TJPPLBME1TT. t REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET GOVEKXOPs GEN. IIENRY M. HOYT, OF LUZERNE. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, HON. CHARLES W. STONE, OF WARREN. SECRETARY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS. HON. AARON K. DUNKEL, OF PHILADELPHIA. JUDGE OF SUPREME COURT, HON. JAMES P. STERRETT, . OF ALLEGHENY. OUR CANDIDATES. Who 'tbey rcnd Iheir Public Services in the Past Men of Brilliant Re cords and Personal Worth. Henry Martin Hoyt, the Republican candi date fur Governor, was born in Luzerne county In 830..: Be entered Wyoming Seminary in 1844, ud went lrom' Uicre to Williams College, where be graduated In 1819. In 1850 be began to teach school In Tonawanda, and after a year was elected Professor of Mathematics In Wyo ming Seminary. Two years later be studied law in Chief Justice George W. Woodward's office, at Wllkesbarre. He taught school for a time In the sour- -ut In 1856 be took an active part In the Frer-onl Presidential campaign In this Slate, after which he began to practice law in Wllkesb&rre. In 1861 be was active In raising the Fifty-second regiment, Pennsylva nia volunteers, and was commissioned as Lieu tenant Colonel by Governor Cnrtin. He was in General Negiey 'a brigade during the Peninsular campaign of 1862, and early in the following winter waa sent with the rest nnder General W. . W. H. Davis to co-operate with the naval at tack on Fort Sumter. He participated, nnder General Gil more. In Die siege operations con ducted on Morris Island against Fort Wagner and Fort Sumter. In the summer of lSGi night attack was organised by General Foster against Fort Johnson In Charleston harbor. where be was taken prisoner. After being con lined at Macon, Colonel Iloyt was brought back with 600 other officers to Charleston Jail. While on the way. from Macon to Charleston lie escaped from the cars with fonr other Union officers. After several days and nights of fruitless efforts for liberty, they were recaptured by the enemy, with the aid of blood bounds, and placed In the Charleston jail. Upon being exchanged, Colonel Hoyt rejoined his regiment and remained with it nnlil near the close of the war. He was promoted to colonel -on January 9, 1864, and was mustered out of the service on November B, 1864. On March 13, 18C5, be was breveted brigadier general. During the year 1SCT, nnder an appointment from the late Governor Geary, be discharged the duties of Ad ditional Law Judge of the Eleventh district In 1875 and 1876, Colonel Hoyt was Chairman of the Republican State Committee, displaying In the successful campaigns of that year marked .ability as a political leader. He was also one of the Delegates at Large from this State to the Republican National Convention of 1876 at Cin cinnati. Hon. Charles W. Stone. Charles W. Stone was born at Grotau, Mid dlesex county, Mass., on June 29, 1843. From the common school he went to Lawrence Acad emy, and from there to Williams College. He graduated at the latter institution in 1863. Soon after finishing bis collegiate course, be became Principal of the Union Academy at Warren, and continued in charge until appointed Super- . Jntendont of the schools of Warren county In March, 1865. . In September of the same year lie was elected Principal of the Erie Academy. During the summer of 1866 be entered the office of Judge Wetmore, of Warren, as a - student at law; and . In September, 1867, he was admitted to practice in the several courts of the county. In January, 1868, he entered Mlnto partnership with Judge R. Brown. In the of 1868 be was elected to the State House of joi "'-outives from the Warren and Venango ,MwBinoi''In 8e"'a re-elected without on ion urn i iv''tIn 1876 he was elected to the State -jnttmv am mn years, carrying bis district by 400 i wrn- ram Tor l'reslrtonl Hayes. HONESTY. ml m w- l H r t I 1 lie 1 TUe KePUDllCail rOllCV LI,..., t, rJlt rMt, -t t, aj i iun iiiv vivuu auu latin ui iiaa tion Have Been Kept. What Republicanism hs Done for the Na tion Reduced Its Debt, Cut Down the Interest, and Lessened Taxation One-half. The election of the last Democratic President that the country bad was followed by the crisis of 1857, and we had hardly begun to recover from that heavy blow, when the rule of the Democracy was at last overthrown, and the war of the rebellion was begun to destroy that which they could not control. The Republican party came Into power with the revenues of the coun try wasted, and the credit of the nation so poor that It was paying a higher rate of interest than ever within the generation, and even more than jt was paying in the height of the war that fol lowed. We bad this war forced upon us when our navy was scattered to the four quarters of the globe, and material and ammunition piled up by traitorous officials in southern forts and arsenals in readiness for the contest which the mad rulers of the south had planned long before the north awoke to the desperation of the men who saw slipping away from them, never In re turn, the power that they had held so long. We had to begin from the beginning. There was an army to raise and to equip, a navy to build and to man, with not a dollar In the Treasury, hardly a gun in the arsenals, and not a ship on the sea that was worthy of the name. Such was the condition of the country when the peo ple at last asserted themselves, and wrested the control of its destiny from the party that bad been plundering it and squandering Its resources for a score of years. THE DEMOCRATIC LEGACY. The Republican party can indeed oliatlenge the record, and stand or fair by the result. The war was fought and won not without an enormous expenditure of blood and treasure, but still without the ruin of our industries or our credit. The close of the war saw the country with its manufactures fully em. ployed, agriculture comparatively neglected, and a debt of 82 680,00O,0O0, which was in creased in the following year by the ex penses of the war to 82, 773, 000, 00a There were State debts besides amounting to 8801,78,1,000. Total to the credit of Democratic rule In this country, over a million lives lost and about 83,000,000,000. This was the burden that was laid upon the Republican party, and which It has carried ever since, although it has been steadily lightened each year. All through Bu chanan's administration, with no extraordl nary expenses, it bail been steadily growing, but under Republican management it has been decreased every year In some years by an amount greater than the largest total of the na tional debt In any one year previous to 1861, not excepting even the heavy obligations remaining after the war of 1812. Some facts concerning the growth and decrease of the debt will show bow It was piled up and how it has been re duced. On July 1, 1861, three months after Sumter was fired upon, the debt was 890,380, 873, and it bore five and six Der cent, interest. For temporary loans the Democratic Secretary of the Treasury bad paid as high as ten and twelve per cent, interest. From that time on the debt grew witn frightful rapidity, for war is expensive, and the government was such a cus tomer of the people that it took all that they had to sell, and yet in all this time no higher rate of interest was paid than 7 aud 3-10lbs, and al though there were (830,000,000 out at the close of the war, all had been paid off three years later. Nor did the government ever fail to get the full value of its bonds. The Greenbackers and ttie Nationals are verv 1011a or talking about the bonds that were bought at thirty-five and forty cents on the dol lar, and there are some people who are foolish enough to believe them. Yet a glance at the annual reports of the New York Stock Ex change sales will show them that the minimum price for which any United States bond was ever sold on the Exchange was 82, which was the lowest quotation in 1861 for the sixes of 1881. We repeat, instead of the bonds being taken by the capitalists at thirty-five and forty cents, there is no case recorded on any stock exchange of any bond of the United Stales being sold at a less price than 82 in the year when these bonds were first Issued, and they sold np to 95. In 1862 these bonds were still the only securities of the government that were on the list,, and the minimum price was 86 wane ine maximum was 107 k. Never since the very first year of the war has there been a twelvemonth in which the bonds of the United States did not touch par. This is a record uuparalleled by that of any nation iu the world. In 1863, the dark days of the rebellion, these bonds reached their lowest price at 91 '., but they sold up an U12I1 iir PANICS. THEIR CAUSES- THEIR HISTORY AND Some .e M Effects ol Democratic Par- " I ..... T.t llsanship as Exemplified in me -"' itepe-."" n. ..... - . 1 The Pittsburg Telegraph publishes a review 19 the various financial panics which have oc curred in our history, and after reciting briefly the history of the United States Bank np tot" year 1819, thus tells the story of the disaster tn befel our trade la that year: "Fortunes were wiped out in a day, specula tive companies, that stood everywhere line shocks in a wheat field, vanished magically, and shareholders were aghast: suburban land! and city lots that were to return a hnnareua. drmiDpd to almost worthlessness. As an ex ample of the effect of the panic on real estate here, an old citizen says that land on ti" Hill held at 82000 an aero dropped to 8100; lots on Fourth avenue held at 82000 fell to ilW; property In the region or Market street, on which were good brick bouses, only partly r"1 for, were wholly abandoned, as property Q'te as good could be bought W less than the sums due on these. Hut the United States Bank, with lis capital of 835,000,000, weathered the storm, and by furnishing the country again with stable currency of uniform value, won back pub lic confidence, and again compelled the State banks to go into liquidation, or to raise the value of the notes to the standard of the na tional banknotes. This, together with the temporary settlement of the slavery agitation by the compromise of 1820, and especially with the Impetus given to home manufacturers by the tariff of 1824, and the work of internal Im provements, set the country upon its fuel once more. INI'AKALI.KI.rn FOB VIKDICTIVKHESS.: "It Is not In man, however, to let well enough alone, above all when it stands in the way of bis political theory. The second charter of the bank was to expire In 1836. When Uie Ttilrty- llilrd Congress assembled on life 2d of December in that year, President Jacksnn said tn his mes sage that In the Interim bis' Secretary of the Treasu ry had ordered the removal of the gov ernment deposits from UieUniited States to the State banks, and lie gave as b.is principal res- sou for this that the bank had! used these de posits for partisan purposes. ' The parliamen tary warfare that followed this action was un paralleled for vindictiveness, tend is too long to be narrated here, even If germane to the sub ject. The constitutional poin t involved was the old one that Jefferson hadj con tended for, viz., the power to charter banjks was a right reserved to the States; they tflone could sup ply a constitutional paper (currency." The Slate rights question had come bounding to the surface again. Thisi authoritative recognition of the value and usefulness of the Slate banks, and the importance attached to them as government depositories, stimulated their organization to an extraordinary degree. Many were chartered to take the place of Uie United Stales Bank, the closing of which was expected. The Slate banks increased from 282 In 1830 to 632 in 18:17. During the same period their capital rose from 8 145, 000, 000 to (290,000,000; their circulation from (61,000,000 to (149,000.01)0; their loans and discounts from (200,000,000 to (485,000,000; their deposits from (55,000,000 lo (127,000,000. Thus during these seven years the banking facilities of Uie country had been con siderably more than doubled, while the Increase in the .capital of the country was small, and there was no manifest need of the addition of a dollar to the currency. The result of the in crease of the currency was an unexampled delirium of extravagance and speculation. in Uie midst of which came the destruc tive collapse of 1837. Ruin reigned on every band; almost every business man tud business bonse in the land was involved in the common wreck. Collections were next to im possible, and in some States, as notably Misils slppl, wholly so. Credit everywhere was de stroyed. There was a general suspension of the banks at the first blast of the storm In 1837. In 1838 they made a heroic endeavor, and resulted payment, but the year following those of Phil adelphia and the regions or the south and vest again bent before the storm. The distress was pitiful, and during the first two years of the panic It was necessary to Import large quanti ties or lood from Europe. The country that a short time before abounded in what it called wealth, and boasted loudly of its many re sources, could not furnish bread to the hungry. The failure of the banks holding the deposits of the government left it without a penny. Con gress was hastily summoned, and Treasury notes were issued to keep the department going until the Sheriff could sell out the share-hold ers of the defunct banks and recover the de posits. Finally the government divorced its monetary affairs from those of trade and com merce, and established the Independent Treas ury. The disaster was so complete that one cannot point to any exact date when the hard times ceased. The recovery was In fact in the gradual re-creation of the ruined industries. THE ACTUAL HANK CIRCULATION. Until lx.'W tlie volume of i.imt money In creased Klowly, ami only HrxMmlins t lli-Mt,iu" NATIONALISM. Its Significance in Politics. Something of What We May Expect Should It Succeed to Power. A Party that Counsels its Members to Make Themselves Proficient In the Use of Firearms-Will You Aid It? As U10 National-Greenback and Democratic parties are running lashed to all Intents and purposes, the subjoined extracts from docu ments circulated In tlio west by the first-named party must have a very important significance to the friends of law and order. From the tract entitled "Meat for Men," Issued by Pomeroy, Chairman of the National Committee for organizing Greenback clubs, pages: 'Let Congress, so soon as we, the people, can be heard in that heretofore Infamously corrupt body of plunderers, declare that in order to save the American Republic, the bond must be burned, and destroyed even as slavery was destroyed. That it must be called iu and retired In ashes, even as tho greenback money has been taken in. That the bondholder shall have greenback, legal-tender, lawful money of the United States ror every claim he holds against the United States, ir he refuses this, then let him howl ir he wishes to. Let him rave, and bis financial damnation rest on Ills own dis honest head. We will have .no bonds or any kind issued by the government. "ir this government of ours will not protect us, tho tax-paying people, then we owe it no allegiance. If it will not do this, it is a bad. an infamous government, after all the people have done for It, aud we had better nnlte the west and the south, secede from a Union that bene fits only eastern bondholders, and let their dupes In northeastern States go into slavery to the illegitimate brat of Republican horning