The Democratic Watchman. BY P. GRAY REEK JOE W. FUREY, ABSOCIITI EDITOR Termi, $2 per Annum, In Advance BELLEFONTE, PA Friday Morning, May 26, (VI The Democratic State Convention. Gen. McCandless and Captain Cooper Nominated. The late hour at which we received the proceedings of the Democratic State Convention precludes their inser tion in our columns this week, and we have only room to give the general re. stilt. And in consequence of the fact that we have not been well this week and only able to write but a very lit tle, we adopt the comments of the Titteburg Poll upon our platform and nominees Bit most expressive of our own views and fe,eling. The Nat says: Two political parties of Pennsylva nia are now fairly in the field. To day we present to our readers the democrat ic ticket for the State of Pennsylvania, and the platform of the principles which is to be its rule of action. They will both command the admiration and cordial support of every Democratic voter in the StNte, and enlist under their standard, thousands of Republi cans ivho see no hope fur peace or re duced and equitable taxation ostler the extravagant rule of the madened rad ical leaders, who have only used their high positions * of honor and trust to rob the people of their rights and op press them with be lensome taxation. With the ticket and the platform herewith presei;ted the Democracy will march to victory, and decide beyond all peradventure the Presidential cam paign of 1872. The Democracy of this state have appealed not to tnen's pas dons, but to their sober judgment, in this the hour of the country's trial and great peril. On the one side are the Radical leaders, maddened with power and crazed with the insane ambition that reaches after the glare and tinsel of monarchy, bending every nerve to centralize the government and the peo ple to their grinding moneyed military despot ors the other in the Democ racy arrayed under the banner of peace and proveroue unity, with a conetitn- Vonal free government, burdens fist rib uted equitably, and the coy vreigtity of the people and the State, for their motto. We do not doubt the final recoil of the eiSUO. The American people Were born and bred to love the free Inftlte tepe, of the imaitinotble government beqw•ittb.l thou) by their fathers, and though they have been rn lslid by the chicanery of canting demagogneB, they Will no more gurrender their birthright, secured and ,atietifled by their revolm tionary H nccat,rs, than the) will tri pie the their father, tileler foot, end eruct the I'ol 11c upon the .hattere4i altar Hay.. of pure and true ('h riNtiamty The Deritocrain ninLe no party lip peal in the ordinary acceptation o 4 the tern). It is but the People inking of one another whether they will toibtnit to see a tree government, m which er ery man IR a sovereign, and not coin pelled to bow the knee and beg favor,, of any tvlielineil beneath the abaftr log tide of deppotietn, or whether a ith the potent wand of the great magician, Liberty, anti to the tarbid wa tees, and gelid them howling back to the yawning hell oh despotic corruption from whence they is.tied to tkapinl the fairest land and de.,troy the heat political I,2,mittiii of government the nun ever rime or met upon more the drawn orrime. The people can be trusted with this matter, and they will mould things of ter their own fashioning. Now that they have been aroused to a sense of the great danger that threatens tutiunal hberrty, by seeing the Presi dint clothed with a power more abso lute than that exercised by the Czar of and under which ire can drag citizens from their domicils and have them shot upon the finding of drum head court marnale, with the gates of the Temple of Justice double locked against their appeals, they will not be slow to hurl from power, the banded . , traitors who rule the Radical party and mould the acts of the administration. WO invite a comparison between the avowed principles of the two parties which now claim the suffrages of the people. The Radical platform is full of evasion and tire galvanized promises which have been so often shamelessly broken by the very men who now ask to be continued in power. The Demo cratic platform is bold and outspoke‘i,, denouncing all attempts at usurpation,l* proclaiming for the rights of the peo ple as guaranteed by the Constitution, opposing public robbery, peculation and toeless extravagance, and demand ing that the people shall be relieved of the burden of unjust and uniqus.l tax at*in which is now eating o up their substance. Two more unexceptionable men, or men better fitted for the positions for which they aro nominated, than Gener al Mces,,NDLzsa and Captain Coornit could not be found in the State of Penn sylvania. With General hicCalintEms for Auditor General,and Captain Coot-- for,Surveyor General, there is every assurance tlutt the Democratic banner Will be borne to a triumphant victory in October next. They are inch of pure and unexceptionable records, irreproach able public and private characters, and are known throughout the length and breadth of'. the State. The lateness of the hour at which we write, and lack of -space, forbid a more extended per sonal notice of our candidates in this issue. Suffice it to say that no better selections coald have boon made, which is no disparagement of the other h igh toned and worthy gentlemen Who were named in connection with these offices, and who fully acquiesce in the choice of the Convention, and will land all their powerful influence to insure the election of the ticket and the triumph of Democratic principles in the glorious old Commonwealth of Pennsylvania The platform of principles adopted by the Convention fully express, the views of the Democracy of the State, and set at rest the absurh talshoods set afloat by Senator Morton and the Rad ical leaders. They challenge alike the re.pect and criticism of men of both parties, who are disposed to act upon the suggestions of reason and be guid ed by sober judgment. While both time and space, forW,a incite extended commentary this morning, they meet with our hearty and unqualified ap proval, and will receive our undivided support. The Convention had a grave work before it—a work fraught with more than ordinary political consequences, and it has discharged it nobly, bravely and satisfactorily. It now remains for the people to put their shoulder to the wheel—turn the corrupt magnates of the Radical party out of power in the State of Pennsylvania, and put her foremost in the column that will march to the political redemption of the whole country in 1872. Brown In Philadelphia The followsng slap at our thattn gusehed cotensporary of the ItepubSi ran, will be Sound in the Tyrone Her afs/ this week : As a sincere admirer of consist ency, we will not be outdone. In this respect the Bellefonte Watchman, in its persistent deification of Southern maranders, Southern assassins, South ern negro whippers—and Southern and Northern devilment generall),has long challenged the admiration of all its readers. •I'he Watchnian, we fear, is to be outdone. A oath in Bellefonte --an editor titan--a black Republican Bellefonte Republican man—who has long nn solitude reverenced the bola Wurr•horrla 111/111, allowing his adnii ra Lion to gnaw like a damask worm On hi crimson cheek—has just now de cider/ to step iii and compete with the Furious hero of the Watchman. Th is man was in Philadelphia recently. He went down to sea Cameron, Geary, fom Scott and Wanamitker & Brown. Ile saw the latter. Which has oath. trig to do with the remark we wish to make. The colored boys in Philadel phia were celebrating something Or other the day our friend Brown wash/. to Wanamaker & It. mos.erefl and 'marched. Had fife and drum arid carried,gerierally, their arms at will. They occupied the middle of the street. Brown discovered the move went and his oh/ martial enthusiasm revived It revived to the extent of oinking his face as red as'two beets. Ile stood nervously contemplating the marching boys--the music marshalling all his well known patriotism. llces• sionally he nodded to some courteous file closer, with little returning reemg lotion. As the column had nearly tiled the Oil )1311/1 , ) nisi,. liff)Vl I/ ( . 01/14) not resist. Ile struggled with himself and wrestled vigorously with a friend ly lamp poet. The sight of General Cameron upon the steps of a neighbor. rag hotel decided Brown. Just as the last broken file came up, assuming the facial heroic, Brown fell into line and proceeded up Chestnut street, lock step with the dee'pest hued 15th Amendment in line. Brown's last and ible words to a friend who asked him it that was his regiment, were 'Go to sir,' arid reducing the regula tion distance or 15 inches from breast to hack, to about Ilve, the infatuated Brown turned a corner and was lost to view. • —The civil war in France is about over, Marshal McMattom has succeed ed in capturing Paris from the COM tuttne,and this breaks their power. Marshal has entered and established : his headquarters in the city, and we may now soon expect to bear of some new phase in French politico. Of one thing we are glad, and that is that that class of revolutionists of whom Itocueroar ia the head has been over thrown and forced to submit to a iib. erty that is not altogether license. We believe that the best thing (or France now is &return to the Empire. The fear. ful struggle that is just closing proves that there are too manyAkabranela • among her republican leaders to per mit her existence as a peaceful iepub lie. The eighteen years under Nero. LION isa bright contrast to the fearful folly of the last few months under red republicanism. The Emperor demon strated his ability and power to keep the raging elements of French society ivithin bounds. Since his' overthrow, there has been nothing but horror. NVe are in favor of liberty, but what is liberty without order? [Fel the W AMIN 4:4 Educational Items from Clinton. Mitssra. Editoroqf the IVidchmoin: We have a normal institute is ses sion at Saloon under the superinten dence of Mr. Rowe, ro.Superintendent, which is doing a good work for the e/Luse of education. Mr. Rowe is a live man, and wants live teachers to 1.-ke charge of the school, and if he does not succeed in secnring the best corps of educators ever engaged is Clinton, it will not be for lack of effort on his part. During the exercise., the other day, Mr. M., One 'of the teachers attending the institute, Intl given loin a fable of the peacock and eaule• With a request to write a moral iv pea cock was represented as being 14'010 of his fine leathers ; although he could never raise above the lowly earth, while the eagle, though dressed so plainly, could .1.0 aloft in the highest heavens. Mr. M. moralized thusly : that fine clothes and high born .titles were no sign of superiority or excellence ; that the only things of real value were character and e d ucation ; and that it were better for a man, though he were born without a shirt on his bark, than to have nothing but fine apparel to rely on. At this stage of the moral Mr.M. was surprised to see the lady students trying to swallow their linnaerchlets and he became somewhat demoralized. One of the ladies Judge( that he bad never been around at one of those shirtless performances. This reminds rite of an incident which happened sonic years ago in Beech Creek Township. There was an educational meeting held at one of the school houses for the purpose of raising money to purchase maps and other necessary articles for the school. Mr. Berry the then Co. Superintendent, was there, and made a strong appeal to pockets of the audience ; hut, much to the chagrin of the teacher ofiwsaid school, the money did not come in as liberally as he desired. Ile determined to make an effort himself, and having noticed that the ladies had been neg lected in the first effort, directed his appeal mainly to theni. Ile sail he was sorry the ladies had been slighted; that they were always ahead in every good work ; arid lie,felt certain if he could only induce theta to open their hherahriem to, night he could get any thing he named. The last remark brought the house, down, and also the money ; but whether the ladies opened them or\mt, I have never been inform ed. • FELIX. Ameiste Judge Me. EDITOR .—The time fs drawing near, when according to the usages and and customs of the D emocra t ic p ar ty, candidates will be nominated to fill the varioue offices this coming campaign Among others, we will have to elect associate judges. Of these the south• ern part of the county is entitled to one, and we cannot find a better or more fit man than the honorable judge flosterman,ot Potter township. Ile is a man of sound judgment and of large experience, and a life long Democrat. We hope the people of Centre county will renominate him, and our bench will be honored like it has been the past five years. The Umpire's Decision POTT3YILIAI, May 17.-9'he Umpire, Judge Elwell,• rendered the following decision in regard to the question of wages between the Anthracite Board of Trade, and the ?diners' and Laborers' Benevolent association to day : The Umpire mutually chosen by the Anthracite Board of Trade of one part and the Miners' Benevolent Assotia• Lion of the other part to decide the question of wages now' at* issue before I them, having received and fully con sidered the written propositions and ar gument of the parties, has decided and established the basis and rate of wages below mentioned, Rein his judg. ment, are just both to the operators and men in their employ, viz; Basis • 2,75 at Port Carbon ; miners by day's work, $l3 per week ; inside laborers, $ll per week ; outside laborers, $lO . per week. Contract work to be reduc ed ten per cent. upon the prices paid under the $3 basis of 1869. Wo agree to be advanced one cent for every three cents advanced on the/ price of coal at Port Carbon, above s2,7s'per ton, and to decline at the same rate when c9al is below that rice down to $2,25 per ton. The articles of a,greement,'under which the submission was made, to• gether with the 4pr/wants mut btato• meats of parties laid before me, are bete attached. (Signed) Wit.hism EtwELL, Umpire. Organize for Patriot Business The party in power at Washington has for several years, been steadily feeling and working its way toward a Government of the bayonet rather than the ballot. The infarpous Ku Klux bill is but a pretext whereby the Com mander in-chiel of the army can con trol every Southern State—and every State where there can be manufactured a sufficient excuse to justify the Presi dent in ordering out the troops. That bill gives the President the power, through the army, to take possession of every ballot box in every Democratic precinct—to arrest every one who shall dare vote against any man, candidate or measure not indorsed by the Presi dent, and to arrest for punishment any and every man who might dare inter fere or raise a voice against such high handed outrage upon liberty. t• The only remedy for this is in tirke, thorough organization of the people i • especially of the young, determine d element which has this matter to set tle very speedily or consent to spend their lives in servitude for the benefit of monopolies and an aristocracy which iS eating its way through the ermine, the flag of the, coetry, into the pock ets 01 ihe peoplem•aye, even to the womb of time to stamp those yet Un• born I :specially should the patriotic, State liberty defending young men of the youth and West perfect an orgtkpization whereby they can think, speak, vote and if ever comes the time alien their courage and patriot:sin shall be demanded—march and light together, if needs he, for a restoration of the rights so long withheld, and which, but for organization and unity of action on their part, never will be again to them restored. Many years ago, the patriots of Scotland to defend their homes were called upon to organize asainst the tax collectors, provost-marshals, Aries and informers of the Queen of Eng land. When these minions of tyranny made their way into Scotland to en force the demands of England, they fell asleep in strange places and strang ly disappeared from view like those mysteriously charmed at the beauties of the If ighlanfl scenery through which they were marching to oppress the peo ple I Some of them were suddenly seized with the desire to return to the {rower and protection of the Queen,and left Scotland with terrible stories of Ku Klux and clannish outrages. When they returned to their mistress, the Queen, she Sent for the Duke of Argyle who, in response to her sum mons, made haste to the palace. ush ered into her august presence ho stood 'like a man havrrig certain rights and duties, not flinched a particle under the gaze of royalty backed by fearful pow er. Said the Queen to the Duke : 'I understand, my Lord, from re ports and living witnesses, that one of my provost marshals has been mur dered in Edinburg.' 'Alas. your majesty, the report is but too true—a provost marshal in your majesty's service was killed in Edinburg' 'But, my Lord, another of my pro marshals was. killed near (Has gow ' 'VCR, your majesty, one of your ma jesty's provost marshals was killed, as learn, near (Ilasgow.' 'Several other of my officers have beer] killed in various parts of Scot. land ' 'Stull your majesty, I unlerHtand to be the (-nee.' , Otherm have been driven by your countrymen back in disgrace when Bent to do my hid lint!' 'Very likely our noljesty, for the eloels of Scotland are n peculiar peo ple.' 'My Lord tell me when this work is to cease 'Whenever your majesty ceases to oppress the people.' Then spake the Queen with great ve hemence : 'By Hod, I•will send my troope iuto Scotland and make of the Highlands an hunting ground!' 'Your majesty does us too much honor. But if your majesty will only give us proper notice we will have our honoils ready for your troops I' Scotland may thank the Duke of Argyle and his organised Highland fol wowers for the independence of Scot land.— Pomeroy's Democrat, Wit AT A REPVIII-IcAN nob SAYS Al4Olll. Ku KLUX OUTRAGER. —.Judge Plantz, whopresided over the court at Pensacola, Florida, is a Republican— a eon of Mr. Plants late Republican Representative from Ohio. In hie charge to the grand jury, only three weeks ago, Judge Plants need the rot lowing Hignitioant language. Being an honest man and honest judge, he tells the truth: "It halt been said that the South iv disorder ly, and that the lives of men who avow an ad herence to one of the enntending political parties of the eountry.are uneefo here. tam fIoPPY to be able tvi declare htue.srm thus pub. Hoy ant alto:daily, that have'no occasion to call the attention of the grand Jury of We country to any special violation of law or or for, and to hear my official testimony to the peace and delcortim which prevail throughout the limits of the iiiihunction of litla coat" POTT I A Neottoits Drum Our.—The Rich. mood correepoodeut of the Norfolk Journal says :—"Our lloard of lletdth makes weekly mortuary reports, and these reports always tell the same mad tale—that the negroes are dying here at a rate that must eventually end in their total destruction. Our white pol, uhttion, compared with our colored, in in the ratio of 100 to seventy-five, anal yet in the matter of mortality the ratio ix toot.. than reversed. Take the flg• ures of last week, The total number of Persons who died here in that period was thirt,y•fl'vei of these seven only were whites, and twenty-eight were, colored—four negroes to one white, This, of course, is not usual, at least not in so great it degree; but it is a fact that thoughAlte negroes are in the minority herd, tht.S , steadily furnish, week oiler week, a majority of the deaths." Fudge. Andrew Johnson, the ssan of great talk and little deeds, of grand opportu nities and utterly despicable aohiev ments, has been in Nashville, attend ing an 'Agricultural and Mechanical Exposition'— An exhibition of huge beets, not one of them a bigger beat 'than himself; of worsted quilts, not one of them worse wprated than him self; and of donkey% whose literal ears dwindle into insignificance beside his figurative ones. While lounging around among squashes and small po tatoes, hinny., patent churns, Duram pigs and Berkshire calves, he was in terviewed by a number of strolling vagabonds, known as Cincinnati "spe cial correspondents," and freely ex pressed the opinion that the Ulyssi anic administration is the stupidest and weakest we ever had. A. J., remem ber your own. Think of the ten thou sand chances Pot' immortality you threw away, when in '65 you were ab solute monarch of all you surveyed, when the 'president' and the 'govern ment' were synonymous terms, and when the whole country, looked' to you for deliverance, restoration and peace. Think of the vast results for, good you could have accomplished by one bold net, but didn't. Remeinbcr that Uw fate of the Republic was ui your hands; and that you failed to die charge your duty. When you could and should have proclaimed the war at an end, and every State and citizen at once entitled to all wonted privileg es and immunities; you stooped to gratify your petty private madignities, by issuing half-way proclamations of amnesty, instituting a vile system of pardon-brokerage and expurgatory swearing, overturning the State gov• ernments framed by the people, and establishing your own infamous 'pro visional' abortions in their stead. Re member 1 1 that while consyjratora, ern': holdened and encouraged by your in ertness, banded together beneath the very dome/of the Capitol, ruthle s ssly tore to fragments the Constitution which you had sworn to 'support and defend,' and again rent asunder the Union which you had sworn to main tain, you, with the whole Army and Navy at your command, entirely sub seryient to your will, dared not dis perse the Congressional outlaws. When you should have scattered them with the bayonet, anti hung their ferocious leaders to the lamp-posts of the Capi tol—When you should have seen the Union restored, in deed and in truth, and every State fairly and fully repre sented—And when the great earnest, liberty-loving millions of the people, were longing to rally around you, and aid you in crushing out the fiend-in spired Jacobin conakiracy, and over throwing the accurde:Cabal of law grinding Usurpers you contented yourself with dawdling, wind baggy protests, speeches, and veto-messages --idle, nincompoopish attempts to quench hell with a syringe-full of sweetened butter-milk. Co home, An dy, and hush I You were made for a tailor, the ninth part of a man I—Let. inglon (Mo.) Caucasian. Morton ---Cameron. Although Mr Cameron is o,airman of the Committee on Foreign Relations in the Senate, to which the treaty with England will have to be eubmitted,and in that capacity ought to be the organ of communication in presenting and defending it, he ham yielded that duty. from necessity, to Mr Morton. In plain terms, he conleases, what every. body knew, his utter incompetency for I the position which he pretends to oc cupy. This exhibition in presence of the British Commissioners, if we have not lost all sense of self-respect, is hu miliating to the national character. I Here is a ratan who not only enjoys no I part ofthe public confidence—not even on the Republican side—but who is wholly destitute of fitness, thrust into a conspicious and most iin porton t place, merely to gratify the President and to punish aSenator, who,whatever may be his faults in other respects, possesses the moat eminent qualifica tions. And his ignorance is so marked, that be is incapable or explaining a treaty to the Senate, after receiving this instructions of hie employers. Such is the pass to which Radical lam has brought us. And Morton, though a stump declaimer arid artful demagogue, has no it spiration towards forrivri Iktniro, as 11,1111 colic] (lot vely shown in the :i l l y ' ) Domingo debate, when Mr. Schurz. turned 4,1 i ito.tetl and iwiiire.l him, it, and satisfaction of ii, Ile Kati the quality of al uropriating other men's ideas, an I, tieing without ecru pie, lie never li,sitated to employ this useful lacultj at the expense of friend or opponent. Consequently, lie will say whatever lie may he told about the treaty and iv in a frame of mind b ) ad, OCOIL R,1L1613 rather than 'Ameri, can interests. The Presidapt ought to have invited Chandler to complete the collection of ornamental arivieera. Think of Simon Comeron counselling on a great international treaty, and conspirator Morton interpreting inter, national law I—American Volunteer. --Genernl Fitz John Porter'a ease was considered at the last meeting of the Filth Army Corps society, anti the following resolution wait adopted, with but one dissenting vote : Resolved, Thal In view of the Important orb deuce bearing on the coon of General kilts John Porter, tlereb , petl tlto close of the war, whielt toottllvitis ho tr, I nlon always enter. Wined by the OUAOOrM and aoltatera who nerved triter Olga, n respeettol petition be presented to the Ptosident of the linlted States, In the nettle ~t •be I',ltlt army Corps, requesting him le I. I Olt ClOlO of our commander. Fitz John PUI ter, in order that Justioe may ho done him. —The Boston '/ I ranacript says: 'Boston girls, as ft rule, are the most intellectual, New York girls the most stylish, Brooklyn girls the most 'flirts. tions, Philadelphia girls thif most la- Baliimore girls the prettiest, and Chicago girls the meet extrava gant. The New Fish Law. The following is a synopsis of the new fish •bill' passed by the legisla ture : It provides, that no salmo n or black bass or any newly introduc e d food &has shall be taken in the has. quehanna *mid Delaware and their tributaries, including the Schuylkill, by any devices whatever until the first of August, 1873; and when accidental. iy caught they must be returned to the water. The possession of these fish by any person during this period will be prooof violation of the law, and he Shan be fined by any justice of the peace five dollars for each fish so found in his possession and in default of, p ay . went to be imprisoned. Fish comm is . sioners and the owners of private ponds can catch and transport these fish for planting and propagating purposes at any time. The fish commonly known as the Susquehanna salmon (stigost e . dion Amereanue) cannot be ,taken bo twaen the first of Ediruary and the first of June, under the same penally. In all eases of thus planting the fishe s public notice must be given of the date of introduction into the streams, ile• scribing plainly the species and a flea coMmiasioner of the state, or a judge of the courts of the county must approve of the same. Trespassers upon lands owned or oc• copied by another, for the purpose of ! shooting, hunting or fishing alter pub. lie notice has been given in a newspa per of the county, and in April and May of each year by sign boards at least ono foot square, put up in too conspicuous places on the pretiii4 iN , signed by the owner or occupant, will be liable to the same penalties. Do :nestle aquatic fowls trespassing upon private fish ponds may he killed by the owners or occupants of the ponds. There i 8 n penalty of $.lOO Mr putting into any stream, lake or pond, stocked with speckled trout or black ban s , any deleterious substance or any medica ted bait with the intent to inquire or capture fish "or placing in any fresh water pond or stream, stocked with brook trout, any pike, pickerel, black bass, rock bass or other piscivormi s fish (salmitin excepted), without the consent of the owner or owners of said land upon which such ponds or stream is situated." Trout can be taken only with hook and line during the mouths of April, May, June, July and the itt , l fifteen days in August. In none of the streams embriced within this act where migratory fishes now have ac eess can any be taken by fish baskets, eel wires, kiddels, brush or facine nets, "or any permanently set means." I m violation of this provision the slientr of the proper county must take cog. nizatace under a heavy penalty. This law is not to interiors with any other to protect the fish against bad keta and other contrivances and 0, 1 repeals such laws are inconsistent with its provisions. —Radicalism means one thing in one State and presents a far ditlerent face in another. While power,place and 'plunder are the real life, aim and per. pose of the organization nil over the 11 ion, the agencies employed to reach these ends are various. The ;Radicals have numerous stops on their political organ. In Pennsylvania they are for protection, a high taritl, the continua lion of the Income tax, perpetual dis franchisement of large masses of the Southern people, and the collection of a vast revenue, to be expended by the government in the purchase of foreign territory and subsidizing men iu all parts of the country, for political pur poses, This Is the Radical platiorni in Pennsylvania—the platrorm on which the trecent State Convention placed General Grant for renomination. But the Radicals of Kentucky used a different stop at their State Con verioon, held on Thursday last. The sixth re+ elution, of the series adopted on that occasion,,,favors complete aultieety,and desires the restoration of friendly relit lions with the Southern States. The eight resolution favors economy in the government, and raising only enough revenue to defray the expenses of the- Administration, and to gradually ex. tingundi the debt. Tlie ninth recolu lion favors a further reduction of the tariff and internal revenue,and opposes direct taxes. In thin manlier the Rail!• elide of Pennsylvania and Kentucky differ upon paper. Rut when called upon to act, when entrusted with port er, they are all alike. They substitnie the bayonet for the ballot; filch (non the people f heir !none ) in the shape - 1 high tares, and dent equal right ti the what , inert of this country. This t' what , Radicalism meant. in Ken lucky as well as iti Pennisyltania, when put in practice. Resolutions are niere blinds to client the multitude The itlay'e the ihitec IVlteroln to catch the Collllelolll.o of the I , ttef --1 z.- • —The New York Tribune, ot iu no mistakable agony, and significantly asks, 'Can the Republicane disband''' Thu developments of the past iew months lnrntnk the beet answer to this inquiry, tier on ever) hand are prooli of the speedy and CCflaili dissolution of the Radical party. The beligerent Made of its various factione hue been felt everywhere, paralyizing the efforts of leaders, and spreading dismay and discontent, as the voice and cry of the people come up demanding a change. , l'he San Domingo job, the harsh depo sition of Senator Sumner, the New Hampshire revolt, have all conspired to produce disintegation. And its if to complete the wreck, the famous kit - Klux bill, the invasion or the mast sa cred,and nanslit lona! righ ail the Stales, and the agegeiision of ilia ha beas (wpm?, North ti'ti well at South, and that, too, in a lime of peace, have been recently superadded. No man of ordinary perception and judgment can fail to see that the rule of existing Radicalism draws near to its end,aud that, had Mr. Lincoln ilv ed to the present time, with his more moderate and more judicious couns v is, lie would have parhaeul a very (Idler eat. course of policy.-- Err/lunge,
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