The DemocratiC Watchman. 3T P. ORAT MEEK JOE W. FUREY, Assommrs EDITOR Terms, $2 per Annum, In Advance BELLEFONTE, PA Friday Morning, August 27, 1869 DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS FOR GOVERNOR, • A A r.A KE R, OF CANNON COUNTY. FOIL SUPREME JUDGE, CYRUS L. PERSHING OF CAMBRIA COUNTY DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICK ET For Ationbly—JACOß 0. MEYER. For Prothonotary—JOHN MORON For Register—JOHN U. Mott Mist( IN. For Reeorder—iSßAEl. tsRENOBLE For ShersJF-DANIEL W IYOODRINO For Trail/ultra—SlMON N. WOLF For Onnostsitoocr—JOS Et' II MeC LOS FY For Coroner—J. F. LARIMER. Fbr Auditor—D. H. TEAHEIt. DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM ' 1. That the federal government Is limited in power to the grants contained In the Federal Orgitithrition ; that the exarvias of doubtful constitutional powers Is dangerous tothe sta bility of the government end the wifely of the people. and the riernottrutto party will never consent that the State of Pertitvltlllllll shall surrender her great right of lociti nelf-govern• meet. Thad the attempted rntlfical ion of the pro posed fifteenth amendment to iilo. rodent Gonntitutlon by the ra,lieal niembern of the last legislature, and their refusal to mubmit the same to a vote of the people, was a deliberate breach of their official duty and an outrage upon every citisen of the State, loth the resolution making such ratification 'Mould -bat promptly repealed and the amendment out omitted to the people at the polls for acceptance or rejection 3, That the democratic party of l'ennsylva- Ma Is opposed to conferring upon the negro the right to vote, and we .loemphatically deity that there Is any right or power In Congress of else whereto Impose negro suffrage Upon the two pie of thin State In opponlt ion to their will Thatreform In the-ndaninistrittlon of the federal and State governments. anti in the management of their financial altairs is Impel , peratively demanded 5. That the movement now being Made for the amelioration of the condition of the labor ing man hart our Most cordial co , meration h. That the legialatton of the late reptilillenn Congress •Mutnitie of the Conrtillition,' the dia rrrrr .1 of the majority therein of the will of the people and nativity of the ballot boa, in the exclusion from their aunts In mgress of rep resentatives clearly elected, the venal d islommt of military governments In Stan, li t Ile, ('stun Nod the overthrow of all eit it goo, ritnients therein, are acts of tyranny mid usurpation that tend directly to the dextrurtion of all r.- pUhlican government and the creation of the worst forms of despotism. T. That our soldiers mitfltailorm, who carried the flag of our country to victory ninta its grate fully remembered, and all the Kt:anode.. xis PH in their favor must lie faithfully carried into execution, It. Equal rights and protection for naturalized rind native-horn citizens at (turns and Omani , the assertion of American nitionality which shall command tim respond of fortign power* and burnish an example And encouragement to teoplo struggling fur national m tegi ity, 11,,ti rtitutlunal liberty and indlvlduni 9 That the present internal revellio , and taxing system of the guneml government Is grossly unjust, and means ought ot lilt , e Mho adopted to cause a Modification the roof The Radical Meeting on Wednesday Night. The Radical meeting at the Court House, on Wednesdry evening, Nlll4 hell istendeil, lots of democrats being present, attracted by curiosity to hear Itucuaa Swoca, the renowned Clean field county blowhard. A. B. II L'IVU NSON occupied the chair, previous to taking which, lie "spoke a piece" in his peculiar eti le, illustrating it with an unknown quan tity of those frightful grimaces which have made his collate f 11111CQ the curios ity and wonder cf R ublic nn.ii-aces ever since his advent to the tsohucnl rue truni. His speech was made up of his usual stock in trade, "copperhead," "traitor," "orphan children," a in nier able and must unfortunate attempt to justify the enormous expenses of ( - laxity's administration, sonic spread eagle stuff alimit Gassy, and, lastly, an open and hold admission that the Radical party were "devoted to negro suffrage," and that we would linie it in Pernimylyania "before six months." Swore then