THE BEDFORD GAZETTE 19 ri'BMSHED EVERY FRIDAY HORN 130 51Y R. F. BEIEKS A! tbe following terms, to wits $2 00 per annum, if paid strictly in advance. |2.soif paid within S month*; $3.00 if not paid vithia 6 months, gy No subscription taken lor less than six months [jyNo paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher, it has bneo decided by the United States Courts that the stoppage of a newspaper without the payment of arrearages, is prima facie evidence of fraud and if a arimina! ofience. JE7"The courts &av= decided that persons are ae* soantable for the subscription price of newspapers, if they take them from the post office, whether they subscribe for them, or not. THE RIGHTS OF CITIZENSHIP. Speech of Hon. Henry Winter Davis in the House of Representatives, March 2,1865—The Administration De nounced by one of its Sup porters—The Horrors of Military Rule Un veiled, °nt charge 1 falsely, arid convicted on testimo ny which no jury in the world of any political complexion would weigh an inrtant, of having •old a few hundred dollar/ worth of goods to i government spy to be sent across the lines to tbe southern confederacy. That trial by m li kary commission was Authorized by no law known to any statute-book in the U. States. The crime cf trading with the rebel states is express ly directed to be trie-land punished bv indictment before the U States courts for a tcisdemcanar VOLIHE 60. NEW SERIES. merely ; but he now lies in a New York peni tentiary, herding with felons, murderers, and thieves, though if legally convicted before Chief Justice Chase he could by law have !>een r-en tcnced oijly to fine and imprisonment in jail! I ara daily besot by letters and solicitations of loyal gentlemen, ioy firmest and best personal friends io the world, to go to the President and beg a? a boon that tins man be pardoned / I have hai no stronger pressure brought uoon me since i have been in public life. My reply is: if n petition i? gotten up f>r Mr. Weiseniieid to pardon tiia President lor lis illegal oppres sion, A vvsii eet.n it ' but ' -viil not u gra :e* toe nafit? cf an Ai.;!can ci ; zen by - enin * a pe-' lit ion to beg as u favor the personal liberty of an American citizen i! 1 gaily and oppressively condemned by a military cotnmi®.-ion and that at the hands of the President who twice refused to refer his car to the courts of the U. States wide open fur Lis protection, and, in the face cf the laws and Constitution of the U. States subjected him to this illegal persecution. Sir, let l.iui stay where he is till the voice of public indignation or the whispers cf conscience com pel Lis honorable discharge—not his pardon!. Till they who iil-gally c nfined him shell beg 1 him to come forth! Mr. Chairman, the alarm ing fact is till. —— military commissions do not even profess to he governed by the laws of the U. Stales enacted by Congress. They have created a department of jurisprudence unknown to til** Saws of the United States, nowhere em bodied in statutes or decisions, called the "'cus toms of war." They try loyal men in loyal -late-, where no wur rages, f r a violation of what they call "the usages of icari" lire ate the pandects of the future empire of ike United Stales ; tbe rulings cf the Judge-Advo cate General on •'•the usages and customs of vy.u" applied to peaceful citizens in loyal states ; where the courts are open, where the law alone ought to he the mie of every judgment and ev ery conviction This invention of the law of "the usages of war' and "military offenses,". applied to citizens an 1 friends instead of ene mies, annuls every act of Congress. In va.n the act of the 3! of March, 1863, punish the aiding a soldier to deseit by one not in the military service on legal conviction in the courts of the United States: in vain does the act of the 3i of March, 1863, punish fraudulent claims, - false oath?, forged signatures, forcing papers, embezzling U. SMat® property, false receipts for arms, purchasi. g arms from soldiers, when corrmined by a ; -arson in the military t irc.-s of the Hailed States, on convict ion by cuiiri-ui.tr tiah and at the discretion of the court-martial, i but in the t'd *ds ction dailies that any person , not m the n.l io:-. . of the U. Stares gtiil- i ty cf those acts, shall forfeit Certain line? and be subject to certain imprisonment on convic tion iu the courts of the United States; for the military commissions presume to punish every one of these acts committed by citizens in deli- j anCe of the law securing them a constitutional trial. By the act of the 2il March, 1831, {urg ing p. . ccr,.;i<:,.tcs is punishable by the courts of tne United States in the District of Colum bia ; yet a military commission punishes it vvitu ni sight of the open court-house and of the President's mansion ! The act of March 3, 18-33, expressly directs a person guilty of resisting the dialt to be ar rested by the provost marshal and to be forth with delivered to the civil authorities, and, on conviction by them, subject him io line and imprisonment; but the military c mmis-ions have annulled that law, and instead of deliver ing the person to the civil authorities for trial, themselves hold and try, convict and punish hint: and this when ilie courU of the L nitcd States are wide open in the District where Congress sits iri peace and enacts the laws which are thus defied! If these things be not arrested, there is no law but the sword, nojudge but the majori ty o' a military commission holding tli'eir cc :n --liiis-ion at the wul of the President. Now , sir, I have a word lor the "cntieroan from Kentucky ("Mr. Yeaiian.] who moved to include persons engaged in violating the rules and customs of war. Does that mean citizens ol the United States in loyal states, where the courts of the United States are open, where their act is trea son, for which the statutes of the United State® say they shall be tried, on indictment, before the courts of the United Stater, and who, the Constitution say?, tfaXrß be tiled no other wise than by a jury of ihe state and district in which tho crime was committed, and convicted only on the testimony of two witnesses f If it is notorious that they are guerillas, in the name of conscience and common sense can not that be made to appear to a jury of their loyal fel low citizen?, to be sutnhaoned by a marshal ap pointed by tbe PreeidentMiimself { prosecuted by a district attorney that he appoints; adjudged by judges who hold their office during life ; many of thorn now even appointed by Mr. Lincoln, and nil liable to impeachment by u? end con viction by the Senate if not lit to administer justice? if it. be a matter of doubt; then the prisoners are entitled to that doubt; and if it is so plain that there is no doubt, then any tri bunal will convict. That is my answer to that proposed amendment. Mr. Yeaman —I ask the gentleman to yield to me. Mr. Davis of Maryland—'Certainly, for a question. Mr. Teaman —I only desire, Mr. Chairman, to ste that there is now a law of the Congress of the United Srates prescribing the mode and manner of trying these vagabonds, cut-throats and robbers, who have to-dny become the great est scourge to the states of Missouri. Tenftessee, and Kentucky. In reply to the suggestion, if it is so notorious that they are guerrillas why cannot it be proved and established in a court of justice, I will say now that in three-fourths of Kentucky we have no courts of justice, he cause from the acts cf these men we cannot hold tlicm. In eight of my own dis trict they have burned our court-bouses, and the officer* of tbe law cannot go there, juries cannot b** tommoned, and witnesses cannot tes- Freedom of Thought aad Opitioa. BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE '2, 1865. tify. I will add, if the gentleman will permit j Mr. Davis, of Maryland—l cannot yield for ' an argument. Mr. Yeaman—l do not propose to make an I argument. Mr. Davis, of Maryland—lt is impossible for me to yield further. I must go on. Tn the first place, it three-fourths of tire State ■ of Kentucky urn subj z* to incursions of peer- j villas the other fourth i* not, aal that will fur- : ni h jurors enough. If there is room to hold j a military court there is room to hold a civil j coina. if msr ••*-. .io: a:raid to go to testify j before a military court they win not be afraid ! to go before a civil court. Jf bayonets are need- | ed to protect them before n military court, bay- 1 oriel? can protest them before a civil oourt. >Sir, j this hank-ring after military courts is not be- ! cause they cannot bo tried and convicted before j the courts of the United States, if guilty ; but j men mad with civil war want a sharper and ' easier way to deal with criminals as enemies j It is tho cry for vengeance and not justice! That | is what it is and nothing else, i live in a state } that has never disgraced itself by rebellion, but j it has been disturbed by internal dissensions ; j and I know that rancorous hostility which has j grown up between men even of the same furii- j ly. And Ido not wish military tribunals to ; apply their !.ar-h, sharp vengeance.between mea j who live on adjacent estates, at. the instigation j of personal revenge, of malice, without local i public trial, unprotected by the rights secured i to them by the Constitution and laws of thej United States, when a whispered lie may stain i innocence with the penitent! :ry by the vote of: twj out oi three of a military ccmmi.