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' - ' 1 / 4 :,tut n.). • ~...., ~,, -l' : - ;Ittelb •.. ';.''.l • • . ~ -,....” Arl 1 . • ~.,.? • •ai1..4-io6t-q. , . • 4 c., 1 ' ati, ! 4 1 11 • . A . ' ':.'' '' .. •, • , ' . 4 4."... , „ ' " ..Allt , "44 1, J ., vi,.1 , 1 . 1.,?! . .4 • . ' - , WI Tltue'l ThidWil Mad ant% • To your fist Ire , Bat, you NMI &Awl Ihi shim! littgli Ahi tbat haulm li°rt7°-1.0. • noir 104 114;#11:i01ii:o'ee the hal, obi IL num. or iire e'ettbe trOse Were theta lootetKetylga 4u {'other able t Weto there Ihr as h ttletrAwlth their bran- To_shatont the beat-if tAz ita t obi man, The heat of the firtYld :), J • s 44. • And boir did o mayor, old man, .o( sorrow--tba. , Did you la y yptir 4411.1. one by one. oichin4 bidet mill be ilobe." Under ilioValidilatilita pen— In the grayer hilia,th tho iroyaido dna/ , Thereto sorrow awl lON:Ls 411, old nan— , • Alas ! !Fero sorrow kraal; ' Andyou, peradrentom havo Lad your khoro, ' For eighty long rioters have whitened your hair And Ihey:vir whitened nue heart as well, old Mall, 'hank God I your heart as wall. You're- now silts foot of the hill, old. mop— • At hop aL Abe foot of Metall I Th. Inn het dens downln a vitle?Vow, And the flehrenly QitY Retina billow 06,i n Ib4o4o , llorNirtriate old man— The beautiful pearly pia. ' • —.ErsAanga. BPEEOf' OF HON. FRiDERICIC"K URTZ. Delivered in the Ihine keprseentenivee, at Itareisburir, Alprch, 1806. Ma. Kuars: Mr. Speaker, I have not trespassed upon the patinae of the Rouse, during this emtion, with spateohles . % the delay of legisiition I having been content to atiand:l9"4llk inetili t legislation as the county which have die honor to represent dementled,•and to preserve, in a mealure, a "masterly" silence; and, NO I would not at this lime attempt to intliot "speech upon the Tfouse,if this evening wore not met apart for dimeussion, and it esnoot, therefore, In terfere with the regular order of legislation, which is greatly Impeded by too much talk. The question before no for conslderation is upon the rmoonstruetion remoiallons, and I shall occupy a short limo In-this divans , Moo. 1-shall-appost.thata resonlllll9fis.liaciatln• I believe them to be factious,' and founded on revolutlou4ll principles, and only cal culated to printout restoration of the Union. They violate the plightettartgricf the °av erment, and, as I shall show, aro inconsis tent with the former position of the Repub lican paHy, and President Aineoln so for as regards the question of the status of the lately Agelliout khan!: , After the first gull Relined, when our army omit flying, confuted and demorali sed, Into the capital, preceded b,y.Lovejoy _had gone down to witting the battle, but not to have a head In R.—had gone down,. as their said, to "witness the races" of fly ing Whets— I say whet those radical mi.. chieterakers came, pale as death with fright, into the city of Washington, to cock a hid ing place for their cowardlytiodies, without. the least ooneern for the brave Efoldn sol diers who ,iay upon - ,that bigigily field or straggled along the mil-side, these men, when the danger was somewhat over, crept forth again and unanimoudy resolved upon the following platform ne to the objective( the war. ..Rerolred, That the wnr is not prosecu ted upon our port in any epirlt of oppression, nor for any purpose of Conquest or subjuga- Mon, nor the purpose verthrowing or in terfering pith the righ or established insti ki l; ttens of these B , butte defend and maintain the suprem oy ef,the Constitution and all ism made in pursuance thereof, and to preserve the Onion, with all the dignity, equality and rights of the several States nuimpared ; that as soon as these objects are accomplisned, the war ought to Mlle." The De.nooratio membere In Congress also voted for the resolution. . Upon 'the princi ples herein enunciated, the Republioan par ty, through its repreeantatives in Congress, stood pledged before the world to conduct the war, And upon this just platform the Demoorsay agreed to strike hands with the opposite pithy In conducting the 'war toy the preserration of the Union. The reeoln-. None now before us for Wonsideration—sad which, I have no doubt, will geoeive the entire support of the Republican party in this ohamber—will seta prove that they ve untrue 'to GO:pledges, whilst the Demo.- racy, in opposing these resolutions, act strictly in accordanee with their professions. They, withlirovident Johneon, who intro. timed this resolution in the Unite d . States Senate, still adhere to Its letter add spirit. I have not the least doubt, Mr. Speaker, that could the Bull Run battle be fought over again, and with the same result, these men would again be fou'ad hastening to their hiding places, to creep forth ogee and vole for the same le - Walton and elfterwards,its now, prove untrue to the pledge. ' This eowartice Is ohsrsethristin of the milted leaders of that may in Congress. None of tile's ever sholdderted astintaket in the cense for which they-spent so =Oh lip , patriotism. Tha messes of the people of nil pertitte did the agent% while these Mon and their hangers-on stood aloof to do the sontrsoting, the jobbing, the plundering Add the bfeeliede running with the ennotion of psialgfitiblittedt 'ingots:hobs, officers. This cawetrffille,l repeal, is et ohorsotorietio of the, triedhin4:iiheffispe.Oand-it peetzliki• Chet noterieds l if 4 , 4 .oitad4ag, 0' kitp who now drives hitt ye as thostostag dose his sieve .