.nii mm nTrn i"n i i rT''1 'i " rr THTIISDAY, OCTOBEU 15, 1868. KEITDUCAX TICBilJT. In the world to-day no prouder name Ts borne on any breeze. And with Grant to steer the ship of State, Our fl i? sdiall rule the sens ; No " Dominion" shall he North of u, Anil Fonth of us no foe Onr strs and stripe9 in the Canada?, And likewise Mexico! For with President Uljsae3 Will be few who care to fight May he. rule the countrj he has saved, And God defend the right! So boys! a final bumper, While we all in choru3 chant " For next President we nominate Our own Ulysses Grant!" And if asked what State he hails from, This our sole reply shall be, 14 From near Appomattox Court IIou3e, With it 3 famous apple tree!" For 'twas there to our Uljsse3 That Lee gave up the fight Now, boys, 41 To Grant for President, And God defend the right!" FOR PRKf I1E3T : GENL. ULYSSES S. GRANT. FOB vice president: HON. SCHUYLER COLFAX. P U KSI P EXT t AL E LECTORS. At Large O. Morrison Coates, of Philadel phia; Tiios. ji. Makshau, of Pittsburg. District. 1. V. H. Darnes, 2. W. J. Pollock, .1. Kic!i.rd Wildey, 4. C, W Hill, .'. Watson P. Mapill, J. II. Brinjrhurs't, 7. Fr-ink 0. Hooton, 8. 1.5:inc Eckert, 0. Maris IIoopos, 10. David M. Bank, 11. Wm. Davis, 12. W. W. Ketchum, District. 13. Samael Knorr. 14 H. F. AVrt?e?cller, 15. Clias. II. Mullen, 16. John Stewart, 17. George W. Elder, 18. Jacob Grafius, 19. James Sill, 20. II. C. Johnson, 21 . J. K. Kwinp, 22. Win. Frew, 23. A. W. Crawford, 24 J. S. Rutan. free schools. Yet this same party will j fawn and scrape and cringe to the basest ignorance of men, of another race,, noble but unfortunate, for no other reason than because -they vote the Democratic ticket. Their tactics will not win with this eren- enition. They can no longer deceive the great body of the people. .They can be made effective only in particular localities. One effect they will have. They will cause this verdict to be rendered : De mocracy is the American Ephraim ; she is joined to her idols ; let her die with them. And all the world will say amen ! YICTORY!! State ticket williiave about TOO majority. EDITORIAL ETCHINGS. Linton's majority, 70D. McDonald, inde- pendent, runs Tierney very close for Dis trict Attorney, but the latter is probably elected. The Democratic County ticket is elected. . The vote cast was very heavy : Government Receipts and Expenditures. Republican Majority In Penn sjUanla, 12,000 to 1G,000 ! AS GOES rEXNSYLVAXIA, SO GOES THE UXION! INDIANA & OHIO WHEEL INTO LINE! The Party of Hie People. SEYMOUR AND BLAIR NOWHERE MORRELL RE-ELECTED HOW ARE YOU, FREE TRADE LEAGUE? There are two ways of administering government in behalf of the people one, the demagogue's way, by which the passion of the hour is made supreme, and the oth er, the way of statesmanship, by which the welfare and elevation of the people are sought, rather than their mere gratifica tion. In a country such as ours, tlie nat ural tendency of political parties is toward the former. It requires no sacrifice of present popularity. It leaves its devotees glide along with the current, while the advocates of the other method are as men moving against the tide. The bane of popular government is this strong tendency to deify popular passion. Especially in a country like our own, where there is not sinipty a recognition of the people in point of fact, but where their will is the very basis of the governmental structure, deification of that will as em bodied in blind passion is more than likely to be accepted as the easiest, surest, and quickest road to power. The people, that is, the mass of them, have good mo tives that amiable quality with which hell is said to be paved but close discern ment, nice discrimination, and sagacious forethought, all experience proves arc only exceptionally theirs. They need, not leaders simply, but teachers; not politi cians, merely, but statesmen. Sometimes events happen by which a generation is schooled into wisdom. A war, a financial crisis, or an insurrection often thus be comes only less than a blessing, or ina prove even the salvation of a land. The revolution gave our fathers more wisdom than they would have gained from the precepts of as many generations as there were years ot that contest. o. in our own day, the conflict with the rebellion raised people and leaders up to views which they either could not or would not comprehend before. AVe emerged from that bloody contest with a people better fitted for self-government than when they went into it. Yet,' as is always the case. there arc some ounces in t lie cl;irs, some who adorn the fool's cap, though, out of harity. it should not be made to adorn them. The dance in this case is the old Democratic one. It will stick to its mud dleheadism, (if we may coin a word.) It is desirous arain to tret into power. Nor is anything more natural than that it should be so. But it blocks the only ave nue by which it can attain power. It was not content during the war to denounce . the REPUDIATION REPUDIATED THE NEW REBELLION SQUELCHED I L.et Us Have Peace!" DISTEICT3. Alleghany Tp , Bl.tcklick Tp....-..., Cambria Tp Caiubria I'.cro Carroll Tp ... Carrolltown Chest Tp.. a.. Chest Springs CleirdelJ Tp Coneuiiiugli Tp. ... Conemauj-'L Bor 1 W Do. 2 W Crovle Tp Ebeusburg, E. W.... Do. W. W Gallitzin Jackson Tp Johnstown, 1 W 2 W 3 W 4 W. 5 W 6 V Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Loretto Millville MuQSter Tp.. Prospect Uoio .... Richland Tp Summer bill Tp... Summitville Susquehanna Tp. Taj lor Tp.? Washington Tp... White Tp... ., Wihnore Toiler Tp Aud. G. Sur. G. ' v . ' f w o w O t 3 P : : 53 : S3 : f 28 197 72 53 72 53 109 49 169 49 27 217 28 210 48 271 48 271 4 fo 4 75 28 135 28 135 10 175 97 C.1 9fi 1 58 ICO '68 160 53 101 55 99 55 102 J4 19 94 18 5U 73 GC 71 53 123 53 123 01 7o 91 70 190 5'J 193 55 121 52 127 '47 82 70 79 09 67 99 67 14c 65 145 62 49 25 49 25 10 51 10 51 216 115'21C 115 40 22 4'3 22 48 49 111 49 111 6 27 6 27 1051113 105 !1". 14" 63 140 62 60 223 60 4& 27 48 27 Cong. o 3 3 72 170 68 48 4 28 95 62 GO 93 CO 5-3 91 '93 r28 CC 99 151 49 10 228 49 6 53 51 175 272 75 135 62 154 93 19 71 124 70 4i 87 67 59 25 51 101 112 27 t49 106U12 59 232 27 40 PENNSYLVANIA! CONNECTICUT! COLORADO ! VtRElONT! INDIANA! MAINE! OHIO! '(Jive Us Peach !" the stobm subsides, Heaves its Blessings lending, Ocr Good Ship at Anchor bides, All its Pebils ending. Raise the brave old Flag on high, Till the Breeze it kisses; Hear a Trustixq Nation cry, "Taie tue Helm, Ulyssks !" "We have met the enemy, and he is ours ! After a square, stand-up ht one of the most fiercely contested in the history of the State we have whipped the so-called Democracy; and not only whipped him, but turned his defeat into an overwhelm ing rout, which must end in his utter and irretrievable ruin. Temisyl vanla. Dispatches received from various sources indicate that wc have elected our State Ticket by a majority ranging from 12, 000 to 10.C00. Philadelphia gave a small Democratic majority. Alleghany county ave U.OOO la-publican majority. Pitts burg elected a Kepublican Mayor. In the Westmoreland district, the vote for C vode and Foster is very close, with the former probably elected. Tlie Liberal l'ress f Europe on ' 4 - - - M 111V tllcl3 The Liberal press of Germany and France, in-discussing the Presidential canvass, in variably sum up the case in favor of Grant and the party he heads. The JJlecteur, a Freueh journal, foreshadows the result of the electiou in a remarkably clear manner. Basing its arguments on the result of the Maine nud Vermont elections, the Eectcur says: "The current which has started from those Xortheru States is fatal to the party which still persists in covering its hideous ness with the fair and noble name De mocracy. Democracy ? The party which now calls itself Democratic is no more so than the llus&ian Government, which some of its admirers likewise call Democratic. The Democracy in the United States is emphatically a party uf prejudice aud re action, a party clinging to the errors of the past, and execrating the new light of the present. It preaches oppression and war, resistance to lawful authority, exten sion of the one-man power, and, where it rules, there is an end to freedom of speech and material prosperity. It promises to rebuild froui the old Irairments and ruins of slavery another structure, likewise built on oppression and inequality ; that is to say, on sand. .No wonder that the large majority of the people of the United States repose confidence in a party which lays more solid foundations tor the political structure which it is erecting. Maine and Vermont show increased llcpublican ma jorities, and these increased majorities sim ply mean that General Grant will be elect ed President in November." The iuillvs du l'cuiile, another journai no less sanguine of the victory of the lie publican party, pursues a similar strain of reasoning, irom which it is apparent that the cause of freedom and justice is thor oughly understood and appreciated by lib eral minded Europeans of all classes. HWWHIMMi' Exit Strong filter Williams. OIilo. Ohia is reported to have given 25,000 Republican majority. Intlia na. Indiana gives a llcpublican majority of 14,000. The resignation of Judge String, and the apjKintineiit of Judge Williams to his position on the Supreme liench, now gives the Republicans a majority in that Court. Judge Strong is an honest man. aud many of his decisious were in harmony with jggy Advertising is the secret of success. , J6S" Growing cold the evenings oflate;- Eg?" Interesting to Democrats the news from the late elections. r J83j- Where the Democratic slate ? Can't it cipher a Democratic-majority in Penni. ? EST There are nt present fonr haudred acd forty inmate3 in the Ve3ten Penitentiary. jgigy Cambiia county has reduced the Dem ocratic majority 300 votes since the election of last year. . . . ' ? jgr The election on Tuesday was a recon noisance in force. The great and decisive battle will be fought on the 3d November. Blair spoke from notes at Indianapolis the other day. That is nothing tew for him, however. lie always takes down his p'ints Jbefore speaking. For sale, cheap, at the Altoona T7n dicator office a laroe Dumber- of wood-cuts representing some phases of the Democratic idea of "greenbacks for bonds." Since the counting up of Tuesday's vote, some, of the prominent Democratic pol iticians of Cambria county have expressed their intention of permanently retiring from the field of politics. Railway Votes" for President are now the order of the day. A voting com mittee on one of our railways recently was taken aback by a vote for "Seymour and Colfax." Howell Cobb, of Georgia, fell dead in New York one -day last week. He was one of the guiltiest of the whole batch of traitors, and, except bv those who sympathised with his treason, will not be mourned. J5"The wheel of progress moves. The Spanish Junta are for abolishing slavery in the colonies at the expiration oi thirty years. Free education, free religion and free speech, will in time follow. A revolution, indeed 1 J5 ot a rebel was hanged for his crimes. Cut since the close of the war, thousands of loyal men have been murdered in the South for thei? loyalty. This is a fact which should stir every drop of patriotic blood in Northern veins. JCS" Mrs. Lincoln sailed for Europe on the steamer Paltimore, from Baltimore, on Thurs day last. Her name was not published with the list of passengers, and the fact of her being on board was unknown, except to a few personal friends. ifiy A Republican torchlight procession in Pittsburg, on the evening of the 7th, was attacked by a mob, and the Mayor himpelf was slightly wounded in his efforts to quell the disturbance. These rioters have forgot ten their latitude. Tey seem to imagine that they are in Camilla, Ga. . tsS Before the election, some of the Dem ocratic prints of this district vociferously as serted that a vote for Daniel J. Morrell for 'oi!,ress would be a vote in favor of a ,cnig ger government." How about it now ? Are a large majority of the electors of this dis trict in favor of a "nigger government ?" fjSf The following expresses, in the happy manner peculiar to pure Southern poetrj-, the feelinga which animate the Southern Generals, including Hobby Lee and Buckner: Of course, you know, I"m on parole, My vote ain't worth much at the poll, But I go for Seymour with all my soul, And so will the rebel army. fcgs- A Georgia letter to the Syracuse Jour nal closes as follows: "You of the North must, plect Gratt and Colfax. "Ye demand it of you. The sealing up war is in your hands. The aid in this work anticipated from the South will prove abor tive. We have not the ability to pass a militia bill, and the lives of Union men are everywhere threatened. But a partial can vass at the best can be made by the party, and no reliance be placed of ultimate safety and fair voting at the polls." BF Said Governor Curtin, in a noble burst of eloquence during his speech before the Union League in Philadelphia last Friday evening, " As I looked upon the multitudes of men in line to-day, and saw the tattered flags and stained uniforms, and recalled all tht-y had suffered for my country, and then ?IIon.E. B. Washburne, Chairman off the Committee of Appropriations, author izes the punlication of a statement exhib iting the revenue receipts of the National Treasury for the current fiscal yeaV, which will allay any misapprehension created by the mis-statements of designing-person j in tne pay ot the Democratic party. Jb rom thi statement, we learn that instead of a deficiency, there will be a surplus in the Treasury at tne end of the current year. The first quarter of the fiscal year 1868-9 closed on the last day of September. The Aourcea of revenue to the Treasury are three, namely: customs, internal revenue and miscellaneous. These in their re spective order exhibit the following facts : The custom receipts at the port ot New York from the commencement of the fiscal year to September 26th, were 33,780,347, gold. To these receipts must be added one-fourth (less than the average) for the receipt? of the other ports. Making due allowances for the fluctua tions in importations, these figure indi cate a gold revenue from customs of at least S170,000,000 for the fiscal year. The receipts of internal revenue for the first quarter amounted to S40,6o0,800, in dicating an average of 13,500,000 per month. In answer to the assertion that the revenue has been augmented by re ceipts from the income tax, it is stated that the whole amount derived from in come as but 5,000,000, and that any deficiency from this source will be more than made up by the gains on the reve nue from distilled spirits. Allowing for the reductions on raw cotton and manu factured products, exclusive of . spirits, bfcer, tobacco, patent medicines and play ing cards, the receipts will continue sub stantially as in 18067. The sum of 4, 350,000 is now in transit to close up the receipts of the fiscal quarter, making a total of 45,000,000. Prom these figures we are enabled to estimate the receipts of the fiscal year from internal revenues at one hundred and eljhty million dollars. The total receipts under the head of mis cellaneous for the last fiscal year were o0,- 185,910. With the exception of the re ceipts from direct tax (which amounted to but 1,788,149) the revenue accruing ur.der this head will bo fully as large the present as last year. Thus we will have from customs 165,000,000 at the lowest estimate, from internal revenue 160, 000, 000, miscellaneous 45,000,000; total 370,000,000. The expenditure for -the lat fi-cal year, including interest on the public debt, amounted to 370,339,073. With the ex ception of 7,200,000 paid for Alaska, a probable increase in the pension expend iture of 2,300,000, and an estimated post office deficiency of 500,000, there is no leason to suppose that the expenditures of the current year will exceed those of the preceding year. The amount paid lor interest on the public debt for the fi-cal year 1867-8 was 140,423,9S5, part of which was the accumulated interest on the "compound interest notes." The legiti mate interest for the current year will ap proximate 126,000,000. The debts paid for war expenditures du ring the last fiscal year were 10,330,158. 3"'xpeu'litures ot Freedrueu'a bureau were 3,215,999. The difference in approprin tions for rivers and harbors between the preceding and current year shows a gain ot 4,632,120, which added to the rapid reduction in the army, navy and treasury Another Accession to Grant The National Quarterly Review, WDj K has just come to hand, contains anar)f. the Presidential election, which reiPW the candidates critically. Although thl publication has always been decidedly c ' servative in its leanings, it expresses hJ", in favor of Grant, as will appear fro A'" following extract: , . "t "It is almost needless foi m to sjr.i it is not on political ground we ix-Z choose General Grant for the President chair and reject Mr. Seymour; we iuT eacu not-Dy nis party out by hxani W e are in favor ot the electiou of Gra.t not because he is a llcpublican or a Had;' i cal, but because be has merited the grati ' tude of his country; and wc are oppu?4 to the election of Seymour, not because he is a Democrat, but because he has m,r ? ireu noiuing gooi ironi nis country. 1,.. ; deed, we do not regard Grant as a politic. I ian. at all ; he is too honest and straightf r. i ward to be one; whereas Seymour is no . t ing but a politician. This is no mere nut. ter ot conjecture or inference. B.nh candidates are tried men in a certain sen-e One commauded our armies at tbe hour of the nation's greatest peril; the other was the Governor of the State of Ntw York at the same hour. Now whi-h er formed their duties best? Which prJvc the most faithful public servant? Which ? contributed most to vindicate the prestige ; of the American people as capable of oV fending, as well as governing themselves. as a cation? In a word, did not Grant do r all the good which it was possible for any ! one to do in his position? What more could have been done by Washington him. self, could he have lived, to save the Iitt j of the Republic ot which he was founder? Nor could the Father of his country i have treated the conquered, brave enemy, with more generosity. "What, ujxkj the other hand, did Seymorjr do as Governor? Could he have contributed less toward the salvation ot the nation without a flagrant violation of his oath, if, indeed, he could have done ko without reodoriu himself liable to be put on trial as a traitor? We do not aree with those who accuse Mr. Sey mour of having .sympathized with the rebels to the extent ol wishing that thev : would succeed in dismembering the Re public. We believe that at hejrt he was in favor of maintaining the Uuion; bat K had not the manliness to speak ami at accordingly. The duplicity and chicanery of the politician clung to him a'l alon. He always took into account the influx v; he might one day be able to exerce : the South by a otuai sympathy with the rebels; and it was precisely in the same sqirit that he addressed the insurgent mob of New York "as his friends. The trjth is, that he was a worse enemy to both than those who openly shot thein down, because he deceived both, and cccoar-.icd them to bring ruin upon themselves." How Ormit Wouldn't. The Washington Chrmiiih- h;is a stry hinting ;it dire plots by the President an his friends plots against the existence f Congress and the perpetuity i' the- llepuh lic which needed only the alienee 1' General Grant for their consummation. In pursuance of their conspiracy to get him out ot tlie country, Vie w-as v lio st-ut to 'Mexico as a kind of a tail to L a Canipbells's kite, but our hero flatly f:':--ed to go. Hut, says the CJhyjm '. ov; or two' after this refusal the Proidcnx re turned to the subject, and urged the eu. Kicsv rn r.r.mt sirin" he had sent t-r ax. We demand it department, shows a gain which may be sh fmnn tn rjlk ' .;: pl'ace. In the mean of the fruits of the represented thus: r,mrrpss w:1, a,uut to assemble. uiA r.xpenuuures lor ioui-s- .joiUjjajOu Increased by Alaska appropria tion 7,200.000 By increase of Pensions ,300.000 Estimated I'ostofiice deficiency... 5,000,000 Total ;.. $384,839,673 Decreased by interest account... 14,(0000 those of Judircs Head and Airnew, and fully up to the expectations of the loyal I tried to count the countless host who died T i 1 ft . XI- masses, lie was elected as a xe.UiOcrai for libertv, I could not belp exclaiming, y.y Decreased br State Claims Decreased by expenses of Freed niens' Bureau... Decreased by expenses of rivers, h:rbors, tc Decreased by reduction of army expenses Decreased by reduction of expen ses of roiV3, civil and miscel laneous, reconstruction, &c.... the air was full of rumors that tlie i ro dent would refuse to acknowledge the val idity of Congress, and attempt to disport it by arms. ' Mr. Johnson had recent!;, seemed to have peculiar designs in rcg.ir'. to Maryland. Grant remembered tiu. au. airain declined to leave the country, thi- - . - t r . 1 1 1 . .time in writing. Alter tins no was c.n to a full Cabinet meeting, where his -i-tailcd instructions were read out by t! 4:632,120 socrctary of State, as if the objections .fi..-nlj '1,1.1 lwn nf no ncoount. 