and Democratic adoption. So it is, eastern masters and money-hoarders, that we sight the gun directly at your black hearts. Too long have your political tricksters in both parties held the hot iron ot bankruptcy to our backs. Too long have you, by aid or knaves and hirelings, held us in the morass or poverty and the slough or despond. You can give us back the rull silver dollar the greenback dollar as a munition or peace and a part or the government, or In 1880 never rises a sun on the Republic as 11 now stands. You have lied to the people, loa, August Belmont, Jay Cooke, John Sherman. Samuel J. Tildcn, aud all or the plundering bullion-baggers. You have torn down the Constitution till it bangs only by one nniL You have Iguored the rights or the people. You have turned the misfortunes or a war you pro longed to your great advantage and the people's disaster, and you deserve to have your banks broken open, your houses plundered, your spoons and rurniture stolen, your ill-gotten gains wrested from yon, yonr possessions con fiscated, and your northeastern Stales held as appendages to a united west and south, band- in-hand co-operating as the JNew America. Give us back the money or our fathers. Give 11s back the greenback money you have stolen and burned. Give us, the people, the property that belongs to us who live by labor, or you shall bo shorn or your power, despoiled or your possessions, aud lcrt in the desolation you plan ror those you have so long planned to hold as slaves. CLEANING THEM OCT OF HOMES. "Young men or the west and south, we can clean all or those eastern pirates out or homes and the property they have stolen. We can unite and whip them to reason and to a compre hension or the right. We can leave the coun try northeast or the Allegheny mountains to pay the national debt. We cau unite and make the southwest the garden or the world. We can onen the Mississippi river and float our billions or prodace down its waters to market. We can send our surplus products to roretgn countries by way or southern cities. With the proceeds weean line the west and south wuu new rail roads, open new mines, and make the east a bowling wilderness, in which will roam the ghosts or the witch-burners and or those Puri tans who made fortunes In supplying me soutn with slaves stolen from the coast, of Africa. We can do all this, and you will take this for your repast in the near future ir you do not burn your ill-gotten bonds and let me people live. Organize Greenback Clubs with bayo nets In reserve. " From page 14, same tract: "Citizens have been robbed of their equality. Ijind has been robbed of its value. Labor has been robbed of Its life. Life has been robbed of its reward. Every bondholder Is a robber whose knife is an infamous law that was made to en rich a few at the expense or the many. Every national banker is a robber of the people In bis monopoly to take from llicin double interest on Hi,-bills lie ims nl. nt ne ol' which are. re- l-ciii!l!o In KolU or KlIViT. K llllM I WOt I STRAY SHOT. TltK SKIRMISHERS OF ARGUMENT. Great Facts In Little Space-No Grains of Allowance for Those Who Would Destroy the Country. Was it the Ohio idea, after all ? not. It seems The Ohio "idee," is now 5,000 republican majority. There seems to be a panic among the Dem ocratic President-makers. The Graphic expresses the opinion that Sam Tllden will become a nun. None like him now. Marble suggcs'.s tombstones. Perhaps he will get a place at the head of Democracy, after all. The silent agony of the Democratic editor Is the most moving spectacle of this stormy epoch. A party must have convictions to win confi dence. The man who has no political faith is a thing of putty. It was a favorite remark of the late .Samuel J. Tilden, reformer, who died or too much cipher, losay "I'll see you later." It would add fresh laurels to his brow if Edison would Invent a Democratic platform upon which that whole party could stand. Democrats are consoling the Greenbackers with the idea that though they may not carry Pennsylvania this year, they will do so In 1130. There is at least one crumb of comfort for Senator Thurman, now that he is laid away iu his little bed. He made It sort aud he will lie easy. The only fixed principle the Democratic party lias Is Its unwavering advocacy or foreign pauper labor against American Industry and enterprise. The Tribune says the cipher dispatches which have been published compared with those that are to come are as a penny-whistle to a fog-horn. Fernando Wood is financially embarrassed; he is bad off politically, too, and is truly in condition to sympathize with the great Demo cratic party. The music of the Greenback song appears in the Graphic. Every nolo is marked on the back, 'This Is a million dollars, "but the song doesn't seem to sing well for all that. The fiat men in Ohio lost a grand oppor tunity to put their principles in practice. Tbey should have got together a rew votes early, and declared "this is a majority. " An exchange says the crop of hay and oats Is so large in Maine that it Is cheaper to be a Jackass than a man. The greenback craze down there was then really a question or cheapness. Thurman is satisfied that he was cheated when he traded with Pendleton a seat in the Senate for Presidential chances. He would like to have "Gentleman George" take the rag baby back, at all events. A Cincinnati paper says you can't make a diphtheria patient drunk. It is evident that Democratic politicians don't have the diph theria, and It is gratifying to know there Is one disease they haven't got. The Greenbackers have proved themselves better talkers than they are voters, as shown by the result of the elections In the west; but they are altogether too strong to be made light of by the friends of honest money. Candidate Dimmick, of the Fifteenth Con gressional district, must feel lonesome. Nearly all the Democratic papers refuse to support him. He is realizing how much easier it is to humbug a convention than the public. The Democratic papers have forgotten all about the ract that there was an election In Maine. That Greenback party that fought so bravely in September forgot the better part of valor, and did not live to fight another day. The nfortalitv among Democratic states man this vear Is nositlvely frightful. Mr. Tll den dies of too much cipher. Mr. Thurman of too much "Ohio Idea." Mr. HendncKS 01 too much Communism, and all the Massachusetts Democrats or too much Butler. Senator Wallace begau a speech the Uhor .i in nils wav: "There Is something menial tT. ir n il What Is II." J" iiio 1. - Nl.iiiKliter of winclmills; In reilllfcvlvanlil t 1 lirf:: To wiikc THE TARIFF. Its Value to Pennsylvania. How the Democrats Have Assailed It at Every Opportunity. What the Republican Party Has Done for Protection In the Interest of the Country and Its Citizens. In the early stages or the Republic all classes, all sections, nnd all parties were earnestly for protective tariff on foreign imports, for the pur pose ot encouraging and fostering ihe establish ment nnd permanent maintenance of domestic production. This was inherent in the spirit ot the revolution, which was as much Incited by the despotic repression or the colonial Indus tries, In order lo give the permanent control of the American markets to British manufactures. as by any otlier cause. Among the first fruits of the protective policy was the American cot ton crop, which was fairly protected Into ex istence. But as In the lapse of time the Repub lic became populous and flourishing, and the amazing spread of cotton culture made it the basis of the formidable political power which subsequently assumed the name of the Demo cratic party, a combination or the strong for eign commercial element at New York with the southern agricultural force was formed, the in terest ot which lay In opposing the protection ot domestic manufactures a '. favoring a low tariff on foreign goods, on the ground of fur nishing the farmers and planters with cheap merchandise for consumption. This southern school of politics was founded by John C. Calhoun, of South Carolina, and although it was courageously opposed by Presi dent Jackson, yet under the auspices of Presi dent Vau Buren the whole Democratic party gradually tell Into the arrangement. The rea son or this was that in New York, which was the northern centre or the Democratic parly, the predominant Influence was Uie foreign Im port trade. When this became fairly established and recognized, foreign capital and commerce centralized almost Irresistibly in New York city, and armed with ample money supplies for political work from those sources, the Demo cratic leaders or New York and the south long managed the whole national policy to suit the views or the agricultural interests or the south on the one band and of foreign commerce on the other. To counteract this combination, the friends of protection sought to build np manu factures In such parts of the south as were not adapted to the planting interests, and those movements were represented by Whig slates men ot the south, like Clay, Clayton, Bell, Mangam, Crittenden, eta , while In the New England and Middle States manufactures grew and strengthened In consequence of the enor mous Influx of foreign labor. TUE TARIFF A NATIONAL QUESTION. It was not until the great Presidential cam paign or 1810 that tne tariff was fairly made a national test question. The defeat or Van Buren led to the passage or the Protective Tariff of 1842, under which all branches of productive industry took an immense start, and made such progress that the plantation oligarchy of the south saw the dawn of their policy and power unless a reaction could be effected. Upon the plain and open issue or Free Trade this could not be done, and therefore it was not attempted. But by the shrewd devise of the annexation of Texas a popular cry was raised on which the Democrats again obtained the control of the Administration and Congress. The Immediate result was the passage or the low tariff of 1846, and the war with Mexico. Under this ruinous tariff the progress made under the Protective Tariff was mostly lost. When, during Jackson's administration, South Carolina undertook to nullify the pro tective duties, a Compromise Tariff was en acted. But when the tariff of 1842 was passed, strongly protective as it was, no resistance was offered or threatened. Public sentiment bad advanced. Statesmanship resorted to strategy Instead or;menace. Extending the area or the Republic was but a device to enable the cotton power to recover central and enact a low tariff. Accordingly the Tariff of 1846 was passed by the casting vole of Vice President Dallas and signed by President Polk, both of whom, while candidates for those offices, were heralded as r.i.nH. r ihn BTistlns Tariff of 1S42. So trans- oarent was this trick mat even the war fever did not Drevent the decisive defeat of the Demo- cratic ticket at the Presidential election of J848. During the subsequent Democratic nomina tions of Presidents Pierce and Buchanan free trade had rull swing because there was no politi cal element strong enough to make headway aealnst the Democratic party. This was caused ih raet Hint the concentration or foreign uniiat and commerce at New York had become enormous, and was wholly on the Democratic siile, while at the south the plantation ollgarcny had completely crushed the Whig element and made the south a Democratic unit. Slavery at the south and lorcign capital at New "ork were BLAINE. HIS LETTER TO WENDELL riUXLIPS. The Senator from Maine Answers Some Per tinent Inquiries Do States Clearly Ills Position on the Currency Question. Augusta, Me., Sept. 23, 1878. Wendell Phillips, Esq: My Dear Sir: I remember the conversation In the Senate Chamber to which you refer, and I beg to recall to yon possibly more fully than I then stated the objections to the intercon vertible bond as the basis of our currency. I am aware that many wise men besides yourseir have approved and advocated this theory. The power to hold a bond which may at any mo ment be converted into legal-tender notes for its face value, and to have legal-tender notes which may at any moment be converted Into a bond at par, appears at first sight attractive. But no scheme is more deceptive or delusive, and I will briefly state the objections which seem to me Insuperable. OBJECTIONS TO THE SCHEME. First It tho bond be or sufficiently high rate or interest to float the currency even to an ap proximate equality with coin say four per cent, or thereabout the inevitable tendency will be for the cnrrency to run into the bond rather than for the bond to be exchanged tor currency, and this with such force aud volume at critical times as to compel a scarcity of notes, an ever-recurring stringency in the money market and a general instability in affairs. Second If you make the bond of a rate so low as to avoid the tendency and the danger Just stated, you or course abandou all idea or having your currency at par witn coin. 11 your interconvertible bond is worth but 75 to 80 cents on the dollar In coin, you thereby fix the value or your currency at 20 or 25 per cent, below par, and you banish coin from your circulating medium absolutely aud Anally. So that, 11 your bond be one that will float a currency at par with coin, it will steadily and irresistibly tend to contract Its volume. And if you seek to avoid this result by lowering tho rate of in terest on the bond, you render equality with coin impossible. In either event the scheme would work its own destruction swift aud sure. Third No device was ever conceived that would eive a more complete advantage to un healthy speculation ot all kinds tliuu the inter convertible bond. Several times within the past ten years we have witnessed a "lock-up" or greenbacks by Wall-street combinations, with a view to financial ends, which were at war with the public good. So promising and so profitable were those ends thnt the speculators coule afford to have many millions of green backs lie idle in order to force a stringency In the money market. Your interconvertible bond would open the way for this class of finan cial operators to "lock-up" greenbacks and have the government pay them interest on the whole amount, while they might be conspiring to derange the business of a continent, and de press the value or every rarmer's crop In the land. In other words, your theory would force the government to be an accomplice In every gambling scheme devised in Wall street against the peace and prosperity of the country. Fourth Every year, as the spring business closes and summer comes upon ns, there is a vast accumulation of money that lies idle for three or four mouths at the financial centres; In the vaults ot the banks, iu the safes or capital ists, iu the treasuries or railways, and in the strong boxes ot insurance companies. During that period nearly one-fourth of the year there are from one hundred and fifty to twohun dred millions or Idle dollars In New York and the other great money centres, and these dollars all belong lo rich men. Y'our interconvertible bond would provide an admirable mode for these capitalists to take a large amount or Inter est from the government at a season when they cannot get it lrom any othersource. But I ques tion whether It would be quite ralr to tax the whole people during the hot months or summer In order to Insure to the wealthy capitalists or the country a good income on that large sum or money which would otherwise be idle while they are enjoying the.mountain.air and the sea 1 I breeze. ? Flfth-The interconvertible bond would leap to postponement in the payment of small bills and debts in the domestic business of supply in 'every-day life. In our present system a large sum of money is carried at all times on deposit without interest. When bills are presented from 'the butcher, the baker or the candlestick-maker, the man having money on deposit not drawing ! interest readily pays them, for there is no profit .... 