-1 ninon - ffi l triettgileeitire bioNie Buokshot witr, iirlitt 1 ; 6 "iiiitra 0 11 1 . 411#14 of symnsaties th rough out a lb. booklets, dews orals aapitat—[latightea]-41italinWo of aba , Bofkiliot war, coil Oettyshgrchtple. worth "et ~ _ WhalAnd 416 t aloud Pledged to f WitY, : filelii. , _tkitlitrhiTor any 4 purpose 444)414)1r 444 , -41:aged not to interfere wit the sleds torinstint.. Cons bf thole Menial Pledgeaii .. "Oilthflatt the supremacy °film Constliutfont end sit ;tw. inetielet :pursuant:4 thereof; &NM. Ito proems the Colon with gli the . dignity; squally sird - rights °raid are cel Isrp4ilit. fair . ; . l4l62fr,filpfher, four yarn anal theie mote= plAjaa woreilren, seal itear. 17 one Year after the war hie wed, And this party,by oadoralnigtbsi rattotatione, now before Mb Horse for its soosideriktoo, phtdglas itliif in - thit very wpiii4tet eptriC anCjetter OM* Crittead4Wittir Lion. iad Sadist Itself nilit:Offewlitig !tomtit:al , ;44:4.yolottotaKT will road th• reselaibta i That one **et our Oopgratatift Daaletratod to 'MP; . 41 14 addliathat Into PM fel SWOP no EI say sad illaoptiatehrto- 1- the wriptala„litar,. estaadeabila r t*Vi".4ls to C=l t, Samoa f ilg2 lii, i; old dais VOL. 11. Witialimolullin. whop pvipariti with the lormer professions of that party, as bid Join in the Crittenden resolution, proses them guilty of the most glaring inconsisten cy and hypocrisy{-and is intended Woo Outage- purpose ;than tir "thwart Andrew Jubilant in hit endeavors to restore the Union"; to Mum' tem 00=67 illrldrd, new. that tit& war Is (leer, end quiet restored—. in short, to keep out the Southern - Slates for 'mere tarty purposes. Aud why shall thole - lately t ebehicups Shia'. be kept out of the Union T Why, say the radloals, Wormse they seceded. Thie,,then, lq an admission, on their part;. that. a Blatiaten.sonade—a North never held. • If, tbeh; Hid passim, of .an act At secession take* a S tate out of the Unioit—dieduslilletss Stott! from being rep' rereted In Cengreas---then tell- me, what right • hen Ideissehneette to be represented in congress t 'For she, toe, Some years ago, pained an ordinaries of seoesilion, whieb stands anrepeoled upon her statue books to this day, and)), it doolarea "that if Tees is in the Union she is out," There is no suck thing a* a Suite being out of the Union; and.the Abolitionists; - by asserting they are out, ore the only ohms in the North who onft, of right, be celled seoessionists. The, Deamoracy claim for our glorious Sag Stirr tpeht eters and for the Union thirty.six States—no mere amino less—all crdioanoee of secession to the aoutrary notwithstand ing, But, lays another' of these radiant inn uolontstr, the Southern litattfs have rebelled and made wtrupiat the Government. Welt, if that takes them out of the Union and die quelifiem from a rep tattoo in Congress, that Massachusetts is out too, and‘hould also be denied a representation in Coopers, -fer she too- rebellesie—Mnte-and -again. a.. made war upon the Government, shot down its sworn agents and retitled the United S'atert oaken' in the discharge of their do tier. ' Massachusetts and mime of the New Nogland Btntes standyis much in need of reconstruotion to day's, any of the South ern States. To gobsek—Wbal,else was the Ileitford Convention, but a congregation Of radical traitors tenser the Union and form a Northern Confitdertoy t Their intentions were just as damnable as those of the Cre amers South; only 'these: New Easleadere 'leaked then - the - mt.plaels—nsira.. tue their deseendants are deficient in to this (levy otherwise they would not have been the first to run at Bull Run, and afterwards' gone Booth for negroes to act Co mituditutes for them ip a War of their own bringing on, and to stead side by side with the white I soldiere from the Keystone-gtate. Softer se regards. genuine patriotism and love for the Union, those radloals cannot be rime , striated, as they never possessed either pa triotism or leis for the Bolen or our father/. Socemeion and disunion were theoffspring of New England. These doctrines were bred and eaught there. The only petitions for st'dissolutims of the Union, that we ever knew of, were gotten up In New England, ware signed by Noir No - gland men, and pre sented In Congress by New England repre sentatives. She, sir, le the mother of these twin bantlingi. Now, the longue - go -of this resolution is, Chet their "admission shall be, resisted." 7Yet these very men prolonged the sanguin ary rstruggle four years to "resist" their going MU, as was their continued declare den ; and now, a solemn resolve, after the war . has closed, and peace and quiet has been restored, a solemn resolve to resist their coming in i Why. the Idea is so mon- Helms and shoaling that one would think the spints of the half million of fallen b whim pined now Ile bleached upon the plains of a thousand fields, would return in ' anger to haunt a radius' crew which thus foully seeks to prevent a work, for the ac complishment of which they marched forth and offered their lives as a willing sabillloe, e nd for wbieh the,gaitop spent four thou millions of treasure. And how • long dose this resolution contemplate they shall be kept out of the Union T qtatil aid-organ ic law is . amended." pr, in osinti'vro'rde, until the ditunionials in Congress get through with their sixty or seventy differ ent propositions to amend the Constitution. Until they hale so tinkered, patched anti shingled it over