ID ttt IlittslpttLt. Gattts: „,„, , _ PUBLUMEDI 'DAILY, BY REED Propristois. B. PENNIBIAIi t -* T. P. HOUSTON, W. REED. Editors and iioprietors. • OFFICE: GAZETTE BUILDING, NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER iOf Pittaltntlati Allegheny and All.gheny ' " • County. Ternut•Daihi.. Semi- weedy . Weekly. 'One year • , ne year...Z.so Single co py — 4 11.50 One month . . ' 7581 x mos.. 1.50 5 copies, each. 1.2.5 By the week., 15 Three mos 75 10 ••• ` • 1.0 (from earrler.) —and one to Agtnt. THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1889. National. Union Republican Ticket. PTATIONAI TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT• ULYSSES S. GRANT. FOR VICE PRESIDENT SCHUYLER COLFAX. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. . 1 AT LARGE. G. 31ORRISON COATES. of Philadelphli.; .. TIIOS! DIA:RSIIALL, of I'lttaburgh. DOtrfct. 1. W. H. BARNES, IS: SAmirra, SNOW, W. J. POLLoCK, li. R. F. WHGONSELLE. 3. RICHARD IirILDKT. 15. CHAS. H. 51ILLEn.„ 4. G. W. Wm.. • 15. GEORGE W. ELMEO; 5. WATSON P. IIICGILL, il7. JWIN STEWART, 0, J. H. REINGIIURST, 111. A. U. OLMSTEAD, • 7. FRANK C. HEATON, 119. ' JAMES SILL, & ISAAC ECKERT, la/. H. C. JOHNSON, • 9. ARnaus 11001.50, - ,21. J..S. EwHaa, • 10. DAVID BI.RAND, Wm. FREW, ELWM. DAVIS, - 123. A. W. CRAWFORD, W. W. KETCHUM, 24. J. S. RUTAN. sTA,r - v. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL OF FENNIA JOHN F. HAWFBANIT. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL OF PENN I 'A. JACOB M. CAMPBELL. ; - CO NTF 24XC 7 -17.T. O. HESS, 22D pISTRICT. - • • AMES B. NEGLEY. 'l, CONGRESS, 23D DISTRICT. , THOMAS WILLIAMS, usubiece to the decision, or the Conferees of the District.) ' • 'DISTRICT ATTORNYY. ' • • A. L. PEARSON. ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY. B. FLACK, JAMES L. GRAHAM. • GEORGE WILSON' GF.O. F. MORGAN, JANTF'S TAYLOR.. :X.'S. HUMPHREYS.. VINCENT .tdILLER, ' - ' ' • SAMUEL . . 1, CONTROLLER. HENRYz LAMBERT. , . - cosisGssronan. JONATHAN NEELY. • SEIWEYOR. H. L.,.McCULLY. : • corm - Tr-dos:cr. *macron. J. G.-MURRAY. • Headquartera Republican County Com mittee, City Hall, Market Street. Open every day. County Committee meets every Wednesday, at 2 P. M. WE PRINT On, the inside pa , ges of this morning's - G AZETTE _—Se,cond page : Origi nal Poetry, entitled "The Aged Styanger;" Letter, from Sveisshelm Concerning Chief ) Justice- Chase; The Lehigh Freshet; Horses, in Battle; Ozone, 5-e. Third and BiztTr pagei:l ( inance and Trade; Home and %Foreign Icarkets; River News, 6'c. Sev enth page: The Edit.rial Excursion—Letter' from Our SPecial.Correspondent. GOLD elo l ed yeaterdtty in New York a A PUBLIC MEETING, in furtherance - of the Monongahela Valley Railroad, will be held at Monongahela City on the 15th of, August Tnz lirasat'S STnran,,in the anthracite • counties, is pretty much ended, the men being paidby the hour instead of the day: TEE PitE,SIDENT has discovered another . reason fornotapproving the Funding Bill 'which is, that it' does not harmonize with the Tammany Hall platform , Upon the same ground, if he had occasion to act offi cially in the premises,he would doubtless set aside the Ten Commandments. ' THE CHOLEMA having made its appear ancciiri New:York, the Board of Health of that city are taking ;vigorous measures' to prevent the disease from spreading, by abating the predisposing causes. It ie hardly prbtable, in view of the precautions used that the malady will become epidemic.. A. few mild cases of cholera would be a de cided benefii- to Piltsburgh, prodded thq authorities should be induced thereby to' put the city ihas fair a col9tiou of cleanliness akthe case reasonably admits of. .- TKO. DEMgcRATB ara doings famous bus Imes in bragging of the success their nomi. nees will have, at the October, lection: r As this is the only chance they will have to get their bragging in, we are not inclined to deal harshly with them for their' weakness.: - Yesterdiir the . Post ,intinUited that Mr. Pr= ate, of Armstrong county, would be the Democratic candidate-for Congresit in the.TwentyAblrdDistrict," and boasted he would easy Armstrong 'county: That was compamgyply, pxodest. , ._ -Why not Ur 'agsin,,and make certain , to:carry the district ? just - ail, easy, and quite as probable , • , - , ; •, -WE runtzsuEn, yesterday, 9 order ,of the President, relieving the Teconstractdd States from, military supervision. This is in conformity with laws"enacted b 3, Con gress'for the regulation 'of this Matter. Gen. anent I ssue d simi r lar orders, touch , ing the States respectively tte fast as the new State Governments were established. TheTresidcnt's ordei does not , recall the military from `the rpconstructed J3tates, ai reported by yinshington..coriespondenta. There is no.rocre reason why .all-ftoops: be : withdrawn from: Britith Caro lina than from Pennsy l vania. , Tills order 4iffectually disposes of , the out cry, hitherto set up bttlie Democrats, that