1 . iin. Kill A.M But once , to nim in puumsuuui teach every man who has a surplus of ready money that he can deposit it with the govern ment and draw interest thereon, and the inevit able tendency is to place it there and keep it there as long as a creditor can be denied, avoided or evaded. The advantage in all branches of , trade and labor or promptly paying small 0111s, not drawing Interest, Is incalculable. The in lerconveriioie uouu wumu diuji mm i. .m.. , ...... would array the avarice and cupidity ot tho moneyed class against it. The interest paid by the government would go into the pockets or the rich; and the interconvertible bond would again THE STATE. Pennsylvania Expenditures. A Favorite Theme for the Democratic; Politicians in the Campaign. Some Interesting Facts and Figures that Throw a Little Light on the Var ious Administrations of the Commonwealth. The Increased expenditure or the State admin istration has been and is a chosen subject or comment in all Democratic discussions. It is a thoroughly legitimate topic, and one we are glad to have opened. The only rear is lest it shall drop out of sight atter the election, as it has so often done heretofore. The periods gen erally chosen for comparison are those of Packer, Democrat, in 1858-00, when the costs were Si, 209,849 17 for the term; of Cnrtin, In 18G1-66, when they were S1.885, 157 68;ol Geary's first term following, when they amounted to 2,453,148 ; of his second term, in which they were S2, 808, 306 07, and or Hartrantt's late ad ministration, in which they have advanced rrom 999,987 77 in 1873 to 81.213,276 31 in 1877. Resting upon these tacts, the Democrats and Nationalists censure the Republican party nu stlntedly for extravagance, and hint at malfeas ance. It is so difficult to procure absolutely trust worthy and In tel 1 lgi ble statistics In such debates that Hon. Chester N. Farr rendered a good ser vice to the interests of the Slate, the knowledge of the people.and the cause or truth. In his con sideration and presentment of the tacts at Myerstown on Saturday evening. He did not undertake to deny or apologize for a state or the case Involved in the history or the State, and generally known to everyone; but, premising that the expenditures or the Commonwealth have trebled since I860, explained the causes and justified the facts convincingly, and when am ple justification could not bo found, pointed to Democratic action as equally or wholly respon- .iiiin. rinrinz Packer's administration, of 1858-60, the expenses were SI, 209,849 17. Since his retirement the population of the Bute has increased from 2,006,370 to about 4,200,0oa This increase has necessitated in creased expenditures in every direction. CAUSED BY COMBINED ACTIOS. One-hair or all that has occurred in the seventeen years is due to the combined votes or Republicans and Democrats, when the constitution or 1874 added 270 members to the Legislature, Increased the judiciary heads or departments and clerks. This action or botn parties appropriated 81,000, OOO-annually to the public schools; increased the pay or tne Legislature 8100,400, and that of printing 861,- 079 03. Of the 8218,070 46 remaining increase to be accounted for, 8157,804 is accounted for by the Increase In the salaries or the executive de partment, clerks and Judges, all of which is non-partisan, and has been approved; by the increase of mileage and stationery in the sum of 857,007 m, or 832,595 03 more than double what they cost in 1860, and by 810,538 94 appro priated to Soldiers' Orphans' Schools, leaving but 843,258 53 of all this vaunted extravagance unascribed the major part of the growth having been wisely concurred in by both Democrats and Republicans in order to meet the iucrease of 25 to 50 per cent, which has touched all branches of living since 1S60. As the ncrease of expenditures nnder Democratic rule from 1844 to 1860 was 66,vd per cent. , the Increase ot the same expenditures for the years from 18C0 to this time falls absolutely 830,000 below tne ratio or Democratic Increase when the costs or reorganizing the government and Legislature are subtracted. On the other hand the .Repub licans have not only carried on the government in a period or civil war, and through ajoltow ingterm of depressed industry andlnactlvlty with no increase of the debt, but they jave made an annual saving or 880.000, together with a profit ol 8261,922 by refunding the State debt, which they have reduced from 842,ooo,ooo 10 813,000,000 and placed in the course of speedy liquidation. We remark of an exhibit whicn win grainy tax-payers and true Pennsylvaniaus, irrespec tive of party, that it proceeds