and laded It down with detestable negro amendments that you can not tell whether it to tt Constitution inten ded 4 the negroes In Africa or foe the white men In, America. This may take five, len, fifteen of longer, just depending upon bow loug the dominant party remain. ed io power, to tinker at the organio.laW ; oti eo loodpak th ought the admission of thee" Stales m L bring theiriperirlitto a minority, and like from them the good op port unit les,they ire‘gow,ecjoying of. plun dering the giople. gr. Speaker, f Marna) tlie posi tion of the Republican party bel4ar, Asp by -fending the description drit earloatarti, which I find in a nontlipt,pliri, tint) Whieh is described thus': "We have-seen in private circulation • caricature which we thing is !4rthy a wldar fame. It represent" Etl, Alumoirstanding on the threshold of the Ittielitutien, his attitude -and expression dettglitts extreme anxiety end perplexity. la the foregromid - ami two figures big boy and • little oak—representing relPeot- Italy the North nod „The.larger ur- Ohio le vigorinely pot ntsl)4ll4l stamper one, Who Is strutting bid s t d.* 441orkuily_ (U.! wards Mr. Sohnenn and ilatit,r(fouo!,tm dad Aruilltig violently to lodt /pileup*. itti. jil L tiskt,t.loolts out upon exchtimrs_ Anybodi ever see ,I thartillg but telling his little beak et in out Oti!tit - 014, ss+pow see—the 44 to eans. walk meal Wow* tpk Vogl holding him' lioidug,lll trio unoraoli ono ):49 • •IVP•1 3. 1•, I ,l 4tie 4 ' 41 , 0 A 4 ,4)( was ita Me I .* r • htAnwonther ts 1A111110.714 P9,I4#WIV4I‘I, ill . 100 —•-• • : Tieso'diiiision*iii ate Sete Cowie! , • , „ • tubs ksit„o4 &taws Lotto, out, to ;lir to tome theor . tA i .sl,orr' lbs togro to zltit of obi .4*, MI • eau!, they; know and feel there 'will not be enough' of docent white men In the coon. try to do it for them. lam oppoeitd to thisnettra equality, be. mulct I bellefi the Arrictin to be Inferior to, the Caucasian, and that dod Co intended, pluck le the emblem of disfavor among ell, akd Wit Mark of diefavor 'has been set upon the' African by ills Maker, sod what lie has done cannot be undone by 111, ereaturee, and I eball'eol quarrel with Him about it. I ear here clearly and dbrinotly, I cannot agree to place the negro 'upon 'social and polgleal equality here. DU I would en- his own race, ind,4 he/hits capacity, to in satiate governments there, introduell the Arts and, sciences, and make the soil lo yield abundaatlyoand to do all for his rape there that the white than kis done for his 41 rase here. I would bi im God 'mood In that work, and offer h every assistance. 1 Dot here it will never do ti, mix. The black man for Africaeand tbewhite man for A merica, I take to be one of the dowries of the Almighty. , Tbekagain; this resolution ipopposod to th's Southern States 'mill the debt MI- I (rooted during the rebellion. What miser able clap-trap I • Why, none- but an idiot is capable of barbering such an idea* Who 1 intends doing such a thing 1 These States have all, or nearly all, repudiated this debt. Now, if we were asked by the General Gov ernment to pay this debt, then I trona find something worth opposing 'and against which we should guard ourselves. This is ohly intended as a sort of Abolition * bogie boo to frighten weak-minded men. This resolution has another oily phrase— "to prevent compensation for emancipated !lives." Who is verdent enough Windiest) mob miserable stuff? Therelln her — aW quibbles are only lasertbd her to keep (be people excited, and td keep their passions aroused so that the real designs of these dieunionists may be overlooked and escape observitlon: it may be well hero to re snarls. that Ills a notorious fact that the Republican party south of Now Ragland has no politice original filth itself. This entire resolution frdus, beginning to end is composed of Ideas and phrases borrow . . Bunion fanatics of New7ingland. Ml== et abandon an Idea, and !wane professions, Om do follows; whoa t run oounier to f the some When the people of New England did away with slivery, they did it for pax.-- They sold their nogroes to the Santis, Musk tits money in their pockets, and then turned around and shed crocodile tears over the "traffic In human flesh." They stole the slaves from their master, in the South, to whom they had sold them, and ran them off to Canada on the underground railroad.— This is the manner in which New England practiced emancipation. And farther on, this resolution asks for "the establishment of an equal basis of representalion." This is a piltly demand, originated by a section, which, enjoys, to the utmost degree, all the advantages of an unequal representation. With a population pretty near the came as New York or Penn- Nylvenia, they have twelve Senators in Congress, and we only two, and through this in-equality they are now efiabled to tyrannise over the country, and keep the Union divided. All the mischief that was bred ilk the Union, bad Its origin and re ceived Its stimulous through the eerie% Inequality, by means of which the Northern factioniste wield the power and lash over the *hole Republican party and the minis try. When the time dime come for a °kens in repreeiontatien. , Let us say to her that she, with bar handful of wodden nutmeg manufacturers, shall not have twelvellenat ors in Congress, while we, with our industrious millions, have but two.