ganarga Nublligmen. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1888. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL OILIBLES E. BOYLE, of Fayetto county. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL: Gen. WELLINGTON 11. ENT, of Columbia so Row to Secure Retrenchment and Be form. . Prominent Republican newspapers are i forced to confess, even in the face of the coming Presidential election, that 'there is no hope of. securing any re• trenchment of the enormous expend!. tures of the general govern men t, through the agency of their party. Habits of ex • travagance are so firmly fastened upon the men who now control the govern ment, through the agency of a usurping and revolutionary Congress, that the people must expect to be ground to the earth by taxation until there is a com plete 'change. Had they the power, die Democrats in Congress would at once Institute in vestigations which would show such a reckless squandering of the public money as would startle every taxpayer in the country. As it is they are utter ly powerless. Every attempt even to examine inta the gigantic frauds which are practiced is promptly and effectual ly checked by the two third Radical majority. The people will never know how theyore being plundered until there is a nemocratio majority In one or both Houses of Congress. It would be impossible to say how many millions of the money which is wrung from the sweat and toil of the laboring white men of the North, is worse than wasted . No estimate can be make until the two thirds majority of the Radicals is broken down. But, enough is known, enough is confessed to by a few honest Republi can journals, to assure the masses that they are being fleeced as no people ever wore before. The exactions of the most despotic government the world ever saw were light in comparison with the organized system of systematic stealing under which the people of the United States are now suffering. It is utterly, vain for any Democrat in Congress to at tempt to institute au examination into the rascality which is a recognized part of the rule of the Radicals. The mo ment a motion looking in that direction is made, it is promptly killed by a solid Radical vote of two thirds f or more. If the people of this nation had no regard for great political principles, they would be compelled to vote for a change on merely selfish and pecuniary considerations. They see and feel— _ they cannot help seeing, and feeling, and knowing—that the money which is wrung from them by taxation, is being wrecklessly wasted; thrown away with an utter disregard for honesty and economy. Of every pound of bread or meat, of every yard of clothing, of all - ""` — bite masses eat, drink or wear, the gang of Radical thieves demand a share. I Every tenth day that the laboring man /works, he toils to put money into the treasury of the United States, which is stolen therefrom by a band of robbers, who are recognized and protected by the / Infamous enactments of a Rump Con gress. Does any ono suppose the masses of the North will sustain a party which sustains such a system? Will white men march up to the polls and vote to make Gun. Grant Supreme Dictator, In order that the Radicals In Congress may be glvtin still greater power than they now possess" NVe think not. The masses will not onitdetunnd a change, bat, by their votes they will effect it. All the money the Radicals can steal will nut buy them a victory at the com log Presidential election. The people demand retrenchment and reform, and they know it cannot be had until the rule of the reckless party which Is now In power shall be broken. The Managers or Impeachment. The Managers of Impeechtnent, who have been photographed together, merit and will secure a conspicuous place In every 'Rogues' Gallery. In the centre of the group eppeurs the ghost of Thad deus Stevens, the practical apostle of Negro Equality, the avenger of the murdered Morgan, the grand Inquisitor after the Freemasons, the projector of the celebrated Gettysburg Tapeworm, the author of the election frauds of Mil. lerstown and Youngwomanstown, the Hero of the Buckshot War, the ,inven tor of Legal Tenders, the originator of the memorable Gold bill and the finan cier who has made the War Debt twice what It should have been. He has richly earned from the afflicted people of this land the title coveted by Alert°, the Visloott, the "Scourge of God." Be side him figures the Lowell Cynoceph alus, the fast friend of Jeff. Davis In the Charleston Convention, the butcher of Big Bethel, the sponge and tyrant of New Orleans, the Insulter of ladles, the robber of citizens, the bottled General of Bermuda Hundred, and the hero of the disgraceful failure at Fort Fisher. He, too, has earned his expres— sive soubriquet of "Beast." Next comes the vindictive prosecutor of the innocent women sacrificed by Mill tary Commission to the manes of the murdered Lincoln. His appetite for Impeachment Is all the keener because the accused is innocent, end would be keener still if the punishment were Death. Then follows the Allegheny Repudiator; who has won the confidence of his constituents and the only noto riety ho enjoys, by a career of hold and stubborn dishonesty that will damn him to (Cllet infamy. The middle-pitted Logan, who justified maumnion mid do. clared that ll' he had 64 , 4 , 11 it Soul herner ho would !wive been a traitor, else griu494 WO picture, But the subject 114 too of fensive to pursue, It reeks 11104 a den of reptiles In it menagerie, "Au ounce of civet, good Apothecary," Were Andrew Johnson as guilty as he Is in neuent, his cause would challenge our sympathy by reason of the pack of mon great and spotted bloodhounds on his trail. But being innocent, the patriot President will go to posterity . .vith great er glory, because of tile striking contrast between his sterling virtue and the ley). rous infamy of his accusers. The Southern Electlonh, The news from the elections in North Carolina and Georgia seem to indicate the defeat of the Radical Constitution and the election of the Democratic can didates. Even in Louisiana there is a probability that the Constitution has not been ratified. It Is said thirteen parishes have voted against it, and only six for it. The closeness of these con tests shows how difficult it is for the Radicals to win victories, oven with the army and the Freedmen's Bureau to manipulate the negro vote. Remove these, and they could not command a corporal's guard—not oven in South Carolina. Progress of Impenebment The whole of the past week has been consumed in speeches by the opposing counsel in the impeachment trial. We cannot give even a synopsis of any of them except that of Mr. Grosbeck. We have refused to belleVe that the Presi dent could be pronounced guilty of any crime Justifying correction, but the rad icals seem to have no doubt of it. Prob ably more than a week will elapse be fore the final vote is taken. The Southern Elections The returns from North Carolina and Georgia come in very slowly. It seems to be conceded :that the Democracy of Georgia have carried the State in spite of the Military, the Freedmen's Bureau, the disfranchisement of White Men, and and all other combined obstacles. In Ncirth Carolina it is very clone. , A Bad Spectacle. • It is now the prevailing ; belie; gpong men of all par ties Putt President Min son will be contOted and', ,deposiid. From thif beginning the Radical lead,* have constantly asserted that there could be no other resnit.'.When: the case of the prosecution Was utterly broken down by lack of evidence to show that the accused had been guilty of any such "high crime or misde meanor," as wqpid justify impeach ment, there was no .abatement of the wicked confidence of his prosecutors. With a criminal audacity that is aston ishing, they have constantly insisted that conviction was sure. When, from time to time, it has been rurnpred that a small minority of Republican Bane tors would hesitate, before deliberately perjuring themselves by voting to con demn when the law and testimony JIM . peratively demanded an acquittal, such predictions haire been laughed to scorn. The Radical press of the country her alds to the world the belief that a suffi cient number of Senators are ready to , disregard their solemn oaths and to vote for the conviction of the President, when it has been clearly proven that he has committed no crime. What a spectacle of political degrada tion is thus presented I Do the people realize the full measure of such unpar- alieled infamy? Has it really come to pass that the Senators of the United States, sitting as sworn Judges In a High. Court of Impeachment, are ready to go down to posterity branded as, men who deliberately perjured themselves to gain a temporarfadvantage for them selves and their party adherents? Such is the prevailing belief throughout the country. There is no man of intelli gence In any party who believes that the President has been proven to have committed any impeachable offense. Everybody is forced to admit that the prosecution has utterly failed to make out their case. Yet, it is confidently expected that Andrew Johnson will be condemned. Never did the world pre- Sent such a:spectacle. History cannot produce any parallel to this exhibition of infamy. It is an exhibition of moral debasement which is positively appal ling. Should the people of this country show themselves willing to endorse a party which can commit such a crime, they may bid adieu at once to a repub lican form of government, and welcome the despotism which is being prepared for them. Radical Bensons for Conviction. Honest men of all parties find it ex ceedingly difficult to believe that Presi dent Johnson can be convicted. They see that nothing has been proven against him—that the labored efforts of the managers toshow him guilty have utter ly failed. Yet, In the face of all this we find the Selate urged to convict and remove him, act because ho is guilty, but because the Radicals fear what he may do In the future. Was the name of Justice ever before mosti tuted to such it use in the midst of a sane and reasoning people? Suppose a nfan on trial for murder, and it Is proved that he has not committed the murder with which he Is charged, what would be thought of those who would urge that ho be hanged, lest he might com mit a murder in the future. That Is the very course all the Radical leaders are now pursuing towards Johnson. Can a nation be more degraded, politi cally, Intellectually and morally than to be represented by a Congress to whom political vampires dare profibr such ad vice and such reasoning—by a Senate whom those who know it best assume that such reasoning will move. Radical Comments on the Michigan Elec• The heavy vote against negro suffrage in the State of Michigan, does not seem to have iisheartened those who are the real and recognized leaders of the Re publican party. They declare thitt the result was brought about by the Inju dicious action of a small fragment of their party, who were weak enough to unite with the Democrats to defeat a great principle. They insist that the bulk of the party is ready to vote for putting the negro on a perfect equality with the white man in every State of the Union ; and they declare with great confidence that It will not be long until the last barrier betweerithe two races is everywhere swept away by legislative enactment. With Johnson out and Ben. Wade In his place they expect to hasten the coming of that day. Those Conser vative Republicans who aro opposed to negro suffrage will be forced to desert the corrupt and fanatical leaders of that party unless they are willing to go with them to the full length of their pro gramme. The sooner they do so the better for the country. A triumph for the Radicals at the coming Presidential election will render It exceedingly diffi cult if not utterly Impossible to prevent the establishment of negro equality In every State. A Prospect for Congressional Aspirants The latest rumor Is that Old Thad. Is to be Secretary of State, if Johnson should be removed. Ho ‘vill be a fitting Prime Minister for the pious and cour teous Ben. Wade. How foreign nations will rejoice at the removal of Seward, who has driveb all their public men to distraction by the interminable prolix ity of his dispatches. In the event of Ben Wade's succession and Old Thad's elevation, who will secure his seat In Congress? Will it be Brubaker, the learned; Billingfelt, the classic; Dickey the sagacious and marcastlc ; Orelst, the witty; Ellmaker, the Cleeronlan ; or some of the aspirants from surroumlin g villages? We wait the coming of the time when such a scrub race will be in• augurated by the death of Old Thad, or his removal In Home other Providential manner, with an assurance that there will be rare sport. HON, JOHN IC, M00111 , ;111 , ,All offend a resolution In Congress, a day or two since, diroating the Committal) on Com merce to Inquire whether Congress has the power to malco regtilations In ro pad to railroads In the different States; ilnd, If such power is found to exist, to inquire into the propriety of appointing Inspectors of the rails and other ma• terial used on the different roads. Also, to ascertain whether a law should not be passed requiring all passenger and mall cars to be constructed of iron. Whether this Inquiry will ever come to anything depends upon the amount of legislation which has still to be done to establish negro supremacy In the South and negro equality In the North. THE New York Timer) makes a very strongpointagainst Impeachment when it takes the ground that the Senate has no right to convict Andrew Johnson for attempting to put his own interpre tation on the Tenure of Office bill. It says the Senate cannot consistently find him guilty without doing the very thing for which it would thus condemn the President. The Thrzea justlyalms that it le a disputed point, whlohYan only be properly determined by thci • Supreme Court. THE Chicago Republican said, the day before the election In that city : Tomorrow's result in Chicago will bo taken as an indication of how the West stands politically, and how Ililnels will go in November. It is the last great election that will take place in the Northwest be fore the great national contest. The Democracy accept the prediction of the Republican, and are confident that the whole State of Illinois will repudiate Radicalism in November as emphati cally as its chief city has dozie. IN Arkansas prominent white citizens are being arrested and 'thrown into prison on the mostirivolous accusations being made against them, by malicious negroes. In. one instance the only crime committed was an attempt to make one of the black lords pay au honest debt. Such is justice under the combined rule of bayonets and 'negro' , bullets, ' .• THE LANCASTER, WEEKLY INT LIG-ENCER, WRT)NESDAY', APRIL 29, 1868. The Moral 'Obligation to Exercise The Elective FranchiseSsinicientionsly n , *OrnlOn4blitica \ areefosely TlAat n4inicontrary 6' the generally rekiiivekopinion, but it Is nevertheless unquestionably true. In thin country we have had' repeated instances of the ease with which the masses are induced to abandon party organization when some question presenting a moralaspect is thrust into the political arena. The libolitionists gradually acquired the power which gave them control of the Republican party, and eventually of the Government, by their persistent appeals to the moral' sentiment against slavery. Without that lever they could never have accomplished anything. The people of this country are pecu liarly susceptible to moral influences as applied topolities. This may not ap . pear upon the surface, and, in the eager strife to accumulate money, selfishness may seem to be the dominant Impulse of the masses; but deep down in the popularheart, ready to respond prompt ly whenever properly appealed to, abides a reverence for law and a love for whatever conduces to the welfare and the hor or of the nation. The American people are not indifferent to anything which is calculated to affect -their political future, and they ,can never be induced to continue in the support of any party which habitually violates the Constitution, tramples upon law, commits acts of injustice and usurps power for the sake of retaining office. Against such acts the moral sense of the masses Instinctively revolts. They may be controlled by party preju dice for a while, but, so soon as the mists of passion are cleared away, they ., will repudiate the party which has commit ted itself to evil ways with loathing and contempt. Believing in the patriotism and moral rectitude of the American people, we have no doubt about the result of the coming Presidential election. To sup pose that they would consent to con tinue the Republican party in power would be to take it for granted that the people are not sufficiently intelligent to undersrand the great issues now pre sented for their serious consideration. That cannot possibly be the case. The lines between the contending parties are so distinctly , drawn that no man who reads can fair to see what public duty demands of him. The people of the North made the most enormous sacrifices during the war because they believed it to be their duty to do so. To this they were prompted by a reverence for the Con stitution and a love for the Union. The Republican party professed to be solely Influenced by a desire to protect the one and to preserve the other. Thousands who had never acted with it before, sup ported Its nominees because they honest ly believed in the professions made by the leaders of the party. When the war ended in the complete subjugation of the rebels, the people of the North did not demand that vengeance should be taken upon those to whom they had so long been united by the closest ties of friendship and kindred blood. The speediest possible restoration of the Union was what was demanded. At first the leaders of the Republican party (11(1 not dare to show their opposition thereto. It was only by very gradual steps that they advanced from one out rage to another. ' Believing that a re stored Union would be fatal to their supremacy, such men as Thaddeus Ste vens and Charles Sumner set them• selves to work to prevent the ac complishment of what the people most desired. To accomplish their purpose they have advanced from one usurpation to another, and have added crime to crime. We need not re peat the titles of the unconstitutional acts of a revolutionary Congress, by which the Southern States have been kept outof thoUnionand under the iron heel of a military despotism, with the understanding that they shall never be relieved therefrom until the men of our own proud race willingly place their necks beneath the galling yoke of negro rule. With startling rapidity the revo lution has progressed unchecked, until we find two thirds of the Senators of the United States ready to blacken their souls with the crime of deliberate and wilful perjury, In order to depose the lawfully elected President of the United States. We have said that morals and polities aro closely allied in this country, and we believe it. If we did not wo should utterly despair of the Republic. We are euro that the people of all the great Northern. States will always be found ready to repudiate any political organ ization which may commit one tithe of the outrages that have been perpe trated by the Republican party under the lead of the revolutionary fanatics who control ft, Alarge proportion of the rank and tile of that organization are honest and con scientious. They have refused to en trust the ballot to the negro lu their own States, because they believe that the best Interests of the nation will be subserved by continuing over it tho government of white men. Does any one suppose that those Repub licans who so lately helped to de feat negro suffrage lu Ohio, Kan sae, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michi gan, where the number of blacks is In significant, will vote at the coming Presidential election to commit ten Southern States to the complete con• trol of negroes who aro more Ignorant and degraded than the same class aro in the North? Will they deliberately force upon men of their own race, to whom they are allied by the ties of friendship and kindred blood, a de gradation which they would resist with all the powers which God and nature have given thorn ? We think not. We have a higher es- Llmate of the moral sentiment of the people of the North, We know how strong among them is the feeling that calls for fah' play. We aro confident that a some of Justice and a conviction of duty will compel thousands of hon est •Republicans hi every Northern State to vote against the candidate of the Radicals, whether lie be General Grant or any one else. In the coming election, the people will be influenced by principle. They will go to Me polls Impressed with the idea that voting fs p, high and sacred moral duty, and with a full estimate of the exalted privileges of American citizens, they will rebuke the corruption and the dangerous usur pations of the reckless revolutionists who aro now In power. BOTH of the men who have been chosen by the negroes of Arkansas to represent that State in the Rump Senate at Washington are Northern adven turers. McDonald is from Pennsylvania; and Rice from Minnesota. Take such carpetbag adventurers from the Repub lican party in the- South, and nothing would be left of it except a white scaly wag here and there and a horde of bar barian negroes. An Able Speech. We publish to . -day the able speech of Mr. Groesbeck. It will be read with great interest. Even the Radicals ad mit that it completely demolishes their entire fabric on which impeachment is based. • Sven United . States Senators as are suspected of having any regardfor their oaths are being subjected to all kinds of intimidation to prevent them from voting to acquit President Johnson. It remains to be seen whether they have sufficient manhood to give a verdict ac. cording to the law and tEte evidence. .irr one of the Parishes :of Louisiana, the Radicals were compe led to adver• tise for a candidate for Judge and Dis— trict Attorney, there being no lawyer la that region mean enough to accept officul • at their hands. Whether they noßteil-, ed in raking,up aoarpet-bagOdventerer, or not, we have yet to learn. • • , : 4 , . Deficient*. • , We b o ' tie tinik.ll l 4' tintionrt9 'lietlsct tin V., t th437Rad;,ls" haire adopted , reeinningpeviceror riick nito irig simple and iiiedulops peoPle be " e that tbit are taliking*tp‘ l itte ' . reduce itiermodis'expeadltn ' of the government. One of the favorite devices is to set out at the beginning of the financial year by making low es timates for the different departments. The Philadelphia Ledger, a paper which never makes a mistake about such pat ters, shows up this system of deceit, by giving some figures in relation to esti mates and actual expeditures for the War Department. It says : By official records, it is shown that the actual expenses are sometimes live hundred per oentnm above the official estimates. In his official report to the President in- De cember, 1865, Secretary Stanton's estimate for the War Department ,expenses, which, he said, is " adequate for a peaceestablish ment," for the fiscal year commencing the 80th day of June, 1866, was $33,814,461. His drafts upon the Treasury for that year were $117,700,980 18. Mr. Stanton's official re port, dated in December, 1866, and reported to Congress, estimates the expenses for the fiscal year ending June, 1868 at $55,255,665. The drafts of the War Department upon - the Treasury to the 81st of March, 1868, nine months, were 8110,908,111 68. General Grant, Secretary ad interim, in his official report last December, estimates the total expenses of the fiscal year at $77,- 124,707. In other departments similar dis proportion is also observed between the estimates and appropriations and the de ficiency bills of the next session: of Congress must, therefore, necessarily bo unpreceden ted. We call the especial attention of tax payers to this system. Is it honest to attempt thus to deceive the people? Is it not very suspicious when an esti mate is made for thirty millions and four times that amount is expended by the War Department? How can Gen. Grant be trusted when he resorts to such trickery Nothing more was to be ex pected of Stanton, for he is but a mis erable trickster at best, but there was a time when the people had a different opinion of Grant. That was, however, before he: agreed to become a mere tool in the hands of the Radicals. It is high time the people were hon estly dealt with. This thing of calling for one-third or one-fourth of what they intendlo spend, and then getting Congress to pass a Deficiency Bill dis posing of more money than was voted in the original Appropriation Bill, can not deceive-the people any longer.— They can see what it is costing us to keep up an army of seventy-five thous and men to enforce negro supremacy in the South, and they know that the bur then will be none the lighter because false estimates are made at the begin ning to be eked out by a gigantic de ficiency bill at the end of the year.— Honesty is the best policy in all things, and the overburthened tax-payers have a right to demand that they shall be honestly dealt by. We have had enough of this roguish trickery, this pretense at retrenchment when none is intended. Freemen of Lancaster Southern negroes are at this moment electing YOUR rulers. Emancipated slaves are crowding white men from the ballot boxes, and choosing members of Congress to make laws . for YOU. This is done In flagrant violation of the Con stitution of the United States and in open:deflance of the will of the Northern people. The principle of Negro Suffrage has been Indignantly spurned by every free State that has passed upon it. Yet Congress invites negrocs to assist in governing YOU. The system has never ban author ized or sanctioned by the people. The Congress which adopted it was elected on another issue and for a different pur pose. So far as the people have had an indirect opportunity to pronouncejudg ment upon it, their judgment has been unmistakably adverse. Yet Congress insists upon enforcing the scheme, and using the system to perpetuate itself. To save the system from destruction Congress has fettered and gagged the Supreme judicial tribunal of the land. When that Court was about to condemn it, Congress hastily and Indecently de prived the Court of the jurisdiction that reaches the liberty of the citizens. The habeas corpus was wrested from the Court to rescue the despotism of Negro Reconstruction. The House of Repre sentatives passed a bill requiring two thirds of the judges to concur in a decis ion in favor of freedom. And the new political device of impeachment was brandished over the Court to awe It Into silence, and destroy that independence which the Constitution is most solici tous to protect. The President having shown a dispo sition to iriterposo in behalf of the peo ple was promptly shorn of labs Constitu tional powers. Dlspotisms were estab lished In the South to take the ballot from white men and give it to negroes, and over these despotisms a tool of Con gress was made Dictator. The President was deprived of the command of the army, by requiring him to transmit all orders through a creature of Congress. He was not permitted to remove his Cabinet ministers, or a postmaster, tide waiter or clerk without the sanction of Congress. He was beset with spies, in formers and detectives to report his words and gestures to the new Masters of the American people. But It was not enough to shackle the patriotic President. Congress wanted the powers of his office to attempt to shackle the people. They resolved to Impeach him for not following his party n the desertion of Its principles and the violation of Its faith. And he stands impeached to-day for opposition to No gro Suffrage and Equality. This is the head and front of his offending. The charges actually made against Mtn are the flimsiest and emptiest of false pro- They have been refuted, dis proved and demolished. But the frost• dont will be deposed, and a creature of Congress invested with his powers, In order that every contrivance of corrup tion, fraud and violence may be employ ed to coerce the American people Into acceptance of Negro Suffrage. Against these outrages, past, present and to come, It Is your duty to pro flounce an emphatic protostat the ballot box. You have one more opportunity to speak through the mouthpiece of freemen, before the infamous ptirposo of Congress is consummated by the re m oval of the President of the People and the inauguration of the Pro-consul of the Sooate. Lirt your voice join those of your sister cities Cincinnati, St. Louis, Chicago, Albany, Pittsburg and Har risburg, In forbidding the sacrifice of the Tribune of the People to the ebony idol of Negro Equality. Speak for the last time in warning ; and if your warn ing Is despised, raise the cry for yen. ; geance. Grant's Drunkenness. Elsewhere we publish a letter from Wendell Phillips, in which the apolo• gists for Grant's drunkenness are rough. ly handled. We shall wait with some anxiety to see how these leaders in the temperance cause will meet the sharp thrusts therein made. The weak mini festoes of General Dodge and Senator Wilson are completely riddled. That' Grant does get drunk, that he has been seen reeling drunk in the streets of Washington more than once, is openly charged on the best Radical authority, and there iSno use in denying it. A pisloyal Ilen. A Vlighila'exchange says S. hen in that State has just laid an egg which has the mysterious initials K. IC. K. distinctly formed by elevations in the material of the shell, tlere IBA matter wltioh calls for the pro.npt interference of the military authorities. We do not :know but that some action should be taken in the premlsei by Congress. We would respectfully call Old Thad's at tention to the, matter: It is a most marked.evidence of disloyalty. ut., tllTiset - le Michigan Bakal Thinks. `"The Kansas State Journal ptagliated A _ LAIMO/ace, by a Michigan ItadiCaltitt litioitighly disgusted with e deft A **to suffrage in his n ve State. luvia-11:.'" , • , • • “lly-aitclUgan," has dislienored h lf, and, oovered,the.party with shame and in contdatency* in refuaing to adopt the new Constitution. That State has a population of nearly 1,000,000 hardy and enterprising eons and daughters. Next to Ohio it is the greatest wool State in the Union, but it has all the. prejudices against ,negre• suffrage that' S outh Carolina and gebrgia &ham With HB'l,ooooo white population it has also about 1,200 negroes, and for. some un accountable reason the State - hoe declared by, about 40,000 majorljg that the 1,200 ne gross shall not. vote ; ItEd yet Michigan has the inconsistency to. ask or, rather,. force, upon. the people of the South the , very rule with regard to suffrage which sherriects for herself - by so large a majority.'Michigan ought to be ashamed of herself. To main tain her diabolicalinconsisteney she shonld call home Zech Chandler and Jack How ard. "If it is wrong for intelligent negroes to vote in Michigan, it is wrong for ignorant and brutalized negroes, made so inevitably by the surroundings and associations of a lifetime, topolicy vote in South Carolina. If it is bad State 1,200 negroes to ote in one State, it is bad for State policy for v 12,000 of the same clams to vote in another State. And this is all there is of the negro suffrage proposition. If the thin-skinned, white livered and milk-and-water Republicans of Michigan haven't sense enough to ap preciate these obvious truths, they had heft& change their names and their politics, and leave their lake-bound State, and _move off up into Alaska or British America. Their climate is not more cold and repul sive than are the sensibilities of the people frigid and unrelenting." That fellow's head is level. He sees that his party cannot expect to live un less negro suffrage is made the rule in the North as well as in the South, and he fully accepts the issue. We do not wonder he is completely disgusted with "the thin-skinned, white-livered, milk and-water Republicans," who areready ' to sustain negro suffrage in the South, but equally ready to vote it down in the North: Such men have no business in the Republican party. Every vote they cast with that organization is an act of humiliation which no true man would endure. Let all such shake off the trammels of old party associations, and act, from this time forth, with the De mocracy. There is no other political organization in the country which is not pledged to the support of negro equality. The Impeachment of the Republican That the Radicals are mistaken in supposing that they will derive advant age from the removal of Andrew John son by the vile means they are employ ing wo are fully convinced. The more sagacious of their leaders, such of them as are not entirely blinded by passion, admit that so glaring an act of Injustice must prove extremely disastrous to the party. Thurlow Weed, who hasseldom been mistaken in his estimate of the ef fect of political movements, says : " What the President would not do—that Is, give them rope enough—the Radicals are doing for themselves. A quarrel is to cul minate in a crime. The Senate, the moment its sentence of Guilty has been pronounced, will be impeached and put on its trial before the high tribunal of public opinion. When the fire and smoke of the Radical speeches in:Congress and the howling' of the Radical press subside, judgment and reason will re sume their sway ; when there will no longer be an Andrew Johnson fora popular scape goat and scarecrow ; when Congress will be come directly responsible for all discontents and disappointments—then, wo say, that is reaction will sot in, and an indignation bo awakened, from which the Radical leaders will call upon the mountains to hide, and the rocks to fall upon them. Even should the consequences not overwhelm the Ito publican party—of which there is groat danger, they will crush the Senators who, with no testimony to Justify them, say 'We had the President of the United States Guilty.' Though urged by their partisans to do this thing, those very partisans will use it against them. It will be said by those who want their seats that the ' Impeach ment' hiss become so unpopular that we must drop A., 13 , C., D., R., P., G., tito.. until one by ono, they all drop out of their positions." The only mistake in Mr. Weed's statement is to be found in the suggestion that the Senators who vote for impeach ment will be thrust aside to make room for other Republicans. The reaction in public sentiment will not stop there. The party cannot purge itself by reject ing Its impeachment Senators. This It will infallibly attempt to do, but the people will not accept that as an attone ment for Its usurpations and crimes. It will stand before the country impeached for such grave offences that the masses will never rest satisfied until it is com pletely deprived of the power It has so shamefully misused. _ • 1 41> 4. Mrs. Lincoln's Opinion of Rant. Mrs. Lincoln had her own views of those who hold high positions under her husband, and she was in the habit of speaking outvery freely. Her opinion of Grant was not flattering, but, unless we are much mistaken it will generally be regarded as remarkably correct. In the hearing of her spouse, she said : Grant Is a butcher, and is not fit to bo at the head of ourarmy." " But," replied Mr. Lincoln, "ho has boon very successful." " Yes," replied Mrs. Lincoln, 'he gone ally manages to claim a victory, but such a vic tory. Ito iOBOB two mon fur tbo enemy's one. If the war should continuo four yours longer, and ho in power, ho would depopu late the North. According to his tactics there is nothing under hi:seven to do but to march a new line of mon up in front of the Rebel breaatworlcs to bo shot down as fast as they take their position. Grunt, I repeat, is an obstinate fool and a butcher." That Is decidedly severe on the gen tleman who smokes in silence, but we have no doubt the Judgment of posterity will fully corroborate the opinion ex pressed by Mrs. Lincoln. What Fosters the Naked Drama ? A correspondent of the New York Tribune charges that the naked drama, as exhibited In such spectacles as the Black Crook, could not exist if the clergy of that city and the country were faithful to their trust. Does the con tributor of the Tribune forget that the principal business.of many northern preachers, for several years past, has boon the preaching of a vary bad style of politics? How can it be considered strange that vice should stalk abroad when religion has been banished from so many pulpits? When a professedly religious Journal such as The Pulpit, undertakes to: excuse the sensual sins in which so many clergymen have boon detected, it is only a natural conse quence that the churches should be de serted while the mattinees and regular exhibitions of the Black Crook are crowded. A Tooth Dom the Jaw or the Radical Party. The followlug appears as a special telegram at the head of the nows columns of Forney's PrcBB; Mr, Slovens spends an hour or two ovary day with his friond, Col, Forney, In the room of tho Secretary of tho Senate, during the trial, and is full of anecdote and infor mation, It is astonishing how much ho has improved within the last two weeks, Yes• . tordoy he had a loose back tooth extracted —.the second he has over lost. Will Col. Forney please inform us, at his earliest convenienco, what has been done with the aforesaid tooth from Old Thad's Jaw? We would suggest to Con gress the propriety of appropriatitig a sum of money for the purpose of having it preserved and properly taken oare of for all time to come ; and that Colonel Forney be given a large salary for keep ing watch over it, after Cameron has kicked him out of the position he now holds. Menge Election. The 'Stale Guard of Saturdak, April 25th, publishes the following: The Democracy are howling with delight over the result of the late municipal eleo tion in Chicago. The Republican vote is of course much less' than it was for Lincoln, but we imagine the silent voters are not all dead. The figures on Clerk and . President are as follows: 869. Republican 1 11,816 KlMB6i. Democratic 11,930 12.891 Republican loss, 2,572; Democrat lose, 705; And out of this the Democrats have the audacity to claim a gain of five or six thou sand. No, Mr. State Guard. The vote was as follows: Republican. Democratic. And out of this the Democrats have the audacity to claim a gain of over fourteen thousand. 116*Faninpilag *Mat and Judg -5..- manta raynillapi . 2. , As there hibonatrable ingniryabont the law recentlye(l,h/ the 4gialiie tare, exempting mortgages, judgmenti and recognizances from taZll4olk, republish the act, which reads as fol lows : Be it enacted, &c., That all mortgages, Judgments, recognizances and moneys ow ing upon articles of agreement for the sale of real estate made and executed after the ppaesaseaaggee of this aot, shall be exempt from all taxation, • except for State purposes; and that from and' after the first day of Decem ber next, no taxes of any description shall be :assessed `or collected except for State purposes, onerfrom mortgagee, judgments, recognizancea or moneys owing upon arti cles of agreement tor the sale of real estate, whether made and executed before or after the passage of this act: Provided, That nothing in this act shall be constructed to apply to mortgages, judgments or articles of agreement given by corporations. This act applies to Lancaster county, but it will be seen that it does not ex empt all mortgages find judgments from taxation ; but only such as are "owing upon articles of agreement for the sale of real estate, made and executed after the passage of this act." There !show. ever the farther provision that after the first day of December next all such aye lietions shall be exempt, whatever may be their date. It does not exempt them fromiaxatlon for State purposes. This statement will enable our readers to understand how the law stands, and to see whether it affects them. Radicals Denouneing the Virginia Con stltailon. The more decent white Radicals in the Virginia Convention denounces the new Constitution in unmeasured terms. A special dispatch to the Pittsburg - Commercial says : After adjournment several members were called upon for speeches. Mr. Porter, Re publican congratulated the members on the constitution adopted, and predicted its ra tification by an overwhelming majority. He was followed by Lindsay, colored, In a speech to the same effect. Judge Smead, of Accomao county, decidedly the ablest man in the convention, loyal throughout the war, and who has acted with the Republican party ever since, denounced the constitution and predicted its defeat by an immense majority on account of the iron-clad oath, which would practically render impossible the inauguration of any government In the State. Mr. Allan, who has hitherto been esteemed one of the most radical Republi cans in the State, followed Smead in a speech to the same effect. Beecher on Advertising Henry Ward Beecher, in his latest Sunday morning sermon, said that if he was a mer chant and wanted to sell goods, be would advertise in the nawspapers.—New York Paper. And Mr. Beecher would sell his goods. Judicious advertising never fails. Mr. Beecher would know how to advertise judiciously—which is what a good many don't know. It is the easiest thing in the world to throw away money in try ing to advertise. Letting on just too little steam is no better than none at all. The dealer who contracts to have his advertisement printed for a lengthened period, and seldom changes it, does the next thing to noth ing at all, at an expensive rate. It is the frequent, persistent blows that make the breach ; and so it is the frequent advertisement, framed to enlist atten tion, that bring custom. Where adver tising has been reduced to a system, the advertiser changes frequently, pays freely, and never allows his advertise ment to become stale. The same song continually sung would ruin the best of singers. Whoever has tested it never underrates advertising. The weak, sick ly, timid advertising is simply useless expenditureof money. Thin gruel never made one fat. Liberal advertising has made more men rich than any other one thing. Mr. Beecher is the best adver tised man in the country, and he knows the value of advertising liberally.— Pittsburg Commercial. Horrible Cruelty In on Orphan Amylum Brooklyn is excited over the report of a cites of groat aructlty towards ono of the children in the larooklyn Half Orphan Asylum, in Cumberland street. The boy, Edward Ferguson, had committed some offoneo, to punish which, two of the women in authority, it is alleged, seized him, and while one of them held him firmly, the other poured oil of vitriol or some other burning acid upon his exposed flesh. His excruciating agony almost threw the little sufferer into convulsions. One of the women who inflicted the torture is under arrest. Her name Is Miss Anna Campbell, and a warrant is out for tho apprehension of her assistant, whose name is Mrs. Davis. On being brought before the magistrate, the former said that In administering the pun ishment, she was but carrying out the or ders of the doctor of the institution She was hold to bail in the sum of $lOOO to answer. An examination of the case was set down for Saturday next. The mother of the boy is a widow, residing on Franklin avenue. Many persons who had children In the in stitution went this morning and Wok them away. Tho Fate of Impeachers The fate of impeachers in history is signi ficant. Of the fifty-eight persons who sign ed the death-warrant of Charles Stuart, thirty-seven survived the Commonwealth, and lived to see the restoration. Of the thirty-seven, nine were executed, twelve imprisoned for the remainder of their lives, eleven fled to escape punishment, three were pardoned or released, and the fate of two Is left in doubt. The' twenty-ono who died before the restoration were attainted by Parliament. Cromwell was exhumed and hung ; and so were several others who wore the chief instigators of the regicide. All this was done, not to gratify any spirit of revenge on the part of Charles 11, but in obedience to a popular demand for Justice. Of the estates of the fifty-eight regicides, thirty-five were confiscated by exclusion from the indemnity bill of Charles 11, ono was restored by pardon, and the yearly I n • come of the remaining ono was confiscated. Tho Victory in Oh'miff° The Chicago Times says exultantly: the Republican National Convention will be compelled to hold its sessions in a Demo cratic city, unless it move nwaykom Chi• cago. The chief city of Grant's own State has pronounced against him. Chicago ,is Democratic. At the election yesterday, the Democracy carried the city by NO majority —electing the Democratic candidate for J udgoof the Recorder's Court, and the Dem ocratic candidate for Clerk of the Recorder's Court, and gaining four Aldermen. This is groat glory. Last year, at the mayoralty election, the Republican majority was 0,038. Democratic gain, 4,8481 The Demooracy have covered themselves with honor end triumph. An Exhibition of Indecency. Forney's Proses notices editorially the feat that a beautiful monument is being erected in Doylestown to tho dead of the 104th Regiment of PounnylvaniaVolun tours ; but it entirely ignores the fact that this testimonial to the gallant dead is duo to the energy and patriotism of that distinguished Democratic soldier, General W, W. H Davis. General Davis has written a history of the 104th, which is the best book of the kind yet published, and through his untiring of. forts the money was raised to construct the monument of which the Press speaks. Under such circumstances it BOOMS strange that all mention of Gen. Davis should bo omitted In the article to which wo allude, and that occasion should be taken therein to make a bit ter assault upon the Democratic party. Such is the Justice and the decency of Radical Journalism. Death of an Editor. Col. T. Herron Foster, one of the pro. proprietors and the the :chief editor of the Pittsburg Dispatch died on Tues• day morning.' He was a gentleman of fine abilities, and much esteemed by all who knew him. THE election of a negro to fill one of the principal State offices in South Carolina is hailed as a great Republican victory; and every big and little Radical newspaper in the country is in raptures over ,the result. Are those whd call themselves Conservative Republicans prepared to continue their connection with a party which offers this as the first fruits of its favorite policy? Nzw Youths is threatened with a daily religious paper. Its politics will be Congregational, and its motto: Go ye into all the South and preach Thad. Stevens to every living creature. THE Ku-Klux have appeared in East Knoxville, but in a very mild form. Two of them woke up a gentleman the other night, about eleven o'clock, to in• form him that they hadn't had a drink since the battle of Shiloh, but the gen tleman failed to come to time, and the spirits were "sold." GIN. " 808 " SCHENCK, famous for the Vienna massacre, bas recently been "completely, cleaned out at several friendly games of poker" in Washing ton. Will Impeachment Heti Negro Beton. • 114.110011g1T • Thirßaditisleideolare that: President John son must tie Rol rid of as an °Wade. An obstacle to Radical femlahrhorrhe fa not and has never been qq:having never been able to otaitznct liar a lunar period than ten days the wildest, mad estirfadmostrevolution aryllaws they have seen fit to pica. His Power of bliderPosing by his velues a ten aays' delay in the passage of laws does not 'account for the three years' delay in the res toration clothe Southern States. In what way, than, has be checkmated that policy ? Not by a refuel to execute the Renonstruo tion laws, for he baarformed every act which those laws req uireof him. In fact, they require nothing of him but the ap nointment_of the fivellisixint.Commanders. The scheme was contrived to dispense with his action; and operate in' defiance' of his official authority. • The military command ers being appointed, he 1s not permitted by law; and has not attempted in fact,thinter fer with thediacharge of their duties, How, then, is be an obstacle, Unable either to prevent the passage of laws or to obstruct their administration, he has not been an obstacle by the exert ion of official authority, but only by his personal influence. If the Radimls think that by divesting him of his office they will destroy his personal influ ence, they are mistaken. The Reconstruction project has-thus far been thwarted for no other reason in the world than because the Southern people have refused to accept it. Their refusal is, to be sure, ascilben to the encouragement they have receited from the proclaimed hostility of President Johnson to the Con gressional scheme. But be will be no less' hostile to it out of office than he has been in. Ashe has stimulated the Southern people to oppose it only by acting on public senti ment, it does not very clearly appear bow ejecting him from office will remove the "obstacle." If anybody suppwes that his conviction will inspire any additional con fidence on the part of the South, in the jus tice, wisdom, or moderation of Congress, such a person must be singularly incapable of viewing the subject from Sontherritioints of view. Even if Mr. Johnson, after his removal, should go quietly back to. Tennessee and "make no sign," the effect of the impeach ment would be to deepen the indignation of every honest man in the South, and cause him to regard the Reconstruction abomina tion with more fervent hatred than he does at present. To punish 'the President in manifest defiance of law, justice, and eSt deuce, on a false pretence of crime, is one of the unlikeliest methods that could be adopted for causing the Southern people to regard the Reconstruction scheme with greater favor than they have done hereto fore. The real "obstacle" Is Southern oppo sition ; and the unjust condemnation of the President would render that opposition in veterate. To suppose that Mr. Johnson, a ft er his removal would sliek away to his home and hide his face would bo to mistake the character of the man. He may be deposed but he cannot be disgraced. He is not made of such yielding, abject stuff as to hang down his bead under an unjust sentence. The only advantage he gains from his offi cial station is that it enables him to com mand the public ear; but as a President unjustly deposed this advantage will be doubled. He is as capable as any man in this country of the fiery zeal of a cruzader ; he perfectly understands the average South ern mind, and has an unrivalled capacity of talking to its level. He will affect none of the usual reserve of a rettred President with a cumbersome dignity to support, but will go forth with the burning ardor of a Peter the Hermit, and, like him, will be less indebted for his success to the powers of the orator than to the preposses sions of the audience. He will rehearse the injustice and tyranny of Congress on every Southern stump to men eager to hear and swift to condemn. Ho will find the task of convincing their judgment already done to his hands. His only labor will be to rouse and kindle their sympathetic indignation. The negro reconstruotionists will find that in attempting to escape the consequences of his opposidon they have jumped out of the frying-pan4htu the fire. They will ex change the Comparative reserve of an officer without any real power, for the inextin guishable vehemence of an obstinate politi• cal zealot, who will never speak in the South without a great audience, nor over fall to carry his audience with him. As President, his influence is merely per sonal, for ho has long been stripped of near ly, every function of his offco . As a Proof ' dent unjustly deposed, he will lose no per sonal consideration, and will ouporadd the activity and volubility of a practised politi cal speaker greeted everywhere with great ovations. If the military satraps should silence him in the South, he would come to the North, where, although he would find public sentiment greatly divided, he would be welcomed and greeted as no orator has been since Kossuth. The idea that so irre pressible a nature as Andrew Johnson can bo " put down" by an:unjust sentence which will leave his person at liberty, is visionary. But, quite apart from his personal activi ty, his deposition from office will intensify and consolidate the Southern opposition, for there are probably not 5,000 white men born and raised in the South who will regard it in any other light than political persecution dishonestly cloaking itself in the forms of justice.—N. Y. World. A Lndy wnlkis ninety4Tvo miles lu tyfour Lours. Weston, the pedestrian is not the only person who is to be permitted to enjoy the honor of walking 100 miles in twenty-four hours, as hero in St. Louis a lady is contest ing his laurels, and with a very good show of success. Weston, on his tramp across the continent, made several uttemps, but failed, only accomplishing the feat a few weeks since, near Buffalo, N. Y. A couplo of weeks ago Mrs. Harry Thomas, a lady of this city, was prevailed upon to under take the great font, Concordia Park being selected as the plane where it wee to be per formed. A broad plank was laid on trestle frame-work, and backward and forward she was to march until .the task was con summated. After ono postponement on account of the weather, she announced her self, on Monday last, as ready for the 1111. dortaking. Quite a large crowd of specta tors assembled at tho,Park to see the start, and with an elastic, buoyant step, Mrs. Thomas began her tedious march at 1 o'clock in the afternoon. At first oho walked quite briskly, but as time wore on and hours bad boon consumed, her pace slackened, but she continued the task without a murmur or complaint. During Monday night watch • era wore loft with her to furnish her with want refreshment might be requir ed, and keep a record of the time and distance, as each hour rolled around. On Tuesday morning she looked very frosh, ' considering the fatiguing journey she had taken, though her limbs had swol lon somewhat, and her slops were slower and more feeble than before. At half-past 12 o'clock yesterday, the score showed that she had travelled ninety-two miles, and it being fully apparent that the remaining eight miles could not be made up in the concluding halt hour, she ceased her walk ing, amid the cheers and compliments of all bystanders. Mrs. Thomas is a rather small built woman, and would be considered rather good looking. She does not look to be very strongly made, nor capable of the fatigue, of such a journey. She feels con fident, however, of herability to accomplish this unilortaking, and will make a second attempt in a few weeks. She has already done so wall that bets are freely offered that she will succeed on the neat trial, duo no tice of which will bo Louts Times, The General Conforonoo of tho Moth() (lint Epioiaciphl Ono of the most Important ovonts of a ro llßttlour that has over occurred in Chicago will be the mooting of the gonor4tl conference of tim Mothodist Eplmeopitl Church of the United Shiite, to occur on the first of noxt month. This conloronco 014- pomblos only once in four ears; It is coin • posed of dologatom from all ythe annual non. forenows in the United Stntom, sixty.olght In numhor, which have tin aggrogato clerical membership of olgitt thousand, Tito ratio of roprosontation In the general conference is ono delegate for ovary thirty members. It is oxpooteel that there will be present at the forthcoming session nine bishops, two hundred and thirty.fivo delegates from England, Ireland, Franco, the eanadam and the United States.—!ivory State and several of the Torritories will bo represented. Soy oral vary important questions will oomo up for action, among them lay representation, Southern work and the foreign mission policy. The body wilt also constitute a court of appeals, and during the session the conforonco will elect general officers. bishops, editors, book Agents and oorros ponding secretaries of connectional eocio ties. A Ntrong Point. 'no N. Y. Herald says: Ono of Mr. Nelson's strongest points is the production of the resolution introduced into the Senate by Mr. Johnson in the first year of the war and then adopted by Con gress as the expression of the country In regard to the object of the Var. Tbat row. lution declared that the war was for the Union, and not for the destruction of slavery nor for conquest nor the subjugation of the Southern people. Tho speataalo now is that Mr. Johnson is tho only man in tho goy ernment who adheres to that declaration and stands up in oppOsition to thoso who are trying to secure the results of the war as though italkd been one for conquest. He is the-man who holds tothe main idea, and and all the rest have been sweet on by the revolutionary current. He is tried on party questions, and yet not because he deserted his party, but because be did not go with it when it deserted its principles. Negro Blot at the Polls. The election at Augusta tGeorgla, closed In a row between the whites and blacks. Several were wounded, but none seriously. The excitement was intense. Subsequently a negro knocked a white lady down in the public streets, injuring her severely. This added to the excitement prevailing, qpd fears were entertained of a general riot. Several shots were fired at the freedman,bot he escaped with a slight wound. After the negro had been arrested, • the military charged through the streets, dispersing the crowd. Geod.Womanl The Hartford Times tells a good story of Mrs. John Hubner, (a German woman,) of that, city. Her husband, (a small man,) walkonflned to his house by rheumatism, unable to walk to the polls. Seeing that he was likely to lose his chance of voting for Gov. English, she proposed to earn' him on her back, and actually did so! 'When. the crowd at the polls saw her approach, they gave her three cheers, and made up on the spot a purse of $2OO for her. That is the spirit with which the Democracy of Con necticut went into the contest. Slate Items. She Scott Won celebrated tho anniver sary of the betide of Cerro Gordo, on Satur day evening in Ptdiadelphia by a supper. Eggs are now down to a Tarter dollar a dozen. They are now the eapest food in the Philadelphia market. A bed otiron ore was recently discovered on the Bum of David Plank, Esq., near Morgantown, Barks county. Win. E. Dodge, E of New York, has made a donation of slsq., 0,000 to Lafayette College at Easton. The Lewisburg Tournai states that there is a line rafting freshet bathe Susquehanna, and the rafts are running in abundance. The railroad safe at Annville station, five miles above Lebanon, was recently blown open and robbed of $5O. The Philadelphia Engine Company has been awarded a bronze medal for their am bulamxs exhibited at the French Exposition. The members of the Masonic order, liv ing in' Hatboro' and vicinity, this state, have recently organized a lodge. The sum of $lO,OOO was subscribed to the stock of the Reading Library Company last year. Cloudy Boner has been arrested in Potts town for engaging in a prize light with Wm. James. The drowned man found at the Fairmount locks, on Sunday, is supposed to bo John Connelly of Pittsburg. The Philadelphia papers announce that Strawberries have made their appearance in that city. Thorn are 80,410 chilten in the public schools of Philadelphia-40,731 boys and 39,677 Earls. West Chester has seven banking houses. Reading hes a bare half dozen—four public and two private. Kemble Johnson," a celebrated trotting horse owned by the late Reilly Smith, of Easton, was sold recently for $l, 271 -•- - W. H. Beal, of Philadelphia, has invent ed an Ingenious dovice for heating railroad cars, which removes all danger from fire in case of a smash-up. .A fatal disease to chickens Is now prevail ing in some parts of Berks county. One farmer in Cumrtt township recently lost twenty in one day. Tho Rainbow Firo Company of Rending intend soon to present to the Good Intent Fire Company of Philadelphian handsome banner and a bookcaso. Anthony Taylor, a much respected citi zen of West Chester, 85 years of ago, was crushed by a car at the Railroad depot in that place on thalsth Inst., and instantly killed. An election for the consolidation of the -- . • boroughs of Lebanon and North Lebanon was recently held and resulted In favor of the measure by a majority of 569 out 067 votes polled. By a law which recently passed the Leg islature, it is enacted that partridges shall be shot only between the 20th of October and 20th of December of each year. The fine imposed fora violation of this law 18825. Mr. Wm. Chapman, the great Slate manufacturer, intends to build a largo hail at Bath, Pa., this summer, for the use of the Masonic Lodge, which it is expected will bo instituted there in June next. Joseph Megary, elected Clerk of the Or phans' Court in Philadelphia, has entered upon his duties. He has appointed An thony A. Lewis deputy, and Albert Fortier Cotirt Clerk. The new Lackawanna Valley House, in Scranton, has been completed. It cost $50,000. To finish it the proprietor, E. B. Burnham, expended $15,000. It is the finest house in Scranton. Returns of the South Carolina election'in dicate a Republican majority in all but three or four districts. Partial returns from eighteen districts show over 20,000 majority for the Constitution. Reading is soon to have another daily pa• per (German ), to be issued by W. 'Rosen thal, Esq., of the Banner von Berks. This will make four papers from ono office—all under the editorial supervision of Mr, Ro senthal. Dan Rico is traveling through Southern Pennsylvania with his circus. Ho takes occasion to give the impeachers some herd rube every time ho appears in the ring, and his pointed allusions generally "bring down the house." John Gibbonoy, who is charged with tho homicide of Patrick Duffy, at seventh and Shippon streets, Philadelphia, sovaral weeks ago, yesterday delivered himself into the custody of Chief Dotactlye Lamon,7nt Ches ter county. Ho woe brought to this city and was committed for trial. An Anti-Tobacco Club has boon started In Girard, Pa., with W, C. Culbertson as President, and H. M. Webster no Secretary, The topics it is to consider aro " the evils resulting from the excessive use of tobacco, as well as the virtues of camomile flowers as a substitute." There is an old lady named Elizabeth Wood in Philadelphia, who is 107 years old. She was present at the time Washington crossed the river on the memorable Christ mass eve preceding the battle of Trenton. She is quite intelligent and retains to a re markable degree the use of all her faculties The Delaware river has been in tine raft ing condition for several days past, and a large number of log and lumber rafts have been floating down it, on their way to mar ket. The lumbermen on the headwaters of the river did not suffer any loss from the ice freshet and aro now getting their lum ber to market in good season. The Prothonotary of Scuylkill:county on Saturday last entered judgment in the suit of Moses Taylor and Samuel Sloan, Trua• tees, versus the Now York and Schuylkill Coal Company, for ono million, sixty-eight thousand and nine hundred and ninety throe dollars and thirty-three cents, ($1,008,- 003.03.) It is the largest judgment over entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill county, and ono of the largest perhaps ever entered in the State of Penn sylvania. Nov. Items Tho Union Pacific Railroad is now coin ploted to a point CM miles west of Omaha. Tho Ohio romalo Collogo, near Cineln nati, was burned yesterday. Loco, 8100,000 Fourteen business houses in Pulaski, Tennessee, were yesterday destroyed by Rm. Loss, $lOO,OOO. Ono Jean Baptiste La Oroix has identi fied Whelan, in prison at Ottawa, as tho man whom he says he saw lire the shot that killed Darcy McGee, Four men woro arroetod at JoU'oreonvlllo, on Tuesday, charged with conspiring to rob a railroad train and murder those In ohargo of it, Tho second trial of John LlNSurratt Is to begin on the 12th of May, It is understood that Judge Black will be ono of tho counsel for the defence, Eight mon wore killed and four others se riously injured by the explosion of a boiler in a saw mill at Miamsteo, Michigan, on Wednesday. Volney Winehell, broker, disappeared from Springfield, Mass., two weeks since, with a largo amount of U. S. bonds and other securities, including 817,000 belonging to the Presidont of tho First National Bank. The laborers on the Union Pacific Rail road, at the Black Hills, were attacked by Indians on Thursday, and four of thnin worn killed, Tho Indiana in the vicinity of Von Eitanton, Now Me: km, are very host) le, and have kil t novoral whiten. Pa-Govornor Plorpoint, of Virginia, ban rondo charges to don, Grant against (lon. Mahaltold. Ho sayn that tiolloilold ban vlo• 'Mod thu lawn by allowing ox-Confedoratem who could not toko thu oath to hold office, nod that ho ham mad° nupolottoontn preju dicial to tho Union calm, A Nadal ;dorm TlNltod Pro!Ho county, Art on tho 111111 Instant, F0110(1/4, (Jut. 'nison, ea/lido:woo nod tlmbor worn prow tratod, and many pormona novoroly An unprooodontodballotorm °conned at t ho mamo tlmo. Ploaom of loci, horn tho olzoof ct walnut to a glom tumblor, full llko moo. ;hot, with fourfulonbot. Irlomohourwo war° blown ontlroly away. No lives aro known to hnyo boon loot. tud of this Way in Abyssinia. Lorrnox, April 28—Evoning.—Bcomatalies have Just boon received from Abyssinia which glvo the following highly important and ttratifying intelligonco: A bbattle was fought on Good Friday, be. fora Magdola, between the British troops, commanded by Napior, and the Abyssinian forcos, under command of King Theodore in person. The Abyssinians wort, dofoalod and rotreatod into tho town, losing heavily in killed and wounded. On the following Monday, all his propar ations having boon completed, Goneral Napier ordered an assault upon Magdala• and the town and citadel were carried by storm, and King Thorodoro was slain. A largo number of his warriors worn killed, wounded and captured. Tha entire capital remained in possession of the British forcos. The loss of the British was small. All the British captives wore found in Um city, alive and well, and were sot free. Napier's in stant return to the coast Is expected. The Aftempt to Aminsidonto Prince LONDON, April 26—Evaning.—Further particulars of the attempted assassination of Prince Alfred have been received. Far rell, a Fenian, shot him in the back on March 12, and the ball was extracted on the 14th. He was doing well, but would he sent borne. LONDON, April 20.—A despatch from Sydney; New South Wales, dated March 81, states that Prince Alfred was recover ing from the effects of his wound. Terrible Boller Hoplos on PHILADELPHIA, April 27.—A boiler in the Penn Treaty rolling mill of Lelbert Co., Marlborough street, exploded this a T.. to To oo n, demolishing the building. John M, Gill, Frank Smith, and John Davis, were killed, four were wounded seriously, and many others slightly. Up to the pres ent time thirteen wounded have been taken from the ruins. Fiendish Outrage. UTICA, N. Y. April, 27.—A most horrible and murderouklieed was enacted on Satur day afternoon last at Pond Hill; about four miles east of Camden valley, in this county; A little girl, eight years old, daughter of Levi Sanders, was brutally outraged a abort distance from her father's regidenoe. Her throat was then out and her 'Read smashed with a stone, or some other , implement. Wm. Henry Carswell, who is said to have committed it, is said to be a single fel low, and there is little doubt that be is an' irresponsible chiuscter. IMPICACH4ENT. Mr. Groesbeck.. Great Speech WASHINGTON, April 25.—The Senate, as a high court of Impeachment, assembled at noon to•day. The crowd in attendance In the galleries was greater than on the day previous. The Chief Justice then directed the Presi dent's counser to proceed. Mr. Groesbeck, of counsel, commenced his remarks. Re referred primarily to the fact that in this country we have bad five cases of Impeachment—four of judges and one of a Senator. He laid it down as a first' proposition that Impeachment was never Intended, except as a remedy for the re moval of an-obnoxious odicer who hold his position for 11th. But this case woe now here and it must be met. He then referred to the argument of the managers, that this body was sittings a Senate and not as a court, and he proceeded to argue that it was sitting as a court. Re then reviewed some of the authorities upon this subject. Re ferring to the trial of Senator Blount, ho said the tribunal had hold in solemn deter mination that it was a court. So in the Peck case, and In every other, and In every instance the tribunal solemnly declared it self to ben court. HO then road from Judgo Story relative to the duties of Senators sit ting as a court of impeachment. The oath you took as Senators was a po litical oath. Tho oath that is now upon you is a purely judicial oath. You aro hero, therefore, Senators, as a court, and ns a court you must act. You aro to t . case upon tho evidence brought here, and not upon common fame, or common rumor, as was said by ono of tho managers. Your Jurisdiction hero is stopped alter you try the question whether the President has been guilty of high crimes or misdemeanors. In every count there must bo the unlawful purposo and intent, and when that is want ing them can bo no crime. Suppose a President should become deranged, and, while in that condition, should break law alter law. You would have no Jurisdiction to try high crimes and misdemeanors. lint lot us state another case President Lincoln by court-martial at' • rested and imprisoned citizens of the loyal States, and the Supremo Courthas since do cided his acts had no warrant in the con stitution; but will It bo clitirnod that if President Lincoln wero living he could be tried for a violation of law when his inten tions and motives worohonest ? If thoovil intent and motive is absent, therocan be no crime. With those preliminary observa tions ho would proceed to note the articles of impeachment as presented. .Tho first eight articles charge but two acts, based upon the removal of Mr. Stanton. It' the President had the right to remove Stanton and to give a letter of authority to Thomas, then these eight articles full to the ground and aro of no avail. We therefore have but two inquiries to mako; Ist. flail the Presi dent the right to remove Stanton, and had ho the right to issue tho letter of authority to Thomas, and upon these two questions ho proposed to speak. It was claimed on ono hand that this law did not apply to Mr. Stanton, and if this is so, thou the 'President had it right to make the removal. Tho act was passed on Morel, 2,1807. Stanton's commission was dat..tl on January 15th, 1862, and this comtnission was given ho him by Mr. Lincoln to hold office during the pleasure of the President for the time being. Mr. Johnson bocamo President in 1805, and ho has not commis sioned Mr. Stanton at all, and Stanton, therefore,'does not come under the terms of this act. Stanton was not appointed at all during the current presidonthil term. The commission says ho Is appointed for the current term, and Mr. Johnson never up. pointed Mr. Stanton, and this should settle the question of Mr. Johnson's right to make the removal. A dead man has no estate and can havo no (Alice, and it cannot, thorotbro, be said that he and the odic° In Mr. Lincoln's term. Ito contended tint it was not in the power of Congress to extend the term of an office which was to be held at pleasure. Again, It would bo noticed tint thu tenure of-office act contained no repealing clause, and wo aro therefore at liberty to look bark to the provisions of the law creating the on:a of Secretary of War, and under Mat law Mr. Stanton could only hold hie °Mee during the pleasure of the President op appointing him. AL this point Mr. Posoondon ammo, and sold IL woo ovldont that Mr. Uroombook woo laboring In opoech, and that ho hod a moveru cold, and ho would suggest that ono of the numagoro go on, If Mr, Oroombock deolrod Mr. Groesbeck was much obliged to tho Senator, but ho had no hope that his foron • elni difficulty would be any bettor after tt day or two and hu must therefore beg the attention of the Senate, and he would pro ceed as well an he could under Ms difficulty. Again referring to the old law creating the °Moo, Mr. G. road to show that the original bill was enacted by Ulu casting vote John Adams, and that ho clearly recognized tho President's power of removal of an in aumbent of the Maio at his pleasure. if he was right to Ma view that Mr. Stanton was not covered by the law, and that the law of Intl was in force, then what hecotnes of the first eight artiolos of impeachment? Take out the single question of the power of the removal of Stanton from the eight articles, and they have no other support. Suppose Mr. Stanton Is within the tenure-of-office act. What then? Why, the question Is whether the, President was guilty for re moving him when he honestly believed that Mr. Stanton's 01180 did not come within terms of the net. Thigh' not exactly a quoution of t h e eon. stitutionality of this law, but it Is a question of the construction of the act, and lu this Senate, hmong them) intulligunt Honutors thomealvos, thoro Is a diversity of opinion relative to the construction of that not. A law of doubtful construction IN It is, yet It . the Prosidont construed it cliffuroutly from the Sonato, ho has boon guilty of no orlon, and of no misdotnoanor. It was In ovidenve boforo you, Sonators, that et a cabinet meet ing the subject was diSOUSIMI, and t h e very question of construction came up, and ti, President and his cabinet all agreed upon the construction. But supposo tho law does apply to Mr. Stanton, the question still arises whether the conduct of the President was criminal. Ho did not propose to arguo now tho constitutionality of the law, but ho would inquiro whether, In the present IN pout of tho case, the Prosident was guilty of criminality in removing Mr, Stanton. Ito started from the point that the question was ut boost doubtful. Our government burl boon divided into aim departments, each independent of the other, and no ono department ix respomd blo to the other. All this Is (ourly mot out in the constitution. At the head of the ex • ocutlvo departmont tho President of tint United Status stands, and ho Ix sworn to protect and defend the constitution or the United Mutes. This Is not an oath merely to oxeouto tho laws, for lawa aro not nuniod. Of all the °Moors of the government the oath to protect, promorvo, and defend the constitution of thee United Staten is admin- IsTored to the President alone. In nil doubts, In all difficulties, In all Uinta, ho must lock alone to the constitution of the United States. The honorable Manager lb:unwell said that the Prosldont was only the 0.1(0Clt• titre officer of Congress; but he (Mr. Groes beck) did not so Intorprot the constitution. Tho Prosidont was not the mom executive officer of Congress, but lie la the head of one of tho groat co-ordinate branches of the gov - =Mont. Upon this question ho took direct lantia with all that the honorable manager lual maid, 110 hero quoted from Mr. lioutwull'n remarks upon thls (minuet, and maid the doctrine thou enunciated wan the loot con grunnlonal theory ho had hoard, If a law hu declared by thuSupromu Court unconntltu• tional, the President (hire not tomouto ono Jot or lido or hi 1 and if he (wanton the law aftorwardn, ho violates that higher law, t h e constitution of the United hilitten, This, thou, oxplocton Mr, lioutweini theory that t h e President must oxcautunll laws, letirthor. More. If n law in paused tnaulfuntly unuom ntitutioual, tbu President Is tint hound to oxuatito that law, and nued not await a (10• ainlon of ilium Huproom Court. To follow Ilium constitution In the paramount duty or the President, and to protect the intogrlty of hin cloparttnant In also it duty. At 2.10 the court took a rococo, Court wee called to order again at 3 o'clook and Mr. Groesbeck resumed his remarks, lie reminded the court of the points to which he bud culled attention In the course of his argument, and expressed astonish. wont at the manner In which Mr. Manager lioutwell had summed up the result of the debates of 1789, and said the statement of tho manager was not at all authorized by the debates. The only question discussed and Nettled In that debate was whether the power of removal was lodged In the Presi dont alone or lodged in the President and Senate, and it was decided that the power was vested in the President alone. The first Congress passed a number of acts upon this subject, and among them three acts es tablishing the three executive departments, and in the language of Chief Justice Mar shall, it had to avoid such legislation us would make the constitutional Interpreta tion unstable. These laws wore in force to this day.. • They were 'professedly interpre tations of the constitution, and had been so declared by the Supreme Court ; by ell the Presidents since the days of Wrishlngton; so declared by the Congress that Paned them, and so declared by all Congresses down to the thirty-ninth. Mr. Or&aback then came down nine years later, and reviewed the action of Congress In 1798, when the Navy Department was formed, and when the power of removal was recognized as in the President alone. Twenty-seven years later the Postoffico Department was organized, and the princi ple was also recognized. It was also recog nized in the establishment of the Interior Department, and in the creation of tho Attor ney General's offioe. All these officials had taken their commissions for and during tho pleasure of the President for the time being. Ho also cited laws relating to the appoint ment of postmasters and other subordinate officers as recognizing this same principle. It all the laws of Congress were collected from 1789 to 1867, which affirmed the con struction that the President had the power of removal, they would average two or three to each Congress. The law of March, 1867, Mono came in to break upon the concur rent chain of constitutional interpretation. But be would ask if human reason might not pause, and human Judgment doubt, at this day upon this question? All the Pres idents bad affirmed this constitutional in terpretation, and acted upon it for eighty ; u the Supreme Court had affirmed it; •eight Congresses bad concurred in it. this was on the one side of the ques tion, that the President bad the constitu tional tight to make removals, while on the other side there.: was but the act of one Oongress:ftaffight; not, thetii human -reason pan; • N'aud. -Woman Judgment,doubt;; upon ; the :aosstrdotionf Want it orinsinatin.titerresideltWitsPi, bY that great mass of precedent, and to belloyo