BILLEFONTE REPUBLICAN. Ws W. BROWN,: HUTCHISON,. 'erms, $2 per Anntim, in Advance. BELLEFONTE, PA - : - ...ednesday Morning, March 3, . '69. How Careless. The Tratohn_tan, and other semi-reb- el sheets,'have a great deal to Ley about the extravagance of the Repub lican party; but they are very careful not to expose their own rottenness, ex travagance and corruption. They re fuse to much there:,ison why it costs so much mure Them to rule in this county; o an it did under Republican . 1416 -.-tow, the - county tax is 7i mills • to the dollar; under Republican rule - 2i `Mills. Why is this ? MEEK is a pretty bird to talk of the extravagance .. of any partyain't 910 W ? Tin fact is, the Democratic CommisPjioners do not attend to anythimi: 'much, unless it is tosee that MIZEK gets his pay for Co. printing. s .`.te. Look at the dilapida ted.'coption of the Court House. No oar? 'taken of it at all. It looks as tho' it hid been built thirty years ago.— Everybody is talking about it. Bad,- as the outside is, the inside is worse.— The nice iron fence that encloses the yard, and which was put there at a handsome expense to the tax payers of the Co.; under the pretext of being an ornament to the town, is now not only a disgrace to the town, but to the en tire county, and shows how negligent public.servants may becoine, in looking after public property. They do not, however, neglect their own interests. No,' no—not they. Ev ery dollar that can be made ; every penny that can be filched from the pub ho':clib, is sun* sltecl down and their attention immediately turned to the next little, speculation; but never once to reparing the 'Court House, -or the fence which surrounds it. If the tax payers are 'satis ed with this 'kind of mtarigement, we do not know as we need complain much ; but we want MEEk and.his Court House. clique to. hold their Silly tongues, stop lying about thC iteimblican party, 'and set them selves earnestly to work to correct their •own 'Randers, to explain their own mis-management, their own black and 'damning record in the last twelve years, and especially since the com mencement of the slave-holders rebell ion. . Crawford Couaty. System. A few months ago the.Editox6of the Centre Hall Report& eoniuveneed agi tating and urgingihouiitntion of the Crawford County System upon .tte Deinocrittie party of this county. He published, we think, two artieles,iiret -tyrittrong, and well written, in 'favor of this measure, paid a visit to Belle fonte returned home and from...that day to the present, we have heard :nothing more from the Reporter on the Crawford. County System. What the Court House - clique threatened to . de he -did not stop agitating this wholesome change, has not yet transpired; but one thing' is ...pretty certain, that the clique did command him to "dry up" on this subject, and his silence.shows that he "dry'd up," caved, wilted, and has determined to take care of hireSelf,no matter what becomes of the Penns valley Democracy. Kurtz wants of -ftea. He knowsithat the power of the clique is supreme in this direction.— . The Democrats in the Valley do well enough to vote the ticket at the gen eral election; but they are of little use in making nominations. Kurtz knows this; and knows his rights, and the rights of his people, but knowing them, he is too cowardly to maintain them: He dare not incur the dis pleasure of the Bellefonte ring. We care very little what Kurtz may do in the matter, but it makes us feel sorry to see our Democratic friends in Penns Valley cheated, bamboozled and constantly set aside and trampel ed upon by men who profess friend ship, and profess it only to deceive. Democrats of Pennsvalley, awake ! arouse to your true interests ! Fred arick, assert your rights---your inde. .pendence. Stand up like a man. Let Ns hear from you often on the Craw ford County System. No, you . dare not. THE Centre Hall Reporter,last week, contained an article in regard to *hat he is pleased to ea!l the extravagance of the Republican party, and says that ! Mons Tye:a:ram, a stiff Centre touni ty Badfeal l thinks that the peo ple shoulehold indignation meet ' KoltrA has forgotten,it seems, that the Ifeinci s or s atic },`arty of Penn : - vivailia, by its r o un d eri "g, stealing, and unparalleled eitriyagaltoe, im posed - upon the tax payers of the State, a debt of forty-one millions of ,dollars. This is a fact that he care fully withholds.from his readers, and seeks to draw the wool over their eyes by slandering the Republican paity, .and publishing unblushing falsehoods Imannfactured out of the whole cloth, i4pon such men as Mr. THOMPSON.— :Mr. R,llwrz closes up his heavy effort yin the following classic language ; "rif the prospect of going to hell ,does not ch - E ck the wickedness of these .men, ':much less will indignation meet tams. Vile only indignation meeting .Ghat will effectually stop this plunder-- t!g, will be by MOSE THOMPSON and bis:politieai friends voting the Demo :eratte NOW, we would inform Mr. KURTZ, that we :are not authorized to speak for Mr. ThomPsoN, but this much we will venture to say, that " Mom?. TnoikrPsorz" and his politicalVriends" would sooner go to h-1 than—do any such thing—vote the Democratic ticket Eli ? The Price of Grain. We do not intend, as a general thing, to meddle with the prices of grain, further than to give, from week to week, a true statement of the markets both .here and in Philadelphia. This wee k,however,weinadvertcntlyselected for our "Agricultural Department" an article from the Chicago Tribune, o n . taming statements the veri reverse of what.we believe. It is our opinion that such articles are written in the inter est of the grain speculators and find their way into the papers, either as paid advertisemente, or through care lessness and want' of thought on `le part of the editors. NoMan , `"f course, can tell to a certainty - w l) !.,.t . her wheat is . going to be higher or lower; but one thing we' do tnow, that Editors, by Paying . ,ittle more attention to this subject, could save the farmers many' a a dollar, as well as from the imposition of speculators. • • We do not advise the farmers to sell or not to sell ; and we request them to act upon their own judgment and not upon ours ; but we, as we have already said, do not believe the statements made by the Chicago Tri buns. Consequently if we bad wheat to sell we. would not sell at present prices. The Trzbune's 'statements in regard to Liverpool and London are, not founded upon facts. The Tribune says. "Odessa is pouring in wheat and th e neighboring ports are sending forth their grain in numerous vessels, while the news comes that California has a very large surplus crop, . which she must export," &c. Will the people believe the mere ipse dixit of the Trib une f For our own part we do not believe a word of it and demand proof. If there were any truth in the statements contained in the Tri bune article, will some one interested, or will the editor please explain to us, why wheat keeps up so well? Ex plain to us why in Philadelphia red wheat is Worth to-day from $l.BO to $1.90 per bushel, amber $1.95," and and white wheat from $2.10 to $2.20 per bushel. Will the Tribune please tell xs- why California ". must export" any more than our farmers who are out of debt must sell at present prices? Finally, we want the Tribune to ex , plain to us telly the speculators in grain who are buying it up at from $1,40 to $1,60, ere not anxious to get it off their hands at present Philadelphia prtees ? Speculators in grain, if there :was any truth in the Tribune's article, and they believed it,would neither eat nor sleep until they disposed of every bushel they possessed at the present Philadelphia prices. Ha fall, at pres ent, in the price of wheat would bene fit the laboring men of the country, there might be some excuse for such articles as one •in question. But every man who has any knowledgs of Political Economy,knows that the very reverse is true. With, our currency so much, below par, or its gold value, * wheat' should not he below $2 00 per bushel, and there . is no reason why it should be. With theserateS, labor is plentier, and better paid, and the far mer, mechanic and daily laborer fares sumptuously every day. But if the farmers become fright ened, and sell off their wheat as sug gested by the Tribune, who does not know that the speculators will control the market, and run up the price be fore next harvest to $2.50, perhaps $3.00 per bushel ? What care these men'for the interests of the consumer ? This wheat Ring is almost as rep rehensible as the " Whiskey Ring," and like it, should be broken up. We have thrown out these sugges tions for what they are worth. Our farmers and friends can act as they may think best. EDITORS WHO is HE ? Gen. GRANT an nounced, a few days ago, that Penn sylvania would be represented in his Cabinet. He declined to give the name of the man he had chosen, stat ing, at the same time, that it was a se lection which nobody seemed to antici pate, but with which everybody would be pleased. This has set everybody to thinking, and the would-be knowing ones about Washington are terribly ex cited, and " Who can it be?" is upon the lips of every one. How stupid (?) the smartest of men sometimes are. Who else could it be, but the chevalier Bayard of the war, the modest and retiring hero of Fort Steadman, Gen. JNO. F. HARTEANET, now Auditor General of Pennsylvania? What other flame would so completely "fill the bill ?" • THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT ADOPTED.--Both Houses of the Na tional Legislature have finally adopt= ed, the prop used constitutional amend ment. 