Aradfotti gtporter. E. O. 600DRICII, EDITOR. - , Zowaids, Pa.; Tlacrsday, Xarch 27, 1879. TOE ILEUMDS OF TI I E 141111T-PAD: 4 ! 'lt would certainly not be good manners in any man to cheapen the halter with which he was about to be hung. On the other hand the most 'abandoned villain that ever' , swung could have no interest in so conduct ing himself on the scaffold as to add to the odium earned by bis i crimes. If there'is ever. a time when a human being shouldsummon up any trifle of decency and sense of decorum with. which nature has endowed him, it must be when he is about to make,, his exit from the stage of human af4l fairs. Obvious as these facts must appear to the intelligent reader, they do_not seem to have dawned upon the eonsciou , ness of the Democratic leaders. That,, party became drunk With power in December. 1875. ,It has,never draWn a sober breath from that time to this. In truth it must be said that its fit ofibeastly inebrie ty has been cumulative. It entered upon the almost innumerable investi gations which have uniformly result ed in besmirching the Investigators, in' a moment of diAirium. prosecuted those investigations with the insane' fury oil delirium. And, now, when it is about to go D off in a idead-drunk sttipor,ito awak`c - sober, but wretched, am find itself in a hopeless minority, it has called upon the Administration to stand and de liver. When the Democrats in Congress - affixed ,their ultimatum to-the appro priation bills, they took up the role Of the font-pad. It was: as if they had said to the President. "If we cannot rule we can ruin." To fault with this Democratic axiom' would he as absurd as it would-be to censure the swine for wallowing in the mire. Nature always asserts 4- self. Democratic nature asserted it self in Ino,when it attemptd to \ decree the debasement of national ilionor or national death. The lead ers, gave it. out as their ultintatum then that the people must rcnewitheir lease - of power c.r the 'Union would • be rent asunder. It was the close of a long term and a most wicked abuse of power, when the Deinocratic lead ers felt and saw all. the presages of political death, and their demand was,horn of desperation. -Had Me ' people hesitated; had they striven to, put off the evil day by surrendering their prerogative, the republic would have been blain id the house Of its friends, and- the American people w Juld.to-