got up aunt such a lin rangue wits probably never heard lietore in the Centre comity court house There is one thing that Seuii.it posses ses, and it is all lie does possess—the grace of oratory. Ile is a line speaker --a duelling, brilliant sa)er of itisiguiti cant nothings, but is utterly devoid of logic and is so poorly booked up in political matters as to lay himself open to refutation by the merest tyro He attempted to reply to Mr. CUTTaIi. L and Mr. W•l4.xcr., but the universal verdict was, that, while he got oft' some funny things and made the people laugh, he failed to upset a single position of either of those gentlemen. Especially was lie in the woods when he undertook to overthrow Mr. WA LLACE•II figures. 'flits part of his speech was a most de. cided failure, arid no -persons felt it more forcibly or are more willing to ilickowledge it than the members (Whig own party; He sailed around and hovered over Mr. WALLACE'S position, but, like the hawk that was riot alto gether certain whether his anticipated prey was a lamb or a lion, he was afraid to pounce upon it. 130 lie sailed and sailed and chattered and gnashed hie teeth, but finally drifted-away from that subject,- and took up negro suf frage, whichiiilie lititchinson, he swore "rig come, saint come, shall come I" And in case negro suffrage was denied by the people, he said "another rebid lion would occur treater than the ,one which has but recently closed." And this was about . the substance of his speech. With the exception of some anecdotes,a deal of 'hifalutin,' is which we sometimes found him "out on the ocean sailing" and again "up in the ether blue," and some lowdown abuse, wherein he lingered on the confines of helband in which Saroczerught to have more sense than to indulge, considering the disgraceful antecedents of his past fife, it was all he said. But his nature is i naturally coarse, and it is only by gtiarding himself most carefully that he is able to conceal from the public eye the innate depravity of his mind. Of this man, to the public "We could a tale unfold That would harrow up their noula, And make every particular hair to eland an end. Like quillx upon the fretful porpentine Sn ore should • rintember, when be,, calls Democrats "dirty," "mean," "low," "lousy," ?'stinking traitors," "dratt-skulkeri,"' . 'CI )pperheadli" and "villains," and thkes the blackguard assertion that Democratic Indies will, at some future period, be "glad to get ft drop of nigger sweat as a whittle for their pocket handkerchiefs," that such words might have more effect did they conic from a WWI having any chant(' ter himself. Rut when sthli assertions come fr(01 lips that lime been gilled in lascivious dallying to the beastly i lips of some of the most brazen strumitets in the land—when the). come from lips whose oily utterances have been used to NVC4/111 plink the seductin of his own relative, and from the heart of a man who is so lost to all sense of shame as to communicate to , his own family the foul disorders of unrestrained debauch ery, they can have but little weight in a decent community. Swill'e insulted every Democnttie lady in the land Ly his infamous remark on Wednesday night, but when they know that their insulter is the cow hided cur of flent• Higdon —the corrupter ot his own faini Iv the kicked dog of Clearfield, and II vile, lOW down apostate from the re ligion of Jesus ell RIST, possessin2, every respect, the elementsot a Radical blackguard, they ti ill Iv t erlectly con vinced that hie censure is praise to every honest b•oninn. "The Most Unkindest Cut of All." If we were the Radical candidate for Sheriff of t his 'count% , ne don't know that we slo old feel ourself particularly under obligations to that parr. Tu nominate a 111211 10 office, and then at tempt to trade hum for the benefit a some other candidate On the smile ticket, isn't, in our estimation, exactly on the square. Rut this little game is HOW being played on Jcillt lit ITS, b% the friends of Mr 13 \IIR, the Itailical candidate for Prothonotary, and b) Mr BUM himself, as we understand. Frequent propositions hate been made to ffetnocntts by Riuheals to tote for WOODRI so and Olttstoll.l. If they (the Democrats) would only vote for fit as. This is making a bridge of Mr BI ITS* nose for the purpose or enabling Mr. 14•Ril to crews the stream in safety /it'd land high and dry on the prothonotary office shore. The Radicals of this county have no hope of electing their whole ticket, but they imagine that by playing what they call a "sharp game," they can work 'Mr. lL cc into the court house. 