negro suffrage in the N.grth No, the Slates have °antral Mr I. of 'hal " 11 F.—Why then has not the State o Virginia the came right? Will the get.? defeat) inform me whether Virginia is not named an a State an well as Pennsyl •Rfli4, in the Constitution r This ynre lion wan evasively answered Mr Foe ter continued by oinking Mr Lawrence whether as a member of Congrens he would ho in favor of counting Southern electoral votes cast for Seymour and Blair Mr will caunt all but Vie nia. M istaiseippi and Texan. Mr F —And why not them ? Mr L —Because they are not `•recon !Unwed " Mr F —What constituterw - recorrsernc-- lion. Mr L --Adopting the constitylion ter itent them Mr. F —Then you will reject Pennsyl •ante, for we hate A Conatitution.enede and adopted by our own people. Will the gentleman place his finger upon the portion of the Conetitutlon coming in Congress the power to furnish the or. genie law of a State , Mr Lawrence declined going into ouch an effort The colloquy was •ery intirroting, and I have only given an outline of it It waeeont untied through out with the most entire courtesy by both gentleman. The Books Posted —Where the Mon- ey Comes From • We once beard of a book keeper in a large business brume, when called on for a statement of the financial condi tion of the establishment, reported "ill paid in and all paid out " This appear+ to be thy condition of the general tlov y.ratient at present One David A Wells, Special Commissioner of lawns! Reve nue, has been making a report el owing the operatione of his Department for the year ending June 80, 1868, from which we learn some anteresting facie The entire moulit of money. collected during the year is thus slated : Custom Internal Revenue, currency..... 193 000 000 Miscellaneous . . . 47 000 000 Publie lands ♦ direct tax cur'cy 3 000,000 Total Receipts . . $♦06,300,000 To show the entire receipts, the gold. which under the present order of things is a mere article of commerce, should be expressed in currency, and amounts to $233,000,000, making the total recipts rue oth TEAR $478,800,0001 This vast amount of motley is all col lected off of the people iu some shape ;41 taxation— By tariff, By income 4%, By stamps, Ily licen.e, By every conceivable manner,i TUE KKKK y uOt 111 TO The Name report also shows how ibis enormous sum of money was expended, which was as follows : . $ 5.1.009 817 . 25 775.503 56,715,410 6 1:12,620 5,600.000 83,687,294 ..... • 141,635,551 Civil list .. Army Rivera and harbors Ind Mal Freedman's Bureau Intarest,un debt.... Total_ ..... $371:5.0,225 It must also be remembered that the Item of $141,685.511, of Interest on the public debt, is ipst mtny gold dollars; which in curntoy •mount to . about $212,000,000 When we remember that the past year was one of profound peace, to ascertain the blessings of Radical government and the rate at which nation is going to ruin, we can Well compare the expeudi tures of last year with those' of the last year - of Mr. Bachanati's administration. Under the last year of that President the entire amount of money collected from tariff duties, public, lauds and oth er sources was $41,844,984—0n1y roue 11UNDNED AND THLIITY.YIIIII MILLIONS lass dart under Radical ride. During the same, and it was conelderod an extrava gant one, the Motman war being on hand, there was impended. for ALL PIM Poets, the rum of $41.844,924, being $182,095,690 leen than last year, to say nothing of. the $141,036,651 In gold paid ae intereillt on the public debt. These are facts for the people to pon der over. We hope Mr, Wells will anon write again—we may learn something of the internal workings of Radicalism. Soldier. A Wor4.With you t We met on the bank of the James in 18111 nave you fistgetteellll It was in Oo'ober of that Isar; the, eteeples_ of !tit:thine/id and Petertiburg Were in eight ; ti Vag the night after the niblick on the Danville, Railroad. As there was but one stint* in that month, of that yeai. you cannot tali to recollect the time. You were one of the elightly wounded, and,lay in the hospital ,whet Vtumet you. We hod a conversation Waive to the war, and its management. You said you were 6.thtiegwfor the nton. We said that you would never gel the Union eased ho' at the hands of the Dculooratio party. You said there wopld be Union the moment armed op potttion to the goverpment mwed: 'We said that the party in power oared noth ing for the Union. That they went in to the content for negro eurremaey, eeJ the opoiln of war. That there we, no hope of a emanation of as long as the radicals ruled, and there could he spoile to get, and negroen to elevate (!). You said you believed we were de ceived, and that if it proved otherwi , e you would come over squaie and pat upon the democratic platform. We eau] that the Rada Oared more for the negro than for you, and that you would dtacm•er it seouer or later. Yca laid that the go•erument would lake care of its soldiers We sad that the abolition hell born rosernment (WWI care a nick's eent for its soldiers, only to use theta fur its own aggrandtzement. ✓ no* is it? Don.t any you won't talk with 119 Stand lair and square ou your declaim Lima- - - lino the facts in the Noe You were told that there would he Union the moment armed opposition ceased. Armed opposition °eased more than