Il The Democratic Watchman BELLEFONTE, BENN'A P. ORAY Editor FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. I3,;1868 TERMS—,2 por year whnn paid in ad Vance, 2,sll..avtacn not paid in advance, and $3,00 when r.a paid beforo thn expiration of the year "Narrow-Minded Blockheads." Many poor ignorant fools of Radi cals in the employ of Pennsylvania iron companies we're told and they be lieved that if SEYMOVIt shouid be elected all the iron works would stop and they would be thrown out of em , ployment. Accordingly these pitiful assts voted for GRANT, to keep the works in blast and themselves in cm ploy, as supposed. This fact we have From Radical sources, and, though ridiculotisly absurd, we are forced to believe it. It seems strange that such beastly ignorance should prevail in Pennsyl vania, where schools, newspapers and colleges abound, but when we icflect that the liprnp negro "reeoustruc- Coirpolitiii has here received a Full .endorqement, we need be surpri•.4l at no erith9444.--of_blockheadisni or ra,- cality—within the Radical party.--- Since the very outset of the war f the nigger the "Iml" masses of igno rance and stupidity have been taught to avoid Demdcratie new-papers and to reject every fact or argument uhieh did not eminate from ''loll'' ~ ource. The re-nit ha, been, of ciur-e, that not one lladreal out of a thou-and (Ai terrain , a correct or common view of the political ,ituation. Fur the pilopioi• lseepitig tlicii i ignorance tl.e Radical lealcr , l,,lN , . ci l u t o e \ :oil Lot - ~'U"I~1t1 Xlllll l'ciiroci '. , t; and It wheal lietl, - -im r lur the amp rra• , ,n. p,l-i•tt Yu-4A to 11.11;],71rt• Ilitn-ure. and pi Hide. r iti 1)01),R (jap Itt , t auu denuilL,,sti•AL OF \\ 4. 4 114 11141, I f"r 14 ..1-4 that: IL ri I 11111.. t I -4 and 1,1.,w1-11,:t MEI ! lip '0,1%. I t't,.111.!1;!, =I \ 1 , I , i s MI I I If ! •• • 1 -.• •l• • i1•It I v.)%% I I sli nor 1 . 1 , •,t , i 1,1 t! t 1 : I v ziet. r , ,( hill,' If two tt.ittl,l,. 411,1 th, I. , - t'„ in 10, lehc,l tm !In l ‘411,, to tt.l •tor: ••1'• OEM .!%. 1 ,4 "I a•id n. iii I .r 1 V i I ' it • m.uwil*• .In II JI r 4i, ti 1,11! Pen, " t a 1:1.0 , ,,1 to tlicui 1,, II,: .1 a Hit a;) II I In in', 111. F .;. .n rid rh ' i i :ill In, 1 prtlii 11,/, 111 f) It I V. it • 1 OM I f n ,u u 'Hwy,' • sit ,Ir:lL.,t, ‘. 1 I= duTP I t ' I. II e r ii, , e , l' . 1 iut• th • I the i t t, , u I MEM I lr 11. - MEE iLaiup 11.:1" a t..•'/. t tr:1! 1111 1. 1.111. PI, • - AI that tile!. r(•,1 ”/ II lii./1.111:101T.II. 11 ME lite• (1.1 4 1 t ,t tc tr ,rVutl.,l. J. I .211 a ~11( ,)!I“ 11:1.•: 3et thy) ale RP. INAKIII7 Mitt, trn ; snot *,, 11l llnlh I 1 fl• 11 , 1'V 11:11111. , 11- „r• ,II .p.„• I, 4 ILrt ,1„ lIIL (d tri,, , 1.0 or to In itoury r , in TIo• I) •talocrat 3' are 0i , j , , , ,•(.1 to it11)1,11 , ', twit h a fitw me r anti mi•imaiiiilom, fa, hum. They at e OPPO'" , 111 hich (1:I. , 4 t!117 Wha• h tub the many to , ton it One few. The indieal trick stm ha tak, 0 advantage of this Cm.t to nti , tet.re.v....,t the ilvitocritcy ::i , l to..pri judiec their ignotant dupes to faun of"il¢.tur, ulllcan have no tam OVCr the ( 0/"Lion, clue vr,ty or the other tham the man in the mon, The election of Mr. SEvuot it nut have influenced the matter, either, becanim all i‘nell questions rest •altne with the legislative branch of the Government, and NO long as the v - e't oppo , ed to high tariffs, nu m. O O-., can raise the duties on for eign im , e is. There is uo doubt that, had the DenoAry power enough in Congretts they would dina- 1 terially modify the piesent, tariff, so ancto make it hotter for • th6' consu ming classes, who constitute the mns of the people. The only gainers by the present tariff ail the manufactu rers and the'welathy class of people. There is another important consid eration, however. By voting, fbr GRANT these dupes voted to support and enforce the destructive negro re construction policy,which will keep the South down in stagnation for years, if not for generations to come. By enforcing that "policy," agricul ture and every industrial pursuit at the South will be crippled and re tarded, and, as a consequence, mill ions of dollars worth of railroad iron, plows, hoes, steam engines, machinery of all kinds, boots, shoes, cloth, fun niture, and a thousand other articles and fabrics of Northern manufac ture will be tinnually lost to Northern workshops, and the stages therefrom will he lost to the workingmen who voted for GRANT. Had they elected SErmorit, however, the ton nktlawed Southern States would have been en couraged to repair the wreck of War, to cast off the negr.) incubus, and to build up their industrial interests.— Tn so they - wouTd lace - giVirfi employment to every workingman in the North, and, instead of (arned I workshops, every anvil would have rung with stalwart blows, and every spindle would have hummed a song of joy over prosperous:industry and no united and happy people. It is thus abundantly clear that in! %ming for (RANT these "narrow-loin 'ded blockheads" struck n nie-4 Hind ' land fatal blow :It their own int , re° t.' and welfare. If neero tin t ree, on they will find that. it their worlsoji,,i, ,, are not elo-ed 111, , amount of woik will lie materially le—cried, and that wave. will I' -reduced mash below 'bete present by 110 111 ,- 311-. to UMW . ' rtandard. It ha- been -ant that "(Apelhoiri. teach.— a dear , chnol hot fool, %Nil ' , karn in no nth ..P It IS evhholt- that inithine rut tit at_tuld e_xperleuce nutk,:rutg 4,1141 will cotirinvc 1140,. dupe , Ilt:it tgi'vz ',lt C. I: `,`.l • Ili I it, !Pi 'lit /11 , a tut I Is. I n t intetv-t of v%,.ry and bring die I Inc r, ' 1:11 ''!I? ME IMO A Carpet-Bagger tn Troable ea what t- kim‘k it 1!1'' i•latnn• that ' I,unl i tll • ;1. Ili. I i“RATto .1 EN is ,„titer pro idea impeacher-, lid,- l'A'n up art. I. , wll,l !Isia. , ••l ~i 1 11:al wnh ' aryl truly, bribery " .IP:Nhh, 11111'4,10C cwi..l.l.r' able .11 a tool, if he think , a ray e.n I Cori. New will b.. 111,1 I c y a Gtr any nl ili orittw , f• suell a think W 1 It. t hero could net, be a rele..ll ur 410 , Alll , ll Irl-.1(11111 rn the ..,11111). ' Val = =EEO n art. the charu•ten•tu• li,t,r - t flat them to the t•ye. th , • lut ttlA l for rto.ttoto, of !,u• , •. .Ltift tnullt. Take thc-e foto' tiwitt an I they would have about u.y winch ;, way to fill the Lillie,. thy 1. a 'died raw with a broltiiii h.:t would to tootteet, tlt: flock hi• ,11 the carpet haggcr ham, in the eye:4, of the 1;1 Florida. !weft guilty or nothing of-e than the 1 - there in iio datic,-r of hi. iiiipeachnieht I to innuie that, would I ave to be art hoile.t white roan arid ho charged with doing But among them he it. nhould be ounted it would only fr. inure evidence to prove that "nul 1114. QM The Mormons, claim that twine. ty•eight years ago their vopliet, si.not SMITH, predicted the t,eec , gien of the southern States and the late war, And SMITH'S successor HOW can - fidently asserts that, a war of' racem impending. It does not need a Too phetic spirit to predict such a calam ity. The hostile state of feeling at the South between the white awl black racx.-4, induced by the infernal Radical "policy," shows as clearly as the sun at poonday that before, long the torch anil sword will sweep over the South with relentless fury. termi nating in the extermination of one of the races. Upon the heads of the demoniac crew of Radicals be the 'blood that will flow. _ ~.-~ lllullill ~N•I i• ~•! "Up and at Them Again!" • Never despair. vo true Demo crat will der..pond at the result,of the Ibie election. ;there is no reasbn to feel discouttaged. Our party in Pennsylvtmia is at least thirty-six thousand stronger titan was two years ago, and fully fifty thousand greater that) in ISCO. We have gain ed ground year by year steadily and surely, net only in numbers but, in of ficial power. We have gained hun dreds of local offices, and members of the Legislature and of Congress, which the opposition were forced to concede to us in order to carry the State by a paltry majority on the general ticket. Besides this fact, o•-r grand old party has compelled the opposition to respect it as a great power—as an organization that can not be fooled and trifled with and brow beaten and persecuted and des pised, as it was in the years of the war. Three hundreil and twenty-five Thousand rank and file—representing an aggregate population of nearly two million of people—cannot—dare not be overlooked or despised by politi cians or the Government, The .um jority against us in October way less tlian ten thousand—a number repre . 4i4ig-Iml4a-bout- mut. -of the entire poll of votes—and the ma jonty in November is but_ a few thousand more, made up in part of per sons who have not left us, but were attracted temporarily by GRANT'S military reputation, and of fraud , perpetrated byllie "{laical trick-tees in the pay of the bonded intere-t The two iurties in re.nimylvania tmw m arly halmral. We have rtain ca two ineinhci , of I'4 and thi• 0u4n,.•-•ntual wo 1 live, that upon that t --t there i roal ly no toalortiN a.zant t th • I), too •r.t.,,;y at all in the State Notlt the Ltd, howeNci, the oppiy.;ll,4l hate still two ineinlK: of I'rii r, to our ono- we having ciAt nil the) -1-,n en In Ishii they hail thco” to our on , • Int!tling nivinituri out of Ito it itch rq—e the paltry I, I lonty or I Ic on tholl•arri tin IMV4. • 1,. .1 u; -1.1 it I. that ,Ln I ',,1igr44, , L , 1nal ~Jto ill( toriiiivot 411 ior.al lets the re :ill 111,11 r 1(1' t.J p 1. , Li .1 1.1:n II In NV. , . • I P0.11 1 1 ,. .11 ill a n MEI ..,111 .111.1 p.,:111. 1 . 11.1111.11.1. - .1. I,' np I .•11.111. 1:11..1 n,,,u•,lrrri: 110 ki 1111:i =II (,/ a \ . IVI that ht Nt.,l .1 14,1 . 111, nilliEdly te,:WITI( t :tny 1.110 ral iit n art 1,1 I,,Lckor. \v %sell th.. hold trAlitary uputi Ow 'Hwy thl n• W, v ,1••1•• awl 1;/111.• or nt •11 u 1 the 1,11111t13 Ct a ilv , tiop . r lifany V1'411101111 , 1, or s. go in the lagd. 'Fitcy r OA. (;:t h, a fall.ll , r --knowilt- his i‘t tßtl iii t I tniiiliiv ti) ip!di Up 011 ..• tio• upon th • r ,Inilrli,;auu.r, taw- t th -!:u -Allan awl dm, do I , .,tilmg r my , t 1 1 Ow mil. % , )I..fr Olen dat.•, (;11,ANi . 1 ed.t . V1.1 , /11 1 , , lilt It i;,IC, th.. ;tom norNy eon-bit r. tl. II , • is simply tof "011011/-11.111 iin'• 1(11'111, 1u man knows' what. 6i., priticipkv are, not what [ilea-tire , or policy will pin op 'Of tour , c tho clenboit will make a , trong effort to compel loot to t•.irry out their 114.11'1111 ill nl)tttlrt and plan+, but, to far, they have 11;1 , 1 no op, n a , -Huiantso that he will fall into tliciF Sono. 01 them- -now that hist clec , ion (of which 111,3 Ilia doubts) iv a. fact. as. coinpirhinol -- are all einly fearfu l of In. tug "Johltionizttti, - and, tis a eon to querns!, arc in sore tribulation. A lew months, cr weeks even, will tell whether their lhar , are just or itiound less tinder tbe,e ciretnnstanec , 4, it is foolish the Democrats to despond. Let us all up and At them again -- Remember that the pitcher Nrich goes oft to the well is at last broken. The Republican party has been suc cessful quite often, but will assuredly he sometime broken and defeated. A little more hope and work Would have given 114 victory t his fall, but it is too late now to renet this. Net time we will do bettk.r and win ! Although defeated in the state and general elebtion we are stronger to-day than over before, and Democracy must and will triumph in the end. because it is the party of the people and is fighting their battle. EC:= Seymouraild Blair tho Peoples Choice Ever' hour jtrings better news.-- Every mail brine later and more cor rect returns which tally on the side of Democracy, When the first news of the result of the groat contest of the .3rd inst., was flashed over the wires, there was reason to believe that the Democracy had scarcely made a re speetaLle show at the polls, but as la ter and more correct returns come ii they show that we have notonly made immense gains, but actually elected .our candidates. Of course they will not be recognized by the party in power as the legally elected officials, but the 'facts and the figures 'show that they ore the choice, not only of a mqjority of the people hut of the States. There is not a supporter of the rad ical party this side of the regions of the damned, with sense enough to know that there are States and peo- A le south of Mason and Dixon's line, who will have the effrontery to assert thatany ono of those states would willingly and of its own accord en dorse radicalism and its dirty dog mas. The friends of that party know as well as we do, that four fifths of the people of those states are Dernacralic..., _That _urea _Missouri Tennes,ce and West• Virginia --the only states in which their party can claim any strength at all—would be overwhelmingly Democratic were it not for the unrighteous proscription and infamous registration acts that are enforced there. These, wo say. are facts which no man of any sense or truth will dare deny. They tkre facts which the returns of the election and the iegn tuition acts prove. In Ten ne—en while the radical majority does not exceed `2)000t-he kooks in the. o • ; _ j i.tay departownti,Aow that over now , y thomanil Democrat , are Cranchi , eil that will nut cive a rtirlictil majortts, of .20,100 has d-frinchi -el democrat., and IVe•t. that ..fives but about 'mooo majority ha that party can 0(11111 fn o4or 26,tm0 ahßto 1101110N - 11k who are out allowed to tote. Tile , e tbl , hat(`., I J ,r imhy 1411', in the en ' I I , that radieali , in cart -.how 111,!:trfily l'n•rdilian' , 4 bu rem] tipou 111,11 .0- a 0... li"tir. Th.. otlici `'.t ,air :1, ihr, gjec tln n,..;10 th,. :inns; I I - • II -• iv.n• •-• I :kilywil -1•,11..1 t.l fa•tt•ii tlipin Ow 111."er ii tlctt 1 • ci a hiltg (111•11, (.) the ground •- 4' ~t %%oli the nittiafre , i”•(.. 11 , 1 ulvm ti1,),1 to 111,11 apt., hf Oay 1 :,;.1 1 1., !ro ta..l! front the white nein, Altl,allia. 4 l l triarp-a., „iiii,L, lienrdu arid NOtlk- 'Car. 131..titt. tlii , -awe tie lul.rm n, u it:Nolen ,ul aittlimit3, Ilse bri-Lucre ..I I th:it! , tale (3.4 the vole fir lii iIl le, awl the 1.-t2.l.l.tturt , being ,/j)- 1 / ,0/0 , ./ l,y the 1„ •••1•;•1 Iry till. pe , llll' . , , vIII 'l , H. MN= tit.itti.r tottr-r tt it to the Koh cal-, 11 h.• 11 wuo If nth uI hit, inhabitant 4 and ywell a Loajonty of tht• tt,•71,1 tow., would have th•eitlol ( Ititorwt,•. ..la.tt• 11.14 (+4101'4 ‘v11 , 11.1 L. , a‘t yort:titt for the 1)1 ae . N, If the peilidt: II:id di , eloece .N1tt•,:le1111 , 1't 11)1 UMW 4111N111. and arioia. mete not allowed to hold dec t,.,1,4 all, I/ 1 1.1/1.1 1 Ha rrWa , WI {IOW,: o lade•alcon ,liceecding or of even' having a it- ewe its in tioma Th..-c Stat.. have 17 clei• tars, making votes w thy, , electoral college Add to the,-e the .t.; of South Oarohna, We.d, M1`,1)11i1, and e,e have 91! vet'- , . To these we ad.l, the vote , : of New Volk. New .1.4r..ey, Otlaware, Maly land, Kentucky, Oregon and Nelmiti 4,7 in ail. making a `lttand total 01 I:Cd, eh chiral votes, for EY ; slot' a and 13!,,mt. againq 1.", s for tia.ANT and I 'orysx, giving tit , :v moult a rid BLuti, a at,id , wity rf one. This is the ~plain state of facts just, „,s the figures show them, and simply proves that the Democracy have not la , It L, uteri, but, have been counted out=have been cheated out of their honestly elected President and Vice Pie: , ident, through the wcrk tugs oftlf most shameful and oorrupt system of legislation, that denies to States and to the people, the rights guaranteed by the Coustitut. in of the united States. How long the Democracy "ot the country will submit to these outrages we know not. flow long they should we have a vety.good idea. ll• they were worthy descendants of the brave old "rebai" who refused to be rode over 5 11 (1 trampled upon by briasb h.yalists, in '7l; they num would ae , ~ ert there I ig1.1 , 2 and plave in the Presidential choir, HonATio S EY moutt, the choice of tlin people and of a majority of tho'•Statos of this 'government. We Don't Want Him. A number of our Democratic, ex changes arc considerably elated over the prospects of GRANT, proving an other JOHNSON to the radical party. For our part we can see 'nothing in such in event to rejoice over. 'flee Democracy aro not in need of GRANT. and his turning "traitor" to the party. that elected him, would add nothing to the strength of the Democratic cause,whilo it would Save the radical party froth .belf destruction. We want to see GRANT go along with Congress. We want to see radical ism carry out its measures to the full est extent. We want them to. Go on with their Reconstruction. Go on with their negro suffrage.' Go on with their white disfranchise ment. Go on with their Freedmen's flu MI! Go on with their disunion( Go on with their Usurpation. G o on with their unequal taxation Go on with their violation of nights -their disregard of I'onstitution-their hatied of Alto inen,and 'the JeNi lidl doctrines they have preached and practiced since the earth was cursed with the first one of them. We want the people to see just what they are,what wrongs they can, and whatoutrages they will perpetrate. We want the masses to get a does of their dirty doctrines that will do them Ibr the next tett 'generations, and we don't want GRANT to stand in the way of that dose being thrust down their throats. Let him go with Congress. The party that endorses Cvngres.4: elected hint. 111. belongs to it, arid we pray God that he arty stick to it. We want to see the nut•se4., the poor, blind, bigoted fanatics who voted ,wain •I their own intete , ts to iek le hondhold t , r+,:url plea,' nigger-. r.l d o,/ it /or/ tl,i/ It 'nil *Tart thrm thry will not .(I , lil f4get an:11 , 4:11.1i them here. alter to ,t Ind by the ;.iity that ha aka). tood by Ih c4ono y and the 111:1 , , •61 the penp!. the 14111ml:11i, vrty, I,cl ;(1. 'I •I p&l.Ali;t‘r(4..r • !It • 11 , ,„; 11, ti. al lc!: • .11141,„ itiv ail, w: 1111,, loon t 6 tun!l, iin Int.• 11: • • i , ll-11 tilt N,•111,. :Ind 1 . .), Ith., 1. 11, wt.,' r. b It ' al,o,qg Kul ry , I . llll'l, a a tilt y ..\ , nr" non 's t . " d: 1 ; : :C t"'" 1 I' l l' ,ery\. approdnat t" La "" hi s a "•• •!I "" "' kr lor till , tal -• WWI 1:1111(' 1111 P.\ 11111 111 111 0. 111'111 (it . any !WI 31111.1 pf . 2 , 11110 111011 . WI • \ „dt!„, 410 , ;1••' , 1 Till 110'11 PII -o I Ili •111111 , .111 I 11 •Ht l ,0 - .• iv 1+ it' ro,u;dl, the f• 11 , 1 I , a l , n„,l i 11111ln»11 Wlll 11 't 1 !ht t' 5 , r,11.0 trd ratigorti ,, rit, awl it li , I- a liar a:1 , 1 ...c,Altidto 1 11, I. 'pit a Mall, aural thetchm. in :11 , •••t a gt 11;1, , !1 the Itch' id' honor ?•-, to lot u,ll •fflutlier in Oim'roill :int) they •e. ai,run,l - Ne‘t Y•tt Jew t:Thr,,t tli the .a r‘::- tire paper awl •rtt r ot'S'e%lttwir, is to he the ()Int t J .ffe..lll ttf t nnew altnitti-tratt et, att.': that l'o,thcy't• oil, Will nial.e w'ar 11110:1 it. li ti, report is eoirt. , ..t. rio stlppt. th ' i• Party that elected .11ifiNst1..4 raid :they wards CtItANT, will hair net were Fu de, with ''t 11-4.00 It-ifitt tit they've tit nn 0111•1 C;(11,111)3(1' A Putt or Ihty, v.tt‘%:-L •tbeit p,t.rago to \\ a•liiogtun, boat week. R.ANT did tlw "bovv and l'obrAx uttered 1.111; Tho titer merely dou4,td libt.ln ad at the lieu ple, but the latter was as noisy as a rattle-trap. (l RANT tries 'to thew wisdom by keeping silence like an owl, while l'obrAx aitiv, at the sale ()Weet by chattering like a niaepie. - o Helena. ArKaiNar, ha.; a pre sident, Judge named Bennett, whose horn) and faintly aro in New York, at whit: place he spends the greater porti in of hi• time. We suppose if he would stay there all the while, ju , tiee would stand a better chance of feting meted outfairly to the people of Helena, than with him on the tench and his carpet hag nt his feet. ----"Lo3ialty" has earned fbr , it self' such a reputation among intelli gent and honorable men in this coon try, that when any one boastn of it, he is invariably marked down as a fit candidate fin. the penitentiary. ---It k said that it takes two clerks constantly opening and reading the letters received by fl nit NV rr4/111 Ip/u -gly radieale, begging fbr little positions where they can swat a row crunik. A [[Envy' SLAP,--The— hardest stroke that radicalism, or rather mon grolism has yet received, is that struck them by the recent elections in the States of the South. In order to whip Chest Spites into the stipport of its degnms,itinnugra(ed a war that cost thousands of millions of dollars; mur der hundreds of thousands of brave men ; established millitary dictator ships over ten States ; disfranchised the white puiple ; gave votes to the uegroes—nn in older to keep in their good graces established a bureau to Veep them akkthe expemie of the whore laboring masses, kept those States out of the Uni9n, and put, their '11 , 01i,: ernments iothouncN of those who would use them exclusively fur the benefit and success of mongrelistn,antl yet after all their war, and murder, and white disfcanehisement,and black suffrage, and negro bureaus and I toy dictators, Alley have been able to carry but three oat of the tot. E ven the negrpes whom they have kept,and kissed, and loved, and promised 60 much, have become disgusted with them , found out who, and what they ' are, and refuse to be led and us e d by them. Verily when the mongrel party gets so low and corrupt that even the ignorant, barbarom+, darkep of the South, - Imre more respect - for - thew; selves than to belong to it, what must the white men of the North who have clung to it through all its cor ruption and crimes think of them selves ? IN THE SA Nit; I : I —\\ •e Uttac'r- Ntand that Mem , orti. .Inn W. R \V it FUREY, Feqirs., editor tor t h e ch., ion I)emorrai, hallo liven stied for h bd. by a ifoor, raserable wretch named Furman, formerly of Clinton County, but now a ea/pet hag offi coal in Florida U the /himierie earl libel 00000 / th;000, of that. klll . l 11111 , t Lace a Ilwtionary that vto hat. never ,eett, for in nor e4titnaticit. latittlinono cannot he pun t get her m ue6 a manner too lion! tint rotten earel..., of I, :mi..), hirttinn L•et., thron:ll the //...nrorrot and the Itleken.o.” So Illiti:.ry %skid the ono th-Cil I nib licheee it toooer I oollt.ois for I. I - In t , l tlint‘, r 13.11 il , tittlor , in the ,1:13-,..1 the f'.•, 1 1,, , t, c,,pr .1 Itri , I • .i• tint r.t , 11 , . tl • hti‘n tu.t :, cli tit t , lit. tint:, I, lit, w, 1 , 1-I r tin!, ill ttlitt ttittsin Itt tit , t t , , tnit , t,tin: :1 tt.tpinr nit,l I , tit vnt nit,ln it nt -- are lined to enter into pr'Atea how- o‘er tlwit late vi, hay lilt) , doll t •i )1' Y, lita la I thi . l' hale ts4!ll a 1.: I , lllilt \lllll . ll they Cir VI, aIIIII. 'III a:11, ugly Znl th. II the 11..1 -oh mute. fora a•.. 1.1 from the Sl.lllll‘ 111 ILeli rtt.ll Lilt never a W(11•1 4he uttvl 11e they may Le lott umle lime 1,11.2. tlic Itett..ll," ‘‘.t.toir for Tli , ),.now racy iv:tilia I I - !';",, in 1 , 1;6, h 1 ,11 ," In 21)7,(1U0, uud 111 I ;(.,•, Si ty ruvcn 111,111-and 0'; an int 111 five yunr, 1 . 1 1111 !nip 11 eit I,er .)] Ir.ul tarty. opppmitiort, I lint . , linv.• added ,)illy nivty thou-and In their part). ----"Our Andy." wants n • cat in RAs Cabinet Ile may get one but it will be ontfie loot stout of :,onic of ' II.IIICI urns f ienils. The old "Wi ne bago" will never allow Curtin, to get a better Position than licking up the crtinilci that ftill from his; table. --Seeing, how ea itANT sNa elected, the Radical walawags arr flow lamenting that they dtd Ina nominate a man they could depend upon. They begim to see that WI E 1 E LEv was right when he called thew "narrow-minded blockheads." -- If tho Infohe treasury had two million and a halt of teats, doge would bu a radical pig to suck•caeh one, and thousands or Ewe radicals running round squealing becausl them was no wort) fur them.- —Forney's Press and other lead ing radical papers of the States, have thrown offlhe mask and note dcelftre , boldly for negro ,:iffrage- 2 9 1,1 111M11 IRE MU
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers