- ,, vrillimni3o a I 1 01Elit. s • • ATSCHIMIY AT LAW. . ' sotiirofts; too, ti Oki Oitu" wlib the Train:yew At. TAIMILIss - Autos ' TODACIDO,. CIGARS AND NOTIONS. i t alicrowir, nine/. W. W. waling, °INTUIT. ' rtirnenovit, rumen. I . 'Min Iticiroitincrotnie tape oftkena at Pinegtovntind 'Aiwa MIL RAWEINi ATTORNEY AT LAW. ISILLI9.OIIII, riven. Osee en the Nintnond i one door welt of the Peet-Alec WILLIAM A. WALLACE, ATTCIANBY AT LAW. 01,11141111TUILD, Will BLit Bellefonte prOfeasionsily when spo- Wally istatmed In connection with resident onint- aims a GORSE, 'ATTORNEYS AT LAW. ff!2=! Will prude, In the seven' courts of Centre end Clinton emulates. All business entrusted to *sir ems will be torompUy attended to. • - DR. WINGATE. • DENTIST. Jahn D. Wingate Dentist, aloe in the Ma ine& Hall. At home, except perhape the Amt. MN weeks of each - month. MARRY Y. lIITITZER. ATTORNEY AT LAW Ihnurr's Orrice, Bzusrorrs Zbe onesultiod In English or Osman. ardh 1664,—tf. •TT.OBNBY AT LAW, BILLSTONTI, Pa. Giles Is ;be room on High At formerly. imeesphid by Judgirlhanisids. alum 10,- - - - JOIIIIEPH L - . - NEFF, LICENSED AUCTIONEER, /OwnAti Emma, Cams Co., PA MU attend to a sales intrusted to him with Adellty• and eare. Residence neer Curti/ea Iron Works. I I. inns 10, 'II. AO= IL OILYII. C. T. ALIIXATDAIL ALEXANDER. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. SILLIIIFOTTIL PA. Mets—Room No. 4, up attars, Reynolds's Iron Noosst, direstly' opposite the Watehoon °Noe, on Nada street. DR. Jr. B. MITCHELL, • PHYSICIAN a SURGEON. ent.t.nrorrs, rsan'a. WM attend to rnfinsional calls as heretofore. He respeenfelly offers his nerviest tails friend' and the piddle. °Moe at his milldam on Alle gheny street. - — A. O.IPVRIIIT. ATTORNEY AT LAW. lIIILLIII7O/ITIt; rucirA win practise la the several Courts of Centre end Clinton Counties. All legal business en treated to him eats Will receive prompt attention. Oftoe—Oo the North-nest corner of the Di *mood. DR.II. W. THOMAS, PHYSICIAN ANT) SURGEON MILMIIIIIIRCI, risx's !WpmMaly offers hie services to his friends . end the public. Oilloe on Mill street, sppoeite Nee Matisse! Hotal. aeons to Drs. J. M. McCoy S. Thompson, T 6. Thong. RAXAtiNG. HOUSE =l= Wit. P. RHYNOLDB a CO LLLLL P,011?1, PS Bile sr lizebany and Notes diseounted.— Oelleotions nude and proceeds promptly remit ted. Intermit paid on special deposits. Be ehange,hi the Hastern cities eonstantly on hand fet male. Deposits remelted. .. MSC E LL AN EOUS HAW LEY' Et* SOLIDIFIED DZZIr VAL, 0111.11.1LERE1 CLIII•111111110, Rerte7MQ IWO • - TEE t BETH! Mb is prepared with the greatest care ripen scientific principles, and warranted not, to contain anything in the slightest degree injurious to the teeth or gums. Bonnet our most eminent Dental Surgeons have given their unction to, and chantilly rooommend it as a preparation of superior qualities, for Cleansing, Whitening and Preacett i i.he Teeth. It oleane them raeilly, rend them lbeautifully white and pearly, without t o slightest injury to the En amel. It is healing to the gums where they are ulcerated end 110111. It is elso an excellent die infector for old decayed tath, which are often exceedingly offensive. It gives • rich and creamy taste to the mouth, cleansing it thor oughly, and imparting a delightful fragrance to the breath. PPPPIRID OILY IT e. Hii:WINIET.A N.W. Oaraar 10th and Lombard Sta., Philad'a. AIM SOLD BY ALL DROBOISTB PRICE 25 CENTS. TESTIMONIALS The following opinion of Dr. White, as to the high esteem in which he bolds the Dental Cream; unapt he sulkiest evidenee of its value; to quote other 4estinsonials in detail is needless, contenting ourselves by simply giving the names and addressee of persons who speak of Ito earelkacy for the teeth. PRILAILDILPHIA, April 15, 1864. dierstelle examined A. Hawley's o Idlfed riststal Preens," I hereby cheerfully reoommung gt go tbilt public generally. It is nu exciellteston for cleansing and pur ee:Tin; thgeethe acid eia be used by all par-- eons with %trod coaldrotoe, u its MINN .- ties are perfectly harshen. Beside preserving the teeth, it promise a healthy action to the gems, end Impart' • paaaastato to the breath. ON W. R. WHIT& 1303 Anil St. B. Vandarallee, Burgeon Deatist, 424 Arch Bt. T. Ingram"( D, Dentlei, 465 N,Yonst l it St. J Birkey, 234 8 Ka* Et. C A ginobery, Datlat, 1113, Walnut St. D D El, 734 Arch St. F M Dixon, 337 Arch St. E3w'd Toehold, Dentist, 426 77.1Poarth Bk. L H Dorphley, Dentist, 801 N Tenth 13t. L'Long, Dentist, 6511 N Sixth St. jel7'64-Iy. ESTRAN. Como to the rooldonoe of tlus taboo* ber, melding rubor Brittany Hall, Wolkortwp., °entre oounty, oa about the filth of May lee,. a yellow Steer, with a gull slit in each ear, and surreal to Iso oboist thaw rears old. The owner is nicipiesaid to tiose.airward, prey* farierty, pay chaff and bts loe sway, oth will lie Mepoood of asearala' it* law. June 24, '64. B. S. 5111111Ainri. D - R,ESS 000p.as0=ILIKAIIIDS Jae v• liil Vol. 9; ALLSCftLANEOTIS HALT I LISTEN I STOP AND READI 11 THAT WOULD • PRESERVE YOUR HEALTH, RAVI :NM lIIMINY • AND LIVE HAPPY AND CONTENTED, . MOULD POROHASS TOUR LIQUOR. . AT THE WHOLESALE WINE AND LIQUOR STORE, i ON WINO! STRICT directly opposite the old Temperance Hotel, .41.1i1XLILIMILUt ZAUSZ &Co. Notwithstandlng the eborwous• taxes impo sed upon all articles In his line of business, he etih oonttnnes to sell the purest articles at the very breast figures. Every dlsertption of, - FOREIGN t DOMESTIC LIQUORS, wholesale and retail, at the lowest wash prices, whieh sue warranted to he the best qualities ao. cording to their respective pieta MU stock consists in part of OLD KYR, MONONGAHELA, DIRK, • WEDEAT, CORN, NECTAR, and others whiskies ' atiron 373 cents to $2,08 per gallon. Also,'• AL- RINDSOF BRANDIES, from 75 els., to $B,OO per gallon. Holland Gins pore, from 75 ets„ to $2,50 per gallon. riNIZASSPERM_CIIZERY,. aPteKliZant and other wines—the best articles—at as rea sonabl• rates as eon be bad In the oily. CHAMPAGNE, BLACKBERRY, GINGER, AND CARAWAY BRANDIES, PURE JADLACA AND NEW ENGLAND RUM - - CORDIALS OP ALL KINDS, - all a which will be warranted to be as repres6n ted, and sold at prices exceedingly , low. All the liquors offered for sale at this establis hment have been purchased at the United Mates Custom House, and consequently must be pure and good. pr. Physicians andethers are respectfully requested to give his liquors a trial. ^is He has the, only article of PURE PORT WINE JUICE IN TOWN. May, 28,1862. tf. THE WONDER OF THE AGE! kVillT BOOT ASTONISHED AT THE PURENESS AND CHEAPNESS O r TrIE ARTICLES SOLD AT nrarr a ZPETIII43II WHOLESALE WINE AND LIQUOR STORE. BISHOP STRIII7, BILLLIPONTIC The proprietors of this eatabliebokent Mks pleasure. in informing the publio that they have constantly on hand a supply of tholee foreign and domestic Hirers, such a* - - Old Nectar, Old Rye, Monoongala, And /rids Whiskey; Cognac, Blackberry, -Cherry, • Ginger, And common Brandjq; Port, Maderia, And Lu erry i ms Wines, •Scotch, And Holland Gin; New England Ruin, Janiaca Rum. • CORDIALSPeEpermini, Anniseed and • Kale. The attention of practicing physicians is call ed to our stock of' PURE LIQUORS, 4 . suitable for mepical purposes. Bottles jugs and Demijons constantly on had. We have ONEY PURE NECTAR WHISKEY in Town. All liquors were bought when liquors were low, and we sell them accordingly. All liquors ire warranted to sive- udisfao tion. ' Confident that we can please customert we respectfully solicit a thereof public patronage Liquors will be sold by the quart, barrel or tierce. we have a large lot of BOTTLED LIQUORS of the finest grades on hand. Ppril 1et,1883. F ASIIIONS' EMPPRI U3l MA 11 ATRIUM, BILLISPONTI, PA. W. W. MONTGOMERY, P* p., Hearer',tired a large invoice of CLOTHS CASSIMERS, VESTINGS, • eta., etc.,— Which will be manufactured in the IgATEST STYLES, 4114 la.a manner that cannot fail to prove calls factory. A large eseortment of GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, Conaiiting of • Collars, Neck Ties, Suspenders, Hosiery, Hankerohiefs, eto., Exactly milted to this locality end Intended for the SUMMER TRADE, hiti shelves present a greater' verietylain and fancy good/ than can be found elleMVe in Central Pennsylvania. Call and see that, Montgomery is the man that can Make Clothes in thp fashion, strong and cheap $ All that has .Ter tried him yet, Pay that le really can't be beat. Sean MI; '63-1y NEW BAKERY! MATTHIAS SCHMUCK. -Would reeinetfolly-lofons the people of Bele foot* aad vpdatty,d4phe has opened a new sad CoitiitE4 BAKERY, In the old Teonperanee Hotel, on BISHOP street where he will keep constantly on hand nil kinds of BREAD, POUND-CAKES, - SUGAR AND GINGER CAEES. CRACKERS. CAiIE y IES . &C., whial lie will • rosoonablo aad VM oatiotow so4449 wiltiod loiVitow472 War. ni.doCii* ko Awikyi mot pars, who M bmo atad, Asid.Orre,, , , - L 111 11 Lt . Lti • ' ' lll l _1 t • • -- I 10' BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, . , AILY - 15, 1864. VALLANDIQHAM•S SPEECH AT HAM- Max or Ottte.L—To-day I sip again in your midst and' pon the toll of my Wive State. Today am once more within', the district which:for ten years, a:Heeded to me ,the highest confidence,' and Altee, times honored me se its representative in the Con gress of the United States. I was accused of DO crime against the Constitution or laws and was guilty-of none. BO whenever or etherever,,thus charged, upon the process of law, I am now,bere ready to answer before a civil - court of competent' jurisdiction, to a jury of my countrymen, and meantime to gilie bail in any sum which any judge or court, State or Federal, may affix ; and you, thefiundred and eighty ,thousand Demo crats of Ohio, I off%r as my 'sureties. • Nev er. have I remained in exile because Irigeognixod any obligation of obedience to the unconstitutional and arbitrary edict. Neither did personal fear restrain,me ; and to-day I retutn of • my own act and'pleasure, because it is my constitutional and legal right to return: Only by exertion-of mili tary power itself, against the Constitution and law, and consummated by military foroe, I was sbduoted from my home and forced into bnniehurent. The assertion of the President that I was arrested "because laboring with some effect to prevent the raising of troops and to en courage desertionfrom the army," and was responsible for numerous other acts of re sistance to the draft and to the arrest of de erjerg, causing "assassination, maimin', and murder," or that at any timeTfieri to obeyed or failed to counsel 'obedience to lawful authority, or even to the semblance of law, is absolutely false. I appeal for the proof, to every speech I ever made upon thA ti atona nd to the very record of ' ilnidfilindaPle, trig' and Thentinee - of *Mob I ''lktilaged. No, the sole offense laid to my charge wee words• of criticism of' the public policy of the administration, addressed to an open and public political meeting of my fellow.: citisons of Ohio, lawfullyand peacefully as, bembled. And to-day my only "crime" is that, in the way which they call treason, worship I the Constitution of my fathers. Butl'ot now mora than one year, no pub.' Ito man las been arrested and no newspa per suppressed within the States adhering still to the Union, for the expression' of public opinion while hundreds in public assembly and through the press have, with a license and violence in which I neter in dulged, criticised and *condemned the acts and policies orthe administration, and de nounced the war, maintaining elan the pro priety and necessity of the , recognition of southern independence. Indorsed by near ly two hundred thousand Tree men of the Demeerstic party o' my native State at the late election, and still with the sympathy and support of millions only 1 do not mean any lodger to be the man of that party who is to be the victim of arbitrary power. If Abraham Lincoln seeks my life let bite so declare; but he shall not ,again delprive me cf my personal liberty, except upon "due process of law." The unconsti tutional tied monstrous "Order 88," under which alone I was arrested thirteen menthe , ' ago, was defied and spit upon,at your State Convent* of 1868. briehelltehmt gentle man who bore the standard p Ayopr candi date for Lieutenant Governor; and by every Demooratie press and Public !speaker over since. It is dead. From the first it was against the Constitution end laws, and withoutvalidity, and all pnkeedings under it were utterly null and void and of no ef fect. The indignant voice of oosetemnation long since went forth from the vast majori ty of the people and presses of America, and item) all free countries to Europe with entire unanimity; end more recently, too, the platform of an earnest,-unanimous, and most formidable convention of the sincere republicans. • Still further, the emphatic letter of ac ceptance by the candidate of the conven tioi.., Oen. John C. Fremont, the first candi date, also, of the Republioan party for the Presidency, eight years ago, upon the ral lying cry of free speech and a free press, gives renewed hope that at least the reign of arbitrary power is about fo bo brought to an end in the United States It is neither just or flt, therefore, that the wrongs inflicted under "Order RB," and •the after s ates end acts of such power, should any longer be endnred—certainly not by me alone. But every ordinary means of redress has been exhausted; yet either by the direct agency of the adininin- Motion and its subordinates, or through its influence or intimidations in the ,civil courts to meet a case which no American formerly conceived le be possible here, all have failed. Counsel applied to an unjust ' judge for the writ of habeas corpus. It was denied. and now the privtlege of that writ is suspended by an. act of Congress and Executive order in every State. The Democratic Convention of Ohio, one ,year ago, by a resolution formerly presented through a comtnittee of your beet and ablest men in person, at Washington, dernarnied of the President, in behalf of a very large mi nority of We people ; a revocation of the order of banishment. Pretending that the public safety thee required It,•be refused,. saying that it want' afford him pleasure to comply at soon se he-could, by any means, be made to b 4 eve thaitstive ptrblio safety would not suffer by it. One year has elapsed, yet this hollow pretense is tacitly liteseeted_pand to day I am here to prove it I untouided - fn fact: I appealed to the Supremo Court 4 the United States, and because CcArgress,has nevetPconferred jurisdiction in behalf of a citizen title@ by a tribunal unknown for such purptile to the laws, and expressly forbidden by the ConstitutiontAtitne pow erless te redress these wrongs. The time has therefore arrived when it becomes—me as a citizen of Ohio and the United States, to demand, and by my own act vindicate. the rights, liberties, and privileges which I never forfeited, but he-which, for so many months, I have been deprived. Wherefore, men of Ohio, I em again in your midst to day. I owe duties to the State, and I am here to discharge them; TUT, rights es .a citizen, and am here to resort them; ..wife, and child, andjppap,,expj, would enjoy , all the pleas whiph Ire implied itt tose okarishe e ords. Bat I Sit here for peace, not tuna ee ; for quiet, not convulsion ; for order, law, not,ausrohy. Let no man of the Dynamistic. party begin any sot of vio. lenospr disorder; bullet none Arbil from any Asppnsibility, however urgent, if forc ed upon hi na Careful of - the rights,. of others, let him se to it that be . -felly and fealismirti ' his own. Subject toilgitt fal author) V itii ill things. let him submit to excess or ilettrAtilen in nothing. Obedient to the Co itation and law. let Wes - =d and 'e% dui tall Inseam of lite. pro. • Zal wil . 11 f A,lgl efrietAtatiOD .spun .--,-''' HUSKS, EXCIFIVESMIID vZDm 4L =ION." • Min or Odto—Yon hate already asserted your right to hicir. It is now my duty to assert toy right to speak. Whereford as . to ,the sole o ff ense for *WA I was arrested, imprisoned and banished—free speech in criticism And condemnation of this admin istration—an administration fitly described in a reeenepublic paper„ by 'one of its early supporters, as marked out at Mine by disre gard of constitutional rights, by-its violation 'of personal liberty of the pre* and, is the crowning shame, by the abandonment of lb right of asylum—a right especially dear td all free nationasbroad. I repeat it hear' to. day; and will again and yet again, so long as I live or the Constitution' and our present form of government shall survive. The words then spoken, and the appeal at that time made, and now enforced by one year more of taxation and dobt, and of blood snit disaster, net reatingihe people to change the public servants and their policy, not 17 force, but peaceably through the ballot. I repeat them, *over all, in no spirit of chal lenge or hatred, but as, earnest, sober, sol emn_truth and warbing tb the people. •ILTON, A powerful, wile-spread, and very dan gerous secret oath-bound combination among the friends of the Administration, known as the "Loyal Union League," exists in every State. Fat - the very men who control it enarge pereisteutly upon the members of the Democratic party that they have organ ized—especially in the , northwest—the "Order of the Knights of the Oolden Cirl cle," or some o. her secret seemly, tressona- A1:e1.., hi its 'with the South and for the purpose of arm• ed resietanoe to the authorities of the Fed eral and State governments. ' Whether such ever existed, I do not know; but the charge that organizations of that sort, or having any 'such purpose, do now 6r i nim0ng ...., 0 0. 9 ....Ne that pa I y_lloltio or the other non-slavehohling States, is to tally and positively fated: That lawful'po litical or other party Associations have heed established, having as their object the organizing end strengthening' the , Demo cratic party and its success An the coming Phsideritial election, and 'designed as a °tenter movement to the' so called '• Union Leagues," and therefore secret in their pro (mailings, is very prohibit); and, however objectionable hitherto and in ordinary times, I recognise to the fullest extent, not the lawfulness only, but the propriety and ne cessity of such organixations—for "when bad men combine, good men must associ ate." But they are no conspiracy against 'the government ; and their members are not tionepiraters, but patriots; men net leagued together for the overthrow of the constitu tion or the laws, or still less of liberty, but firmly united for the preservation of these great objects. There is indeed a "leonspir- Roy" ,or powerful, very 'ancient, and - •I trust that, before long, I may add, strongly adithilidated also, Aspen - sound-principles, and designed yet to be "triumphant, "—n eonepiracy known as the Democratic porgy. the 4 lresent ohjeot of which is the overthrow ,of• the administration In November next, but through the ballot boi, by the election of a President who shall be true to his oath. to libe4y- AO the Constitution. This is the sole conspired} , of wkilob I,know anything ; and I am pelted to be one of the conspira tors. If any other exist, looking to unlawful armed resistance to the Federal or State authorities anywhete• in the exercise of their legal and constitutional rights, I admonish. all persons concerned that the eat lir treason and penalty to death. But I warn also the men in power that there is a vast multitude, a host whom they cannot number, bound together by the strongest and holiest ties to defend, by whatever means the exigencies of the times may demand, their natural and. constitutional rights as freemen, at all hazards 41/(1 to the last extremity., * • Three years have now passed, men of Ohio, and the great issue, constitutional liberty and free popular government, is still before you: I again commit it, confident that in this, the time of their greatest peril, you •will be found worthy of the ancestors who for eu many ages, in England and America, on the field, in prison, and upon the scaffold, defended them against tyrants and, usurpers, whether in council or in arms. We segjt stated that President Lin coln has ilevettHrtisul qne dollar of hiesal ary., A letter writer says that "hitoßscel lency remarked recently that he did not intend to lift any portion of his salary till the end of his second term, at which time it would amount to a nice little sum." This looks strange. kn 1869 Lincoln's friends represented him as being very poor—dot worth a thousand dollars, and this they said was evidence of his honesty. Where does he obbiin his means? Former Presidents hail to draw their salaries quarterly, and then had not enough money to provide for their wants, but Mr. Linooln', it appears, can live sumptonsly for eight yea upon nothing-! Is he too now in the shoddy bu siness. or is cotton now king with him? He is certainly.making money very rapidly by some means or other. His son Bob, too. as we have heard,,has within the last three years become a very rich boy—worth come two or three hundred thousand dollars. "Loyalty" pays now-a-days. Oar OUT Or our re era will Mite warning front the " signs ofitho times" they will wipe out _without delay their col , debts, am& oontrsct as few new ones as po stble. A tremendous .financial is at hand, and they whom it finds deeply in .ihebt will, in all likelihood, have a life-burden and an entailment of struggles and poverty. Money such as it Is, is now plenty, and as long as it will pass current in the payment of debts, it should be so used. That the money now inxirculation is not issued upon a sure ba sis, is evident by the notion of the Eastern capitalists; who are rapidly converting it into something lets perishable, and prepar ing to let the loos tall upon other heads. Get out of debt, then, while you ean, and the storm,' even if it sweep your all away, will find you free film the inoumbrance that has dragged many a man to an early grave. To be out of debt: in indeed to be a free man. ' There is r i1440-Master so exacting as debt. Tem Passinswi:—Lineoln continual, hie comes and frequently indecent jocularity, which seems more jubilant itr proportion to the slaughter of our soldiers•sad Os suffer imp at our people. . And so we go, laughing , anal to the grave, in which eery soon , bops f o r the country and humanity , will be buried Mame Provldenee shall mercifully interpose for eke rescue of st Nation which owes unre cognised gratitude foe farmer• favors. • fit"' ,A JpKae4io ; ~o~{at~is 3u : beellllis. _lßry[l~~i4_Q!~?M~t► fl~Pl~niL i ; _ _ ~~ . ' . Upon another subject allow me Lore word. • ,•C MAJORAIENERAL BUTLER Somewhere about 'the month of October, 18ff.9—less thin five years ago—there yaks political . meetidg held a Charlestown, Meal saithusetti. It was a,Demooratio meeting 'and possilily a Breckenridge Democratic meeting. Alit a epee.* :wee made by Mr. Benjamin F. Butler, from which we make the following extract, beggieg our readers to understand that Ws matey is Major-Oen eral B. F. Butler, of the-Federal army, now besieged at Bermuda Hundred. B. F. But ler said : Let us lqok at another thing by which I propose L ',hoe that while our Republican friends have been BO busy looking after the t,be interests of the negro, that they have neglected the interests of the whites. I pray you listen to me a moment. The subject to .which I would now call attention has been already alluded to by the chairman—the evils are nowhere shown in a clearer light than in our ryateut of pauper charity: Al low me to state A- few facts. Aboorfling to the statistics furnished by the esent State Legislature, as • report of their own coin mittee.,it is moredangerous to spend a yea r in a Massachusetts almshouse than it would have been,to have charge of the Zouavea at Magenta. I ace that this statement strikes some of you almost with dread. Let me re peat. There was a larger proportion of the regiment which led the attack. at the battle of Solferino came out : from the battle un scathed, than there *elle of the paupers of 1858 who came out - alive front the Suite slutehouses of Massachusetts. [Sensation.] Allazzins..l7l.o.le..yog _IIIALIAAL . ".._ How many was Hie average number of paupers in the State almshouses during the year 1b58? Twenty-seven hundred and atone odd. How many died in the year ending October, 18.. Six hundred and sixty-six—olte in every four. Every fourth man, woman and child that went into the statehouses of Maesachu iiiiVit died and was buried in the Ptitter's field of a pauper's burial ground; Three hundred and forty-one children, under the age of five 'years, died in those eharnel Ileums, and the physician of one of these houses says that be does not expect to rear but three per cent. of the children brought there under one year old ! Three out of a hundred—all the other ninety-seven to g• a nameless grove ! • Why this whole Commonwealth felt out raged because there came a report from Kansas that six or eight men had been killed ; and in all the wars of Bottoms there acre but nineteen well-attested cases of mutt beteg killed. andjet our mothers .and wives, and daughters scoured thecountry for old clothes and other comforts to send the people tit that Territory. [Laughter ] In tie same year three hundred and odd children of Mast nachusetts soil died like dogs in a kennel in our own alntsboosee, while we were weeping over the' imaginary., wrongs of Kansas.— ,[Cheers.] - /again I -wak e -my —friends, la-it not tints that, we look at homer Where is Mrs. Stowe I Where is Greeley in The Fr.bune t Where is the eztrg phiLautropy of the hu manitarians? Where Is that denouncer of great and good men, Wendell Phillips ?-- Where are all these men who regulate the affairs of the people afar off? Is there not ample room for their charities at home ? Oue hundred and sixty-five people dying at Bridgwater; One hundred and fifteen at Tewksbury, and one hundred and one at Munson ? Forty infants dtod in two months ! Oh, but they were while children! [Laugh ter.] Why look after them ? I do nekwish to harrow your feelings fur ther by going into statistics. • I only ask you if it is not time we ceased to look after the wrongs of — Hie negro at the South, and look a little after the people at how ? But if any Know-Nothing Mend ef'Efine r will say this is of no consequence, that bens people, or the largest portion of them, were merely Irish paupets, to him I answer that the great majority were native born citizens of Nlitssachuset t If, entitled to every protec lion that Massachusetts gives to anyf her citizens, (applause,) and the ry gest portlen of them were born on t / ji s c rent. If I am told that,-"Ott, these were the old, the infirm, and the sick." 1 have to say that o of these 661, 841—more titan tine half— ercfnatier five years of nge; immortal souls, brought into , this world. and placed. in the care of Massachusetts charity. Maseachu solar philantkiropy4 and they have gone to God who gave them, and it is for us to ren der an account, Ilol{ for them. TRII FREMONT CLCBS is New YORIC—The New York Journal of the says, that "al an indication of the exci.ing character oT the political •eampaign upon which wo are entering it may be mentioned that Fre mont's friends in this city are organizing clubs upon the largest scale. The Central Club r..ioniet on Broadway near 18th street) is a ar..plete inatittition of the kind, and will be flowed by the establishment of sim ilar organizations in each ward. Although out off from Government patronage thi Fre montere seem to have members anti money enough to carry on a large political busi ness, and will ask no odds of their peoutiar antagonists, the Lincoln men. It is said to be their intention to outdo everydemonstra tion which the Loyal Leagues, or Lincoln clubs, may make in the interest of the Bal timore ticket, and show by undoubtable ev idence that the Fremouters can always mutt ter the larger crowd and the more enthusi asm. This contest between the two, Radical Democracy and the Radical Republicans, gives spice and animation to the campaign." Statesman. - Ws oesx's^Bss Ir."—The Government abolitionists eulogise Andy Johnson because he was formerly a tailor, and argils trio this that he should receive the suppOrt of the waking classes and everybody else. We uwh toe complete inability to atm in what particular sewing clothes quill* him to sew up the fragments of this onoe glorious republic... And still less can we pee it, when we remember that Lincoln, who has split rails, split the Union, and split his own party is placed at the head of the ticket. Tun Dnerr.—Hurry up the draft. The car of Juggernaut - shouts for more victims. The , "spirits that peep end that motter," eall for three hundred thousand more to die in the swampti of Virginia and the moun tain fastnesses Of Northwest Georgia: This -demon ridden Federal power will obey the “spirits." Will the people obey naturti - or the devil? 8o asks the Primes's Jeisir` A despairing nuts, tears his hair. M enraged woman is 3riser—waikei tears her husbands. —lt is proposed to open s imams*. Aion in risroe.W. aid of Danish soldiers, who, itsidorictoe of their eoentry. _ • • f'ae -CaL WHAT "THE GOVERNMENT" LEAVE) ‘. THE POOR TO LIVE UPON. .. Every citizen of the United States re ceives from a United States functionitry once a year a lung yellow envelope super- Bribed thus:., " Sar—The enoloaed blank must be 4141, and returned to, my of/ice within ten aye from this date, or you will be assessed, and a Renal!, of 6 per cent. added." Uu opening the doeument. you il:scover that ,Ou are required, under severe penalties, to girt' the United Steles Govern ment t complete laventory of 'all your pun 14c-or private arab'', embracing (net) , cent of your income or, expenditure!, togetlier with the exact netu:re of every souree of in come or outlet of means. The set on which tins rigid scrutiny is based ought to be.Jui.. titled "An Act to meddle, with every main' private business." If you thoroughly study the document, you will discover that "the government" generally allows yen $6OO for the support of your family;, and all of your income over and above that thin you must share- with "the goierninent.! In view of this tienighd, it may be interesting to inquire hew far $6OO will go towards, supporting a family in these good day it' of , triumphant "Republicanism." Let us take •a family of six persons, and see how far the sum which "the government" graciously )11- lows will go towards its support, A family of six grown persons will consume five pounds of meat a day, width, at 18 cts. a pound, will cost $330,50 a year. Three loaves of bread a day will he $130,10 it year. fine pound of sugar do.. $88,60, Oue pound. , Ltenter_do...ll.4lL. (tee pound. of ~w eans. week, $26. One half pound of tee a week, , $3B. Spices, etc., 26 cis: a week, sl2.= . Fuel, at $1,50 a week, $7B. Light, 40 eta. ' a week, $25. 'Milk, cue quart a day. $26.- 55. Potatoes, one barml &month, s2B. Servant, one dollar and a half a week, $7B. Clothes, $lOO for each postai, $600.._ TAW 14, - 674 06. This estimate_ in conniderably under the cost of living at present prices, and yet we see that "the government" does not allow Ibis family of all persons enough to live upon, free from lie seires, by , $1,074. This is for the prkeen time.-1 What will be the coudition'of, the n or next I year, when prices, if the war goeS on, - will be much higher, and the treshel,lll,l :71 UPI ey still less in value? kliould the c iill e.intiu. ue 'toolbar lear,-'4l,e pr;ce oF fod and clothes will be nearly double a lon they are now. What will then become oftlie poor? , Nay, we may well ask, what will become of I the rich? for when exhaustion rendhen a,, certain point, it will sweep the rich and they poor together into a.comnion gulf of ruin. , The Repnblienns comfort themselves with 1 th'e thought that other 'nations have luid wars and came out without' entire ruin.— i But no nation on the face of the earth ever spent one-fifth as much, means in the awe time. No nation ever, 'Mowed exhaustion to progrgss with such speed. The country is sorely - 113141traf quick consuntption." A Dirrrnmvce.—The Shodd,vitee thine they hit upon the Demooratic plan would they nominated Abe. the railspliter, and Andy, the tailor. That's them mistaken The Democracy nominated men wild have proved themselves fitted for something high er than the humble workshop Shoddy nominates men fitted for no higher calling, and even but bunglers at splitting rails and running seamy. About the only thing they will be good at will be in ”splitt;tig" the Government and "cabbaging" the re' this, VilIT iTxw Esot. %YU FAVORS Tux Wart— The Newburyport Herald eeye that within four cud a halfyehre the James steam rot tou mill bee earned double its capital. It has actually divided $377.500 0% n capital of *260.000. le it any wonder that tiro lles sachusette coftctn lords are importing recruits ftom Europe to keep up the war on the south ? • Harriet Beeches Stowe, in the couree'of kiittnegyric en Mr. Lincoln soya: vhe convention that nommuted AbreAen Lincoln for President know what they were doing." Nothing could be truer. And still lees did thepeople that elected him know what they were doing. lint they know now. Will they, with Their eyes open, re peat the deed? —Wilkes' Spirit, an Abolition papore asserts that "the nation. cannot live with Abraham Lincoln and Seward at its bead during the next terrible four years. Even if honest, they are unequal toi le task; and that they have devised to •submate the ex pression of the loyal masers, the name of the party they have labored to destroy:":* RESlONllo.—ling. Gen. At drew Porter, recently mustered out of the service as a Brigadier General of Volum .ers. has re-- signed hie oommisaion as Cblonel in the the regular army. Thus has the country. through the partisan maligns of the pres ent administratlen. lost one o the beet of- Boors in the service.. - ,- . —lt is reported in the Hera 'd that Mr. Lincoln declares, “If mititary successee are not soon achieved, he intends to take fhe field in person as Commander-in Chief if Gen. Let hears of this, no doubt he will Rio as the coons did, when Capt. Scott threat ened to shoot al teem, ' , come down at once.'l --The 'Albany Argos thinks the Preei• dent,. course will "widen' and den the line of separation between the loyal and Se ceded States." "If so," says Prentice, •pit will greatly Improve the narigction Of the Ohio and the Potomac." ThviVpreester. Palladium, a republi- MID paper etyma-74er. is a deep feeling among the people. against perpetuating the order of things that has prevailed the last three yeartin the conduct of the war. A physician has discovered that in nine oases out of ten, night-mare iv reused by owing a bill to a &empower, and the best cure is to oy U. . _ The world contains iine thousand millions of , inhabitants, Who speak 8,064 different languages, anti axe ef 1,000 forms of religion. A red nosed gentleman Hiked a !tit Whether he believed in spirits? •'Ayesir," replied be, looking him fair in, Use fire, see ied mueb.evideekee before' aisle doubt -- The poraingen os Deetwie l ea ',hor n in . canine noinplekd," e 1420. : to wse -45,111 T; Ann Arbipr -le who aialisC,to `tint* . po est Aewsitier *light u 10.4 levy to twit fir• he Me over beie j. .• - • THE - f O ASO' 7HE PAESI. - • ;' The Demeigtl • P atioittit ; 4llllhl ttimeet at Chisaga, airthe A propotOtion hoo . hoilotAdeatiMitirddh Na tional comer:fee to bee "PT yetAzi tititid - Mat. and 1 Ity I. that the tuntitostieb wilt tad tat the time named. TheroThelfilltandillidli• be renewed Asa proUlat-bli Med 11dower. Schemers are at week, rind those of them who look mealy_ tllb_c_fiesb-res.,,esthant rote=ie lbe, etentual oueeess yea and patriotic principles. and the to4Wah lishmeot of the peace, aid PirttePlieilY stair* trorintry. will endeavor ,to-nwarnate cx commend" eons e ouch tool of lire hAtir as eneral Dix. hal posit ire that this will toil. Other: aMr . ferintaiing Conolnitation. the plausible plea ther.ey fraud or fake the Democracy will be beer t emat entente, and therefore they WI let de Itepublitmns fight it out between Freruput and LlieolO.— The ultimate object of these is to ettipihmt, the former. which nfo lieroucnt, esti- ever c.andelently do, however right ihe Fremont frdatiorm". may be in wane r•wpects. Oubers rgain airs for nominating a audit date of pliant, princ,plas the beats of ayailability, placing hineapon s sound Om. , form. , .No. 27. The latter is the most dander one of alt the • propositious, the moat destructive in its clnacter, the most seduitive antl therefore most likely to lie adepted if there bei any departure trom the reit uhir come, 'For the .plat tortes" of ceurentlion, we have learned ' the most perfect ciptempt. They vizeitince a pure efhrmaiion of prine , ple and the et pression of the sense of the eonventiort es to the propriety of one or two Impiiirent measures ',eluding at the time. 'be degen eracy of later years has tiun them into meta, humbugs', and. since the Presidency of Mr. yolk, no candidate elected upon them, and nu party orgenizapion promulgating them, L ime been faithful to-them. It is absurd to assume that a convention may cheese the princples upon which the parry it represents is founded—euch attempts tifliOUßl to 10011,t an much as a resolve to cloture the base of. the Allegheny mauota.us and run them hereafter in a direct east tind west course. A convention may declare it. Neer or eis bapprobation of certain pending measuren, and that is binding only so tar as the can didatee and delegates are umicerned, end . • ami-nanteraly-se-forttrit-- - i ' commends itself to the judgnitut of :Le pen . pie. We trust, therefore, that thi,smischies - - ' one proposition may not prevail. Others are in favor of notikine it Montilla nation-at once and procieding e te a vigorous campaign. We do non approve thaepro_po maim, but will support .ii-41-iiribsy'ite The great changes tbat_inal ,' try-within three months, may raise entirely new questions, requiring entirely different action by the people from what would now seem to be proper, and candidates of differ cut qualiffeations from ally who are likely to be selected at this time. We would pre fer that the otitivention should meet at the time appointed. make no emoinai ions, adopt no v 1,1 10 1 .1 4 ,1 except a general deciaratien of faith iu the power end pure, se of the in:relic party to stop the wit se et moldy as practicable, and to restore as much of our fernier prosperity. freedom and tottery.' feelieg, and therefore anion, pa possible, (lad e to. reer.mniera the I), overeat, of eac h st a r e t o keep hp thorn ugh cm g roue oronivirians, and la styp.rt A CONFER VF Turin ReeFleT• treSraras FOR PRERIMINY. The *Warne o be gaitieu lay the' eoutee would be to have a I/enigmatic 'candid ate for President in soich State of the Union, which would result in a forced discUstliou of the' principles lawn which the Government. _was fornied, and, "Welflff teach" our fipple iwlinT most have forgotten or tierce knee) and especial ly our youth, that there in not and never was any liberty in the United States except• lug that contained in and inherent to the respective States, and such as established by them in their sovereign capacity—the - United Staten Government being noihing more nor leas than a general agent of a firm of sovereignties to conduc' certain business confided to it by a general contract (the Na tional Constitution) by them. Such die emotion we believe would result in re-estsb lishing that lofty- idea of independcce. that purity of seetimeni and action, that perfect panic and fraternal regard for each other, and that high degree of public virtue .and general pionyinity whioh characterised the beat days of the Republic. If that object can. be gained. it will be of more corm quence than all the ternpdrary political tri• umphs end all the flesh-pots that can be im agined. By this mode, too, if the Demon-Mention% elect a majority of Electors, the latter oould combine upon anybody and cast their votes for and thus elect hint. This would be car rying out the original purpose ilf,..She.-Con---- stitution in this regard. which did not de sign - that there should be candidates for President, but that the Electors appointed according to law should 'Wept' whom they pleased. Again, if only a minorferof the Leine...retie. candidates for Electors should succeed, they would iq all probelkijlty be strong enough to elect betweeu,Fremant and Linteln et.•dietale terms idkither, Orotund upon the - teeerve and let the Republican candidates add party work out of the mire they have cieated fur themselves aa beat they could. We do not think it desirablethst the Dem ocratic party ehoutd have or be responsible for the . neatPremdeut. Thee Republican and Abolition potties (lade aided by the Rebels) havejnirled this once happy and prosperous callititry into an advise of destruo• lion. We do not rieu why the Dcunomatic party should become the Administrator of their broken estates. ...Let the dead bury their dead. ' If the Numeracy (the only 'Lippe of thi country.) new take the reigns of tiloverneuent, they writ have the'wer to con elude, the tinaueus to place tie a solid basis, the debts to asaerteiu, Bettie and arrange, the public maletactora of all dencripticauf to prosecute. large armies to maintain andlarge uuea to disband, &Maisie's! and labor to slam elate and regulate, public virtue and reaped. for law to re-tatablish, and' a thousand oth er things similar in difficulty. The ...fixa tion" (as Mr. Clay would say) of all these things will sink any party to eternal doom., If that should be the late of tie Law:Orrery. then who would be loft to save the remnants and remodel the A second Mellott would be the result, our ohildree would nev er see permanent peace, or protection to life, liberty and pursuit of happlomieroots, Mier ond Maximillikn under European pratradon would be the finale. No, let lite Bersblicens, Abolltdoldabt, and their conferee*, have the next National Administratioo—,let them meet their, Awn troubles and settle their own aocontols—tht , will break in'tbb baok before Your ' years come around end Alan .thipeopia will herre learned their folks' and or'y idea ferthe Democtraq.. Then shall nn. ndbli4party (always the 'backbone of the motet tirade forward and Nairn the -Notion, sad• li *MI then continue in power whilotibeenneory of the present National winu4s lasts—it ,will onto more maim . • free, happy, imbitielfok proPpenroui and virtuous Onuntry.6.Mineen Depootrot. 4,1 leMonne eeroirtarliti affaioot-416-41iireo-vornar 4 tikso Afir 4.11,4:4017, on. 9C MY OilUdliPl9444ool 14aX • 41 109, Laery. t .641 oe # dew 4 1 IMt# p ri a crin i . H - !,• • • r, r,rl MN 'l9l aht~%;44`. fLa ivi h iftbst AAFI w lEEE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers