4 C Gaittts. .yIinTRWFT) DAILY, BY pEnThuN, , RFPD & C 0.,. Proprietors. P. B. PENNIM AN, " JOSIAH T. P•_I:IOUSTONi- N. - P. ItEED. • E-4.l.tpre and-proprietors. Ell • • OFFICE: GAZETTE BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 88 . FIFTH ST, OFFICIAL PAPER Of Plttiburgh, Allegheay andlawny County. 7einte--Dolly. Weekty.j • sekly. One year-. one year. te...olSin g le c0py.._..51.5C One''swath. mos... 1.501 5 copies, each. 1.25 - By the week," 15 ; :rhree m05,45;10 " 1.15 Wens - cattier. ) I] , f I and one to Agent. • - WEDNESDAY; -.JULY 29, 1868 ?'utional'sbvnion Republican Ticket. - ICA."I76.tiAT., ICIelK1:71'. Fait PRESIDENT: • ' ULYSSES S. GRANT. FOR 'FIRE PRESFDENT:. BCELITYLER COLFAX: • PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. • . AT LAItGE. G.:MORRISON COATES, of Philadelphia. T 11115. iI.IIARSHALL, of Plttiiburgh• , District. iDiBtrict. 11. • BARNES,II3. SAMUEL SNOW. 2: W. .1. PottocK, 114. 11. WitGONSELEE. J 3. RaciLtoo WILDE:Y. .15. Cu.AS 11. MILII-Eit, 4. U. W. HILL, (IEOIIEII W. ELDER, 5. WATSON P. MCGILL, 17. JoILN STEWART, 6.• J. 11. IitUNGIIGRST, I Is. N. 6. OLMSTEAD, 7. Funs& C. 11 1.:.4,Tyx, .1.(31t.1 SILL, 8.15. x..“: , 11. C. JOHNSON, 9. MORRIS Doo/.1.14.; 121. J. K. Ewlso„ 10. DAVID 31; RAND,,, , W3l. FliEw. ii. WM. DAVIS, '- 23. A. W. CitAwFonio; ilk. W. W. liVrellUal, 21. J. S. .111YrivN. • STATE rrtcnr.r. VOR AUDITOR GENERAL OF PENN'A JOIIN FOR - SURVEYOR citi.:K.l2ll, OF PEIS'N'A JACOB M. CAMPBELL. cor_, - Nl-vpici T. CONGRESS, tn:k Di :STRICT. , JAMES S. - NEGEBY. ; . CONGRESS, Ar.,3D DISTRICT. 'THOMAS WILLIAMS, Valthieet to the declilon of the Coafiieea of the District.]' 'DISTRICT ATTORNIT. •- t A. L. PEARSON. ASSIST/CT DISTRICT ATTORNEY. J. B. FLACK. - •ISTATE SENATE. . JAMES. L. GRAHAM. • ' .ASSESCRLT. GEORGE WILSON, GEO. F.• MORGAN, ‘. . JAMES TATEOR.I • M. S. HUMPHREYS, VINCENT MILLER, SAMUEL KERR. ' cosrhol.Lp.A. HENRT LAMBERT. comIuSSIONEh. JONATHAN NEELY. • • ernVEroß. I. L. MpCUILY. • , • , CorNiv ruollt DIRECTOR. J. G. M'URRA.Y. Headquarters Republican County Cora mittee, -City- Hall, Market Street. Open every.day. County Committee meets every WedneSday, at 2P. M. I • WE ,PI r? on the inside pages, of this morning's GAZETTE : Second page : Postrit , , 6 ‘.Little .Things," Ephemeris, The Sea,lon . at Sarae o o, Third and Sixth pages: 4fdrketi c s. and:l?iver News: Seventh page: - "Wasts Not, Want Not,(" Clippings, 3c. . • • Gann closed yesterday in New York at 144®1441. ! Tim wheat-harvest is in progess in Min= nesota; being nearly a month in advance of ordinary seasons. 'The crop is very large, and there is an extraordinary demand for labor_to secdre it. TUE . death of M. E. CCII,WEW Esq 4 of, Cincinnati, a prominent lawyer of Chichi pad, ,and widely known as the author Of'sk 'aluable Digest, is announced as having oc curred in London on the 11th inst.; TllE , price paid for the farm at Danville, _on whiCh it has been decided to erect the ne7 Lunatic Hospital for this Common- Wealth, was $42,000. Of this sum $16,000 and alittle more was paid by the citizens Of , Danville, and the residue, or about $26,000, py the State. - 4 APT ATLANTIC CABLE is to be. laid within a twelve month, between New York and,Rrest. The preliminaries of organiza tion, of legal authority, and , for securing the necessary capital, which is estimated at $5,000,000, have just been 'completed and the work is to he at once taken in hand. THE article inthe last number of the Al lantle Monthly; in.revievi of a previous pa pefentitled "4 Modern . Lettre de Cachet," which we attributed to . Dr.:KHOO:MIDGE, was not 'Written by him, but by Dr. IseAc RAY, who was forMerly Superintendent of the Rhode Island Insane Asylum ; but is now retired and residing at Philadelphia. i'nE president's consessions as to the finality- and validity of the reconstruction acts in the restored States, becomes daily more evident. He ',now' freely announces his intention`to recOgnize the newly chosen governments and to execute the laws to the • extent of his ability. His adhesion-to this ' position Will have te favorable•effect upon. public Affairs. IF .wio May credit the rebel Democrry,. t. iuth, is now ruled.by carpetbage', or f .y men who carry carpet-bags. cry like- ly. There ! are few things that more eta ) phatieally mark lively go 7 aheaclinen of hal- , . , mess:than carpet - bags. . The carpet; hag is an-immense improvement over, tbe slaye whip. The South is ruakink progress like all the rest of the world. - ' ( Dun neighbors of the Pittsburgh Dispatch gratified their readers and surprised the town bi issuing their lively and wide-awake journal on Moliday morning. in an entire new dress, of decidik typographical beauty,. and their columns bearing the Most satisfac-! tory internal* evidence of the appreciative esteem ., orbur citizens. • We congratulate' our neighbors upon their marked pronxirity which thus madefipparent, and which they have fairly -won by their industrious diligence, adding thereto our sineere hoPe that they may continue, in the future Relit the past, to win golden t;pinions from sort of rail: BONDS AND BONDHOLDERS It is knovrn to all the world :that the United States is heavily in y debt, and, that this :condition of affairs was brought about in consequence of the efforts needful for the suppression of the rebellion. This indebtedness rests mainly in the form of bonds given for moneys borrowed. The 5-30 s, now all cancelled except some thirteen'rnillionsiif dollars, were made pay able,-principal and interest, in coin. What remains of them will be paid in currency, sinless they shall be exchanged for 5-ns before the Ist of August. The 'interest on the -5;-20S is specifiCally payable in' gold; IA what file principal shall be paid is not Rated in the bonds.. ; " Hence the current ' controversy as to whether they shall be paid in money or currency. • ' Members of Congress — differ -as to the - I understanding on this point wen the bill authorizing this issue of bonds was under discussion. Of course, if suits could be brought to recover payment of these bonds, no court would listen to evidenCe as to the intention of different Senators or .Represen tatives in voting for the bill. The Whole matter wouldbe determined by the construc tion the tribunal should put on the words used -in the bonds. Such adjudication • being impossible, the decision as to what pavment shall be made inwill ultimately be made by Congress, guided solely by the ikas pf equity f prevailing among its members. .1 All men whose' sympathies still cling to the rebellion, .or to the doctrines in which it originated,:are 'eager. to adopt the construc tiort of these contracts which will give the public creditors' the least real money, im pose on themselves the lightest burdens, and dishonor the =GOvernruent to the largest ex tent. Men naturally disli i ke to pay for their , own defeat. They Will resort to the .moft shameful equiv6cations and deceits rather than dodt. This explains much, but not all, the ppposition to the 5-20 s in coin For onr part, we have au invincible re- pug,nance to a currency not convertible into real nmey . at the pleasure of the holder.. A commercial' revulsion may create a neces sity' for a temporary suspension of specie payments, but nothing short of the direst straits of a gigantic war can justify an irre deemable currency for a long period.' Even then it is the imperative. duty of the Gov. ernment and people to get rid of it, and re turn to gold and silver at the earliest .possii ble day. How "hard money Democrats"' can go about clamoring for a perpetual and incteasing( deluge or "paper promises to Pay" is one of the mysteries of politics we confess our inability to unravel. Aniong the remedies devised to extricate the. nation from this bond dilemma is the authorization of new loans, for longer peri ods; at reduced rates of interests, and with both principal and interest payable in coin beyond all : dispute. A bill to this end •was passed on the last day of the'ession, and is waiting Presidential • action upon it. Opinion seems to be dividdd as to-the dispo sition he will make of it. We'cannot - help thinking that if this bill shall become a law it will - nbt produce the,effect intended by the originators of it. .. , The President is reported as taking ex captions to some features of the Funding' Bill ; and particularly to the omissioa of a clause making income derivable from these .bonds liable to taxation. - It may be remarked that there are two ways of practically reaching income from bonds. - One, and the direct method, is by making, such income anbject to taxation in like manner as other income is. The other, and indirect method, is to put the rate of interest so much lower than is paid in ordinary business transactions, as to be in effect equivalent to taxation. This latter method lias this advantage that it simplifies the process, dispenses with accounts and ac - conntints, and applies as well to for ( eign as to domestic bond-holders. The former, or direct method., is•more satisfactory to the masses of the people, because they see •that the bOnd-holders pay •precisely as other folks, and lo the same degree. unless; however, pro Vision is made to have the in- come tax._deducted from the coupons upon presentation to' the Treasury agents, the fcreign holders necessarily escape entirely ; which, perhaps they fought to ilo; for plau- sible _reasons, at least, can be presented against the right of the government of one country to tax' citizens of another Congress, it is - fair to presume, thought the rate of interest' was so low%s to stand instead of a tax ; while the President, ac cording. to rumor, prefers to attribute to the two Houses the fault of letting the hond-holders oil' without contributing to the support of goveroment. • Most of the 'present owners -of 5-20 s bought them at premiums ranging frOnt five to -ten per cent. They will .not be likely to exchange them except upon compulsion,' for other bonds of leis market valoe, and drawing a • reduced amount of interest. What they will do, if left to pursue their own inclinations, will depend upon, a clos'e calculation :cat loss• and gain. Confidence :may he so shaken in the honor or ability of the government that the. bond-holders will submit to immense sacrifices, lust as men do in trying to 'save their .hOusebold goods from conflagration; but that is a 'matter with • which we are net now dealing. .Thehond,liolders failing to 'exchange se curities promptly, could. the, Treasury De: partinent, if authorized, tell enough of the new bonus to take up the' old ones before the expiNion of the Ave years option ? Is there 'currency enoughiaflpat and in bank rest do this without seriously ineoni.. moding - pri rate' business 11 This method failing,, it is not presumable that public opirkin - Would now endure, or Congressional wisdom . sanction, a fresh issue of greenbacks sufficient to . this end. The lnflation inseparable froth that measure would unsettle all business calculations, and might Ving on a total, eollapsetof that im -awns° fabric of credit . which covers' the whole country. ' If in . neither of these. ways the Govern• meat could get the requisite currency, topay, off the 5.20 s within five yeara of their date PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : WEDNESDAY XtTLY, 29, 868 the holders would retain them until the ex piration of Me full term of twenty yearS. Long enough before that :time specie pay ments will be resumed, in which eient the bond-holders will get money instead of cur / rency in extinguishment of their demands. But, who;—'air the bond-holders —the "bloated bond-holders," and the "bond -barons," whom it is fashinable • among the Democrats,to decry? Under the main as pect of th i e case, it dos not matter who they arel , and it ikan insult to every right 'minded man's sense of justice to a,sk who they tire. Bquity does not let her scales turn this way or that, according to the financial or social standing of contestants before her. She dem l ands to know only the right or wrong of the made; and makes her balances vibrate only as justice inclines. Whether a man is poor or ich is immaterial before a just tribuntil. Rich_ .and .poor there stand on equal ground; the poor 'con fident he will not suffer Wrong because of his poverty;, the rich sure he will not be defrauded because he is opulent; No one° but an ingrained scoundrel allows the wen h or poverty of a claimant to influence his e termination of a cause, no matter whet r he acts as judge, juror or voter. ManY•Government bonds are held by Na 'Coital Banks and - by individual caPitabsts. Many, too, are held by Savings Banks and by Life and The Insurance Companies. • Hundreds of ihelisands of dollars are so held I in this city, arid in all other cities. These bonds are held . in bust fer poor men and women who'•have deposited the scant.sav ings of hard toil as a provision against sick- . ness and old -age ; or its security that when husbands and - fathers die the policies upon their lives will be paid to the otherwise des titute widowt and orphans; or, as the guar anty that if poor men's houses burn.down • they ;will recover insurances, which will help putrother 'roofs over the heads of their households. Millions of bonds are held in trust *by ex ecutors and administrators for widows and orphans who would be without friend or helper if this support should be swept away. Clergymen, physicians, clerks, mechanics, laborers, and other classes of small means,, all over the country, have invested their little_ trains in Oovernment bonds. To these. individuals it is .a very .serious matter how the question of paying these securities shall be decided. Irrespective of the question, Who are the bond-holders ? this issue ought to be deter mined without clamor, without passion, and without prejudice, according to the demands of impartial justice, and actuated by a nice sense of honor. JUDGE THURMAN, of Ohio,.was one of the speakers at the ratification meeting of the West Virginia rebel Democracy, at Grafton, last week. Indulging in his. characteristic brag, as to the result of the 4residential election; be -predicted that the Republicans w i onld then desire to surrender. The Judge proceeded : . . "Anil that will be a matter for you to ronelder— Whether you 1.111 require anoneonr.itioual aurretirler -or a flow them- to march out . with-; he tilinore or war. (Cries or •• U