three years ago Is there Union' You were told t hat the rights of the Staten were to be left intact ; that the subjugate, it only sought -to conquer armies flow has the proutise been ful filled? Whet of freedmen's bureau+l Whet of enacted negro euffragel by the general government ? What of interfering in elections! Whet of removing otTicers which the people had elected ? It wee cumportitvOy of little moment whether negro suffrage carried in Ohio and other Northern State. or not. Yet the people voted it down Yet, did not the Radical representatives of there came people impore, force, thrust negro suffrage on the South at a wine, and to •uch a manner an Eu make negraeutfrage negro supremacy 9 What shall we call subjugation ? Whet deed was ever done on earth more damnhle, mire boll•tmpregnated then lb ! Will you, geogtion it.? - W ill you have anything further to do with men who can conocive such a mon sirosity 7 Another thing li-concerns you flow does the government lake care of t soldiers? You cannot be rich You were 1.11 the rooks You be•e w litile borne of your own it may be Prrhape you work from morn ing till night, for the neoe•sariea of life You trusted the Radical tyrants to take care of you Surely you had some raft son But who elands ibe ease? • • ...Negroes are cared for Those who staid at home and cheated you, a-reared for. But you are left out iu the cold, now that you have been need, \ You must pay lazes, to support the elegant equipage, nod lonittsoun larder of the bondtiolding aristocrats. The kind of money that in good enough for you, k not good enough fur them. No says your J.toobin friend. Now, soldier, this to a laud of liberty. Every man who bee been wronged, ha• aright to turn 'lron thine who wronged him nod demand junt toe. It in no di-- grace to a man that ham been deceived There is an opportunity now to ged— Sattsfamion for the past. A perfect Union White mane government One kind of money for all Equality or Stales ilaa .500,00 u Taxation to all by voting the straight Detnocrat to ticket If you wanted the Union enough to fight foe it, you do assuredly continue to want it enough to vote for it Vole fur Horatio Seymour and you will have it lwaertonr VOR Tlia PCOPLIC —For Au ditor (Jensen] who will the people choose ? Charles E Bo)le, the Democratic oandi• dale, a nine of integrity and capacity agninst whose character neta word even of stispicivin dare be breathed. or John rank, the itadicnl candidate whose chief recommendation 'bee been /bat he was a moldier, but who now In bore, under the unrefined anti irraftila ble charge of official misconduct, in ibis that he authorized the payment of thousands of dollars in the violation of the law! line or the other of these could idatemmust be elected Auditor Deneral Which one will it be ? The men of irrepronchah le character, and acknowledged fitness., or the man who, occupying the pool of men tinel over the Treasury, failed to protect For Surveyor General whom will you have, people of Pennsylvania! General Wellington II lint, Democrat, au ap proved soldier, wbo bares opon his per eon the soars of actual conflict, and is an Intelligent honest man, who would honor the office, or General Jacob M Campbell, whose soldiership is to be in• (erred from his title alone, hie deeds in the field % being unknown to fame? The real soldier, who marched and fought and bled, or the one who, we believe, never smelled powder burnt in the face of the enemy ? You must take one of them. Choose w lee 1y.7-Patriol. FACTO, TAX PATIO.I.-1. In one monib—the month of July—during pro found peace, the Radical party lucre's - ad the national debt over 13 000,000. This is not the eoodomy of wealth, Honest republicans ratio& where this will end. „2. In hlaroh, 1866, two yoere and a half ago, gold wan moiling at 24 per cent. premium. It is now ceiling al double. Thicirrs in these two years of 'peace, ills Radicals have reduced the value of the currency in which the sol dier is paid his pensions and the labor ing man his wages. whilst it has increas ed the value of gold which is reserved for the bondholder. These two faot are worth pondering by all candid men. Will General Hartranft Withdraw ? General John F. Hartranft, the Radi cal candidate for re . rolad , i.iri to the re- Ponvilile' position of Auditor t 7 tient% elands before the people II WWII) end de liberate violator of the law which he, 'above all other men, was bound to r lonely observe. Ills duly to the p ßo pi; , who had * confided alreat trust to ilia iteepiriß.And his oath of office, WI well, should have admonished him to itelaith falobservanoe: The law was framed for bin guidance• prnvteiona regnired hint form.' no ant:fount' for cervices of tnen t h,,,, , o r teglelative committees. Yet he did au dit examine and approve 'lice° fr•au I. lent noloun'e to the amount. of nearly ten th'one ind dollars, and .I'4 odor the payment of the money. The prowl-too In the appropriation bill RIR drawn op by Win. Chas.' E. lloyle,• the Uemnora nc candidate for Atiditor Ueneral. to ton. loot the State treasury from the raid er , in the Leg sla'ure: who inert. t ly nailed lc Notwithstanding, (I.n -liar! rant!, utterly uel4lindful of Vie responal. billuiee of hia important otlSgr , and In rockiest' dleregard of oath, di•l unit hie sign and