Viontrost gitmotrat A. J. GEERltgoli, Editor. bit4i**ll.oBl3, I'VESDA V, JAN. 28, 1888. Doings in Congress. Partisan legislation still continses to assume more dangerous aspects. The re construction bill, placing Grant aboye the President in power, in gross violation of the Constitution, has not only passed the House, but as is now foreseen, will pass the Senate. When Mr. Wood denounced it as the most infamous act of this most infamons Congress," we felt that ho ut tered'a painful truth. But he was iniUso ken if he thought the lowest depth had beet. reached ; for a baser act, remained to be projected, which has since been agreed upon by a majority of the recon struction committee. It is no less than this That the Supreme Court of the United States shall have no power to con sider sny act which has been done or may be dime under authority of the recon struction acts of Congress! This amounts to a proposition to abolish the Courts en tirely so far as the great issues of the day are concerned; and gives the present& natical majority of a rump Congress, (who do not represent a majority of the voters, as shown by the late elections) an uncon stitutional power which they are baSely using to fasten negro equality and an ab solute despotism upon the country. Senator Thomas of Maryland is kept out of his seat, to the end that. the radi cals may pass their unconstitutional acts over the vetoes of the President I. Y. Brown, a member from Kentucky is excluded from the House, in the same When the reconstruction act was on passage in the House, Mr. Wood moved to insert the following as an appropriate title to the bill. " A bill to absorb the entire authority of the government into the hands of Con gress, by which the powers of the Execu tive, as Commander in Chief of the army and navy, shall be abolished; the power of the Supreme Court to pass upon the validity of the acts of Congress prohibi ted; Congressional usurpation over ten States established by force of arms, and a new form of government created in place of that which formerly existed under the Constitution of the United States, hereby declared to be null and void," How the States will •vote for the next President With the present exclusion of certain States, it. is easy to see how the States will vote for President this year: The electoral college will be made up of 232 rotes, requiring 117 to elect. The follow ing named nine States are certain to go for the Democratic candidate: States. Elec. Votes. Ohio 21 New York 33 Kentucky 11 Maryland 7 Delaware 3 California 5 Pennsylvania 26 New Jersey 7 Connecticut Total .. There are others which are expected to rote with us, and increase the majority. If the Radicals attempt to cast the South ern negro vote at the point of the bayon et, and count it for their candidate, such policy will cause Fitch a farther reaction as still throw almost the entire North against them, and render their defeat all the more certain and overwhelming. So, in either event, the Democracy will win. Does Congress Represent a Majority of the People ? In reviewing the doings in Congress, this week, we assert that the present bopy does not. represent the majority of the people ; and will hereunder present the proof that the radical members only represent a minority in the States which voted in 1867, and are represented. The following table is made up from the Tribune Almanac, and shows the vote in the seventeen States which have voted within the past year : Democratic. Radical. California, 49,905 42,476 Connecticut, ` 47,565 46,578 lowa, 58,543 90,173 Kentucky, 90,225 47,106 Maine, 45,644 57,462 Maryland, 63,602 21,890 Massachusetts, 70,360 98,306 Michigan, 55,865 80,819 Minnesota, 29,543 34,870 NeW Hampshire, 32,657 35,808 New jerse3i,, 67.468 51,114 New. York , 373,029 325,099 Obio, . 240,622 253,532 Pennsylvania 207,746 296,824 Rhode bland, 3,350 7,554 Vermont,. - 11,510 " 31,694 _ _ . _ Wisconsin, 68,873 /076,507 1,554,945 Demmatie majority, 21,562 s i3therlatates represented and not. bold ing general eleatious last year—Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Neva- da, Oregon, would base shown a similar result, and increased the majority in favor of the Union and laws, and against negro equatii y and the party that violates the supreme law to force it upon the people. The masses 130 W more fully understand the wicked plottings of the Radical lead ers, and will hurl them from power and elect a Congress that will truly represent them. To this great end let all good men put forth a united effort, and union, har mony and prosperity may once again be enjoyed by a free and happy people. Geary on the Pardon Power. Gov. Geary attempted in his late mes sage to screen himselffrom censure for his improper use of the pardoning power, by assailing the Judges of the Court of Quarter Sessions in Philadelphia, for an alleged misuse of the power to reconsider sentences of prisoners. This has brought that, bench "down on him" with crushing force. Judge Allison, a Republican, de fends the bench from Geary's attack, and shows that his allegations were entirely uncalled fur, "unseemly and unwise," and done in the manner it was, amounts to a "usurpation of authority" in seeking thus "to intermeddle with a co-ordinate depart ment of the State;" and he also shows that'Greary not only omitted to mention the facts, but that "the Governor has misstated the case as he knew it, to ex ist." Judge Allison made the defence, by previous appointment, in the presence - of all the Judges, in open Court, to the grand jury and, the public); and most com pletely unhorsed the Snickersville hero, who does not attempt to follow np his calumnious assault, but retreats in a bad ly demoralized condition. Stanton's Unionism. Senator Doolittle tore the veil off the miscreant Stanton's face on Wednesday last in the United States Senate, and clearly showed that. the usurper in the War Office was.at one time in close accord with the "rebels" and " secessionists."