— Let us tell her that there is an Inequality that needs adjustment, in her latitude as well as in other quarters. Ntpr come the ilosing words, "and thus to somas to the fallen thejust bulls offhe war;" and the "just fruits of the war,7 In the sense which is (Mended by this moie ties, is nothing else but pure and undis guised negro equality. When that party sboll have obtoined for ilutnegro the soolal and political rights and privileges enjoyed by the white man; when that party shall hark obtained for the negro the right to rote, to. sit upon the *yetis right** sircruism this door, and the right for the children of•the black man to sit side by tilde with your children and my children I,n the 99.41PACE,Acheo's. then ibis party will be ready to swing its at high Jo the airrAnd- sifted "the } just fruits' of the war tow Peett accomplished." Pere case In point. A writer althteagoputedhe case thus: lq the Jones school, on South Clark 'treat, Wlllllllll largo number of negroes of both 'arab* attendance, g:turban ok ll dean:are iiiiktpelled to eh with them; flower er repugnant to their feeling/ and ere edu cated by thetr:-teatitters to the belief that they are their equals mid as good as they Ore. ltieently a Pile White girl Wes sent out aT the aohbol. .room for punishment, because she obisedit tb itt bout).* m ne gro." " Tboy waditid at 41; n _trona College, in Ohio, whopt biaolti r stlololl'ntinpri sit logoasorOirtili arm in iltatilt44•Astottii.ta is taught and praotioed that the tier° is tie 4.4 %4! vigtP JAPIP7 ,I I4 ,I 6# I I IO IkePt t . :tjusettittillioalsts.. Ai* . Toilattion an/ ntlinr payi*ollere, or.;tias two tidos 7'00041'. ligaiJkonsilspitation, tillifylagAnd • ihp4a, th ose Olntnil were , OhilikONOUS4iti:l4lol4alo oo ttoti4l . 1.1010•I i k 1°h • , s i a t e l 4: 7 4" Ilids, in the' Judgment or litSl+llo4s 911ifoldlrift , Ad In a spirit tit honest idintli,"lisieteal Nen. ,4l4l *lividenn,ily l o°* ll 4 4. - :11010- .1 0 .41 ,, 01114Q14"* Iion . 9 . 171101 . 1' .04147 :%~.~'~, szonvsartm! I)ELLEFONTE, JUNE 8, ,1866„:, In 1 24111(4 Pelpit,: and did they 'nut' ratify the ainintinsentl• Did you not de mand of them a repudiation of the t ebel debt, and Gave )hey not repuilklied that debt? Old you not demand .of t hem Alter. should take'the oath to batwing true and lay nl and dhl•thej not take that oath Was it poseible for teen, who•mtve the am plait evideppe of courage and brateivy- 1 . • - Ifghling for What they 6slievett tuba a`right none cause, to humiliate thediviltes deeper? [lave they not bowel themselves intieskte. very mire of'huibiliation, se an evidence of their, repentance; yet the foul denial of. abolition ie not appeased, and geisha to free - tevimst - withihe degraded IV= rioan 1 Does not Gedernl Grout, who pur ponely made a tour of inspection and °beer tration to the South, reiortthat these people have a sincere disposition to become . true and_leyel •eltliens; and Is not President 0h41411011 satisfied of the same foot, who is himself a Southern num, and certainly un derstands the character of then people bet ter than we in the birth 7 General Lee,t the other day, before the Congressionel committee, under oath, noti fies to the fact. Gen is he language of some of their represantative men. General Longstseet, in a letter recently made public, says! I see that some of the public men of the North are still inclined to doubt. our loyalty at the South, mid to hold us in our present condition for further gurrrenteee. What can we do to satin(); them I We aro Willing and anxious to do anything that is wanted of us, provided we are allowed to get on some con stitutional platform, I do not suppose there are a thousand men in the South who think differently from myself on rldw sub ject ; apd I ,halo some doubts whether there orrnottany se thorwho would leave the Union to-day If they were offered the choice to io out. or return on terms of equal- Here is what Ex Our. Wise eije to the Richmondlnes, of which organization Le was the commander •• Be; theirgeneral, bad surrendered,and it was a bona f i de suakander. If Ma h those who bad. fought in the ranks of the Blues, would allow their old general to is sue his last orders, he would say surrender, and bi it a 6a::::,l:t.:surrepder : not • crouch ing, servile surrender, but &surrender upon the point of honor. If oaths are requirifd of you In order that you may return to your occupations take there'd( you pouibly can, FM. n>t flay regherentstrrthavell latfWelLand you have never disgraced them. But go to work. If vitt can't get a dollar a day. take the half of ; If you can't get a quarter, take a cent; if you mull get meat sod bread, get bread alone; and if you can't .get a whole loaf, take a belt loaf. But go .to work! work! work r, , The following le an extract from a series of resolutions adopted by the Virginia Leg islature,and which were recently presented, by a delegation from that Stat•to Push - fent Johnson: Reaolord by the General Assembly of Virginia, That the people of this Compton wealth, and their representatives here as sembled, cordially approve the policy pur sued by-Andres* Johnson', President of the United Stales, in the reorganisation of the Union., We accept the result of the late yen test, and do not desire to renew what has been so conclusively determined ; nor do we mean to permit any one subject to our con trol to attempt Its renewal or to violate any of our.obligations to the United States Gov ernment. We mean to 00-operate in the wise, firm and just pulley _adopted by the President, with all the energy and power we