putotOter fideltignar. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1867. von JUDGE OIL SUPREME COURT: lion. OEURGE 611111SWOOD, of rim. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET W M. SPIIIN 0 MR, Stratiburg Borough HENRY SHAFFNER, Mown Joy. D AM IL 13 1 F. L E. 1)1:H~ Drum m. WimvWk. County Treasurer, JOHEI'II DETWEILER, ltapho Recorder. JEBSI2 , BSI StIOLD, Woof, Cocallco :Prison Inspectors. HAMUEI, LON°, Wog, Lumpetor I. W. TOWBON, Fulton. !Director , ' of the Poor, (]ED. (3. BRUSH, DANIEL Lk:FEVRE, Drumor Cbunly Omltinsioner, \V M. CA RPENTEI t, Litneastor t wp. BENJ. WITISIIM, Eden Jury 0/7117/11.v.viot . r. NVI. A. MORTON, (Ty. County llll ittittot. 'footling The Denmeratie County ColllllnlLtem of Lan eniter Comity Will meet lit tliti Demooralle Ouli !Wolin+, In the Illy of Lancaster, on itiAT UBDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1807, itt,ll o'clock A. 51. A lull ittlendanee I. requested. A, .1. HTEIN MAN, Chairman. 8..1. MorlansiN, Secretary. 4-- An Appeal to Readers of the Weekly Intel Ilge neer. We have a few words to say to every reader of the WEEK LY INTJ LLI OES c'Elt. We will send out our next issue ilu Saturday morning, three days in adilance of our regular publication day. That will contain our last words to thorn prior to the coining all iuipor taut election. But before it roaches our readers, most of their work should be already done. We Inge upon every one the greatest diligence and the most untiring activity during the few days of the campaign which remain. Work as you never did before. Let not a vote be lost. Ei;ery vote is needed to swell the majority, whirl] is sure to be ours if all do their duty. ReltlClltbe with a full pull w'our vole rielor,y is alma tut( ly ,sur( Give one whole day to your country on next Tuesday. See that means are provided for conveying every voter to the polls. Let not a single one be left at 110111 e. See Ow doubtful, encourage the hesitating, rouse up the slothful, and let not tln sun go down on Tuesday severed theft connexion with their former party. More of the same sort, but less independent, have refused to vote, because they could not sanction measures which they had not nerve enough to denounce. This is the key to that apathy among their voters, ‘vhich the Radical journals so bitterly lament. They are welcome to, mid will discover, much more of it in Pen nsyl p Its then, and Pennsylvania I vania. . . next until every Mall ill your district Nvlio ran he induced to vole for Judge Sharswoml has deposited hie ballot. You, reader, must do your full share of the work. Are you ready and willing fully to disrharLtit your duty. \Ve hope, Nye wlicve, u•c kIIOW you are will rc lioml to l'alifortlia iti tones wlII•II will the knell of Ho , foliath.:: who scol: l ercvl a negro Unwire on mill..' r,f tho The County tonlentlon The Democratic County Convention of Wednt sday, gave evidence of the spirit which :militates the Deitiocracy of Lan caster county. With the exception of the great iluchanan Convention, it was the fullest Democratic Convention that ever assembled in this county. This shows how deep an interest the De mocracy lake in the pending political contest_ They tre not only alive, but fully awake to the importance of the great issues of the day. They are de termined to do all that lies in their power to rescue the Mate front the clutches of the crazy fanatics and the corrupt, and thieving politicians who have made the mune lit Pennsylvania a bye-word and a reproach throughout the land. We never saw greater evi dence of stern determination, and impe nd resolve than was exhibited by the large assemblage of delegates. \Ve hail this :is a sure indication that the De mocracy of Lancaster county will do their whole duty on the Sill day of Uo tuber. Let them work unceasingly and untiringly. The County Ticket is one of rare ex cellence, composed, from top to bottom, of good men and true, and the candi dates are well distributed among the different districts. But little time is left ill \rhielt to complete our org:uti•r.a tion and bring out the entire vote. There must be no delay, no relaxation of effort. Let every Democrat in the county resolve to lend his personal ef fort to bring out the full vote, and when, on the night of Ilie Second Toes• day of October, the telegraph ticks off the news of a grand victory:, each one will have the proud consciousness of knowing that he has faithfully dune his part in the glorious work. Re member that- every vote will tell on the result in the State. • Sec to Naturalization The Court, will sit on :\londay, the Clay before the election, for the purpose of granting naturalization papers to all who way be entitled to them. Let our friends in every district see if some votes cannot be thud made. Look into the matter carefully, and do not let a single ease be neglected. Foreigners who served in the army are naturalized without any first papers. Qt: ?--What commission does Forney we'd ve, its Clerk of the Senate, on the "730,ntin worth of pocket. knives, scissor, kid gloves, pool:et books, hail• brushes, pin cushions, cologne, coati's, soap, pomade, tooth powder, toilet pow der, lemons and other physical helps nod adornments furnished to the mem bers of the S. Sella El ? 1151 think of what a nice little margin of profit there must lie on such a traosaction. 'There are only filly-Lwo Seuatols in tills 111111111 Congress 111111 yet it takes nearly 5'.4.10,000 to furnish them Willi little k iek knacks. There must he some nice picking all round ill this rascally SWitl,llo. \V hat do the tax payers think of Itudirul economy ? Ben Wade Gives En Ohio The profane blusterer, lieu NVaile, has been stitingting it all over Ohio. Ile gives up the State in despair. The (level:old 11(Iiiidert/et says: "lieu \\rado staid over Sunday at NVoos ter with Ilan. Nlartin \\run:or, and is said to nave remarked in his choice and ex prus• site latr4nage: 'The d nigger and the 0-0 hooch have Ltiven Ohio to the Copperheads this 3,ar.'" Ben ought to know as lie has been Can Public Affairs be Improved? Reader are you satisfied with the con ditiou of public affairs? If you are not vote for a change. There is ho hope of any improvement with the present party in power. The coining election Is the very point at which to make a turn. You cannotpossibly make affairs worse, but will be certain to better them vastly. By all means vote for a change. There k nut a soldier in Pennsylvania, with a personal character worth respecting, who 111Ipport4 Copperhead candidates. Tip; 7%Agraph denounces Judge fibarnwood us a " copperhead candi date," and he is supported by General Meat 1111 , 1 a majority of the best and bravest seldlers of Pennsylvania. Such are the ;nen who are denounced by the tlitevilig and lying stay-ut-home loyalist Baguio, Signs or the Times. Since the passage of the infamous Military Despotism and Negro Suffrage Act of the last Congress, the current of popular sentiment has turned strongly against the authors of that measure. Every subsequent election