Bellefonte Democratic 'Watchman ivitc BY P. OR JOY, IV. FURRY, ASSOCIATII EDITOR Ink Slings —Nevi , York had a two hundred thousand dollar lire onthe 22d instant: New York seems to take pleasure in such trifles. —A negro, named WitiTe, has been nominated for Mayor of Decatur, Illi nois. Is this White, colored ? or color e l White? _Congress wanta to abolish polyga• my in Utah. It had better abolish it in Washington, and among its own members, first. —"A New York rag picker has $lO,OOO Mit city bank." That chap has evidently been picking,up some of Uncle SAY'S "rags." —lt is said that the women of Brie % tol, Tennessee, take their knitting to church. NO suppoite they do it to pre ‘entl them from going to sleep. We ttro told that'Mrs. a .l.,:towtv M. ; 4 1ria:toN is too sick to talk. Were her husband living, this would utterly pre. volt her from having the last word. —The liaNical papers are ptiblialting Ott' Iscat York Sun's cotnpliment to Senator SCOTT, of this State. This is 41n,ftttetnpt of_the_ottti IQ illuminate a very thick object. —Miss LonKTT of Adrian Michigan, is studying Medicine nt Philadelphia. When she graduates she will be dip first feniale.Mann pity. sician On record. —The names of some of the towns in California, are enough to scare a lel low For instance, how do you like "Humbug," "(louge-e)e," "lied Dog" and "Von-Itet 7" —We real flint tii wCu\ ie preparing It sixteen column speech on tiliV rent postage. -A nil wilco it is finished ne stilitio4e lie will send it all over the ciitintr , y, postage free. --Gen. ill TI It lins nmointol a nv gro hoy oftialetn, neo4m•litli-et (*lt KTVINEtt WII.RoV, to It 1'71 , 1e1 HlOp r git Point. I f that. Btl`lo, hi' 11114 11(.01 llrun alt I xlll,l —The Illintingdon (ileihe wfl IiRIN r's minu II (ratin 1, n hrilitant, t4nrv•r the plumage of the peacoel., 1i0‘%(• , ,r hrilliane% 1. nil 11T1 the 0nt41,10 Thi. (,l ;'..; ioll IL ',,tit'tk. Dvintwrat4 rllll , l 1. , •t nnn mr that the ( . ./lON , I VIII' gill I,e light -- lor how cAti the e“lored Not( lie 1'01( 1- lilt, my ! Vital. lull 1111111 . t 4 ad The (4'OlllllllN (11 Ila V In:4 niegers ittseit our pul.he IM in,lunce,l !Jr of tioi:initowin New r+ Jr 4, t‘;1,10 I=l -IVe Nhollifi Itkc to {nnvc• I'n pUun LI it, the Murderer Id the I)ueld.l reA, rvnnc o‘er In 11114 ciotintry. pist thin hp in,tt pent t' the Or ~r,ur \t /IFIIT COIN has been arre.ited in Philadelphia I'oruululßiaq in the lux• urn of lour wives. ALBERT r,in now halt' nn opportunity to ruminate II p.. on Um had luck that will o ertake a Nuinetinies -ilia new st vle of hood to be worn by the lad, hereafter, is to he the "coal scuttle" style. This is up with the progress of things, and will slut the colored portion of our social sister. hood first rate. --That wax a sensible remark of the rich man who died in Maine, the other day : "Plant me as soon as I 11111COld, and don't cart ine around for a side show." Spirits of Li NC01,14 and 'gg t iiony, take notice! —A woman startled a congregation in Philadelphia the other day by an nouncing a "special telegram from Heaven." We didn't know that Phila delphia radicalism allowed_ any com munication nith the upper regions. —A cotenmorary relates that a mar ried friend of hie went home the other night slightly exhilarated, singing "Shoo, Fly,—don't bodder me," when hie wife let her shoe fly at hie head, which "boddered" him considerably. —The public domain ie being frittead away by Congress in large grants to corporatione and individual enterprises instead of being applied to liquidate the public debt or meet the expenses of the Government. - Consequently, the toiling, overworked people are directly taxed for this purpose. Ranh ie Radi cal management. —The sentare of the court martial which tried the British Captain Eras, whose vessel, the Bombay, ran into and sunk the United States sloop of war "Oneida," was that he shroili d be "sus pended" for six months. We submit 'that the suspension is too long. He /(~C ter- VOL. 15. should have, been suspended only about half aln hour—by the neck. —The body . of gallant Captain WII: Lillis, who went down in the Oneida disaster has been recovered from the sea. What a pity that the body of his murderer, the infamous Eva', cannuOs he sent down to take his place among the fishes. But "time at last makes all things even," and the sharks tna• " yet feed off the body of the bran! Brit ish Captain. Copy ! The above is the cry of al(hands in a printing office, from tt•e foreman down to the devil. Copy! Copy ! What to write about we scarcely know. Week after week we have shown up the evils of ltadieldiem, until the people must lie tiredssind disgusted with the reeord tff its ini twines. Week after week we have shown how things are going on from bad tmworse, with no prospect of final delir ernime with no hope for the country. And yet we are compelled to write uti. Higher and higher is lho Radical party tiling burdens upon the people, and lower and lower are we sinking into the (bud of our huntilin Isom Mor former glory 111113 departed The white wan no longer rules sot's ~ o‘erei, ,n of the land Mongrelisin has lilted it ± horrid head, and to clay grins linleowdy tii oar• congressional our council chambers, 1111 our supreme benches :old in ourjur ) boxes The white people ot one potium of the "[moil" are itt:clotitts nut, slaicrl„ while thome ol the Whet portion are looking ;ni tii blank tintaiement, but II lititg in hand to sin) the onit ii i Meths ,d the mighty despot ti r 1 that purr proiveied North and 100% ,air, hut for rho 111 ria 01 Imr . .o111111 , ,Ti‘‘e;1111, 4 1111' (.11,1:11) IMEEI NEE BE MEE gored 111 thlq 04.111 Val V 1111 a ,1.111111111 =EOM lan 111. 1%1111 11.4 ‘veni.ll :14,1 In-t the Id it- 1=11.113 II •111:11 1)1 , T1' (.1111 e:1. , 11V 1144,11'01 \l • ii Ii lilt , 1 , 111%. ‘l 1 111 111111111111.111 .31 ., 1 1 ill 1•111 1/1 11. 1 11111 1 111r 1 111. 1111.1.11 1 ..1;411- 1 , 1111.1 114 11111 t,1:1 . 4' 111 . 0.111”11 Yet, w•:111 1,4•1,11 11, IltJill 11 it %1 I IL I• a t I 1,1 I. I 11%Cr 01011111 ;1" . iint“lll. 11,h - 0140 tile jolt-pr,i) , 11( 111;111 Pr, :111 the I - 11111 it 11.1.. -111 .IJ, 111 1111 hie. It make such splendid negro `tales, to torroLd ui spoe ()! all us 1,1061 :Ind let the "I alnotm" perish, rather than tears and not. and wan' and nretelted them I'6 Inntnpli ruder the lead of net's- 111 spite of all the liberties it has :1 .."",ithett, t rnrral I lu,ethe nolinoi wre.te.l Ituut the people. and the lights r i-u :t ti ,u s potty "Pie ius' l,l l•4 a skillful it liiis wrested rront the States, Hr , confederate officer, lets Is eh the barrier 169sc and tiieV too way of the I. ts,giotion of fliilsto still cling to it 1111,1 still aid it in yr ui ri n dependence, "r, al Ica 1, of Cuban famous and ilestrtiettiii cork of trainp hag upon the people, upon the writ lint, [lit lie traction Sen IlLutit:tra ten law ()I the land, and "'poll e‘ery - has succeeded tier. Joßn‘N, we 1011 V thing that is saell,l iii the eyes and to look for a change of poliev JoilitAN the hearts _ out of the way, the Ilndir.tlr, although crything that is good it l just and "“t o tpttthising in dit• lend with the holy. Cuban desire for liherh, will scarcely . Will the day never conic when die I allow this opportunity to secure one or chains of lbw tyranny shall lie t h romn Iwo new States, controlled by negro off? when the liberty loving People of votes, to slip through their fingers. If America shall rise tip in their 'night the insurgents should be smeeershil and and assert their former prerogai Cs ? Cuba heroine a portion of this Repub.- Oh, we long for the hour when we ran lie, what it splendid eliimee for some return to the vilays of our fathers, and more carpel-bag proceedings I To this become once more the refuge for the I end, therefore, we may look with eon oppremseil of all nattoos when we ean tidence—that the Administration will sing, with Woefulness and truth, the now assist the insurgents with its mon glorious old Clioril. al support, at least—always provided, Anil the suer-spangled banner forever .41.11 that JORDAN is out of the way. W het It• Wave, .1, , and the home or Cr it will dare venture any further than o'er the lend (or the brut e. this, remains to be seen. lily of lilt • lun.iluUun it lr:i•i 11\11 More Reconstruction Notwithstanding 1;a tvr said "Let us have Peace," we never will have peace until the %Radicals liuve ieconstnicted things to suit themselves. The cases of Virginia and tieorgia are an instance of this, and now all attack is contem plated by the Hump Radical Congress upon Tennessee. litm.vn, - he of the cock eye,—alleges that Gov. SENTER was elected by fraud, which mar or may not be true, and now the old spoor. thief wants to remand her hack to teritorinl condition, preparatory to the process of reconstruction. The idea that a State has any rights, as n State. seems to have become completely 01, CM "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION•" BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDA , MARCH2S, 1870 !iterated from the minds of Radical politicians, and they net as llrougli the sisterhood of commonwealths had stir , rendered all their reserved privileges into the hands of the despotic power at Washington. Althotigh we still claim • be a Republic, the leaders of the • adical party act on the hypothesis that we have become a monarchy, and laim the right to overset and rebuild our State fabrics whenever an aspirino rogue in that party shall deem that his interests or the welfare of his party de mand it. And because, therefore; (len BUTLER don't like the way things are, going in Tennessee—bAiuse (iov. Sas. TER, Radical RR he don't sneeze just every time his party leaders at Washington take snuff, the overgrown, bid bellied, blear , eyed beast of Massa. eh uget I is. rind woman violator of New Orleans, (lamas that Tennessee undergo the experience of Georgia and descend from her promd point•ss4 as a sovereign State to lick the feet of her Radical masters in the humble condi• tion of a Territory, We don't know whether fit I I.E H " ill succeed in this attempt or not. But if Le ;TOri't, it will not be because he will riot 1 xert every art of his malignantim titre to accomplish it. Ile hates the South and e‘erything Southern, and so ambitious and designing is he that he would el en ,litre to Inv his guilt-,wrie -01 hands upon our Northern comm on weniths, did he not apprehend that the time fir such n Mtepha4 ri o t of arras al. But, gradually, and almost impercep (Oily. the Radical Party is stealing . away the liberties of the people and making thetitates the mere tools of a centralized power. When trill the nice liderty loving people of the Ite piddle awaken 10 a rentizing sense of Why it didn't do It fl .l -Iglll ll l 1111 1 ( . 1,1111117111 , 1 1.1 thr • C 11 1 ,7111 •1(.711% 111 Imlrl,rollrurl • • %IV '111111,11 , 1 1 1110 •11111111111.1(1111111 (•hjit7,..l p,,11,•%. 1.1% rird the html It 1-4 /in nituunn Ilinl ha, caitit.4l vxleti -1, 1. er o• rf.:l-,m alit I ; i;tSl • v 1141111r111.111111.1, 11114 If, I, fir I illy.] 1. , leN,gl.l/1 . lII.' ll`tulllolnlll^l.4 . heraii , i• I ‘• Pre 41i 41 'lv I ;eft 11.. I.:11,r I tlir 1.00 ; , to,lt ‘s•ir I. I‘‘cf•,llll , . to . th ', • , llll.amt 1.4 •liiiiko , ed 1,, lia‘ee \ cord the particiihir of the li•ulio,il pirt% Hence, ,‘ he., .1 lit 71r:1;‘, it at r 1 .11 1 1. 1 ,1 1 , 1 r•r " , 1 iii lirll.in_• • r:tilior %%Jill all 114 I LL I ilh r4•L laLr Teri Ita% of th, t.t,• —Judge Cit..timyrost, of Decatur, Alabama, was assassinated at that place the other day by men in ambush, who fired upon and killed him. The Radicals are charging this murder up on the "Ku-klux," against whom, they any, the jolty of which Judge flu take:. TONI was foreman, prefered several in dictments. Of course it was the Ku klux, say they. Oh, yes—of course! —After all the talk about the doubtful prospects of Judge BRADLEY for a seat upon the Supreme Bench, lie bits been confirmed by a AT•le of 46 to nine. This shows what the wiseacres know and also what they don't know. Teriff—How it Operates Perhaps, in no part of the Stag, are there as many on, who talk as loud and khow an little about the "blessings," as they call it, of the tar that now curses the country, as in this immediate vicinity. To hear their hint borings one would almost be in duced to think that they really believe that.,griierall starvation, death and the consequent de population of the coun try would be the immediate result of the reduction of the tariff; and that the policy of.free trade would be followed only by famine, pestilence, and the complete wiping out of the entire pop• ulat ion of the Western Continent. In thin country there is no exeune for the ignorance that would allow of each a belief. With newapapers in every house, hooks upon every table, - school houses at every crows TOftdfl, and academies or colleges in almost every village, there is no reason why any one should not know better than to support a policy, which, call it what I'on may —"tariff,' "protection to home itnins. try," of "raishfrevonues for the gov eminent," or mini yoll please, le not h• ing more, nothing less than a legalized system of robbery. And a robbery, too, the meanest, cow ardheet, cut all rob hericH, that a hieh, with the sanction of law, role+ the poor to enrich the rich— that lakes from labor to gi%e to capital -that steals the neee.mane4 of hie from the malty to Ittrni,,ll laNuriom., thing Gar the few. If any proof were needed of dm, it would only be IleCe , ,tOtr)' tai point to the daily increasing ss of the few manufacturer , ' of the country who are benefited Lc tariffs, and the correQponding impoverish merit of the man) , out of who , e , cant) t-torp comes the ai wand ten led a- 'lnt te-1 0111r:1pol ted good 4, to con% ince earnlllllll Ot ordi nary seiew of the great wrong perpe trate,' upon the taUitli of any 1.11,11 I ' M( It II tyr the vi Ito ;111,1 1, 1.0%, ttnd these thingN. that It , . MI WIW nntni lllig I iiI:III., It t:t Ittr the mail Nlnt telottl., to hee :(.1. 111111'1(.11; NI11,111'1(111 , 11olge-t titalt.D.4 licit hiv nut.-tery tell Imo not to, 111111 1N1.),P1.111111gir Nunll tether lIII‘e it • 11111p101,:1111,11 NI,IIII. 11:111,01,, :I Imrrel of !lour h,r 111 , 4 !Arndt Awn Ji reel .Iretttt for 11114 %Stk., tutu till • arts-le otttql.lell. Arid II; It, 'Al' (MI) I\lllit 141 rnll I i Iltientloll I. the operations of the Ittrill; on a few :t ter% 1 . 0,s of the articles that the tie ce-itiei , require Imo 111 I r 1 • I '11111d) the :MI in %%hid) hi+ S ictitalB are roe ked. Ihn ti hat in knots n av the ordinary iron tinned hot tote war., the gmerninent I•art placed a ;Int% cent+ I.r foollllll, %%111,11 It lulls . 2()0 ler cent higher here the snl I:unte. ;he .114,11,4511 e pi lece 111 1,o , t)41111 and Net% k are an fol- /.00./ett d S 1-.16.01 tI en I itire .1 kettle 1 6 I 10 6.10013 0.01 10100;1 ko the 0 I 20 A .31.301....ueeptut . 11, I 2 060 I jolllt .1:01 I 2 0 110 .. 'vol boll, r .t u 1 40 A 4. pound bre.. kettle f.d m,k • Ing pi ewe, e, 7 0 3 24 BEI tiicteen shill, rigs sterling anion nt to $3,87. Add to thin 10 per cent to cover importers colas, anti we have theme fix ingm in New York for $4,26. Can any one who umem pots or pans, and alto im not a nattitifactnrer of them, tell its how the tariff benefits him in this instance? It eiinply increases the price of these articles which he is compelled to buy from $4,26 to $8,04. And as it is with the pots on his stove, so is it with ah most any article in his house, from the sheet on his bed to the,fork on his table. It is out of his pocket that the tariff collies and into the pocket of the manu facturer who is "protected" from the competition of other countries, that it goes. There in a bill before Congress, which willl proxt...l become a law, to donate the public lambi In the States to the niggers. It in to be divided up into tracts of 40 acres each and given to the warfreed negroen. Each black head of a black family is thus to be favored over any poor white man who ever lived in thin, hie native land I What poor white man with a family of pret ty, intelligent and metal Caucasian chit. dren ever had Ruch a privilege granted to him? Verily, we have come upon the /t4tltLfl IZICM:=I Monstrous. / black man's millennintp,when he rises to such overfowering importance in every respect and care shown him, as to overshadow and totally obscure the white toiler who made the country, fought for and won its liberty, and who shed his blood as the price of every acre of land on this continent. We say the scion of every revolutionary patriot or of all the war-of-twelve 801. diers, has a first mortgage lien, in principle and right, upon every inch of this continent and is first entitled to a free home in it, before the Africans. Butalas, the scions of our revolu tionary and,-patriot, fathers, and their progeny are only poor while men I Forty acres for a live lazy nigger. Only Hix feet for a dead poor white! God help poor white men [Fort W•TC111111AN THE REASON WHY. NV N F.. ITE, The air in filled with flying snow, And deep the Hoke. Ile on tho ground The loud win+. Into mminlaine blur( The snow drifts, that are lying round The sky Is dull and cold and gray, The leafless trees aro clothed in white But atilt this dismal winter day Is glad , as slimmer, to my night. Oh, how I love thin winter lime I Aye, oit better than the Spring, Or 'miter than that ' , tinny CURIO W Mem warmer wind,. no winter bring Pear to me are it. Know white tiolcbt,. It, •now hank r, alrnont mottntalnltigli A n , l all ilot Meal:rte.n to rue yu , 1,1, Perpetual ry+l'll tell you why 'Twits In We winter first I knew One whom my mem', y turn. lo 01 - 1, lad on her a heeks the north it indr blowd And then grew balmy, warm and soft, The air I flouted round he] lips In winter's bleakest, eoldert days, Wnr soft nn sin that fan the ships lu reylonli Cahn and perfumed bays 4 nil /lII' her tote. were brighter, ton, 'I /inn iii) I hall' 141111, Tll , lllgll gnrintc on aert ilriirot of glow iti tormtztor t too , un rotirot Ltd %nil not the mummer H0111;+ of lord+, i ye-fretolfrinter-fillk, Rah like the music. of Itr r worth In open air or (Iv, oiling loin.. An,! s‘) it I. 161• Nlll3l r 11111 nulkl•r my heart lan• merrier, Awl freergag air t. *largo, 11 , 11 :111.11 1113 6,•al} 14 13111111 11101 her It6,lo„•' that thlog van 1,11-• impart, Anti 1110(111110 a i titer mar., to Me, lirogg het real pre.eng e• In got heart, 111-11 /111 11C metotort• ll.l•narwe', March, 21.1 187,1 About Society We nit. 191.1 (hat social matter. 111 Wai.l.,ligtoti city tire approaching a tie hi the com mingling of the black.-, and whitey of that ( .()1,11 I cacti a solution. SI 31\rn 2111(1 other while niggers are endeaioring to tilt' thing (o a con and we It . lllll that there are parties occupying high social posi thin aiming the Radicals w ho are willing nay, itiminc-i, to try the experiment. tihmtly, therefore, tie may expect to hear that the Movnil hartier between while and black Radicalism has been broken down, and that the glorious (') era of recogni/ed miscegenation has I•glin: • Well, if there be anvtlitng attractive about (him state of things, we should like to know whnt it is. Ira white wo nun can find any comfort in the socie ty of a mgger man, by all menus let her have it; or, if a white man can delight in the conversation or embraces of a nigger woman, for the sake of love and harmony don't deprive him of the pleasure. Further still, if white wo, men and black women can associate together, with mutual respect and ad miration, or if white men and blfick men can do the same thing, then let the parties that are willing to so assn elate have a surfeit of it. For our part, we shall not interpose a single objection to those whOlike it enjoying themselves in this way ; but Ire have the comfort of knowing, thank,.,God, that no decent man or woman will countenance or mingle in such a wretch. etl, demoralizing and damnable state of society. It may do for the Radical men and women at Washington, but no resident of that city—no man or wo, man who has seen the Capital in its glory—in the halcyon days of the Re public--when the great men of the land occupied our Council Chambers, and their noble wives" anddaughters graced the refined and high-bred socie ty of the national metropolis, will ever mingle or mix in the low-d Own, mon, grolized, disgusting and horrible social association of Washington at the pm tent day. Letwhite and black niggers go together, if they will, but the true, mire-blooded, proud eaticasian can never consent to lower his social stand ard to the level to which body and soul destroying Radicalism would reduce it. [Correspondence of the WATCZNAN.) From Harrisburg. . There being sixly-flve new members in the House, they are running a muck against each other to eon who can Introduce the largest number of hills. The private calender of Tuesday wan weighed down with over four hundred hills, some of them being of the most trivial nature. The Governor will have a gond old time IMexercising hie veto power. An attempt hie been made to pass a Joint resolution fixing the day for final adjournment on the 71st of March. It la very evident that no adjournmentven take place until aboatthe middle of April. The appropriation bill will probably come up in the Renate this week. It will be 4 frightfully scarified end thesurbear of euttigg down the eateries of members will be revifed•muoh to the tlingtoit of many of them. NO. 12 Some genius of liberty who hid no doubt nerved an apprenticeship to the white-washing buelnevs painted a picture of ({rant and his General., prominet among whom wits the mug of Pope, who la considered the MOW liar and smallest soldier in the army. "The picture was hung up in timl.lbrary for sale. It did not, Jiowever, lire the northern heart, and it was looked upon as a poor npeeulatlon. A happy thought struck the owner. Ite knew the waaknemn of Gov Cleary. He collected anoth er artist, and in the ,twinkiTrit'of an eye— it is changed. Pope's head WWI blotted out and Geary's subatituted. If the Joke had not leaked out, there is no doubt but that Cleary would have purchased the picture. A wag at toy elbow remarked that if the owner had sub stitoted the head of Henry for that of Grant, and Willed it Geary and his (itinerate,. be would have bought It anyhow. (Mary stoutly de• flies That he knew anything about tritraltara lon Pot pßople will think and enjoy a hearty I wont to ray a few Morin about some of our Democratic members. Among the energetic and fearless members on the floor of the House, Is the editor of the Ashland (Schuylkill county) Advorole, Jitmea Irg in Steel, esq the oilier day, 01i the Important measure pro viding for the better protection of miners, and the 14 Iltikthm of mines, he made an eloquent speech, for which et cry miner and mingp . ..' family, owe him n Iloop debt of gratitude 11a speoeh went far to carry the bill Mr Steele war I torn in Indian■ county. Pa , IU 14111,1..1 I 4 Ilia father, Ilan Steuart Steel, was a lawyer of prom inenee in ll'e•rtcrit Pennsylvania, and star consul to Dundee, under President Polk Mr Steele began life am printer iK the Mom, bun Erho otl b •e, edited and pliblkiled j,y riot. Neb.on Smith , r.; .nl lolinrborn Having fine taste for the '• art, preservative of al arts,' he adopted it as a profession 'l • he f4ll - to the• Jill r wale stamp him 61111fahly IP , a gne•eful 111141 ritellole w rty'r He Ira gen tlrinnn Itmert end even temper., ment, and a correct Mode....r turn of mind Ile r all the mar I. teems In leek.. 111111 1111 ne Ute 11.1 . 1e1 feel 1111111011(1M item her '1 the 1,0,.:1•11111, (Inv 11.0 ino , t and dr lug Samuel Li Liihly, lien Nlr I k tily I. no,‘ repriimentlng him dl+- Innt third term, and If tho toi.powor. of +I r tl , ll the ell) 1,1140 N their Intern,.. lbry mill I. 1111, 1./111 In /I.lrll-I.llrg fur yearn to 1,111 , t, izi•nitligininly 41,,011in , uI hl,. mail" hunt n giini•ra fat onto In 1110 noi,e, find IA a veltho..ilionee, whatever levislutlon hl.lll.lrivt need ,, , it liiernose .Plll. ~f the p.p.ii-tr 1111.1 M . fill. , iin tilt. Him,. Vc . it IQ II tint ynung him er form Pikm . and \Nn3lll . , .Rhi n o Piping 1:1,1 • 1111 . 10 I , llllll' r. In it, t,, ILP lii ili•ltle lin 14 Pier He I/11 4 11f1111. x yonslilernblv nrilinnn li•gLslation fit In, th•nt And lutx bt • II 1ti , 114 , 111.4•1ng In- i 111 4 .11 .11.1141 .Ir, terliii,e,tio., Ile. 14 :1111aY•1 I , he f.oteof it 110...011. W 1410111114 utter the In ter...t 415, eoltr4littelli., RN %Sell an the 1.11111,1 ..1 I li.6u W I In, 1., Ft radical flleniher from Ih. I ..111 II 1/1•411141, IS 4.llllllting very I , Plerely Itepliirlll,/(1 (81,1/e1"- I/0.. lle loin entered tino campaign early, anti alam4 a. qrong n 111:111 u. tho 11 1l hllhnw 4.1m11 metect, bat they hone no Aloe e of eleeHng smaller if:orcrnor kni Ketehrmh req., of Lezerne, who I. here on n tiort, to also nenmhdmr for !he 1.1111, nPo:e Ile to "report eti to be tery popular In lan party lien tlelfrltim the ernes de clerk of the Howie, 11. running It ❑ u trk with Auditor lien ere! MTG.:inn, on the military plug form, for gubernatorial honors I Geary assured na he mould not again be a ealftLisiate for Gover nor Ile aviras to the I'. S. Senatorship, or the Proahloney, and thinks that he la about sr fit for that.positton,aa Gen Grant, If not more tab • • • The Funding Bill The following im a terns recapitula tion of the Eutiding hell introduced in the Senate by Mr. Slit-man, and pass ed on 'Chummier land : let. Three series ofbonds, bearing respectively 4, 41 anti .5-per cent. inter est; running respectively forty, thirty, and twenty years, and redeemable re spectively utter twenty` fifteen and teu yearn. . . 2d. Interest and principal payable in coin, tither at home', or at London, Paris, Frankfort or !erlin. 41. A commis:4mi of one per cent. for expenses of negotiation. • 4th. The ensue a each aeries limited to $400,000,000, save the 4 per cents,. which are unlimited. sth. Sinking funds limited to the an. nual difference between the amount or interest on the public debt, and tie snot of $150,000,000 in gold, which. is appropriated tbr both purposes. Pith. flanks are required, after the let day of October, 1870, to replace their presefit securities with the new bonds in proportion of one-third .efeach series, and in case of failure to doso to surrender their circulation or deposit United Staten notes for its redemption and receive their bands. Circulation on these bonds is fl'htitedl to 110 oent. Free banking is also.authorizql en the basis of the 4 per sent. bone. the bonds to be purchased with Usiled States notes, and as *mount of seek' notes to be canceled equal in Amount to the bank ciroulatioe so leveed, —Trout ashore ere wetting onxtotta. ly for tho let of April, HAIIIRIBSOINI, March 16th, 1676,