'fo do this, it is necessar% do sacrifice somebody, and Mr Ili art, their candidate for Sheriff, has been se lected for the holocaust. lilt die flung is beginning to leak out, and, as Mr. Burrs hue his friends also, the matter is stirring up a very loud stink in the Radical ranks. Now, as far an we are concerned, ti e don't care a sixpence what arrange ment our OppUnelltS make in regard to their political affairs, nor who the} sacrifice. But we just wish to caution our Democratic friends once more against being caught in any such de ceptive and plainly to be discerned trap. Don't trade! yore, fora 4,1 , 1•4 Twit ET, and vote no °Met. We hat e no need to trade ui order to get %iises for WOODILING or ORKNOBLE—they will get enough without that, and by no do ing, we would be risking the ruccess or our other candidates. Besides, it not ptinciple, and the Democracy have always claimed devotion to ineasure4 not men. Vote, then, the whole Dein ocratic ticket., and let the Radicals light out their own squabbles! ----If the radicals of this county' welted to give BARR, their candidate for Prothonatory, who was unlucky enough to loose an arm, somewhere down Booth, an office, why didn't they give him the Bellefonte Post office, which they gave to Jourt T. Jonstrion, a stay-at-home °yenta, or• ooe of the assistant &meow-ships, of collec torships, or one of the other positions, that they could have given him, in the county, but which were bestowed on men who stayed at home to howl "copperhead" at,the white men of the county because they wouldn't worship &mho or support is war for the de sitritcti.m of our government and the degradation of our rime. Why RoseoransDepflned The Radical exultation over the de clination of Gen. ROSLCRANS to be the Democratic candidat: for Governor of Ohio, has been loud and long. The papers of that party have attributed his declination to his disinclination to run on the "copperhead" ticket, but the New York Herald knocks the talk out of them all, and shows what causes the " milk in the cocoa put " by publishing the following little article: ROStellol,l' LITTLZ 311.—W0 have t‘,l go to a Western paper to irorn that General Roserrans little game In declining the nomination for Governor of Ohio was founded upon an inten tion to proceed tn. New York, and, If possible, from n grand company for the purpose of con structing a railroad from the city of Melleb to Acapulco, on the Parifle roast. thitt Is A auk!, did scheme and if Hosornms imeceeds In ear , 'Ting It out he Is likely to find himself better off than if he wore elected Governor of Ithlo ten limes over But Roney bilks to* mud). Ins vanity will 'Tot permit him to ketnrit se cret. no matter how good a thing he has in hand. And it would not he surprising if this new project of it railroad from tho city of Mex ico to the Pacific roast were to result in more profit to others than himaelf. Jit•t from thin permature ventilation of his design In an ob sem° town In the interior of Mexico. Letlien. Boserrans emulatt , General Grunt and keep his mouth shut, The last sentence in the Herald ar ticle is good advice, provided always, that 'RosiiicatNs is careful to imitate (I RANT OMly in the one respect. ofekeep ing his mouth shut. 11,t him not. imi tate the great public " mendicant " In any other way. for heaven's sake. But e hope the "little game of" building a railroad from Mexico to Acapulco will explain "old Itosey's disinclination to rum on the '• copperhead" ticket. The General is a good democrat. although He are glad he has declined to be the candidate for Governor °I 0160, As we said last. week, he is not the man tlir a political leader. Let him build Iris railroad, and we wish him success in tilling his pockets with the proceeds of his great enterprise. lie can make money in this way, we think, touch more COIISCICIIItousIy than as a Lincoln general in nn nhohtion Radical Impudence When the Radical members of the ! last legislatare were in the field soh ' citing the voteW - iir th- people, they pledgt:d themseltes to prevent thtradop min of the 15th amendment futile con ' mitution td the Unit&L.Stateit, until af ter it tad been submitted to a vote of the iis-ople. IlOw did they keep that pledge? No sooner lad they got therm sel% es comfortald) warmed in their seats, than they began to tinker the State constitution, and Put their heads together to devise wave and ftlefins to strike the word wurre" out (*that oust rum( 111. 