the Southern, States are controlled' by 'a mil- itary despotisp.. .All-but three. or four of: , them 14e entirely delivered from military anpervildon, and those three or four will be as soon ! as .tikey• comply / with the reconatruc. lion la, The Republitans of Pittsburgh, Alle ghenymand adjacent muricinallties will be pleased with'• the announcement that the Hon. J. A. Brtiorram, of Ohio, will address a public meeting TO-NIGHT, at the City Hall, 'upon the issues presented to the American people for solution at the Presideniial elec- tion. No abler, or more eloquent, or more- honored champion of Republican principles exists than he is. Of rare sagacity, of ripe perlenc.e, of infallible instincts, of unshrink mg cotrage, of unqueStioned fidelity, he is one of\ the few public men : who always grasp the essential points on-whieb a great -Controversy necess9rily turns, and analyze them with a certainty leaving nothing futither to be desired. %et,' there be a spontaneous' and grand co'n.vocation to welcome him THE SCIENTIFIC ELEVATION OF LABOR—HOW IT CONCERNS PITTS BURGH: Had we not all sinnedy ADAM'S fall, would man be more happy in hia ignor ance of,that vast fund' of knowledge which the race has accumulated in its silty cen turies of submission to the first sentence i of Divine Wrath? Philosophers may spec- ' ulate upon his condition as he - would now have been, without the original or any sub sequent transgression, and may institute' curious comparisons, between the Para disaical simplicity of the myriad 'descend ants of a sinless ADA.M, swarming over the ylimet in that : state of unsophisticated, art less and lovely Nature which our first par ents forfeited, and the present ; state of the face, socially and , intellectually, resulting from the great obligation ,of Labor for Bread. Let us leave such speculationato the i philosophers, not even disputing their unanimous deduction that the curse was really a blessing 'in disguise. It is enough for us to know that, Labor is made the first duty of man, as it ;is of the first necessity to individual or social existence.' With the need forlabor, came the instinct for its guid ance in the method most effective .of results. ADAM'S first efforts in that direction, even under an eight-hour system, would natur ally have led him to some advance beyond mere main strength and ignorance. As an intelligent being, he probably ; made some sort of use of his, inventive faculties, before the first sun-set, and thereby illustrated the dignity and intellectual phases 'of Labor, even while the personal memories of Eden were still fresh, 4d from that day on- Ward, through all these thousands of years, theinultiPlying children of the earth have studied the intellectual problem Which should give to , LaliOr its largest results at the smallest cost. • The rights of Labor depend upon an intel ligent understanding of its objects and its proper results.• The dignity of Labor is, quiy comprehended in the remembrance that it is a necessity incumbent upon all the race. And the elevation of, Labor can only be accomplished by the clear perception of the equal need for - its intelligent guidance. The hands avail as the brain directs them; and Labor is effective exactly in proportion as Science shall lead it to a maximum of re sults with a minimum of expenditure. The world has made vast progress in that direc tion—progress ao great that it begins fairly to f-p Coinprehend, the illimitable magnitude of 'the field oractical discovery upon which .it has but post entered. Science draws each day nearer to Art; and Labor rises, by 'slow but sure degrees; ' as it responds to the, instruCtion 'of the hrain, towards its Ifeaveu-ordained rank as the duty, the safe ty and the hope of mankind. In the pro gress of the world, the co-relations of scien tific knowledge and.the !power of the mere animal man become more. intimate, and more essentially an element in national as wellss individual developmgit. We hold it therefore to be the highest 'obligation of a wise and well-ordered goveritment that it should provide its people with Scientific and technical instruction, exhausting therefor the entire field of practical knoWledge. To 'Americana this obligation should address it self with peculiar. power. We li - ave entered into the /rivalry of nations, with ad vantages 'and disadvantages' specially re sulting from our political and social 'characteristics, i as' well as from our location ; on this iluarter • of the planet. With institutions essentially antagonistic to any others t in Christendom, our statesmen perceive that the - material and the political indePendence of the Republic depend upon the same conditions, and are not independent of each other. Our climate, soil andminer al resources supply us with every natural element of superiority. Our people rAand in the first rank' of Christian - enlighten.' ment and Scientific knowledge. We have nearly forty milliops of human beings, whose' material needs are to be, supplied with the yroducts of labor in every depart ment-of manufacture. Agricultdre and manufactures meat feed and clothe them. Art, in all its varigty of form; must supply the 'Wants; the superflUities as well as, the necesities, of an enlightened, wealthy and luxury-loving,people. Why should we not create all that we ourselves are to consume? Why should we be dependent upon other, 'nations for these ifroducts which are regard; less of the zones, and which 4therican Labor hasi all the natural ability to yield ? Why shonlihwe need to look-to Europe for cloths 'or metala; or', chemicals; or Machinery, or ought else, better, or cheaper than our own artizans can produce in our midst ? - ;Why shoUld we need tariffs, for the.protection of our own dearer or less skilled labor against the destructive competition•of cheaper Or better -workmen abioad ? Why is that • - foreign :labor cheaper or 'better, that it should thus threateathe existence of Ameri , can Labor upon American soil ? It is not enough to reply that the , denser. populations of taeold world. have cheapened the wages of eich pair of hands. , There is soinetbing in that, but by no means all. It IS Dotage to deny, that ; the products Of En glish forges or French and Swiss lame are 1!,; !! THE TURN-OUT TO-NIGHT PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : THURSDAY, TULY 30, 1868. superior to til l ttT °wit: For it mast he a::ml te!1 to bt'l Itrue that, in nearly , erl• line of the,higher walks of Productiie Ar#, the foreign and especially the Continental manufacturer either attains an absolutely higher grade of production, or, for the same price, he can deliver a bitter article upon our shores. There are exceptions, which might be specified, but the general, truth is as stated. - Our workmen are, in Some respects, far more intellirrent than-those of Europe. In general education, in comprehension of po litical truths, in every department of knowl edge, except some of the specialties Of La bor, the American artizan is frilly ur to the' lieSt standard of an enlightened citizenship. Our inventions fill the workshops, the armo ries, the palaces and the cottages of Christen dom, but it is too often true that the Amer ican brain has profited the foreign hand more than , our own, and the English or the French manufacturer undersells our markets with goods upon which an American patent was first stamped. And since this is so, there exist abundant' reasons, in a sound pu lie policy, why our 'Home Industry, co peting at any disadvantage, should be fo:tered and protected by such discriminat in. imposts as shall equalize the respective co ditions. I , he triumphs of American production, , he sposition pf last year at Paris, were y fekv. Such as-were there were very, idedi. Not all the world could present , the equals of our locomotives, sewing ma chines and pianos. But the triumphs of American genius, wrought out by the AV plied Science of European nations, were found in every department which displayed the productions of a civilized people. With an inventive capacity which rivaled that of the English,. and with a perfection of detail which in a few instances far exceeded the cunning of English handiwork, we as well as they were completely eclipsed in the field of Technical Knowledga and Practical Science, by the'superior adroitness, .fidelity and instructed skill of the French and Ger man workmen. The inferiority; as:_an en tire class, of the American as well as the English contributions to that display was painfully recognized by all who spoke the Anglo-Saxon tongue, while the Amer ican visitors were but "partially recon ciled in perceiving that more than one triumph of our rivals had been won by their more successful practical applica tion of our own discoveries in mechanism. his not remarkable therefore that the Eng lish and American jurors and visitors - drew the one and only inference that the case ad mitted of; they accepted the indubitable proof before them, that in the familiar adapta tion of scientific knowledge to the, various processes ot-operative industry, the nations of the European continent were far in ad vance of any profitable competition: The enquirruaturally suggested was as easily answered. France, Belgium, Germa ny and Switzerland abound with Scientific Schools :for technical instruction, which i yearly send out their thousands of worn- 1 plished workmen, of whom a very large proportion bennmn enrolled at once in the great body of the operative etazq. In due time, the ranks of the overseers, foremen, managers and proprietors are recruited from these workmen, who, in whatever grade of employment; know precisely how effectually Science is an aid to Productive Art. The apprentice of a twelve-month does not aspire to the skilled workman's, place, nor doea the artizan, familiar with one specialty; for that reason hold himself acquainted with all others. As a Glaris, the