'lh, v 25,000,000 , tn ,vl,!i,: nat; uuiiuunim i.kj uumw ...... .. ho would or not to drive him out of t' 25,000,000 country which he had saved, tiram - now aroused, nnd. beiore tho Wiu.:- s ;t : 10,330,188 2,715,000 and for that reason he felt in honor soie obligation not to demur to the decisions of his Democratic colleagues, io those things which savored slightly of a political char acter. And here it is hinted that his re signation iust now arises from disgust God, what sort of a man must be be who can dislike, much less vote against, the party sup ported by these men and led by their great leader 1"' ggf- Henry Ward Beecber says: " The new- Total.. S 81,077,308 nctj declared his unwillingness t k-ve - jicre we nave a maximum ex pcuu.iu.c Wi!Creupou xie president, not an -nr. for the current year of o03,202,obo, to Grant turned to th9 Attorney tionen. meet which we ha ve shown that a revenue ftuJ agked him whcther tlierc was anJw excecoinir bot U.UUU.UUU mav Dereiscaon. t r? t- ti.i,i n,t r.l.,- thU onl The statements, published under the au- .iloti,..P i,ft wac indi-nble to the V thority of Mr. Washburne, show conclu- ti in any wa C.rant at once rr j eivrlu that, instead of a deficiency. Hie ( f.( i.,;,,i . i;r - - - t - . - - i iij ilia itxi auvt CALiauiitu . a v.iit" Congress. Notwithstanding the herculean efforts of the Tree Trade League to defeat lion. Y). J. MoitcII for Congress, that gentleman is triumphantly re-elected. The following figures will give au approximate idea of his majority in the district: Linton. Xorrell. Cumbria for something which Thompson and Shars- adhesion of impatient Southern men to the cou,ltry u,ay reasonably anticipate a sur- fjUCSton yT president without ? wood were connivi'ig at as Judges elected vry worst type of Dimocratic doctrine ever pus Gj from fifty to sixty millions in the f-.U:.. .....1 l.lnn.i. r.f T.;iw.nli.' t l''1'1'''.. . i i ni nil u'J J" . administration, but had to hobnob r.rl exchange winhs with the rebels in arms, as though it could persuade tlte North to do likewise. It was accustomed, previous to the rebellion, to playing ujxn the prej udices of many citizens of native and nearly all of foreign birth by making appear as hideous and disastrous the competition of the free white man's labor with that of the free black man. It is now engaged in a bimilar trick on the Pacific coast, where it is exciting all the mean animosities of our nature against the Chinamen of Califor nia. Knowing that our government was framed that there might bo the greatest religious freedom, they urge against the California Chinamen that they, are not Christians. They oppose their-becoming citizen, and do. not want them to h.-tve Mi til in.. roo roo 700 900 20 1620 Morrcl.'s majority, 920. Stale Senate. Indiana county gives Harry ."White 2, 4U0 majority; Jefferson county will prob ably give him 300. In Cambria county, Piper, independent, runs behind the Dem ocratic ticket. He will have a very small majority here, if any. "White's majority will probably be 2,CO0 in the distaict. by the Democracy. And inasmuch as he could not sanction them, .he would no long er remain iu the position his party placed him in, when lie could not co-operate with his colleagues placed there by the same organization. What a comment his course is on that of an ex-Senator, not a hundred miles away, who, though he left the prin ciples and organization of the party which elected him, had not the manliness to resign his position, but held to it pock eting the spoils, and persisted in misrepre sentintr the will of his constituents. Judge" Williams will occupy a scat in the Supreme Court till Dec, lSG'J, at least. A Prize. 7orV 44G Cambria Cuunfj Wo subjoin the vote of Cambria count-, si far as the returns have come in. The figures seem to show that the Democratic JftaJfjuarfrrs Soldiers and Sai Notional irpublican Kx. Com., Ao. Fourteenth SV., Washington, J). C, Oct.l, 1SGS. The Soldiers' and Sailors' Nation al Kepublican Executive Committee offer a silk banner to the soldiers and sailors of the State which in this campaign shall show the largest per cent, of increase in the llcpublican vote sir.eo .is last general or Congressional election prior to the nom ination of Gen. Gi'uui. Also4 a f-iuular banner to the county in any State of the United States showing the largest per cent, of increase upon similar terms. y order of the Committee. II. A. Barxum, Chairman. enunciated since the party went into alliance with slavery, cannot be as disastrous for the South as was the league with the same party before the war. The Democratic party seems fated to lead the South into desperate steps, and then to be utterly unable to help those whom it has deluded. It will be so again. Utterly lost to all moderation, the Conven tion in New York has laid down a platform which will bring civil war to the South again, unless it is prevented by the victory of the Republican party." J&- Intimate friends of Chief-Justice Chase say that he has recently spoken very freely in regard to the pending election. He thinks that Grant w,ill carry all the States, with the exception oT six or eight, and that after he becomes President the country will surely prosper. In his opinion Grant will make a prudent and honest officer; will assume no powers that do not belong to him: will call good and trust worthy men around him, and will, by his management of the affairs of the country, make a re-election in 1872 an easier matter. He will be the means of uniting the Republican party and keeping it on the offen sive. Mr. Chase adds that the present polit ical campaign clearly demonstrates the fact that the Deinocratic.party of the North can not remain united with the Democratic party of the South and hope for success. The lead ers might agree, but the mnsses never. Treasury at the end of the current fiscal year. Those who are so disposed can com pare these figures with Mr. Delniar s fan cies at their leisure. Gen. Sclioftcld to Geu. Grant. pealing to the Attorney Genera, i an American citizen, have oeen gum no treason or crime, and am eligible to an civil office to which any other America: is clitriblc. Hut this is a purciy ci u u; to which you would assign mc. and 1 can not he compelled to undertake it. legal military order you will give me I :. obey ; but this is civil, not military, a I decline the duty. No power on cart can force me to it." The President at his Ministers were astonished and silec aud Grant left the Cabinet chamber. Immediately after the Chicago Convcn tion, Gen. Sch-jfield, then commanding art Richmond, wrote to Gen. Grant, congrat ulating him on his nomination and the ac tion of the Convention iu other respects. The loiter concludes as follows : "I have alwavs believed that the Union could he fully restored only by the men who put down the rebellion, while I have not been without serious apprehensions that, by forcing upon the country extreme radical theories, the stability ol the Lov ernment niiht be endangered. Great re forms require time for their full develop ment tiuie in which theories may be an- .wi w m,nrl rf essaryres rov.pHenlntilitvKOTv.v.l frmn th.i unsound Tammany Platform and chimerical. W lsdom an-1 moderation in Congress will now give the country re storation and peace. Your election to the Presidency will be the end of our political troubles, as your accession to the command-in-chief of the army was the end of the Southern rebellion." Vote'5 for Grant and Colfax on the 3d of Novenihcr next. The New Rebellion U in full blast r Louisiana. One hundred Union men, t and" black, were killed or wounded i Opelousas. The J'royress newspaper destroyed and the editor lynched. Shreveport fifteen Union men arid rebels were killed. Similar reports expected from other quarters, as the b ' suit ot tlie revolutionary , These tac - ford a text which is as sood as a ser' We have to ask simplj what do yoota of U, and if the nomination of Seym and ' Blair is atended by euch consequences, what may we expect r- ii 1 fr i rom Vi l r 1 n t I fill Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indian spond to Vermont nud Maine. i November, and victory tor lranT. ; Ei o on t A A 1 nan . on. hoo nev "for 'i ree ' in i i , I tag f JVb ; NIA Bla ' Car Chf Gal Joh Sus Wai Wh Wil of 51 wei rai: lim an3 I pul i ins He auj. cai le ore die pul to I hoi 1 me I "ii t do 4 De n i he j on on i J nt l'H ri " On Pa ! pa? J cil of ie Mil tb nnj ty'i to per i n g or the ow . shi fin thi f do EUl il)c da Ce ha: an fox to "off tO) er )us op lei an cit be no 'Ca fai 2S Jo Hi: roi It OC( th, bu rai on EL tur wa of bu tal of thi eib m