111 order to girt the negroes of the State a right to rote! Directly, along Curries the 15th amendment, fresh from the hands of the Radical 1,41 suckers in Congress, when it is immediately seized upon, with avidity, and ratified, in the most wanton disre gard of their promises to their consti ments. Now these Marne men are ask ing to be again returned to their seats. With the most unblushing impudence and a hardihood that is beyond all par allel, they once more demand the votes of the people, and ask to be sent back Io Harriaburg to wallow in their own disgusting infamy. And the " Ring," the roosters "of the last Legislature, alio controlled that body, and alio lithe had their fingers in the State Treasury ever since litcAttt's 1/0481111111- • ion Of the reins of 'sower, are doing their best to send all these political and moral scoundrels back. Not only is .1", ! tro, Sufi ratite In he perfected arid made, bona fide, the law of the corn monw e alth, but there are new money schemes to he organized, the victims of which are to i.e the people —the tax payers M the State. Already arrange mews htye been made Mr the return of some of the InWit comipt menibeis of the last Senate, among whom are six scoundrels from Philadelphia, head ed by Eusu % It tvis, the !Mtn w ) ho laughs at the Idea of honesty in legis. lation, weir STRANG, of Tioga, ALLEN, rut Warren, Rey N, of Beaver, and a }iota of others, who, if they had their deserts, a ould he strung up around the CapitoLinstead 01 occupying cushioned seats within its Walls. People of Centre county, will you not do your part to prevent this? Will you not oppose with all Your might the election of .1 teas P. Comes, who, though a new man, is one of the most radiea l l representative of the schemes of of pOJ, er and plunder? Rally aronad Jame ht. MEYER, wI(o will OppOee in the Legislature all the corrupt arittFor rupting scoundrels who are endeavor ing to degrade the people, and enrich themselves at the expense of the pub lic. —J ue COBURN says it ie not fair for the WATCRNAN to charge him with selling the Lewisburg and Spruce Creek rail-fond charter to the Pennsyl vania It. It. Company, because he had nothing more to do with that transac tion, than to east his vote in favor of We take it all back. Jim didn't sill, he only voted in favor of selling it, and got paid for his vote. OUR STATE FINANCES. A Suffloient Sum Raised for the Sink ing Fund During the Last Eight Years io J Have Paid off Neerly Twenty-Eight Millions of the State Debt I WHAT HAS BECOME OF THE MONEY? The history of the State Debt of Pennsylvania, ,says the Itsr . risburg Patriot, may be told in a few words. it was created principally in building up and keeping up the public works. These works were eventually sold in order that the debt might be reduced. In 1858, a democratic legislature, in accordanCe with Section 4 of Article XI pf the State constitution, enacted a law providing finr the creation of a Sinking Fund. This Sinking Ftmil wax to be a receptacle of certain reve nues which were to be applied only to the payment of the interest on State loans and the extinguishment of the State Debt. The act erecting it (see Pardon's Digest,. page 914) provides as follows: " For the purpose of paying tho pres ent Indebtedness and Our interest there on, and such further indebtedness as may hereafter be contrwa ted on the part of the eMninonwealth, the following reve nues and incomes are hereby specifically appropriated and set apart, to-wit: The net annual income of the public works that now are, or may hereafter be own ed by the Commonwealth, and the pro ceeds of the sale of the same heretofore made and yet remaining 111.'e or hereaf ter made, find the income or proceed. of sale of stock owned by the State, and all revenues derived from the following sources, to-wit: From Bank Charters and dividends. Taxes iiii,essed on corporations and all the sources of resenues coo riveted there with 'she tax on taverns, eating houses, res taurants, distilleries,breweries, retailers, eilliirs, brokers, theatres, circuses, bil liard and bowling saloons, ten pin alleys and patent medicine 111•en...e On theatrical, sirens and menagerie ex i !dump+ -.On auction coininissiona and duties On writ+, dee&, mortgage+, let ter+ of nttorney and all inornments of writing, entered of record, on which a tax it , ie.se+hed On public officers and all others on which a iirr is On foreign insurance companies. On enrril lIIPTIt of In iv l)11 pamphlet laws On loans or money at interest All fl forfeitures and penalties. Riven tieq derived ' from the public land. The execs of militia tax oxer extant thturea Militia tax Tonnage tax paid he railroad.. E..hent. ('"linteral inheritanctil tax Averiteil inkrest. Refunded ea,h, and all gifts, grants, or bequests, Or the revenue derived therefrom, that nut) be !mule to the State and not. othert ise directed " The receipts at the treasury, from these sources, 114 per the statements of the Auditor General's office, from WI UII IXtiS, mchou‘e„foot uptheenormous sum of TWENTy SEVEN M IL 1,11)NS, NINE HUMMED A N SIX Tilt/USA TWI) HUN DUE!) AND TWENTY SEVEN DOLLAUS! We give the receipts for each year as folltmn. l '\, ei 774 (Art AA Z. 21 8114 ori Now, these twenlv.seaen nollionm and upwards, ought, under the law, to liaNe gone into the Sinking Fund, and to have been applied to the redio•tion of the State Debt. If they did not go here and were not to applied, where did they and 1 what 115 C Were thryapplted This in it question athu•h the people alk the radical State oil' claim, alai Lk) 1$ Inch they demand an hollewt 1111 d straughtlunaard answer. hut Slllll has certainly ma been Or plitql in lin) weals on the State loan.-- On the first of December, 1860, the State Debt was $37,969,x47 54). tlta The first of December, 18t1X, the State Debt Wit! , $A2Sti,94(l 13, showing that but ::4,1i512,901 di of the debt had been pa &dining these eight )ears. Nutt if nll the taxes received at the State Treasury, which under the law belong ed to the Sinking Fund, had been stit plied in payments ou the, State Debt, we Khould have the following exhibit: mate item in now.• sa7,ucom47 Ui iieVelpt. a Hank tag Fund f 18b0 fill twos vm16.2.27 Amount of debt remaining . ti 2 If, therefore, the finances of the State had been properly and lawfitlly minim istered, arid the Danam tali. plan ficr paying off the State Debt contained nr the Sinking Fund Act of 1858, had been fairly and honestly carried out, during the last eight years, the debt would now be only a little over ten millions instead of tipKards of thirty three million, . Twenty-three millions that went into the State Treasury dur ing the last eight years, and that ought to have gone into the Sinking Fund for the purpose of paying oft' the State Debt, have been squandered, or stolen. We do not charge this ; the figures prove it. We.ask the closest scrutiny of what we have here stated, and refer to the statute book and the Repot% of the Auditor General's office for proof of our allegations. A Negro Who Could Vote Intelligent ly. At an educational convention hold recently, in Louisville, Kentucky, P. H. CLARKI, a negro with an education above the common run, and a degree of common sense that does him infinite credit, made an address, in which he boldly maintained that "this a white tuan's government." lie said : I trust that I shall shock nobody's preju dices, alarm no person's fears for iny sanity, when I, a colored man, and a life-long agitator for colored men's rights, declare, as I now do, that this is a white man's country. In all its wide:spread grandeur of mountain, valley and plain, of river, lake and ocean; of densely crowed city and uninbahlted wild, from sterile frozen Macke to the warm shores of the Gulf, this country belongs to the white man, to him and his heirs forever. It wan a white man's ship burst through tho gloom which had shrouded thiscontinent from the eyes of the M Old World forgo many centuries, and it was a white man who leaped first upon the shore, claiming the nett land ter himself and his brethren. White men have conquered this continent. its teeming fields, its !ninon, its wealth-pralueing industrien, its thousand cit ies belong to them. This in a white man's civilization