foreign workmen are faithfully, patiently and thoroughly instructed, and, to a very great extent, scientifically as well as practi cally trained, Herein is'seen the deficiency of American Labor. We need the better, the thorough instruction of our operative classes. We shotild enable them to enlarge their scientific knowledge of principles. We need Scien- , title. Schools, which at a small cost,shall give practical instruction in the higher walks of , ` Art ; 'Schoela which shall acquaint the 1 pupil with material properties, asswell as uses; which shall teach him why the given result, is, obtained, is well as .to secure that result most certainly and profitably. We n, need to educate Labor into the mastery of practical science, and to the com and of the favorable conditiOns which knowledge can impart. And American Labor so instructed will find itself qualified for successful com petition with any foreign skill, and may ulti mately come to dispute the home-markets of those nations which now supply our con sumption. These suggestions seem to us to apply with peculiar force to the interests of Labor in our city of Pittsburgh. Over all this brosui continent, there appears no spot where Opeiative Industry and Productive Art are so actively concentrated. Here ,Manufac ture floats its, broadsombre flag over almost every•known department of iandicmft, and the rights, .the dignity and 'the duty of La bor are questions which come home to every class of our citizens. Here, with. peculiar fitness • and success, might he illustrated the ~of Technical and Scientific Educa tion. A School of Alta and Mines, estab lished in this city, and instructing its pupils thorougidy, and. at a cost no greater than is involved in the other common or public ichools, seems to tis not - only of special necessity, but as promising to be of. re markable adiantage to our material in: tercets. The' work and the workmen of Pittsburgh would• then take a• still higher rank,; and would continue, ' e future generations, to maintain, against all rivalries,' the manufacturing repute of our -people. With such 'peculiar facilities ' for the application.of Science to Production, a systematic scheme, of instruetio might easily be inaugurated, and, In due time, its results would be reaped in profit an hundred Tell Why should, not our Western Uni versity, already equipped as It IT, be sup -plied with the neediul additions to , its staff, ferthis 'end ? Aud how easy it would be for the intelligence and, wealth .of a city like Pittsburgh to supply the means requisite to ensure the perpetuall_on, through this chart nel, of a still more decided pre-eminence In matitifadttring skill 1 • . TSE IMIIRTEENTII The ratification of the Fourteenth A.Mend ment of the Constitution by the Legislature of Georgia completes the incorporation thereof into the fundamental law, even ac counting as valid the withdrawal - of assent by Ohio and NeW Jersey. Consequently the Secretary of State has issued another and unconditional notification of the acceptance of the amendment. Unless, therefore, the Democrats are pre pared to resort to revolutionary violence, as suggested by BLAIR, Emma, Too Mas, and many of . their le ding newspapers, the es tablishment of bl k suffrage in the seced ing States must e regarded as . final; as, ilso; the deducti n of the black population from the whole number 'of the inhabitants of all the other States in hereafter determin ing representation in Congress and the Elec toral Colleges.' Under this latter provision, Maryland and Tennessee will each lose one member of Congress and one elector after 1870, , unless they shall enfranchise their colored people. If the blacks are not -al lowed to vote f r themselves, it is clear that nobody ought to be permitted to vote in their stead and against their consent. , pennsylvan* . has shout sixty thousand black inhabits ts; not ), enough to diminish her represent ion unless a large fraction shall become a mriterial element in the com putation- Nearly one-half of this:; black population is in Philadelphia. Chester Washington county has 6,100, LancaSter 4,000, Alle gheny-3,000, 2,000, and York 1;500. .The r_esidue are scattered thinly throughout the State. If these- blacks ilibuld be admitted to the right of suffrage 'the aggregate vote of the Commonwealth would be increased about twelve thousand. In the present condition of popular opinion this increase will not be4ermitted. .~i ~ T he Bloated Bondholders:, The Hon. Am6sa Walker, in an article upon the of the Bondholders," in Lippincott's Magazine for August, after enumerating the various classes which would suffer by repudiation, says: "The Savings - Banks have, from the first to the present time, invested largely in the National bonds. All the interest they have received upon loans made .before the war, which, according to the terms of payment, should have been paid in gold, or in paper on a par with gold, have been paid in green backs, which they were compelled by law to take; and, to a large extent, they hays in vested these in the public stocky, as also the deposits made with them from time to time, amounting to many millions, and belonging In a great degreeto the poorer classes, who, as we have seen, were certainly not 'bloat red,' if indeed they were not horribly de pleted by, the issue of legal tenders. Are they not, then, entitled to full payment? Did they not pay what to them was the equivalent ? Will they be unduly 'enriched at the expense of the nation,' if they receive gold for what to them had stand for gold, and which; perhaps, they received, under legal compulsion, for actual gold? These institutions must hold over one hnndred millions of dollars in United States bonds. "The collegestuad other literary and sci entific institutions of the country, too, have funds consisting largely of Government bonds. Upon the income from. those they - rely to eke out the small "Salaries- of their professors or teachers. So, also, of the hospitals and other public charities, 4ecular and sacred, of every name and description —all are alike dependent on the faith of the "31Any persons engaged iu the trade an manufactures of the country made largi profits by. the advance of commodities in their possession, and by the enhanced profits' they were able to obtain in consequence of the pressing demand occasioned by the war. They took great risks; they threw them selves into the turbulent and perilous Cur rent, and were successful. Such has always been th 6 case, at all times and in all coun tries, wheneyer the general industry became disturbed .by military operations. This class of. persons doubtless hold a share of the Federal bonds, but upon what principle of justice can their claims be regarded as defective?" TEIE New York correspondent of the Chicago Jotifta/ writes : On Thursday night, after the Democratic nominations were made, Frank P. Weir met the repreeentatives of the great un washed at a "blow oat" at a private resi dence up town, where they reveled and held high carnival until nearly morning. What the character of those present were you can infer from a few of the names that I give you : Clement L. Vallandigham; the Ohio martyr; Hon. Ben. Wood, the New York lottery policy dealer, and editor and proi priror of that infamous dirty sheet, the Even ing News, and Senator Bradley. These are the syle of men with whom this apostate Blair now makes his political bedl The Democrats account for their ratifica tion fizzles by saying "it is all .'owing to Frank Blair ; he has, taken the stiffenin' out of them." • Cob, ISRAEL PAINTER, a well known an prominent Democrat of Westmorelarid coun ty, Pa., (John Covode's district) and a-for mer personal friend of Mr, Stanton, relates the following incident in the career of Gen. Grant: I was sitting in Stanton's office one day just after the news earhe of the battle of t3biloh, no one then being - present, when Stanton turned to me, holding in his hand Grant's very modest dispatch. "Read that said he. After I had, read it ,he said: "I have a great mind to send -in his name for Major General, what doyen think?" "Be- eider," he added, "I knowthe liftle man—l knew him when he was a boyin Ohio and/ know he can be relied upon . " I assented, and the name was sent in, and, before I closed my business with Stantok -the,com mission came back duly signed. ; All old gentleman in Michigan; who served in the war of 1815, and also in the Mexican war, called a day or two since to receive the payment of bounty for,two ions he had given to the country in the late war, and voluntarily in the presence of two or, three persons made the statement that he was, nearly eighty years old, had never yet voted any ticket but the Democratic; fhat he had served in twowars; had;given two ions to the late war, but God forbid," said the old man, as the tears,` came into his eyes; "that what will' In all probability be my last vote - should be cast for men who have always opposed , the interests that I ve fought for, and for which my two only "..nsweregiven." •• • MET , had -a Democratie pow-waW lfl Kansas City the other night, during which an honest lrishnian mOnnted a counter. and rolling up his sleeves, remarked : " D—n Frank Blair.," They tried to' pull him down,' hat he continued : U Whin' I first came to the town, me'n the CassidYs ,was the only Dimmecrats, but now every spiul peen that's kicked - out•ur the presence uv decent people comes to us for ettppott. Blair's played out." Here the speaker was squelched by . 