-sioa. t . they have committed acts which render them dangerous but are not criminal or cannot be \ proved, we have authorized the suspension of the / ulcus corpus and the President can hold [ them ; not try, not convict, not disgrace, not j degrade, not kill, but hold them under the pre- j cautionary discretion conferred by law and t en- j dered secure Uy the military power. If they j have committed crimes known to the law which . can be proved, and which it is desirable to pun- j isb. the President can prove it before the courts j of Pe United States in Maryland, and they can i onvicted in the courts of the L'. States in j Maryland. Now a word touching the amend- j ment of my honorable friend from Ohio, [Mr. j !u:xo:c.l with whom I always differ with the greatest hesitation. Yet 1 thiuk that his logic ; will bring him to this conclusion, that if the Constitution of the United states says that no on. -hall be tried for any infamous crime other wise than by a jury of the state and district, ' except cases arising i.i the military or naval fore-? of the United {states, any enactment which authorizes any one to be tried in any other wav in the states where United State?; courts are open is itself void. The tribunal i ; which tries a case not arising in the military for- ' c:s in any other way is a trespasser, and the • party who was convicted has a private remedy j for tlie injury lie has sustained if the court had j no jurisdiction. No one can violate the right ! • cf the citizen to immunity from military trial 1 safely, whether we declare it or not. and every j one has hi? remedy to-day in the courts of the ! United States, in spite of any enactment, tor ; everv oppression. Why then place a provision j in the law declaring these proceedings to be j : void ? In order that a loud voice should go out j from this hall to the American people, ringing j over the land to announce by authority that their i i reprc? rotative® recognize and declare the nullity j of the proceedings of these military tribunals, | and to encourage the people to seek redress in I the courts of the country, nut by crawling ?o 'kit 'rimis at- the bands <,i the President of the I ; United States, but of right, by law. before those j (courts, which are the glory and the safety of j the Ameri an Republic. My honorable friend .■■.tso wishes rue to trik • out that pact of my amendment which provides that those not iiabie . !o tri d by military courts now h -ld under their | sentence? should be discharged or delivered to the civil tribuual.® for trial. Sir, if it will sat isfy any gentleman here, or remove any doubt or f '-itatiort; 1 will most cheerfully agree that the word "discharge" shall be strickhti <>ut. ®o that tiie provision will stand that these men shall he delivered over to the civil tribunals to • be proceeded against according to law —the A merican's birthright. i But it is objected by mv honorable friend ; i'roai Oni'i (Mr. Schenck) that these men, hav : ing first disputed the jurisdiction of the milita ry court, will, when brought before a civil court, plead their former conviction in bar. L know the eminent legal ability of my friend, and if he will run over it. his mind the form of plea ! that, must he made in such a case he would find that it would be this : On a given day, at a certain place, before A B C D E F and G, a military commission convened by order of the President of the United States, I. a citizen not in the military service of the United States, was convicted for a violation of "tho usages of war," or sorno* crime known to the iaw, but punishable by statute only in the courts of the United State.