UL BY S. J. BOW. CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1868. VOL. 14.-M 46. PURPOSES OF THE PXVlBLiaX PARTY. c .k f ir.,n ( W. SCOFIELD, delivered in Sreeen tr 0'-,n ' , . ij the h -im- of Representatives, July 14, IS08. Mr.. S-'ikikld . Mr. Chairman, which wu are e moving r Are we, as mjuic ..mis :ijiprvnc-a ana cuarge, mug party excitement ami coiuusion, and usurpation, toward uespouc iMverimieut, or arc we, tliouifb mth midst of the storm, but in spite of it, still holding I 1 . . L . n, n r 1 .2 nri.l cninr. At i '..n.t tut i.m toward a wore ueneub uc- t . J- tn .-Jotiment of republican poyernment ? Whit, line nouid we follow f What is v tVi'unJaiuental theory of our Government The emit lin n who laid its foundations held thai 'all men are created equal." They i.r.H-ia;ni'' I 'hi-' sentiment in the face of a world iieaviiv oppressed with inequality of nIik, and privilege, i hey spoke and fought fr it. Tli.ir d-mence a; i valorestahlisbed i! upon tliis continent. And ibat, I under stand, i- "r om-hi to be the reeoguizcd theory 1 (,iir ttiivcruiiierit. Jt is a simple formula, a t-vr R'.rJs. a single principle, one idea ; i nt up iii it our fathers raised the j'abric of the !W 'ioverniuiMit. It is that one idea wlii.-h inikis the Government great, gradu ally ri.ir:.' above all other I'owers on the face of the earth, even in its infancy giving liber ty and j r.nvin m to forty million people at h" utie. and reachinjr out a helping hand to tin. i.j'prt s.-ol and humble all over the I know it is paid tint the founders of the lirj.uhiu: did not really mean that all men :i.rt (.roated equal, because they did not at lir-t an 1 at once confer equal rights upon all. It ii- impossible. Existing institutions, vi?tfd iutTets, erroneous convictions, and .iivi prejudices stood in the way. They went a- far as they could then, as far as the sentiment of their day would permit, and then holding t. and advocating equal riht. 1 '.ir ail men as the correct Republican tin ".ry. awaited the tit times and opportuni ties and the proper development ol the pub- i ii'imeiit to make that theory more and mure practical. L pou tins tucory tliey i .'iii led a new political party, which they called :he "Republican party." This word iii ileal, .1 as near as any one word in the latiuage could the coiuuiorialty of all gov ( r:i!: :';:a! rights. They added to this name tic ii.iintive "progressive," to indicate ;!. .t they .iel not mi an to go backward nor to ::.i.il still, but move forward on this theory i f l.i.n an i ii.l.t.. It was not many years Irli.rc ihi.- " i repressive Republican party" mine to 1 the country. S e t, i at was done. The slave trade was ii::i ' I r;e I and the trader declared a pirate, in ii.,: y . i'thc States slavery was abolished, aii'li y an inej caeaUe ordinance all the terri tory then held made free forever. The f'ran t !;;-e tva. enlarsed ; and except, in the single Stale of New York, without distinction of Ix .'islat ion could uot make all mvn ;:. n equal in talents, but it could give all .in i-qitid oportuiiity to cultivate whatever 'i-.-l I. ad been pleased to bestow, and there I .re fr.-e s. Louis were established. It could ti-1 make all men equal in wealth, but it em'. I iiive all an eqiial chance to acquire it; ap.i ... imprisonment fur debt was abolished, t xi ii.i.'i.m. lVmu execution allowed, and the Lw. ni iiilu i iiaiice eoualized. These great a b ailees t.e.vaid equalization of governmen tal adwnta.jt were not secured without re-sl-iaiii e. There were conservatives in those iliy. a. i !1 a., in ours. They saw ruin in i very progressive step. The prohibition of tie- -lave Ha le would deprive the poor Af r. ,m luatbi n of a chanct? to hear the gos I ei aiei save his ml. The dedication of the eriii.'iie.. to freedom was sectional and uiie.in.jitutinria!. Nun iuiprisionment for d.-bt and exeii.-i.tiun from execution would both det'iau 1 the creditor and destroy the credit ot the debtor. Free schools would burden the thrifty with taxes to educate the ch;i Ir.-ti of idlers. The enlargement of the Iran, h:..- w.iu'd be it degredation. But in s) ite ni'. o;i.,.i-va:i..!n and itji evil prophecy to ' 't.tit: ipq. loved, and whatifar more im ran; mankind improved, but conservatism I i ! - im iider ; it never does surrender. 1 ' ;: -. ie Republican party" be- ! in time divided into several parties !;; t- i,;..iary qiioiions, and losing its i''ii-:;u nan. e and organization, conser ;'' :1 1 i -e!f with the tlare power and " . V. r , time the mastery over the " 1 ra.' ii . :.;..t... immediately the brakes w id. v.T.; all progress stops. It '.'"' '!!! ..ut that the great declaration , : f ,r equal political rights was r.''-"!:i.' generality," "a rhetorical ? -:'::-!'. "an .mnif aniug abstraction." It ' ' ' .: ! out that political distinctions : --:o- ; that political equality is a !. d : that the law should assign '.' '"' ' ' ' " e:a-sand privileces to another. "' e "t 'hi-old doctrine was not re ''.'!e"t o! ji-ftion among the disband ' '.!. iSinall dissenting parties u l't:v-i up. The aboliontsts, the ;.-i:!s party, the tree I'emocracy, ; . '. - - !n e .oi.l Ts. licnton Icmocrats, ' : :. r-. whieh e-eape my memory as I : !:o;n time to time and in various - i-. s utti'aet.'d the attention of the public. t !.- were numerous enough -to exhibit ; ii ..'i-e nitent ei ihuikiug. progressive s it : too il'elde to n.-si-t the.retrograde !: in.iu-'nratd by the ai:nd powers, ' r;. ni and slavery. In Is.ir, re pre -' s o! the-e various organi.ations, : oi iii-. eiitiment.s indicated by them, ::l l i.-udiia. and then and there, in i .s.a-e llou-e, in-wbieli the theory of ' . a. e,,a.ii;iy had beeu ti r.-t proclaimed, ;-!- ; 1 t. iti..iia! party, piedted to take up : ! ; .. .p e- and earry forward the work ! ' : .. They t.Kjk the name which ;; ". ' !- "io:e l by the advocates of equal tie- hett.-r day., of the Republic !! o! !r. edom and equality all over h. jan to gather iuto this new '' "l-iie the advocates of privil r' :" rvatives, the ami-progressives " ' !'''' :" -'oers squatted at the feet of ! l! ratid assunied the misleading ! I'-ioracy. These Philadelphia : ' ' ' "! a-.uiiied the nauie and re- -ei ti.- i.K;rihe ((fthe first llejiublican J ' :y to wit ; iillt -aH njp,, are created - ke that party they did not ex- t-i ure to all men their eoual rights Centuries of vested wrongs still j' 1, l, ?-e way. Ite-asserting the priuciple, ! :- !:!- to the liberties already acijuired, " ' ' 1 p j-ed to move forward slowly, l.l ti.fij. liin.rivil.'i'rtl cllLSSeS. act bv - a-i i n.easiire by measure, as time and "."rtututy should permit, greater influence a " ntae in the Government, until, in Jjie course of time, in the distant future, 'r' fc0,J.' heboid a great nation in .1 e.vt'ry citizen, without excertion or ..'"""tiop, bad secured to him his equal !.f't to life, liWrty, and the pursuit of hap-i'iues.-a alwn wjtn no ignorant, no poor, "'- eo-iitved, no degraded class, 't is now twelve years since this party was organized, and I submit that the history of t tie country proves tnat it has held steadily to its declared purpose. So give every child an equal chance of education, it has advo ted and legislated, both in tbe States and Territories and in the District of Columbia, in favor of tree schools ; to give every man an equal chance to acquire property, the old Republican party, as I said before, abol ished imprisonment for debt, and made tbe necessaries of life exempt from execution. Following in these footsteps, tbe Republican party.in the first year of its national triumph, secured to every landless man one-hundred-ftnd sixty-acre farm without money and with out price ; and in the further practice of the same principle only last year it released the honest but broken debtor from the further pursuit of unrelenting credit. By an amend ment to the Constitution slavery in sixteen States, in the District of Columbia, and in all the vast Territories of the country has been abolished, and its restoration made im possible forever. We have many bright pages in our history I trust we are to have many more but the page that records this brief amendment will be the brightest of them all. The franchise, which lifts up the humble, protects the weak, educates the ignorant, and endows the poor, the synonym of liber ty and self respect, has from time to time been greatly enlarged. Under Republican legislation the volunteer soldier retains his franchise and sends home his. vote. One year's service of the country endows the alien with the ballot. In twelve States, in all the Territories, and in the Dis trict of Columbia, the franchise has been extended to all and without distinction of race, and the whole tendency of Republican debate and legislation has been toward an enlargemeot of the franchise without re striction, except for crime. All these measures look in one direction, and lead only to one result. They enlarge the rights, privileges, and opportunities of all the people, and subordinate the laws to the popular will. That is not despotism, but freedom. These measures may all be wrong, but it so, it is because the theory of popular government is wrong. I have a -right, therefore, to conclude that the charge of despotic tendency preferred against the Republican party is entirely without founda tion. It may be said that two of these nieasures., nnniely, the emancipation of the slaves in nil the States and their enfranchisement in the eleven rebel States have been too much hurried. The Republican party did not in the beginning intend to move so rapidly. Emancipation, which would withdraw from the enemy and add to us tour million ponu- lation, became a military recessity. The great purpose of the rebellion was to with draw slavery from the wasting influence of the nineteenth century ; to build it around with a new nationality, aid wall out the light and warmth of a Christian age. That motive could only be destroyed by the des truction ef slavery itself, and we struck it a hurried but fatn blow. lVe.utuie -era-4 franchisement, if premature it is, has 1 een forced upon us for a somewhat similar rea son. Tbe returning rebels demanded two sets of Congressmen, all their own, and thirty-three more lor the blacks, both sets to be elected exclusively by themselves. Under the amended Constitution the claim was legal. But such double power would enable them to vote down your soldiers' pensious, repudiate your plighted honor, force upon you the payment for emancipa ted slaves, and finally to master and redivide the Union. To break the strength of this disunion element, we put the ballot in the hands of the loyal black man. Our own safety and the safety of the Uuion demand ed it, but it is in accordance with the tfreory of our Government, and if a little prema ture, time will soon overtake it. But you have passed laws restraining the pewcrs of the President ; where is the des potism of that? A despotic government is a one man government all executive. IIow can restraints upon that one-man power be also despotic ? They might be considered too Republican, too Democratic, but to call them despotic involves a contradiction. What are the facts ? During the war the President was clothed with extraordinary powers. The Democrats complained. They apprehended that these powers might be used to destroy the liberties of the people. At length the war was over, Mr. Johnson had come to be Piesident, but the extraor dinary powers were still attached to the ex ecutive office. They were no longer needed, but were as dangerous as ever. Mr. John son himself said in his celebrated Kast Room speech, that he possessed power enough to make himself dictator. A great many peo ple thought he intended to Hry it. Then Congress began to do what the Democrats claimed they should have done long before, confine the executive power to its old peace limits. Then they com plain again. To confer the powers were despotic, to recall them is despotii. One or the other complaint is unfounded. We could hot be wrong each time' We were really right each time. It was proper that the President should have large powers to suppress the rebellion, and that these powers should be surrendered af ter the necessity was rassed. Butyourmode of reconstructing the South is despotic ! .Not so much so as yours, pro vided you adopted it. The President put the people of the South under military rule; Congress did not. We did not order the Army there. We did not . keep it there. We took no action till March 3. 