6 ,btudtWbstaker, =NE "Altadical Speee4 by a GeorjOigh tgtlati* Coitesiandencs or the Cincinnati Com mercial.t The Hon. James L. S eward, resides at Thomasville, in southern. Georgia,. but a few miles from the Florida line. He is known in all that country called In Georgia the Wire Grass Region, and possesses great influence. He has been in the Congress of the United States, and in 1858 beat General Bartow (killed on the rebel side at. first Bull Run) for that office. He is a thorough Georgian, a man of great popularity 'and superior social position. Mr. Seward addressed the people at At lanta yesterday evening, and had the Hall of Representatives crowded to heat him. The manner and bearing of the audience was, in striking contrast with that addressed by Toombs. All present . were struck with the difference. Mr. Seward speaks with great energy and vehemence, and, from the manner in which all hung upon his words, it s was evident that his opinions are sought fiir with eagerness. He opened somewhat thus: - FELLOW CITIZENS,: I appear before you as a Georgian to speak to Georgians; to ad dress you-on the ureatquestions before the country. I desire to wound the feeling of no one. = I wish to address your 'reason, and not- your passions. Do you know that you are upon the eve of a revo lution? I tell you it is so. I was the Charleston Convention when the late revo lution was inaugurated. I opposed seces sion then, and was denounced for it. What is the result? To-day we are 1 the poorest people in the world. If Generals Toombs and Cobb made so sad a mistake then, I. warn you not to follow them now. You followed them through four years of bloody war, which has left the country filled with widows and-orphans, deprived of - means of support, and our people a conquered and oppressed race. But I forgive them, and will not say that they were not patriotic; but they made a mistake. While at WaSh ington, in 1861, they were continually'send ing telegraphic despatches advising Georgia to secede. I don't charge them with crime, but I do say they made a sad mistake then, and are unsafe leaders now. Public liberty is lost, and how shall, we regain it?, We are a conquered people, a`nd must accept such terms as the conquerpr dictates. assert that Andrew Johnson put worse tettusupon us than the Radical party him ever imposed. He appointed a Provisional Gowernor; a convention was called; the ordinance of se cession twinned; a Legislature and State government provided for; and what follow ed? Why, Andrew Johnson actually re quired, at the point of the bayonet, that we should abolish slaiery, after it had been abolished by military power and the proc lamation of the President. The reconstruction acts of Congress were not the first terms submitted to the people of the South. We rejected the first and more liberal terms submitted to us, thus showing a spirit of opposition to the government. The reason why these reconstruction laws were imposed upon us was that the North ern people belioyed that the. Southern lead ers were opposed to reconstruction. All of this has been the result of the teachings of such men as Toombs, Cobb and Ben. Hill. If you accept the constitutional amend ment, known as Article 14 you will, by that means, put the suffrage question in the hands of the' people of the State. I do not look upon the enfranchisement of the negroes in the same light as Toombs, Cobb, and other leaders of the Democratic party do. They take the position that the enfranchisement of the negro degrades the white ,man. The elevation of the_ negro does not de grade the white man. And I tell you, col ored people, if the people North says you have the right to vpte in the South, and admit you to the right of citizens, you have the right to demand that they admit you to the same rights and privileges in the North. I don't admit that the Southern peonle are inferior to any nice on the earth, We are conquered, and the North has put harsh measures upon us, but let us accept them, and get the State under the control of the people of the State. The fourteenth article will become a part of the constitution, whether Georgia adopts it or. not, North and South Carolina and Florida'will soon adopt it, and . whether Georgia adopts it or ' not, if she returns to- the Union they will have to - accept it. • , But the Democracy think if Seymour is electedthese reconstruction-measures'will be set aside. Well, let as see. Suppose they elect Seymour,_ together with a majority in the Rouse of Representatives; they cannot change the Senate for four years to come. Then what will they do? •Will they inau gurate a revolution with Seymour 'at the head and take possession of the Government and turn the Senate out? If so, why has I not Andrew Johnson, as Commander-in- Chief of the, army and navy, 'done this heretofore? I tell you the people of the North will stand by the Governniblt;and no matter what they tell you about figlitifig for your rights, in opposition to 'the -03v ernmput, they will not do it when the test, comes. We were deceived by that cry in! 1801. I tell you if they can't get any one else. to fight you, they will fight You with the paupers of Europe and the regroes. 