can devote 'to that object. "2. That the above deolaratioe expresses the sentiments and purposes of all our peo ple, and we denounce the efforts of those who represent our views anddotentione to be different, as cruel and criminal assaults on our character and our interests" Then why these resoJutiono to prevent re construction? It Is clearly evident that they ere opposed to reoonstruotion for mere party perfumed. Why wore representative!! trim Tennessee permitted to take their seals in Congress whilst the war was raging, Ad now, when "peace is restored, why are the doors of Congress eiknuned right in the face of that State,and her representatives denied admission ? Maynard, who occupied a east in Congress is the midst-of the rebellion, was it-elected by the mune people, went book, and is now dented a sea; and yet ho was loyal man all along and was elected by a loyal district. Is not this strange? If Tettlntame at any time at all was out of the Union, It must have been while the wits was going on, and yet ehe was then allowed to have representatives in Congress. 1( Xenneuee was out of the Union at all; It must Intve been whilst the Republican con vention wino In session for the purpose of nominating candidates for tpesident and Vice President, and yet that party nomina ted a Teanceseean, Andrew Johnson, for „the Vice Presidency, and be Mamo presi• ding Whom "of therUalted States Senate, of which body no person front a Territory" can become a member. And If Tennessee te out of the Union, bow do they reooncile that fact With tba bet that Andrew Johnson, a citizen of none of the Slate &wording to that...l6Elo, In President of,Ualted States? flow do they roarittelle .. that feet. with the clause of the Cdnetilatlen Whisk ¢eelarss that: the Provident shall be a resident of one of the Steam?. The position of the 6e plift/1n flirty 10-diy is not only intionsistent,indroiniutionary In the highest degree. and all for the wle ... por• peecrofleeopkoglek power an . pep - Wailow which is a stemth. In the • nostril's of the American peep 4`• • • :"Nov. Mr. Speaker, tie have still turfher (Wanes that the.. iltalste are not out of - the . I?wiew r etwl 410'ebey' are sittllo to le ,ropiesearitbies in COnikiese. ,ffipMrelt4l • aUuntlen'te +initer.peased , by A il '444000 jitaelt;:. Obillattid• ilon.sayrn olteproselantifent &bailiff.' tom, shall be. liPportlooliii among the several States . whlth,anibekindittthiSl 1 0400 VI4IIY.' , Litr olir!di of this sothorliri moots& .1* tk44.00.4.010 1 . 1 4*A. 1 4.41 1 ,6 14 4 ,- soo l*poireloosd both , gland Isooitsost .re P • 4 0 11141 4i , MW I W Il y tikile ,W4lakt: 4 ?.tirt 1 ' , ,00,1104. , ' iiicso44( 44 l lliiir l / 4 4,47 .-- 'cObow ,44.1 Wet, 1110 'Olll ,deny-Itt Hew are yosa going to poll ever ro The position of she radicals is • clearly rovelntibnary, and the &logs of the present , Hump Congress . are as illegal nod uneonetildlional assay legis lation can be ; because States whose rep rnsentdilves barn a right upon that floor, aro denied admission. Rut we have still later •evldeuea that them, States• were eonilidered ns being in the Cohort by that potty. In Much, 1862, in aoeordance with thee mune provision of the Constitution which I have Just oited, this party passed a law for the apportion ment of roPresentatives, and' gave the Southern States, thew in -rebellion,. allele share, the same as to the loyal Stales. Now by virtue of whit statute do the present members of Congress hold their seats I Why, by virtue of the law passed" Meroh 6th, 1862; and as that UM has never been repealed, what prevents the • Southern States from being repremmted in Congress, as these Republicans themselvos made this to apply to the South as well as to the North If the rebellious States were not in the Upton, tell me why a Republican Congress apportioned representatives and taxed among them 1 'representatives and taxes ire not epportioeed among territories; and thus we hove an admission, on their port, through their owb legislation, that there is no such thing as a State beidg out of the Union; mei in the face of nll _these incontrovertible facts. they ..now have the impudence to say these States are no lon gerttales, but territories, conquered prov inces. But, say these radicals, are you going to admit men to seat, in Congrosi—unrepon tent rebels--those hands are red with the blood of our own citizen's? I soy, no, sir= and if such are sent et them be sent back until the right MOW' representatives ..re oledied, but do nal—deny to these States their right to rspresentetion. The Consti tution distinctly says that no State shall be denied hk . reprelentation without its own consent. Art tole fifth makes this proils lon. May I not ask, sir, whether a report. tent rebel In Congress might not prove a better Union man than an unrepentant abo• Mon traitor of New England, who for years and years has been aimingat a diesolution Of the Union, and counseling resistance to e lassa.af the crown __. and - has Atrgfict given the 'least sign of repentance Now, Mr. S ker, 1 think I have shown clearly the MilMiling, ineonsistebt and •owardly attitude of this great humbug of the nineteenth century, the Abolition-shod dy party. I hare told you of the humilia tion of the South. Dot, sir, it is nothing compared ticith the cowardly humiliation of the shoddy, party of this State, in which It has placed itself by the notion of its lens. tore at the other end of the rotunda. Did you ever see *en skulk, hock „down and stlntlfy themselves's' tbeyAU'on their negro suffrage resolutiqns WA; Sir, it is a position such as a. dog on your streets mould feel ashamed to occupy. , With great flurry of trumpets did they usher in thpir resolution endorsing the action or their Congressmen in favor of negro suffrage.— How disgracefully did they retreat and seek refuge by, burying their own wolution in committee 1 They talk abourboing the persons upon whom the salvation of the county' depends, ind yet driven to their boles by the argument of a few Democrats, which rendered them perfectly helpless, an proven by their disgraceful retreat—the Senator from Erie remaining its die only one who batibeerve enough to face the ques- Hon. And the Senator from Bradford, the oloqunnt Londoncalomel!, acknowledges his rout, horse, foot and dr , agoons, by rating to recommit his own resolution. What else can you make out of it? All, they feel it-; their own uountenonees betray that they feel it, &ad the world trill set them down is a pooh of moral onwards, afraid to meet Issue so definitely raised by them selvea. Look at the eoth ibitioh—t he shod dy party, with tide Clovernmen t, Slate and National, In its hands, In power in every State in the Union; yet, like whipped dogs they have retreated to their kennels.. Let Democrat. cluternpend gain fresh courage; the first victory: the grand victory of truth over error, has been achieved in (hie Leg islature. The dlsoiples . .ef Stevens and Sumner in this State stand upon the record to-day as heating a disgraceful retreat.— But let not the Dlmooraey rest here. Let the fly ingenemy be pursued. Keep hurl ing their own lune* at them, cram them dots% their thgitate until these men who for yeses have beten saffering with negro on , the brain, become sick with negro on the stomaeb, and are made to disgorge the de testable heresy. [Laughter.] Truth, just loe, argument are on our side, and with these the Democracy cannot fail to be triumphant, and our glorious country, founded by the kuutiortal sires of the revolution as a white man's goveinment, be perpetuated es such, and as a democratieheritage to geoerstions yet unborn. -- 7 A genius out West, nonoelving that a Itljie , ;toiler thrown upon. some green wood would fasilitate tta burping, direqted a 441'11 stream from a keg upon. tire pile. Not poisoning a hand sufficiently quick to out this off abodesirable moment, be was ittio a million pleer. The armor reasoned out this verdict : "hasn't be salt ed suicide, because he dlds'yeamou to kill Itlniself ; it "wasn't 'visitatlon of God,' be.. came he wasn't struts Ity 'lightning; be didn't-die for stint of breath, for be hadn't 'anything left to breathe wllik It's plain he didn'tlnow what he -vas about ; so I shall Wing br. . 0 1)1 for lowa of eioninon - wise 1" —She important question of the hour is, "WW M 5 ;ammo mists with tbikpiq.- tr 1016 dkatfe Me President or to otgr to dke vi • Oh& wiids , hint IProoi dog [Chas Imantr`aiia by iadiali that sverod 441,44111,•r0tt," !Oa of his 11 'ltsuntirr at sigah!st nu, 2 . 101 We luta; the .44 ' • ' • —All ;doh explgeliati hosting the ea voi ion m Potisaurrth. 1414 pi•no*lt 2 tl * i4424 4 4k0t;'. -.- ~,. _ . I;tinvo acinget o p *A iIIME4IOI. I 4 ko4willi4" , 11 10 IIIIIII4 rii4 "004 44 1 0 * t1ki 1 z„..,..... AP lll. Vtd i l a- o. bil 10 40 I" , . . . -----4 "4" ' • 26 '120 212 . - witi oiso ANP III 7 4 . 4 1_1 0 110•0 110 0#0 0 °‘!“ 11W1 i " Il l r ft * YrttlaV l oo l .lll .4 4 11 gosiiiii4bowo. • -, ' II *01:1011.Pri . PA; t i ne rA Quinsy rehi es'au iceident• ocourrin in that oily, Illtutratiie of the in decency of a prominent ,Titilesi. and Abe merited rphttkp h. reeeired front Ws ,owu deogpmr. Fred. Douglatm, the oratorhull nigger soil "dear personal'friend"of dons Dickinson, lectured in that city last week. One Of lice white admirers, desirous of.doing the darkeY honor, invited him home to dine with, bib'. The Illustrious '• smoke" not being too prond;;lt's yet, to associate with "pooh whittttrash," tiondeseended to nocept. the invitatiOn. Thke nigger WAS made, much of in the parlors of kW boat, end indite time dingier wes-senottneed. Hnt - the-daugblet of the 111131111-501144 wbile men, a young lady p Mg self respect sad sonic spirit, ab• tented heyself from the festal bokra. SW& was made tog tier by her negro loving father, 'and slid was found in the kitchen, from whlch . t solleitation or en treaties could indium 'her to move. As the Herald states, "she persisted that those. who wanted to eat with niggers might do so, but she would not, end site carried her point' in 'pint of paternal, expostulations.— 'My Plage,' ittlid she, L 'ia In the kitchen when Degrees take possession of the par lor.' " That girLdeserree a better fattier, and ought to bave,without delay,. " white" husband, Unmarried—Quincy -Democrats, search her out, apd, when found, let the best looking one of you conjugate the verb "love" with her. If theist,/ says " yea° to tour grommatioal discourse, - take her and bo happy, You both have stir blessing, • nil that Oboe is enough to set up'house keeping.—Lo Crone Democrat. Gov %Vita. Nor as Moonsn.,-We have numerous instances on rotund of the judg ments of the Almighty suddentg.overtaking the wicked, giving practical illustrations of the truth of Ws Word, which declares that "The wicked shall not hve out half his days." An instance of this kind angered near our neighboring town•of Catasauq an last week. A man named Miller, about three weeks ago made en ogreement with some of his companions In vice to meet him at a certain place every Eitufday, when be would adminieterto them the holy ordL mince of Communion, giving them whisky and stackers. This mod ceremony was Performed every Sunday, but the * hands which admintetered the Nock 'eat - isms In derision, were so Mangled by the premature i x discharge of • blast hut week, as to req re amputation. lie was also severely bas d about the head. After two days. of - tremetwaffering he went. to meet his limn l ed Creator.—AtLentown Register. OIIAT CRAM, or Mzen.—On the 12th of Deoember, 1859, Mr. Lyman Trumbull, them, au nor, s Senator of the United Stales, said; "In my Judgment, there is a distinction between the white and the black race, made by Omnipotence itself. 1 do not believe these two races can ever live happily and pleasantly together," Not five months later Andrew Johnsen, then a Senator from Ten , pstp, said: "The senator from llautos concedes tie whole ground, and all this clamor atkd clap-trap about lil?estylind the man being °rooted equal, falls to the ground." Mr. Trumbull, it will be recolleoted, Ranted both the Freedman's bureau bill and - a° so-called Civil Rights bill, wllch seeks to override the 'Welke:ion between the while and the black races niade"—lS he once admitted—"by Onortipotaiec ilee(f." --There are no ten than seventy prop ositions before Congress to amend the Con dilution, all having for their aim the eleva tion of the African. The following,says an exchange, would corer the whole ground sought to be gained by the proposed amend tnents 1. Every freedman shall have a bureau for himself, with a lookiog•glass on lho top, If ho wards it. • 2. Every freedman shall have a secreta ry. 8. beery treed child ehall have whatever it odes for. 4. Every treed boy or girl abet have o ward robes . 6. While people, whether free olitt,must behave ibemselvea. 6. Every while male citizen of the age of twenty-one Sara or under, and of mound mind of otheFiiiee,,may vote it be will take the loath that. he Would be a negro if he could. MABIACHUANTTS AND 8 .—A work has Just been given to the public by tho li brarian of the New York HAMlrina Society, proving from existing documents that,hiu sachusetts was the originator . and - meet strenuous defender of American slimy. That Massachusetts was the originator and defender of American slavery sea divine in etitution was well known. But it has never before been so plain as4low that having s tablished slavery ‘ by staling law before any other America n ablony, she upheld It oven after her constitution 0.1780, and the strange truth Is proven IndlepsUebly by Mr. Moore,that slavery, was niver abolished .law in that State, but only ceased by die dying of, oo by fink of the Old slaves, the iltilure of the peoplelpply Omsk (probably for econnisio njesonn.).•44, the consequent el:gestic* °CM, yueUtutian —A Now Orklawrosuriploadewt of the Now York Irotehnula says of Chit dity I "No city toßurope or AotetWiliali pasuilod,goe likethlsa. .Four boors' She topography of 1 rube heretofore. But Just where I woo the . sad auttoot, sad the ram In heaps' to rues to ',Bee t "Yea beta% ' yet, doctor, Up lbw Booth.: Dowc the Stink taw 41so.itietree *bar ortuutillslair berst ttl .r. Weir Notottaalliallatiib. Radleel 440. aolo *along, oleselsg," bo l a. t)miNowitaiPlaiikkto 'ON*" no do not tax Ike Goinimasiir anyer tibtrboll lien, isiU' 11 1 0 1 .04, Rilk, *ft - oim ikf 44 , 46 -(„ r* 700 4 71 0 ; I. • • • • . , - 11( I L • 23.; CAN TSUI' dE NAMI IN IttNIIIPIO. The waters kW the pebblyilwre. • Tlatralads all kW tbs hint . The stabeattis kW the tulip bad, Far Weeder It distills. • Tho dew Anil* hiss the rose nt mos% TII cereals dew above, The font snd.ffower, in circling clasp. Their :cyclic beauties weave. The moonbeams ktei the clouds et *Sap The star gem kW the mat White shadow. amateur, loft awl light, / Are hinging on the Ice. . The zephyrs kiss the budding pink Thai blooms on beauty's lip; And leder beets, th 'ugh cold and chill, Itetubytkeetur sip. The iribds, the wares, the budding flowers, The laughing, merry rills,' Me kissing all from morn te see, And clouds still hiss the bUls. Even heaven and earth Ao meet to its§ Through tours of cperkling dew ; In kissing then, can thereto harm? I don't think so—do you? —E.re.ia ge. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —lie that low his heir this year will grow bald. —There le no each thing ns en easy chair fora discontented man. —Censure la the tax n num paya to biz public for being eminent le lady whore peace of mind wee biro. ken blonde trf have it repaired, —lf a lady parrot five times In succession . young man, you tney gel your hat. —There is aometalk fn Vermont of log liquor deniers. That's Yankee. —Mile Prim say. it takes her half-an hone every morning tomato her water fall. —The Uovorisment Clerks at Washington Ciiinave formed • large Johnson Chsh, President Johnson •wlll be Iffy-night years of age the 29th of Deeember next • t —lt la believed that both nooses of Con gress will adjourn about the middle °Unix.. —The latest arrival from Europe indicates the probibillthra or a war between Austria stud Prussia. —ltier may multiply and succeed for semen, but tha esibbage plant growetti not all the year round. —The limped Slates Besets hu conlinsed tho nomination of Daniel E. Sickles u Mids. -ter 10.1111 os• _ —We dote upon this world ea if It were to have no