itcontlit tonal[" ••:ibont every last one of them:" — Let tbeni bankil — * "Jiang them every one!" . • This is a very fair illustration of the K. K. K. spirit which now fires the reassured ,rebel heart. They find in the ,New., York , platform and nominations the license to shoot and hang the friends of the Union with the same impunity asin the first rebel lion which the Democracy. visited' upon the country. The same old rebel jell of mur derous hate welcomes the new summons to -rapine and murder, and the same old rebel policy, of the extermination. of the friends .of the Union, is to be inaugurated with the success of the BLAIR ticket throughout the South. TUE iNCENDIARY violence of the BLAIR programme of anarehy and armed revolu tion, endbrsed' as it is by the Democratic :party, ha' driVen gold up to 144, with a cor responding depreciation of the paper cur rency, The value of which depends entirely on the popular confidence that it will ulti mately be redeeined in specie Here is al ready a positive losi of nearly three per cent., shout twenty inilliona of, dollars, to the people holding this currency. The dimunition in . the purchasing value of a paper dollar will soon be seen in'the ad vanced prices asked for all articles of prime necessity)for the consumption of the people. And the BLAIR party have the cheek to charge this dep7:.ciation of our paper money, which is solely due to their incendiary threats, as the consequence of the salutary precautions which their menaces hrive re quired Congress to take for the preservation • of the public peace. ON Tim 16th of August, the Republicans of this city will select a candidate for Mayor. They will not do, this through the intervention of the ordinary delegate-Con vention, but by a direct vote of the mem bers'of the party. Under this plan no fault can be found with those who are designated as managers, if the nomination Made shall prove to be 'either bad or unacceptable.. The blame 'will attach to those ;Republicans who shalt,he so indiffertint to their, welfare as not to take the,trouble of attending the primary eteciions, or, attending them, fail ( to make a wise choice. We earnestly press this. ntatter upon the consideration of all who are interested in it. • . Im rs probable that South Carolina will this year follow her invariable practice in former:Presidential elections, and choose her Electors by a vote of the legislature. It is also possible that others of ( the re stored States may adopt the same method. Wewere lever partial to this mode of creating the Electoral Colleges, notwith standing the long line of Demodratic pre cedent in its favor in South Carolina. TEN new act amending the Bankrupt Law, extends the operation Of the fifty per cent. clause to Jan. 1,1869. The extension wuellemanded by the new Southern States, fn which the inacblue'ry of the law has but little more than fairly begun its operations, Mond thq Om been very justly and properly admitted. , • TEE ESSENTIAL RELATION OF ISO ENCE TO LABOR! r . In some observations. yesterday upon the comparative decline of English manufac tures, in the great industrial competitions of the world, we made an incidental allu sion to 'the most , influential cause of the greater proSperity Of i l roductive Art upon the European continent. Applied Science affords the true explanation of French and German superiority, and the results which to-day humble the national pride of English manufacturers are but the natural, legiti mate Sequence of their reliance - upon the potencies of mere capital t and labor, unaided by the direction of an instructed and dis criminating intelligence. ,- Knowledge is power, but only in a limi i ted 9e‘ se. To clothe it with tke largest , practical value, in the material development of the productive resources of a people, it must! be utilized, by the precision of its re searche ,-by a clear comprehension of the materia needs of humanity, and by the dis .k erimina ing application of such scientific de - doctions as may be established in the pro .,. , ~ gresa of invention mad practical analysis. 31e * re,,, knowledge, if not popularized, may fill mit,ms and cabinets, swell encyclope dias, al win thefrofound homage of the learne i ut, unless it be faithfully dissemi t nated_ nd commingled with the great mass i t) of nal onal information, becoming a part of the utilized, intellectual wealth of an indus trious people, and constituting an active ele ment fur the constant and universal service of its material necessities, such knowledge avails nothing in the p_romotion of national prospeilty, or in the world-wide. rivalry of productive art. Knowledge is only power in these latter days of practical humanity, in the proportion that it shall be creative, productive and exhibiting tangible fruit. The nineteenth century hag brought in the era of works. Science was ever admira ble, but it has come now to be valued, only as it arms a people for resistless war, or ele vates its own relativiii subserviency to the ma terial necessities of tke peaceful world. As the brain and the hand shall labor together in the service of society; as the Operative and the Savant shall march side by side in the creation f of national wealth—and that wealth can only be created by human 1 in dustry more or less intelligently guided— the real, permanent and decisive criterion is presented for estimating the relative power e.lntluence or nations. In their clear perception of these truths- 7 so simple and obvious that even their state ment seemi needless—and in their acceptance for practical ends, is disclosed the true se cret Of Continental success in the rivalry of national industries. England has invented; France and Belgium, Germany and Switzer- . land have developed, improved and utilized. English science eliminates principles; the Continentalrivalry applies them directly to the service 'of productive • art. The broad. field of scientific knowledge is completely I familiar, to Etiglish„philoaophera, but re mains an unknown land to the millions of I' British workmen. Abounding in capital, and her entire island a hive swarming with docile,. eager and 'inexpensive - labor, With tnineral resources unniatchaditi'any nental dqmain, and with a commerce which -bears the English flag tirSt and farthest on i all the waters of the glqbe, Great Britain entered, Circe-fourtha of a century since, upon a career of mannfticturink industry i which was unchecked by competition, and which rapidly advanced that empireto the undisputed control .of every Market:at home and abroad. For a half century, she held this pbsition without a' rival, but we [wee that she has lost it to-day and that the 1 seat of intelligent industry has been 'trans; ferred beyond the Channel. She has lost it, .l because the continental rations have come I to surpasS her in the application of scientific I knoivledge to the multiform departments of production. The English' citizen sas ever industrious and faithful, but the French or ' German operatives stand far in advance of him in their knowledge of scientific princi ples, and in the fidelity and constancy with which these are applied to the processes of their daily employment. The English me chanic accepts so much of science as may be requisite to qualify him to 1111 the I measure of - .the daily labor which yields his daily Wages. Beyond that, he has no ambition, nor haS he yet been offered the opPortunities for ad- . vancement. He has not let been tatight 'the inestimable value, of that connection between the science of the cultivated brain and 'the cunning of the practised hand, which arq . now giving to the continental artizan conspicinitiSly,the lead in the mand lacturing, indiistry":[- - Ot nations. Go to a French workshop,likC-that of Synxmosi, at Crekizot, and of all the army of work men edrployed in every department of the manufacture of marine engines, there is not one who cannot make •coniplete drawings for,every part of the work. The iEnglish Islands can present no such instance of educated and scientific skill. If Ikrough out France, ' Prussia, Belginm, 'Ger many and Switierland, the ..visitor at all the great centres of manufacture; whether in the metals, in chemistry, in* , the textile: fabrics br in mining, is astonished to dig—. cover that a large per ceidage; of the com tnon workmen whom he sees, have been • thoroughly instructed by a two, three or five years' course of study in the public Aciehtific Schools,i . and that their daily labor becomes' not only ,skillful but successful, because it comprehends and can explain results by 'principles', and is alwaya intelli gently. guided, toward the largest and highest product, by the applied science which the • education .of the workman has made his highest qualification for. productive labor, ; and which bears its legitimate fruit in the superior value of the product itself. It la needless, in this connection, to re capitulate the statistics of Scientific Popular InstructiOn among tife Continental nations, as comparcd with the operative classes , of, England. ' It is enough to say that this in-• stntlction has been systematically recognized. as of national duty or policy on one(side of' the Channel, and as generally neglected on the other. The'natural..