'The negro is a dangerous political efe,nrent in thiei country, because they iare abused, driven to it. All of this is therresult of the teachirmr of such men' ai Bill, Toombs and Cobb. 7Let theirtratop their abusive Wean'gues, and my word for it; the militaty, will he removed from Georgia in'nsixty — days,' The press, also, has been a great power in engendering strife in Georgia, It. has ed deavored to arouse all' the bad passions Of the people in, these trying times. Let us cease this strife, accept the condition inipos ed upon us with the best grace possible, and restore , the 'peeple arid the State again to peace and 7prosperity, -Our , people want -peace,land I feel confident that a majority of them are satisfied• - that if-the' acceptance of the . ' reconstruction measures would re store peace, they would say, accept,them. In looking over our exchanges we observe' a greater enthusiasm, for the Demecratic ticket in the South than in the' north and The ex-rebels take kindly to it. 'Ai the Chicago Post says: "The last act of the rebels before the war was to vote'the Demo . = critic ticket. • The 'first , act of the rbbels af,er the: war was to vote' the TernOcrat= in ticket.; As • there was but ono" step from Deinotraoy into rebellion, , „ there was: but one step 'frau rebeilTOn back into tu ocracy.' The inference iß* plain. one, and loyal and Union-lovinli, - people iV ii not 'vote fora party " that stands . in such close relations to traitors that thelatter flyto lies to a city of refuge." , The ' lines :will be drawn more closely. every' day, andtitwill be evident to every thinking Menthe Grant alone le On the aide'llnioritc_ and peace, and that the' succiiii of Seymeiar ,is„ direct encouragement, to,disunion, and to a retie*. ' al of civil cciatniptioi. 'Ens Chicago PUrp hays One 81 01— &ant fact in Connection With the recent p er a. obratie National, Convention! has ; mot yet been 'mentioned In public, : namelyt.,.that. every delegate in that cenveetion limn the . Southern Eitates was nsfletesionlit;-fit one of 'tbe entire Itambet , 'had been.n loyal, Union man daringithe war. , Wept esume it is also true that there is not: wrnan in the= s out h, w hite or blaelrorholvilis lbyal to the r UniOn daring the wa,T; who . dipport` Beytnimr,and At all events; there is, not a solitary Botithern rebel, ;or:Northern tCPatiliz e r the,rooloi is nut e 0 ,t i, ticket:" ' • , =EMI -BRIER ATEWS iTEMS. =Hon. J. M. Mason and darightera are at Montreal. , —Two fatal cases of Asiatic cholera are reported in Hamilton, Canada, ` —John L. Tate; one of the oldest citizens of Richmond, Va., died yesterday. —Abram, Bell .sc. Co,. New York hankers,: have failed, with liabiliaties of a half, lion. - . , —Nova Scotia papers Continue publishing editorials favoring annexation to the:l:lnf. ten States. —Ground was broken for the Boston, Ilartford and Erie Road near Waterbury, Conn., yesterday. —Peter Wesley was killed in Philadel phia yesterday in a qnarrer with George Gunn e - an acquaintance. —A three days' Saengerfest is progress ing at Poughkeepsie.. Large delegations from New York are present. —A little girl named Willis choked to depth in Camden, N. J., yesterday, by get ting her head under the headboard of her bed. • , . —The steamers St. Laurent, Australasian and Wm. Penn, from Europe, arrived at New York last night. Mail dates are to the 18th. —At a Conservative flag raising in Rich mond, Va., yesterday afternoon, the speak ers' platform fell, seriously injuring several persons. , • —The warpfactory of Thomas Lewis do Co., at Cotton Hollow, near Naugatuck, Conn., was burned on Friday last. Loss $25,000; insurance $12,000. —Tltp first torchlight procession of the campaign took place last night'in Buffalo, N. Y. About two hundred and fifty of the Grant and Colfax clubs paraded the streets with torchlights, transparencies and music. —There was a great Democratic torch light demonstration in Columbia, S. C., last- night. The "town was illuminated. Speeches were made by Generals Wade Hampton, Kershaw, Chesnut, McGowan and others. —The railroad bridge on the T. W. & W railway, at Danville, 111.,rwas partially de stroyed by fire on Monday evening, but ar rangements are made se that there will be no detention to passengers or freight. —A man named Cunningham having been murdered in a house of ill repute itt Oroma, Maine, the citizens on Saturday night last gave five minutes warning to the mistress of the house to leave, and burned the place to the grolind.. The murderer had escaped to Canada. Wilkesbarre, Pa.,dispatch states the coal miners' strike is at end, all the col lieries recently stopped having resumed. In Schuylkill county the miners are still idle, but would .undoubtedly go to work in a few days on the ,Lehigh Valley Railroad system of paying men by the hour. • , —A mortgage on the Missouri Pacific; Railroad for seven million dollars has been filed in the County Recorders office at St. Loris,-to secure the bonds issued by the Company to pay the State of Missouri five million.; of purchase money for the road -under the legislative act of last win ter. One million _ and a half of bonds, known as the Dresden Bonds, were given some time ago for work on the part of the road west of Dresden, and the remainder to change the gnage of the road so as to conforin with the Kansas Pacific Railway, and place the road in complete and effective working order. The amount of purchase money will probably be paid in_ Missouri State bonds, which will reduce - the State debt to that amount. The mortgage is in favor of Uriel A. Murdock, James Pannett and Luther C. Clark, and the bonds are to run for twenty years and_are payable in gold at New York, and bear six per cent. interest. The, stamps' on the , mortgage amount to seven thousand dollars, IS YOUR DISIE;IRE Many persons, supposing they are suffering from this dise , ase, have applied Linaments, Plasters and other Rheumatic Remedies without ribtahaing any relief, when in fact the cease of pain is a derange ment of the Kidneys. These are small organs. but very important, and any obstruction or interference with its functions are indicated by pain In the back and loins, languor snd weakness, difficulty in avoid ing and unnatural color of the urine. A. Diuretic should t once_bc'resorted to. Littretlc or Backache Pills Can be relied on for these purposes; they have a, direct influence ; the cells of the kidneys, assists -- nature in relieving them of any foreign ,particles, and stimulates 'them to a healthy and vigorous ac- Dr. Sargent's Backache Pals Contain nothing injurious. being comnosed of en— N :i tirely veg able remedies; they Co not sicken nor gripe—on t ntrare they act as a gentle tonia and restores tone the system, They are recommended by all who who :aye tried them. • Price 50 Genie Per Box. FOR SALE EYDIttIOGISTS.- Sole proprietor, GNI* A. KELLY, Whdesale Druggist, 37 WOOD STREtT, PITTSBURGH SWINGING ROUND THE CIRCLE. There axe fifty ways • of alleviating. the agonies of dyspepsia for • the moment; but there Is only one way to Colin Jt. After "swipgiug.round the circle" of temporary palliatives the patient finds that the dieease, so far from being subduell, bas actually gathered strength, while be has been p.irle.ying with its symptoms. . The only way to get rid of the demouls to endow the stomach with sufficient sl rengn io cast it out and keep it out. Impart permanent energy to the digertlye organs with 110STETTEIVET0.11ACH. BITTER}, and the object is acc,mplisbed.f This powerful vegetal:llc remedy is not a mere stimulant. It does.not brace up the gastric machinery for an: hour or two, leaving it, when the temporary ex citement has passed off, In a worse stale than be fore. Such is the effect of the ordinary alcoholic 'nontroms. They keep the stomach "in a 'perpetual aee-saw between unnatural aettylty and uttsr relax ation. Not so the. IitTTERS. ?dedicated with the. finest ' tonic, al. lenitive and. anal-blitoos . extracts, they nermanently,leinforee and ountl nuously :rexn late the assimilating priding. • .duch IrWl:experience of tens of thouninds. At this debilitating season of the year, when-the solvedt - printlyie of are gastric juice la weakened by. a H .constantdrain oi the animal:- dulds 'through the pores, OS • E I'l Kiva ACEI HIT PEES Is an article of prime necessity for Ile weak Tolnegteet the ÜBP' of-a ten e and•altira ve,- 150 wonderfully efileaelons aud 4.ntiruly narm less Is simply to forego the blessing 01 health and vigor. and voluntarily accept foobii.:ncoo'iui die comfort in tlteir stead:. .ss , , DR. Karen I write to thank you for your ilad nem and 'denting matutgetuent of my- disease, for whirl 1 called to consult you some Cline In January last: You will remember that 1 had tt. complication of diseases, which filially elided In a terrible fistula. which. I had been advised to ••lot stung." On so" count or a• borassing cough. which Al was feared might iltste.n It on my lungs. 1 knew that the pets lair mode cif eroding diseases iikr time was by a cutting operation, which, if surerbetut at all, would throw the inseam ratan the lungs 9f some : other vital Organ, on account of the suddenness of the core aid the inimediate check...to the discharge. "kWh believed was;a salutary provision of nattlyet co get or soPe Flo"id c° ll ditivi; " 1 /i ' e 5 3' 1441 ' I feel perfectly sattaded that tour tot thud of.treat,- 1111 . 11 t. V411(54 1 41 16 system, and lucid' applications to the 08 . tutoaaiffirt. must eare,'lf Anything emid. .without cutting, which 1 anti It did, and iym nippy to report tplulelf well lin every par tlettlai, , with sounder and better health than 1 burr bad'for years. I would alio add that the applleation-- yoti• made were itlatoer. panicle,. and hnvo two! Man i with lit theenergies and victi,r,.r reit'orOftealth. Yount, paternity. • - DR. ICZYL4EII,Ln CONSULTA rt. , a,ptists•roll talto2llo DISnABICS; IS 0, Inst, •Crliirjr4 _ 1 from 0 UNTIL 3"r. I into nth. ,?, , t MEM . ~ aZ~n r~ tl nu. SARGENT'S CURE•OF FISTULA. : 8 ME