Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 12, 1869, Image 4
‘ , 1 Th . e Democratic Watchman. the (•:,-.• I- unclrel Ittle , irat. 'l'll,-.! The Issues Irit i 7,2, and the Financial ooniraet hotaToon the I i o vernineei i i n,l 1 111,4 l'wmk, and 1 , ,5• brute ba . rt; tionillellr. 4 1. ' no/a-it/tam iwowiwritr i'q in the Ilitnro -,, (Question. I lie bondholder iq toi'• the p: ,, flic , nt ~/ :, !io .nlaatt to •Ineult4 too il ih n sir ,it ~,,„ - , abolair aid , 101 a mow. DI bite, .. , ..1 , " ' .:" . • 4 "" Ill th °"'''''' 111 111-t.w.l•- of OH, ,104.1.1e_; 1.11111 dots that int ,, rvftt '‘ I . I1114• Ila% t• th 4'11:1 . 1 . .I, nut It I, f, \VIW: I. OW 11111% Cl,ll 11,111.11:11 1 / 8 11.11 That lA. BY P GRAY STEER Jo, W tssnrrtrr Enron Terms, $4 per Annum, in Advance BELLEFON the Friday Mbrning, November 12,1869. 11,01 2.2:uonlim;ll lu i c:r .fq, mi d lii The Political Power of the West examination ur the political t•olInt COllt I,We the ol , n.r‘er !hut tt re allatwement II ere 1,11, oh respeel to the kilitio r of pow ,r In country. It liaq 1.W.% be 4htl! Iliv 1 , 4) 1 111v:6 :11) , I 4 0e1:lt lt,titlelLei• ions! eNeret , ...i 1.% Nett I:1 WIIt. 1011.14 , 11ry of 1.1NItIV:11 'lower k ,t .k htently, but tzrtninal intlnence 1- ttin-ooz in the 1111111( . 114 e tleetdoity Itosttle tv the pot rnottortoly of rohtieot-otti,t) pro ,t• t-litimetl 1111 , 1 1. ,, 11111( , 1 1..1,1,111 ~f the Fujin). Thu ri,e and tritsnip hn tmi I , re viptated Oita m.111, , 1, have Lt nn d, POoller ,•t• latrr, 111.1,1 IMMIZEM 11.111 - ,tl,c luliu ul I.UN% cr 01 No% the early any', the, Republic, that pmer NVllq it political ttn.l rro7nl ticce. It 11116 110—loliprI11 11%, Ilet! .11 , 11;,, 1011( 111 , 11 e I 11'11,011 vl 111 V ther ad% tineerovut ur the %%hide court try : What hen-, ?II the day,. or her , r,lurN. %%as to the tjreetttri Stuteq, ,te It a, No% England, in call) to the I= =NEM ity it :s;p‘c England, at fit II t ni et e‘elc ied 8 IreliCll , 1;11 Httl , :i.fil•C on the entint6 at lar;:e. Sic a; nit . Tile CWI.-4 ., Vi lill . ll :radually led thealai,• of {III. moral odlaenee and power. were rho-0 have eventuated In all states under hke +elti.ll aa,unipti4.l. sti an inherited rght ut ilivse in 1 , , iirgem and advantales hicli were mere',) the act4detu Itu the relat e ru.sit \ea tai land, within th- last Otero, NA.:%rs hai 111111er:one n tnatertal (+row!. Iler 1.,-Itioa, now, atilt ov4pec-t. to the other la ho longer :1 politate.liwee#sits ;a a political aiiornaly. Thu-iv or I;;rty 2.eitre, it,r,o, there \N; iwre a'. e-t er.la ,qu 'unbroken of prairie --to ila‘ Itt, re has arisen a new pewter -anal tit, er earrte4 1.11111 it the verai that potttuttal tatltteatte w htrt t. de. tti,ed tit ettanterttalattlat and titlark trlaailth ,tser the etatheti mel:1.1, rvatlve [whey of Nov England Itt•tti tile !tr. ss and the ipttl.twal vet/ h.Lve 1,o) , liore-een the+ me,: 14t1 , 1e : hence the atnennnue eflorir, which httAe been made 01 late reare, by