•Consequence is that the superior repute. of 'English mantifac- tures has given place .in the woild's mar- I, kets to, thejtreater merit of the foreign pro ductions, and the decline, not only compara tiie, but in( some respects real, of BritA industry, has awakened among her states men and thinkers a feeling of profound alarm. They see clearly, not only the dan ger, bit its causeand its cure, and the most direct, speediest and Most effective method of engrafting Science upOn Labor, and thereby eleiatin,g the English , eperative classes into the higher plane of their COn tinental rivals, is a question which engages, at this moment, the closest attention of leading English minds. • The facts to which we have alluded, and the inferences which they warrant; touch ing the vital importance of Applied Science to the successful competitions of Labor, have a powerful bearing.upon thesolid, per manent interests and dlte future welfare 'of Americans as a' manufacturing pcople. In that relation, we Wall recur to this topic again THE Permsylvania MilitarY Academy, at Chester, under the accomplished superin tendence of Col. THEODORE HYATT, with a large and varied staff of instruction, has, we are gratified to learn, become a fixed and prosperous institution of the State. Its marked success during , thei past year afferds a flattering augury for the' future, and most deservedly. A military, scientific and classical education is here given to our own youth, and within ou t r own borders, at a moderate cost, and we therefore commend this Academy to the kindly regards of all . our readers within the Commo,nwealth. THE BOLTING GERMAN DEMOCRACY. Another Broadside Against Seymour, Blair and Revolution—Plain Talk from a "free.; born Dutchman"—Soniething fur every German to Read. We printed, a feW days since, the signifi cant and 'powerful article with which the Zanesville Germania, always Iteretofore Democratic journal, repudiated the SRI% .10tiR and BLAIR. ticket and platform, as an infamous fraud upon the free-born German Democrats of the North. For this exercise of his freedom of.opinion, the editor of that journal was so grossly assailed by a K. K. K. print at Zanesyilleahat he retorts with the following card in the Courier. • It affords good evidence that .neither "the Dutchmen of Mtnikingum" or elsewhere are to be "hitched tO the chariots" of SEvstounland BLAtR. Read : The Muskingum' County Democracy blames our brother editor, Mr. Irvine, of the Signal, very much, for hot having given us better leisons in the K. K. K. Democriacy, and kept us under better control in .political .views, in order that the Germania ,alight hitchthe Dutcfunen of Muskingum tO the chariot of Seymour, and the old and new Democratic genius Mr. F. P. Blair. We beg the Democrats to excuse Mr. Irvine very much, because he was absent when we cut. .loos from the New York Company, not from the principles of real Union Democra cy, and to we the -editor and candidate, because we are a free born' putchman and have imbibed these sacred- principles oephil osophy, that a man as a being divinely gift ed with reason,/ intellC s t irnd free should make use of tliC same in all quers lions, arisin , b either in, politics, religion or science, and that he 9.houltl search into all, judge . iinnartially, ainl hold the best, that'if -his action should be a reasonable and human one, (artist humanns rationabais) he IS bound to judge for himself, and that he not blindly follow others, or the great xrowd. • Reason teaches us that' partles, as human: . societies, are liable to err,' and experience, and history teaches us that' these, especially at an age of much dishonesty and corruption, are to be taken ,Tery careinlly, and their candidates closely, scrutinized (?) after their former hiStory. • To the objection ,ot inconsistency which the Democrats throw up against us, w.e beg - leave to say: • ,If the Demoorats wish.a man always to. stick to the party he hitherto belonged to, 'i they might have the coroisteney to ) sweep -first before _their own door, anil kick out, their repeatedly fence lumping candidate for Vice President, F.Blair, and many other leading Democrats, refugees front the Re 'publican party. The Democrats will hold . us, therefore,.excused of inconsistency. . We are considered faithless, 'a traitor to party and principles. In this regard we ask the Democracy: - !- .„I.st. Whether they iieffnit us the exercise of an independent judgment, or whether -theywant party slavt , ii?: f2d. Whether a Man is not bound to leave a company which he sees is, getting Corrupt or leading into bad ways, and we 'ask 3d. Whether the Democratic party proved ' itself at the New York Convention t onv,er tell or eradicated from the: secesh or whether this element Was not thereAn full three and glory. as Gov. Wise announc ed at Richmond:. "The . Fotirth of July in New York is the day which would gain the friends that the rebellion could not gain ?" : and we • • 4th. Whether it is not the right kind of traitorship, to leave the flag hpiated by For- • mat, the guerrilla General, by •Vallandig- htuu and Mr. Wash 3FLean, and to join the • army of Grant, who i la proclaimed by histo ry the Sayiour of the American lii public.? 1 - Whether it.is treacherous or meanto eon- i fide in that Patriotie,upright, straighttbrward ' and horiest•minded General who:Se hands to kiss every child thought itself happy, at the close of the war—or to trust the t uture of I the country tO those In connection or co- 1 operation with our enemies?" To trust to the candidates - that desire --• "peace," or to the one : who thirsts for ",war?" To the commonly usetl r Deinneratic Charge of bribery wit simply request the Deinoc racy, not to judge us by themselves, he- cause their delegates got their pockets filled at New York and sold themselves; (See La 'Crosse-Democrat, anti Cincinnati En- I gairer of tith-and 6th of July.) We belieiT• it requires no bribery for a war Demberat as we always Cousidered ourselves, to repudiate that conveuthin. Was General Sherman suddenly. bribed be cause he, a Democrat, declared for Grapt . against thq New York ticket, or-is Chase bribed because lie like-we declares, there was no hope tbr the victory .of the Democrat ticket. It is no miracle nor does require lnibery, if an honest thinking: iDrinoorot prefers Gran't with Union Denloti atic prin t • ciPles to a man who doesnotenjOy•the con, fidence ot the land. These are our political principles which we think areteitta enough,' Mr. Irvine: of course not sefiied ha the wooi;died -Democrats used . toi ei*: • "My father orpranillather was a Democrat. I am' . a Democrat, have: born one and with the hope of the Lord shall be one all my tile time." Our principle is: Leave the -party It you think -it is wrong and go:to tite party which aims cut right; never pledge yourself to atty party, because it may tctt.•• Stich aro the. principles of a tree an and ciple M. not of a blind partizan or of one who iron. der obligation or , pledged to a partY. The interest we earned from the free ex pression of our upright view on the New- York ticket is: Persecution from 'rustics, prospects of a Seymour mob and the losrof snbscribers, of those who not relying upon their own mind were afraid of learnin g different views, and Of being lifted above their."Westbotc or Volkstriend." - Here it is proper to remark that Repub cans are more patriotic and penetrated'bi their principles so as to give -a generous slip.; port to the newspapers, these - great instru.. ments for the cultivation olthe.intelligenee" of the people, than the Democrats. We Contess ourselves the Gertnavia never. ;:tte:mpted to work for a party; never put up party4icket and neverspae in apassiona.:l hle - toneof the parties - .It seems the Denes-1 crate : think that only such papers have ef-: feet which make it their profession to sitoef, with the poisonous arrows of misrepreseit-:' tations, slanders and personal attacks. We alSo conteas and ,believe, that the names or Seymour and Blair on the Democratic - ticket . will work far more powerfully to the defeat, of the Democrats than our humhle the Germania. Sc4entitr sat.. Taxable. in the..:. , 'Cityitepresentation ht : Coinmon Council.. Returns from all but two 3, varOs, the 1 Thirteenth andyourteenth, of the number • of taxahle inhabitants were received at the Controller's inlice last evening.. All wilt °; be received in time . for.the Committee haw; ingthe.' matter in hand to determine the number of representatives in 'Common Council_ to which each ward is entitled, .1 , and report to the adjourned meetingof Councils on Ficiday. Following are the?. returns so far received : Wards. First Seeond Third-. late 'Tenth Fos rib Lde Third Sixth. late Eighth Seventh, late first precinct Sixtbi.. F:lghtb, late second precinct Ninth. late tirst prechigt Tenth, late second precinct f Eleventh, late seventh Twelfth, late Ninth Thirteenth, late Pitt Fourtc•„nth. late Oakland Fifteenth, late first precinct Lawrenceville..... Sixteenth, late Blooindeld 410 Seventeen, h, late second precinct Lawrenceville 781 Eighteenth, late,lower part of Cohins 209 Nineteenth, center of Collins 433 frwentletb, center of Liberty 407 Twenty-first. )ate part of Collin• Twents--secaid. part of Liberty and Peebles.-- Twenty-third, late Peeples 264 —From . the above figures, and estimating the two diihrictsnoi yet heard from-to each have three hundred taxables, we have a total of 16,735 taxables in the city, which, according to a rough calculation we havh made, will give ;the following representa tion in Common',Council Wards. , 1 Wards '.•• 4 , Thirteenth :.. 4.Fourteenth...... .;.. 3, Fifteenth, ...... . .1. 3!•,lxteel.th .... 4;Seventetrith..... ... 31F ighteentb ... Ninetrenth ... 3iTwentleth ... 2 Twenty-fir.,t .... ... 4 'l'vrenty-second. ... 3 Twenty-third... .. 