has demon strated the hostility of the people to that oppressive and unconstitutional method of governing the South. The probability now is, that the passage of that law has dug for the Republican party as broad and deep a burial pit as that into which the Democracy fell after the repeal of the Missouri Com promise. Connecticut, Kentucky, California, Montana and Maryland have ranged themselves under tho;ltemocratie stand ard. Even the New ngland States of New Hampshire, \ ermont and Maine have given greatly reduced Republican majorities. The municipal 'elections of Pennsylvania clearly indicate the same tendency. Wilkesbarre, Williamsport, Reading and other places have surprised the public with the size of their Demo cratic majorities. And our own City of Lancaster has surpassed them all by rolling up, unexpected Imajorities of au and WO for the cause of Constitutional Liberty. The most gratifying feature of all these elections is, that their results have uniformly astonished the Democrats as much as the Republicans. The most careful canvassing and calculations failed to indicate w hat was about to take place. The week before the election in California Republican newspapers there predicted that the Republican vote would exceed Lhe Democratic vote from :20,000 to 2.1,n00. The (lay belpre the elec tion, Radicals wagered their money on from ,5,000 to 10,(iii0 majority for the regular Republican candidate for Gov or. Vet the Democratic nominee beat him ii,non, and both Rellublican candidates together 7,000. At our own municipal election 00 Democrat expect- ed Mayor Sanderson to receive 511 ma jority. But wards which the Radicals expected to carry cast large Democratic majorities, and we all remember the ridiculous explanations of the former after the election, of the estimates on which they relied to secure the Coun cils, and their disappointment at the votes of the new wards into which they had divided the City. While these results cannot be account- ed for by Radical apathy, they can be readily explained by the cliBgust of Re publicans with the measures of their leaders. Many intelligent and consci entious Republicans have quietly voted the, Democratic ticket, and thereby Democrats, these encouraging signs should stimulate you to relleWed uctivi ty. The ranks of your enemies waver; their forces are deserting to you, or re fusing to light. You have thousauds of well-wishers among those who appear to be arrayed against you, and troops of nominal Republicans earnestly whill the Democracy Goof .opf «1. Thell, Wake it . your determined plirpose to toll the full Ihino,puti, rote. when that is done, you will be amazed to discover how many more Democratie tickets the bal lotdioxes t•uulail, thLUI you put there. These will be rho tribute of your loonier opponents to the soundness of your principles, ;lint will secure a vietory that will reileein Pennsylvania and liberate the country. The Bounty Swindle The people should remember that he House of Representatives of the present Congress has passed a Bill giv ing an additional Bounty of Three Hundred Dollars to every soldier of the recent war who has not received, or A is not entitled to receive, that amount Of Slate or local bounty. Every soldier from Pennsylvania and the i\liddle and Eastern States inns tictired, of is ntitlcil to icccive , of Slate or local bounty. Therefore they will gain nothing by this Bill. But it will give jauu to every soldier of the Western Stdites, NV e h paid neither Stale nor local bounty, and will thus, it is esti• mated, take 5:l00,0d0,0:11 out of the National Treasury. This now only awaits the :indiction of Lilo Senate to be come a law. What think you or this, Citizens of Lancaster county, who have pak enormous taxes, mut created inonstrou. debts, to provide bounties Mr your sol diers'."Uhe WeAt has paid no such taxes, and created no such debts, an now imperial Congress is about to cow pel you to help pay the bounties o Western soldiers, The Bill hangs be tween the Houses, just as the An allowing legions to vote in the Distrim ( olumbia hung between the House; but year, ;Ind like that, will be passe( through the ienaleus .CUUlL (15 (ions air or, P. now Small a Chill= Wlll Ensure a Great Victors. 'rile majority against our candidate for Governor was not a lair test of the stretigh of parties at the last election. Creary enjoyed the advantage of n military title and considerable military repudiation, while our gallant candi date was charged with opposition 1.9 the war and to the Constitutional amendment allowing soldiers to vote. These charges were false, but they were believed to a damaging extent,. The fairest test of party strength at that election was the vole for Members of Congress, • and this exhibited a Radical majority of hut 11,11011. Tlte whole vote cast was upwards of six nuNnitkii Tnorsxxh. It will therefore requirc a change of bat one per cent. or one rote in 0 1.1111110 il, Lo wipe out this majority. A change of two per cent. or two votes in every hundred, will give a Demo cratic; majority of - rump. We think these votes will not be hard to get; in deed, tee believe they will come atheir own accord. Military Despotism, Negro Suffrage, Congressional and Legislative, Corruption and Extravagance, and El Regulated and Oppressive Taxation will readily effect the change. It only remains for tint Democracy to poll their whole role, and the changes added to this will secure a splendid victory. The Maryland Militia Hans Forney and Hansworst Geary profess to be terribly frightened by the Maryland militia. They must be ink. erable cowards or great liars. The law of that State only authorizes the organ ization of ten thousand militiamen, and but a few scattering companies have been equipped. Yet Forney and Geary are trying to snare the Radicals of Penn; sylvania out of their wits by telling them Unit these fragmentary militia companies will turn the Radical mem bers of Congress out of their seats and make Andrew Johnson king. The Baltimore Sun ills affief4 of the whole of that Improbable lie by showing that the few militia companies which do exist in the State are mostly officered by men who served in the Federal army, while all are under command of a Union gen eral who has been repeatedly eulogized by Forney himself. So much for that raw-head and bloody bones. Shall We Win a Great Victory ? We can carry Pennsylvania and elect Judge Shorewood by an overwhelming majority If the full Democratic vote Is polled; Our opponents do not pretend to dispute that. On the contrary they freely and frankly admit it. Shall we grasp thoglorious victory which thus lice within easy reach ? It is for the masses of the Democratic party to say. Reader wjll you, weeny You, enlist lo lis contest from now until sundown on the day of election '."The work Is not onerous or disagreeable. It involves simply the faithful discharge of a great public duty—the duty you owe to your country In a crisis which should draw forth the full energies of every patriotic citizen. Last Fall 600,000 votes were cast in Pennsylvania. This year the vote may fall off to 500,000. How many of the absentees will be Democrats? That is the question In which Is involved a most glorious success or adisastrous and disgraceful defeat. Thousands of Republicans ure dis gusted with the course of their party leaders, and many of them will vote the Democratic ticket for the first time at the cooling election, while others will - - _ lellberately ailment themselves from the polls. The Democratic party labors under no such drawbacks. Its political position is impregnable, and it has the loftiest as well as the strongest possible inducements to put forth all its energies, Never were the incentives to exertion greater. The Democrat who deliberately absents himself from the polls, or who refuses to use every effort to get out a full vote at the coining important elec tion will deserve the execration of every true man in the State and the nation. We speak strongly, because we feel the vast weight of responsibility which rests upon the Democracy of Pennsylvania in the pending contest. The eyes of the whole nation are anxiously turned to the Keystone State. The battle in which we are engaged is for the vantage ground of the great presidential contest of next year. The tide of a mighty popular victory is rising. It has just swept over Califor nia, Montana and Maryland, and came near submerging the Radical fanatics of Maine in their stronghold. Shall it be checked in the great conservative State of Pennsylvania ? It is for the Democracy to say. A full poll of our vote will elect Judge Share wood by a majority of twenty thousand. Shall such a vote be polled" Reader it is for /jou, for von as touch as for any other wan to say. Work, work, WORK from this hour until sundown on Mee Lion day, and all will be well. Supreme Judge The Democratic candidate for the S prente Bench is confessedly the able udge in Pell nsy 1 van ia. Possessed untiring industry and gifted With supe rior intellect, he has devoted a long and laborious life to improvement in that profession of which he is now a dis tinguished ornament. Twenty years' experience at the head of the most Im portant local Court in the i- 4 titte has ripgngd his faculties and matured his judgment. Of unidemished moral char acter and unspotted integrity, he is in every respect. the model or a Christian judge and gentlelliall. Horn iu the Commonwealth mid developed by its institutions, he is a 1111111 of \Omni Penn sylvanians May Well la proud. His opponentsas, , 44:, two renSOlis why he should not be elected. First, be cause, iu the language or the lladica Conventiou at Williamsport, " the Su preme Court should he placed in har mony with the political opinions of a majority of the people." This must mean, either that the judges should be politicians, or that. they should consult the wishes of the majority in some of their decisions. Either alternative would be fatal to the independence of the judiciary and the safety 01 the peo ple. The very circumstance that a partizan Convention, now for the first time in our history, dares to proclaim such a motive for the nomination of a judge of the Court of last resort,-should condemn its candidate to hopeless de feat. When judges decide according to the wislies of majorities, they should have town meetings juries. Every citizen who has any regard for law, justice or decency should contribute to rebuke this shameless announcement. The second objection to Judge tShars- WOOlt is, that he decided that a contract to pay a debt in gold should be fulfilled in gold. Who doubts the justice of that decision ? T. m. this very day a citizen should lend nis neighbor a hundred dollars in gold, to be returned in gold, and the debtor should liquidate the claim in greenbacks, the unanimous voice of society would denounce the latter aS a scoundrel. The principal of this decision lies at the root of the pub• lie credit of the Cuited states. If it is right for au individual to pay in paper when he has contracted to pay in gold, it is right for the Government to do the same. We arta willing to refer this ob jection to the public creditors. If they repudiate Judge til u u•.swood's doctrine, they will surely not complain if the people should repudiate the features of their bonds, which requires payment lug old and not in paper. Probable Defeat of the Radicals In Louisiana The first attempt at an election under negro rule has just taken pine° in Louisiana, and the general apathy which is now prevailing so exiensively in the Radical ranks seems to have seized even the ticwly etillancitined negroen. 'lire proi,ahility in the Eadi eals have been defeated. The follow ing news looks much lilac it: NEw Sept. passed olr qta,•tly both otlici,tl returns :ire ur yet th, , Fottiti, Muni- Hind toial vole p lied is about 1,201 in this - OHL de..pnirs cll . tilt. v,)1... In•ing inr,4, , enough to render the election voh,l, Say, the \\ldle Vote is about 0111. 1011111 of Ill)' Whuhr vote elle!. The entire Vole of the city is es liinnted at 12.000, the number regi,• tereti Is over :2,S,aaa. Several instant-s are 110E0.1 of negrcws votleg or offering their vote under it different mule than that On their registry • The law requires a majority of all the registered votes to h polled to authorize the assembling of a Convention. Ilansworst Geary We have a new name l'or Geary, one which is perfectly descriptive of him. At the Hans Graf meeting in this county he expressed a desire to be called Hans W. Geary. We did not know at the time what the W. in his name stood for, but an honest German, who knows him well, informs us that it stands for " Worst," Hans Worst Geary. That is the very name for him. He is a Haus worst of the first water. Let him be dubbed Hansworst Geary for all time to come. Such a clown as he is should bear the name, as he wears the motley. Facts for Landlords Cleary has pledged himself in favor of a prohibitory liquor law. John Cessna is now engaged in. draw ing up such a law. It is to be passed next winter, if the Radicals have a soffleient majority in the Legislature. Henry W. Wllnfirm., is pledged to see it fully and vigorously enforced. Lancaster county landlords can vote for men pledged to destroy their busi ness if they see fit to (I() so. The Yankee Judge Williams is one of them, READ ! WHITE MEN !I READ 111 ow Negro Equality le to be Forced Upon Pennsylvania. TEE MUMMER BILLS There is no doubt about the intention to force negro equality upon Pennsyl vania by Congressional enactment. The Harrisburg 2'clegraph, Forney's Press, the Philadelphia North Ameri can, the Pittsburg Gazette, and a vast majority of the Itei,ublican papers of the rural districts openly advocate It, while not a single paper which sustains Judge Williams has dared to say a word against it. The leaders of the party In this State, from Thad. Stevens down are all In favor of passing Sumner's Here It is. Let every voter read it! It stands on the tiles of Congress as Senate bill, No. 1.:4, was introduced on the 3d day of July last, and is entitled "a bill to enforce the several provisions of the Constitution abolishing slavery, declaring the immunities of citizens, and guaranteeing a republican form of govenment by securing the elective franchise to colored citizens." This bill wits introduced by Senator Sumner of Masgachusetts, and is substantially the same us one Introduced by him upon the Dith day of March of the present your. The first section reads us follows: d enacted by the .S'enate and House of Representall yen of the United ,Vate.l 01 A nwrie.,l in Congress assembled, That every citizen of the United States, who may have Keen a slave or a descendant of a slave, or by reason of race or color deprived of equal rights, shall, in every State and Territory, have the right, if not otherwise disqualified, to be registered and to vote at all elections ;or members of Congress, for presidential electors, for representatives and Senators to :•itau. or Territorial legislatures, for all State, county, city, town, and other officers it every hind , upon the same tortes and qinditions, and no others ' an white citizens •ire, and limy be allowed to be registered and to vote, ;nal every provision of every Stale and territorial coUstitUtioL ' Stut and ordinance which is no‘l7 ur here:thin may be enacted, and every custom ant principle oi law heretofore recognized it any Slate of Territory, contrary to the fore going provisions, are hereby declared nut and void. The dad section provides a penalty for any one who shall hinuer these new made electors in Pennsylvaniaand other States from voting, the penalty being a fine of not less than one hundred dol lars nor more than three thousand dol lars, and the common jail for not less than thirty days, nor more than one year. Then follow a .lrd, 4th, and ;Stil sections teeming with penalties and with judicial vengeance againstauy and all persons whp under any pretence whatever shall interpose against the complete operation of this proposed law. White men of Pennsylvania, remem ber that Congress will pass that bill so surely as Henry W. Williams is elected. He stands pledged to enforce it. You can only prevent negro equality from being immediately forced upon you by giving an imposing, majority for Judge Sharswood. Will you do that. You can, if you will. Let not a single vote be left un polled on next Tuesday, and this diabolical scheme of the Radicals will be effectually thwarted. See your neighbor, ask hint to read this infamous bill, and urge him by all lie holds sacred, by his love for republican insti tutions, and by his pride of race to vote tom Judge Sharswood. Despotism In Pennsylvania The seventh section of the Act or the last legislature, entitled "An Act to enable police officers to enforce order in licensed houses, and to exterminate (hie utilicerised traffic," reads thus: It shall he the tltny of every sheriff, stable, pidiciiition, nth! officer of police, the id,iirvitiice, and to provvilt t violation of the I,ll)Visiffiui ( , 1 . tins apt ; in the th.,eh argi nt snclt duty, if Hiss' Lc shall have to ist,mr (Ind I: rlusri 1, any “ridlLt•l, I:111011s Leruuw k11 , ,V11 to 11111, wli , tht , r by A,B ouvt /PT, n1(1 t ibn Or by r i 0 11 Off 012/ leSjoCet(llil of the airnlihL This section empowers every con stable in the city awl county to "close up and keep closed" every hotel or restaurant in which he obs, , rves, or thinks he observes, any "1 . law. Ile is liltew I,...lAtimed a directed 1.1) excrei-, the ,:une. power "information of any respeetable citi zni." Here is a code for the Irial and punishment of offenders against the license law, without exautplt• even in Radical legislation. The constable, and every constable, is accuser, judge, jury and executioner. And from his sen tence there is no appeal or relief. in the terse language of the law, he may c/os , am/ KEEP without limit. Where the constable is not himself in former, he may act on the charge 0 any citizen without oath or affirmation. And no opportunity being given for defence the innkeeper goes to the wal on the hearsay accusation of his malic ()us neighbor. The tyrant in Pennsylvania, wears not the shouhter straps of the brigadier, but the star of the police. But his au- thority over the business of his subjects, the hotel and restaurant keepers, is as complete and summary as the authorhy of the brigadiers over the people of the Under Radical legislation, the venders of 'liquor are an unfortunate race. The commodity in which they deal is taxed a thousand per cent., they are loaded with State and ( iovernment licenses constantly increasing in amount, they are subjected to the des potic rule of constables and policemen, and. they arc made responsitle for all the damage that may be done by any one who gels intoxicated at their bars. We almost think that a prohibitory law, which the Radicals are now organizing to enact, would be a relief to those who are suffering fit an intolerable afflict ham Let liontilwiders Let every bondholder remember the a Republican Legislature repudiate Ulf dpre.s.i cotdract to pity the intere. On our Stale debt iii coim Let every boil Molder remember that a Republican (lovernor signed that bill of repudiation. Let every bondholder remember that every Democrat in the Legislature, r.e e,pl one, voted against repudiating the interest on the state debt. Let every bondholder remember that lodge Williams approves and endorses that act of repudiation. Let every bondholder remember that Judge Williams favored the repudiation of the Allegheny county railroad bonds. Let every bondhohler remember that Judge Shorewood decided that a con tract to pay gold must be fulfilled in gold. Let every bondholder remember the his cherished securities depend for thei value upon the correctness of that de A Last Chance for White Men Let every white man in Pennsylva nia remember that it is the deliberate and fixed determination of the Radicals iu Congress to force negro suffrage upon this state by Congressional enactment if Judge Williams is elected. Let every white voter remember that Judge Williams is positively pledged to enforce such au enactment. Let every white voter remember that this is the last election at which white men alone will vote in Pennsylvania, if Judge Sharswood should be defeated. Let every white voter remember that the leading Radicals of this State have openly avowed the infamous purpose of thus forcing negro equality upon us ; that very many of their newspapers openly advocate it, and that not a single one opposes it. Debt, Taxation and Plunder. The people of the United Eitates are patient and long Buffering beyond ex ample. Groaning under a National Debt of Two Thousand Five Hundred Millions, at rates of interest ranging from s wen and three-tenths to upwards of eight percent. In currency, and State, City and County Debts exceeding a Thousand Millions more, they have thus far submitted without question to every species of extravagance, waste and corruption by the dominant party. With ordinary care and honesty in the administration of the finances and pub lic expenditures, more than half of the money expended upon the war might have been readily saved to the country. With care and honesty the amount that has been applied to the reduction of the debt since the close of the war might have been more than doubled. And with care and honesty, if now intro duced, the reduction of the debt might be continued, and the taxes that con sume the substance of the people might be almost entirely removed. Nothing has ever been read or written that will compare with the burthens of our people. Taxed on their property at the rate of a respectable rental, they are moreover taxed at an average of nearly one hundred per cent. on every thing they eat, drink, wear and use. Every operation of industry, every branch and transaction of business, every move- went of production arid consumption, is taxed again and again. Foreign arti cles are taxed by the tr, and domestic articles through the else. Tax gath erers swarm over the land and investi gate every man's business atrd estate. And after all the special taxes have been abstracted the whole substance of the country is again sponged with the eneral tax of a depreciated currency In England, France and even degraded Austria, the taxes are not half so bur densome as they are in the United States of America. In the present period of peace the people of this country are subjected to heavier taxation than ever oppressed the people of Great Britain in time of war. The ordinary expenses of our government. exceed those of any other government in the world, though most of them maintain the expensive pa geants of royalty, and some of them number their standing armies by mil lions. Do not these facts demand the attention and scrutiny of our people' Should they not inquire why it is tha the Federal liovernmeut now annually expends more than Two Ilandrcd as F,fty Million:3 of dollars apart from the interestenn the National debt? Especi- ally when it is remembered that the whole expenses of the government be- fore the , war amounted to but Sixty Millions per annum. Without going over tie whole budget, it may be curious to examine a few items of the national expenditures. The estimate of the War Department alony for the current year is Forty-Seven Millions, without reference to the In dian War, which is suspected to have been brought about by and for .I.l..idical contractors and speculators, and will swell the item to more than a hundred Millions. Why should the War Depart ment cost :',S-17,000,000 In time of peace? The answer is found ill tile military' government of the South, the expenses of the satraps :Ind their courts, the offi cers required to register the negroes for suffrage, and the standing army neces sary to keep the Whites in subjection to the blacks. An additional expense of Fifteen is incurred by the Freedmen's Bureau, for the purpose of supporting twit educating the embryo colored sovereigns of the rising African Commonwealths. Millions more are expended in registering the sable citi zens, so that each may be duly qualified to deposit his " Broad Axe" in the ballot box. We are not advised of the cost of the Bureau of Military Justice, and other despotic contrivances of the Radicals, but doubt not that they, too, may be charged with Millions. The Fedyral Treasury is not merely drained by these rivers of extravagance, but every rill of expenditu.e is swollen with corruption. Members of Congress not only vote themselves S.s,onn a year, equivalent to ,z 1) for every days' ser vice, and mileage amounting to fortunes besides, but plunder the Treasury for pocket knives, scissors, kid gloves, articles of perfumery, &e., by the dozen apieec. The contingent expenses of the Senate and lions° are thus run up to millions. The salaries of the petty officers of the army and navy are kept at war figures, and the pay of lieutenants is counted by thousand,. Revenue ~Ricers , in. , pectors, clerks in departments and detectives are paid on the same extravagant scale. l'ongress seems anxious to divert attention from its own pilferings by allowing every one else to pilfer. Congressional and government contracts are distributed as bonuses to partisans, and Radical newspapers are supported by Congres sional subscriptions and advertise ments. Hundreds of thousands of dol lars are expended in the capture and trial of a man l~urrattl who is pro noub...ed innocent by too-thirds of an impartial jury. And here be it under stood that we excuse nothing in the Executive branch of the government, for the President, his Cabinet and office holders, although not Radicals, are al most entirely Republicans. How long will the people tolerate these gigantic and trifling abuses, this grand and petty larceny? Thus far the public has been dumb as a sheep in the hands of the shearers. The shibboleth of /p/(0,./ Lay been sufficient to silence obh,crth,b, nod excuse every offence. But the patient public is at last begin ning to suffer, the shears that once clipped wool are now d,rawing blood, pain dis,a,lvus the charm of loyalty, and the sheep threatens to become a wolf to the shearers. flay it turn and rend them. Absent on Election Thu Not a few Democrats in this city and elsewhere lose their votes by being ab sent on election day. Numbers are at work outside of their district and find It difficult to be at home on Tuesday. This is a matter that must be attended to at the coming election. so Democrat can afford to absent himself. The issues are too momentous to permit it. Let every Democratic voter make arrange• melds to be at home in time to vote. Reader, if you know one likely to be absent see him and urge home upon him the imperative importance of voting. Remember every vote is needed to ensure the victory which a full poll will unquestionably give us. Negroes in the Public Schools. In certain districts of Ohio the Radi cals have recently forced negroes into the public schools. An attempt was made to do the same thing in Philadel- Phia, last winter. The party which gives the negro superior privileges on the railroads in this State will not rest until they make a similar distinction in favor of negro children iu the public schools. They can only he checked in their fanaticism by a defeat at the polls. Let every white man be sure that he votes, and that he votes for Judge Sharswood next Tuesday. TH Ell aiii. few abler ju thits in Penh ayl vania than Ifi-nry W. Willia burg Telegraph. Judge Sharswood is one of the few He stands foremost in the ranksecond to no man—and the people will surely elect him. The Candidate of the Repudiators. The city of Pittsburg and county of Allegheny are disgraced by more rank and recent Repudiation than any other localities in the country. The history of the affair is briefly this: Some fit• teen or twenty years ago Pittsburg and Allegheny county were seized by the then prevailing spirit of enterprise and improvement, and commenced the con struction of a number of railroads au signed to benefit the city and county, Under the authority of legislation pro• cured for the purpose, the Councils of the city and Commissioners of the coun • ty subscribed large amounts to the stock of these railroads, and issued the bonds of the city and county in payment of their subscriptions. The great wealth and resources of the city and county •endeted these bonds a favorite Invest tlent with all classes of persons, and hey were negotiated everywhere throughout the State and country. :llost of the railroads thus constructed roved unprofitable and many of them worthless. The people of Pittsburg and Allegheny thereupon refused to pay the interest on their bonds, and repudiated them in foto, Various pretexts, were assigned fur this course, such as, that the bonds were Issued without suftlebmt authority, that they were unduly no• gotiated, that the money obtained for them was not properly applied. &e., &c. Suits were then commenced by the bondholders in the State and Federal Courts, wherd all the defences, were thoroughly investigated and tried, and u every instance judgement was ren ered against the city and county. Bu, nstead of erasing after trial, the resist ance of the people of Pittsburg and Al legheny became more stubborn that Reptaliation Was avowed, pro claimed and justified ; anti debt tickets were nominated and elected by the dominant (Republican) party, and pub lic meetings were held to oppose and denounce the payment of the bonds. The Courts issued process to compel the city and county authorities to provide for the interest, the Councils and Com missioners resisted, and the Courts fined and imppisoned them. The sullen au thorities went to.' ail rather than subunit. At last the interest was wrung from them; but the bondholders found it necessary to repeat their suits and pro cess for every instalment that accrued. This became so irksome and expensive that the bondholders eventually coin- promised with the people of the city and county, by releasing about one third of the claims, and accepting city and county bonds for the remaining two-thirds. That is, after the cases were tried by the Courts and every question decided, Pittsburg and Alle gheny, by disobedience of law and fiat rcbellion, forced their creditors to aban don one-third of the debts. But one newspaper in Pittsburg o posed these disgraceful proceedings, the Democratic l'o 1, and none but Deino orals sustainer' riat paper in its course. At this time 11 ory W. Williams was a prominent lawer and citizen of Pitts burg, and never publicly wrote or spoke a word against Repudiation ; and if he did not approve, lie dared not condemn it. Shortly afterwards lie was elected by this community of Repudiators, Judgeof the District Court of Allegheny County. Does any one believe that could have been elected to that post, if he had even been suspected of hostility to repudiation? And this year he was nominated for Judge of the Supreme Court by the strenuous support and ex ertions of the same set of Pittsburg and Allegheny Repudiators. His popularity among them shows that there could have been no recent and open differ ence of opinion between him and them on so vital a subject as resistance to the City and County debts. While, there fore, we do not exactly say that Judge Williams was himself a Repudiator, we think the facts before us amply justify us in styling him the CANDIDATE IF THU REPUDIAThIiti. How to Pay the Public Debt It is admitted that the public debt will be increased instead of being di minished during Ole present year. The enormous rate of taxation under which the laud groans will not furnish money enough to pay the interest and to meet the extravagant appropriations of Con gress. If that is to go on, repudiation is only a question of time, and the time required to bring it about will lie very short. The debt eau only be pail by eilbeting a complete revolution in po litical and financial affairs. The thieves who have been plunder inc the state and the nation must he turned out, and honest non put in their The expenses 1,11.hu Geheral Govern. meta must be reduced to one huudret millions a year. To do that the Freedmen's Bureau must; be abolished; the military des potism set up iu the South must be done away with ; the armies employed to register negro voters must be dis banded ; the multitude of official parasites 'now hanging on the Treasury must be cut ofrand compelled to betake themselves to honest labor; the whites of the South must be freed from the galling letters of negro domination; the industry of that great and rich sec tion must he fostered and encouraged ; and a complete change in both the political and financial policy of the nation must be speedily made. If the holders of United States bonds are not perfectly blind, and stupid be yond comprehension, they will lie found uniting with us in an effort to bring about the necessary change. 'tiny' may rrlli,e to ilo so, but in the end they will lied that their folly has cost themselves and the nation very dear. IN a Radical procession in St. Louis a few nights since, a banner walpromb tient which bore this inscription : NO MORE PRESIDENT,. Ppe.si , l• . ?ley £/c jinvt step to Despoi;,ne That we regard as, the public an nouncement of a design to revolution ize the government, by making Con gress supreme and dispensing with the Executive altogether. What else could it mewl NOT A soldier is needed in the South for any honest purpose, and yet the Radicals expend forty millions per year as the cost of the War Department in that section. This is one of the taxes fastened upon the labor and industry of the nation by the Radical party. The \Villiatnsport enliven iioll endorsed this needless use of the public money, and if the nominee of that body is elected, the march of corruption and profligacy will be still more rapid. Those in favor of retrenchment, economy and reform must act with the Democratic party this fall. FLATE to borrrow ; contract to pay. This Is the radical party policy. They inflated the currency until it was worth but forty or fifty cents on a dollar in gold and then created the debt. They now propose to contract the currency until it is at par with gold, and then pay their creditors with it. Is not this a beautiful arrangement for the people? Will they not insist that a debt created in inflation shall be paid by inflation ; and that when we have paid the debt it will be time to contract the currency and approach the specie basis. Negroes la the Railroad Cars. The Radical majority of the last cor rupt Legislature were so anxious to show their disposition to put white men and% negroes on au equality, that they oven went so far as to confer su perior privileges upon. the inferior race. They passed a law making it a criminal offense focax railroad Okla' to at tempt to p nt a negro from occupy ing any seat in any car ho may select. When this ollimmive bill was under consideration in the Senate, Mr. Wal lace (Democrat) moved to amend by changing the section so as to allow col ored persons to occupy seats at the cnd of the cars. Mr. W. held that the duty of the corporation was done when it furnished comfortable seats, and hold further, that the colored persons had no right to intrude themselves upon the seats devoted to white persons. The amendment of Mr. Wallace was lost by a party vote of IS Radicals to 13 Demo crats. Searight, (Democrat) offered an amendment releasing the penalty in ease tiny company shall Aet apart Heim. rate ears for colored persons, or separate seats at t h e end of the car. Lost, by a party vote of 18 Radicals to 1:; Demo crats. Mr. Wallace further ollerea the fol lowing, Provided, That notl.l ug herein contained shall he COLlStruled to compel the admission of negroes into the berths in sleeping ears, or to punish any one for the exclusion of persons of color from cars set apart for the use of ladies. Lost by a party cot; of 17 Radicals to 13 Democrats. It will be seen from this that the Democrats were willing that railroad companies should be required to pro vide separate cars for negroes, or sepa rate seats at the end of cars, but this did not suit the Radicals, for it did not compel the whites to sit aside of and keep company with the negroes. Under this bill niggers have the right to sit in the same seat with white men and women, to sit in ears set apart for ladies alone, and to go into the same berths in sleeping cars with white men and women. This is a fair specimen of Radical li g slation. The negroee in this State fully expect the time to arrive very speedily, when they shall not only vote, but sit on juries anti exercise all the other privileges of white mem The darkies are not slow to claim the benefit of tl.e law which was passed by their friends. We saw au instance of it only the other day. Coming up from Philadelphia the train we were on, st(upped at Downing town. A huge, greasy looking Congo negro was on the plattorm carpet hag in hand. " 1 low far are you going" asked the conductor? "7b Pen ningtonville" replied the negro in a gruff and surly voice. " Front car" said the conductor, point- lug it. Did Mr. Salida) go where he was directed': Not he. Ile knew that un der the law passed by his friends the conductor could he lined and imprison ed it he :tllenipted to interfere with his sable will—so with an insolent leer, he deliberately walked into the ladies cur and planted himself in a scat right in the tuiddleof We jokingly called the attenti,jn the conductor to the maiiner in which the negro obeyed his instruction. "Oh!" said he "that is the way it goes now. ,, The negroes have superior rights awl they know it. Bail lie been a white wan lie would have felt hound to take the way car, but being a negro lie goes where he pleases, and 1 dare not inter fere vViOu hint." That is the way the negro car bill works. A white man cannot enter the ladies car unless he has a lady with him. Any dirty negro, drunk or sober, can go where he pleases and scat him self by the side of any lady he may farm'. lu the House and the Senate the Lill was passed by a strict party vote. Hans Decry =grid it, and it is the law. We ask white men to rcllect seriously upon. the tendency of public This bill is only a sample of what future legislation will be, unless the Radicals are promptly and effectually checked at the cowing elections. Progress or the Black Dominion Stvgistratlon For ill till! tioulli Tr 11 . 11 . nJ 11,J,1111 1 9, 1 1. A r I • 1 I 111 11,72- ;; ". .1)1 70,;;1t , i 122,17.; N. :;:.; 11. Tux:, ' 1, , ,;11; r:Hi - V ; .:11,. • 11',1;',7 1;;1.1";;;I "2.16,2.17 ...... 2'2,)711 . I I I, Cl,.rtlll,l.rity We extract from the New furl: lb_r (ad the above statement of the progress of Itegistratiou in the South. jtatturds food for the most humiliating reflect- lions. Six American States are abso lutely given •over to the negroes, and they have the large majority of 92,:2:i in the seceded States. This is the ma jority which is hereafter to hold the balance of Bower over the North ; and, which is to combine with the Puritan majorities of New England and the border ruillan majorities of Kansas, Missouri and Tennessee to rule the country. lint that is, not even the worst fea ture of this exhibit. The census of Isuo shows that nearly two-thirds of the In habitants of the enumerated Slates are white, while the registration gives the negroes a lar6e majority. This cannot he accounnql for by the war, because liu :mintier legb-tervd is cqual to the number of votes cast in Isoo, nor by disfranchisement, because the dis franchised classes include comparative ly small numbers. It resicals fraud , NI) ENORMUUS FR.\ COUlit• ing negroes over and over again, to manufacture majorities and subjugate the country. The Union Parts " So Called." The Radical disunionists, all the des picable traitors who are banded to gether to keep the Union divided so that they may continue to plunder the public treasury and Mob enormous sums of money from the hard earnings o f th e toiling masses, call themselves Union [nun. The term is popular, and it Is part of the livery of Heaven which the Republican party has stolen to serve the Devil in. The name has been used as a shield to cover the most infa mous political rascality that ever ilis• graced any. party or ruined any nation. The word Union is a holy one, but it is as much out of place in connection with the Republican party of today as the word saint would be If applied to the very devil himself. WHEN Bill Kelley, who is now stump ing in Ohio, gets through with his con tract out there he is going down South to get up another riot. He will have the whole matter so arranged that he can escape by the rear without any dan ger to his precious carcass, and will again appear in the role of a would be martyr to the cause of negro equality. A great feature of the Republican mass meetings in the Western Reserve of Ohio is the constant presence of ne groes in the processions. They march in iu delegations, and carry banners with inscriptions demanding the ballot and entire political and social equality. The fanatics of that section do not dodge the real issues, as they do In Pennsylvania. Forney on Negro Conventions. John W. Forney has taken a survey of the political field since his return from foreign lands, and he freely Con fesses that there is no hope of main taining tho domination of the Republi can party except through the aid of negro votes. Recognizing that faoi, ho Is engaged in arguing the propriety of acknowledging the fitness of the blacks to rule over white men. His praise of them is unlimited. Ho pronounces the black and tan conventions recently hold in North Carolina and Mississippi, to be model political gatherings. He has been permitted to haven glimpse of the correspondence of the Republican Con gressional Committee, and the eulogis tic accounts of the doings of the North Carolina and Mississippi negroes there- In contained have tilled Ills soul with rapture. In his estimation neither the Old Continental Congress which framed the Declaration of Independence, tho Convention which gave to ho world the Constitution of the Mil NI States, nor our Senate In Its pale lent days, could compare in Intelligence or patri• otisin with these Republican negro conventions. In order that all may know precisely what kind of gatherings these wcro which elicit such a flattering eulogy Iron Forney, we publish the following accurate and graphic sketch of toe concerns from a correspondent of the New York //cm/ d, who was present. says : Th, 1,l;,4; and tan cmivontion recently in in this city \Vas IMO Of thu most ru , niarliattie gatherings, if infinite variety iv tll , ldered, that over te.seinitleti in profound deliberation over the political questions that Intiv ognank respot•led North State. Vat' front their deliberation being profound, int%vever, the proceedings or per torintinees, they alight aptly be terniuti, . . . Itirtook woro of it sorio•rontio nature, be nu: replete with funny inenletits. comical .coontl'ionios, tuna Iniving aniong the actors ,ont.• ronownotl norolutts, politically of •ottrso Tho variegated Ismtplexion of the ...ovonnon sr.ts ono of its best foaturos. It a, not imposing, nor van its dignity bo •111.,0,1 i•t . that order that fiuroilily iut vcases the spectator with ItWO and there WItS a 1111.10-drallllttlegVellie 'lreCt 1111,011 t thn whole at once singular and uggestive. The unadulterated 111 ill Its prisliue elegance and original ignor wee, \vitt' physt,,gnotily of the darkest ilattest nbse, thiel:est lips, respletitl ent ;voile -, and rolling eyes, stood foremost :is a leading elniraoter in this reconstrtn•tion drama. Next in prominence eoines the bright N 1 ,Ii lusal , g:ii ceuntlas,llllll/11011, , it cunning and illtelligUlleV, anti a , patti.t 111;4 of education—the result of the white Ih it that colir,es through his coins - waking hint all fear to his I'aticassian brethren and admiration among his the eye is struck wit II all the intervening shades, in- eluding liraolset, copper gingerbread, dad: skinned, light untlnlln,und numerous ether complexions already hinuliar unil un interesting to the reader. Last, and utter the visitor huts glanced carefully over the more conspicuous the above mentioned, he sees the cu operating brethren or Anglo Saxon race, and then, alas! a piteous sight he sees. 'Mont, grim, lean, hulk, cadaver ous, sinister and with vissago anything else but prepossessing, the white mend, rs of the convention aro easily recognised by their slinking, bunging, whispering, half audible ex 'it ',semis, and a multitude or Mrs that ut 0111 V conveys the impression and explains that 11.1 - 111"111 , ,111WIllivs," HO coin nitmly lilt , Zad it•ak 1,) make cltpitnl now a (13y, •• ben iqvcliffileoritig With 1110 iwgrm•s. The t lel it term ions of the I , lllVelli kill were 111.111:1p, n. path colored tis its spechtled complexion, and the NV !Mil , Sl`Sl•lit,ll teas nuu • ketl ily C 011 1 .11,6011, a babel or dialects, contrielietit Its, perstintil encoun ters, the upshot_ of the whittle Irving tuna the "nigger" was Opt superior or lhvwhitelman, hind iii 'elitrwitril they should govern North Are the people of Pennsylvania ready to believe that such a body as that is entitled to be considered the wisest and most patriotic gathering ever assembled in this country ? The Convention ill Mississippi was just such another motley assemblage. The Ile 1.,11,1 says of that: It'rotti Mississippi we have the !matting of th.• C.Tivonlion at Abdul one roorih ol Ilse were hhaeks• Om , hall ii o.taialws of the State, ra,,ra• or lest:, were repro, plod. The awganization was 1111,1 hadicapaN, ;and the election of pre sidiag •rs resulted in such an admix tore ots widie and 111.1 i. as might have suited the most itatlieal pit all the Itmlivitls. Color rut alp or rLncn in all gradations, Irmal a ,toed pumpkin-1111(1- mill: [hal. li was decadi (I, too, that ali cpin ataitta,i,h(nald la, half Idaf•k. The platform adopted wa, tally up to Ihv times. If the while voter, of Pennsylvania have ally regard for the welfare of the nation, any colicerli for our character as a people, tind love for republican in stitutions, any respect for there race or themselves, they kill so vote at the coming election as to check this mad project of placing the tioulltern 'tutee under the domination of a horde of ig norant and degraded negroes, and a few base and selfish while men, who are seeking office. Forney anal the rest of the Itadittals advocate this iniquitous plan, liar)' know that only by such a co irse eati they succeed in carry ing the next Presidential election. Is it not high bole lair every decent white mall to leave the ranks of such a party ? Negro Suffrage In New York The Republicans or NOV York are more honest than their brethren of Pennsylvania. They are not afraid to say just where they stand on the ques tion of negro suffrage. The Constitu tional Convention have inserted a clause granting the right to every negro ill the Mate. At the State Convention which met on Wednesday the following reso lutions were adopted as the first planks ill the platform : Thai party Siiiti• ts Its n .pr 110. light, slid lihi•t'tian of mist nisi that it renew ii,pic[igi, pr.lt.i•l Lind dt•lt•lid thONU Eights HI, anti thi. frllll , lli,e which c. 1.11,111. tiiuti• oI NoW YOrk, the 11111 i straight thii principles Wll 111 . 4if1,5, we thut sur f ragoi imp:trim! ; that iL is II right which o n ight not to be linlitutl by property Of ity means negro equality, the s,eni,d declares openly ndr negro suf . - frage. In this State the Republican leaders expect Congress to Lake the matter in charge, and there is every reason to believe that negro suffrage and equality will he forced upon us within a year, unless the people gktet Judge Sharswood. The Nov York Radicals The Radicals of the State of New York seem to be in a very sorry•plight. The Convention which met to frame a new State Constitution, after a session of some months, has adjourned over until after the election in November. firecley fought against this, and In sisted that the work could easily be finished in time for its submission to the people at the coining election. Thy Radical majority have, however, been so badly frightened by the result of the election in California and Maine that they feared both the new Constitution and the State ticket would be lost If submitted now. Hence the adjourn ment. It is a virtual confession that the Democracy will carry the State In November. The guilt reaction has set in with a force that is acknowledged to be irresistable. The Prospect In Ohlo. All the intelligence we can gather from Ohio leads us to believe that the negro suffrage amendment will be de• feuted, a Democratic Legislature elected, and that it Is not at all impossible that we way secure the Governor. Such news should cheer ever Democrat in Pennsylvania to renewed exertion. THE New York Tribune, recently de nounced the honest Germans of Penn" sylvania as "the school-hating, rum loving breed of low Dutch." The Tribune is the leading Republican paper of the country, and it Is anxiously urging the election of Judge Williams. Will the Germans of Lancaster county vote for the Tribune's candidate?