Ille;In4 of a proter•tive tanfl, and its attefol.tot prsit•in of !Minor" In• 1.0 retain awl secure to the Fr.ie!ern tte , 4 their emowere:al and Ili/11111 fat tut-in.: pre eminence. Theme ef ortm. alt,he to the hitertdi4 iit the We-tern and 111,1•11 e State., have hull erto hew) 4iteeis,ful to beearnig for N England inanulactitrerm the id.j..t ought to tie attained. But Ihe irkounie 3111 i bomptuary antler mi iron, glasi., drug and other prime neceefta riri have hail the ?fleet of preparing the Hind of the countrt for the eratting change —while the zealous propage gum of New England Itatficall'on, in all ;tried I.IIIS and O l oglel , . is har•t cn mg that period when the Fast will be ilive-teil of int long.tanitanned and pre ponderating influence in the affairs al the Viitott. That. the political power of the East should 'be suiperceded by, that of the M iddle and Western Staten. Cs not only n natural sequence. It is a national neCe.ciiiy —4l) e result of that Feqiwnce. ft iv mild be preposterous to suppose that .the Testers trod Middle Staten, with their rapidly increasing popula. ilOll and continually developing re• • r.,,oreers, will be content to remain under the tutelage, sad accejlt the supremacy of the Fait in all that pertains to their pditical, 'social and internal economy. The time for that has passed away. A new order of things has arisen. The resources of New tngland have been day eloped, and her history has been written, Her social condition and her social polity, have been crystallized— as is the case with all old communities. With her, Wealth is the standard. Labour no longer enjoys that coneide• ration which is accorded to it in newly nettled regions. The tendency with her is class legislation and centralism. Practically, she has no future beyond the retention of her present prosperity and political ascendency, and the do. sire to see the propagation other priti• ciples,and polity. With the Western end MiddleStettel, a (,11,111c1ic ,. . I itt.l.il Ow\ tilt- th4n lout Lithittir, tli ntivititititt Ot ire it hir•- ortule ;I\\.n 1 , 111d111!!: tip 1.1 Ihr r ox%r, it nn‘‘ "rdcr 111111 , +•:111,1 III( 11,111211,1(1..(1 I :111. 1llt•1 111,4 h ' 411.•1 %,1,101, In ..1•, =HEM WHI :1 104,-Ityl and 1 ,,, r o• I iro hrtirn•. \N ti.ai ~:r,••••i I lA' I- , 111'11 I\ll, h \NIA roil. 1!n .I• , 1114-entivi,t 1. , 111 , :I W Ett. , l -- ellen!!! tri ill • th ,r• oi,n ' rit r It Le We-t a , ap ii lIMEM I, CI, '41,111 ••I 1 . 11 .0, ' l / 4 ,1 110- r -111( %,) :11 11 1 , 111( It4ltt.itl 1.1 11.1 =I t • lit (Lc :',1•1111 11 , le,zllilii.att a ~ ,! Fr.,111 hc z hui 11 4 C W1)1111 111 , i111 . 