fc'i TUB "CLEARFIELD RENIBLICAV FCBLIiaiD ITIIT WIPHHDAT, IT GOODLANDEU & LEE, OLHARFIKLD, TA. Kif TAIll.ISII&O IN ISSf. Pi larirciit t'lrculaUuu of aiiy Newapaper . In North Central Penney It an la. Terms of Subscription, If paid ii ad ranee, or withla X moo the.... '.I OO If paid after I and befora 6 nontb ,M. II 6(1 IT paid after the expiration of A wont be.,, 3 OO Rates ot Advertising. Natulan. advartlienenU.por aqaaraof lOllneeor Iim, I time orleea. I AO rnriaoh aubiequflBttnMrUQD.. 60 lmbiiftritun' apd Riecutori'nulloce,.,... 9 fiO Auditor!' nutkei UH ..., S 60 Cautloni and Kilraya ,H ,.,.. 1 60 Dltiulution ttotitiee S 00 Profeeaional Carda, 6 It net or leaa,l ear.,, A 00 Lix-al nottoM, par Una 10 YRAltl.Y ADVKRTINKMUNTS. I nquare $8 00 I eolamn $50 00 t juare.., 16 00 ) eoluDinn 70 00 aquarei... .,30 00 1 i1ntua lift 00 O. B. OOOMiANDRR, NOta B. MtK, 4 PubHahan. W. C. ARNOLD, I-AW & COLLKCTION OFFICE, CURWBNSVILLE, Clearflold County, Pcnn'a. 75y .211 TBoS. I. MURRAY. OYMUI goBPOB. MURRAY & GORDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CLEAKKIELD, PA. dr-office ti Pie's Opera House, second floor. 9:S0'71 FRANK Fl E LD I NG, v ATTO UN EY-AT-LA W , Clrarlleld, Pi. Will attend to all business entrusted tn him piomplly and faithfully. aovll'73 WILLIAM A. WILL AC lunar r. wallacb. DAVID L. tit Ma, JO HI W. WRIflLST. WALLACE & KREBS, (Sinaaaaure to Wallace A Fielding,) ' ATTORN EYS-AT-L A AV, ll-12'TS Clearfield, Pa. lOHRPI 1 M BXALLT. haxibl w. h'oubdt, McENALLY & MoOURDY, ATTUHNKYS-AT-LAW, Clearfield, Pa. Jf tF" Legal bgtlneat attended to promptly withj 1dtlitr. Office on Second atreet, above lhe Firat National Uank. jaa:i:7B G. R. BARRETT, Attornrt and Counbklor AT IiAW. OLKARFIKLD. PA. ' Having rent grind hit Jmit.Bhl, hat if mimed the practice of the law In hit old nfflc at Clear field, Pa. Will attend the noarti of Jeflerton and Klk cimntiea when apeclallv retained in connect inn with reiidont oounael. 1:14:71 A. Q. KRAMER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Ileal EitiU and Collection Ageol, II.EAKI'IF.1.I, PA., Will promptly atttnd to all legal business en tru.toil ti hi. care. . X-tr-Otlloe ia Pie's Opera Hon.e. jeul'iO. wm7 mTmcc u llough7 ATTOKNKY AT LAW, . ' I Cloarflilrl. Pi. ' frOffiifc la tli old Wpiltrn Hotel tallJInir. l..-ftnl buiineKpromptljattrnded to. Rial ,tnta bouglil and Hid. ' ' Jul I'l l AT W. WALTERS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearlteld, Pa. Vtt-Oflloa la Oruhiim'a Ilow. . deoS-lr H. W. SMITH, ATTOKNKY-AT-LAW, H:I:7II i rinrflrld, Pa. WALTER BARRETT, ATTOltNEY AT LAW. Cleardeld, Pa. jrrOmr la Old Wr.tarn Hotel unlldiDg, eurti.r or SteoDd and Markol Bti. norXI.M. IS RA EL T ES T , ' : ' ATTORNKY AT LAW, CleirDold, P. ' -OBe. la iheCwrt lloa.e. (JtII,'7 JOHN H. FULFORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearlteld, Pa. ptr Ofllca ea Jdatkat ttreot, opp. Coari lloaia, Jan. 9, 1ST4. . John" lTc u f tle, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ud Heal Batata A Rent, Clearfield, Pa. UH oa Third .treat, bat. Ch.rrj k Walnit. !UipeeifuU7 offer! bll serrieeilli lelliDf ind buYiog land. Id Clearflold and adjoining tounttaa ) and with aa experlenoa o( over twantr f.m aa a turrayor, flatten hiinf.lf that ha eao render fatiifaetton. Fob. J8:f3:t(, j7 blak e wa lters, REAL ESTATE BROKER, AMD Diataa IV Haw Log" mill Taiimbor, OLKARFIKLD, PA. Office In Graham'. Row ' ' M6:T1 jTJT lingleT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 1:11 Mareola, ClearUeld Ctk, Pa. jnpd J. S. BARN HART, ATTORNKY . AT LAW, llellet'nlite. Pa. Will f raetlee la Clearflold ami all of the Courte of the loth Judicial di.triot. Real aetata bu.lneee and eollection of olairal made apeolaltlel. " nl'TI DR. W.' A." MEANS, PUYSIC1AN 4 8URGEON, LPTIIHRSBURO, PA. Will attend prefe.eioaal oalla promptly. augl0'70 ;, DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN AND SDROEON, OBoe oa M.rk.t Strut, ClearJeld, Pa. ftr-Offlea bovrlt 9 to 11 a. nr., and 1 to I'p. fa. D U. E. M. eCHEURER, llOMtKOPATUIC KHYS1CIAN, Ofllea la raeidenea ob Market at April M, 1ST1. ' " Clearfield, I'a.' H, KLINE, M. D., ' PttYSlCIAlT 4 8UKGEON, H AVISO routed al Ponafleld, Pa., ofera.hla prafaeeiaaal ear. lee. lo-tbo aaopla of that plaoa and eurroondlngooaatry. Allealle proiaptty .Headed to. . oeU II tf. , DR. J. P. BURCH FIELD, Lata Surgeon, of the S.ld Rglent,Penniylranla Volantaari. having ratarned from the Army, often hiajjirofeaaional aarvtcoi fa thaeltUaDi of ClearUeld aonntf. 4aaT-ProfiionaloalU promptly atUnded to. OAea an fiaaoad irraet, rrtaarlroeapled by Dr.Woode. Pfj',tj:1.1 DR. H. B. VAN VALZAH, CLKAftflEMV PENWA. ;': OK KICK IN SIASOMC BL'ILlilNG. fir Oflive houre From 11 to 1 P. U. . , nJ DR. JKKFKRHON LITZ, WOODLAND, PA. . Will pnimptly attend all ealle k tke line or hi. profeealun. auv.llr-71 D. M. DOHERTY, FAHIIIONAIlI.lt BARDEh A HAIR DHKfiKKR. . CLKARKIELD, I'A. ftbop la root laly II, '71. i formerly occupied by Naugla bl arhet atrtat. HARKY HNVbKK, (Foraerly with Ue Reholer.) BARBER AND UAIRDREKHKR. ,ehnr. oa Market 8t, etieoelle Ooart Hoaea. A eloaa towel far every eu.Uia.er. aaey la, '76. liriioixiiLE U UOE STORE. ; At the and of the new bridge, - WR8T CLVARFTRIiD, PA. TLe proprietor of Ibla aefabll.banrnt will bay bit llquora direct from iiitiller. Partita baying IVuB thia hoaaa will ba tare to get a para article at a email nergia above eot.) Hate! it pert eaa ba faratvhtd with liqaora ea uaaawahla tarma. Pawi wiawa aad braadta dlraat froa Sea ley ' Vlaary, at Cath. New York. OlOKiiK . C0LDURN. ClaaHreld. Jaat 1ft, 1076 -U. TIIRTICKH dk COtftNTABIeKfV PIKH J Wa have printed a large aaaabar af la aaa FBI BILU,aad will aa the receipt af tweaiy. va aaata, a. ail a aapy ta a wad 4 ran. asyll CLEARFIELD GEO. B. G00DLANDER, Proprietor. VOL. 50-WHOLE NO. Cards. JOHN D. THOMPSON, J a t tee of the Peace and Scrivener, CurwcnavlUe. Pa IfcColleatlona nade and noner proinj.tljr ajatd over. relief z Tin RICHARD HUGHES, JLHTICK OF THE I'KACB ron MHcatitr Toirtwhlp, . Oeccola Willi P. n, II offlelal ttailaaft ant raited ta aim will bt pmmptly atterdd to, inehSO. 'TO. ao. Aiaanr niaar At.aaar w. ALaaat W. ALBERT & BROS., ManufeetareraA eltenrlreDealerita Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, 4io., WOODLAND, PKNN'A. ir-fr-Ordere enliclted. DHIe tilled nn ehort notlee and reaiouabla teriae. Addre.) Woodland f. O., Clearflold Co., I'a. ,lb.j W ALUKRT A 11IK8. FRANCIS COUTr7et7 MERCHANT, PrenthTllle, ClearUeld County, Pa, Kaapl oonatantly oa band a full eaaortment of Vrj uooaa, liaruware, uroeenee, ana everyming aauallr kept in a retail etore, whieb will ba eold, for eaaa, aa oneap aa eieewnere ia ina oounij. Frenehrllle, Juna 17, 187-lj. THOMAS H. FORCEE, ' AiAbaa ia UENERAL MERCIIANPISE, CltAIIAMTON, Pa. Alio,aitanelTa manaraetarae aad daalar la ttoaare Timber aad Unwed Lumber of nil kind. -Ordorl eollelted and alt bill, promptly tiled. jyl'71 RE U BEN HACK M a! House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, ClearUeld, Peim'a. fcfA.WIII aiaeute Joke In hie Una promptly and In a workmanlike manner. arr4,07 G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER. NEAR CLEARFIELD, TENN'A. aT-Punipi alwaya on hand and wade ta order on abort aotiea. Pipe brod on raaaonahla terme. All work warranted to reudcr aatlefaction, and delivered if deilred. tny36:lypd E. A. BIGLER &TcO., DRALKHB IK ' SQUARE TIMBER, and manuraoturere or ALL KINDS OK 8A t:l) I.IIMHKH, -7"71 . CLEflFIKLD, PLN.N'A. J AS? B 7 G RAH AM, dealer la Real Estate, Square Timber, Boards,, BIIINULE8, LATH, A PICKKT3, B:1'7S ClearUeld, I'a, JAMES MITCHELL, PBALeR IV Square Timber & Timber Lmiils, Jelt'T CLEARFIELD, PA. JAMES H. LYTLE, In Kratier'e llulldlng, ClearUeld, Pa. Dealer In Orooetlef, Prorlelooe, Vegeteblaa, Fruite, Flour',' Feed, f to., ete, eprM'7t:tf WARREN THORN, HOOT AND SHOE MAKKU, . Market l ClearUeld, Pa. Ia the ehop lately aoeupfed by Frank Rbort, one door west of Alleghany House. T. M. ROBINSON, Market MCreet. ClearUeld. Pa., HAMBPACTtmaa or T.lbt aad Heavy rlarnaee, Collara, Kaddlea, Bridlea, Aa. Repairing neatly done. May 34, l87-m. JOHN A. RTAD1jK,. PAKF.R, Market St., Cli-aifkld, Pa. Frenh Bread, Roab, Rolli, Plea and Cekee oa band or made to order. A general aMorttnent of Confeclionariea, Fruilt and Nuta In itock. Ioe Cream and OyMere in irneon. Paloua atarly oppotlte the PuatolBca. Prlcea moderate. March 10-75. J. It. M'MURRAY WILL 81'PrLY YOII WITH ANY ARTICLE OF MERCHANDISE AT THE VERY LOWKHT PRICE. COME AND BEE. . ( 1,4:7 Jy:) NEW WASHINGTON. CHEAP GROCERIES I LUMBER CITY, PA. The undersigned announces to hts old friends and natrons Inat he has opened a good line at (lltdl'KKIK.B A 1'ltOVIHIONB at Hi. old tland of Kirk A Spewoer, far wbtob he eolieitj a lllMral patronage. H. W. HPENCEH. Lumbar City, Pa., March Ifl.lC ARBLB AND HTONE VAHI. Mr. H. a. I.lliUEI.L, aving engaged In the Marble business, desiree to iDform her friends and the pablla that she has. aow and will keep constantly on hend a large and well selected stock of ITALIAN AND VERMONT MARBLE, and is prepared to furnish to order TOMBSTONES, BOX AND CRADLB TOM US, MONUMRNTX, it. feajt-Yard on Reed etreet, near the R. R. Depot, ClearUeld, Pa. jeU,7D I. SNYDER, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER ARD P BALKS IB . Watches, Clocks ami Jowclrjr, eraaooi'e Kr,m, Uorlnt SIMM, Cl.EAHI'lEl.D, PA. 'All kinds of repairing la my llnrnniinntlr at. tided to, April 13, Itft. lalvcry Ntablc. THE anderelgnad begs lee.ete latorm the pub. lie that ha is Bow fully nrepaiW ta aaenaimo d4te all In the way of furnlsnlng II. .see, Buggies, aeddleo and llarneee, ea the shortest nolle, and 'SB reasonabla terms. Retidenoe ob Losast street, between Third and Fourth. ... . t I1KO. W. OEAR,nART. !laarelilj'Feb. 4, U7. - J, MlfdHELL- WbyS. iTJie Jest k tie Clitfapest r ' Ttietnaa Rrilly baa tteaivad anotbrviUrg Mef "MitthelK Tftftn'i" fli lt' ara an.o- ll-4ry beat hunnraftiwred, aad whieh be nn at the mop reaaooable ratea. II la atocb iacTaAca alninet all daeriptoar of wagoai largeanaajdl, wide and aarnvw Uak. LU an I n?e lltfin. . aprft'M -r tj fX111 mlhV. "an bhzw-- M A Riyvl ick , ' Nrrt uiVrt ricarHeldi WAKoraoTtiaia ami naAi an t l HARNESS, 8ADDLK.H. llltlDLES, (0-Lj.AHfl, and all hlnda of II OH UK fl'llNISIIINQ OOOfS. A fall atnek of ftddlera' Hardware) flmhe, Com ha, HlenketeS Ruhea. ate, alwaja oa head and for aale at the nwet eaah prieea. All llhdn af rrnalriag prwmplly aileiiaj to, All hiatla Mdea tekan'lb aaebange tor bar. nvft td eppairinr' - All biada or baraa leal bar 1 kept on hand, and for tale at a aamail profit, liearflald, Jaa. 10, 1870. The aaderalgne4 tn aow, MF frraparad. lo carry aa the buelaeea of . v -v , UJfDEItTAKIIf O,' ! AT RRASONABLS RATES, And rripeotially aollelt tha patrae.g. of those seeding aaeh aerelaea. , JOlllf TRorTMAit, JAMES L.LEAVI. Clearflold, Pa., Feb. It, 1174. 6. TJNDEKTAKINO m pjp, nir-- 2481. HAMBURGH J110T8. 8PEECU OP HON. WH. A. WALLACE of PR.YjrsTrLr.ijriji, IN THE SENATE OF Till UNITED STATED, WEDNESDAY, ALU. 9, 1870. The Senate baring under eonsldoratlea tke res olutlon submitted by Mr. Morton on the Id Inst. that 10,001) eoples of the PrMident'e manege and the accompanying documents la regard to the tote massenre at Hamburgh, Seath Carolina, be primed for the use or the Boaele 11 r. Wallace said : Air. President: I suull not attempt lo tielunu mo otttmiro til Jlambnrtrb, Like many another otitrnio upon so eicly, it can neither bo palliated nor defended, if the fuots charged In the documents sent us ara true. Hut, sir, it this ofl'enso, demons and outrageous as it is, shall bo judicially invostigaUid ly the courts constituted to arrest, in. viwtii'ato, try, jndtro, and punish i and if tboso courts shull visit upon this out- ratro prompt, condign, and Iceal punish. ment, I shull rejoice. I shull rejoice that in that community, anions: a poo- plo who claim to have the power to govern ttieniselves, tney nave succeed ed in vindicating that power and Itavo vindicated the majesty of law, They win thon bavo proved their capacity for self-government. But they are upon trial. It is for them to vindicate tucir capacity in the proot that comes from this very situation. If they shall thus vmuicato themselves, it will add an other proot to the thcoricsof our friends on the other side. . But let let me ask those who find in something else the cause of these out rages, why it is that they always oc cupy tnotr minds and always vox the publio car when important oloctions aro pending? Why is it that we hear so little oi tbem on other occasions and nt other times? Why is it that only when the pooplo are upon tbo evo oi an election in which the rulers of the country aro to bo changed that those outrages come to the puljlio mind and eommunitit are stirred to their vory ucptus oy accusations, by tergiversa tions, by charges of riot And bloodshed nnd of wrong and injury ? Why ia it that pcaco and ortler nnd the adminis tration of tho law, tha vindication ot tho majesty of tho law, aro found in all llio reconstructed Mates controlled, governed, and directed by Democrats, while from those alone in which some other power is in control do we find theso reports of outrages, of broken mw, oi not, ana oi uioousuoa r Mr. Katon. Will my friend from Pennsylvania yield to me now lor a moment r . Mr. Wullace. Certainly. Mr. Katon. I bnve just received a diapatch which 1 desiro to road in this connection. I had the pleasure yes terday to say here on the floor of the Sonate that the election in Alabama hod boon carried on with ahsoluto fair ness, i he Senator Irom Alabama Mr. Kpcnccr avowod that there had been intimidation. Doubtless ho believed it; 1 did not, and I so expressed mv sell, havoj u nt received this telegram, wnicn runs inus: MoarauHBRT. Aaau.tOlh. 1STS. eealor W. W. A'oloa . Alabama thanks yoa for your generous do' f.oee of her In the Senate yesterday. The elee tioa was eoadeotad tbrowgboat tha Stale with ob solete fairness and without tba slightest distorb. snoe or complaint or iutimidation that we hare heard. The Democrats have elected their Slate ticket by aver forty thousand majority, and at least four.flnhs of both brioches of tha Legisla ture, prgreee in large number. Toted wltu as. W. D. OBABAB, ' Chalraas Democratic State Oommittee. Mr. Hnenccr. Will the Sonator from Pennsylvania allow me a moment ? I desire to state, In answer to the dis patch rend by the Senator from Con necticut, that the majority in Alabama is vory large and that on Monday last largo iiepublican counties, for instance) the county of Greene, which has, ever since the Kcpublicnit pnrtv was form ed, given over 2,000 majority, voted the Democratic ticket; that tho coun ty of Sumpter, which has a liopnbll can majority of 2,000 in it, voted the Democratic tickot : that tho county of II ...i.:i. I - ti Lif junri-ngir, which uun lupu UUCP. majority of 2,000, voted the Dem ocratic ticket. Those counties voted the Dctnocrntio ticket simply be- causo the colored people were afraid to go to tho noils and vote. The col ored people did not vote, and it was intimidittion nnd nothing else, the Chairman of tho Democratic State Committee to tho contrary notwith standing. 1 . i . Mr. Wallace. Mr. President, what better answer Is thero to the argn mcnls of tho Senator from Vermont Mr. Edmunds and tho Senator from Indiana f Mr. Morton than that tho State of South Carolina, tho Btnto of Louisiana, and tho State of Mississippi oro the only places in which they can find theso outrages. Why Is it that in Democratic States, In States that aro reconstructed and controlled by Democrats, prosperity is returning, pence and Order prevail? Why is ii taaltliero the ireenman' is contented and industrious ? Why is It that tax ation is being reduced, that the com munities are orderly, that material prosperity Is' Increasing? Why is it eat in an oi tneso states under Dem ocratic rulo order prevails, business is reotoreti, material wealth grows, taxes luHSenlntorost on Rthto bonds is being paid, tho credit of tho State is being restored? Why is this, I ask, whilo itl States that aro still under control ot others than tho Democratic party In the South the freeman is discontented and riotons, outrages, blood, and mur der nro heard' of, the people are discon tented and unhappy, taxation fs re doubled, and the only right that a white mah has there is tho right to be taxed? ' Why Is it' that In all those Stittes material prosperity is lessening, prosperity dot-reusing? Why ia this ? Can there be any other answer than that tn tho latter tho (mwer, the con trol, the Interference of the Federal Government 'exists, 'and men aro hot pet milled WgTjvern themselves as we tie In the 'North, regulating and con lijolllno; our domestic affairs In our own winy j our township affairs, 'onr roads, oaf schools, ovnj-thrng that cortcortis ufl as a pchjilfc from the holtfjin upward through the township, tho rounty, the Strafe, tdJthe-1r(jrnl Oorernment; whilo In these States; J-ou nndortake to rail) them front the top through tho peworof tlie Ferltral Oorernment with thohsyorref,thrn'u'ghlhHtat,throiiglr tbo Governor, through the powef that the Veferal Oovornmcnt only controls and directs. This is the true answer Id-It, rfhd it ia an answer that goes to tie very csscneo of Baton liberty: It is an answer that will come to' you 1 wherever and whenever yon nndt take to reverse the traditions of the (iovemmetit and people from1 whom yon got tour liberty and your law ' Tho old Saxon form of Oorernment, the Oovcmmont ot the people them' Helves In their vtasest relation to their home llfo, the home Oorernment, borne rule, ia the only rule for any free poo-, CLEARFIELD, pie. When von give to theso peopl tho entire and absolute control of their institutions themselves ; when you tuk away tho Fodernl bayonot and ceaso to vox and oppress thorn by inlcrtor- ing with thetn, thon you will havo peace and order; taxation will be re duced : the credit ol the Common wealths will be restored, and you will have contentment and industry and pcaco and order and Just administra tion ot tbe law. But it is charged that tho frco schools aro disturbed ; it is alleged that edu cation does not prosper in the States that are reconstructed and under Dom- ocratlo control. Such is not the fact. Sir, but yesterday, this wook cortainly. wo nave tno iniomtation Irom tho trustees of the Peabody educational fund that in all tho States south save and except alone the Slates of South Carolina, Louisiana, nnd Florida, their school systems are being properly man aged and cared for, whilo in those Slates tbe report stales that they aro not being nronorlv managed, that thev are not being cared lor. 1 ho report of Mr. Htearns, the general agent, is as lollows: The report shows the general flourishing con dition or publio schools ia tho Southern States, eicept ia the three Statue or Florida, South Car olina, anu Louisiana. Mr. ueorge reaooiiy nos cell, who kae been spendiag tbe last wlater la tho booth, gave It as bis opinion that nothing otiuld ba oitieeted from these Elates In the way of adraneing their educational Interests until there was B change is their State Qoeernment. tforo is an answer to tho educational argument of Senators, and you find this answer everywhere In the Demo cratic South. Tbo churgo of the Sen ator who was lust upon the floor in this regard may bo placed sido by stdo with the report of tho gonoral agent of a non partisan independent educational fund, and lot tho pooplo judge between litem. This Is a apolitical discussion. It has degenerated into such. We recog nize it; it is declared to bo such by our brethren on tho other sido. Wo have already had cxtrrcts from the lotter of acccptunco o! Mr. Tilden ; lot me read another brier oxtracu Speaking of tho South and tho ne groes, be says: Hut, In aid of a result so benefl cent, the moral influence of ercry good cltlien, ea well ae cyery governmental authority, ought to be exerted, not alone to maintain tbelr just equality before the law, hot likewise to eeuhlieh a eordlal fraternity and good-will among citisen., wbat.rrr their reee or eolor, who are now united In the obc destiny or a common eeH-gorcramcnt. Placo this declaration sido by sido with the concluding paragraph of the report ot tho bennlor from Massachu setts Mr. lioutwoll on Mississippi, wuicn rcaus mus: 1. The constitutional guarantee of a ReDubll. can form af government to every Stale will re quire tbe tnlted Slates, if tbeea disorders in crease or area eonllnue and all milder measures ball prove laefleetuel. to remand the Slate to a territorial condition and through a.rstem of nub. lie eduealion and kindred mesne of Improvement oiieoge toe laces ci ma innaoitants and recon struct tbe government npoa a Republican basis, Follow this with the argument of tho cool, clvar-beadcd Sonator from Vermont mado on this quostion. in which ho looks to reconstructing re construction, and then I ask Senators on whoso side will those who lovo pcaco and order, who believe in tho stability of government and in honest payment ot tho public debt, be found ? Senators who occupy tho vantago ground ol leadership, as do theso sen ators, do not deliberately concludo their State tinners ormakothoirstttdiod addresses without a purpose to execute tno conclusions at which they arrive. Sir, is it to bo questioned whether tho ortler and law lovins nconlo of tho fiortli, nay more, sir, the capital of tho JNorth, will not scan theso declara tions with tho closost scrunitv? I mistake much their temper if this pro gramme be not tho tocsim ot danger, the fire-boll in the night, to arouse that capital and those peoplo to the just ap prehension of what tho entertainment is to which they aro Invited. nut, sir, this is not all. Uno of your most pronounced partisan papers but yesterday denounced in unmeasured Tins this progranimoinemnbaticand decided language Tho New York timet of ycslorday. tho mouth piece of tho capital of the city of Now ork on the llopubltcan side, emphatically C -nounces it It says: A more outrageous proposition cannot be easily lagined. That la this Centennial rear, before tbe echoes of our national self -glorlfloetion have icd away, grave Senators should prepoee 10 vest somewhere a power which on lu fane would ba equivalent to a confession that tha Republic Is a lailoro, ts s elreamstsnee that would tax tbe credulity of any dtepa.sloaate ebservar. flere tea propoeitioa, powever, Bad In a form that leaves no room to doubt the earnestness of its au. luors. It Is a proposition so far in excess of tho neode af the occasioa, .. obnoxious as all who would preserve the admtnlslratloB or tke Gov ernment in tbe spirit which bed imparted all Its winy ana eareeu lor II all lie elorv. so d root. In confliet with the feeling that dominates among me people and, therefore, In a party sense so InospedUmt, that we would fain believe Ite aa arplonoe by the Seneta Impossible. Tbe reeoa. strueted Ntateo are parte of the Uoioa in the eame sense mat appllea to New York or Hassaehu.eu. . and It Is monstrous to suppose that tho Govern ment or any department et itmev beololhed with an authority whereby It may "remand a State to territorial eoadillon, if IB the opinion of tho pertleaa majority for tha lima being the local al- inmraiion ue not "upou a Ifepuollcna basis. riow. sir. if it shall bo. as I said when 1 began, that in this matter South Car- olina shall prove herself able to defend tho majesty of tbo law, wo shall all re joice If in this duty cast upon her, lor it is a amy it sho bo a sovereign Htuto, to protect lifo and property, to uuiiirm urime, to viouieuiu 1110 tmiKon law it in tho porlornianco of her duty in this she shall be successful, I and all who act with mo will bo proud of its accomplishment. But sho i upon trial. Sho cannot as a government controlled by peoplo whom you claim enn govern themselves, demand of tho cuerul liovcrnment interlerencg and d. Ihcso people are upon trial. Can they govern themselves? Can they punish crime? If they cannot, let thoso who can, come to their aid in publio affairs through peaceful and nomo agencies. Now, Mr. President, with my hand pon my mouth, and my mouth In tho ust, with humiliation of face I am compelled to refer to what was snitl upon tho floor of tho Sennto tho other day in regard lollio great Stato which I in part represent. It was in reply to a declaration of tha Senator from Ohio Mr. Thurman that my colleague said that ail tho murders committed in Pennsylvania by tho Mollio Ma- ffiilros were committed by Democrats. My colleague is mistaken, Mr. Presi dent. Thoso men aro of both political parties ; many of them aro unnatural used citizens, dosporadoei who come to our Commonwealth from other coun tries, who consort with th miners, band them together, and form organi sations which are violont, arbitrary. and a terror to the people They have noney-comnea several oi our counties with crime, and I am humiliated that I am compelled here on the floor of the Senate to admit it as the foulest blot pon Ike escutoheon ol that trrond old State. ' Yet the fact is here, and it ta my duty as one of the representatives of hor people to say what is the truth. At Uila point the honorable Senator yielded that the Senate might take a recess till half past seven o'clock p.m. Alliilsl PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1876. Mr. Wallace. Mr. President, whon tho Senate adjourned 1 was endeavor ing to express a sense of tho humilia tion that us a Sonator from tho State of Pennsylvania I loll in being requir ed to cxproris here on tho floor of the Senale any reason, any cuuso why sho should be unablo in any portion of her broad domain to vindicate law and pun ish orinio. But it is hero; tho ques tion ig in tho Senate. It has loon brought hero by tho Sonator from Ohio and my colleague; and It Is my duty to say that however much thero may havo been of breaches of law and ot order, of violence, crime, and blood shed in that Commonwealth, it is not all attributable to on political party that both political pudtlics bavo mem bers among tbo organidilion that has commuted those violations ol law, and that niHiiv of its members aro unnat uralized Jenpemdoes from other lands. Hut the communities-in which thev exist have become, tliroi'gh a species of torrorism they huvo oxerciscd thero, to a largo extent demoralized ; crime has honey -combed two or throe coun ties, and officials, whether Itenublican or Deinociiiiic, nave become In a man. nor untler the control of this organiza tion. That violence occurs, that mur der has occurred, cannot bo denied. i bat tho power ot the counties bus Dccn attempted to be exercised in vain also cannot bo denied. I bnve no rec ollection that exoctttivo power has over been called there; but, if so, It too has boon powerless or weak to stem the tido of lawlessness, liut, air, recently nn attempt has bcon made through tho ctTorts, not, I am sorry to say, of executive power or the powor mat ought to control It tho Police, tho Grand Juries, the Sheriff's of the counties but through a great railroad organization, headed by a Democratic rreaiuont, which placed its Police and its powor among these dosnontto men, traced them to their lairs, and is now dragging them to the light and to jus tice Tho courts before which thov aro being tried aro presided ovor by Democrats; the itirios buforo whom they aro being tried arosolectod under a non -partisan jury law; and 1 believe that six men havo been convicted of murder in tho first degree Thoso crimes aro now being drawn to tho light ; tho prosecutions arc being press- od ; these men are boing driven to the wall ; terrorism is ceasing and law and oruer is about lo prevail in that State in which law and order originated, for from Penn and his followers and their theories camo tho system of law and ohedienco to constituted authority that now governs this country. From that Commonwealth moro than from any other in tha country proceeded recog nition of law, ot orderly methods, and of pcaco ; and it is my pritlo to say that tiio pooplo of that grout Common wealth will immediately, if not through regular channels at least by some power. ooerco order, vindicate law, punish crime, i,nd permit no further outrages upon us peace. I also read in reolv to what has boon said on this subject what was said to tbo jury in the trial of on. of thoso mon in tho county of Schuylkill by tho gentleman to whom I bnve alluded, tho counsol for tho Commonwealth. I read from the argument of Hon. F. 11, Gowon in tho court of Oyor and Ter miner of Scbitvlkill countv in tho trial of Thomas Munloy for tho murder of I i nomas Sanger, a mining boss : Than we knew we were freemen. Then we eared no longer far tbe Molly Maeuiree. Tbea we could go to rally celling tbe Commissioner or Ibis coaaty, am md say to him, " TlaiM well the Welle of iheaaw additioa oftbeprieoBl dig tbo foundations ueep anu mala tnem strong, put in good mason ry and Iron bars, for, as tbe Lord llveta, the time will eotne when side by eide with Wa. Lovo, tbe murderer or 'Bquire tlwiiher. yoa will enter the walls that yoa are aow buildtei for otbero." Thee we could .ey to Jsok Kehoc the Hifh Constable of a great borongh ia this ecuaty, " Wo have aa rasr af yoa.'' Thee wo eoald say to Ned Mona. ghan, Chief of Police, and marderer and aeeaeein, " Behind you tha seafluld is prepared for your re. oeptloa." Then we eould ear to Pal Geary, Com. mtssioner of thia eoaaty, "The time has eaaesd woen a uoveraor or tbls Stat, dare to pardoa a Molly Manlr. t vou hare had vour last pardoa." Tbi-a we could soy to John Slettcry, who waa almost elected Judge of this Court, "We know thot or you, thet it were better yoa had not been horn than that It Ibonld be knowe " Then ill of as looked np. Then, at last, we were free, and I eame to ibis eoantv and walked threuch it as safe- ir aa in tbe most crowded thoroughfare or 1'blla Se.pbia. Can yoa Imagine tbe eonditiori of the peoplo of mis ecaotry with murderers upon the bone aad la the Jury-box and ta control of all the principal ofllecf of tbe county t X lived ie tbe apprehension of ell this for two ysars aad a half alone, and tied kaows that when the Unto comes tbst all I know may be teld to the world it will reveal a history sueh aa will msks ovary Anierlcsa citisen bang kle head with shame. I k.ve eeea s eociety of murderers and asta.sins having Its members ta tba highest plsees of this eouetv. I have seen them eleoted to All tbe positions of Constables and Po lice oAoere. I have aeon a trested member or that band or murderers a Comml'.loacrof theoeanly. I bare seen this organisation wisld a peiitioal power In tbe Stele whieh ba' ennirolled the elec. tlone ore great Onmmoawealth. 1 bavereeelved tha Information of meeting, bctweea eotne of tbe highest officers of the 8tatc and the chief of the murderers, at whieh large sums or money were paid to secure the vote, or Ibis Infernal association, to tarn tha Ude or a Stato eleetloa. Uod knows If aver in tbe world (here was a revelation aa deep and damning as that now laid open le the people of une wmmoBwe.nu lor use nr.. ume. Now, Mr. Prosidont, enn it bo, is It to be said that tho ordor-lovlng peoplo oi tnoi.ommnTiweaii,noi rennsyivnnia, that great Gorman population, than whom nono respect ortler and obey law moro, that all of tho peoplo o! that great Commonwealth aro tn bo stigmatized with tho crimo of a sintrlo locality ? yet this is tho argument that comet) to us In regard to tho South. Sir, I bare done with this humiliat ing subject in regard to my own Stnto. I regret that it has come here. I could do no less than 1 have done. I havo given to the Scnnlo what Is tho truth, tho rooord. Now 1 take up, and I am sorry that tho Senator from IndianuMr. Morton is not here, a speech ot that Senator delivered in the Senate on tho 18th of July, in which ho produces a stato- ment Irom tho J n'ostiry Department, which statement Is lengthy and elabo rate That Senator said in introduc ing it: - I ktve tbe slalrmoo! from the Treasarv Denert- aeent I em going to reed it. Home roar or Ave mo ei a. age, ca me via at reoraary, 1 believe, tbe Senslepe.eedareselntloB eellinaoa tba Secret erv or the Treasury ta make a statement rrom all the hooks or the Treaeary af all the de'alealloas aad failures to msks eetUemeot, from whatever sauce, that bad occurred la oareoeatry stane tbe letef Janaary, Hit. That embraced the lest admlals Iratioa ef Ueneral Jaekeaa. 1 hat doeament was seat here aLd with It aa enelycl, printed omelal ly. It ooaiee ever ihe signature er Ike Secretary or the Tracery j II It tree. I proposo to examine this valuable document, to test its value by recorded fiicls, and to see whether its statements are true, or, if they be taken as true, whothor they help tho cauie that it was produced to serve. It ia true that the Secretary ot the Treasury on tho r.'tu oi dune sent to ineHonats a mass of documents, a mass of names, an Im mense, voluminous document at least five inches in thickness and eighteen inchos square. The columns of that document were not added. It appear ed upon the thee ff it that credits were to be entered ; it appeared that charges wcro to be msue to ins men woo were alleged to be defaulters thereon. It waa incomplete ana unfinished In every particular, and it showed this upon its lice. It lies now in the office of the REPUBLICAN. Socrotary of tbe Senate Incomplete unfinished, burned In the tomb of tho Committee on Printing. It was not honored by tbe poor credit of being Srinted. This was objooted to by tho onator from Ohio, and it was lent to the committee as valueless. That doc ument, which was not worthy of being prinica, served 10 proauco to mo sen ate and to the country a mass of fig. ures, a tabular statement and com pon dium which has been sent to the coun try and is now boing circulated broad cast as a voritablo document. Sir, that statement is unrohablo and nn truthful to ihow the real defalcations duo to tho Govornmont, and tho Sona tor from Indiana in tho concluding partol bisromarksadmitsit. lie says The statement Is act correct la this. Mr. Pros! dent, that there are defalcations put dowo that do ooe exist, teas were afterwards settled i bat eo mi as the proportloa la eonceraed between tbe difler- aat admtnletretione, so far as my purpose Is con- oerbrd In the comparison 1 propose to make It la the same as u every defalcation bore stated took place, The.blei.lloi, U thai !.----.. i. ... . , but too large. I staled wherela It dees aol pro.' .. M ihh, ion. en. oi ineee a.reieerinn. le ell eduitalau-Btions were afterward settmd er taraed out lobe nominal j but that pertained Just as much to one as to aaotker, and, eo far aa tbo .object I nave ta view it eoaoeraed, litis fair .laUra.nl, because It shews tbo prouortion la all admlnlaiM. tlons, eed Bow I piopose to giro It Just aa It Is urni.ueu irom tna books or the Treasury Depart. But this is not all. Tho Senator from Indiana says this stutomontcomes hero ovor the signature of the Secre tary of tho Treasury. This is a mis take A statement somewhat like that published did accompany it, but it was neither signed nor certified : and the stiocoh of tbo Senator domonstratos that. It was not signed nor certified in the paper. If the statement ef the Senator from Ohio in rofcronoc to what was told htm by a Treasury official be admitted to be true, if it were vority and intended to Impart the truth, why in it nut, ccntnou 10 r it true, it would be honored and not discredited aa well by the Sonator as by the Treasury of ficials whom bo quotes. The publish ed table nowhere shows his certificate, but says it was prepared under direc tion oi the secretary ol tho Treasury. This statement, so elaborate and com plete, so unfinished and mysterious, jo untruthful and unreliable, ia printed as Senate Document No. 118. and has un- on its face the Indorsement that it oomcs from the Treasury ; but it has uu signature, ine documents tbem- selves upon which it is based are not printed because thoy aro unreliable, but tho statement printed gives the figures they contain. Wh v was it not printed? W by is it not cortifiod ? Is it authentic ? Docs it give tho truth ? Tho Senator from Indiana admits that it does not. Othor Senators admit that it does not, and thev quote the officials ot tho Treasury as discredit ing it. When the motion to print was up the Senator Irom Ohio said of this document as follows: Mr. Sherman. Ta reeard to the nrtertn. r tk. document I should like to have that oasstloa re ferred ta tke Committee oa Printing. I will soy thet my aitentioa was called to the doeameat It self by an oflioar of tbe fjovorament i. the. Tmml ary DopartmceL It oovere several velamcs, most wi no poeetoM moment, wbteh be of ao Interact to any mortal, man. wnman child. I think II waald de greet InJuUlcate loea lands aT worthy men to print this doeameat. Tha Swralary er tha Treasury la the latter read says be has comm. need rrom tke time tho last ronort wee medeielfl.lt. There may have bean lose. al statements made In tha meeatlme, enlaotkiag i noee pepere were sbowo to me. Asa matter at eoBrae. tba Seen!., .r .. Treasury tall bound to go back aad do this work. uere leioioiung! are some or tee tables sent acre treat, long tablet. There are n...l irom in... laoiM mat are saown also la the tabu lar statements that accompany the loiter or the Secretary of the Treasury. I bare ao oblexloa to prinupg tble dMum.nl except on account of tke grea. eve. ioa. win ue involved aad tbe aafeir a ess aad Iejnstiee that will be done ta iaaeoeat aeetiie now ia their graves. Mr. President, these tables Ikow tkat meet af tas persons Balnea aa defaulting oflloere wore net ia the military, nasal and civil service of Ike Uni ted Suttee, wbe are aow dead. Tbe Barnes ef the sereUes are given hero, maay of whom are dead ; the amounts rang, from $1 ap to lloe.OOO. Scan dals without number all ever this breed country ol oure will he published to Ihe world without any good whatever uwe print this doeumsnt. It gives Ike aoeoaeta of every otfloor of too Sovernmeat rrom IS.1I to tbie time. I BoUee many aans er this class. During tbe tndlaa wars, aad daring cur reeent civil war, a soldier may have beea killed ib belue who was okarged with a lot of mus. kele, end against his account they all stand in the beleooe charged to him, while it was elated that be was hilled la battle, etc. Consols have aud abroad and It hac beea Impossible le ectUe their accounts, and yet balances are starred at tke Treasury Department agaiast tba Coasal. Hon. Creole men, men of the highest reek tn the publle rorvlee, men of the greatest dietiaetioa la this country aava little balaaoas onerged agaiBst them and thay would Bow bo published is the list ef do realtors. There may have been aotbing due from tnem, pot it mere were come lltUe d sorenenev in heir aeeoanto they are still Babaiaaeod. Saeh a list would Injure greatly the repatalion or honora ble offleert In tho civil, military, and naval serv ice, If published, although they are little matters. sometimes aiaoontlng to but a lew dollars. The officer le whom I have referred celled me alteatloa ta the reel that while Ihe Depertmeot wee suejing n eiiopie, plain dnty, no one pre tended that tbls money was due bv these neonio and yet it Is charged oa ths books or the Treae ary Department as a elsim against them, bat It never wouia oe una never eoald eo settled. On the objection of the Senator trotn Ohio this voluminous, this unreliable document was sonl to tho Committeo on Printing, 1 1 camo back to the Sen ate on the 27th of June with a report against printing tho documont, but for printing the tabular statement that contains its results. Tho aggregate of me uocumoni waa reported in favor or but tbo document itselt was renortod against On that day tho Senator from Bbodo Island Mr. Anthony said: It contains a list of all persons, Including those not now In the public service, against whom there appears to be a balance oa the book, of the Treas ury. In vary many instanoeetho balanoe is nomt aal, sot real, eomotlmes eo desire ated i h) very many eases It arlsss out or misunderstanding be tween the disbursing officer and tha aeeoundnr oflloere or tha Treaaaryr which, when they come to be explained and e-IJeated, may bo decided IB raver or one party or ths other. In very many lustanaes It arises rrom betenoos dee from officers or the navy who have goasdowa with their shins 'lib thslr papers apeo them , offloorserthoormy ho have fallea In bottle er died ia boepllal aad hosa vouchers have beea loet i while it la aimer. en! from the sonnlles which thev had onmhaaed and Trom tha mea whom thev hod paid that tho oney intrusted to tbem had beea expended rar tha pnrposee for whieh tt wee appropriated. . Ae. oerdiog to tho law these all appear apeo the books of the Treesory as Indebted for the aaieltlcd bal eaoee for, while the Treasary ahsrgea bb efficer wiu evsryining paid to aim, ll does ao! credit him with what he has paid oa! until II le aeeer telaed and adjasted aeeerdtae to eoealsileas af tha Department. Many ef these are eharree for erpoyments i that Is, where ae officer has erroee- eueiy paid to some creditor af tho Qoverameel lore tbea ha was leg ally author! ted to receive t aad of ooeree Ike diaburaliig officer must suffer tbe eoneequeace ef hts error. Tad to a bleeder, pal It Is act a crime, lie has aol omeeuled Ihe money i be bos Bel defrauded tbe Uovorameat ; he has made e mistake aad paldaman atkeesaad dollars, for example, wheo It eppears from all tba laiormauoB yet IB tae Boeeaseiea er ue Treeenrv that ho only eoghl ta have paid kirn ti aad therefore be steads as a defaulter far III aa tho boohs of the Treaeary. Thle may in maay easea remale yet opoa for adjeetmeat. 1 am sure that Bobody wants le nvblish Ike nemec ef each men, Mviag aad dead, aa embsealoro Bad defaaltera la aay erlmianl eseee. Tke great deraleatlens, tbe criminal defalcations, are ail kaonai they are eu made pebllsi tboy caaBct be ooBsaalod wltboal erimtaal sempuelly ef the aceouBIIng officers. Tksy are put ta anil agalart lea defaaltera eed agaiast tbelr heads. re and ether eases are pet ta out!, tke recalls of whieh do act always show thai the officer la a dcraaltcr. Thero may be eeees ef beeeot differences of oplaiea between the officer eed tha Department as le tbo law, which aro le be eel tied by tke Certs. A greet eseay seaee grow Bp be fere the pre. eat improved system ef keeptag the aeeoeeei, whoa diebarelBg officers wbc verealee rooetviageCjoera react red lemreveBdoaeftkoOeverBeaeal, alabejre ed the exaeaaeo ef Ihelr depertmcBts, aad earned ever Ike knJeaeo be ike Treaeary. That ayeteos prevailed aalil II wee refers ed ba ear day, emd eader Ike! system Ike resell ef every dlffereeee of epkate. bctweea dtebarabsg officer eed the De part, eat weald ataevfl ae . detBeaelleo ageresl htm. Seme of those saeee art ae erlllBg that I have ouceled t he ef Ikcex. Although I ahoald NEW Sot read the name oranypersoa who would suffer ny It, I suppose tbe lllustrtons name er Washing Ian Irv leg would not suffer tf 1 say that ba stands acre ea s deiaellar lotae nmoanl or lAree cento Here le another oflioar ia Ihe list whom I wee la- strumsnlal, among ethers, In eonmendisg le tho teblle service, in wblek ba groeUy distinguished imaelf, I shall hold myself responsible for bis deralealloB, priaeipal and Interest la gold. It amounts to one cent I de net suppose that any body will think that Robert Walsh was an em- bossier or defeelter to tke Government, and yet bo la put down tor s small amount. Hera I lad aa eld Colonel whom 1 knew well, who died IB mac, wbo le marked as e defaulter for fa.se. Mr. Preeldeat. I do Bdt wish U Impair Ihe oredll of the great keeking kouee of tbls city, but I am beeed to coy that Corcoran A Riggs stead dowo aa eeienaaau BBder tntd eel I. Bering Brothers ere down, and, worse tkae thai. tha Eaglisk Government Itself It net dewa aa a defaulter. AS WC have last settled aevlv all our oi. uiinouiucB aim nngiaaa and got into a new one, I do not wish Usee tho credit of that Qovem. rncnl Impaired, and far lu relief I must say that a marginal Bote reads t Tha Becretary ef Bute no oae ue oooot in IB wee seated hieg ego." It Occurred IB ISIS, but It Stand, an the kiu.ke e. ever ai.joe or default by tbe British Uovornmont, ear. rresiueai, t mi, si go ever great many niastretions of the earns kind, bol I have made quite sufficient lo show Inat, whilo there ere or oourse in tna great operations or the Treasury any defaulters and many ambssslsrs, nothing eould he more aajaet thta to mla tbea up with these porsoos wbo are marhed la darnel! is tbe Treaeary. bat wbo aro Bot defaulters In env eenee wnatevar, Bad probaaiy do not owe the Uovorn mont enylhlng. Certainly It is not likely that voreoren at Aiggs, tferlog nroiaors, and tbe Uril. isb uoverameol owe the Treasary Bnylhiag. That is what Senators said in regard to this documont, and yet the table !b printed. iDcy discredit tbo source, thoy deny its truth, tboy ropudiato its statomonts ; yot tbey order its results to bo printed and preserved, and it is usoa ss a campaign documont 1 bey makocampaignBueechosuDon it. Thev quote it as true, ana tney calculate re sults from it. What becomes of polit ical fairnoss if such proceedings as these are to be countenanced bv the Senate? What becomes of thevoritr. the truthfulness of the record of tho Sonate if statomonts of this kind aro to be printed and filod with our roc. ords to remain there as official docu mont from the Treasury Department ? Tk- I ! C .1 . . , im uresis ut tuis suttemont was oad, the structure unsound, and the results it produces aro utterly and absolutoly unreliable. Tbe statement is incorrect n every particular: the losses are not truthfully stated, and necessarily the conclusions arc not correct; and yet the Sonator trom Indiana prints the statoment and relies upon it. A leador ol the Uouse I dare not refer to what is said in tbe Uouse: but in tho lUcord of Sunday I find rv speech that also relies upon this snd quotes it in txtetm, to a figure, administration by adminis tration, tbe ratio of losses fixed by this most veracious documont It is quotod by tho Republican loader of tho House, not by him alone, but another promi nent Iiepublican gentleman of tho House in his speech also quotes and relies on it It is for us to tost this statement bv known tacts, ascertain whothor it is truo. discover for ourselves whether it can bo relied upon, learn whether this is tho kind of budget to be given to an intelligent pontile, on the eve of s groat foouw woiKBk try kiiej ouusu) til Mlw United States from which tho nconlo are to make up a verdict which is to control their tlostinoa for four years. Let ns examine it by the tests of tho record ; lot as oxanine it by printed documents; lot us tost its truth bv that which cannot be gainsaid, and if wo una tnnt not only bare senators nore discredited it, but that on its face it bears falsehood, then the cause that it attempts to serve must be baselosa and bad indeed. At the outset it mar bo said that it is of course difficult for thoso wbo are in opposition to obtain tho necessary access to records to got the data on which to contradict a statoment of this character. Mr. Kdmunds. What does tho Sen ator moan by that? Mr. Wallace. I moan by that that we are compellod to gropo our way through printed records. We go for aaia to tne x return ry Department, and find it occupied with somotbing else ; to other Departments, and printed or dors intorvone; and whon we go to euv Aniaeuiv we uniinot get a volumi nous mass of documents in time to servo our puiTMses, and yet Senators get it i ao not protend to say that there is any wtlllul disposition to refuse infor mation, rot I say that printed orders are in the road, that time cannot bo given to the officials to furnish thodoo uments in tirao for use on such occa sions as thia. , Mr. Kdmunds. If the So--tor will allow me bocauso that is rather a ser ious implication, I wish to say for ono, and I fool pretty stiro that 1 urn stat ing tho truth, that no discrimination whatever is mado in tho Treasury, or any otnor department, botween Sena tors, with regard to thotr political faith, or their raou or color, or what ever, and the Senator csn get all the information from tho Treasnry that my honorable friend from Massachu setts, an ex-SoorotarT. tun. at an v timu. Mr. Wallace. I havo no doubt that I can got it ; it will not he denied, hut It will net onto in time to servo tho purpose. Mr. Kdmnnds. It will eomo In the same time that it will for anybod y olso, Mr. Wallaoo. The Sonator may have mat opinion, but 1 am entitled to mine Wo aro obliged to grope through print ed data ; we aro obliged to meet tho accusations that we find on thia print ed statement in the best war we can. it we prove its taiaoiiood in vital points wo think wo iball bare disposed of it If wo prove that it is untrue and fulso in oertain vital points, the maxim al tut in vno,fiilsus in omnibus applies, and wo can rely on tbo people to tail to be lieve its reliability as a whole. Tho Sonator irom Indiana stales that during the last torm of President Jackson, trom January I, 1833, to De cember 81, 1837, or as it should be, from March 4, 1833, to March 4, 1837, tho ratio of loss by defalcation! waa 110.55 per 11,000, and he relics on this statoment to demonstrate this and tbe figures given by it he says is ths actual amount of defalcation. This statemont shows, and he relies uon it, that there were losses by reouiviug ollloers of II, 383,845, and there were losses by dis bursing omeors ot ai,l63,uuu, a total loss of 12,547,000. iiere is a apeoifio. distinct, and accurate statement ap parently. Let us soo bow fallacious it is; how wild a statemont these loose data furnish. , It is fortunato that ws have tbe data for those four years or ws eould not moot these charge ; but It happens that on the records ia found report of lion. Levi Woodbury, Sec retary of tlio'Treasury, mado in 1839, to the House of Kepresentatires, in wnicd tne real lossoa by dolalcations from 1789 un to that dato are stated. That report ia found in House Docu ment rio. 10 ot the Twenty-sixth Con grass, first session. It shows tbe losses by receiving officers to be 1214,648, not. 1,883,000. It shows ths losses by disbursing ofioors to be 1230,336, hot 11,163,00 ; total locates on both sides l44iS8i, not I2,M7,601 ; thus making the trifling diff.rnnoe of e,102,QOO.v On tlie figures of the Senator from In diana this difference makes ths ratio 11.97 per thousand of losses In place of TEEMS $2 por annum in Advanoe. SERIES - V0L. 17, NO. 33. 110.55. Can wo rely upon data of this character, whon wo find upon the re oords ot the Government a statemont ovor the signature of the Secretary of the Treasury palpably, plainly, dis tinctly saying that instead of tho losses boing 12,517,000 for thoso four years thoy wore It 14,984 ? From ono we loarnall, 1 havooxtrnctod thoso figttros ano navo a tnblo which 1 annex. Extracts from statement nf aggregate amount of defecations end ratio er lo..ea rrom I7HV le Mereb 4, I83T, rurniaoed Dercmbor 10, le3, to Congress and found In House Document No. 10. drat session 'Twenty-sixth Congress, Including public debt. PtBBUBs assays. Period, March 4. HJ.1. to March i t3f. Eg. ponies, Including public debt i ISM.. ...m $2J,4tH.J7 IS 18:14-. 18.420.IS7 H i"-io..,... 17,00s,41S ti 18.-. . 1M55.144 Total rur rour years.-. , t87,lM,41 0t i Total deraleatlens.-. 130,1110 01 I 00 84 Ratio or loss per SI.OOO Whole number er defeulters. Total loss by disbursing effloera irom iev 10 ma .. 4,S,07S afl bscbipti. Total receipts.. )iafl,MI,S7l 4 Total defalcalioB H 114,048 0.1 Ratio of loss per SI.0U0 .... 160 WholeBomberof defeollara 1R Total loss by receiving efllcers, rev to ion- -.. BZ,U3lj,o4M SI Total receipt! end dliliarseutents derlar Jackson's last Urm fl221.oAl.lvS tf soiei uetaicetions aunog JHI- son s last term. 411,184 It 1 SO Ratio of loss per Sl.OeO Ratie or loss during same term aa stated Ib Treasurer report II li Error aa sbowo by original official report ; I Oft Whole amount of losses rrom 1780 to March 4, lb37, (40 years)...... ,, 1 21 17 Annual Iocs Hs.7.11 00 n noie kmounl or ton Irom July l, ism, to Jane II, I87i, (14 yean) It liS lM 47 Anaaalloss ....... 1,018,093 01 Mr. Secretary Woodbury in his re- Iiort on the finances mado to Congress )cccmbor 3, 1839, discusses this sub ject so broadly and specifically and so tuorouguiy reiutes tuis nameless stato ment as to its figures, that I quote him : I no partlcaiar l osees tn cock Presidential term being also desired by the resolution thev have been accepted ; and as tbey tarnished a strihing eolatiea or some ef the general causes af those losses, the perleds In whiek the Inrgeet and come or tbe smallest once hennenoJ amoaa each cleas ef publio agents mignl be nsorully deeigneted here. Among the beaks the largest losses were from 1111 lo 1817 then eon.i.tlng entirely or de. r reotatioo on notee taken, aad aext rrom 1821 to 834, consisting then chiefly or denoslut while from 1810 to 183H and from IS33 to 18.17 tbey were smeller than In aay period tines 1813. Among disbursing officers, locking te the eraounl dt.bureed, the largest losses were trom 1821 to ISlo, next from 1817 te 1821. snd next from 18rVB te 1K13 1 eed (ley were coulter reee 1820 to IBM I eedrem 18:13 ea 1887 lean in eeyetssrterwi toaof cecr, uerfVom 1781 le 1703 Mr. Morrill. The Senator from Penn sylvania is calling attention to some errors at the Treasury Department 1 desire to ask: him it be nos noticed some of tho errors in the statements of Mr. Tildon, the nominoe of the Dem ocratic party. 11 o states the amout of tho out flow of gold from this coun try tor a series ol years, but omits to doduct what has flowed in, making a iiiorence irom the true statoment ot 6200,000,000 ? Mr. Wallace Tho Sonator has taken tho floor nnd interjected a speech with out asking my leave Tho President pro tempore. The Chair askod the Senator from Penn sylvania if be yielded to tho Sonator Irom vormont Doosheyioldr Mr. Morrill. 1 do not desire to in terrupt the Senator. Mr. Wallace. I will only say that, following the example of tho othor Sen ator from Vermont, Mr. Kdmunds, I am making a political speech, and I rust I shall not be again interrupted. Mr. Kdmunds. But the other Sena tor from Vermont yielded to interrup tions continually. Mr. Wallace. Tho Sonator from Vermont is a much older settlor here than tho Sonator from Penn sylvania. When he gets to be as old in this Hall as tho Senator from Ver mont ho will yisld as oflon as the Sen ator. Mr. Morrill. I only desired to call attention to two errors, tho ono in re gard tn the outflow of gold and the other in regard to taxes amounting to from four hundred to fivo hundred mil lions. Mr. Wallace. I decline to yield. I continuo to read from the report ot Mr. iSecrotary Woodbury. The lose ca each 1100 from 1811 le 1833 waa only nineteefl cents, and rrom 1838 lo 1837 only tweBfj-lIx cents, while la come pre vicos terms it was as high as 12.10. la this class the most numerous losses compared with all Ib oHee were from 1817 to 1811, Bail trom 1811 Is 181a, endaexirrom IMsto 1817. the Smallest propor tloa IB this reepect, except derlng tbo Orel two terms onder the ConslituUon, woe rem 1839 re I833,end except those and the theld term fee nan emoteel wee rem 1838 to 1817. Among eollecting officers, If looking te the emounli collected, the highest tosses were from I7t7 te inni, next rrom 1809 te 1813, next from 1817 to 1831, and next from 18111 to I SOD. Tho moit aumerout defaulu, compared with tha whole number or that dees ia office, were from 1800 t. "13, Beit from 1103 to 1809, next rrom 1821 to 18i, next rrom 1817 to 1811, and aext rrom 1823 te 1818. Tec rehc .!. rem 1831 te 1883 dnet 1838 W 1837 eras eel oao-oerfa aa Icroeni ie eeeie fee remede t'a.1 .eeie.rttlfd. Indeed it was less thea any previous terms Irom tbe foundation ef the Government except four, end tho number of suck delaulters was lees than IB aay Presidential term since 1840. Mr. President, I might stop here and treat this voracious statemont from tho Treasury Department without signa ture as a discredited wilness. but bo causo the printed records giro us no specific data with which to meet its tnlsity as lo subsequent dales, I take it up as a wbolo and contrast it with such records as I can find on tho sub ject and ask that reason and sense shall guide us to tho truth. 11 seems that the aggregitto loss bv tho statement published between 1831 and 1861 is 615,269,000. This is too large ; the Senator admits it himself. It contains discrepancies with the fig ures that 1 havo already rood. Iflhorw) four years aro a teat, it is 67,000,000 too largo. The wholo sum of tho losses for forty-eight years is less than 67,000.- 000, as ahovvu by this statoment of Secretary Woodbury. Thoactuallossoa by death and hopeless insolvency are shown by Mr. Solicitor Streeter on tho Z&lb of Uetoher, 185C, to be 67,822,418. The defalcation shown by tbe books of the irensury may have been larger, but thoso actually chargeable to profit and loss are stated by Mr. Streeter. as Solicitor of the Treasury, up to that date. This included debts in judgment for many years. It excluded all of which any hops remained for colloo- ttpn. Ibis statoment plainly contra- uicts tuo treasury nguros. lie re ports tbe ascertained insolvents up to tuiomir avo, iooo, sna tno statement ot ths Senator brought from the Treasury oomcs up to 1860. Report of asmtninrd intdttmtt up to Otf- looer 20, i fioo, at per report oj f . Ji. StrtYter, Notieitor of the Trmtvn. Debts ortgtnatlcg la Nary Depar'I.S1,40t,3l II liable ctigiaating la War Depar'U 1,141,101 tl Debte originating vaeaeteme 071,391 II peblt erlgiaeUag la foreign iater- eeeree.....'. ,. ,......, tt.Slfl 14 Debit erig.aelleg la Iedlaaa... 11,491 .40 Debts originating la lends 191,011 II arums wru " ea miseeiiai IIO.flM M 0JII40 II Btl.noe. aee froex beaks, inavalla- ei. ....... -. , I,0ne,l71 U Total knee.... xi.. r,in,4ii oi Treating those figures as tbe actual losses down to July, 1850, we will fbl. low the suits of the Uovernmunt to 1859 through the report of the Treas ury in order to loam tbe aggregate louses to that dato and ascertain it we we can it the duta given us are true. Hy them wo loom that suit tor 64,100, 000 wore brought, that 62,030,000 there of were oolloeled, and 62,057,000 unool. looted. It we add this latter aum to tho lost debts, we find the whole loss to be 60,880,000 and not 615,260,000. Thoso figures expressly contradict this statoment so that there is no possible oscnpo. This brings us to the conclusion Irro sistably that the figures from 1834 to 1859 are not tho real sums of the losses. But, for the sake of the argument, lot ua assume that this statement of losses from the Treasury is correct, its figures aro true, its conclusions are uistlr drawn. Then lot us glance at the re sults that follow. It this voracious paper be literally true, wo find that the greatest total loss shown br the statemont through receiving officers from 1861 to 1875 was 64,348,000; from disbursing officers, 69,905,000. In fourteen years the total loss was $14,. 253,000 ; annual loss, 61,018,000. Loss through receiving officers from January 1834 to June 30, 1861, 62,907,000; through disbursing officers from Jan uary I, 1834, to June 30, 1861. 612.- 361,000. Total loss in twenty-seven and a half years, 615,260,000; an an nual loss of $565,255. Taking tbe figures of the Troaaorv statemont itself, it shows a loss of a million annually, while during the twenty-soron and a half years preced ing thoro was a loss of something over half a million annually. A loss of but a million annually a trifle, a mere luigatclle; officials take but fourteen and a quarter millions in fourteen years, bence our economy is plain. Tbe peo plo aro suffering and our expenses are increasing, hence our economy is plain. This is tho logio of the argument and ol the document I am commenting on. Whore bavo tho lessees occurred that this total gives as the aggergato there of from 1861 to 1875? By report mado to the House in 1874 we find that ono hundred and fifty-seven pay. masters in the Army are in arrears 6768,706. From the report of tbe Naval Committee of the House wa learn that one hundred and twelve paymasters in tho Navy are in arrears 61,154,000. From the unprinted docu ment we find that one hundred and forty-eight colloctors of internsl rev enue are in arrears about 63,600,000; and thatoutof four hundred andninoty five defaulters in tbe Indian service tboso papers show two hundred and Bovonty-soven in tho past fiftoon years, and but two hundred and eighteen in tho thirty years preceding. From the letter of Mr. Pratt, Commissioner of tbo Internal lievenue, we learn that of cash deficiencies ot colloctors of Inter nal Revenue between March 1, 1869, and February 28, 1876, there are 6595,. 751. Tho statement that I have referred to is contradicted by tbe facts; load ing Senators challongo tho data and refuse to permit that data to be printed. Common sense and the rule of practice in ordinary affairs certify it not to be true, and the conclusions are irresisti ble that tbe figures given as the losses from 1834 to 1859 are not the sum of tho losses sustained by the Govern ment during those years, but are ovor Btatod. Tho unprinted documont be ing untruthful, the data based upon it is necessarily false and the results de duced therefrom are without support in fact ; but this table and these figures bavo gone to tho country. Throe load ing mombors ot tho Republican party have accented and indorsed tho state mont, and it and thoir speeches are boing sent broadcast ovor the land un der tho franks of members ot Congress. How untruthful it is lot us see further. It states the receipts of the Govern ment, after leaving out the war, since July 1, 1865, at 68,039,184,922, and the disbursements at 67,900,434,948 ; mak ing the total of reooipts and disburse ments since tho 1st of July, 1865, of 616,048,620,870. Tho mind of the or dinary man is not more bewildered at tho attempt to grasp the magnitude of the proportions of 616,048,520,870 than it is amazed at the cool audacity which will parade tboso figures as the aggre gate reooipts and disbursements of the Government during a poriond of ton years of pcaco, and attempt to build thereon a superstructure of argument for an intelligent people Kxoluding from tho calculation everything but tho actual expenditures of the Govern ment, and ascertaining by the data given na by tho Sonator from Indiana the su m-total of the losses for ton years, from July 1, 1865, as well on account of receipts as of disbursements, we find that those actual expenses have been 62,077,573,973 ; that tho aggregate sum of tbe losses has boon 67,145,786 , tha average annual expenditures, 6207, 757,3H7 ; tho average annual loss, 6714, 278 ; and the loss per 61,000 of expen diture 63.43 in the ton years. I have tha figures and the ratio ol loss for the ten rears ending June 30. 1 1875, tabulated, which I will not de tain tho Senate to read. For those ton yoars the Senator from Indiana says the ratio was in Johnson's -administration forty-eight cents; in Grant's first ail ministration forty cents, and in tho last three years of Grant's administration twenty -six cents on the 6 1,000 ; whilo we find it to bo an aver ago of $3.43 on the 61,000. Let tho pooplo judge between us, Losset and ratio of lost per 61,000 fur ten ytart ending June 30, 1875. upon ' the bant of the actual expenditure of the Government, excluding the pubUc diit and interest : Period, July 1, 1810 to Jobs II, ISttt 18SS ................... t38r,SrU,l) 1887 !IS,00,1IS I S8 ...,..., .. 130,918,230 1801 110,330,301 Total ., July , 1809, U Juno It, 1871 1 , 1,I30,I0,90S 1871 .... 610,418,0.) 108,000,81 143,10I,8.M 180,40S,03t 1871 1871 1874 . Total.. ....... IS0,7M,irt July 1, 1871, te June II, 1871 : 1874 .. f 103,114.031 1871 171,119,011 Totals 107,044,810 Total 1,071,171,971 Total loss receiving and dfsbunlag 1,140,701 Los. -per 11,010 1.41 Now, Mr. Prcsidont, I sm done with this statement Lot what I have said on tho subject and tbe referoncea that 1 havo givon go to the country side by sido with the statements and tbo spoeches that havo been made based upon it and let an intelhgont Doonlo judge between them as to thoir truth. But if it all be true, bow does it af- loct the question that ia before us now? Ilow do those figures heln to give re lief Irom business depression or in the reduction of taxation ? How do thoy aid to give cheap government, honest govornmcnt? These are tho issues of ths present hour, and no tirades on the past, or its corruption, or its figures of expenditures, or on sporadio griev ances in isolated loca'ities will divert the minds of the pooplo from these, ths real, the grave, the vital issnes of the ponding campaign. Tbey who admin istered tho Government in thoss ders were tried before tbe great tribunal of ths peoplo, and in obedianoe to the law of our boing, both natural and politics!, the safety-valve of ths Be publio, the only protection io a govern ment of law when ft ts maladminis. tared, the remedy of change, ther were driven from the seats of power. ertt .1... . ... too issues of tns present ana of tne recent past as thoy affect ths people now ana in tbs future are Here, J. bar OmftntttYi on fourth page.