lrom a compe tent, responsible and reliable source, where the floating statements which Impeach State credit and hurt the prosperity of the Slate, Indirectly if not directly, are the products of partial knowledge at the best, and either leavened with partisan feeling or intentionally colored. With this authentic exhibit the case is made up. The financial issue is the greatest In Slate as in national politics. Having shown a great re duction of the Stale debt, greater efficiency and permanent gain in every department of ad ministration, and preparation for greater econ omy and profit, the party may well and sonQ- dently go to the people, who wanted no other evidence to renew Sheir original friendship and sustain a policy they marked and demanded. OUR PRI.XCIPJLES. POETRY. EATEST LAY OF THE DEMOCRATS. Tho Story of an Attempt to Steal tho Presi dency Tho Effect of Samuel's Bognary A Miserable Failure. By Samnel J. Tllden, LateKetbrm and Frand ;an- didaie, now grievously al&icted with ciphers. I have touched the highest point of all my great ness, And from the full meridian of my glory I haste now to my setting raster than Earns trots When at bis best; I shall fall As falls the slyest knave that wears a mask, And no man see me more my goose is cooked. - Farewell, a long farewell to all my greatness ! This Is the state of man: to-day he puts forth The semblance or Reform; to-morrow preaches And solemnly proclaims his bate or Fraud; The third comes a Key perfect Key And when he thinks, deluded man, full sorely His prospects are a-rlpening, busts his mask, And then be falls as I do Yaln pomp and glory of this world, I hate ye; And also ye, ye horde of nincompoops. I feel my eyes new opened. Oh, how wretched Is that poor man who tries to bribe electors ! There is betwixt that seat be would aspire to. That vote of bribed electors and bis ruin, ' ' Such pangs and fears as I or Marble have. And when be falls, befalls like well, like me, Never to hope again. Deuce take the cipher. Pel ton, I did not think to shed a tear In all my misery; but the Tribune makes me Out or its honest truth to play the woman; Let's pack our trunks; and listen to me, Pelton, -And when I'm execrated as I shall be, And Sleep with, d that Marble, Where no mention ot me more sball be heard, : Then say I taught thee; Say Tilden, That once trod the road to ruin. And sounded all the depths and shoals of rogne 'ry, Found thee a way out or his wreck to rise in. ' A sure and safe one, though your uncle missed It. Mark but my fall and that that mined me, Pelton, I charge thee fling away ambition. By that sin tell your nncle; how can yon, then, The nephew ot your uncle, hope to win by it? . Love thyself last, cherish those hearts that hate thee; Ask Scbell and Kelly np to dinner Sundays, And write upon the gonfalon thou bearesl: Corruption wins not more than honesty. Reform aud Fraud are not cod vert 'ble terms. O, Pelton, Pelton. Pelton, Pelton, Had I but lived my lire upon the square Not Gra mercy but the downright moral square. I would not In my age, with '80 Just ahead. Be knocked much higher than the famous kite Whlcb once waa flown by Mr. Gilderoy. - IfASBY. lie Proceeds to Organize a Section The Result. COXFEDRIT X ROAn.4. (Wlehls In the Stale uv Kentucky), epL 1, una. I felt it incumbent onto me to go to Factry- vllle, a village hard-by, and establish a lodge uv Nashuels, uv the Kearney kind. Faotry vllle wuz established by a company nv Massy- choosl is disturbers, wlchinvadld the sacred soil for the pnrpus nv manufactrln iron wich M found there in great quantities, and they hev m mill Into wtch about a hundred men hey bin employed. The price nv iron hevln gone down, these graspln monopolists hed the ashoorence to ask their snfferin labers to redoose their wagls, glvln the frivoloos pretex that ex the price uv llvin hed gone down also, they cood afford to work for a trifle less. Ez most nv the men owned iheir own bouses, wich they hed saved. and was comfortably fixed, they eoodent git away, and hed to endoor the ojus exacsbuns uv the grindin capitalists. And ex collocksbuns wuz difficult, and tbey didn't git their wagls with the regularity of former yeers, they mar- mured some, which I felt it my dooty to Im prove. They needed a leeder, for none nv 'em knew how much they wuz sufferin till I went and told em. I bed a tolerable easy time nv It. I made em two sneeches, in which I showed era tbey wuz groanln under a tyranny compared with wich the suffcrlns uv the Rooshun serf waa nothln, and that they wood never hev ther own till they organized and crushed their oppressors. I showed em that wat tbey wantld wuz to crash out capital, aud be thetrselves their own root ers. It wnzn't hard to do, and the second nits I organized a seckshun. Cli9 ritojii I writ my3e if, basin it on Kear ney's idee. It wuz very breef, and inn suthin like tbls: "Hath the brother wrongs?" "He hath." 'Doth the brother brood?' "He doth." "Is lip a successful brooder?" "He is." "Doth the brother look forward lo tbe time when he will hey bis iron beel on the neck nv bis oppressors, and will hev Ihe lecherous em ployer by the throat?" Hi or make (.taMMMteitfiaaUi