1 . ::11 1:1%(' --•-• • adinint.l 4.1 :ithiir -1.,..kr tlloce... i l (1114 urtit IN.h tical ihrhtetiec, the S•olith r 4.111 , 1 now) 11111 111 re:W.14 , 11 I" the roder.ll (; , i'. rru went. tii 111 111111 T the pre.e.rt Itigt Irtml the /111 , 1111111411/A ilature 61 It, p!ok ernment for t-fanf• pa-t. on iu a 4,111.111. h VII it 14, the 114,%11,2 trnni NPW it , et.wirrwv u. tile C , .11 ~..k fthr Ilalloll The '4.4.1011 would iiri.lioiloeilly he more ‘‘ , ll,Fig to under I I' pre-ent -t% lit tinerSrrrtknitaunlP In the Wi -t ' ern mila M1 , 1.11c :11.4 the /oode 4,1 that cowing political pu‘set: -hall Prihally re.h.eta 1101 emititr% from 16olleal arld 4 , 4/rript!,.rt, it that ohject i,. e‘er to be accolu I.l;khed \V ith the \ll4i as a political In',%el' ut 10pp.111 , 01 Ib the It:1 1 110:t1 01 the tilt principle,. ..1 Demo ertte still have it lair tie1,1„01,1 tablet traimph k I the trturllph (J 1 the.e plo.(11•1, 2 i tali I,c the I.lLlVatioli of the roatitr 'Maryland, My Maryland." In one of the 5tmeq.,r11,17,,r , . itt lea.t. none 10 OW I w ul 10 , 111•311.'tu are al l o ss ed to 6eNl to the path • roan CI IA In Maryland, in\ Niarvlnlpi. • not one count% enea lia , heal major-lie at the late election, and the OM . 11 , 11'lif . .` butte lionwee of the Legeilature are thoroughly I)erooeratic - not a einole Radical being en either Boner. Thin le a triumph of which the Democracy of At IA r, land may t% ell be !trot] I, and one which will 111M4 ntderllv rrelattnd to the interest of that noble State Mot etreetualhe has the heel of the tyrant been removed from the neeka of the people of Mar)land. During the war the:k were pert.ecuted, oppressed and outraged, their rights More , garded and thew persona abused Radlc:diru ,with its intolerant bigoted, 'treacherous and tyrannous rule, trod them Imo the dust and laughed and mocked at their pieta.; for justice It with a dark Mt% tor them—so dark, in deed, dial es en the famt est gliononertng, , of the day that has some dawned so brightly could not then be discerned. Rua now, thank tin& the tide ham. turned. It is the Democracy that are in power, t.nd it is Radicalism that licks the duet. The oppreeeor has been overthrown—the people are etwerign. tilorione Maryland I Way her exam ple and her struggles be lo Pennmylya the incentive and guide to her own fu ture disenthralment. —Mr. M'El.lt A TII, formerly a partner of linascr GiILICIALY in tile Tribune, has been reepectihily kicked out of the New York Custom Houle. We are not told what he has been do ing, but take it for granted that his former connection with HOlldtell - would prevent him from doing anything very nice. —The New York Suit nominates iloasos Ossici,r for next 'Governor. Considering the fact/ 1 111st Gnaw, has been badly defeated for a State office, looks like at attempt of Os Sun to toilettes ap a dark spat to lifotaaa's " baziom." MEI= =IT MI zt,itt,:,lltlll l I.il 1^ 11111', 11111111,11 ,, /1 , :“ ., 1. \u. uul e‘: ,11:01 t !, offitcll.l that it'shed, l'itt , latt t ; /ie./ ha, the tolhmlll.4 but the OCitc Lail to Ow ohh,ohoi tio• ;lot vrimmont t for 111);1•4 t 0 111,k- - .re 111 biol.! lIE 111 1 ; I•, 1,1!1;! II . 110 t to 1111, , I , • $,- It. p . 1 1 11 4 ,1n . !,,IIIII•111 Mg:Ml. o ,ln .71 1:11,., 1.1 4..11111 tt. , ' :11141 11 ll', I 111/11,11' II 11. 111 I 111,1. It- , 1 , 1, ih lit t ) 11 Iln 111 11 , . II I,l'l 3. 101'1 I. all itt,tl har 111 }lc. Idltll, .111-t 11 , 111 tlt OW, llt 111 1i.1.• all I :111.1 .1).•111/I ..IPir ..01,••11rI ME '~~Ni!' 'll lii I•, 1 I 111,•.i ii • 0- Mt' :1 111,it 14111. 1 . 1,11: .1, 4,! pi‘,l,,r I OEM In l"“rk thru ilc I("ldern nr -(,i%on• n 1-- f:...1.:11 . f%* tint tit In‘nr nI Ira' ll1111 . !I II aZIS e5.1114-I.4ttiell \V}lfli - 1-. 111 the Sr It ,, 111.1111113 :111.1 Hint, t toi , t LsIII, , IC, %,04, :if lir po itt.ls“nt% ‘ , l tI I ar,"!:III,111 111 I I• '<lnto Ot tho r, m con, In 1,111( 01 lIIVI, 111141111 i h:l%, 1,1%,,r Int.lll "I'lit. (' neintiati (; , izale ha. tilt' Truce to ..,Is that I th!,, :111 Intl) Le 1.2.%1 . 41 (11 the ItellUi/1111111 r.w. The samo 1 , true in liner ;0,1 1111,.01,.. ire with the leepublican that !ST.!, tall he 'Ton the mode lutetng • ttll the f; 2(1 bottag. It trill not cult IT theereteally but Ilettl :till the gnr.Uun. Awl m di IS I.ollllee in,ll Sl . l. %%1.11 In ell I I t he It t ten tow 01 he pub! lean to otle _tact. ()I . the 4) Repttl.hcan Noters m the-e three Stitt , . there are not le', than ra X 1.(X)0 of them 111 favor of FAN ittif the homer in le;!al tender 4 ; that il the nonte.i.4 r tnr tatrlt made upon the ra t meta of the t thatmutt' nLirh favor , their payment in legti Minters will /lt,t t all short ul2oooo thrse three StateQ, in nF ite ul the workingc of party machinery. The ha.t , w hlrll 111 (111114 (0 (11V . 41111 1111011. Mill fore thin yue•itnm in 1872, 1111 , 1 Vie are truly glad that it 'volt do it. It will—and mark our prediction —girl near!) e'en• Weoern and all the Southern :4ttliss to the Democratic eitti. &date, while the Eit.t will he almost solid against Maim The Republican eiiterd iota i.tatistics to show the relit• tier strearth hit the two parties, and is ami thing taut pleased with the result. The entire vote m the United States approval:llc. 6,000.000 Out of this Sloe these is but little alri)%e 3(Kl.tslt) majority against the Detimera which as anorganiiation la% ors the tort meat of the 5 2ifs in legal tenders. In the Republican ranks there are not le,s than 11,110,100 witers in favor of pur Illr the 5 20's in legal tenders ; while in the beniocratie ranks there is, x large estimate, :2;)1.,,001.1 in Incur ot their puytnent in coin ; cruise {nentlt, when the i.i.sure is fairly maple the Demorracy must' triumph by secur ing nit lent than two-thirds of the elec laruli rolleus, and more than one mil -Ipofoillar majority. ti Vitidd to the discomforts of the Re publican nrganizatiffn upon this deli- Gate question, a new party -tea party of repudiation—..ta, gtrmiaating in Washington and Ne'w York, drawing its nourishment from the Treasury De partment. 'We - speak Of the party that wants to negotiate a new loan, as sithstitiffh for the present public debt. Democrats are charged with being repudiators because they favor the pay ment of the 53.ra in legal tenders ac cording t o the stipulations of the con tract, giving the bondholders six per cent interest in gold. In what partic ular this is repudiation does not appear upon the surface, neither can it be. found in its turgid depths. The pro posed financial policy of thesew party, however, develops the must .. prpnou to c• sal tepucliation; namely the' iedocOon ot. the Interest itpoh-the bends. The 111 or' =EWE = illy HI II = rile it' , 1 , 1/oi , t.r, 114 , in 11.4 mI Ilm rotarricl %rt.. tiul lo nrr. Bet‘veou =Mil ill' :,!i s eenkildi 4 , 0 1 11 , C. The 1 ) 1..1110( . 1%U It: ty II h Id evlrt IBM t, titoll:t•r rlitttliti Im 1)4. trite 14 11. 1:1 , 111,11141 Lr I' , 111:11 lit 1,111 . 11 1 11110 - f,l 1 ', 911 (kV 11W 1 I'VrIT-111111' 111110 111'' 1)1,11 i. Iron) t lilt erudite the lolphttt / P ie:tog. the ir.ititpuil debt, I: out- lh n d, Jay 1: , ,o060, Lti ,LN " I T" - • t . ` 1 :" 1 "i .•\ , \4• ,, V.,1•41/, t (11, 1111- t, 'lt 011. M '•j,!‘ 4t.“ " % do' 11: I'llll 41 \thy' tho 11,,,04.11111 IN, 11,11 I u 1,,1.1, t 11111 at 1.1 14011 li rim.. In fat r Earn OW\ t nil I i,llll rl.uui II l‘/ Illly l.ciop;4• llk 'HUI^ ,o 1 VI di:J:1111R 'lt: W tf:r 1;,,. I Nil l ine !114 7 1.Lt. ,, r And the 1 , 111i1:% lIIV In he hal . % t:I I IH! Wider k,,•1, t•fli•It• 1,- , thik, 1,1%1 I le e ‘ll Ici 11..1r ‘,..1,1i( I 1:1 tile he "The Day =I ,11•11.11 in, caliod The A., its tmji, =II P.,litic;tllN, It In tilderetnklit t , ) Qtai h‘ - th / if matt or that. part. %%h.. , 11,1; Out re.“orin...; the with loilttnev rnion. hurt:• r•eeui;; the decline 01 the politic-II puw• cr of Nt-w England ;mil the liiture greattli.... to. the W.-4 tinder the urw immbcr, , 4.,1 die pt,ple in IS7O, and the oilt.lizenf „precartott; Iv, tto:i of he J11.611e Sate., - 7' he I)(ry expre.ae4 ,INerfilined lu Atno.l t 9 the ;mere-is of th,, ,, e `'title'. in general ard of Pf•iff,.. icanta m particular Int the , ohject ado. national debt the 1.,,‘ paper also pledgees ita •11 to ad‘orate the nottatainance_uf ate public credit. Thr I#ii Is likely to prove an able journal, 11.11 , i I! the /1.1111.C1. , 11.11fi4 CO' Itoi N . . 1411407 111 not Call.c! II to .Irdt into the mildly and loath.orne channel of liadwal-t•rn, ‘‘e noy yet have to our State mevropolie a high toned, tudepett dent paper. —This flellefontn triatiotssi (*Torn Ih.• ntiaiinistani of 4e.,1 go If Pea il !Mob ni the mist Iforniii•ratie candidata fOr lir plot itheinit (h. khiel ~ 1 n cundnJntr Repl/1011 O.IIIS 0.13141 fire (.•r - Ho/lida lobo rg Brass ter ;40 It wolild merrn, from the Hummel(' vote he reeeked at the late githernato nal eleetiofl in flhio. Tt Is a moral certainty that It great inauy remthli calla prolarreti hun to Gov. HATER, wluclt aiCUllrlta I it part fur the fact that that geritlemitn'm majority in only n trifle over seven thousand. Last 'tall GRANT'S DlDJOrity Irl ( 11110 was 41,4 TA, which shows that PENDLETON IM ODE of the most popular inert of the day. Itay- t ing riaineed,Gß ANT ' S majority 11,000' vote , . This ecrtainlv looks an if he was preferred by Republicans as well as by everybody else. ------A scoundrel by the Damen( 14►.V Curfew, entered the linnet. of M N . Dodge is Stephentnwii, New Voik, nn the sth instant, and attempted to vin. late the lady's person. An ax being within reaching dioanee, she yeirod it and bone,' it in the fellow's skull, CA/M -ing instant death The verdict of every lover of deeeney and morality will, of cowrie, he. "served him right." So perish all such devilish beasts. Negro -Outrages The outrages and villainies' of negroes have become so frequent of late that public attention is beginning to be direct ed to them. The papers are calling es pecial notice to them, and we think before long it will be about ad much as 1a negro's neck is worth to lay his lingers on a white girl. The Washing ton Inielligencer, in alluding to this matter, thus speaks of the tiubject gen. erally : So frequent have attempted or com mitted- violations of women, and of young girls, by negroes, been in the last few years, not to say in the last few months, that ladles have become afraid of trusting themselves alone in unfre quented places, or pieces at all 'out of the common tide of travel, and girls on their way to school or elsewhere are filled wish a natural dread, lost at some ones peeted moment they may be as eailed by moor more of these way Fay. u' ,pi~tu•r u I 11,111 II :1 , 11"1111., 1i1111111.11_,1 hy a 1111111111. at arid , A - 1,75.1, Ir: 11l II - r i.„ 1 ~ ,hll 11,0 filrit It1:1,t- I 1%1}1 , 1,1.% - irc.{ the, lbuut it t,r 1.% 4110 ilv hnnl ri r , ,ii. it , / Ili hr,ligtil (Imo. a ~,I‘..rt I J.. , :1.1It• Into,ll ;I,•;; t • too, a :II klind 1,ft.1 \s! 11%111 u\ Eh.) . 1 1,. •1 t 1111141 :I ,1 1 :inl 1111 1, ;11 11 ;iii I 111 41,1 I'l un 1144 11 , . , r. I n .1, li in [new %, ins 1%1 , b / t li. h , z1,1, I .iee ii%vr Inv brain e 4 Ow hal [Won, rtly•li li% tore,t root. 1111)1 11 . 011.- 111 I) Info little! , roll II), I,' . 1 )I)'•re--helt I %NU , NW) -cott..l onto ,L ) . lies et ell lIV • %,•.,1) , I) rank ieir !4ttitottio . i. thr rii , zif.•r when ‘‘elit. with thew in the ro 11 i Ir irvio to 1 . (1111, wuz, alter all, a 'irate nnir.ti ilrr “r unt: alai, ‘‘lletlit•r I l'itoo unit \Chat lit•t% IleXt h.! ilic.e,,vered :tad adopt itl hp oar lactoliett I had t‘No 10.r1114 ni,l 11,1/ it --11,1,11 i uc Itadyk le tw! beer ,ati 111 a quart pielier—l 41117 eiLfage.l I:1 (}ll., when, Pai , hlititl‘, a ~tapor un to me. Whether Al.l/ 1111o4)111`41111 , \f'llf•r !It 11...111 t%%„ hum perariee vo.liether It %VII/ "I• ra4hetaal be the mle:glit at' re-potoila that re.te.l ale 1• , :t lin , lt Lie paytruot —wielt tiv the., .vrirrated it, I ith.l 01111111 V to .:It - hull tt hale\ the ka,vze iiv it, that ~s ercanie aim I entlevvor.,l to iive front that chair, bat my leg," rrtewird their I sank down, and wtapt 111 a m111:11601, alcli I lia,l the folleri r .'reeni lit•thawt that I tt tra‘etloi the lbstreek ti the Stets anti shrine iiv Itadi Ilecomin tired, I H,,t. onto 11, ntlin in rest. %VA& eeeted theft.. I ;moist a nay), troltt. ;iv tne,jratit tenth ',notice and a stricktly sultorns odor hill. rots arisiii: Nin, , htionlii what to make iiv this strain?, :-pertakle, I wont over efigar,red at considerin it, one.f. I lie came sensible ;iv a omit h orn lade onto Illy rite shotildor, Tarim; round, I beheld a ligver, the feeeliers and genral outline iiv with strongly- - remintled toe at/ I);Ante's deskripshen tiv the rooter ;iv Hades. (Itazin imto tae with a piereiti ex prewnlieti, the tigger :41: " Wat mite be yoor Ens:aims in these part., 7" " I am," Ned I, ‘‘ engaged in the study nv. man." " Wat paytikler genus claims your attenslum ?" " I rejined, " cheetly Radikles. EA7 . a .trop Itailykle, the study is eonjeenial." Then," replied the figger, at the same time qxtendin hit rite claws, "I can gi• yoo the rite hand uv fellership. lam Loocifer-- and, at a onevitable consequence, a trop Radykle. It 'Wax ~ t ,,...4311,1 1,, N‘1,,,•11 1, , ...1110 mv , . 1) n n»111 /11, y 1111 t:11100/ lk rinidki . 1 101 1,0g1',/ 11a1.11,11 1 11,1114 1 %\ 11 I.• 4 , 11 111 a 4, , 111 11: 1•11 , ,61•41 111 II .1%. 1 . , wlmt, \ ILt• 1:1111...11 I , IIIIV Ilrf 111111 R111111:1 1 , 11 i 111 1.1., 111111 a 1.0 , 11 - 111 1 11 gor •,. !hid rop , .:111 n• nil I .13 , 1 111tH , 11 IIt 111.4.11 \'.. , 11111 11 11. :1 1 11 , -10011., 0;01 on 1.v..t. 1.0 ~ .10, 1 0.1.•.'1 rl.l 0401. 101.1 111 1'.11,1 t 1 ,, .111 , 1 1' , 110 , 111, , trt t 1 1 ,11% 1.• 11111 , 1t1hl!L 1' , 1 1,11 1 • 1111.1 1011 1 1, 11,4 , 1 11 1,111.,11 , t0 111 il,.r ;lII' Om,- 111:11 ,•111 1 . ,•^t111111 CM , 11 , 11 111 , 11.% , II :111 , 1 111 , .0111 111,1 f, 1•., I!, 1% otilllll.lll 'POLITYKLE OBSERVASHENS. I=l 1), 1,4, 1, t•/:, •„11r• , f,ll' , WM= 1,, / lb , ),,, 11 II ;,., • f,,C, ill, •I; 1.% N.l; :lII' • hat ht 1 . MEI Il I , lit I.:tt ttt lfl Inn II if I~;ildu~ 1. ~. lip. .ills': Li~~, ~ =MI for endevverin etrenkt n rAdvlcl diang„ in the rrnviTtiment ;IV IT , lit 11,1 I %VI/7, knit (ion n filmy, /tin loreit ‘11(klITA rha pniiiht• A now hold." I i'4 ' l; he sell Ihi., it Fannie it% 1:4 4 041 ()Ver Ole piirqlloll Ily li.rel.r! , . . v 100 . 1 " illit 110 n (i7.prvvatil 44100 d )•orrbio"gn to t.j+lt'Pr reejiti e.t it t vno rood br,iiv nioro to III(' 0 earth ot the wo.elit tinir " I fie% flolligig,..l the 1 . 01 . 0,0 re'lliatk4, Lnt, sele , tl.l In Ili, 111-htio, that a moo, iiv this I.)litvklv thkpartawil ii hi. (I , .a.ituong \eil I 110.1 hr (.11: I. eept;ilJll,ll, Itner aitli I (..“41:1'2-11/ r,(tiro (II earth. 11. 011,4• n liervitimn Wt. ilovrmli,l t0t...111,r =MI Never liell I t h,, ,it„ „„.l I 4 1 . 11 . t0 PIV n 01.111.1 lklll.ll 11 111'11 I (11110 the tiro ...0,1,41,e1 ut th, I,ll' delay' mew It& tde. There cvui into it eviy IZadvl.li. politvl,le Koh. 1.11,11,1.1.1er , 1,•. 111111 “rl.tilw, et .I'llol V. I 1111 . IIV tL if I.llr otntt 1, /111.1 4.. I ;•:v. I n. l !F. =EI H amm , n t Oft %%t• I 1,-4-11.• ! , i.k 1%11/ 1.1111, 0 1 ' ‘‘;:i t :\ .11 nth': .41.111t1111 I 111 ‘1.11(111 . r , fo " ITlde tilajorit% it% die Ic.ot,r, They 111. /11...1it 4.; art, lin; ilii• in thou. itn.leijs I/. te l t 'iet lel! —lett , i, 1: i sel.t..hmeill hey II rm. ,•••1, th'V 1•.1'it11,0!11%kle 011 111.0 I 1. , 11.1 n 11.0 , %.1 11 , ••1 a 0.1111-11•1. V kIII/ lIV II1 , • %Sill -I I.It•II.I n. 101,1,1t.r4 ..„1„ 111'10n-4A, ni n piro‘v4iii rn r IZ. MINE k 1,31, tv,iz ".: .. 111 Y.. I hoht...- - I ri,, , 11,:e 1 141 1 4 0 Wllq t (,0 ‘1.:..11111 rol•.r he • " th 41110 +I III" 1110.4 f oiro , olr , ll it, ul. ..tIIJ T4ey au/ a exemplar% Icroivii. p m + e more xvlii to l• ka‘vrerl retort civil n•ar, 01,111 ely other win!, di it I lie% •I'heV Nut Ify e,ntle I•er.t.4 to nie :ti reett• wtritvlin the South on 14,it the other day., , hth. lesninn earth. trift•ks•tin 1101% 111; , / 010 4 0111+ 11% the Itadyl‘le maim v ur Ittritzta. --doom tti2, iti , elltT that vati7, •ttiertipti,l ta tr.• , ,n.t00-r tli meta Ly Inv 'troll it:li., onto tile thro.le. It.a diSkli , r ..ro,l the plot to Him on Inv rotor!, I 111 romo , lorn , lion nv lie r tt I t kept no fire baraia in their iiitt I shall lieqeetorth torrid more coll nn them than the) Joey known trrinie time !row heejet 17 IIVM111f00(1 P ." ra)ie Hie brkaiglit down het tail in th a jerk. Irevin wren end tie liit,hklenirho low, I reke4tol to hoiallowed to Ilertrt, neon tech Ihz cowlliktid nr to the outer gate. 1 4 ;4 I WilZ Ireviti4 I fiz Flight:oAm rued : ..(ianrniti, the rinlitykln giteleioa it givia rile much titteastpe.i at pre-aint moment. I believe that a ihcnl jntikeher to about In erie'. nittAt fio'd the South, if we can, t/ ',wens 11% Ito hollered eleniotil. The lie.. us' nigger suffrage iz not goof to help us ez mulch ez we thot But 1 bry I/no resource wieh I hew r , vreol for the last stroke. The soshial ekality of the nigger must 'be part lie our polisy in 1872. 1111Feegenashen will he a grate.moral foe, asui a•grato ifalp to our kriWze. Detaokt'asy will not go the length uv adoptitt this ih;e, but the Itadvkle fuelothen will embrace it, for the sake ny offis—and thus we shell secure a majority uv the nigger vote. We must prepare the minds tie the masses fur the reeepehen uv this new ijee. The policy ity •New England Itadiklism hez helped us much at the South, but that policy must be son tiuyooed. We must keep eddykatin the nigger without religion, by Goodin tiv the country with sew England skool-teechere. We must also impress it onto the mind uv the nigger that his proper sphere iz politicks and the study or politykle ekonomy--not agri cultural labor. We must foster his nacheral bias for white winitnin, es hiz intermarridge with Katukashen (mails will hey much to do in regene. radii the South on Radykle prinsipele, and the nigger will thus become a tower ay strength to our kawzot. For three reecine, I wood hey you agitate the (needle; itv the Onecindiehnel and tburrer eoshiel ekality ur the nigger. 0Pt1V,.1.11 111'110,11 rode' ito...ioleq !mate n L ,1,1%1 1100 ;11';), ICY k' I nf- , lt