mark of approval to then unjunt accounts. Whnt rnnnaa do hi, spologi-tic en 1 defen lera t?tfer for Ilk gro.l betrayal or a high 1 ,01,1,0 tr ,„,, ! Why, they with cool impudevivie lororm the people that Democrats were chai•men of some of them, comnnueea , an I p, took of the plunder PO 111•19111y.1184,(111,11d by this faithless official 117 bat is that to the purprive, except ea a confeenion of guilt Y Du•'e the part teinatien• of others relieve him at all ? Is he less "inky of unmet ion Of his duties as. a. public 11.1 him end on hint alone will reel the respooti hility with the entire people of the.yhate The wrong could not have Neel, consum mated by any pereo•t on earth huthim eelf. The Legialat ure might have urne.l Itself into a bundrellicomtuntrea to rub the public, under pretext of unread, Lion, and_yetnnt "rirelt d. ye, been nbstritetod fro,m cep* by order of the Auditor Uetiercl He wee chosen for be •pecial itiirpoce 'needing the Reece. to the iloore..l the Treasury. To hie honealy,lom CC, hi. practical good pelvic-, were mortioel millions of the public 4:ney. Ile 1,,,e shown in many way'. hl itor unfune,l tor the hi trust repomet in him Genera' Ilnrtranfi is esrui 04n lida'e f,r Anti tir -General Ills offiebtl ;Het ie to he raaaed on by the people in October. Who dare any the{ lt to t n“t the deepest condetahation! In •ittle of hie onworthinera tt ; ie ilie , boy of the Radical!' to witildrawi.ljon flout the °enlace. , If they do not, they be come Kaponeible for hue offence., en. Jorge them. But if the HA hoots, rely ing en party titectpline, and the b'ind obedience of the masers within their or ganisation. ah‘il defiantly _keep We faithlean offiotal in the field, the people will unite to hie oundemnation. Ilu eleetirm wmeld he iliegrneefol In the Siete It would ihr)w open wile inn loom of the Tremenry to the phinilerern who linee so long iufested the tinpeol It would he en locilation to gorge them/ eelven on the money of the people IC would remote eery reel raint on the in ilolgenee of offteiel lieenti , iuelene 'nil repieity Hie election would he n pre mium for inompeetty in offiMel et•non , it high reward for fetiltlettenest in the dilmoherge of most important public trulitte It will not do to take refuge bohaol general Ifarirsoft's military repotorin man priepomen to 'gnarl him eel in the field. B 1.1 But if be has 006 1041 .1 it by enlemendttot to civil station, the fault I. but own. gratitude for martial ner•ice will not require the people to repnme confidence in a man who hm• already betrayed (hem It is not Mope. general Hari 'mil. but ihe Auditor General of Pronmylvania, wh o i• before the people. I , is no filia tion about the l'eter.burit louse eiplueron but one of treasury abstraction. Will ihn It‘dicol mendidaie for Aodonr General irith.triwl I borrirhurg harlot A Talk with the Working Men, The Ciuoinnati Enquirer has the fol lowing You are pail for your day of bard %nil unremitting toil _r ot th e year sod tear of your bones and sinew.—in legvl lenders That money is thought good ~ tnough for you, and why, should 1 1 not he good enough for the h.indholder who toils not, who is arrayed in fine linen, and lives upon the fat of the 141111' If it is good enough for him, ought 1"" to •iite for the party which pays that he moat hate better money than you rk r,ive---ihot he moat have the solid gold • You are oppressed with Pll/11)unni tot , !ion in every variety of form. The reit of the dwellings in wbtoh yor live is for ton high. You are taxed two or three price. (or evetyilling you buy to the Aerie of clothing and provisiona Why in this? A portion of yoar money does riot go to your landlords, to your grocer., or your butiohere. or your 1411- ore —They only receive it amt then porn it to the tax gatherer, $l5l 000 tem . , Senator' Sheraton admits. was prrid for interest on the bonded debt kat year It in proposed to pay this intense!, for forty years, which would be $1,000,00 0 .- 00 0; and then we moot pay the princi pal of the debt, $2 500.000,000 more it, too, inohard coin! Iffave you thought how much of your sweat and blood would have to go ,toward paying this enormous debt—of how many com• forts yourself and family will hove to be deprived, and in that long interval of time, on its account—unless we pay the debt, a portion of it, off in legal ten ders, and (hue save this ethorbitant in terest-, Will you vote for Grant, and thus vote to establish 'this dreadful incubus upon yourself apd your posterity ? Re member that this $4,000,000,000 in (our years, is in addition to all the other taxes for the support of the Govern ment, and that there will be at least $6,000,000,000 more in that Interval. Do yon GAO we can stand that burden of taxation? Do you think the $ 2 , - 600,000,000 capital, •Itioh is now in bonds that are not taxed—which capital in its present shape affords no man em ployment--ought to be permanently looked up ! or do you want it paid anill and the now• idle capital used in build• ing houses and steamboats, carrying on internal improvements, and giving em ployment to millions of laborers? II you want this change, you cannot get tt by voting for a ticket which believes that the bonds should go unpaid for genera tions tollicome.—Ex
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers