Incidents B in eholdLiYour fe of 'blew I Grant—Radi cals, • The last twelve moallis have been pro lific of what purports to be the . life of Grant—some.tof them professing great minuteness in "incidents" of his life from infancy. Jf one could believe one half of the baldd lash about him in the numerous "lives" theft bay; been issued from the Radical prose in the country, w 4 would be led to bolter° that Ito was a jewel of morality, decency and piety.— There are numerous "incidents" omitted by Me biographers which prove the re verse. We propose to supply some of t h e se ••ineidents," which show him to be the veriest "confidence man" to. be used by his Radical "palls" for the over throw of our free institutions. We have the authority of Jesse Grant, his father, that Ulyivgee wilt a very lazy boy, and his father could not control Rim—that be found ho would be aLurthen on him through life. Ile lived in Ohio, in the Congressional district then represented by the lamented Thomaif L Harmer, who got Jesse's lazy,, dooless, drunken son appointed a Cadet at IVeet Point. In due time be graduated, and was ap pointed a Lieutenant in the regular arm:, In that capacity he served i i the Mexican war. There he got dtunk and was arrested, but through the influence of brother ofllcern, the offence was over looked. tie was sent' to the Premier, where lie was, in a great measure, free from public observation rt is asserted, ^amt. believed, that be %sag very iutem . perate, kept bull flogs and genie cocks, and ems interested in a drinking saloon• Ile obtained leave of absence—visited New York—got on an extensive behauch —rode a horse into it store—destroyed things within his reach -was ar m sled, I ski.n to.the tnortibs and fined, and enteimilienzly court niariittleil for drunkenties and conduct unbecoming IL •mldier Ile was found g,n lit). and im ['dinned rein Davie, (bun .•:taireiary of %%iir, to rirectit ills I esigwol iti before die of the duct tilai till w ae ay .l ri.ri .1, as that would relieve him of the undrriloginru :Ur ~11.401•, in the p:iiitlns, Ile ell lel 1114 resignation 1: DICA 111:1101.1. 1 1I >1 R C.l.- 111': Vie will ottl pn txtt,l to g, 1,11 ihe -incidents which go to 111114tt.it, (lifirnctrr," (tie hitt ItltiTtlYnt hiorrnnhrrY Fly 'bey Cellr ft, .1, 64' het t!" duct our Ittatlert4 to all mitEulnrly en,tich, they all we copy from the 1.. ) 111 whieh the t.l,tor t for Lyn ( . 0171'11 Itt 1 , 01 ut 11.1111:, t 111'11` IV iyl a r T of Illy Lch in ll\ v.l ( 1 ,re ray . .., the trtolt 1 , 1 thittelt hs• 1.1 “The ettat c," tv—ctitttctif, t porlt of grwl 111, HY Is in t“, h , an 1 ~', 11101Igh dhl l •, WI4 •11e beg leave to undo( cive !hell& 1 . 1,' relating one or two little incidents f ehich we have lately r, reined tiothentie information We du not allude now , to that little Ittrair in Washington 4 luio ago, upon which sonie of the mei aldy men tb, gw qrhes annuadve rued In leimv j 11•4 severity, lweetuse we me oil r the impression thr♦t they fit nem, of reconciling that It tlr irregularoy with ili • statment el.ewher.• made, th tt "General Brant echleni indulges 111 0.1-4 01 wine " The int olent to vv!,ie'i we now elude 111CCUrr.il not in Moro! tditugion, tut in St Lowy tor to torment, who is repreeentc , l to its a men of high einudink and unimpeachable veracity, nay, that tiront reached St. Louie on the, 1 lth of December, 1866, registered Ills name at ho Southern 'toted, and remained two dap. (loing out into the, city, shortly after his arri val, he Learns BO emplial.cally and uu reservedly,drunk that two mi n had to carry him back to 1119 hotel After lie had recovered 111 imme degree from the effect, of hie debauch, he repaired to one of the gambling "hells" of the city, and 00011 lost $2OO —all the moot y i.e had upon his person—in one tho•e fart nutting genie, of chahce which prevawl in thorn gilded pale& sof vice. tie then burrow e d $lllllO from a friend, and lint the whole of it in the conic way before he left the room. "The , m facts are vouched for by a cit izen of St. Louie, n gentleman of rrerd lent character and high social posit tor, whose . naine in at our disposal TVe do not doubt that every word of his state moot is true, but the incredulous oath have their doubts removed by applying to usJor the names of the parties who know the facts "Now we trust at t'Etr-snen who arc supporting (Irani as the.representive of the !Rooney and morality of the Ameri can wople, will make some inquiry into this matter, and if they find that ho is not worthy to occupy so exalted a posi tion in the party of• "moral Meng," that they will transfer their support to his opponent, a man as distinguished for the purity of his private life as for his emi nent poblie services and the lofty char acter of his stateemanship." RADICALS, BEHOLD YV)UIt WV A drunkard, a - gain - Met; whore-monger. A fit represents tife of the Radical party, who have had the reins of power in their bands for the last seven years. There in another "incident" in the life of Want, which his biographers have overlooked. After Grant was court mertialed and left We army in disgraoe, his father-in law, Lien. Dent, gave him a &nil of 800 acres, ten miles from St. Louie, on Draveie creek. This was in / 86 4.„ .... firent had this free of rent, and here he lived and kept his family for five yearn. There, too, he wade • record of a levy, drunken, gambling debaucher.— Rio neighbors lait very gteat synipatlay her hie family, who were often in 4 ( 4 11 1 tall 1 a nut CM VOL. 13 BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY OCTOBER 30, 1868. tering condition, and would have suf fered Jrtlim Gnonce habits but frr the compassion of Mr. boot, who supplied therm with the necessaries of life. With the advantages of so large and produc tive a farm, he might haVe risen to afflu ence, had it not been for his bad habits, which were habitual. Hero 'hie neigh bors say of him that he wee "'bout like the rest of us, only ho would get drunk and tell a big, windy tale." Hero is what hie neighbors Bay of him while he was farmer Grant : "limas the habit of Captain Grant, when he woe farmer (Irani, to haul his wood to St. Louis and there dispose of it; to leave hie cattle.in the street, or whether they might happen to be stand ing, and to purchase oblivion at the nearest groggery, untill either come charitable neighbor took him home, or ho so far recovered him self as to look up his team and go thithe'f himself I am told.that the former watt the more fro quoit case. At the time of hie fast' ap pointment to command during the war, it 14 !Old that he owed billet at almost every grocery between his house and the city 1 geMiletllllll avers that hie negro, then a slave, but now free and a legal witness, once plcLeil up Captain Grant and carried him 'home in his wagon, , re the print of his pretrial( form wan riftei wards 1141104 iliheerrialile in the fi nit with whieh the tow ni t' , e vehicle- woe coot - red lIJt ea);l.,twoeli the farm and the City littli• ale house, ivithin in a bench on which the fleneral has often ri pool himself sailc slumbei lug off de li.oichea. The scared relw• has now been to the house of the owner, and app; ur in former p.oi.,tion a hideous I !!,rgroidliJ poitail i , l hen', with a 1,1 , 111 . 11, lol , la I , W , l u , ~ 11 the of li,n exploio; Thene Were dot - dnaiiionilt, 'be it rftiembrierl but habitual , and it. 14 as 4111 1 Pilltl' , 11 , •1 4 14 Ilan 4.11t1,4 lu 111'11:111y 10.1 air, 'II !item, o.,,tigh th it ring‘it \Wm) 01.1111 . 1,1. I 111 , u• the el- • 1 but w 111111. 111111, 1.1110 Vt t o meter atly 111.11/C1 meat 11) tr 1111 fl 411 1611.1 TI ry are 01,011 amid 1 •11 , 1,, .14 f etH, wlth In the ktPetvhflgt• et ttll s of I7rltJl It N7ll / e 111111111 IP 111111 ,,, ',f grill. Ite . 'Who 141,e'It Ip,w pte re,terett4 Itl it for -urn, ti p/ r 1011, with hah,t4 of Il rau 1, I t pre•: le over thi el,t:/eit 1 t i {;:,• 1 , 11 .110119 le:t SI I.wwilul`,'ll,l lenlen r n prem.i f if he would teliirni .0111 1:111 ,11,II:,1,1. for Ivy.) ipiitv, lie would give 111111 tut 1111 , Wit In 1111. winery 1:1;11()1,I) I' 1,•;‘,,,, One ity A Hundred Tho nlfriil return..l, w I vote at the I co I lort ItiAlit S WOK to - ,3,00 , ), hit 1 11,1.! the Ralie ii 111.1 pm, r for 111.101 W f'oiternl it it 07f- and for tiu rv, ,i r '1,179 ' IJII , I 11 will IP , the Detnoetall I'o per vent, of the wll 'lv Sow of the polls I per c, , nt. th, foro, of en. ry Lwar, •! (row I,lir e 1 to the Deeit ,• at o,de, will pivo il'e Dcsuo malt con,' of the vote ritil (cove the llndiells II.; of it, which wil4 givc the Democrat , ' a firtioi i'y of 1,:173 nt the Slate 'the result of the election the fate of the Republic, ' , e1.1118, nicrefone, to 11 an upon this pot eible change of rine rite in a hundred. 110 e, oral r, r, Ictll ynn nut re your /27 iris and ”croillilcrii (his Y TtarAl +.UB RI: alre•idy feel the erinhing weight a I.lr.ation howinfr you to the etiili, and prey for deliver 111C'. No deliveranc, need ho expected thailongrels are kepi in power, for !buy ale incres,ing the burden three hundred thousand dollars a day by keeping the emu ling Rimy to ilia- Nouth, Thus one n , .nh•+t of Radical rule costs you three hundred thousand dollars daily The siyuries of the Freedmen's Bureau clerks alone, is one million del lons per 11111111111. Just think of it! The standing army, to keep in subjugation and degrade one third of the Union, costs you three hundred thousand dollars daily, and the bureau clerks, employed to in cite, negro insurrection and trouble, cost you one million dollars yearly.— Ilow will you stop the increase, and lighten the burden? VIA only way is to Tete the party out of power that keeps it up. Remember this. Woo ?-IVho risk the most—the bond holder who gave $5OO and received $l,- 000 5-20 bonds, at 6 per cent, interest, sayable semi-annually in gold, or the •oo'F'boy who gave his service and lost• his leg? Dir►tyusxur. —The ono doubles his In vestment, gets his interest in gold, and pays no taxes. The other Is maimed for life, gets paid in a depreciating cur rency, worth only 60 cents on the dol lar, and IN compelled to pay taxes in or der to pay interest to the bondholder. 1 ---Great Briton wanted the colonies to put down stamps on the paper the people use,l. But they wouldn't. They fought George the Third seven years about it. Since then, however, the friends of the cause of the Third have not only required stamps. to be put on every piece of paper, but upon every• thing elan whioh the fanner needs, and on Africau army to stamp the life out of the prople!—Sentinet on the llordsr, Council Bluff lowa. "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION . " Why they Voted the Radical Ticket Ask some mechanics why they vote for Grant an.] Radicalism, and their re ply is, we want a proteative, tariff—we must have it to protect hots ihduolry. Well, why haven't you got tine? Why did not your two-thirds Congress—two thirds, in both btatiches—give you what you Want, long ago? Answer that! You want the great iron interest of Pennsylvania protected. Why hasn't it been done to the extent you want? You don't know the reason. Well we will tell you. Your Radical representa tives and Senators from the New Eng land States and the West are against it, and you 'cannot get what you want You are played upon by Uie:party you sup. port; they Rice making fools and tools of you, and you`tion't know it. Theydeoeive you w1t4 .. , false promises which they know they cannot fulfill, and whieli,per haps, they would not if they could. Who then support such a party? hu i ,pose you were to get what you do sire—a protective tariff—how much would it benefit you? Were your wages ever raised in pro portion to the per Tentage ( protection, or near it ? Never: You have alwais been cheated, always will be, by the Iron Nlasters and by all the madufacturlng Lords. They make immense fortunes, wider the protective tariffs—many of them be come tni.lionares Tr n a , 11 , 1 you ever know any of Iht mechanics or lakott is employed by them become wen:thy, ao thry dm and build pahe e s, and revel ill luittri . Or did ran ever know any, after tolling a 'lle time in the employment of these Loris of rhe Fur.ance and the Loom, the and leave even a comfortable sob.4isttmce to their funilne," SOM. , 41iCil u1•I re may be —. lint In c, , 111 11 , 01 with the who die pour, an t leave their fitinilie.4 they are ea few as not to he wet lit noticing. ou ate the slave of capital Ily mice seine the your halt watt arms—you produce the of tYic country —you make the g that tribal p,,cliets And whin i gel 1.1 rewrn liw d,.,, fouls no longer Look at the truth In Chilg CV IL lieve and net No tar.ll ever rased loon. wages per t.anently or proportion 'lly, nor ever will, and yet On every article )011 con some, on all you wear and use, even the very thing. you manufacthre yours, I% es you pay the wet eased ix: imposed by y,,ur Mitch de•jrr,l proterbt e tariff, while your Lords, the Iron Master, the Cotton Spinntr, and other OOttilliaelllfeS, put it on their goods, and pay no lax at all y0,,1 of the loom and 'pludle --you who hemd your stalwart liiiilii y vii the gltring, fiery furnace, :wit handle the r. , WICrOII. II trnuno• and heavy 'bar rfl.ia year t t year all you mechanics and It irers iif every ription, wh. , wutk around, or about manuf'etories of any hind—awaken at last to the truth' probnn bee tsarinas no advantage to you It nly, in the end, makes the —rich richer had the poor poorer." ()pen our eyes to lb., stern reality, wri , l vote, of t of Novvintier, not fur your employers, hut (or youreelre4 --Those of our Demmer:l.6c friends who imagine tliat ale Presidential elec tion mull go in favor of (Irani, merely because Illy late elections, by a tight squeeze, went Radical, are advised to look at the following figures before clinching such a CUlleill`llorl Texas, Mis.issippi and Virginia, being counted out of the Union," by the Radical Con gress, the Electoral College this year will aggregate only 291 votes Conse quently lIS will eliot Now„, let 114 see w hat the Democratic chances really are: A gentleman in Washington, who hoe the advatit.l7,e of daily intercourse with well informed gentlemen from all parts of the country, gives the following as hie pre diction as to the way the Staten will vote in November, viz. Foi boy nor For Grant Alabama IR Arkansax Florida Illinois California lowa Connecticut I ouisinna 7 lielartaro M Reno mant. ow hu fie Ita 12 cl eorgia 9 M 101 l igen ••• $ Indiana 12 Minnesota 4 hennas 3 Nobranks 3 Kentucky II N Ilauvikb Ere to Meryl, nil 7 Ohio 21 Mlentregi - .. . II Rhode Island 4 Nevada 3 South Carolina 6 New derail 7 Tennessee 10 New York 33 Vermont a North Carolina 9 Oregon 3 119 Petihsylvanis 26 *est Virginia 6 Wisconsin 8 Democratic electors, 175 Rad teal electors, 119 Democratic majority It is thus seen that Seymour hes yet the beet ohanoe of election ; for even should Pennsylvania go against him which is by no means certain, be will Mill have 80 majority ; and, should Pennsylvania, Indiana, Wirconsin,• and West Virginia, whioh really are tbe only State, that are doubtful, - all go against him, he would still be eleotetPby a ma jority of four in the Electoral College MEE Why should 'Workingmen Vote IMF Radical Ticket Said Senator Wilson of Massachusetts, In his speech et reburgh, Pa., on Wet: esday last: "The 'country is more proeperous to day than it was on any 7th of October in its history. The truth is we are in emceeing the wealth of this counlryquite fast enough for our own good " What say the workingmen.—the labor er, the mechanic, and the artilac t Ito you, whose toil and sweat prodticee this national wealth, and whioh has made One country no great among the 'lntim.) of the earth, feel that this October in the “moot prosperous" you ever enjoyed '— In your family better clothed, your lar der better supplied, or your p s ocketa bet ter filled with cash? Ilyoueauanswer all these questions affirmatively, and can further Fay that you are freer from debt, then Mr IS lyon in right. Hut if you cannot—if you have to work no hard no ever, and live no better, enjoy nu more of the comforts of life than pion formerly did, Mr Wilson simply insults your manhood. If flit pi osperity of which he speaks ie etdaltird to the rich capaitilio•in, iiion opoli•ty a ill Cl , , rol to 1011 g, R 9 we think it in, why it simply praxes that Sir Irtlstai logic not know ; o l it etinstuute4 national wealth y tmr proNpet ity cannot be Nub c(nit ikll 1/1110 4 4 the working classes, who prodr{f•e Iho4 lot 110periV, tire in a pros peinirm (.ml,lOlOll All wriler4 upon Ct.n Only ilgree rn tii.e Anti lieckre, when Ijariu•.cl oral Ira lort,i of Ow lhrrswg curl4llloll of ihc. cc.uulry, and 1.1 the .nme lime Ink() from Ihe of the c ,, ii.itr) 0.6 1 uI r try cai 1 , 41 , 4111,1,t,r1 of the florernmeiat, hi y unuit to litjol3 111 1 live 111'1110141r 11. 1 11 111111 1 11111 .11,1111 iti •e uolutitti.4.that wvikltJg anti piodtwing cla•••••eti of the country pity lei mote Alan their just hhnre of the pithlte rur;li s l•ri in the klixpe • , which, lu a large t ge to ~well the wealth of !he monop) lists We have alvo shown that l‘hile latter is thus injuctly burthened, thore Radical orpre.sorl hare exempted from taxation over two thousand mil:long of the wealth of the wealthy On the other hand. we Intro hh yen flint tt ir the poitcy and the inittecl of the Dentiniratig party In correct. IlieSe ahuecs, and to materially relieve the pre-e•tt limpet's of the working by taxing tt iv vavt amount of we.lth Witch II:01001m ham exempted from 7iiin d see n t What right have you, then, as :folk ingmen. to vote against your own ut tercets! With what juvtioe can the Itatlicale clam your votes when they would deny you the bread or life" If you want to work harder and grow pool , vole the Radical ticket If you want to become elnvice of a monied nrietocracy, vote the Radical ticket But if you prefer to bo freo men, and return to Old time prosperity—with equal tasea and equal prtstlege ,, throughout the whole country —Tote the Democratto ticket —Er SCHUYLER COLFAX Schuyler Ccolfax's Speeoh, Made in 1855, After - hie Return from the Know-Nothing Convention in Phil adelphia. An obi Fenian friend of thin city has handed us the following from .his scrap book for publication. It is an extract from one among the many speeches ta livered by Schuyler Colfax, Radical can didate for Vim) President, on his return to Indiana from the national Know-Noth ing convention, at Philadelphia, in 1855. Read it: * * * * "Some tell me that many foreigners are intelligent ; yes, intelli gent. Ifow in the name of the Almighty God can they say it? Look at the Dutch man, smocking his pipe, and if you can see a ray of intelligence in that dirty, idiotic looking face of his, show it to me! /Look at that drunken, bloated Iriedmao, with his rotgut whisky bottle in his pocket, and he drunk, swearing and reeling, and show me in that pollu ted face any spark of morality, intellect or education. The idea in perfectly ab surd; It is preposterous! "We must change the lawii of the land and prevent these igntirant, degraded paupers hare from voting and holding office. There are a sat of Unprincipled Villains and Ruffians, who congregate in And around our large cities and vil lages, and live by stealing and begging from the Americans. &motell me they have rights. So they have; the right to live under our laws and till the soil, Pod do as we did. They are inferior in intellect and intelligence to the Ameri cans, and they must( and shall be put down ••..• NO. 43. and kept down, if it•hns to he done at the point of the baz . Lmet and with powder and lead. There Is no use of talking min cingly, or of fearing results in regard to the matter. A great cry has went up by old liners about the foreigner being driven away from the roils, and not be ing allowed to vote. This I suppose is true In many respects. Would you have the American citizen stand beck, and let a bloated, red-•issged, drunken brute of an Irishman vote instead of himself See the wretch as ho ap proaches; his knees knocking, and the slobber of tobacco running down his jaws, anti an he cornea you hear him "burro for dimocricy ;" and hero he comes, fresh from the bogs, just one year ago, and wants to- vote—and be clause the boys ery "mere him," ana he gets knocked down for his impudence a, great cry is made obeli!, it by old line demagogues. I say it is righ.—let them stand back. "Again: You see a lop eared, wide mouthed, mullet headed Dutchman com ing lip Just front some hut in the Land of kraut: with the foam of heer still 'Slicking in his horse-tail whiskers, and hie breath smelling of garbe and onions, enough to kill a white man three hun dred yards, knd before ho can say any thing in the world but 'Democrat,' he must vote, and that vote counts as much Ali yours or mine. This is outrageous and abominable These forelgirers that have carried elections for old liners will have to learn their places They have no more right to vote than the 'mites of the field, and have not the souk(' of a good Newfoundland dog , and God knows Hutt Were I a candidate fur any'ollice, would tell these paupers aiu vagabonds they,' vile, dirty filthy, degraded., idtotio foreigners, I did not want their votes and if Lever am a ctmlislate, I hope to trlo I I never will get thorn " crinor ) goo. Once Mitre to the Polls t' 77nre u I he n" DI 'I ¢\l it k,7,/ n 1 (TI? govell h" r•neuri ITht nml CAN BE \ i'll1:11 `,1;11, ;f wo rally In the 1,0114 in Th, it o.lonired voier4 thy rk lino line• gore Lorne 'l'l.l til too 1.1111:1 Th-tr nit,ttey ti , 1.•••1, nt). iu til prt run II Theth,j, , eltti of naitt rr.l.zat tin papers C tin not and ,I,ro not it t • rept-tte.l In tunny 1,01110 i,, the I ,cal t ckutt Lrpt thrrn our rite Imoul 3 ,„! I no:N••wall ticloqs are now allot 1,-• way Therefoto bring eat rtie vote at N,.vern'iet election, and the WILL. II! ol A speaking can• vast In utinecewiry Ilk a toll with your neighbours UM! good M em e l , her, it net , I. LAt c.t tr of the earl] to give the State to r•eyinour ey a handsome majority; Some r ; laoot~ it inevitah:e . Tl.e two elections cannot be The iim,,tion is, shall the change be favorable or \ unfavorable to the Democracy' It is tar you, Demo cribs, to answer. Let the answer come, on Tuesday next, In tones of invincible power, that shall crush the paltry ma jority which was achieved through fraud and dishonesty by thedtadicals in Octo ber, and glva PeMisylvatim's 26 electors to Seymour and Blair. It can be done /t swat be done ' Ir WILL tie 1/1)N1.: --Under the le,rislatton and admin 'et rAtion of Democrats, the farmer and poor man knew that there was a Gen eral Government in the interest of all the ritates ugly by reading Now the Federal Government enters the farmers house, by the front door, the track door, through the windows, and down the chttnney! omnipresent—alike in the prior, in the bedroom, dlningroom, and kiechun ! Behold the stamp on the mustard and spice boxes—on everything ! On the boots on his feet, on his children's shoes, on his wife's gaiters! On his eclat, pants, vest, and hal ! lie is hut a walking eating and sleeping stamp and abinplaster! This is the price of "loyalty!" - the Federal soldier—the poor mon and farmer—suppose whoa he went into the army to fight for "the Union," that ho would thereby permis: nently dissolie the Union and establish o Diotator•akip over half the States and a bondholding m:i!loarstly in the other, Who dares deny' the truth of this 1— &mewl on the Border,Couneil Bluff lowa. —A whits . Radical in Georgia used the following language in addressing the ncgroes: "I tell you no t to consider or treat any man, ,white or Black, who is a Democrat, as a gentleman, and If any of dig whitolivered scoundrels came whining around you on eleotion day, with auggestiona or advice as to how you should vote, knock their teeth d own their throats." --Yankee* and nigger* are driving the poor while man before them out of the Alkalis and Middle States into the unexplored West to again how p path for the Puritan trader and his nigger part ner. This is the poor man's reward for being "loll" to the wealthy highwaymen who aro absorbing the smaller estates and grasping a landed power !—Sentoill on (Fr Bord-r, Counct/ lihrff /cirri:" r,Tts,i-,••••••, - irn^,r, re% • e.Awgla Philadelphia Letter. SPI CI I. COItII ' ItSOONIWKIII 00 0 ATCIIIIA.N.I Plrn.Anet.rote,•Oct, 2?, 1868 Philadelphia )11011 . 111w RO/.1111100 it more quiet eppearanre. Poilitically, the Union Leaguers are trying to hunt up enough bee men—paid witnesses—to swear to any thing in 'tin' coming contest for the various offices, carried by the Democcntie candidate's on last election, but not yet, In stalled Into office, "Messrs. Myers, of the 3d district, and Thyle,r, of the 6th, dealers, their intention of taking their ?eats this see pion, notwithstanding, the .popular view and vote of the people of their district Jrit planting them to remain at home. Backed. by the League financially, and by corrupt men who have already had their part as signed them to swear to in the contest.— Philadelphia may yet lose the reputation she gained on'last election by her choice of WO cersmnie ie buryingptdienlism so low never again to rise, notwithstanding, all ntlempts at fraud at the polls. Radicalism declares the majority ,don't tule,minority must. Their aotion speaks iss loud as their word.. In regard to ourMayar, considerable Influence is beinglirbtsght to hear in order:to cheat him of his laurels.— And if it was not for the determined will of the people in rallying to his support as they did on election day, the certificate of election would have been withheld until the excitement abated and the Liaguers had time to concoct some damnable scheme by' which to deprive him of his rights. Dot in Mayor Fox they have found their equal.— Strengthened by the support of the peep*, 'Philadelphia may think her stars that the days of our Mayor for-going a fiviing oa Important nerrIRIMIS is shout played. By present appearances our newly elected Democratic District Attorney bids fair to have his hands full, as our democratic Com mittee have enough suits pending against Radical candidates, Judges and policemen frr extra officiousness on election -day last, in arresting *motile citizens, destroying naturalintion papers, offered and properly vouched fee, and with mat treating the, holders of the si l o for daring to vote the Deniocri . ;ti7ileVet. In one instance wo find ono of their good ') honest (') law Odd. ing Judges, dedroy mg the naturlization papery uta e oter, vr , ll , h roper dated hack .nine I", or it year. 4. this offeneo we have. him under sJinlo but, with a fair pro-pe,t of giving him boarding in Moya monsing Pr, ion float) year or more unless sooner relieved by nor fe , ipft; ilovernor, wlt , tottl hettrt to always tender on 51.vh ot•ca stow+. in r,ltt.v int: fr.'ut their juft ennTidrrabie crnsuro ha* hem hrvargirt.t, hear :1'4:1111.1t our dierient Sheriff, Urn. Peter Lyle, It ba, n ,tw ithstJniLt.tt, the st.ertst "pawn .1 earl jai It nli jud;; in,t tho )ur r 1.••. k ,'to /IL!. aut ,4 0 or !I( a 11-,e, $a r j•-e%enta iv is a, 1, - 111 111 ,, .•1 I .11 m appoint I/111 1111 III) pre‘lnt riot in;; "fl 11,11 , a 41IV I n I. 513,011 tho p rr•rnr week our rfl'•12111, h ut ILIoW 1111lik It t , l, 110 Linger Ilistri.it ttiirney \Vas IS. ...I Inn, that. 11 , in.qable an I 41:M1)4 u 1 , 1“. 1 what fur) gt ntli 1,1.1 ..1•:OU t., ri al-y—r-hargo and mita 1. 11 Sherd] Peter le at tteetinory t nwirdi r of the innocent hilt 1, 1 1 I 1 , 1 clout hay during fr i.• .1 IS:linty and it midi of ~'or • Th, ,urialn:, the duuble pig t l m of , Jur) au.l 11 1 for 111=119 Thn lincncra'ic heal. uarter.., 9th and, ‘r , }Litre crux Ird 111.7htiv c't frn4 m rltril—trion to c tll frn.o Ininatoc. exli•Jrt.lng LJul,ty to !may, un , tlwr sling pull in No,olnlJer next, i n nrkr to ,nrly the ; - :t.i1.1.1 fvr .^eynl..ur and 111ntr, good 11,u+ie nod innttial rater hanger of idea+, .teetnlngly every night to prevail, and tvl'h fair pr,peeti that Mandelphl.k miy_he Tint ti'ren in Nnvember • Tarot good for 410111.11N•rtty to; omit ertn•lt I rtes ea the. Carpet-baggor , , thwve,,tourdereryinti reno horn g OOO hack to Ma+ tiehuratt, Vermont. ((moo State, needing flit it note on that 00(.11011. We am h.ll to bcheve that no eml 11WITtl'e dot unspatty 5000, about the number ~f •tuffet , j oe 11.111 In (offload agnin•) on fact ~reertc., Tru-ting I Lace not cm 'tried y."• 1 n-mo,n 0 ow , tiLm. LA BORING M l N, Have yourwagee in creased under rad teal rule in propotAion to the advance in price of groceries, dry Foods and previsions ! Answer the pies lion yournelven —we leave it to yen Cap italteie, bonahnlilers and government plunderers biro gratin rich on the I>•te Abolition war. Have yell? 4!kiswer again. Would a (MAMIE hurt you In fact, don't your circumstances urge you to try"' o CIIA - NOLI? We have no doubt you will Hay yes. Well, theis t make the ellANUE—you can do it, and we think you WILL 100 IT BRING OUT 1 . 0011 TEA !—Demo miotta, in each township in this county, bring out a sufficient number cf teams on elution dcy to bring voters to the polls. De not let this defy fall upon one or two men, and postpone it till late in the day. Oa"to work in the morning, and rain or shine, bring out every voter. lt can on ly be effectually done by previous ar rangement—by getting together an even ing or two before the election, and mak ing the nocesaary arrangements. BROTHER DEMOORATiVaLue to your faith--Aeroted io four ocounaryt gathering around the Jackson fiag, and firm en the hiokory platform—next Tues day go in the mtght of freemen to the ballot-box. and then, Strike, for your altars and your Ares ! STRIkr, fill the last armed foe expires! STRIKE,. for the Foot% grave& of your sires, Ood, and your native land. Rallying cry for the piaple down with taxation and all corrupt tax-gather era !