'The vote in the Senate stood 39 yeas to 13 nays, ind in the House 143 yeas to 43 nays: . The bill including the amendment, i ..tads as follows .671 it enacted, &c - : two thirds of b ot h ili•ouses concurring, That the fol lowing a olendment to the Constitu tion of the United States, and when ratified by ee-fOurths thereof. it shall be of . said Constitution. - a-part Article 15. Th‘ e right of any citi zen of the United otates to vote shall not be denied or itbrialeed by the Uni ted States or States on at.Ncount ofrace, color, or previous conditio.n of servi tude. The Legislatures of twenty eight States must ratify the: above before it can become a part or the Constitu tion. Senator Sentor of the Tennessee Legislature was inaugurated Governor of that State on the 25th ult. Gov Brownlow will take his seat in the U. S. Senate on the 4th inst. • Bellefonte needs a market House, or at least two regular market days in the week. Protection. Too much, we think, cannot be or written, upon the subject of Protec tion to American industr.z/N. It is the only policy that will give an impetus to our manuSacturing • and business in terests; mad enhance the interests of 'ate laboring men of tile country. It is the only policy that will make a dc:- mand for labor, raise the price of la - bor, and establish it on n permanent foun dation. The f•r s nids of free trade are at work. The Democratic Watchman., and air the Democratic papers in the country, at the :bidding of the New. York Free Trade League,, and the English aristocracy, that:furnishes the money to keep it in existence, have thrown off the masks hitherto worn by them, and openly and avowedly espous ed the cause of English free trade.— But while they are working to build up England, and fasten the slavish chains upon Ireland, the friends of American industry are not idle. On the 17th and 18th of February last,. : they met in Philadelphia and-organized the "Na tional Industrial League." Leading protectionists from-almost every State in the Union were present, and there, in sight of Independence Hall, they re solved that they would spare no pains, energy or labor, in urging upon our Congress the importance of legislation in favor of American men, and Ameri can industry. What an important movement I Our miners of oar and coal, our American working men, na tive and foreign born, should now firm ly resolve to aid in this movement.and to vote with no party who is not fully committed to the great American doc trine. The Irish Republic, in speaking of the organization of the "National In dustrial League," says that the object of these men waiter save the great Re public of the West, which England fail ed to conquer by force of arms, from becoming a mere English dependency, by force of what is called Free Trade. This is, beyond all question, part and parcel of that Southern slavery born treason which culminated in an open attempt to destroy the life of the Republic. And this, too, is part of that 'more cowardly and contemptible Northern Coperheadism which,under the guise of x false Democracy, sym pathized with, and supported those who, Cain-like, turned their murder otts. weapons against their brothers', hearts.. With a few honorable, and, perhaps, not altogether inexplicable, exceptions : they were Free Traders to a man. And how far their vile and suicidal policy is still p'ursued may be judged from the fact, - that du ring the past year one hundred and eighty-three millions of American,,gold dollars have been paid into foreign, and principally into: English pockets, for goods which, in nineteen - instances onkef twenty, could have been man ufactured here in our country. Wh , .) can calculate the loss of wages to the American workman and the loss of profit to the American manufa . Cture'r which this shameful tile unfolds? In the name of interest, ofjustiee, of lib erty, of country, how long is this in saneand ruinous ii , ickedness to be en dured ? -The entire so-called Democratic par ty is Free Trade to the core. They may not have the. honesty to put it boldly. as .a plank into their " plat form," but it is the cardinal hinge on which their whole policy turns. We assert this as a fact, deny it who dare? It is for the Irish voters, who are the foundation on which the whole of thig dreadful and destructive superstruc ture stands, to ask themselves, are these facts? Is it, or is it not, a fact, which one of the meat able members of the present Congress lately declar ed, that in the one article of railroad IRON we, the people of the United States, bought from England, in tea short months, TWENTY-ONE THOUSAND TONS more than ALL other countries of the earth taken together? Is it a fact, as was announced in our hearing in the Report of the American Iron and Steel Association, that of the whole consumption of iron in this count ry, England supplies fully forty per cent. ? is it a fact, or not, that by this false and unpatriotic Free Trade policy, England manages to continue to be our mistress? That we are her chief commercial dependency ? That we maintain her throne and aristocra cy ? Who, then, are the friends of Eng land, and the enemies of Ireland ? land ? Who puts the plunder into the pockets of the former, and locks the bliains on the limbs of the latter? The men who vote for Free Trade. The men—let them gnash their teeth at it, if they choose, but they shall hear the trutti—lhe. men who Support the De mocratic party. Tim following is Governor GEARY'S dispatch to General GRANT, denying the report that he had written a letter recommending a Pennsylvanian for a Cabinet appointment: ExEnurivE Cu.karnzu, 1 HARRISBURG, Pa., Feb. 26,'69. J Gen. U. S. Grant, 143 t Elect. By the newspapers of to-day I ob serve that certain persons have stated to you that I have written you a letter to influence your Cabinet appointment from Pennsylvania. have never writ ten or telegraphed to yon, or to any other person, a word in favor of, or against any one for that position. If you have received%any such letters or telegrams, they are forgeries. Truly yours, JNO. W. GEARY. The Philadelphia Press of Saturday says it has been authorized to state that no letter has been written, or au thorized to be written, by either Jud ges AGNEW or WILLIAMS, recommend ing the appointment of any person as a member of General GnAmr's Cabinet. Editrial and .Other Items -7 -Kankakee, 111., ha&a $75,000 fire SiiturdsiS , morning.. - ---Rich gold digging have been dis covered in Lovier California: - —Nearly half the town. of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, was burned on the 24th. -The mails are carried by sleighs in Canada, the railroads being block, ed by snow. —ln the Illinois Legislature on Saturday the bill to repeal.the registry law was defeated. —The Missouri House on. Saturday passed the bill amending the charter of the Pacific Railroad. : —All the railroads in Mine are blocked by snow, of which there has been a fall ofeighteen inches.' . —Rev. Robert CollYer, of Chicago. addressed the Women's . Suffr . age •As sociation of St. 14ouispn Saturday: —A fire re, cently, at Morristille; Vermont, destroyed the „Masson- if hall building. It was partlyjn :. sured. • —Andrew. Collins..was. instantly kil led by being run over by a train on the Pennsylvania Road, in West Phil adelphia, on Saturday. - . —Watson, ; Cassidy & Co.'s paper mill at Lyringham, Mass.,•was•entire ly destroyed by fire Saturday -night. Loss $25,000; ingitianee'sl2,ooo. —Nathaniel G. Wood, watchmaker and jeweler, Hanover street, BOston, was robbed on Sunday morning of soy en thousand dollars worth of property. —The Park Savings Bank in Brook lyn was ribbed, Saturday, of a:small tin box containing $45,000 in city bonds and $4OO in mcney. No arrests. De Soto county Missisippi, is, now without civil officers, all the former incumbents having failed to take the oath required by General.Gillam's or der. -. • —Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony addressed the citizens and legislators at Madison, =Wisconsin, Friday evening. Gov Fairchild presi ded. D. C. Stickney, au'expressman,had $32,000 stolen from his dwelling in Boston on Sunday. Suspicion rests on an inmate of the house, who has disappeared. A check for ten thousand- dollars,- the amount of insurance on :General Rousseau's life, has been forwarded to his widow, by the insuranco'agent in Washington. --In the seduction case of :Rene , cock vs. Wilbert, at Frankfoit, the jury. on Saturday returned; vir dict of $5OOO damages, the full 'a mount claimed. • —A duel was fought iiL l s.; public house in Williamsburg, - N. Y;-Satur day, between a Spaniard and a 'Cuban, over events in Cuba. The former was slightly wounded. —The organization of the militia in the country - districts of. Oinadg . is sending a great many French . Cana dians into the States, fearing that war may be imminent. —Many of the hop growers in:Wis consin are disposed to try their luck again, believing that a sufficient num ber will abandon the business:to make it profitable for the few.- Postmaster Kelley, of New York, has been directed to send all mails for California and the Pacific coast by steamer, and to retain all subsequent mail matter until the 11th and 21st insts. • —A newspaper passed through the Lexington, Kentucky;post office a day or two since addressed to "Petroleum V. Nasby, P. M., Confederate Cross Roads, Kentucky." It was . mailed in Oregon. • • —Frank Swift. of New York, and E. T. Goodrich, of Chicago. skated a match for the championship at .Buf falo Saturday, but the judges failed to agree, and no competent referee could be obtained. —Cincinnati shuts its doors against "drummers." There is a law of the city prohibiting them from engaging in business there, and it is enforced. Two . agents have lately been fined, one $5O and the other $lOO and costs. - Leonard Choate, recently arrested at the West, was arraigned at New buryport,. Massachusetts, yesterday on fifteen separate charges of incen-. diarism. He pleaded not guilty. His trial was asfigned for March Bth. —The estate of the late Hon. John Minor Botts was sold last week by auction. The horses, cattle, and some other personal property brought an aggregate of $15,000. His • stook was quite famous, and buyers were present from several Northern States. —Another railway war has just been instituted in the New York Courts ; this time between the Atlantic and Great Western and Erie Companies. It is instituted by the Great Western .parties•to compel the Erie to appro priate certain moneys to paying mort gages on the Atlantic and Great Wes tern Railroad. —The "Gardner Real Estate Dis tribution," a gift enterprise concern, which has been selling tickets in St. Louis for some months past, and which was to have been drawn Satur day night, ended in a row. When the drawing was prepared, the mana ger announced that as only 76,000 tickets had been issued, several of the largest prizes would not be put in the wheel. The audience objeetal, and the consequence was the lights were put out, and the manager loft, the crowd dis.persing in an hour or two. For the RsketteiN :tibir. • . MESSRS. EDiToRS :—Bacon . truly said that laboi was the only real. ealth ora country. That being an acknowl edged Tact by all _political economists, the legislation . of a nation should 'have a tendency to foster, promote and pre serve that wealth, and thereby enhance 'the substantial prosperity of the Coun try, and its, laboring members. A wise Government will so construct its laws that its, toiling masses need never be idle ; but always prosperous. The im merise-wealth of the country,labor,that has been compelled to remain idle in this country this winter, is beginning to awake grave apprehensions in the minds of all true philanthropists. An acquaintance of ours, who went to Mexico eighteen months ago, as an employee of a- British and Mexican R. R. `Coiripany, recently returned, gave 'us " a sketch of his experience there,and hare, "since' his return, which corrobo rates the prevailing idea entertained by the teilinc , masses, that our Govern ment's legislation has a tendency to promote interests 'antagonistical to the welfare of labor. He says that, after fulfilling hi's contract,. and drawing .his pay,..and about leaving for 'home, the Governor of Very Cruz, upon the' pre text that it was dangerous to his Gov ernment for Americans to be at large in his domains, had him throat into prison, where he was robbed of his money..and clothing. The American Consul paid no attention to his com plaints, and after lying in prison for three months, Gen. Rosenerance ar riving, caused his prison doors to be thrdwn open. He then worked his pas sage on board a merchant vessel to Boston, where he searched the whole city for employment, but failed to find any. He visited Worcester and Spring field, Mass., Albany, N. Y., Philadel phia, Baltimore, Harrisburg, and sev eral of the interior towns of Pennsyl vania, in search of employment, but in all these places failed to find an open ing for his services. He Says that wherever one vacancy occurred, there were ten applicants for the position va cated. In all the large places in this country, that he visited: he found thousands of robust men out of em ployment, and many compelled to sub sist upon the cold charities of the world. What the honest, toiling masses wish to know is, what causes this state of affairs—that honest, intelligent, sober and industrious American citizens are compelled to be idle, and see their lit tle ones want for the common necessa ries of life, and that, too, in the. most inclement season of the year. • . Would it not be well enough for the laboring masses to enquire into these facts, and apply the remedy•without respect to party or PolifidS: They have the cotrettive pbwer in their hands, -if they properly apply it. The true reme- • dy, and kl,le may repiecVtor • all these evils is, a Protective Tariff .Will our adopted -fellow citizens never consider the importance of these questions? Yours, &c., - BreckinriOge Rettiins. Under the supposed protection, says the Philadelphialitgitirer, of ANDREW JornisoN's' Amnesty Proclamation, JOHN C. BRECKINRIDOE has ventured biqk to the United States. He is the first of the expatriated rebels, except ed in previous amnesty proclamations, who has returned. He will probably be soon foll Owed by JACOB THOMP SON, SLIDELL and JUDAH BENJAMIN, and possibly _all of them will ask some reward of the rebels in consequence of their sufferings. The last public appearance of Neekinridge, previous to his going ever to the Rebels, was et Baltiniore, and in the same city he makes hiS re appearance. -Of all the miscreants who took part with the Rebellion, this man was the most odious in his treachery: He had not the common and paltry excuse of lesser Rebels, that be must go with his state, be 7 cause his State did not go with the Rebellion. •He•could not rely upon the allegation that he was in the South when the Rebellion broke out, and'widearried away by the excite ment around him. He was a mem ber of the Senate of the United States when Fort Sumter was attack ed, having sworn to support- and de fend the Constitution a short time previously. He stayed in the Senate, participating in public business, after the war had commenced, and although he interposed his feble influence in favor of the Rebels, he did so at the same time protesting his loyalty. It was on the. Bth of Au gust, nearly five Months after the commencement of the war, after two battles of Big Bethel, Boonville, Rich Mountain, Carrick's Ford and Bull Run, that .Breckinridge ate his last dinner with the Secessionists of Balt imore, and received their congratula tion, no doubt, at his intended defec tion. Ho left Baltimore immediately afterward, sought the Confederate lines and' offered himself as a volunteer ,in thiißebel cause. Scarcely any. in ittance•of treason as nefarious can be 'pointed to. *lt was an act worthy of one oho, if ho had lived in the Revo lution, would have envied and follow ed the example of.Benediot Arnold. - As a soldier,. Breckinridge was a fail ure. Ho took to the rebellion neither honesty or talent. He required high o aive as the price of his treachery, An d h o ;vas 'made a Major-General, a 'position for rhieli he was neither fit ted by (Attention nor capacity. He MO hit illOtthtii4 to the Rebel cause ratittir thtui a benefit, and for his last vandal Hitt., tho conflagration of Rich ittOlkit IMO portion of the chivalry of iliAt plitiNt ruined by the result, Will How ilirgivo —Ph iladelplizq Remarks of Senator• Cameron. In the Senate, on Wednesday;Mr. Buokalew_, while discussing the ques tion of changing the mode of choosing Presidential electors, charged that half a million of dollars had - been bound out in Pennsylvania to control the last Presidential election. When he had concluded his speech, Mr. Stewart, of Nevada, moved that the Senate recede from its amendments to the Constitu tional amendment and concur in the House proposition. Senator Cameron then took the floor, and we copy his remarks from the Daily Globe: Mr. Cameron. I shall vote in favor of the motion now made by the Sena tor from Nevada. I had no intention to say a word on this subject, and. should not have done so but for a re mark which fell from my colleague, which I think was disrespectful to the State from which he and I come, in which we were both born, and to w hich we owe not only allegiance, but love.— I was sorry to hear him say that mon eny had leen brought into Pennsylva nia to influence and corrupt the elec tions there, and to produce a result which the people did not desire. In 1854, my colleague and I separated in politics. The first election, of any con sequence, after that, was the election for President, in 1956, when Mr. Bu chanan and Colonel Fremont were the opposing candidates. In reply to the remark of my colleague 1 1 think I may say with confidence, that there is hard ly a man in Pennsylvania, now living, who was acquainted with that contest, who does not believe that Colonel Fre mont was chealed out of the vote of Pennsylvania by the activity and dis honesty of the men who supported Mr. Buchanan. Large sums of money were brought into Pennsylvania to use as a corruption fund andlhey were so used. Sir, had General FremOnt received the vote of Pennsylvania then, as he was entitled to do, we should have been saved the evils which grew out of Mr. Buchanan's administration, including the great rebellion which has cost this country so much blood and treasure, and its consequences. But Colonel Fremont lost the vote of Pennsylvania by the management of the chairman of the State Democratic Central Commit tee of that year, who, through the use of money from other States, changed the resilt of the election. Sir, such things have often hapened in Pennsylvania; but my remembrance is, that they have always been done in the interest of the Democratic party. At the recent election we lost the city of Philadelphia, and the Democratic party nominally elected three Congress men there; but all men who are ac quainted with the contest in the dis tricts of Me Myers and Mr. Taylor, know that thosegentlemen are entitled to their seats, and were only defeated by great frauds:. They intend to claim them, and I have no doubt they will receive them. I-remember the other day, in a contest for a seat in the Leg iSlature from the city of Philadelphia, three men were brought up and swore that they had voted- at every precinct in the city, and at each .place they had .given different names to' the amount of eight or ten each. They . - Voted early and often, as niy 'friend 'from New Jer sey I Mr.-Frelinghuyseni suggests. I only rose for the purpose of defend ing my State, and especially the Re. publiaan_party, against this charge of fraud.... The election, in. Pennsylvania occurs earlier than in many of the other States. It is a very iinportant State; and, of course, the electlon is contest ed with great activity. •• • • • Now, let me say one word-in regard , to the proposition of my colleague.. •I know that I ought to, have _studied the question before I attempted . to speak upon it. Mycolleague saysthat of all . the people in 'the - - World . despises most stupid . people. agree 'with shim in that.- stupid man is. not to be admired by- anybody; tont we some times differ. as to where the stupidity is to be found: Sometimes we think people are laughing with us, when they are laughing at us; and so it may be in regard to stupidity. I think it would be very stupid indeed for the party.in power now to.give to any fu ture Congress the right of gerryman dering Pennsylvania, Indiana, New York and Ohio t so as to control those States; for I think half a dozen shrewd men from those States brought togeth er could pass abill in Congress by which they could control the destinies of this country. lam in favor, therefore, of leaving this power in the hands of the States. Let the men who know the local interests, the local feelings, and the local strength and weakness of the States settle it themselves at their own homes. To be sure, by carrying such an amendment as my colleague pro poses the county of Berks in our State would vote on the one side and the county of Dauphin on the other; and under such a proposition the condi , - dates of my colleague last year might have secured four or five electoral votes in Pennsylvania, and a few in'soine of the other States, but 1 greatly prefer that each state shall show its whole strength. Whatever the power of the State may be, let it be given by a sin gle vote in favor of the cain.liaate. am not so much in favor of State rights as some men who have been here. I learned, during the war fbr the sup pression of the rebellion, that we need ed a stronger Government than we ever had before. The great trouble at the beginning of the war was, that there was no power at Washington, under the laws, that could not only arm the forces that were offered, butthat could wield them as they could have done if there had been nobody in the States to interfere with them. I believe this is all I have a desire to say on this subject. I think I have shown, or at least I have tried to do so, that Pennsylvania is not worse than the other States; and if she has done wrong, it has been the Democrats who have done the wrong. Puma THE exports from Now York last year, exclusive of specie, were valued at $164,000,000, against $186,000,000 in 1867.. The export of specie and bullion was $71,000,000, or nearly $20,000,000 more than the year pre ceding, and largely in excess of any one of the five previous years, The total on foreign imports was $251,193 834, of which about $12,000,000 were free goods ; and $1,000,000 dry goods. The importations of iron, were, in pigs $50,704, in railroads bars $4,- 094,569, in sheet $350,643, in tubes $90,544, and in other forms $2,256,- 218, The railway bars numbered 696,257, which nt an Average length of thirty feat, would lay over two thousand miles of American railway tracks. This was the importation at NPNY York itiollE4. . NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 150 TEACHERS WANTED.—S7S to $l5O per mouth ; for full particulars ad dress " The People's Journal," Philadelphia, Pa. suar.3'69-4 tr. WANTED.—Salesmen to travel and sell by sample a new line of goods. tit nations permanent. and good wages. Ad dress with stamp, H. H. RICHARDS a CO. 413 Chestnut St-, Phil's. Pa. mar3'69-4w. PAINTS FOS FARMERS—Unsurpassed for any purpose. $6 for a bbl.. of 300 lbs. Send for circular. GRAFTON MIN ERAL PAINT CO., 254, Pearl St., N. Y. marT69 4w. $lOO to $2OO per month salary paid to good Agents to sell our Patent Non.corroreite White Wire Clothes State•aga and post occupation. and address the American Wire Co 75 William St., N. N., or 16 Deaiborn St.:Chicago, 111. mar3'6 . 9-4w. • AGENTS WANTED.—For the only steel engraving of Oen. Grant and his fami ly published with their approval. Engrav ed by Sartain. Size IS. by 19. $2.00. 100 per cent. to agents. Addrers GOODSPEED CO., Chicago, or No. VI Park low. New York. mar3'69.4w. NEW BOORS-200 ENGRAVINGS.— The Farmer's and Mechanic's Manuel, edited by Geo. E. Waring. Jr., author of "Draining far Profit," "Elements of Agri culture," Ac. A book of great value to every ono. bend for 16 page circular. Agents wanted. TREAT A CO., Publishers. 654 Broadway, N. Y. mar3'69 4w. THE CHRISTIAN, 60 CENTS !—A large live, 8 page monthly religious and fam ily paper, full of facts, providencee, inci dents, music, poetry, true stories, pictures. reading for young, old, saints, sinners, one and all. No sectarianism, controversy, pot ities, puffs, pills, or patent medicines. GO cents a year; 10 copies $5. rot Sunday Schools, 19 copies 84. Send 10 cents for 3 specimcnsbefore you forget it. Vol. 4 be gins Jan., 1809. 1000 pages new live tracts for $l. Address H. L. HASTINGS, Scrip tural Tract llepogity, 19 Lindall, St.. Bos ton glass. mar3'6B AGENTS WANTED SIGHTS AND SECRETS 01? THE NATIONAL CAPITAL, A work deseriptire of Washington, City; Inside 2. vd Outride Uninusked and EL:pos ed. The spiciest, most most en. tertaining, instructive, and startling book of the day. fil:T.3'tend for eirettlars.with terms 4-e. Address UNITBD ST •TES PUB LISHING C*., 411 Broom Strt•a. Now City. Le rniii -4 CI (41:4;11-A 1 • i '''L aet3.: :f ARK ( n6; 4 1• 11 1=1127:11Si ....nevietenswmaseaq - 'NATE ARE COMING, AND WILL PRESNT TO ANY PERSON Sending us a Club in our Great ONE DALLAR SALE OF DRY AND FAN- • CY GOODS, A Watcb, piece of Sheeting, Silk Drees Pat tern, ac., &c., FREE OF COST Our inducements during the past few years hive - been Hoge. WE NOW DOUBLE OUR RATES -OF PREM.IUMS We have made many important additions Cone to our Winter Stocks, and hare large ly extended our Exchange List, and we now feel confident tO'xieet . the' deafen& of our extenirve-pittronage: ;Send for new Cireutar. Catalogue of Goods and Samples sent to any address free. send money by register ed letter. Address all orders to . J. S. HAWES k CO., • 15 Federal et , Boston, Mash: P. O. Box C. Wholeaale Dealers in Dry and Fancy Goode, Cutlery, Plated Ware, Albums, Leather Goode, ac. tnarl'69-12w. tI 4I 1 < DR SAGE'S , CATARRH REMEby WE do nut wish to interne )ou, ietoier that Dr. Wonderful, or any other man has discovered a remedy that cures Con sumption, when the lungs are half consum ed, is short will cure all diseases whether of mind, body or estate, make teen live form r, and leave death to play fur want or work, and is designed to wake our sublunary sphere a blissful paradise, to which 'leaven itself shall be hut a side show. You have heard enough of that kied of humbeggery, and we do not wonder that you have by this time become disgusted with it. . But when we tell you that Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will positirely cure the worst eases of Catarrh, we only assert that which thousands can tes tify to. Try it IA you will be convinced. We will pay $5OO Reward for a case of Ca tarrh that we cannot curs. FOR SALE BY MOST DRUGGISTS EC- ERYWHERF, PRICE ONLY 50 CENTS. Sent bf• poet paid, for Sixty Conte; Four Pachmgcn for $2.00; or t Dozen for 85.00. Send a two cent stamp for Dr. Sage's pxusphlet on Ca tarrb. Address to Proprietor, B. V. PIi:BCE. 'M. D.. 1•e24'60-3m. BUFFALO, N. Y. A GENTS WANTED FOR SECRETS OF THE GREAT CITY, A Work descriptive of the Virtues and the View., the Mytteriee. Myeeries aid Crimes in New York City. If you wren to know how Fortunes are made and lost in a day ; how Shrewd Men aro ruined in Wall Street; how Countrymen are swindled by Shapers; how Ministers and Merchants are Blackmailed ; bow Dance Halls and Concert Saloons are Managed ; hvw Gambling Houses and Lotteries are con ducted ; how stock anti Oil Companies Orig inate and how the Bubbles Burst. read this work. It contains 35 fine engravings; tells all about the Mysteries and Crimes of Now York, and is the Spiciest and Cheapest work of the kind published. PRICE ONLY $2.50 PER COPY Air- Send for Circulars and see our terms, and a full dtseription of the work. Ad dress. JONES BROTHERS .% CO., Phila delphia. Pa. CAUTlON.—lnferior works of a similar character are being circulated. See that the books you buy oontain 35 line engravings and sell at $2.50 per copy. feblo'69. EIOUSE FOR SALE„--Any person wish lug to purchase a good driving or rid ing horse, oan be accommodated by o Ding at this offloo. The horee is good and safe The purchaser can have tuba ohotce of two. a mare or horse, Also a good oow for sale.— For partiouiars, call at the office of the. tf. " 11 lILICA N." DOOR LOCKS c.t all kinds, to snit evasy t et Ittlyuc MISCELLANEOUS. $5OOO a year oan be made by live s eats, selling mj mit) anfirat :sable invention. Addreis J. AILIARN,,I3 Second St., Baltimore, Md. te24'69-4*. WANTED! WANTED ! ! Vi . Amts . of,either sex. in overv_ town and village. for the larg est ONE DOLLAR. SALE in the country.— The smallest articles sold can be exchanged for a Silver Plated Ave-battled Revolving Castor. or your choice of 2$S articles upon exchange Het. Commissions to Agents larg er than ever. Send for f7iienler. - S." C. THOMPSON A- CO. IM) Federal St., Boston. Mass. I F YOU WISE!, TRY TUB COMBINATION OF ALLEN, ATWOOD & BAFES, GREAT MAMMOTH SALE LICENSED BY THE U. S. GOVERN 'NT Having had large experience. *e are confi dent of success in our ONE DOL LAR SALE. ,•09..NOTICE.- We will pre2ent to tiny person sending 113 a club in our great vi<<4 DOLLAE. SALE Silk Dress Pattern, Piece Sheeong, Sew ing Maehina, a Carpet, a Watch, e., ALL FREE OF COST Grzatest itiductotentA ecor offeeld. Circular and Sample sent tree to p.ay ad dress. ALLEN, ATWOOD 8 BATES, Nos. ST Milk, 78 di 84 Devonshire B:reot Bvetun t Alan. . want to rents cash sleep ] hed. Who stand upon the brink,- -*•• Where yawning gulfs disclaim the dead, - • Who zoight,-bnt-did not think..:. I want to warn the living one! • ' Who blindly grope along. • . Ye fathers, daughter!, piothera, What perils round you throngg•-: Look our, my_reader, ate yen free, Or do you wear the inarkl Most all are blind and imams lee, Tea, groping in the dark. Catarrh, a, demon in the head eonenmptinn id its s Kills hosts, yea, countless millions dead, Perhaps yen may be one. • That haCking, hawking, spitting, shows, Catarrh effects your head, Matter and slime in throat or NM, Runs down your throat instead.- Your lungs and liver soon will shew, Consumption has its birth Catarrh, iti sire,...fir feed it too,' 'Till you return to eartk. . • If colds affect your head and throat, ANNIIIILATOR buy; Now don't forget what I have wrote, Or think this subjeet dry. WOLCOTT'S ASSIMILATOR enter, Catarr/i—the demon flies; It move the binge, good healkh issues, And Catarrh quickly dim. I want to gratify ray friends, Who wish to understand About PaileParir,itefise, ife Enda, And Why its great demand. • I vrtot to show you pain as day, Why PAIN PAINT !tops all pain, That-you stay never have to ray " not try paint again." PAIN PAINT will cool but ACTET stain; Pumps inflamation out; 'Tis harmless on the breast or brain, A trial stops all doubt. When intlaciation leaves the frame, All pain will cease at once; Remove the cause, 'tis all the same ; None doubts unless a dunce. The pores will ope atd drink PAU PAINT ; Absorbents Gil with ease; Restores the weak, the sick, the faint, The greatest skeptic please, Evaporation cools the plEco As intl.nuation 'dies Hot blood at the absorbent's base Slakes PAINT in vapor rise. 'Tit , thus PAIN PAIN? removes ail doubt, honoree's the very e4use By pumping inthunation out; On this we rest our CLUES. Wolcott's PaiA Paint is sold at all Diug Stores ; also, Walcott's Annihilator, for the cure of Catarrh and Colds in the head. Sent by Express on receipt of the money, at 11/1, Chatham Square, N. Y. 1%. 14. Walcott, Prop'r. 42411 4w.