1867. Lp to that time the President had his own way, and all this time he governed the fcouth by the Aruiv. Till then his despotic will was law. lie got up conventions. He selec ted the voters. He shaped the constitutions ,).l-.re.I ilipm a lot, ted. He allowed no popular vote. That was your plan. This ma us ilevirfllisill uureoiraineu uiic-muu ,;i;,ort- nimiT Our rdan was only a re straint upon yours. N e did not order the A.m, oirntr tn be sure : but we put it under the control of law. W e did not prohibit the assembling of conventions, but released them from the dictation of the President. We did not forbid constitutions to De iraniea, but required their submission to the people. Your plan was to originate State govern ments in accordance with the Presidents will, ours in accordance with established Rut vou are makine encroachments upon tbe Supreme Court 1 A bill which requires the concurrence of two thirds of the judges to declare a statute of the U nited Mates void was proposed, but never became a law. Supose it had, what despotism is there in inai r Vt IIO compose me ouuicuic vuu. i. i Usually nine judges. Tbey are appointed by the President and bold their offices for life. The people can change their Repre sentatives once in two years, their President once in four, and their Senators once in six ; but the judges of this court are always be yond theit reach. This is the only anti-republican, aristocratic, despotic feature in our Government. While these judges are entirely above the influence of the people, they are not above the common passions and infirmities of mankind. They are still politicians, as much so as Senators and Rep resentatives, though not progressive. They be d to whatever was uppermost when they were lifted out of politics to the bench. You can tell the politics of a judge by the date of his comiuiftsion, and the date of his com mission by bis politics. Tbey crvstalize in the sentiments .f thr day and are changeless ever after. Some of tbem cannot even now realize that there has been a great war; and are trying to decide that, a constable and grand jury were equal to the "late political disorder." Some can not realize that the slave power has been le gally dethroned ; and are trying to retain in the legislation of the country at least a few memorial shreds of the odious institution. I have the best authority tor saying that a ma jority of tbesi judges have made up their minds thit the "lepal-tender" law is uncon stitutional, and will so decide in the cases now pending in their court. I mention this fact, not for present criticism, but as an il lustration of the vast power of these nine men over the fortunes of the people. Is a law that requires the agreement of one or two more judges before they make a decision that will ruin all the debtors of the country by requiring them to pay their debts in gold despotic ? Every debtor in the country who now thinks such a law would be despotic will have reason to change his mind before he is two years older. Again, it is said that our legislation tends to centralization of power in the General Government, and that centralization tends to despotism. I deny it. We have endeav ored to preserve the Union of the States, because individual liberty can be best secur ed in a single Kepublic. The Republic was divided before we came to power. On the 4th of .March, J8C1, r. Buchanan surren dered to Mr. Lincoln the northern half, having surrendered the southern half to Jef ferson Davis nearly a month before. We found it with sluvery, the chif sineeuitive to disunion, and we broke the . chains of four million of bondmen. We' found an hundred kinds of money that would not pass as many miles from home, and we have re duced them to one uniform system of equal value all over the land. We found the Pa cific States separated from the East by a vast unoccupied country, and growing up into isolated nationality, and we have stretch ed out great lines of railway to secure their commerce and hoid their interests and affec tions in the Union. We found commerce between the States everywhere burdened and obstructed by local and illiberal State legislation, and we have undertaken some measures of relief. These enterprises, un dertaken to preserve the harmony of the States and secure the growth and develop ment of the whole country, are mistaken by small politicians for acts of centralization. In addition to carrying on . four-years war for the suppression of the rebellion all these beneficent and permanent reforms, nave been secured duriug the ktl lite ot the Republican party. Take as many years of Democratic administration prior to that and tell me what record you have left to awaken the gratitude or pride of the people. there stands the gallows upon which they immolated old John Brown, a brave but err ing enthusiast of human freedom ; but its victim is more honored to-dav than its cruel architects. Just beyond is the Dred Scott decision, rendered in violation ot precedent, law, and Constitution, for the bructilizatioo of four uiiliions Christian people. It has no friends now. Turtherou you behold the Missouri compromise -otir fathers' bond of Union the peace offerine of iUs dav. rtpu- diated, broken, and trampled underfoot that the inhumanity ot the hou might be with out restraint. Standing around it, as fit witnesses of the wrong, are the "border ruf fian war," the "Lieeompton villainy," and the small tyrannies of Pierce and Buchanan. Still further down this dreary history stands the "fugitive slave law," to which every Democratic knee was wont to bow. Its man acles are broken. Its bloodhounds no longer bay upon the track of its victims. No gar lands crown it ugly brow. It has no tvor shippers,no admirers, no defenders,no apol ogists even. Ail have sneaked away. These are the monuments of their administrations. During all these weary years nothing was done by the predominant party to elevate and honor labor, to educate the poor, to lift up the fallen, to endow the landless, or to soften the cruelties of bondage. You can not point to a single act that any body will celebrate, that any body will honor,that any body will remember, even, except with re gret or shame. This doctrine of political equality forms the great "divide" between parties now, as heretofore. The conservative, or anti-progressive element,always beaten, except when allied with the slave power, takes heart from the complication of public affairs and enters the arena with new disguises. The remnant of the slave aristocracy rallies to its standard. The foiled secessionists extend their crimson hands both to aid and to be aided. A great church, believine that the mass of mankind should le rjutdeit rather than eitcMfe,leads its vast flock where otherwise we would least expect it into the support of anti-republican distinctions. Many submit to the theory which degrades them because it degrades others more than themselves. And many mistake license to the vicious for liberty to mankind. It is the old combination so often beaten. There may be a few recruits ; some few who have obtained senatorial and judi cial honors by the advocacy of equal rights, through the natural selfishness of the hu man heart, have come to believe in rank since they have reached the highest. A few descendants of eminent men, unable by per sonal merit to command the position of their fathers, reject their fathers' doctrine. John Quiucy Adams was a progressive Republi can, and his grand-son is a conservative. The descendant claims by law what the an cestor acquired by desert. To these add a few natural grumblers, and you have the present Democratic-conservativs-sorehead-rebel party. Such elements can be held together in a party of opposition, because a minority par ty need have no affirmative policy. They bring forward no measures of their own. It is their business to hold back, to oppose, to criticise, to denounce, to threaten ; not to originate, to propose, to decide, or to act. To avoid present accountability for the past they even condemn their own history and acquiesce in the defeat of their own mea sures. Thpy were opposed to the "Lecomp- ton fraud and "border ruffian war" after Kansas became a free State. They approv ed the homestead law after it was enacted. Thotr An not worshin the fugitive slave law after it is repealed. They are in favor of the war after it is over, l ney are opposea to slavery after it is abolished. They will doubtless be opposed to repudiation after the debt is paid, and in favor of universal suffrage after every body can vote. But they attack whatever is proposed by others, whatever is uppermost for the time being. During the last seven years tbey have done nothing but scold. Scolding is their voca tion, their sovereign remedy for all public ills. They scolded the Union party when Bu chanan divided the Republic, and scolded harder when we attempted to restore it. If the army lacked men tbey would scold. If a draft was ordered to fill it they would scold. If the Treasury was empty they would scold. If taxes were levied they would scold. If a loan was attempted they would scold. If a battle was lost they would scold about mis management if it was won about subjuga ting the South. They scolded terribly when $300 would commute the draft, and worse when the law was repealed. They scolded when greenbacks were issued, and scolded again when the issue was stopped. They scold when the rebel States are kept out,and scold when they are brought in. While this party remains in the minority scolding may answer their purpose. It may even enlarge their numbers by the addition of malcontents and impracticable men. But if they carry the election next fall they must become actors instead of critics. What will they then do? If thev have been honest in their opposition to Republican measures they must attempt to undo them all. They were opposed to coercion 'they must,there fore, restore the Confederacy and treat for terms of separation. They were opposed to emancipation, they must re-establish sla very. They were opposed to the amend ment of the Constitution, which forbids payment for emancipated slaves and the as sumption of rebel debts; they must, there fore, repeal it. They wer opposed ' to the repeal of the fugitive slave law ; they must, therefore, re-enact it. They opposed the re-admission ot the eight reconstructed reb el States; they must, therefore, turn them out. Their candidate for Vice President says they will, and that by revolution if they cautict bylaw. They were opposed to the enfranchisement of the colored people in the rebel States; they must, therefore, disfran chise them and leave the rebel power with out check or division. They opposed the enfranchisement ot the. citizen soldiers, and they must be disfranchised also. It may be said they cannot accomplish all this. . That is true, but they can try it.: They must try it, because if they do not. it is a confession that they have ail along been wrong, and we have all along been right, whieh s a confes sion that they ought to be defeated at the polls. They carried the Legislatuie ot Ohio last foil, and immediately began the work of demolition. Their first attack was on the franchise. They at once withdrew from the soldier, the student, and the quadroon, whom they classed and proscribed together, the rbht to vote. Ohio had given her consent to theconstitutionai amcndmendiiient, which makes the loyal Slates equal in representa tion in the Federal Government to the rebel States,and prohibits payment for slaves and the assumptiuu of rebel debtr-but this Leg islature revoked ft. . KuppoB.i--l" fail in ineir errons, now is rt-iiuty-to bp fitted by a four years' struggle over it ? If they succeed, the old slave aristocracy be comes again the masters of the country. The defeated rebels become the political victors, llainptou and Forrest and Prestou will be the honored soldiers at Washington, as they were in the New York Convention, and Grant and Sherman and Sheridan will be dis charged on parole. It is said they will not carry matters so far ; the northesn wing of the party will moderate and restrain the in solence of the rebel wing. So we were told when Pierce and Buchanan were candidates, but after the election we soon found that the southern Democrats controlled the nor thern. Whether the northern Democrats desigu it or not it will be so again. But it is said this party can jret us out of all financial trouble. The southern wing got us into it, but how can they get usout? Will they pay it? They ought to do so, but they will not", and I suppose they can not. They pay no taxes. They say they have nothing to pay with. They could do nothing, then, but tas us and dispose of our money. Why should they be selected for that office? When have they shown any financial ability supe rior to northern men? They run the Con federacy four years and two months, and so far from developing financial ability they de veloped great lack of it. Their only schemes were forced loans, to be paid out of taxes on the loans themselves. Their currency be came so worthless that they were forced to collect taxes in kind. They developed great military ability, I concede, but as financiers they were total failures. It was always so. Before the war they borrowed from the North the money to improve their estates, build their railroads and their public works, and it has been mostly paid in confiscation and bankruptcy. They might double your debt by adding theirs to it, but how would they, or could they, discharge it, except by repudiation ? What could the northern wingof thepar tydo? They have had the Administration and run the Treasury Department for the last three years. Tbe whisky tax that ought to vield $y0,CM0,0l0 perycar has. under their management, yielded less than $14,000,000. They are iuiavor ot free trado,so they would get noticing from customs. The internal taxes are now nearly all collected from whis ky, tobacco, banks, and incomes. Could they find any -better sources of revenue? Would they take tbe tax from whisky and put it on bread ? From tobacco and put it on coffee? From incomes and put it on la bor ?' Or would thej abolish taxes altogeth er? IIow, then, couid they relieve us of debt ? No way, sir, except by follow ing their southern wing into repudiation. That would be an expensive payment. It implies disgrace abroad, and distress.rcvolution and anarchy at home. I have a!wa3's thought the liberties of this country could not sur vive a repudiation of its debt. In my judg ment it would produce a convulsion which would end iu the establishment of a less popular form of government. But it is said, again, they could tax the bonds. Very well. But why make that a party question any more than taxing whisky or income? If all the bonds were taxed, in cludina those held abroad, at tbe proposed rate, that is, ten percent- upon the interest in addition to the five per cent, already col lected, we could only realize from tl is source $12,000,000. Compared with our other sources of revenue, this a small sum. hy surrender the Government, with all its fi nancial, military, and political interests to those who but three years ago were in arms to destroy it altogether, order to secure so small a modification of the law ? If the people think i best. upon full consideration, to levy this tax, can they uot so instruct their Reptesentatives in the several districts? If Grant is elected so as to give confidence in the stability of the Government and the continued peace of the country, we can ex change our bonds for a long bond bearing from one to two per cent, less interest. This would save to-the country from twenty to thirty million dollars per year instead of $12,000,000. W would not only realize in this way more than as much again money, but avoid the charge of incipient repudia tion. Why has not that been done already? If you can tell me why God in his provi dence has seen tit to afflict this country with such a President as Andrew Johnson, 1 can answer the question. For three years he has been sitting there, an obstruction to all proper legislation and administration. If we propose a new bond with low interest he calls before him the correspondent of the "London Times," and fills him with appre hensions of repudiation to be scat let ed all over Europe. If we put a tax on whiskey, which, if properly collected, would relieve us of all other internal taxes, he is careful to see that it never goes to the Treasuiy. He counsels with the bi terest opponents of tne war, nnd plots with the bitterest rebels. Their common purpose seems to be to keep the country distracted ; to defeat tbe recon struction of the Sonth ; to advise, prompt, and aid resistance; to encourage mobs and murderers to fulfill their prophetic war ot races; to keep the finances unsettled and business men in doubt ; to worry the men who trusted the Government wben tbey would not, and make them unpopular with the people ; to magnify the burdens of tax ation, and thus confuse the judgment and tire the patience of the people. The more distress,real or imaginary, they can produce in the country the greater will be their chanc es of political success. They make the trouble and hold the Re publicans responsible for it. With John son controlling the Treasury and all the Ex ecutive Departments we can do nothing. He can, will and does thwart all our efforts. If the government now goes into the hands of the southern rebels with only such re straints as their northern allies choose to impose, capitalists will have no confidence in the maintenance of any new contract end will make none. But it is said, again, that this party would pay off the bonds in greenbacks at once and have done with interest. At present we have no surplus of greenbacks to pay with, and unless taxation is very much increased wo will not. have for several years to come. Whether the bonds shall be paid in green backs or gold is a question for the future. It is not a question for this year or next. It may never be a question. Before we may be able to pay at all. or can be called on to pay, gold and greenbacks may and probably will beot equal value. It may become a troublesome question at some future day; but why anticipate the trouble? Do not the times furnish trouble enough without this? Yes; but the Democrats would print greenbacks enough to payoff the bonds. That would give us $2,oOO,(X)o,000 of cur rency at least ; if the bank issue was still outstanding, $2,800,000,000. During the war the Democrats declared that in time it would take a cord of greenbacks to pay for a cord of wood. They would thus fulfill their own prophecy. Such a course would lw uui V 11V. kru" , - r .-1 1.- l tors would not be the only sufferers. It would discharge all-private debts as well. Rut like the confederate currency it would have little value except to pay debts and af ter that nobody would take it- A debtor might sell a horse for enough to pay for a farm he purchased on credit the year before ; but there the traffic would end ; all trade would stop ; all manufactures would stop ; the poor would have no employment, and property command no price. But, after all, it might not effect the discharge of debts either public or private. Suppose the debt ors should refuse to take it.and the Supreme Court should decide the law unconstitution al and void. That would bring everybody to specie payments at once. It is well un derstood that this court will ultimately ren der such a decision on the present legal tender law. They only wait lor a favorable time. Such an avalanche of irredeemable paper might force the decission at once. As proof of the financial ability of this party we are reminded that in 1801 they left the country free from debt, and that under our administration a debt of $2,500. 009,000 has been created. Tim nieiit is not quite true. Thy left the country in del t nearly toO.000,000 in time of peace, and its credit so low that Howell Cobb, the Secretary of the Treasury,informed congress in December! 18b0,thatbe wasnnablej alter repeated efforts, to lonow the little sum of $10,000,000. It Is true, We. have a large debt; but who caused it? It will be ad mitted that the debt was created to suppress the rebellion, and the southern wing of the party which now complains of it got up the rebellion to divide the Union. It ought al so to be admitted,but I suppose will not be, that the rebellion was prompted and encour aged by a portion of the northern wing. Upon some portion of the Democratic par ty, as at present organized, lies the whole responsibility of this rebellion. Is it fair then, to hold us responsible for a debt caused by the misconduct of some of our opponents? In 1-803 there was a great anti-war riot in New York. To suppress it and repair dam ages cost the city a large sum of money. Suppose these rioters and their sympathetic friends the next year had formed a party and nominated a ti kel to contest with the old officials the possession of the city gov ernment, would they have had the check to urge as a reason for the change that the debt of the city had been enlarged the year before I During the war the beautiful town of Chambersburg, in the State of Pennsyl vania, was burned by the rebels. A large debt was created to rebuild it. Suppose these incendiaries had settled in Chambers burg after the war was over and had finally been placed on the Democratic ticket tor lo cal officers, would it have been altogether modest in them to urge the people to select them because the old officers had created this debt? It a discharged cashier, turning thief and robbing your bank, and thus en tailing upon it a heavy debt, should, on his return from the penitentiary, ask to be re stored to his old place, and give as a reason that your bank was out of debt when he was discharged, and a large debt was created hy his successor, would you be likely to restore him? And yet the impudence of the New York rioters, the Chambersburg incendia ries, and the discharged cashier wou d not be greater than that of the late rebels and their northern allies, who ask to be restored to power because their own misconduct has forced the contraction of a large debt. The talk about relieving the country of its obligations, means repudiation or it is a deception. They cannot levy the taxes more judiciou.-ly, nor collect or apply them more honestly than anybody else. Their three years trial under Mr. Johnson has not de veloped any superior character in this di rection. They certainly could not negotiate for a low rate of interest to advantage. Capitalists knowing the debt will always be hateful to a large portion of their party be cause it must ever remind them of their fol ly and humiliation.would fear to trust them. This pcrtion of their party, to frighten the people into total or partial repudiation constantly magnify the burden and decry the ability of tbe country to discharge it. Why, Mr. Chairman, the amount of our property to-day is $22,0(0,0(0,0(K. Every twelve years it doubles. Our population is forty millions, and doubles every twenty-five years. The increase in the wealh ot the country, as shown by an able and accurate mathematician, would pay the whole debt in two years. In twenty-five years our pop ulation will be eighty millions, and our property worth SSCH.OOO.OOO. To our in creased wealth and population the whole debt would be' no more than one fourth of what it is to us. If, then, they nrean repu diation we do not need it, and cannot afford it. If,- in' any other re?pect. they claim financial superiority, it is Unfounded pre sumption. Aside from the question of finance, this party promise nothing except to fight over and backwards the political battles of the last twelve years. Is the country prepared to embark in such a struggle ? lo we want ar. Administration which will not only resist all further progress, as Mr. Johnson has done, hut undertake to woik the country back., act by act and measure by measure, to the days of Pierce and Buchanan? Is any human being to be benefitted by it? Would it not be better to choose ail Administration which will not only hold fast to the liberty and privileges already scenred to the people, but, as time an opportunity permit, move slowly forward on the ere.it Republican doc trine of e.fual political rights? gussmcisus givcctoni. U TALTKR BAKKETT, Attorney at Law. Clear field, F. May 13. iisoa. TJD. Vf. GRAHAM. Denlir in Drj -floods. (Sroee i rios. Hardware. Queenfwure. Wooden ware, Provisions, etc., MarKet Struct. CleafSeid. Pa. -VJIVLIXO A fHOWEILS. TVBlern in Pry-Kood Ladies' Fancy ocd. Mats and Clips. Hoots, hoes, et . Second Street, Clearfield, i'a. tcf2.t rEUKELI A BIGLEK. Dealers in liar-ware 3L and manufacturer of Tin and Sheet-iron raro, Second Street. Clcurueld. Pa. June (it. HF. NAUOLE. Watch and Clock Maker, and . dealer in Watches, .Jewelry, Ac. Kocm in tlraham'i row, Marketstreet. Nov. 10. HBUCHER SWOOPE. Attorney at- Law.Clear . field, Pa. OfF.ct inOnthara's Row. four iloo f west of Graham i Boynton's store. Nor. 10. I TEST. Attorney at Law. Clear3e!d. Pa., will . attend promptly to all Legal bufincFS entrust ed to his care in Clearfield and adjoining coun ties. Office on Market street. July 17, 1867. rnHOMAS H. FOKCET. Dealer in Square and J Sawed Lumber. Iry-(ioods. Qaeensware, Jro ceries. "Flour. Grain. Feed, Bacon, Ac . Ac, (Jra hamton, Clearfield county. Pa. Oct 10. J P. KRATZER, Dealer in Dry -Goods. Clothiug. . Hardware Queensware, Groceric-?- Provi sions, etc.. Market Street, neatly opjiofite the Court Hiuse. ClearfiiUil.-Pj- . - . ... Ji:nn. ISfij. ... H AISTSWICK A IRWIN. DcaleM in Druea. Medicines. Paints. Oils. Stationary. Perfume ry . Fancy Goods, Notions, etc., etc. Market street. Cleaificld.Pa L'za. 6, lsfi5. - KKATZER A SON, dealers in Dry flooda, V J. Clothing. Hardware, Quscnsware, Groce ries. Provisions. Ac, Front Street, (ahove the A cademy.) Cleai field. Pa. Dec 27. 1sfi5. JOHN GUELICH. Manufacturer of all kinds f l Cabinet-ware, Market street. Clearfield. Pa He also makes to order Coffins, on short notice, and attends funerals with a hearse. AjnrtO59. milOMAS J. M'CULLOUGH. Attorney at Law. J Clearfield. Pa. OClce, ea;t of th -Clearfield o Bank. Deeds and other legal instruments pre pared with promptness and accuracy. July 3 RICHARD MOSSOP, Dealer in Foreign and Do mestic Dry Goods, Groceries, Flour. Bacon, Liquors. Ae. Room, on Market street, a few doors west ot JourruJOffie, Clearflold, Pa. Apr27. FB READ, M D.t Physician and Suigcon. . William's Grove, Pa., offers his profei"' services to the citizens of the surroui"i!r """" try July lllth. ie7. tf. THEPunlCK LEITZINGER. Manufacturer of i all kinds of Stone-ware. Clearfield. Pa. Or ders tolicited wholesale or retail He nlsokeep on band and for sale an assortment of carthens ware, of his own manufitcture. Jan. 1. 1863 JOHN It. FULFOHfj. Attorney at Law. Clear field. Pit. Office with J. B. Mt-Enally, Esq., ovor First National Bark. Prompt attention Riv en to the securing of Bounty claims. Ae.. and to Ail legal business. March 27, ISti. lf ALLACE. Bf.fi LER A FIELDISfl. Attor- V nevs at Law' Clearfield. Pa.. Legal business of all kinds promptly and accurately attended to. . Clearfield, Pa., May loth, IStifi. WILLIAM A. WALLACE t! ILt.t 3. PIHLF.n J.BLAKK WAITKIIS FlIAJi K VI (;I.niNO VLnERT.GEARY k CO. .Dealers in Dry Goods. Groceries, Hardware. Quecnsware. Flour Ba con, etc.. Woodland. Clearfield county Pa. Also, extensive dealers in all kinds of sawed lumber shingles, and square timber. Orders solicited. Woodland. Pa , Aug. 19th, ISrtJ. DR J. P. BURCII FIELD Late Surgeon of the 83d Rcg't Penn'a Vols., having returned from the army, offers his professional services io the citizens of Clearfield and vicinity. Profes sional calls r.romntlv attendnd to. Office on Sooth-East earner of 3d and Market Streets. Oct. 4. lS6i 6mp. QURVEYOR. The undersigned offers his services to the public, as a Surveyor. He may be found at his residence in Lawience townzh'p. when not engaged; or addressed by letter at Clearfield. Penu a. March 6th. 18rt7.-tf. JtMES MITCHELL. BANKING & COLLECTION Oil ICE OF McGIRK A PERKS. Successors to Foster.' Perks. Wright A Co., Pdilipsbium:, Cestrt. Co., Pa. Whore all the business of a BanKin? House will be transacted promptly and upon the most favorable terms. March 211. -tf. J. D. 11 ( I It K . KM 11. 1'rUtKS pLEAUl-TELD HOUSE, Clearfield, J The subscriber would respectfully solicit a contiiiunce of the paironaee of his old iriends and customers at the -Clearfield House." Having made many Improvements, he is prcpar ed to accommodate all who may favor hltn wilh their custom. Every department connected with the house is conducted in a manner to give gou eral satisfaction. Give him acall. .Nov. 4 ISrt6. GEO. X. COT.BCRX. O C O T T HOUSE. MAIN STREET, JOHNSTOWN, PA. A. EOW & CO., IIROPKIETOKS. This house having been refitted and elegantly furnished, is now open for the reception and en tertainment of guests. Tbe proprietors by long experience in hotel keeping, feel confident they can satisfy a discriminating publio. Their bari supplied with the choicest brands of liquors an wine. July 4th. 1S66. HE WESTERN HOTEL. Clearfield, Penn'a. The undersigned, bajricg taken charge of tbe above named Hotel, generally known as 'The Lanich House," situate on the corner of Market and Second Streets. Clearfield, Pa. desires to in t Vi a t ii r 1 1 ihatKa iiniiv nrenared to accom modate those who may favor him with a call. . . - j r : .. V. - J Tne neose baa been re-nttea ana n iuiwiu, and hence he flatten himself that be will be able to entertain customers in a satisfactory manner. A liberal sharn of patronage is solicited. June 12, 1S6V J A- STINE. TJOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, AND HOOFLAND S GERMAN TONIC. THE GREAT REMEDIES For all diseases of the Liver. Stomach, or diges tive organs. lloortancVs German Bitters Is composed of the pore juices (or. as they ara medicinally termed, extract,) of Roots, tier bs,na Barks, making a prep aration.hrghly eoncen trated, and entirely - tn from alcoholic d muture of any kind. IIOOFLAXD'S GERMAN TOXIC. Is a combination of all tbe ingredients of the Bit ters, with the purest quality of SantaCruz Rum, Orange. Ac . making one of the most pleasant and agreeable remedies ever offered to the public. Those preferring a Medicine free from Alcohol ic admixture, will use HQOFLAXD'S GERMAN SITTERS. Those who have no objection to the combination of the Bitters, as stated, will use IIOOFLAND'S GERMAN TOXIC. They are both equally jood and contain the same medicinal virtues, the choice between the two being a mere matter of taste, the Tonio beinjr the most palatable. The stomach, from a variety of causes, such as Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Nvrvous Debility, eto., is very apt to have ita functions deranged. The Liver, sympathizing as closely as itdoes with the Stomach, then be comes affected .the result of whieh is that the patient suffers from several or more ot the following diseases: ConstipMion, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Fa! was of Blood to the Head. Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fulness or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pitof the Stomach, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing. Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull Pain in tbe Head, Deficiency of Perspira tion. Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Back,Chest, Limbs, etc., Sudden flush es of Heat, Burni ug in tbe Flesh , Constant im aginings of Evil, and great depression ef Spirits. The sufferer from ?hese diseases should exercise tbe greatest caution in tbe seleotion of a remedy for his case, purchasing only that which he is as sured from his inves ligations and inquiries possesses true merit. is skilfully compound ed, is free from injurious ingredidents, and baa establUhed for itself a reputation for the cure of these diseases. In this eonnnection we would submit those well-known remedie Iloojtand't German Bittrrs, and HoflaniV t German- Totiir, prrparrH by Dr. C. M. J art son, Philadelphia, Pa. Twenty-two years sinoe they were first intro duced into this country from Germany, during which time they have undoubtedly parformea more cures, and benefitted suffering humanity to a greater extent, than any other remedies known to the public. These remedies will effectually cure Liver Com plaint. Jaundice. Dys pepsia.Chjoniifcu-i ftfU WimtfjWdurrAiseasea arising from a dis ordered Liver, Stomach, or Intestines. DEBILITY. Resulting from any cause whatever; prostration of the syitem. induced by severe labor, hardships, exposure, fevers, ete. There is no medicine extant equal to these rem edies in such cases. A tone and vigor is imparted to the whole system, the appetite is strengthed, food is enjoyed, tbe stomach digests promptly .the blood is purifiod, tbe complexion becomes sound and healthy, the yellow tinge is eradicated from tbe eyes, a bloom is given to tbe cheeks, and the we-ik and nervous invalid becomes a strong and beaithy being. PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE, And feeling the hand of time weighing heavily upon them, with all its attendant ills. will find in the use of this BITTEKS. or the TONIC, an elixer that will instil new life into their veins, restore in a measure the energy and ardor of mure youth ful days.build up their shrunken forms, and giva health aud buppieess to tbeir remaining years. NOTICE. Tt is a well established fact that fully one-half of the female portion of our population are sel dom in the enjoyment of good health; or, to use their own exprcs --J sion.-neverfeel well." They are languid, devoid of all energy, extreme ly nervous, aud have no appetite. To this class of petsons the BITTERS, or the TONIC, is espe cially recommended. WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN Are made strong by the use of either of these remedies. Tbey will cure every ease of MARAS MUS, without fail. Thousands of certificates have accumulated In the bauds of the proprietor, but space will allow of tbe publication of but a few. Tbose.it will be observed, are men of note and of such standing that they must believed. TESTIMONIALS. Hon. Geortrf W. Woodward, Chief Justie4 cj the Siiprrnu Court of Penn'a, write : Philadelphia. March 16, 1667. "I find -Hoofland's - German Bitters' is a good tonic useful in diseases of tbe diges tive organs, and of great benefit in eases of de bility, and want of nervous aetion in the system. Yours truly, GEO. W WOODWARD." Hon Jam' Thompson, Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania : Philadelphia, April 23, 1866. ilI eonsider'Hoofland's German Bitters' a vafu ahle meilirtn in case if attacks ot Indigestion or Dvspepsia. I can certify this from my experi ence of it. Yours, with respect, JAMES THOMPSON. From Rev. Joseph II. Kennard. D. D., Pastor of the tenth Baptist Church, Philadelphia. Dr. Jarl-son Dear Sir: I have been frequent ly requested to connect my name with recommen dations ef different kinds of medicines, but re garding tbe practice as out of my appropriate sphere, I have in all cases declined; but w i th a clear proof in various instances and particularly in my own family, of tbe usefulness of Dr. Hoofland's German Bitters. 1 depart for once from my usual eourse, to express my full conviction tbat,'r general dehiliti of the system, and e)eciallf for Liver Complaint, it it a safe and valuable preparation. Id some cases it may fail, but usually. I doubt not. it will be very ben eficial to (hose who suffer from the above causes. Yours, very respectfully, J. it. KEN N ARD, 8th.bel CoateS st, Fiom Rev. E. D. Fendall, Assistant Editor Christian Chroniele, Philadelphia. I have derived decided benefit from the nse of Hooflands German Bitters, and feel it my pilvil-e-e to reeommend them as a most valuable tonie, toall who are suffering from general debility or from diseases arising from derangement of the liver. Yours truly, h. D. FENDALL. CAUTION. Hoofland's G erman Remedies are counterfeited. See that the sign tture of C. M. JACKSON is on the wrapper of each bottle. All others are counterfeit Princi -L- pal Office and Manufao tory at the German Medicine Store,No.6Jl AHCil Street, Philadelphia, Pa. CHARLES M. EVANS, Proprietor. Formerly C. M. JACKSON A Co. Hoofland's German Fitters, rer bottle, Hoofland's German Bitters, half dozen, Si 00 . s 00 Hoofland's German Tonic. put up in quart bottles, SI 60 per bottle, or half dozen for $7 50. fj Do not forget to examine well tbe article you buy, in order to get the genuine. For sale hy A. I. SHAW, Agent, Clearfield Pa, April 22, 1868-1 . It ' if nr ir