TIMMS Or PIII3IILICAUOIL The BRADVlSRaroireas pv11,11044 every Tegodarmo ng py Geovatcs Is Elsromoood, One Dollaryier annum, in advanoe. ifirAdvertistng in' all, cases exclude, of snap. beriptior the paper.', S' E C AL NOTICES Inserted at Tait OlanTa per line fo firstiwiertion, and rorsOativeperlinereir each subsequent insertion, -but no notice litlierled for lisa than fifty cents. YE WILY ADVERTISEMENTS will be Ansert• do at reasonable num. Administrator's and Ezeetlionl Notices, p 2;, /Mallory Notices,ilt.So ; BusmessUards, liven:tea. •". (per yawl .% additional lines Yearly advertisers are ent i l4 to quarterly 'ehtliges. Transient advertise 1110 must be paid for In advance. AU resolutions of association.; eommuniestione of limited or individual interest, Mu; notices of . , msrriages or deaths.exeseding evellbesare chart. .',oertva CENSE , per line, but simplenotlees of mar. Manes and de dimwit" Gs published without charge. "'be it4POILTitu having a larger elreulatlon s timn anrother paper in the county. makes it the best 'Mkrertising medium In Northerp Pennsylvania. • JOB PRINTING of every kind. in plain and fancy colors, done with neatness and dispatch: Handbills, Blanks. Cants, Pamphlets, Dillhesids, Statements, fi.c., of every variety and style, printed ' at the shortest notice. The Ilitrownot office is wall supplied nith now°, presses, a good assort mein of new type. and everything In the printing line can be execeted in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERN) INVARIABLY, CASH.. VltSintSS garbs. • AIADILL KINNEY; - , ATTOUNSTS•AT•LAW. 011lee—Rooms formerly occupied by Y. M. C. A Read lug Roam. + 11. J. MADILL. ' 3.18,80 O. D. 1111111.11 T AIRS. E. J. IPERRIGOI TEACIIIII OP PIANO AND ORGAN Lessons given in Thorough BRAD and Harmony Cultivation of the yoke a speolalty. Located at Snell's Multi St. Reference?: Holmes at Pristine Towanda;'Pa., March 4, 1140. t r,OHN W. CODDI7 ATTonxas-A.T.T4w. TOWANDA, PA Mice over Ktrrs Drug Store TaOMAS, E; MITER ATTOUNEY,i , LAV4, •i TOWAN )A, PA.. •Illee with .Paiyiek an Foyle. & OVERTON 1 ATTOISZYS-AT LAW, i'OWANDA4. -1 ' A. Bl CK. a. M. BA TIM ODNEY tßte. 1 1YR, Jl. LI D'A..OVItwrON, ATTORNEY AVLAW, • • TO*ANDA, PA., Solicitor of Patents. Particular attention paid to li..Bless in the Orphans Court and to , the settle ment of estates. Office In Itontmlyes Block OVERTON & SANDERSON, - , ATTORNET-AT•II,,AVT, 7 . . ToWASDA,TA. • ; I , • - I':.OVERTON. Jl4 I I, JOUR F. SANDER.SON -'!-- . TV H. ,JESgtf l P, VI • A TTO EY AN I) cpu . : 4;kICI.LOII 7 AT-LAW, 0 N Tit PA.. Judge Jessup having iestt sped the practice - of the law In Northern Penusylvaida.stifi attend to any legal husluitss intrusted to hint In Bradford county. Persons wishing to consult.'him, can call on H. Streeter, Esq., Towanda, Pa.', when an appointment can lot made. l i ttNnsir STREETEIC, ATTORNEY AND COUNIIELLOR-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA TT L. TOWNER, rd. . • I[O]I.EOPATHIC rtivnclAN . AND §IrItGEOI4r. "Eld Residence and Office just North of pr. Cor. Main Street, Athens, Pa. jurt26•Gm. EL.IIILLI E. ATT4 V . F. GOFF,' I_ .L 4.. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, • • WYALIJSING,:yA. Agenoy for the sale and purchase of all Muds of Securities and:for makingloans on Real Estate. All hitiluess• will receive, careful and prompt attention. , e (June 4, 1579. ''Elr-AT-T. AA, NDA, PA. 11" k T W EI N I N E-) T N, I P Iirtz S I 9 VI N F I A AT 'Z it ai N te E n ir d to all business entrusted to his care in Itradford, Sull.cansnd Wyoming Counties. Office with Esq. Porter.'' (n0v19411.. HIRAM E. BULL, r SUB'S' ETOR. e:INEEItiNG, SI - RVEVING AND PRAFTING, mike with G. F. Mason), over Patch & Tracy. Maio street, Towanda. Pa. f . 4.15.80. , • GEO. W. KIMBERLEY, ATTf IRN EY-AT•iAW, TILINVA7:DA, PA ~ Offier—S: emit' door booth Of 'trot National' l Batik. August 12, 168?.. —4 F--- -_4_-, -E, LSBREE 4i, SON, 1 , . . _ . ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. N.C. l ,ELsßurit NiePHERSON, .ATTtiltN ET-AT-LAW, TOWANDA. IA. .Dbet Atry Brad. Co JOHN MIX, ATTo.Or-AT-LAW AND U. S. COTIISSIONRIEL, TOWANDA, PA. • i b •-c—Not..l, 81,1 e Public square. , I ' tJan. 1, 1875. SAM W. BUCK, 'ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. To WANDA, PENN'A Offwe—S,eitt. side Poplar street, opplotte• Ward [Nev.il3, 18:8. ... DAVIES & CARNOCLIAN, A , TORYFAS-AT,I.AW. SOILTVI 811 , E OF' W.AF.I) HOUSE. De^.1:3:73. 1 ' TOWANDA. PA. J 'ANDREW VILT,•. , ` - ''' -I. ATTONNEN'..ATI.W. t Ordee—Means'illock. Main-at over J. L. Kent's store, Towanda. May be enultdied to German. A'''' . [AprII 12, '76..] W J. YOUNG; A Trittl.N Ey.A.r4, 4,1,1 1 1, TOWA ND*. P AS Oftles--..‘erond door south' of nig First Nat!onal Bank Hain St.. up stairs. WM' MAXWEIL, A TlO RS EY{AT• LAW, Tow ANA, I'A. (Mee over payton's A.pril 12,157 G. I..) l . l. l . a . o B ;utl M S : urre2 ° o l) l2l ß ce ij a i t t re N sid P en h cZ B o i l; 'in.. Srreet; Ea.l of Main, • To* .11,1 a. May 1, 1e7,2 f „. W B. KELTN, DENTtsT.--Office ' • over M. E. It i oseufield'a, Towanda, Pa. 'it- 4,llingerted on Gold, Silver, ,Iluutier t and Al um-Mtn base. Teethturacted without :Nato. Oct. 34-72. , V . R. PAYNE, 31. D., I 'Jo PIIYAItIAN OD Sugoro,c. inlico ovet liontauyea' Store, 01190 e houra from 10 i . to 12 A. M„ and from 2 to 1 r. w. Special attention given to DISEASES? DISEASES or and • ' • Or THE EYE i . . THE E. 91 • , 4., 2 , : ..7 ( -1 _ Wi. RYA .N , kfi • COUNTY SVPICRINTEND-S day last . Saturdiqr of , each moute, over Tanter & Cordon's Dm . ; Spire, Toasoda, Pa. T. ,, canda, June 2.1!. 18,7/3.' S. RUSSELL'S GENERAL INSURANCE AQ . ,,PNCY v7.v2A-Tort. TOWAN A . 4%. FIRST NATIONAL BA:, TOW A: 4 ; pA. PA. CAPITAL PAID SPRPLUS . . Ttlil Rank offers unusual facilities for the trans. act fuLt-of a genr:albanzlclng.buslness. N. N:B ETTS, Cashier i'OWELL,'Presldent INT RS, IL FEET Tx.teits.nOr PIAN))//hitrere. TERMS (Residence TI. T'•wsnda, Jan. A3,•r GET 1701:TA Jas. Ikna at theREPOATEIe Orrie.i.'oll"4 OD the V•4llr t Mete, Toytende. Crotereilliao S Ir P ee 4 4l7 , , • i r. GOODRICH'S' HITCHGOCK..RubIIIiherS. VOLUME xta. 'SENATOR COOMNG'ip, Great Sport* at the New' York Academy, Friday' !Wight, Septe m ber 17111, 1, . [The Academy of Music in New York was crowded to overflowing, on the occa sion of the 'Republican Mass Meeting. Thousands went away, unable to gain ad mittance. -A letter *as read from Gen. Grant expressing regret at being unable, to be present. Hon., Hamilton Fish was chosen elm - it - man, and introdueed Senator Conkling who spoke at, great length, and was . loudly applauded. , Wei give below some:pf the salient poilip&of. liia address 1. - W hoever is. "given greeting . and audience in sack a presence, ought . indeed to have 'something . worthy--: something fit' and wise to say. In, adequate 11, save only grateful and rest* 1 appreciation must he 'my rettitir. We are citizens or a Republic. We govern ourselves. Here no pomp of eager- array• in chambers of royalty awaits the birth 'of boy or girl to wield an hereditary sceptre whenever death or revolution pours on the-oil of coronation. We know no sceptre save a majoilty's constitutional will. • To wield that sceptre in equal share is the duty and the right, nay; the birthright, of every citizen. The supreme, the final, the only peaeefill arbiter here i h s the bal lot-box; and in that urn . should be gathered, and from it should be sacredly recorded the conscience, the judgment, the intelligence of all. The right of free 'self-government haS been in 411 ages the brightPdreanr of oppressed 'humanity—the - sighed-for privilege to which thrones, dynasties and power have so long blocked the way. France seeks it by forced marches and daring ~strides. Mr. Forster, Secretary for Ireland, tells the.peerage of England 't must take heed it, fall ; and . Westminster and England Aug with dread echoes of applause. But in the fullness of freedom the Republic of America is alone in the earth ; alone in its grand eur in its blessings; alone in 5ep.25,•;9 Slay I, '79, Fel) 27, •79 s promise's and ToadAtitles, and therefore alone in the devotion due from its citizens. The time has come when law, duty and interest require the nation to determine for at least four 'ears its . policy in many things. Tivo parties exist; parties should, i alWays exist in a i government . of rim; jirities - . and to support and strengith. en the party which Most nearly hold . 'pis views is among the most laudable, meritorious acts ok an). American citizen ;L- and this , 4,•fi r etlier he. be in official or in private statior. , Two managementparties contend - for the agenient of national affairs. One'or tb other of ~ these two contestants' is sure to manage the nation's concerns _for. some time;to come. The question is. 'Which „of .the two •is it safer and wiser to trust. It is rrot,,a question of candidates. A candidate, if he be an Honest; genuine man, will not seek . ,and accept a party nomination to the Presidency Vice Presidency orCon gress and after he is elected become a law unto himself. , Few things are more despicable. than first to secure elevation at the hands of a party, and then, iu hopes of winning preten tious nonpartisan applause, to affect superior sanctity, and meanly to im ply that those. whose support and confidence were eagerly and deferen tially sought arc wanting in purity, patriotism . or some other title to re. sheet. •The higher obligations among men' are nut set down in writing and signed and sealed—they reside in honor and good faith. The fidelity of a nominee' belongs to this exalted class, and, therefore, a candidate of a party is but t.he exponentof a party. The object of political discussion and action . is, to Settle 'principles, policies and issues. It is a paltry incident of an election affecting fifty million people that it decides for an.occasion the aspirations of individual: men. The Democratic party is the Demo cratic candidate, and I am against the ticket and all its , Works. (novll-75 12131133510 rfabllBr TOE GENERAL ISSUE A SECTIONAL The general issue confronting us in itsqlf and its bearings sectional. rwould..and you would, itlwere not •so, but it is so. .11 in one portion of the country one party outnumbers the other even by overwhelming -odds, the fact need not be blamable nor proof of sectional ad, , ziession. But if in any section 'a party rains and keeps control, not by numbers, not by honesty and law, and then, stilling free discussion :.rd action attempts-to grasp the Government of the whole country, the proceeding is sectional, guilty and monstrous.. In twelve States of the , liniOn the ap proaching election is to be no more than a farce,;unless, as has,Sometimes happened, it,l3e turned into a tragedy. There is to be no free .debate, no equal rights,:no true expression in these States; and in several States the clear majority' is to have, no de ciding, power—not even a chance in a raffle such as that in which lots were cast and the booty divided -the other day between Tammany Hall and the tipper-air and solar-walk Denocracy. Senator Hampton largely promises forty thousand_ Democratic majority in• South Carolina, where tbe'aetual majority is forty _thousand the other way. In. Several Southern States there is a large, well-known, often as certained Republican'. majority, 'but all Southern States alike; without ex-- .ception or doubt, are relied upon to .count otilthe Democratic side, and to. score 138 Electoral votes—lacking but 47 of a .majority of. all. The causes of such a condition, and the consequences, if it succeeds, are mat ters which no sane, intelligent man put out Of iiew„andiYet he who did cusses them must he,, told in the coarse parlariee,of r : the day. that be waves the 'qllocidY, shirt.', It is_,. relief to remember that this phrai-: ;and the thing it means is no . inven tion of our pplitics. 'lt dates to Scotland thOe„ Centuriegf ago.' After 'a massacre in_Glinfrtlip, not so say age as has 'stained our annals, two hundrel and twenty widows rode'on white rAlfreys, to Sterling Towers, • $123.000 "eirooo OEM Arll 1.187.9 ~''~k . INTRODUCTION. ONE s q:?* F.l '._".:,..;.q.;'"-.1.,,,,,,_:.;. bearing each on . . ,a spear. 'her hue-, bloody 'shirt. The' appeal waked Scotland's slumbering sword. and outlawry 'and the block made the name of Glenfruin terrible to the vic torious Clan Alpine even to the third and fourth generation. I am not going to recite horrors, nor allude to them, nor the chapter of cruelty they fill, for to retry the issues .of the ifitr. My purpose is quite different. It - is to show if I can what is actually at stake now, who and What thii con tending forces are, how much the're stilt may mean, and which war pru dence and wisdom point. , OMURA'. GRANT'S LETTER A TEXT • FOIL MANY SERMONS: Yon have liStened to a letter from one to- whom at least as much a§ to any other,Man the nation owes its preservation,prosperity and primacy. This• letter, instinct with common sense, hits the nail on the head. Its writer generally does hit nails, rebel lions and pretenders on the head. He says : ►t • This meeting should awaken the people to the important() of keeping control of the Goiernment in the hands of the Re publican party until we can have two national parties, - every member of which can cast his ballot as judgment 'dictates, without fear of molestation or ostracism, and have irhonestly counted ; parties not differing as to whether we are a nation, but as to the policy to secure the greatest good to the greatest number of its citi zens. Sincerely believing that the Demo erotic party, as now constituted and con trolled, is not a fit party to trust with the control of the General Government, I be lieve it to the best interest of all sections, South as well as North, that the Republi can party should succeed in November. Yours very truly. U. S. GRANT: Lord Chesterfield said, that a letter shows the man it is written to as well as the man it is written by. This letter bears Lord Chesterfield out. It is written to General A i;thur, and it reveals the confide* and esteem in which the writer -heldwhim. In formed by many sears of intimate acquaintance, the General knew and felt, as we knoW and feel, that he was Writing not only to a frierid, but to one of the most genuine, patriotic and honorable of men. lOW THE •DEMY)CRATIC PARTY IS CON STITUTED AND CONTROLLED. This letter furnishes a- text 'for many sermons. " The Democratic party as now constituted and control- Ind." How, is it constituted, how ckptrolled ? There are a vast number Of upright, patriotic men in it—a vast number of men who 'gave all ando - did all- they should have given and ddne to uphold their Govern ment and their flag in the supreme and dire hour of trial. A vast.num ber who .imperiled their lives, WS . other Democrats laid down their lives for their country. Many North ern Democrats who east all their weight and sympathy on the nation's side, after the war was over returned to their former party associations; .many others never did so return. Were such DemocratS to guide and influence a Democratic Congress and a Democratic Administration their party would not be •' constituted and controlled - " as it were. Becduse such men and- their views and interests will not and cannot control, in the event of Democratic success, much grave peril arist s. As the Democratic party f is consti tuted, not the men of the North, not the men who were for the Union and the Constitution, but the men of the South, who were against the Union and ,the .Constitution, men whose policy and purposes are still hurtful to , the country, are bound and pre destined to control a berno_cratic Administration . and a Democratic Congress. In the Senate and in the House the, South has an overwhelm ing majority of the Democratic mem bers, and most of them are men who led in the rebellion. Every party measure in Congress is settled in party caucus by a" party majority . ; thus the Southern members hold ab solute sway. In possession of the law- making power, of the purse, and and .ofthe power to confirm or re ject treaties and appointments, the South is also to furnish all the votes to elect the Democratic candidates, save only the 47 votes itilkh must be raffled or counted, or certified, or produced from the Northern States, particularly not • excepting Oregon. Should the election be close, there is no knowing but the two Democratic houses may find . ground on which to throw ont a part or all of any State's Electors. With much unemployed leisure• on their hands, with the danger which the Electoral Commis sion of 1878 alone overpassed, for that time, staring the country in the. face, these Democratic liduseaelave adopted no measure, to insure order and Tight in ascertaining the result of the Presidential election. Should . controversy arise, and the election be thrown into the House,. there, the vote being taken by States, the South would cast nearly all the Democratic votes, Ind in the Senate' the vote for Vice-President would come from the same source. - In every event of Democratic success, the Southern end of the Democratic Party must be to the Northern end as the loco-. motive is to the tender, as the hni-Se is to the cart. This is !as plain as :`any.truth in gravitation or arithmetic. :SWELLING OHE SOUTHERN VOTE.. - A , - Perhaps ... this point will seem te r 1 / 4 you to challOge some attention. 'For, the population of the Southern States: we Must go back to the cen sus of 1870. That count of the peo ple was made by enumerators not se lecte4 by Southern •Senators and members of the House as "non-parti 7 sans" and professional. reformer* It was made by the regular Marshals it'nd.their deputies; and the compen (satien:was so • adj:isted as to induce thoreugh visitation, and, at the same time, to guard 'against exaggeration ;of - iumbers. No imputation of fraud `was ever cait,upon the work. Such fp,. thing as a,plot to faliricate a mons- Irousincrease of the population in -one section, in order to baffle the course of nature and the logic of events in another—a pl t to change the balance of power an population f i in fiirder to aggrandize one section bil'establishinga false. basis of rep resentation and apportionment, thus robbing other sections , oftheir share NM :,:;;k .;~:;~~ .~~. _ El I -1 . '::~-` TOWANDA, BRADFORD _ 'COUNTY, PA., t, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER: ,30, 1 in gov • rning the country, in levying taxes, and appropriating moneyhad noti',' at that time occurred to` the conservative foes of radicalism., That partieulrfr spoke in the wheel of deviltrys"ha4 not turned. uhf the shifty patriot of that day.' Now such schemes seem to wax apace. We read of producing false * heirs " to tYF,ones and estates, but to multiply Edge heirs without any one to per e;onate their), on a scale so giand as seems now in proCess, would stupify the integrity of a French novelist, or anybody else, except a rthorough- going, non-partisan conservative dis ciple of the Demcieratic persuasion,- wanting nothing for himsel4 but ready to do and suffer for a white man's , governinent with "reform" and "change." r. The suggestion now is that the census-takers of 'lB7O under .'counted their neighbors. Paid by the head and by the mile, not by the day, it is now allowed they . cheated them): selves; they neither . traveled nor countd, nor charged for doing it. There were "carpet-baggers," too many of - them in the south ; their States were Republican, they had their ambitions and motives for in; creased political numbers and power; there was not the remotest danger of any direct tax; and yet, with noth ing to gain and everything to lose, they wrongefl and swindled them selves for the sake of beir.g dishonest. This all may be) It is the only way of accounting for the awkward, won ders of the census now progressing. I . - cannot be called ingenius, because it is plainly the , only possible expla nation and it limps badly. .14.:eu counnils may sit on these recent fabulous census . revela tions, i but men will still wonder how 43 per cent. was'added to the population.of a State- in_ ten• years, during which time•she received exactly 1717 foreign emigrants—a fact established:,-with out the aid of any census. Such an increase of the population anywhere would crop out s in unnumbered direc tions.. Production, cOnsurnption, buildings, tilled acreage, railway , postal ' returns, immigra tion, would tell the story of such growth. Whether these tell-tale tests, which cannot be smothered, sustain 'or demolish the pro Posed count in the Southern States will in cidentally appear further on, it your patience will endure. I was speaking of the population of the 11 States, now 12 by Me di vision of Virginia, which seceded ' from the Union, and now constitute the .chief power of the Democratic party. In 1z470 it was—white y 7,- (167.213 ; black, 4,179,222 ; total, 11,- •24n,435. The total was 29 per c;ent., or-three-tenths of the ; population of the United States. The whites were one-sixth of the whole population of the;_country—th,e blacks one-ninth ';The Democratic majority in ail these 42 States' represents about six mil lion people, or . 15 per cent. of our whole people. If to this number be added, : all the people of these States, of whatever color, then they repre sent not more than 7 per cent. of the industrial, commercial, tax-paying, property interests of the country, the other States:of the; Union representing 93 per cent. REBELS CONTROLLING THE NATION. Let us See how much national con , trol is in the; hands of 'the south, scant as it islri numbers and interest. Upward .of cio riAmbers, sit in the House of Represeiitatives'-nnd in the Electoral Colleges, by reason of counting the ;whole celored'popula tion as citizens: with ) full political rights, equal iii all things to the whites. This is a double wrong and double robbery, to just the extent" to which the freedmen are hindered or defrauded of their rote and their voice. To what extent this is true .the election returns clearly show. This representation, based on stifled. rights, is in plain vioiition of the Ccinstitution and of common honesty but there it is, and there it votes and speaks in the Nation's:councils. The 16 lately slave States (includ ing Delaware, Maryland, Kentu6,ky and Missouri, which did not secede) have :;2 Senators. Thirty-nine is a majority of the Senat4lf so that the south needs, only seven Senators from the other States to make a ma jority of all. ' She will never fail to get thernif seven northern Democrats are. there._ There are 12 there noiv. In the House of Representatives there are 293 members.' A majority is I#7. The south has 105 members, lacking only 4.1 of 'a majority of all. The Electoral) College • consists of 369; a majority is Iss The south has 138, lacking only 47 of a majori ty. -Consider the sway these num bers have. .In the Senate there are 28 committees, and committees' not only prepare, but virtually control, legislation in 'both houses, and this twust be so more and mare as the houses-and lmjsiness grow larger. Of these 28 confmittees the south has the chairmanship of 17, and the con trol of all. The southern Chairman ships are- of impOrtant committees. Dela Ware, with 110 . ,00fi'people, about as many as the city of Cleveland, Ohio, or a single rural county in New( ' York, has the Chairmanships of the Committees of Priveleges and Eleetions and of Finance—both very imp l ortant committees. The great State of New York, with five million peck*, and her enormous interests end tax-paying, has for her Nmo -eratie Senator - the Chairmanshii) of, the! committee on Patents.' West Vitinill has the chairmanship of the Co mittee on Appropriations, which holils,the purse-strings of the cottiltry. Thft;eat State of Pentisylvan4 has 1 'tare Chairmanship of the Revisi n of LaWs, a committee whose ;bus ness Was finished years ago— . Vir inia ,irsicthe Chairmanship of the C... - Vit. fee on Pensions, Georgia V' tom .\l j meree, Texas of Post Office and Poi(' Road's,i; Missouri of C aims, Sort Carolina of Railroadsl iid so ,7.1 on. __ ,- have said the South has control of all the working committees: e This is true in this way: On ever Y com mittee there is a majority of Demo crats, and of these a majority in all cases consists of the Sonthern Sena: tors, The same conditions prevail in the ,-.<. _f f _ .., ~` .. . :1. -...-:.,'.‘.,:, 4i----.,*:g;-:.,,.,-.,0:-..,.e1,1- • ' : " • " • • gi ;1- I • • - , • • - REGARDLESS or DENUNOI4TION FRO kAii • mukatim. El House. There, are 42 committees The Chtiirmen- of 22, are from the South. AU the committees are so ' constituted that the majority is Dem °cystic,- and the majority , more than half IS Southern. During the two years while this absolute power in both Houses has been so lodged, the existence of the %%Act power and the -approach of, the Presidential canvass have suggested urgent reasons for "going slow." Many expected' bills have not been introduced, many that have ;beenin troduced have not been "pressed," some that have . been ' pressed" have run against such obstinate opposi tion as to secure present- postpone ment or some motlification.- But whenever the hour strikes that the veto poweils in Democratic hands— put, there by southern votes—what ever the "solid" caucus . decrees will be written. The caucus will be controlled by those who repres3nt less than-one .seventh of the people of the Union: 1 have said, also; that they represent not more than one-fourteenth of the producing, commercial, industrial, tax-paying, and property interests of the country. Let me prove this by the official figures. of the Beareu of Staistics 1879—Customs duties. $137,250, 4 - 018. Collected at Southern ports, $,145,505.- This is 11. per Trent., or one-six teenth part( 1879—Intlernal revenue. $116,848,- 221. Paid '-by 12 Southern Stites, $20.332,464: This is 17 per tent:, or one-sixth part.;, Since the war Ohio has paid more internal revenue than all the late Confederate States united. So has Illinois. New York! alone has paid nearly twice as mulct. 4f custo3ns duties were added, 'the comparison would be more striki4 still. Our domestic co ntnerce exceeds our foreign commerce twenty fold. Railways move 90 per cent. or it . In 1870 424 ; 014 freigllt cars carried `this traffic. Of these cars "the late Confederate States i,mlsloyed 41,248. This 7 145, per cent., or one-four teenth mrt:- In 18'0 the tonnage of vessels en gaged itilint:ernationat traffic•was 2,- 678,057 tone'. The late Confederate States employed 242,540 tons. This is 9 per cent or one eleventh part. , .. In 1879 (to .June 30, 1880) our ex, ports were $845,633,595 . . The South exported $188,629,717, This is 22-1; per cent., or_two-ninths part. Of this 84 per cent. was cotton, and the New York Cotton- Exchap,ge reports that very little'of it was Ooved by South ern capital. All thrit.tame north W 23 handled by northerXcapital. That exported directly *al moved mostly by northern and foreign capital. In 1879 (to June 30,-1889) our im ports hero $667,953,302. The south imported $15,934,34. This is 23 per ceht., or one forty-third 'part. Exports and imports :together were $1,503,586,897. The share ,of the south was ,$2"4,564,108. :;Thiti is 13 3.5 per cent., or one seven hO. In 1879 (October 2) banWh;ans were $578,503,097:k Loans of south er banks, $46,360,01/7. This is .5 per cent., or one-nineteenth. In 1879 (October 2) State and Na tional bank_circulation was 8314,103,- 223. Southern banks, $2.1,478426. This is 71 per cent, or one-thirteenth. In 1878 six month, ending May 31, latest returns) deposits in savings banks were 8873,135,817. In south ern banks $2,527,423. This is four tenths of 1 per cent., or one two hundred and fiftieth part. - In 1879 cost of railroads in the Trnited - States was $.4,166,334,922. Cost of southern railroads, $354,274,- 979.• This is 131 per cent., or one seventh. The latest returns show weight of mails carried on railways was 5.51,- 370,158'.pounds. On southern roads 94;3'4,853 pounds. This is cent., or one-sixth part. In 1870 our manufactures were $4,232,321,142. Southern portion was $277,7'20,637. This is 61 per cont., or one-sixteenth part. In 1870 produCtion of mines was $ t 52,598994. Of southern mines $4,- 996,042. This is 3i per cent., or one-thirty-first part. From June 30, 1870, to June 30, ISSO, the'number of immigrants who came to the United State was 2,812,- 177. Of these 2,662 came to south:. ern • .Atlantic ports, and 47,239 to ports or the Gulf of Mexico, making fo'r the whole south, 49,901. - This is 1 77-100 per cent., or one-sixtieth. The latest report of the Commis sioer of Educational states the total income for public schools of the country at $86,978,101. The south' paid for public schools $8,336,797. This is 9 142 per cent., or one-tenth part. This item is presented here because it belongs to the industrial interest.. -.s. Looking into this mirror ofi.lthe country's business , we see impartially and exactly reflecte d the respective proportions-and features of the two seetions..',„.By analysis and .n erage we ;see that production, in ustry, commerce, capital and reven i e are found one-fourteenth in one section of the country and thirteen-fourteen ths in the other 'seetions, i , , team), OLTY, AND DEVILTRY. The vot e of Georgia were 'regis tered' 'before the election in 18e6. The white voter's numbered. 95,393, -the colored 93,458. . 'f: In 1876 the whole Republican vote einr4eit Waa . 50,446,. Only two year! later the. whole Republican vete counted was 5,257. Pretense!' have been .inadi that the - freedmen ef Georgia do not care to vote, and often vote the Deniecratic ticket. Only relil the; savage: laws of Geor gia, under the Option of vagrancy and prison'• management, and then learn of their sickening, beastly administra tion, and human hi.ture will tell you that the freedmen_of Georgia do not support the Democratic party, but would cast it out if they could. In, 1876 the Republican vote of Louisiana wan 77,1'71 i ' , i , Two years afterward the Republi n votedisap• pearad from the election returns. Yet in. 1867 In the" same State, the registry of voters - shalred 45,199 white! .sotera and 84,431:c010red ISMS EMIZI Mlne voters and In 1876 the registration showed a Republican majoritY, of 22,- 314.-- In North' Carolina, in 1876, the Republieo vote -east was 108.-: 417, , At the:, next 'Congressional eliction RepOplicap votes searcel) appeared in fife count. in Alabama, in 1872, the Itepablicans cast 90,?-72 votes. They elCeted i five of the seven Representstives'. to Congress and the Legislature by &large. Majority. In 1876 68430, _Republican totes were counted.'—ewo year later whex a Goveinbr and members of Congress were elected, not a Republican vote was counted. In South Carolina the registration ,showed that the colored voters outnumbered, the whites by 32,724.. 1n,1872 Grant received 72,- 870-49,587 majority. EVery Con gressional disttiCt elected a Republi. can. The Legislature was Republi can by, 95 majbTity. .1876 the Re publican vote east wa5:91,870. Only two years afterward; When a Govern or and Ottngressmen were elected, all the RepUblican votes counted in the State were 213. This was a very carnival of fraud, cruelty and deviltry. Voting p'aces in - Republican regions had been es tablished 25 miles apart, and the Re publicans of South Carolina do not ride by night ,nor by day—they go on foot. They - are - poor and ignor ant; but they .know"what emancipa tion meant, 'and . they. know what the ballot-box means, they know which side they.prayed for : and fought for in the war,4 they know which side they would vote for in peace. Vorceand tissue ballots took care of the election of 1878 in South Car olina.: It was testified before a-Com mittee of the- Senate that one man put about 700 • votes into the ballot box. • This makes politics one of the sciences,". much more certain_ thin the dice or lots with which otll ees and nominations were raffled off here the other day. In Mississippi more than half the population is col ored. Every year until 1874 the Re publicans had a majority hi all elec tions. In 1876 the'Republican vote returned was 52,605. The nest year it was but 1,168,. and the year after 2,085. In all these States klie ..Re publican vote, and even Republican committees d newspapers, have been utterly suppressed. Alabama has just held an. election. The Greenback candidate for Presi dent went there and realized the em barrassment or the 'bull who butted against a .locomoti4: The whole proceeding was a shameful wrong,. and Mr. Weaver says. that the en forcement of the national •election laws is the only thing which will make a fair election possible. -Ar kansas has just voted Arkansas, where, until recently, Republicans al ways elected Members', ,of Congress and Legislature ; - where; at the last Presidential election, 38.669, Repub lican votes were cast, and wherenow in no part of the. State ,does the Re, publican vcite, , ,appear Repudiation and Democracy prevail. mightily. . I repeat here as I have said, in the Senate; when the Government was taken by r the throat and thicat9ned with strangulation unless the elee tion were stricken down; that the Democratic party would haVeto day no majority in - either - house of Congress, except for elections domin ated and decided by violence and fraud. ILL-GOTTEN TIMED BADLY USED. What use is made of all his ill gotten poWer? One of its cllietuses has been the I F ,repudiation of honest debts. Every ; Southern State. hut Texas has lately. repudiated,: its obli gations. This aggregate repudiation of State and municipal- debts amounts to about $300,000,000.• In 1872 the debts of Southern States were $242,500„000. Now these States recognize and; pay interest on only $53,978,945. A. large part even of thials unpaid and funded interest. On' , $20,000,000 interest has been sealed down to two per cent. Wheth er the residue of debts are also to be foresworn is now en open issue. • Is there excuse or palliation• for this ? We are told so. What is it ? It is that " carpet-bag Governments" contracted these obligations. One difficulty with this excuse, and not the only one, is that, it is not true. The anti-war debt, contracted before the "carpet-bagger " ever visited the South, eithe' with knapsack or "with , out it, was $90,000,000. No part of this debt has been paid ; a large Part has been repudiated. The "carpet bag Governments" paid the, interest on it regularly. • The increase of debt since the war was largely for public improVements.. But the most,damaging fact for this excuse is that all the alleged illegal issue of bonds charged upon the car pet-bag GovernMents put together deck not equal the sum .repudiated by Georgia alone. What are we - to think cif men and communities who go into wholesale repudiation as gayly as the trouba dour touched his guitar? When Mr. Weaier 'brought .forward in the House of Representatives a bill to issue "fiat money,'.' and make it a legal tender for all debts - public and private, man after man from the - ,South ' : openly declared that, :if the word "private" were stricken out he would Vote - for the bill. - • They. had no objection to. , paying off public debts with chaff, but pri vate debts thei thought should be p~did. in mondy.' , State debts are sacred above na ttonal obligationi in Southern ethics `,—a "sovereign §tate " is of higher essence than thh Naticik, find this was the standing defensti in rebellion for " going with tlictr-States," 144;dre over, State arid Muidicimil.OMig.atiOns 'are for home purposes. flf-OrTdir own State; faith and credit is fiat , inviolate wittf-Sdlithern leaders,',What4ln their hands *bald . be -ihe fakf of obliga tions Which are the mean's, Pie cause, the memorials of their defeat I _ .But we are told, General , Hancock would watch tliem ! An angel might watch a tiger fa child: might attempt to divide a beefsteak 'with a blood hound; might lie down' with a lion, but the lamb, w Auld lie i n side. The peril of. Democratic ascendancy In all Ake branehes of ilk Govezn tnent .Is deeper rooted 'than any measure within the scope of existing rzu :,l.v ._ rC'~y3' ~.:. - '-.' • ''• - ' •: - - ': - -11. - . k L..\.:1.:\:51 J_ : , 1 11 . \\ .; •...,,:: ..10,, ~. I . L ir ‘., -. . IP A. i''',i!.;'',lj. public questions. Statesmen abroad talk of "the balance of power, " 1 - and of "changing the map of 'Europe." These saying's mean not muelf more than might easily occur here.-.-. The resolution admitting texas to the Union in 1845 provide(' for erecting out of Texas four addLional Staics. The area and popplation are 'both sufficient. The area is 274,000 square miles, the population a 4 l mil lion and a half. Such . a proceeding .would' add eight to the number`of f Southern Senators, and add to the Southern poweOn the Electoral Col lege. From New. Mexico and other Territories, whose traditions and pre judices have descended from, Slave holding influences, several new St..tes may also be made. Schemes exist, not in embryo, but far advanced, to obtain a-" slice of 31exito." Cattle stealing on the Rio Grande border has been and is - a fruitful occasion for incursions into Mexico. Special cavalry iegiinents of unusual size have been raised ind stationed on the •Texan frontier. It is , an open' secret that not long ago' much exer tion and alertness - were needed .to keep - us out of another Mexican war. Without violating the Vonstitu tion or transcending the us'ages of the Republic," at .least seven- new States could impbrought in, and in the case of some of them a ter.V plau sible case could be made. The pro ject would — become a high 'party measure- Its success would assure complete Democratic ascendency •in the nation for a generation at least. It would put the Government not merely in the hands of the Demo cratic, l l!tirty, but of the Southern Demoeratic Party. Why-should not this be done? Who and vvh - at,,is to prevent it if the Dem ocrathii:Party is elected ? The North ern wing , could never resist the -Southern wing in Congress were -these iiew States brought for ward for admission: The North ern wing never could, never will, anti never can withstand the pressure of, the , far strong er Southern wing. Gravitation a nd arithmetic - . make such resistance itiipossible, just as pound cannot outweigh a ton, just .1s one man cannot outnumber a regt, merit, The past-is pitiful in its ward. : ings Despite - pledges and .Ncrrthern indignation, Northern iterriocrats united in voting down . the -Wilmot proviso in order to make California a slave State; united in .voting for the Fugitive Slave' law ; un4ed in the mighty perfidy -which overthrew the - Missouri compromise in order to fasten slavery on Kansas and other - States, and united inr,de feating the Homestead at the behest of the Southern majority. Mr. Van Buren at last, like Mac beth, would "go no further ,in this bloody business," and politiCal de.' strnetion was his reward. Mr. Doug lass at last made a braVe stand against sectional aggreSsion, and Le was hunted to his grave. Caucus is king, aid the avenging angel is hard ly more-inexorable in decree or more tuierringLin retribution. AYTACKING THE JUDICIARY. , One of the main bulwarks of the Republic IS the. Judiciary. The courts of justice are unwire, conservator, citadel. The Supreme Court is the final arbiter of many momentous con. troverSies. This great tribunal is very obnoxious to Southern leaders in Congress and out. Itr is in their way. It , does not always decide as they think. The halls of 'Congress rang last year with Assertions, utter ed With passionate vehemence, that the 'laws for protecting elections are unconstitutional. - Soon afterward a .ease on the docket c4 . ' the Supreme , Court, involving the validity of these laws, was. reached. and the court de cided them valid. A Register in Bankruptcy not long ago overruled the Chief-J ustice on the construction of a statute, and so it oftens happens that the court is not able orrecall, dite enough to get at: the ." true in wardness" and profound depths of the law as understood on the bus tinge, where the niponshiner thrives and te fire-cater reigns. Mutterings deep- and loud, breathings of dire longings to " go for" the court. bare for l years been gathering in volume In the House of Representatives fig two or three years this feeling has now and again found harsh voice in useemly sinister words. Not only Kentucky, through the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Mr. Knott, but Missouri, North Carolina, and other States, assistol, I regret•Nto say, 'by a representdtive from this City, have uttered language, gross and calumnious of the courtospers ing - its integrity and its decisions. "Mere drivel," "plausible sophistry," "packed partisan, and demoralized," " packed. tribunal " decisions to be observed " pro tempore , " only, "dirty work of its masters;" "made a political decigion to order," "fiery indignation . of. inflamed :people."— these are some O l f the buffetings to be foundin the ,Ctmgressional Record, delivered sometimes from carefully written speeches; and sometimes re ceived, the Record says, with " loud applause." '• To What does - all this pave the ivay . ? The- Congrii,ssionol Record gill inform - 7 you. On the 2,lith of 'January; 180, Mr. Manning, of,Mis sissippi—a State well - .known to be jealously sensitive to the pure ad ministration of, justice and the rigor ous Punishment of crime--especially hideous, cowardly - m,urder and , taas- . . mere—introduced :a - bilrfo place 12 new• additional .fudges - on • the .Supreme Bench What an easy, effectual, and withal plausible, dis position- this. would make of the court:. Increased business would be such an innocent excuse--the court could sit. by. sti.rens. for some pur , poses and meet in Banque . -fey all large ptirposes when State sovereign ty, and State rights - amendments to the 4 Constitution and .cotton taxes and,-the like are at the stake • The bill:passed to a Second reading, and was referred to a committee, whose' Chairman a few days afterward came into-the Muse and- denounced the ; .court, find .said a majority of the,, present J.Rdges,were "hOpelessly lost in a For the pres Ont it Would, be prernature and bungling .to pass a veto might spoil MIZE `~ . . _ ,1~; /51.00 - 00 . Annum In Advance. . :4• - and might 'Spoil tbe:result,in Some close ,Northern State. let the Democrats elect: their • President, or rather their party—Mr the party is running—and-who will say - this bill will not aid ; its *ay to the statute book.. Yiti daff all say whatesort of Jndges the'lf> niw ones would. he. But rid *new, !awls_ needed ;':natUre's law, and- the statutory' limit of_ ege . at which Judge 4 may !TUT, will, during the' next four years , vacate at least fora:facets on the Supreme Amick. . These four ap pointments will decide the political „com plexion of the court. With what Judges would the Dt mocracy fill, them 2 The Circuit and District Courts are ob 'noxious also. They aro still more. eas34: to deal with. Like the Judges of...tbe Sd.i' preme Court; 'these Judges hold- their places during good'behavior, but legible _tion, as has often been seen in States and in the 'Nation, hasways - to plow around this stomp. Abolishing a circuit or dis trict, or adding to it another, takes his seat out from.inider a-Judge and gets rid .of him filially ; lie is legislated . out."' • Thus th'e whole jaicial establishment of the Republic- is at the disposal of the slaw4naking potror. • . With courts revolutionized to conform to reactionary nations and deeming, preiti-• dices, and interests e what may be the fate of-questions affecting "cointrirce arming the several States,'!. revenue, ,bank and legal-tender curreucY,: -the taxation of Government bonds, -the/Currency i 1 whiel these bonds are payable, civil-rights acts, election laws, claims growing tint of the. war, claims for refunding the war tax on cotton, the late aineudrnents, and many other grave niatters„no man can-predict. BOURN* . lI,kTIIED OF TIM AT The army, ttoc?, is envied—its " offense s is rank." Less - than four lines of the Re vised Statutes are all that denies commis sions in the Army fo men who, educated at the country's cost, and presented with their country's'swoid, drew that sword against their country's life. A bill' to re peal these four lines is tmw pending in the Senate, already .passed to a third reading op the sidid Democratic vote. On the Vitb of February last, Mr. kell, of Maryland, was relieved from the Operation of this est lusion, and a Senator from Arkansas - movid as an amendment its total repeal. The yeas and nays were demanded, and 36 SenatorS, every Demo crat who was present, voted yea.. Ohio, New Jersey; • Pennslb : lniaf: and New Xork contributed . their ' fiirrioeratic rotes to ,the Southern proposition of " reform." Stihsequently the mover and all conclud ed to 'reconsider and drop it t ie amendment —a sagacious conclusion iu a "Pt esiden tial vear." ' • Mr. Tucker, of Virginia, moved in the Hotise the repeal of this safeguard to the At my as a rider to an apkoprlation bill, but it rvoi huddled out of sight on a point of order-r--1 judicious point iu a ?llresi dentilkil year." • 'The Democ; - atic ma.p_irity put in the Army bill a provision that offi cers now in the Army - might receive ad vanced rank and pay if they would retire —a benevolent, thoughtful, provision cer tain-IY. tHtit-if a - body • of Army officers could thus he coaxed out of the service, there would be sti many vacancies to be filled, and tilled by the President, by and with the advice and eontrol of a DeMor erratic Senate.: r ,When this free-will offer ing was presented a cry arose about "gift bearing Greek..," and other ungracious symptoms were manifested on the Repub: liean side, and so brevet Muk and brevet pay stand over. at least till the session of Santa CI Us. 31eanw hire the Army has been reduced to a skel .ton, and 'Whenever a -scare, a pretense, a speck of war on -the 3lexicaii border o elsewhere can be . discovered or invented,i the Army. must be iucreased and f 111 0: up. Filled up by whom? That depbtuls in the approaching election. If Gaitield ud Arthur are choset, by Union men—m4always for the Union to the cote. If lianeock and English and the Demecrati9 patty get in, by men - . who " went to, their States." Confederate 'soldiers wetild - flock 'to. the standard of military ; as well as of civil service reform, and flock in a fervor of magnanimity and devotion,' ready to let by-gones be, 133, - giums,.and to forgive the "usurpations of Lb:coin" and the "unconstitutional coercion of sovereign . States." j WhY• shouldn't they? Who would be warranted to assert that a confdderate Soldier was false or immod est in professing patriotic intentions while seeking - lank in the army of the'Repnb lie ?No man ought to a(ssert it, and yet all fair men would agree that, other things being equal, preferments in the A: my should be given lothose who fought in that Army : wither than to those who assailed it in the dread extremity of the . . Nation's life. 1 The present tariff and revenue laws are .decmed very bad by• the dominant ele ment of:the Democracy. They want lo change them. They will change.. them radically Whenevert r the way is : clear.; There is a whisky 'rebellion now id sever al Stattr.s, and the officers of the law aro Powerless to suppress it. In Alabama the law is resisted, and the prokess of the courfs destroyed and defied. Recently a warrant was issued for the arrest of one Prenton, charged with such an offense. A Deputy. Marshal went with a posse to excuto the warrant. In hiti repart to the Marsharhe says Pronton assembled froth 15 to 50 armed men, and set them and the law at defiance. When cautioned to dissis : Prenton replied, "When Hancock is pie 'ted this damned foolishness will IttoP.' ~. . Thl, thing to stop, thus piously predict ed,* i,thosollectiOu of the tax on i 'frisky —th t middle beverage So sacredto the ;Deli ocratic heart, sio grateful to the Dent , ocratic stomach,* so nourishing ; to I petnocratieprinciPies. The lawls defied in t rkansai, and tyre Officers apply to'llic Go ' erner for the use •of the arms c;i' the United' States loaned to Arkansas, and the,tlovereiv replies that he dare not per mit ilie arms to be used, because if, he . sbfitird; and i s moonshiner should he kill eikaie ;would-have to leave the State. Itiliashiligten raised au army wifen ho i ,was President, and marched at its head a.,:put down such lawlessness ; and he AA • toe army in Pennsylvania three months after it was, put' down; .to see it /did not get up again: NoW, thera'are ;22 • Others of the United States in Alabama,_ 't ;4 WM ME IN NUMBER 181 end 37 hi . . Arkansm, and a fibarred inure sheitihl to'efther: the country would not: be big enough to hold tbe noise. ,Ilanceek'n Order; wouldleip Mom the Denicmatieseabbard, and we Would bear bow "the - military maid be always subOrtlinate'to the civil Tower,". and bow "the- courts are open. y "Thean-obnoziona -lawsi Ste marked for tfotortii"- and "change" wbeeelei the Democratic hand ein , reach thelb. prrirmikTnE•coNstiruninl.r. . The. recent 'ainendmentil .- to- th'e Constitution and the' laws made in pursuance of theM are 'objects of an. abated .Democratlis' wrath--a wrath going to such excess as to compel the belief that free fraud in election is deented the only adequate, means iti to party success . -'fhe amendments of freedom, lispecially the thirteenth and fourteenth, were, established in_ tire Constitittion against _the most - Assperate opposition the Demiaemey-' could-make. As thei gainesi per in States which,lhad already7.'ratille'd them, in-impotent passion the fare . was enacted of formally reieindiiig and withdrawing the; irrevoettple as isent whibh had: been finally given. This was dune in Indiana and „New Jersey, and Mr. Tweed did it in I New York. FrOm-first to :last, the organs of the Detnocrats have dechired r tlic* amendmenti illegally carried—ille gal. because Democratic States that were orit fighting were not in to vot‘i... They never yet have said or admit ted that the amendinents: were legal., ly adopted. They did gay, in. Na. Convention, in 1822, that they oppOSed reopening question set tled by ' s . the amendments, and-. they • did say, in 18; 6, - that they' would.ae eept theft; ;- but that they were legally valid they have never said... The :amendments are constantly and flagrantly 'defied in more than ffalf the 'Democratic States, and have been for years. The laws enacted under - them have - - been denotineed .in - every forth, - and denounced as. null and void, even since-the' Su preme court; has salemnly - .flecided otherwise.. " It Was to get rid of these laws that the revolutionary plot was laid last year to stop ;the- wheels of uOvernnient, to close . thiPcotirts - and post offices, and put out'jhe beacon lights on the sea and: on the .lakes idess- a repeal .was yielded. 'With a thoroughbred.. Democratic --Presi dent. whatever May; happen 'in - form: .to the amendments,-they will become wore a dead letter than a quickening spirit, and the laws made to enforce . them - will, he swept lilie t leaves before : - a gale. Should -tlieK be swept away, and should the spirit which as sails them in-the South, and which called them into being, -coritintfe to rage; m ildew will ?olio* in the wake: When Lincoln issued hi§"-prOcla mation of emancipation, men and women its this - city :were 'maddened - by.being made to believe that the slaves . set free would swarm ~to the . North, crowd out White !abort. and.. cut down its wages. The - draft riots were largely incited by this: Wicked, insane pretense: Throughout the North this was the: appeal .to the la boring man, and Many. members: Congress who had supported. Lincoln were defeated at the- ensuing, elec-. tion. - Vainly we pleaded for, reasen. - We,said no, men do. not tIY from lib erty: they fly from slavery and wrong. Events have vindicated the logic of freedom. • . Once more I repeat' the. argument• and the WArnina.- • The black man wants to remain e by.the graves his fathers ' but let perSecutions• go on, and!, the story of Pharaoh and of will be repeated. . An exodus ; not of a few despairing spnls, but a real. exodus,r'will is gin, 4fcpriiing7 Sotithern fields of the hipais that ; should and Woulil till them, end bl'inging to thetNortli and the West a population• not inured to Northern climes, - and not:adapt eil..tO psefulnes4nd advantage here; which, fairly .treated, would come from them, in the South. The. national - banking - systein is :inothUr, eyesore t 6 , the. opposition. Nitional ConVentions -have de nied All i tipoWer of Congress to author ize banks. By votes an'l specebes. in Congress, by declarations of con- Ventions and leaders, by, studied-, arnendments - offered to• the billy un der which - the national debt has been refintded, the national banking sys tem etas been struck wherever a blow could be. put in.. This fahr . .c of banking is now i&wrought not only with the business of the country. but with the maintenance . of specie- pay-' ments- T -it Stands a lion in the Path - 4 of .fiat money, intlation, , Land all' the train orlinaneial hetegies• which Os , sess the 'Democratic mind, especially in the South. In unnumbered ways, direct and indirect, this vast interest is constantly exposed to the action . of Congress. ~ The Cineinnati' Convention, seems to have felt. the need of a little cau tion on this point when it nominated Cdr. \ Ponolish for Viet?. President. • 1.1,1 is - President Of a National Bank They ! nominated a Union - . General as a blind toillie soldiers and a bank of ficer as a blind to'-the hankers: -Evi dently it, is thought the • Northern Demoeraticiteam - drives better w.ith . blinders. But even blinders do not always answer. In .1864, after sol-- .etnnly asserting,Juit when the rebel lion was gasping its last,' that the war for the Union was a failure, the Democratic Convention, -at, ,instign ition coming then from the- sheltering 'refuge Of the Canadian shore,. the sante instigation. which 'prompted a like expedient trio*, putlip a 'Union General. That General did not issue order No. 40 in the midst of laWless. ess and butchery, which civil .att;; thority could not arrest.. No, he is suedi orders arresting the Legislature of Maryland, a State which had not. seceded, and he issued orders pro claiming martial law arta suspending the !MVOs corpus. at election time, and placed soldiers as Super Visors of the poll& But even, with- such a Union General. the disguise' was tco thin. . SE,,EKINd TO I'LUNDEEt' irtn•TßEiSUltl* • • ar claims upon the lreasufy have been and Will be a subject fruit ful of much agitation. I fun moved toizrefer to it by the wholly ground less. assertion in regard to it uOw ing the rounds or party, journals. The fashion of this asseAion seems, to have been set by Mr.."-Randall, Speaker of the !louse of Represents.' fives. - Mr. `Raridall is one of the ablest and moat intelligent, as he is one of the itcost kourageoni, men of his party, and I speak of him with much respect. 3n several speeches he has taken up the matter of •South ern.o, .always to : say that they Arvt lry, -, thp fourteenth ainend , Merit t Constitution. It puzzles me S 0 -. 11olv so discerning a- man , can liavf: fallen into such' an error. The proceellings over which he pre-. sides constantly , refute the amnion. In therourteentit amendment stand t 1 corrrtriott rtniartt rAcizq \ ,