-, rig sentence and punishment. My learned friend would he the first to put in a demurrer to such a plea. On the record it would appear that the military commission had j no jurisdiction of the party or the offense; that! the party had not been convtcled at all; that he had never been in jeopardy of life or limb ; for the Constitution forbids such a tribunal to try such a person. The jurisdiction of every court, especially one of limited and exceptional juris diction, may be impeached collaterally, or must appear on its record; and the appearance of generals and cologels and captains sitting, at the will of the President, in place of venerable j judges, whose tenure is good behavior, and the ! absence of a jury, show that it is not a cqurt 1 at all, bu f an unlawful combination of trcspas- : scr- usurping the functions of a court, guilty of j a crime and not exercising an authority. Any court of tho United State? will, on habeas corpus, discharge a citizen confined under sentence of such a tribunal. Let those new in illegal con- lincment seek that remedy; and if it be denied j them, let an impeachment by the rcpresenta- j tives of the people vindicate the rights of the people. Mr. Chairman, the public safety never has required these illegal and summary trials; ! it now require; that they cease. The past, men arc ready to forget, thr. American people most jof a!i; they instigated or tolerated the usurpa tion: of those in authority ; but they now have : felt in*- sharpness of military justice and demand | of their rulers a return to the Constitution and j law:. If heretofore they have violated the law ! jan ' Constitution—l do not say criminally, Ido ■ mi* .>• with intent to opprs. Ido not say even ! knowing it to be criminal —it was the common | error; and they may plead the error of the peo | pie which .misled the leaders of the people at j the beginning of the rebellion. More firmness, ! more knowledge, more coolness in high places, j might perhaps have arrested the popular our , rent and silenced the popular tumult and kept 'the torrent within the hounds of law. It was | not found in places of authority; all bowed be- I fore the storm and lloated with the current. It is ii the power of the _ representatives of the j Am- ilcan people alone to stop it before every I vestige of American liberty i> hurled beneath I the waters. Sir, I am not v\ iliing to change ) one word of my amendment. It was not fra jmo out of in} own head, of my old-fashioned j whims and fancies, now out of fashion in this | era of gold lace and military vertigo. I had I frequent consultations with some of the ablest i members upon this side of tire House, those j most conspicuous for the ardor of their support i of the administration ; and they think with me j that obstinate adherence to these abuses must j I destroy either the administration or the repub ! lie. If it would satisfy any one to strike out' i the word "discharge," I have no objection, be i cause an American citizen is sate when deliver-, •ed into the custody of the civil authorities to i be proceeded against according to law ; but be j yond that I do nut feel disposed to mo fify my i j amendment in any particular. Least of all can' ; I accept the amendment of the gentleman from j . lowa, (Mr. KASSON*,) which enumerates the of-' j femes for which citizens shall not be tried by I military courts, but yields the whole principle i by admitting that persons not in the military 1 fur- in states where the United btutes Courts j are open, may he tried for violating the "usages j and customs of war;" it recognizes the cate- I gory of military offenses committed by a citi zen, an exception which would place your lib ; erty and life and mine at the beck and call, at j the will and pleasure of any military cotnmis : t. • i of officers too worthless for field service, ! or >r d to try us and "organized to convict." That amendment involves a total roisapprehen ; sion of the whole question. It is not what of fenses a military court may try, but what per ; sous they may try for any offense. The Con- Istitutiou forbids them to try any citizen for any orfene I will not detain thcllouse by narra ' ting the individual cases of oppression that are j fresh in my memory. There is no gentleman i that docs not know of such cases in las own I ueig!.'> u'ljo jd, and has not felt this atmosphere ' of oppression around him. Income of Farmers. The following letter from the Deputy Cant j missioner of Internal Revenue, may be of in ' terest to farmers: TREASURY DEPARTMENT. OFFICE OF J INTERNAL. REVENUE, WASHINGTON, :> March 11. 1865. ) Slß: —Yonr letter of March oth, in regard I to farmer's income returns is received. 1 reply that the act of July 1, 1862, under I which returns were, made for lite annual income j taxes -T j 862 and 1863, required farmers to | mal • returns ol the entire crop harvested. But the act of June 30th, 1864. now in force, under which Ihe returns for the special income tax of 18 3 were made, requires farmers tore turn each year the amount of produce sold. It will !>c found that the farmer's income re turns of 18" 1 will include some portion of the crop of 1863. and which was taxed as income for that year. There is an apparent injustice in subjecting the same income to tax in two different wars when sold; but consideration of the question will show that it is only an appa rent one. For, supp the income- cf a farmer to be the same every year, and the rate of tax the same, it is plain that the amount of tax should always be the same. Now, the farmer does not sell the whole crop of each year within that year: and if he is taxed in 1864 on such pro duce only as he raised and sold within that year, it is clear that lie will nof pay the full tax due on his real income. Suppose the yearly crop to be the same, t'ue farmer will, in the last year of the tax, raise a certain amount of produce on which he will pay no tax, because unsold, and such produce vvii!, on an average, be a fair offset against the produce raised in 1803, but sold in 1864, and which consequently pays two taxes. It is true that in particular cases hardships will ari-e from ii#: fact that the practice of far mers is not uniform in regard to selling or stor ing produce, and in other cases farmers will es i cape their just share of tax for the same reason, j But the same occasional inequality will oc i cur under any general provision of law, and cannot be avoided. j The entire amount, therefore, of produce sold . in 1864 must he returned as income by farmers, i without regard to any taxes previously paid on I any such produce. Very res oect fully, E. A. ROLLINS, Deputy Commissioner. E. F. Church. Esq., Revenue Inspector, Tow ; sontown, Maryland. C3~The total police force of London last year, was 7,190, and its expense $2,800,000. ALUM or vinegar is good to set colors, red, green, or yellow. WHOLE 3112 Particulars of the Capture of Jeff. Davis.! A correspondent of tbc New York Tribune, ; writing from Ililton Head, gives the following ; particulars of the capture of Jefferson Davis: j Through the kindness of Lieut. Col. Priteh- j ard, in charge of the prisoners, your correspon dent was permitted to visit the learner, and learned from the Colonel and others the partie- j ulars of lite capture, which was made by a de- j tachment of 1 ~2b men of the ith Michigan Cav- i any, under Lieut. Co!. B. D. Bjpicbard, about ; one mile from liwinsville, Ga., and about 100 j miles southeast from Macon. The Colonel learn- j ed un the 9th mst. where they were encamped, i and just before .tnyt.gbt on the 10th surrounded j the camp. It was supposed that Davis had a considerable force sts guard, and a severe fight , was expected. By an unfortunate and so far j unaccountable accident one part of the force ; tired upon another, and before the mistake was j discovered two men were killed and six others slightly wounded. Cant. Hudson had placed a strong guard around the tent where Dae is was ' supposed to be, and when the firing commenced, i thinking his duty called him to the fight, he left j the tent in charge of a corporal with orders to 1 let no one pass out. The corporal went to the j door where lie was met by a lady, who proved to be Mrs. Davis, and who said that tent was i occupied by iadie.-, and she hoped they would 1 be permitted to dress before being disturbed. j Very soon, she again and voluntarily appear- j ed at-the door, with another person in petticoats, j morning dress and a woolen cloak, with a hood • closely drawn over the head and a pail or. her ; arm Corporal ordered halt! which was of course f obeyed, but Mrs. D. feelingly appealed to the Corporal to allow her mother to go to the spring for u pai! of water —it was hard, even if they were prisoners, not to be allowed to get a little > water for their morning ablutions. Mr. Corpo- i ral just then observed that the morning dress ■ was not quite long enough to conceal a pair of boots looking rather too heavy for "i other' to \ wear, and, with his Spencer carbine presented ; to the aged lady's head, ordered her to remove I that cloak. 'The argument was persuasive, ; even to the chivalry. The disguise was reinov- ! eu and Jeti". Davis appeared in full view. Davis said he should have defended himself i if he had been armed—even it he had a revolv- . er lie would have fought with it as long as be 1 could. The Corporal replied to him, that he didn't appear to be in very good fighting condi tion just at that time. Alter a hurried breakfast the party was put in marching order. The prisoners, inambulan ces, preceded by the band of the 4th Michigan Cavalry, playing first '"Yankee Doodle," which < had evidently a depressing influence on the feel- i ings of Mr. Davis; but when in a few minutes j the band struck into the somewhat familiar air of "John Brown's Body's Marching Ou," it was too much for endurance, and he actually fell ! prostrate in the ambulance, and was kept con- 1 cealed from view by his friends for a consider able time. C. C. Clay was not captured, but wrote to , Gen. Wilson that having learned that a reward j had been offered for his apprehension as an nc- ! complice in the assassination of l'resiuent Liu- ■ coin, and feeling entirely innocent of such a j charge, lie would at once give himself up for : due examination and trial. Gen. Wheeler asked and expected to be pa- j ruled, under the armistice granted by General 1 Sherman, but Col. Pritehard "couldn't see it.'* j Instead of accepting the terms of the armistice ! and laying down his arms, the General under- j took to keep up the war, fighting his way thro' | the country, and the Colonel decided that his case must be settled by higher than his authority. Jefferson Davis looks careworn and dejected. • None shook his hand; but sorn of the visitors, j desiring to hear him talk, commenced conversa- j tions with him upon ordinary topics—the v.ea- I ther, -He., obe. It was noticed, in all bis con versations, that his eyes were constantly toward I the ilocr, as though the eye of a Yankee was ' not pleasant and agreeable to meet. He is dress- j ed in a tine gray suit, and wears a drab soft hat. ' The last four years have added apparent more j than ton to his age. With Mr. Stephens it 13 different. He is, for him, in tvicrable health, and his eyes are keen \ and pleasant to look upon. He is very ngreea- ; bio in conversation, and earnestly desire 3 a per- j eminent restoration of the Union. He says the ! advice and warning which he gave to the peo- 1 pic of Georgia before she seceded were such as ! a wise man ought to give, but the majority over ruled him. Ho concedes that slavery is at an end in this country. Chief Justice Chase Begging Ucgro Votes, j It is said to ho well understood in Washing- j ton circles that Chief Justice Cha-e is already ! out as a candidate for the presidency in 18Gb. j He is taking time by the forelock, and is rcsolv- j ed to make a sure thing of the nomination-of ; the radicals this time. He has issued another j circular, similar in form to the one gotten up by j his friend-- last spring; and it is now being eir- : eulated extensively, though secretly, in Ohio, | and throughout the Western States. His trip 1 to the South is looked upon as an electioneering ; tour, and he has been making speeches for bun- j combe to such audiences as he could gather.— j The New York Herald has the following notice j of a speech made by him at Charleston, a few ; days since: The Chief Justice of the United States is now j on a stumping tour along the Southern coast, \ entertaining the negroes with his ideas of re- j ; construction. We gave yesterday his first speech, ( delivered in Charleston to a promiscuous audi ence, composed mostly of negroes. The burden of this speech is advice to t'ue negroes in regard tc their duties and relative to their course of | action in their new relations with the rest of mankind. Alter urging upon the colored peo- 4 I pie to be industrious and economical, Tie deliv i ered an essay on the importance of the right of j negroes to vote. In his remarks upon that su'o ' he throws considerable doubt upon the EaUs of Startisfng. One square, one insertion, >1 00 One square, three insertions, 1 2C Oue square, each additional lnsertioa >0 2 months. 8 months. 1 year. One square, 50 $6 00 $lO 00 Two squares, $ 00 $ 00 18 00 Three squares, $ 00 IS 00 20 00 Half column, IS 00 25 00 40 00 One column; 30 00 45 00 80 Of Administrators and Executors* notices, $3 00. Auditor's notices, if under 10 lines, $2 50. Sheriff '• sales, $1 75 per tract. Table work, double the above rates; figure work 25 per cent, additional. £strays,Cautionsand Notices toTrespassers, $2 00 for three insertions, if not above 10 lines. Mar riage notices, 50 cents each, payable in advance. Obituaries over five lines in length, and Resolutions of Beneficial Associations, at half advertising rates, payable in advance. Announcements of deaths, gratis. Notices in editorial columns, 15 cents per line. iE7"No deductions to advertisers ol Patent Medicines, or Advertising Agents. VOL. 8, NO. 44. ! present Administration favoring the policy of ! clothing the colored race with the privileges of the elective franchise, adding, "I aru no longer {in its councils." He, however, took special { pains to show that he had long favored that ! policy, and endeavored to prove that the idea : originated with him referring to a speech deliv , ered twenty years ago in Cincinnati. He ap • i a red desirous of impressing upon his audieooa ( that he was the father of kite ifca of elevating : the negro, but at the same time informing them ! that there were obstacles in their way, but by perseverance they would finally accomplish it— ; that is, when he became President. Can any American imagine a more disgrace ful proceeding than that! Here i 3 the Cbiet j Justice of the United States, begging votes of a ! promiscuous crowd of ignorant negroes, in on© ! of the principal cities of the South, before they have r::y right to exercise the right of suffrage; and when it is clear that no such right can bo ; conferred upon them except through a clear and ■ palpable violation of the Constitution of the United States; of which Mr. Chase, as Chi©.' \ Jo. tice of the Supreme Court, is the sworn guar j dian and defender. This single disgusting cxhi | bition is enough to damn the doctrine of negrq, suffrage to eternal infamy. Let any man irna j sine what would b A the condition of this coun ; try, or of any State in it where there is a large [ negro population, were the right to vote given |to them. What white man, with a decent sens© of self-respect, would appear on the hustings ■ where he had to solicit the votes of every igno : rant and degraded negro in the district? What | decent white man is there who would not feel i himself to be degraded when every fiiihy and ! ignorant negro could jostie him as he approach ed the polls to deposit his ballot? How long would the right of suffrage be regarded as of any . worth after it had been so basely prostituted. We should speedily see State Legislatures and i the hails of Congress filled with such low wretch es as would not scruple to associate on intimate ■ terms with the nc-gro. He who would put him self nearest on a level with them would be most j certain to receive their support, and in almost \ aoy district in the South they would be the con i trolling political element. Only a negro, or I some white wretch utterly lost to all sense of decency, could be elected to office. It is hard to preserve proper composure when speaking of . such things. Every instinct of the nobler race revolts at tho outrageous doctrine boldly and shamelessly advocated by such well known lead j ers of the Republican party as Salmon I*. Chase. ; —Lancaster Intelligencer. President -Johnson's Opinion of the Use of Ardent Spirits. The New York Observer says: ' We have great pleasure in laying before our readers the following letter from E. C. Deiavan, , E-q., which gives to the American people the j opinion of several Presidents on the use of ar dent spirits. Jt presents the names of the late Mr. Lincoln and his successor, Andrew John { son : SOUTH BAIXSTOX, Saratoga Co., } April 29, 1805. } MKSSKS. EDITORS.* —In 1833. I visited ex- President Madison, who signed the declaration 1 below. On my return from Virginia I called . on President Jackson add ex-President Adams. They added their signatures. The declaration {is on parchment. Every succeeding President , has added his name except President Harrison. !He died before I had time to forward it; but that he would have signed it I have no doubt, : had he lived, as I was given to understand, af ter hi-> death, that he had abandoned his inter j est in a distillery from principle. * • * | President Johnson has now returned the docu ment to uie with his autograph. Your?, truly, EDWARD C. DLLAVAN. PRESIDENTIAL DECLARATION. Being satisfied from observation and experi • enee, as well as from medical testimony, that ardent spirits, as a drink, is not only needless, j but hurtful, and that the entire disuse of it i would tend to promote tjie health, the virtua j and the happiness of the community, we here by express our conviction, that should the citi i zens of the United States, and especially the ! young men, discontinue entirely the uso of it, they would not only promote their own person al benefit but the good of our country and tha j world. James Madison, Andrew Jackson, I John CJuincy Adams, M. Van Buren, j John Tyler, Z. Taylor, J Millard Fillmore, James K. Polk, i Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, 1 Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson. 1 S3*'Ve arc frequently asked what the words ! '*Sic Semper Tyrannis," used by Booth, tha ' assassin mean. We answer that, they are La ; tin, and mean u May the fate of Tyrants over he ; thus." It is the motto of Virginia, and illus j trates a man killing a tyrant with a sword, and J having his foot on his neck.— Hamburg Advtr ! tiser.