We gain enlightenment from a endure, which in all its varied departments— philosophy. theology, physics, mathematics poetry and the &ems—white men have been perfeciAng for three thousand years. Thin, two, is awhile map'. government. Our Union of States, our guargnteen of free thought and free speech, our method of enneting laws by men selected by the people—all these are his peculiar modem, and are the crystalised results of his politlosl experience. In numbers, in intelligent energy, the white man stendsat the boon head °Gill the races Which have found in Ammo.. White men have come to is by bemired!, of thrmannds each year, by Millions every ten years They have, do and will con trol the destinies of the people remitting upon this continent. That darkey could vote with a prop er understanding of the franchise. lie is a man of sense, and if there were a few more like him. they could do an immense deal of good among the igno rant and benighted of their own color. The above honest utterances of an in• telligent negro ought to put to shame those infamous Radical teachers who are endeavoring to instruct the black race in the doctrine of political and social equality with the whites. As he truly says, this is indeed the white man's country, and white men are bound to control its (4..6,6,5. The sooner the negro race adopts this new of the matter, the better it will be for Radicals can learn a lesson in common sense from this man CLARKS. Rote and His Revolver Rove, whom the negro suffrage party-, of this county wrote down as its candi date fur Recorder against the maimed soldier, asstums, is the identical chap who, a lew yeaa, ago, when returning from a political meeting at Bellefonte, jumped out of his wagon at Pleasant flatylrew a revolver from his pocket,and threatened to shoot a daughter of Mr. John Sweenoy, because her father had placed a Woydward banner in his yard; and Miss Maggie Sweeney, the lanlyr e ferred to, refused to take it down, as this drunken blackguard and cowardly wretch ordered. An individual who would threaten to shoot a woman, be• cause her father was a democrat, would be an honor to the cbunty ir elected, auuldn't lie? bah Civode---Brewster. Sonic ono hae found the original manuscript of Covour's letter request ing the resignation of Attorney General BRIM/Mill. We give it below verbatim literatim, et xpeleatum, el puneinaturn etc. It certainly evinces a very high degree of intelligence and education on the part of the writer, Joan (. 1 0YOUN, chairman of the mongrel State central conlinittee. It's " hefty," decidedly " hefty :" 2 4.12 440 18 2.:+ , 1,1«1 1.1 30 , 7.11'14 nm 4 2:.1,:11x, 71 4 64 'lll4 q ,l ul 4,656,521 42 1117,901 , ,V7 5*4 101 l benjulinn brooqter after con Multambull With our perliti kid A.,l,,itheittit Who ar Ankalout Ferr the elekslihn uv our Mee tehul fr Lod t 11th 141111ii.1 tit ore Nashin Azz titurnti genii ail tloo A. Loulig ‘ta too heel ximoit.t Ins (Alit.lon t rite 'Flom fraiikle to you Bee C11•11A t no ITilenir tit eekuur tLt Itee zult Oita kunkloozhiiii Ilan Nott bin arri,v(l.At liazt iIIe Bug has hill swe Tiitirtized By the, guy ern T hymn 'telt! Surz troolee JON KOVI)A1) Aare Man MtiteL yea Tral Kiiinni Inito Wil Kur Nel tome plenz kur reef befintr nzi Anon Nott moncli oft* n riter j k cmH c k pH H donut Let ene Koptir lied c mi ritln --As a result of the interference of PETE. HERDIC and GOY. GEARY with the 29th judit ial district, the public bumittemh of that county 1111Rbeln4play• ed for nlmomt one year. We.learr - 4y the Standard that three hundreil cases have accumulated on the civil list, and over one hundred on the c Thus through the iniquity of a man who, for a price, sat up till midnight to sign PETE litsmc's bill, the course of justice has been put back in Lycom ing county one year, and the people of that district burdened Witt another heavy and unnecessary expense. Such is JOHN W. GEARY, who aspires to be re-elected Governor of Pennsylvania.— The man who can be bought and sold, pie tool of a cot of political "roosters," the like of whom never attempted to crow in Our legislative halls before. --Subeeribt for the WATCCIIIIA'N We find the following stirring alipeal to the people in the last Carbon pon• ocrat. As it suits in every locality, at 1 11111;ly perhaps be of use in awaking Nome of the sleepy headed Democrats in this region, we publish it entire. We trust the Demobracy will heed its nl• vice : roam IN LINE! Demoeratg of Pennsylvania, Holiest yeomanry of or grand old Commonwealth, Artisans, All who pay taxes, vote, and ar e amenable to the laws and have an i n . terest in their construction and faithtl4 execution, A great contest is upon UP. A battle to be fought and we munt win it! Are you ready for the fight Look along your line and eurve) the Are your forces thoroughly orgnniz Have you your townehi w and auk district clubs in active working order? Do you not know of at leant one ter whom you can influence to cut bw vote for Packer and a pure.fitatu ad• minietration I lit*p and think. 'Then appeal to the science ; his ideas of honesty told recn. lode; Isis Slate ride and los duty to himaylf and family. The argument fa all with yo u Radieaham tine no argument now and it never had. It came into power in inn navent stage during a period of teinimnary na• tional derangement. It has only maintained that power by bayonets at the throats o the people in one section and by fraud and cor• ruption in another. As fast ns the mailed hued i-i re moved from the control or the Stales of the South, lindienlimin dies, htrangldi by its own monstrous en IlleM. In the northern States it has nelnev. ed telyporary success through the me dium temporary a wanton expenditure ler per ty purposes of the people's money, ;tut by the most outrageous and in ne system of corruption and ballot bon stuffing `err known and scarcely cr e di. ble. It can no longer scatter yam MIMS of money in leveink prolusion to earl.) an election. It hayrobbed the public coffer, tin til nothing In left to steal, and the ts,t harden of taxation beneath which the people are now groaning is insulliclent to keep up the expensen of a spetst thrift administration. Workingmen of Pennsyhaios, I it your duty and you untie to achieve the vienow. From the minas of the mountaiam, From the farms of the valley, rally lor The Two Candidates for Governor ASA PACKER, Thu Chrixtian Patriot, the Enterpri zing liuminems Man, the Friend of Industry, and the 'Prue-Ifearted Gentleman. " 1115 WORD In AM 0001) AS III) 11 ~N D " Ile has Dispensed litindrols of Thoth , - ands of Dollars in the Cause of Education, Relig ion, and Charily IMNII MORE TO A DY A NCE TUN ERO6IIIIIEII And Itiiien from a Pour Boy to the Front Runk Among our Public Men. His Election will overthrow the Cur ruption at Harrislitirg,this us Wise LawH, and Hon est Administration, eouttNeut I hotel july The 30'69 ♦YU ILESTOILII TO IM TIIN MEI=ENIIES=I 711 P. VAIIDIJNILK (Pr ItoGrES, A\II Tiir 1.001? 11AN':11CNKII1 - . Ile hair litooved to E% en thug low and Mena in order to secure Ilia He-Election. VOTE FOR lIIM, AND YOU Valli! TO PERI' RTC tTV. TUB }IBMS OF TUB CORRUPTIONIIITS, Help to Tighten the Chains which the Great Conan-Minna have Fan tenet about us, Eneour age the Worst Ple nteous DINTROY TII E WORK I NON 1.1 10111', And Continue the Intiptrneefid Scentv which make our State Ca rtal a By• Word of Reproach. —The following prOves incontem Llo the purity and high honor ol the Democratic candidate for Governor JULKIZ PACKER IN I:MIR/RI-SA When Judge Packer was in Congre. , , bill was introduced to reduce the duty on : Iron, and repay that which had been paid by importers. The Judge's then an extensive rally', ad man, and had taken a heavy contract to supply rah, amounting to several millions of dollars. The repeal of the duty would have add ed enormously to his profit, and every motive Of self interest, added to the ar guments of his friends, would have ln duced him to favor the bill. Ile felt it to be his duty, however, to vote against it, and the bill was defeated. When his vote had been recorded he turned to ono of his colleagues, and said • " The success of this bill would put half a million dollars into my pooket "Why didn't you vote for it, then was asked. "Bemuse I cannot conot ently with my principles. I know fteft W ill Pennsylvania needs a thrift', and I not vote to cripple my tftate." A Lively Appeal Laboring men, Diechamen, • Tradesmen, Let it be hurled from Fiower! Packer and Permhing: Peace and prosperity ' =1 I= =I I 0 11 N W. 0 E A It ) of the Monopolists, —Delightful weather now
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers