- ! ! A , THE BEAVER RADICAL €,MITH CURTIS, Editor aBKAVER. PA.. FrMtos*Momlne, April 4th, tS73. 9ESSCRATIC Governor'Hendrif-ks, of Indiana, recently ivi si ted Washington to con sult with,leading and Rep resentatives, of both Democratic and Liberal Republican organiza tions, aseto what the future course of their trespeetive parties -should be. It i« understood that the -dis tinguished advised a method many. His mission to the lost tribes .was one of peace:and reconciliation. 'He went to ‘Wash ington to preach a new dispensation and his words were like oil and his speech melifluOtts. -Having hereto fore been conservative Bourbon Dem ocrat and looked askance on his Lib eral Republican allies, his sudden change of countenance and dissolu tion of old antipathies are psycholo gical phenomenfiiand the new depar ture which he represents, indicates that his conversion means business. He proposes to abandon the old Democratic organisation in name and in deed, to organize a new ..party which shall have for its plat form such conservative and com promising declaration of. principles as will attract to its support all classes who are opposed to the dom inant party,* and hopefully predicts that by this coarse the new party would gain an easy victory in the next congressional contest., and by eighteen hundred and seventy-six, could walk over the Republican : party into the white House. The •shades of the position are so arrang ed as to create a startling effect, ;*nd we are not surprised to learn Mr. George W. Frywill pl ease sincere thanks for the lime and alien. 7 giyen me. in showing and etpiai* intricate workings of the May the Rochester Tumbler Works T' long and prosper! , IVfi Just here allow me to ask a quests Why do notour landed lords hold oun ’ ducementsand give encour« K eme n . buy and Bui&, and help improve ° towns. Our advantages are just as J? here as they can get at Pittsburgh Th the material and the taxes are higher * 5 the danger of destruction by firem k greater than here, and it is a patent 2 that mechanics will not work as steady a city, when they have everything to« tract their attention and money »e *l, Will in the country. But it appears Z those that have land must have th e , side cent before they will sell to a co m ?' ny, because they think the companyT. rich and can stand it Better were it d j they give a few acres of i aD(l I on. It certainly Would enhance the value of the other properly of the giver and besides it would be a blessing and benedt to the community at large- f or the tone of society of a command 0 { honest, industrious mechanics will co m pare quite favorably with a like numb« of purse-proud bigoted nabobs. Industry, March 29, 1873, Editor Beaver Radical ; The bounty tax, that hydra beaded monster that so unceremoniously, a i meJ his dirty assiduities at the pocket, , was supposed to have been slain years ago; but such is not the case, for here i® in dustry township we find it like ths l e i gendary Wandering Jew, jogging aim lessly along, like the never to be Satiated horss leech, crying Give! give!! It may seem strange to loyal men that after a laspe of eight years since the rebellion was crushed out, the bounty tax of Indus try township remains unpaid, yet it is so; it is in fact the Rip Van Winkle of the present age, at first it stalked along in the vigor of its manhood and ran well for a season, when it fell into a profound slumberfromjwhich it has lately awoke and is now out on the rampage cutting right and left with all the energy of despair; nor is to be wondered at, when we lake into consideration that there is a certain peculiar set of men living up “Goose Hollow” who are determined not to live unto themselves alone, and expect to ren der the country God service by voting for Gen. Jackson at the spring election. , Now honestly what has caused this delay in paying off those bonds, why all this equivocation, why this dallying with other peoples’ interests? I know of no answer unless it is that they are wailing for a few more Woolslairs to move into the township that they may fleece them out of another extra sixty odd dollars or so in the shape of bounty tax. This equivocation and dallying of theirs is going to cost the township quite a little fortune in the shape of costs, expenses, &c., of which those careful engineers will themselves have to bear part of the bur den, but then for the sake of vengence, i suppose that they will cheerfully bend their shoulders to the yoke, taking for their motto Longfollow’s aphorism “suf fer .and be strong.” From the bands of the old iron clad democracy the bounty mat ter has got into the clutches of what has been lately known as the Lib-dem. party, that party which had for its purpose, os tensibly, the liberal reformation of the political state of the country, but really “anything to beat Grant.” They were born crying reform,: they live crying re form and they will die crying reform, without accomplishing so much as a tithe of their avowed purpose. Such reforma tion as theirs, is about like the dog bay ing at the moon; it began in moonshine and it will culminate in moonshine. Xb' 9 appears to be an age of reform, the cries are, reform the ballot, reform the rights of suffrage and reform the assessment and the collection of taxes. “How well it Is the eunand moos Arc placed so very high. That so presuming man can reach And pluck them from the sky, If ’twere not so 1 do believe That some reforming ass. Would soon attempt to take them down To light the world with gas.” One part of the reform movement i fl this place was to tax the soldiers to help to pay off the bounty; consistency is said to be a jewel, but the jewel didn’t bappea to come this way ; the very idea of taxing the soldiers to pay off the bounty is P r ®‘ pnsterous, the better men of the township scouted it, they scorned the and the tide of public indignation set in such to tide against it that the reformers at fell constrained to get together and exon erate the soldiers from the payment o the tax, but taking the will for the dee . we conclude that they ate no more so t diets’ friends now than they were before —what a man does under protest, he afterward protest that he didn't do, an lQ their every act these liberal reformers ishow their cloven foot, in all their iotri goes the old rebellions element can e seen 1 cropping out, which has to say * least, three shades of copper in it; s> nC ® they icannot rule in high places, t ruin in low ones, and are like an army of Jack FallstafFs, having a bann ® upon which, is inscribed by the ham time, this motto; “Maximum in i „ SOLDIEK mum.” i Clioxiax