• - • 3 • • •t , , . . • , . • - Ht • • .44 * • • .• • 1 7 " ,;.; - , ,• t;-4, _ 4.1 11 - c• _ 7 • C , • . ?.;fif • . • -•••••• 4 - •• . • ;',l•i •-• ~•.;• 7; -1 4 • . „.. • .; s.. A. J. GERRITSON, Proprietor.} SOIL TILE MONTROE DEMOCRAT .A. ME XSI 7L" C, 13. -3r 0( the Great struggie between Liberty and Despotism for the last. Hundred Years. TIIE PRESIDENT BOUND BY HIS OATH TO OBEY THE CONBTITUTION, INSTE.'AD OF cois:GrtEss, The New York Tribune says " Presi dent Johnson means war. War be it then and God speed the right! The evident fact is that the President wants five Com manders in the South who will construe the law as he construes it—as a nullity. It is nearly a hundred days until Congress meets. Till - then we can only how to this dreadful tyranny. Let our friends organ ize everywhere, and having defeated him at the ballot-box, we can prepare, through our represeutatiyes, to consider the best course to be taken to punish him for his crimes against the sovereign will of the American people.'' If this Republican party, who are threat ening to impeach, or otherwise punish President Johnson for not obeying their will, are as learned and intelligent as t hey profess to be, they are knowingly com pelling the President of the United States to commit perjury to escape their ven geance. They know that on the day of his inauguration he took an oath that reads as follows: "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my preserve, protect, and defend the Constl tntion of the United States." President Johnson did not swear to obey the will of the party whowere in power on that day, nor of the American people who were liv ing at the time he took the oath, but he solemnly swore that to the best of his ability he would pre4rve the Constitution from "destruction at their hands, if he per ceived an intention on their part to de stroy it. A President cannot swear to protect the Constitution from overthrow by the people who are living when ha is dead, but he swears that he will defend it. from all the assaults of its enemies who assail it while he is placed over it, for the very purpose of its' paservation, protec tion and defence. The Tribune and the Republican party are enraged at the President for constrtr lug the Reconstruction law as a nullity, yet Alexander party, wrote a "standard 6irnmentlry oil the ends and aims of the Federal Consti tution and its true interpretation," in which he says, "There is no position which depends on, clearer principles, than that every .act ,of a delegated authority, contraiy to the tenor of the commission under which it is exercised, is void. No legislative act, therefore, contrary to the• , Constitution, can be valid. To deny this, would be to affirm that the deputy is greater than his principal; that the ser vant, is above his master, that men, acting by virtue of powers, may do, not only it hat those powers do not authorize, but "\what they forbid." Now can any sane person believe that the Patriots of the Revolution of 1776, who fought against a military despotism, framed a Constitution , which delegated authority. to the Republican party to treat their posterity as Great , Britain treated them. If they never delegated authority to Congress to reduce a portion of the American people to a state of slavery, then every act of the Reconstruction bill is void. None of these acts are valid, and • 'obody is bound .to obey them. To de thiS, Jays Hamilton, would be to hflirm thafSumner, Stevens, Wilson, and, the host of Radicals in Congress, are greater than,the Patriots who framed the Government; that these men, who are but servants, are above their masters who framed the Constitution which they are to administer, and have sworn to obey; that Congres . s„,acting by virtue of powers, I may do, not-only what their powers do _ not adthorize; :but what they forbid. l Hamilton says further,"The interpreta tion of. the LarccrEi lie. th - province of the courts. A" COftptitution is, in fact, funda mental law, It must therefore belong to them to ascertain its meaning. The Con stitution ought •to be preferred to the statute; tbalraterition of the people de clared in the Oonititution, to-the intention of their agents. Where the will ,of the Legislature, declared in the statute's, stands in opposition to that of the people declared in, the Constitution, the judges ought: to be governed by the latter: in stead.of thaferMer. They ought to regn . late their aecisions by the fundamental rather than by. those not funda mental." NoWberelean-eiress injunction from thErpt*evpari , whose legal talents and abilitielaare , held in the4lighesttstimniion by•theTederak party, that the intention of the people in• the days of the Revela tion of 37 : 7$,:ntid when, the Constitution was framed.; ; should. be preferred. to ,;the irgetitiopAilib:COngrois of 1867. This is why Congress set itself above the :su preme court-Allo.defigdAs:authority, and bir...ll3mill24t,haa;adepted Iris expo§ipiona of the Constitution td•la• crisis. pt'ecOely like the present one. He says: P,14-tien, the e coarte of justice.- apitr ; :to die torisitkrred asVie'bOw . arks Of uAlralikii "constrati*'ilainAt . l44l4Ws:ol*(4* meats, iltiS afford a strong argurdea for the permanent tenure of judicial offices, since nothing will contribute. so much as this, to that independent spirit in the judges, which must be essential to the faithful performance of so *arduous a duty. This independence of the judges is equally requisite to guard the Constitu tion and the- rights of individuals from the efiliets of those ill humors which the arts of designing men, or the influence of particular conjunctions, sometimes dis• seminate 'among the people themselves, occasioning dangerous innovations in the government, and serious oppressions of the minor part in the community. Though I trust ; the. friends of the proposed Con stitution will never question that funda mental pridciple of republican govern ment which admits the right of the people to alter or abolish the established Consti tution, whenever they find it inconsistent with their happiness; yet it is not to be inferred from this principle, that the rep resentatives of the people, whenever a momentary inclination happens to lay hold of a majority of their constituents, incom patible with the provisions in the existing Constitution, would, on that account, be justifiable in a violation of those provi sions, or that"tim courts be under a greater ' obligation to connive at infractions in this shape. Until the people have, by solemn act, annulled or changed the established form, it is binding on themselvt , s, collect- , ively and individually, and no presump tion, or know!edge of their sentiment, can warrant their representatives in a depar tore from it, prior to such an act." Now, however large the majorities were, o'r are to be in favor of sustaining Con gress in their violations of the Constitu- it. is no justification for their acts—' and affords them no warrant for the com mission of Perjury. The Constitution is binding on all the people, and however anxious the Republicans may be to punish the people-of the South, and to compel them to live under negro governments, ' Congress has no authority whatever to gratify their malignant desires. Their own chosen leader tells them that they must, obey,Washington instead of Con gress, and Washington, in his Farewell Address, says: "The Constitution, until changed by an explicit and authentic act of the whole people, is sacredly obligatory POn all." The Constitution which Washington sifmed, is y et the supreme and fundamen tal la w r rann Iry • uhn 1".3 t framed it are yet the rightful rulers oi America. Their will is to be obeyed, in stead of the will of the Radicals, and the Radicals should be compelled, by force of arms, if need be, to obey the Constitution of the United States. They are enemies of Washington, and followers of 'Cram , well and Robespierre. Washington fought against both these tyrants, as wed as against George the Third, as this ,history will show. Let the people stand by the President, who is fighting for Washing ton. his name is the synonym of Lib erty, of Union and Peace. Americans owe allegiance alone to WaShington, who is vet the "Father of his Country." !!!!!====ll A Fact for Tax-payers. The Legislature of 1847, under the ad ministration of Governor Shunk, Demo crat, Cost $57,819 19. The Legislature of 1867, under the ad- M iniStration of Governor Geary, Radical, cost $265,061 16. From these figures it will be seen that the Radical Legislature tinder a Radical Governor has cost more than four and one-half times a greater sum than a Dem ocratic Le , rislatnre under a Democratic Governor. Is it possible that the people of Penn sylvania will longer tolerate sech bare faced robbery of the Treasury? If the so-called Union League were avowedly a band of thieves and the' Radical party composed of robbers,4 worse state of affairs could not be expected. —The above is obtained from the official record, at Harrisburg, by the Pairiot and Lriticn, and e.shibits a single example of the extravagance and wholesale robbery that prevails' in every department of the goveratneut, State and. National, where Radicalism bears sway. Let the taxpay ers of Pennsylvania contrast the expenses of governor Geary's administration_with thoSe of . the late Governors Porter and Shunk, or of Governors Bigler and Pack er, and they Can. readily . perceive the greAt difference which exists between . 11adipal:and , Democratic rule. Facts are stubhorty things, and figures cannot lie. Too Risky for the Quakers. A correspondent of the Press, writing from New Jersey, says: . "Some Of the Quaker districts, strange -ly enougli, seem to hang fire on 'the word le manhood 'suffrage platform adopted" at the late convention being a little too strong' for them," If the'''QUake'r districts" stagger at the insane efforts . 4:l.f . ':the - Radreals New --ler negrosuffrage, how Wilt it r he in the other. .portiOus ,of the State, `ft & 'the - negro ' has not been, tFm..:o4iStingly . 'eultivated ? This - fiec t ;i9 • safiya„ . ,eire . ..plaak, in the New' Jersey Radie_al - :.pl4foturan't:Stand - tlie,presitire. It pOt' ive ** -It ill hiriictien Vtall on quOliOr 02 lio r trkt.st., for support; • • • - MONTROSE, PA., TUESDAY, SEPT. 24,1.867. RADICAL THUNDER. The Radical State Committee are sir dilating through the State, and endeavor ing to place in the hands of Democrats, a lying document, appealing to the pecun iary interest of the voter. We give it en tire, and &so annex some comments upon it.. Read it and notice its falsehoods: Facts for Government Bondholders, And the holders of Greenbacks. READ, REFLECT-AND HAND TO YOLTIt N14.:1C411130R In 1801, eleven States seceded; and since then only twenty-three have been represented In Congress, until the admission of 'Tennessee in InBo, All the United States Itunds--5-grs. 7410's and 10-10's —all the greenbacks, and all Ifir National Banks. were created by this Congress of twenty-three Stales. Preside ; at Johnson calls this an assumed Coaryrrgs" —thetefore not legal. Ills supporters and the bemo rrata roll it a rump rofeynas. and a "uertipingy con gre,x,- and hence. not a lustful Cohgras ; and the gieat effort has been to elect Congressmen In the North, and MI/nit enough from the rebel States to enforce this " policy." If a Congress, representing but twenty-three States, lie not a lawful Con,gress then every United Statesßond. Bond. and all our greenbacks, and Nation:a Bank notes are worth nothing: because an unlawful Congress could not make lawful Bonds or lawful money. The mad effort, im recently made by the rebels and thair sympathizers, to destroy this Goverumont by force of arms failed. Thus far the attempt to do the same thing, through Congress, has also failed, because (lithe action of the loyal voters at the ballot-box ; and the last effort at destruction is now being made thro' the Courts. Witness the recent attempt by Democratic lawyers to induce the Supreme Court or the United States to Issue an injunction, nullifylng the Reconstruction Laws of r,,Dgress Georgia. and the other rebel States. Read also the opinion of Judge Sharswood.the Democratic nomillee Per.ledge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. In which he gravely denies the constitu tional power of COligr , ,M to make paper money n legal tender. (Boric. vs. Trott, Legal Ditelligencer of March 18th. 1"11, page 820 Judges Woodward and Thomp son of the same Court. announced from the bench the same alarming doctrine. in ISSS (See Mervine vs. Sai lor, et al , Legal Intelligenter of Juno Viand 30, pages 188 anti g 05.) And this too, in the face of the fact . that the Superi or Courts of every loyal State in which the question ha= been nused, have su , tatned the power of ('on gre-s. It requires. therefore, but lit tie knowledge of either arithmetic or law. to e-titnate the imminent danger of putting any more men of Judge Sharswood's opinions on the Snpr•me Brunh of the State ! if )on believe the pre.ent Congress to he •initrtcfu/, or desire our National Cnrrency and Government Bonds to be declared tsrdarGfril, vote for Geo. Shama-nod. If von believe the present Cougreaa to he lawful, or dm•ire their action on Currency and Bonds to stand good. vote to sustain them,--tor the party that errakt/ the Greenbacks and the Bonds—the party that sutitain ed the war, and compelled snbmission ro the NatlonaL anthority.—and that stands pledged to keep faith with the Bondholders. and to maintain the National credit—. vote fee Henry W. Williams, the worthy and honored nominee of tills party. LOOK AT TILE OTIIER SIDE When secession came, Democrats sus tained the Government, shed their blood, invested their money in 5-20's, i 30',g and ~" • ,ts ;A.,, f.... a ..4.01 a Congress of twenty-three States enacted. That was their Government and they loved it, they defende# it, and many of them died for it. During the war, eleven States were not represented in Congress, and they refused to be. That was a lawful Cone-reSs; all obeyed it, and all its laws are biu%ing un der the Constitution. When the war was over the South sub mitted, then the Radicals kept them out ,to give the negro power. They " acted outside of the Constitution" as Thaddeus ( Stevens says. If it be true that the Democrats are trying to destroy this Government, how strange it is that they should hold its bonds and notes, and tight and die for it. Their object is to preserve it, to bring it within the Constitution, to govern it ac cording to law, to economise its resources and to pay its debts. Are your bonds and greenbacks safer inside of the Constitution or outside of it? If we have no Constitution, as Stevens says, what security have you for your debt? The Constitution is the,title deed to the property that your debt is a lien upon. In the case of Boric against Trott, Judge Sharswood decided that a man who agreed to pay a debt in gold should pay it in i gold. Was not that right? He did not decide the question of the power of Con- gress. You bold a 5-20 or,a 10-40 bond, the in terest is payable in gold, The govern ment agreed to pay you in gold. -The Radicals and their Judges say the Gov ernment may pay 'you in paper. Judge Sharswood holds that a contract to pay in gold should be enforced ; which best suits you? Which is•the more honest? Do you see Where this Radical doctrine leads you ? They already say that the principal of the bonds may be paid in pa per. if Judge Williams decides that your interest is payable in paper, is your con ' tract with the Government carried out ? Will ho not so decide?* They will pay in paper if their extrava gance makes it necessary. The interest on our State bonds was payable in gold, the law made it so, (See Act of 1840.) In . 1864; when gold was 166, the Radicals in the Legislature passed a law making it Ipayable in paper, on the ground that they could save money, (See Legislative Rec. 1864.) Are you any more secure than the bondholders of the State ? • The expenseti of the Government are ; more than its income. The Radicals ate ;• expending .$215,000,000 of 'your' money ! for this year. The Democrats expended i $62,000,000 the last year they were in power., for the, smile purposes. Can you sustain thili . eitraVagance Does not the !•seearity of jOuy 'debt consist in prudent, maiiagerrient; economy in public businesS, add . 'Mari - Sting and developing eur'rc- I soUrce.s ? Are the Radicals pursuing this &Mtge . ?' If you wish your bond and its interests paid in paper, and your contract with the Government violated, vote fur Henry W. W If you want contracts between man and min, and between the Government and yourself carried out, vote for George Sharswood. Negroes in the Jury Box and in the Public Schools. It is a positively demonstrated fact that the Radical party intends to force negro suffrage and equality upon the States by Congressional action. Mr. Wilson's bill is ready for consideration in the Senate when that body meets in December next. That bill raises negroes in all the North ern States to the full level of citizenship, anything in the Constitution of the seve val the contrary notwithstand ing. The word "white" in the Constitu tion of this State will be uo bar to the progress of Radical usurpation. The fact that the people of this Commonwealth are opposed to the disgusting and revolu tionary scheme will not be considered by the party in power. The leaders of the dominant organization declare that a ne gro enfranchisement bill will secure them three thousand votes in Connecticut, and fifteen thousand in this State; that it, is needed in New York and Indiana, indeed in all the States, as a means of keeping the Radical party in power, and that, con sideration will be sufficient to poll every vote 'of the Radicals in its favor in , both houses of the National Legislature. In a Lite number of the Cincinnati Commercial it is announced that Senator Sumner has positive assurance of votes enough to pass his universal suffrage hill, which is kindred to that of Senator Wilson, and in this manner negro suffrage will be fastened upon the people of this State, and that, too, in open defiance of the Constitution, which dechires that none but "white" teen shall be depositories of political power in this Commonwealth. This is to be followed by the enactment of State laws carrying the idea of negro 1 equality, whichis a leading and cardinal doctrine of the Radical party, to its legit imate goal. In the first ,pinee, za - ogrooe are to ‘ be admitted to the jury : lxix. This point is insisted upon by the leaders.of the negro movement, and the politicians have yielded. They want the votes of the negroes, and, for their sunnort,at, box to them as it is open to white citi zens.' The result of such an act cannot but be disastrous to the interests of white men. Negroes, with all their ignorance, caste, bigotry, and prejudice against white men, will not make safe jurors to deter mine cases in which the life, liberty or property of the superior race are involved and imperiled. They will be led and con trolled by their clannish feelings, and Rad ical lawyers will artfully introduce politics into the consideration of all cages, and thus make them depend upon the political opinions of the litigants, not the facts which may be given under the rules of evidence. The introduction of negro votes into the ballot-box will throw a mass of ignorance and want of reason and judgment into that safeguard of the rights of American citizens which will be pro ductive of the most serious consequences to the white people of this State. And yet, this measure will be carried out by the Radicals if they are successful this fall. It is therefore an element in the present State contest which should not be overlooked. Following this attack upon the interests of white men will be the passage of a bill by the Legislature introducing negro chil dren into all the public schools of the ,Commonwealth, on a full equality with' white children. The Radicals are not content that separate schools Shall be maintained, where negroes can bo edu cated at the public expense. They are not satisfied to make white men educate negro children in addition to their own. I This does not carry the principle of negro equality far enough for the dominant party. They insist that negroes shall be sandwiched between whites in the same building; that white girls and boys shall be compelled to• sit beside negroes, and mingle with them in all the exercises in cident to and connected with school-life under our present educational system in this Commonwealth. This is what white girls and boys.'will have to do if the Rad-1 Mats are successful at the polls this EMI, or else forego the chances of receiving an education fitting them to act well their parts on the stage of busy and exacting life. These are issues of a deeply interesting and practical character, and they aro di rectly involved in the State contest. now going on in Pennsylvania. If the Radi cals are successful, white men will have to sit, beside negroesin the jury -box, and white children herd with negroes in the school room, This is the price white men will be compelled to pay for a Radical triumph in. this State._ Are they to do' so.? -• 1=121:= said that the hotel 'keepers at the . White Mountains are about to pe tition Congress to have the name of those hills changed to Black Mountains, in. def. erefiee to the popular sentiment of New England. They need' rYOt ,40 so iu view of the late elections. •" Radical Duplicity, In an article on the Ohio election the Press says: "The vital point at issue• is the question of manhood. suffrage, and it is that great principle which draws out such an array of force." 'Why was the " vital point" repudiated In this State ? Why did the Williamsport Convention ignore " manhood suffrage ?" If that great principle is calculated to draw out the whole force of the Radical party, and make it effective at the polls, by what strange oversight was that fact overlook ed by the men who engineered the Con vention which nominated Judge Williams, of Connecticut ? The truth is, the Radi cals are not controlled by:principle in this matter of negro suffrage. Where they can win on the black issue, there the ne gro will be brought to the surface; where they can make nothing of the "colored brother," he will be pushed tinder the ice' and allowed to remain there. In Ohio they are clamorous for negro suffrage. In this State the question is not even men tioned, in their State platform. Here they rely upon Congress to force negro votes into the ballot-box, in opposition to the will of the people. This, they hope, will save the party from a certain defeat up en the open issue. But the. body of the os trich can be seen although its head is buried in the sand, and the white men of Pennsylvania will defeat at the polls a party which intends to place the negroes on a full equality with them in all parts of the Union. United States Bonds. The. Republican papers arc abusing some Democrats of Ohio for proposing to payoff the funded debt of the country in legal tenders. This is called "repudia tion," the "sacrifice of national, credit," and other, hard names; but is not ball so bad, if bad at all, as the measures that the Radicals have already endorsed and forced upon the country. Who made legal tenders good payment for debts in curred in gold and silver, thus legalizing the repudiation of private contracts ? Who compelled the creditor to accept a doprecintcd currency fur his demands, giving him oftentimes only fifty cents on the dollar? If we are to suffer the name of repudiators, the stigma has already at tached. The public debt was incurred in greenbacks; why should it not be paid in gold wan gul - -- jection can hardybe made - to is payment now that gold is one hundred and forty. If the Radicals can point to any law guar anteeing the payment of the public debt in gold, they need not hunt so far as they do ak ,present for their arguments: If there is no such law there is no obligation, express or implied, to repay other money than that loaned. But in any event, a simple way of avoiding all questions is to buy np the bonds in open market.—New York Citizen. Strong Radical Endorsement of 'Our Candidate. Over forty' thousand Republicans of Philadelphia voted for Judge Sharswood when he was last a candidate for the po sition he now fills so ably. That was in the very hottest excitement of the - war. He was then regarded as sufficiently loyal and was considered sound on all constitu , tional questions. No paper in Philadel phia then spoke of hintexcept in terms of the highest praise. The assaults made by them upon him now, come with a very bad grace. Either they , lied when they praised him, or they aro lying now.— 'Which it is any man of sense can easily tell for himself. The people of Philadel phia and of the whole State know Judge Sharswood so well that the falsehoodi of a set of mercenary and corrupt political scribblers cannot' affect his fair faille. That he will be elected' by a large major ity there is no reason to -doubt He is just the man to be , placed on the Supreme Bench; and the lawyers, the busin ' ess'men, the capitalists and the masses of the peo ple all know that to be the faot. Even the Republicans of Philadelphia can not "go back" on their endorsement of him. Multitudes of them will vote for him. fgr When Thaddeus Stevens stated that the Republicans would come to grief in Pennsylvania this fall on account of their frightful corruption, he, in advance, gave an explanation of ie painful defeat of Radicalism in California anti Montana, and the overwhelming gains of the; De mocraPy in Vermont and Maine. The truth is apparent that the masses are be coming.itioroughly disgusted with the usurpations of the Congressional traitors, and they are preparigk to strike the Rad icals a crushing blotr in Pennsylvania. —A Peris Wei reports' that M. Do brauzdo Raldapenna;' of the Manorial .Di plomatique, is left literary executor to .MaKimilian, tint' is about le publish a bi ography of his Oaf life. M. de Saldapeuna had already begun the work befOre the ar rangement of Miramar was tenblinied;and he has recently received documents which will nearly (halt him to the end of; the life of the Prince; - ---Tho 'popular question of tho•day now is—Havo, yOu heard, from Californa f , GOLDEN Ni s--Thatfrom,Californii. VOLUME XXIV, NUMBER ap. The Despotism Bill—Conflict of Races. Hon. James Brooks, member of the Rump Congress from New York, and one of the proprietors of the,New York Ex press, delivered an able'speech against the Five-monarch bill as it p - assed• the Rouse. We quote his remarks .upon "the development of a conflict of races," as follows. The truth the statements and deductions cannot be denied: Sir, I deprecate the • passage of this bill in its effect upon the people of the South ern country. Far better would it be for that land, from the Potgrnac to: the Rio, Grande, to be as it was one hundred years ago, a howling wilderness ; han to be sub jected to the auialgaination 4)l,rac.es.whi,ch you "are - •propositig' bill:" Our country is now made up of many different races, not only Caucasian, Mongelianln dian, Chinese, with Japanese- abont.kO come here in the Pacific steamers by thou ! sands, and et _last the : Esquimsti.,xl,btil you have selected the least intelligent = . the poorest informed, ezcept they.squimaux ; you have selected the African to share with you copartnership in thiS'Grovern ment, while yonf own wives and•children, your minor boys are shut out front the right of suffrage. You have, given to the negro equality and copartnership with the white man. S'ir, it is impossible for 'Chesil two races, in , my , l judgment, ever to live together ou terms of intimacy, amity and friendship, as you propose in ; this You have stored up and are yet storing up for them the elements of, awful strife which will produce a perpetual conflict of races. Sir, the negro Haytien is wiser. than you. Ile allows no white man, to •hold real estate on that, island. The black Li berian is wiser • than you. Ile allows no white man to share with him the govern ment of that country. The experiment in Jamaica of a mingled governm.entrhas broken down, and all the free governntent there is absorbed by the Britis Parlia ment, which now, through orders in coot!: cil, disregarding both whites and LIMES, exercises supreme power: NoWhere on this earth has this tuixed ; government.suc, cerried. One race is superior_ to another. God so ordained, and -no fiat of .authority of yours can' bring,' down the Caiieasian to the African, or bring up the African to the Caucasian. All efforts, all struggles L• LW, reenl6 .”Irtlianditryt, "ix tru - rtz, - 3 half Indian, now Governor and ruler of Mexico, is' just now showing . there the barbaric character of this mingled Gov ernment of unnaturally aspeiated races, while the numerous other Spanish negro Indian hybrid States are almost all of them in constant civil war, armies run ning and overrunning' one another, with the blood of the white than and the blood of the negro both deteriorated .by finks commingling, and yet hero this rash, this fearful experiteenti No, not an experi ment, for experience has already shown that it never can succeed. You , propose to mix and mingle the twelve millions of your countrymen in the Southern States of the Union. Yon take the most igno rant., the most uneducated, the most brutish of the population, and give them absolute control in boards of registration or through the ballot.bok.. It needs no,, the eye of prophecy, it, needs, divination to foretell what ,must be_ th 9 eff.SCi'd i sucli a - crime is this; for tori shows you what" hasbeerilia'Vffe4 and what Will be hereiften , . The • I `4roeudewell" Against ..ligupcak. • 441 •: There can be no doubt that the deca deuce of Radicalism has sot, in, and‘that its falling fortunes can only be retrieval_ —if even thus—by a resort to negro suf- (rage. In Marsh, New Hampshire ,one of,the strongholds of Radicalism, fell from rte annual Radical majority more tbafi half. In April, Coeineetleut, : alivays Rad:- ical, threw off its bonds and declared 'in favor of Democracy. - In August, ,ICen tucky, which gave , the Democracy 37,- 944 in 1986, ran the majority, up to 66 e ' Next-Verment, the'preseßt month; has fallen so liar below'the usual -Radical majority that the Radical press and officials keep back the rettirtiA—inem ly claiming the election' by a redneed ma r jerity. Lastly we have California, rvhicli wheelS eneef the thialtdom of Radieial.. ism. into the Democratic lino by st riiajbi' ty'eatiniated at ton thonstind.,.: Turing' see, alone, • maintainsitself inrOuced Radicalism—but how? ' 1:11rof4?,4 ape voteB !—tho unjust and inf.imons-disfran chisement of:nearlynil the best citizens of the State. - Taking these facts together, the De mocr,acy:have great.cause to, rejoice, end to renew their, efforts to,:etarry,the.Qate ber alid'Novcinbet oleetionsm states. - !, t b ~rof. IW,gteou. of Ann Arbor, 10 uttOds discovery "of iv now planOt;iiit‘titted in riglititeeeiiiiitiuo D 4o•; and in deeleneion' 3°'lo'sotith-4noviDg west and south. , • , t ,--Honi Jatneet:A:. Moth:fugal!, - Senat or of, the 'United: Stateni,Wennitife istete o 1 Cialiforna, died •at.„Ailledi,iislwX7, on the 3d inet. ' 1 Y 183218il