— Senator Doolittle said : "When Albert G. Brown withdrew from the Senate to join the rebellion, Ed win M. Stanton met him outside of the door, and urged him to go on in his course, wishing him ' God speed,' and say ing ho was right."- Although publicly stated before, Stan ton has never denied this, and yet he is now one of the puny gods before whom the Radicals fail down and worship! The 11. S. Supreme Court. Not only is every Judge now on that Bench a Northern man, but the majority of the Judges are Republicans, appointed by President Lincoln himself. But Lin coln's old party dare not trust them to de cide-any important question of law, for fear they will sustain the constitutional rights bf the States and people. Pennsylvania Legislature. An amendment to the State Constitu tion' has been offered in the Legislature, to the effect that negroes be made voters, and that such persOns as cannot read shall be disfranchised.. Wo are content to let the , railicals press , ibis issue, and do not fear the result. But we do not think they dare face the music until-after election, they hoping that Congress will be able to force negro suffrage upon the State. In any event a direct vote will not be had on the question before 1869. -119 The Proposed Reduction of General A bill is now before the Rump Con- gress to reduce Gen. Hancock below the military rank necessary to enable him to act as a district commander. By such despicable means the traitors in Congress expect to bring back a reign of terror and military tyranny in. Louisiana and Texas. In regard to this infamous scheme the N. Y. Times (Republican) says : " Congress proposes to degrade Gen. Hancock from the rank of Major General, because his course in the Department of New Orleans does not meet the approba tion of a majerity of that body. General Haudock won his rank by such service to his country in the battlefield as few men ever perform, and such as it is a disgrace for any public man ever to forget. The men who propose to take this action in regard to Gen. Haneoek, are the• very met-Who insist most loudly on the duty of gratitude to soldier; but 'they keep their gratitude to the soldier strictly sub ordinate to their party interests and pat ty zeal. The proposed measure is utter ly unworthy of Congress and discredita ble te the party which brings it forward." Or Judge Woodward has made a speech in Congress upon the. question of paying the Government Bonds in green backs or gold,. which will appear in our next issue. 73,627 —Attorney General Brewster has noti fied the State Senate that the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad Company has Violated its charter by not finishing the read to Erie. Hancock.' Minority Report on the new " Recon struction" Bill. The undersigned, a minority of the Committee of Reconstruction, so called, submit among others the following as some of their reasons in opposition to the bill 2 tot, That a Congress ex parte is asked (first section) to abrogate and destroy all civil-and State governments in ten States, four of them as follows : Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina an Georgia, being of the original thirteen that star fed the Government and created the Con stitution, while boar others of that thir teen (making eight in all) have past been demonstrating through their popular election that they recognize these State goveruments, and guarantees, as far as the popular voice, their preservation as legal State governments. Self govern tneot and representation are cardinal principles of a republic and ordained in our Federal Constitution, but the section ignores both, and robs ten States of this Union and twelve millions of inhabitants, of all protection from the Judiciary or eoutive branches of the Government, while dooming thew to a miliiary despo tism. 2d. That a Congress, thns representing but a part of the people, and that part now in a minority, even if a lull Congress, in a parliamentary sense of that word, would be but one of three great branches, of this Government, with no right and no power to invalidate or to deny the recog nition of the Executive or Judicial power as asserted in the bid. The Executive or Judiciary has as much right to proclaim or predicate that Congress shall not be recognized as Congress has to enact for the Executive and the Judiciary ; both are as much the Government and the creation of the Constitution as the House or Senate, and the executive, elected by the whole people, better represents the principles of popular government than a Senate—a mere arbiter—the creation of the States. 