6 First.... :•econd.. Thfrt... Fourth". Fir ' 4 l\ . Seventh: Tenth.... Eleventh Twelfth . .1 The number of Councilmen is fixed; by ! law at sixty; and the ratio from the figures: received and estimates is one council Man to tw•o hundred and seventy-nine taxable& Three of the wards have returned a less 1 number, but the consolidation act provides that each district shall have at least one rep - t reseutative in CoMmon Council. • ---G. W. Childs, of the Philadelphial Ledger : has contributed $l,OOO to the relief., of the sufferers by the recent flood at Bal timore and vicinity. IS .YOUR DISEASE RHEUMATISM Many persons, enpposlng they are suffering from this di..exee, have aprlied Linaments. Plasters aud other Llffieumatieltemedies without obtaining any relief, a ben . lo fact the cause of palms a derange ment of the Kidneys. ( These are small organs. but very Importalt; and any obstruction or interference with it, function's arc Indicated by path In the back and loin,. languor and weakness, difficulty in avoid ing and urnatural color of the urine; A Diuretic should t once be resorted to. . DR. SARGEIiT'S Liuretic or Backache Pills • Can be reliCd on for there purposes;.they hare a direct irilluence on the cells of the kidneys, - masts nature In relterini 'them co any foreign ,partfclee, and atimulates the to a healthy and vigorous ac tion - • Dr. Sargent's Backache POls Contain nothing. Ininlflons, being composed of en tirely vegetable remekdles; they oo not ~ , lcken nor gripe—on the eontrarr 'they set as a gentle tonic and restores tone to the system', 'Vhey ire recommended by all who AVb , , liase tried. them.... Price 50 COntet7'Periliox. FUR SIeLES:I7.I3II.titiGISI'S. Sole progrlettiA GEOROE A. VELT,Y, Wholeside 'llruggist, 37 wpon STREET, PITTSBURGII. ' SWINGING ROUND . TIILI'CIRCLE. There arc. fifty WaYs of, alleviating the agonies of dYsllensla for the moment: hut there is only one way to CURE it.._ After "swinging round the circle" of ti inp..ark palliatives the patlent finds that the diyase, en fir from being shinnied. has,. Actually- I . gatheied strength, while lie lihs beeh parleS lug with its symptoms. 'file only way to c •t ri , d +the demon 13 to endow the stomata, sufficient s.rench iv cart it out • and keep it out. Impart mirmanent energy to the organs with IIOaTETTEIt'S 111.1. r It-, and 'the object is ace mplistied. This' I , ov.rernil vegetable ri tardy Is not a mere stimulant: It does not 11-ace cp the gast"ic mac; niery for-aft ..hour or tW .L ia, .leaying it, when the temporary ex- - citement has passed off, In a worse state - tit:7ft bey fore. Suelt fe the effect of the ordinary alcoholiC nostrians...,lh4 keep the stounteh in a perpetual it iefe-sawibetween unnatural setivlty and IICItr relax" • • ation. Not so the li,TTEIIS. !dedicated with the finest tonic, al erative and anti-bilious extracts, r they permanently ieint•rce and eantinnonsly rezu- Intel he asAintioting organs Such Is he ea perienee of tens ot. tli , u.auds. At this debilitating seasoner the l ear, when the solvent prineithe ot gasirle i juice Is weakened by a constant dram 0' the anunal throu'gla "the pores, 1105 E i sTO2I- .. ACll lIIT an art icle of prime necessity for -, the weal,' l'o the ,rse of a tote e 3110 worry o i ICyt, so won ovriell) • . tlic,ictilitz, and , 1 11 . 1 11 , 11.-11 , 11 - 1II:i leas Is simply fo-e:o the blessing - 01 nealth and • vigor. and y °lowa: Ily • accept - feebioness and die ' control tin tiiiiir stead. cetsilu,A. N=lZE== ursn and cliseltee, for`'.; w bleb I CALO'.I TO eou.•ult )I,IT z;ooit: l IpT In Januar), . You A - 1U . relnellibcr that ~l 11;.1 1..“1npue..311012. of althe:o , es, uvtitCh ituafy rued lo a irrrihir Iktu "Wet?' I bad taoka.advibtot t4i-, 4 .61 50.,t0," guy comic' or a he ra+sttig ettuteit,;,..ettltt it , Zai. feared / ,utignt faitra it toll Illy 1 , 111,/..e. /ktievr that tltpeed lair nitnte.of treating on-ea.,'like n.tiut by'., co t t opt. rat to a, w h nth. I r tlUcettlo,l - 111 111, nll, Would ( tIZ.t.tINOIT thfouV tht' lige i!St'liOlile . . Otrkl'r Vital 00...411.u n 21'PretLij.,1 . i 1 . 1,1‘ . 91111,19114C9a,01 , ihe'otre k diw.:harge, NV6 l, :h I hottleV,l IV.D I II Hittite, :•:4. CO Icet rid of .;11111t 111;:Htfl/ the systela. • ••': I ree k l perfectly titea vitur tuethod Of treat.; "..1 nt, purlryiti,; Ilte. syste:ll, and focal m.pileationi t th- a I.IM. utuat .;crc, l F gityl Mpg could, ( , `ltboateondnA'. , wndett I . llnn dtd, and I ant happy - t to rt Wirt tnyself we'l tn only part!.erplar, u•in.!rc:us.! 0-1.te , 1.- hr iOI, t hac' I . hrtve,i - I,o,tia . r scats: & ..."4111 ti 11'4 /11:11:11.3,11‘.1 . 1.1 ttjt wrtr it 0, /Al 11-s 111*.lis - fp 11.1 thr ,•„Itt rt.A.14,1 & n•i1..., t , liny,_ , t 'l's' !coom's r EN N , „ • . 1 14,4,11 lA. t . .. IT 9 a. A NM • CL Ao:NoLx, Editor Germania. --.T; Ta.ra6kt ;: ... , ... I,lfX ....... 121 ........ I,o=- 1,411 3,001 943 662 .......1,067 ....... 915 ....... 1,631 .... i r .... 1 i ISE