3d. That the invalidation or malifaction of the executive and Judicial power in States is not only an abolition of the Federal Constitution, but in direct con flict. with the great military acts of 1702 and 1795, and of March 3d, 1807, putting. the army and navy and militia of the Uni ted States in certain cases at the disposal of the President; also in conflict with the fundamental judiciary act of 1789, and al so in conflict with act 4, section 5, of the Constitution, which while guaranteeing to every State a republican form of gov ernment, also guarantees on application of the civil authorities of the States protec tion against domestic violence, such as contemplated in this bill. 4th. That the second and third sections are in utter violation of the Constitution, art. 2, sec. 2, which declares the Presi dent to be Commander in Chief of the Ar mies of the United States, inasmuch as the General of the army is authorized to be Commander in Chief, and to remove by his orders alone, any or all officers of his army of the United States indepen dent of the Constitution and people's elec ted Commander in Chief, and thus inves ting a General of the army with this su preme dictatorship, is as if in solemn mockery set forth to recognize civil gov ernment in form. sth. That the whole act is revolutiona ry and incendiary in arraying Congress, but one branch of the Government against the co ordinate branches, in all repeats the Constitutional equals of Con gress, and in some respects the Constitu tional superiors of Congress, and thereby calculated, if not intended to involve the whole country in commotion and civil strife, the end of which no human eye can foresee. JAMES BEOOES, of New York. JA3sES B. BECK, of Kentucky, <Mr 4- Profitable Patriotism. The Sc. Louis correspondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer describes. A HORRIBLE CHEAT There is no telling the ways that men, greedy for gain, will not avail themselves of to advance their fortunes, especially during and since the war, as men have been found willing and anxious to sell soul and conscience fo a little filthy lucre. A few days since an incident occurred which very forcibly illustrates this. An Irishman was employed to dig up and re move some of the bodies of Union sol diers in the Wesleyan Cemettry of thiii city. In lifting the coffins he thought they seemed unusually hollow in their sound, and opening some of them discov ered that no bodies hod ever been placed in them at all, nothing but planks or square blocks of wood. The mystery to the honest Hibernian was great, but when it was told him that the Union soldiers were buried by contract, the undertakers receiving so much per coffin, and then that bodies could be sold at a handsome progt to some medical college, the doubt was at once removed, and the avenue to a wealthy fortune immediately disclosed. This was only one of the ways that the war made men rich. Beer vs. Bread. The amount of nutriment contained in beer is generally greatly over estimated. Liebig asserts that in 1,460 quarts of the best Bavarian beer, there is exactly the nourishment of an ordinary two and a half pound loaf of bread. This beer is about on a par with our best American beer. Instead of being a condensation of the nutriment .) contained in the grain, in just so far as the liquid has undergone fermentation the nouritbmeut has disap. peared. —Chief Justice Chase, in accordance with the opinion of a majority of the court, advanced on the calender the Mc .ardle case to the first Monday in March. I Mg ZI SIC El . z —We atil attention to the advertise ment of the Providence (R. I.) fiend in .colinn of new advertisement. —The Rada of Louisianna have moral- Dated a negro for Lieutenant Govenor of that State. " The world moves"—into darkness. —The negroes in South Carolina have got to stealing loaded wagons on the road and appropriating the contents, wa gons and mules, to their own use. —The Wilmington (N. C.) Journal says between 40,000 and 45,000 bushels of peanuts will be marketed in that city from the crop of 1867. —Commodore Nutt is about to marry Minnie Warren. His weight is 25 lbs.— Her's 20 lbs. Their combined fortunes amount to $250,000, —Real estate in Atlanta, Ga. that cost before the war $40,000 in gold, sold the other day at, United States Marshal's sale, for $7,000 in currency. —To prevent the Fenians from seizing them, all the guns and ammunition in the Limerick shops have been taken possess ion of by the police. —Continued arrests are made of the suspected persons:in Ireland and England, and the "boldness and audacity of the Eenians" creates much uneasiness thro'. out the realm. —The large number of " Fenian outra ges" in England, reported as having been attempted immediately after the explos ion under the walls of the Clerken well jail, appear to have had their origin in the excited brains of the enemies of Ireland. —A' Negro Bureau agent—"trooly toil"—stationed at Lake Providence, Louisiana, has absconded with 88000 be longing to freedmen and others. —lion. Win. T- Hamilton was elected to the United States Senate, on Friday, by the Maryland Legislature, to succeed Hon. Reverdy Johnson. —The indications are that the Rump will pass a bill to continue the Negro Bureau another year from next July, when it is to expire by limitation. Radical organ chucklingly says "Grant outwitted tha President." Is trickery the roll of a great soldier or a wise statesman ? —The Grant Rads intend to nominate A. T. Stewart, the " merchant prince," sor Vice President, in order to get a few of his millions as a corruption fund. --George Francis Train, and two oth er persons by the names of Grinnell and Gee, were arrested on Queenstown. 19th, oa the ar rival of the Scotia at Queenstown. They are charged with being active members of the Fenian Brotherhood. Train has since been released. —A g ift entertainment in Louisville ad vertisedto present a horse to the holder of the lucky number. When a toy horse was brought out as the prize, the audi ence couldn't see the joke. —A Selma, Ala., dispatch says : Hon. P. G. Wood has decided that he could not comply with General Pope's order in rrgard to placing negroes on the jury, without violating his official oath, and Thursday his court was suppressed by the military authorities. At a meeting of the bar of Dallas county, Jndge Wood was unanimously sustained. passaze of the reconstruction bill by the Rump Rouse at Washington was not, unexpected. When Fernando Wood pronounoed this revolutionary body " in famous," he hit the nail exactly on the head, and its members are determined that his verdict shall stand forever. Copperheadism," according to a de finition of Mr. Farnsworth, of Illinois, Radical, means " a preference for a_ gov ernment of civil law over a military des potism." We accept the definition, and . so will the country. Radicalism means " a preference for a military depot ism over a government of civil law." This is shown by their acts both committed and contem plated. —The Raleigh, North Carolina, Senti nel, in its reports of the black and tan menagerie proceedings, used the words "negro" and " white" in naming the members. The radical portion of the concern, of both colors, became very in dignant at what they call "disrespect," (who could respect such a pack of scoun drels,) and have resolved to in future ex clude all reporters who may so offend their tender sensibilities. —A nnmberof the negro suffrage or• gans of this State have put up the names of Grant and Grow for President and Vice President. The party of " grand moral ideas" will have to "grow" much stronger in numbers, and the country will be required to " grow" vastly deeper in negroism and corruption before the elec tion of such a ticket can be effected. , —The assistant secretary, engrossing clerk, door keeper, sergeant at, arms, and messengers_ of the South Carolina black and tan menagerie are all darkies. The first two are farming out their offices to mean whites from "-down east," not. hav ing the requisite ability to uae the pen. TIM NEGRO JURY BILL—The District negro jury bill having failed to become a law, as shown by the President's message to the Senate, it is expected that, the measure will be revised in that body and passed as speedily as possible. The ne groes and their white allies are clamor ing for its enactment„ and, therefore, im portant publicbusiness must be laid aside and the bill repassed without delay. —A girl, aged thirteen years nomed Su• san Trout, died in Columbus, Ohio on Sunday, from lockjaw, caused by 'over ex ertion while skating. Radical Iteconstzacticm. Not content, with disfranchising large numbers of white men in the South, the radicals at the recent elections placed hundreds ot fraudulent votes in the boxes, and thus secured delegates to the consti tutional conventions. In the City of Richmond the white population charged both a fraudulent vote and regisiration, and in one of the wards General Schofield has had a census taken of the persons an thorted to vote under the reconstruction laws. The result, of this exatninatio'n is that more than six hundred negro names are ascertained to have been fraudulently placed on the registration lists. These names were voted, however, at the elec tion. Negroes were brought in from the country who answered to the names, and the election was kept open three days, up to midnight of the third day, in order to ehable the fraud to be cousutnivated. As there are five i wards in Richmond, it is probable that the total numbei•ot negroes fraudulently registered in that city is fully two thousand, and in the entire State not less than twenty or thirty thousand. This is what the radicals call guaranteeing a republican form of government to a State. What a Soldier Thinks. The Union, publishedat Madrid, Maine, gives the following extract from a letter written by one of the soldiers in the sixth Maine regiment. It indicates very dis• tinctly the immense change which is go ing on in public opinion in regard to the radical:4. This soldier veteran says : I have been a Republican five years. I fought the *South in arms three long years. I marched over desolated fields and grounds deluged with blood. I t ho't as scores of others did, that I was fight ing for our old flag and the Constitution, but I was greatly mistaken. I found out before the dose of the war that I was fighting to keen an army of plunderers in power. I think they have been kept in power a little too long for the country's good. It is time they were relieved. I think there are honest men enough to rule the nation. The Republicans have had a fair trial and they have proved incompe tent. We ask them to stand back, and give place to a better class of men. This they must do no matter how much they dislike the idea. I for one will never cou sent to be ruled by a negro! The Re publicans must remember that there are in the loyal States one million soldiers, who will nut be ruled by negroes, nor consent to see ally portion of our own white race thus degraded ! No, never ! Impediments. The New York Tribune declared in its Friday's issue that negro suffrage must be established by the Republican Congress, and that " if President, Johnson is an im pediment he must be removed. This is [he logic of the hour." This annnouncement may fall very pleasantly on Republican ears, but we wonder how it would sound to theta should we, on the other hand, say that negro suffrage must not be imposed upon us, and that " if Congress is an im pediment it must be removed. This is the logic of the hour." And yet we presume that we have quite as good a right to make the one announcement as the Tribune has to make the other. If Republicans can claim the right to depose the President because ho is an impediment to the ac complishment of their wishes, they cannot refuse to us the right to eject the present Congress Prom the capital becaure it is a " rock of offence" in our path. E:Z=1111111 mongrel pay committee of the Mississippi menagerie have reported in favor of $2O a day for each member for the first ten days ; $l5 a day for Secreta ry, $lO for each assistant, and $lO a day for the Sergeant at arms during the whole session and twenty cents a mile each way for each member 1 This is the biggest gobble yet, and entitles the Mississippi mongrels to the title of the grandest thieves outside of the Rump Congress of the Pennsylvania Legislature. The twigs are certainly determined to estimate them selves at. near about the top Most notch to which the radical demagogues have puff ed them. Mo.= DIABOLISM—A LITTLE GIRL nry- RAGED BY A NEGRO.—One of the most in famous outrages that ever occurred in this city was perpetrated in Cherry alley very recently. A black fiend named Charles Henry, who is in the habitlof visiting the house of James Maloney, during the lat ter's imprisonment for violation of the li cense law, took advantage of his absence to violate the person of his daughter, a little girl between seven and eight years of age, and communicated to her a most loathsome disease. According to the lit tle girl's statement before Mayor Ed wards yesterday afternoon, the black skinned and black hearted scoundrel re pettted the monstrous crime on last Tues 7 day night, having in the meantime silenc ed his victim by threats. The child's con dition led to a suspicion that she hadleen outraged, and, upon being intern)te , she made developments which ledle V negro's arrest. After a hearing, ayor Edwards demanded two thousand dollars bail for Henry's appearance at ' court,. in defaillt of which he was committed to prison.—lfarrisburD Patriot and Union, 16th. —This is tho age of paper. Almost everything is made of paper, from money. to hats and shirt collars and even water pipes. The latest adaptation of the arti cle has been discovered in Maineowhere a. local paper advertises, for the. benefit, of the ladies, the productions of the "Paper Pantalette Company." Irra The population of lowa is estima ted in the Governor's annual message to be at least 'a million. The past year is said to hive been the most prosperous in its history. Rights of American Ottissas. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs have at last agreed on g bill , for the better protection of the rights of American citizens while abroad. and It is ex. petted that the meestire Will soon be Moaned, and will then no doubt gre else to elaborate debate, near ly every member of to Hones being anions to express hie views on the question. The measure, but to make a little political by favoring the measure, but their tar. dinees In bringing It forward, and their known tedir fcrence to the rights Of naturalized citizens. will pre vent them from obtaining the popularity they seek amnug our naturalized citizens. Another Stab at the Supreme Court. The eu called Reconstruction Committee this mor ping agreed to report a. bill prohibiting the Bppreme Court frem exercising juriadietien over any ease or ea. see arising under thy sQ , Celed reconstruction sets, and dismissing elf such cases now pending before that tri bunal. 'Cho object of this measure Is too obvious te leave any room for doubtas to tbh ulterior desfrne of those who favor 11. The enactment of. the " maj ority bill" paseed by the House last week befog sower tto doubt, it Is now proposed to deprive the court of its right to decide upon the legality of any get OiCbtitress relating to the reconstruction. Thus It lithat Con gress Is to become a self constituted despotism. - —The Empress Eugenia is reported to be the most graceful smoker in Prussia; - When Napolton scolds Eugenia pit& —Robert Stevens . a negro of Chariest cm S. C., has commenced suit in the 'United St ates District Court t at Richfinindoguinst the Richmond and Fredericksburg: R.Wt. Company, for requiring his wife • to tide in a second•clags car, when she had *first- class ticket. Damages laid at $4,800. ew Abirertisements. PROVIDENCE MORNING 111314L . D. arD/Ln.r. $8 ran Aascrit..4.3' REPUBLICAN WISZILLT. $240 Pia Asaux.. , . 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