end, addles milted the next ft if It were n.ver to have abgianinr. —was should • mum always wear a watch 1 sawn ravels Ina waterless desist 1 BOCIMIO every'rer h has a spring In It. gotTae property or ex- 3overnor Atkin, of Ilna, has been restored to bha on the' mendatlon of Gan. Bleldes. • —An order hp been bawl . for the release, on parelb,-of the non. r . Ihr. heretofore oontlne4 In one of the roots below New-Orleaor --Twenty-six soldiers of the regular imp, in Mississippi, have been committed to the Vgpitentlary for desertion end insubordinatioa. —The ring tall monkey swingeth as easily' by him tall as by his arms : and the bypoertia aoteth the +mint u easily am he Both the sinner. ft—When you see a ridical whovill'usame ly speak to his poor neighbor, itis evidence that he has a very great degree of feeling for rho o gre: —Thareday last was Qneen Victoria's birthday, Abe having attained her fbrty-seventh year. She la Raw is the twenty-ninth jam of her zelgn. —A bantrept law, passed the lower house of Canvass last week, and from appearances will pass the Senate too. This will ite a "god send" to the Onlrers. —lt is said the President ban ordered the arrest of all the Plundering Freedmen'. Bureau *gents. This may be called taking the drawers out of the Dame. ---Charles Lamb, wlieik a little bey walked with his sister In a ehareb yard, and reading the epitaphs, mid to her "Wheie are all the naughty people burled i" —All the oases of oholera have disappeared from the hospltaLaldp Palms abNew York, no deaths have taken plasm recently, sad the pa- Ceuta are all eonvaleseent. —Lather used to say "It It were not for tribulation I should , not understand the iiiturip tura," end sonny iorrowing saint ntipondi‘ to this, es bar dg felt its truth. • —The new live cent pipet is to be of the urns sue as thsi thnerdoller gold' coin. Three of these coins wilt , weigh a half ounce, sad be convenient for apoitage weight --Xorfro suing la not the ampepteeplot forra of the Iladiaali. !leery Ir in favor of fit ors vote east for blip will to a vote kr favor of negro suffrage and aggro squat". . —The President has Weed en order dine thug the armed of all (Aeon of the freedmen's BUVINNI Interested, aridly or Mired''', i• the cultivation of farms in the Southern Station —One dr the largest ides which erier toa plane in the oU regions nocturnal' Oil City on astenlay. The loss !f' Bat on ordains, on labile there was only 00,00 Insurance. —A noitsw hawday salmi bad a plsrale Hamwstowit; Maryland, last week, to pistils& the *Ws with humanltestts* the' lightWfwe issaription s "Ws sast Jobiaitytmei pat Wm' It must hat•lotes a %WY 4• 4 4•• 10 . —Ono isstpn Chsteasw. th• rasa ofWl4 . lll , B4olo!4,9 l ,Nwihiliti.two 40021 4 bill bald* d0:11% Gam' LW for fl°71 01 w• ThelklitgArk i OIiMIPPPOrt 40 *aim 0 1 : foist destrimis ok MA, a oat . G•ore u. tdwl Odd :follow the ircrid, alsd is 8•11111. ie Pram* WI WI. iu wail torn }skim. *Jowl %b. ,iinkie pit oda MAN' fa am. V. InsOrtb•he rbitstgoitatelsiduillppowAlwi" wlabb e.l.in I Why v., en, thfiblasii___ upstart, pst*liitil gewetile wbo yea. op Oka rocket. itatillalogi dove Ilk. elieke,,.loCow peek b. te Wreilitikwentore lbe qtdos Wog ieihtiOti •. .. ' • I went to war in rod Cala, 110411, score of donee, 41104,411 inOn .1 MA,ll4,4ked the len iNstiallikte.dowes COLO pw0.01117- I "Ind o,down'enarfula, OA, Oar onels, sod orknadriat otk r,oillaipa, slab' I hays hippial mop piano, rapiwonic bedeitenti e nneit*top tibia, oblong Of books, mammy atiews4 MI6 Asa out of Booth ern homes,* 4 , o o.N.artot do,. of of his ittimo in the North. 11,1 . a was the big daft for_rukitli,M doWARig $ 1 441 1 .,"` Groat God !Slighting so m e of ow pier Ms , And vfoqiio war for loss wise! tinto I could bilinb 644414 at boss. Amiga:Wl* was often was wird*. And my °Mins b,lhme Orly and riggini—my faro; ran 64.44- 0 ), 111 4 4014 4 1-- iny tools wen tilitiqf lost—say by anothet- 4' i' ha= & Ailed pith dioriosol,:tiniriim tiOw leotsd ittott lby too same men Ohio wanted is. to go)* war. much as poop!! Wolk opon some dead but Who 'Lai soli - Elifiritilr third for all ilikdr spare statspo; • • • Attalla AM litionleta who forgot to take , oars of 'oldie's boolties—the obalitiOnisto who told no OW Domearate wentol - ike I Edon who ohid Democrats wire traitor.—the oboUttoolato who staid it hose and dare owl light, except in thelarAt of' a olob, in the littaek• of , ditialieli*PiiiiiitsWisii* tan illit - illu 4l - 4 cowartitiotrattoki mit* WON we • hwriktennitilhols lobe, tbate... , Th. hao no• Ala aoi".roolna lie 'Wool Tkowairuso amator• • IlEtaro I • The aide, IN* 44 lb. aortic Uri ao mash for tba whlio r amo of Par ma& - Th. warowilakk ban *dal I. for the "ttk:4444 1 1 , 4h.-olgres Tido 10 - wkoldndlit as. Holm they wtlL bawl a pod Ow pigmy or re turned Doklletionoped fn anolbor moods for cotton, nigioni, *oleo sad MOW Apr , der, taken by tamof O. Wrist frp, wo men and MOdrollb - it eeweado ow M if lbe late war yea a gag — e wicked. tritons tuttioatt4alleasA pg. It did not tutors the Bawl, bat it ludo a in. a 'kWllll4'4M and war dwastiesteffielt It never prolodei opererecut. bai lige. this Union in this Ago we never found ley', It Ictiver,ellit!t4 ws we .irrik ( rs' sth sunk, illienWsoldiensedgny swindling soninsetisr drunissa ales, its mnP4o,a4Bll4o4:lllothlT "9 h rtf of the Irate itamleteit4tteit. It didn't hob the *kilo people. . t o* It 4140 biliAteib : It Jpooutriaked.bair StobArotoi. • It ditio:igsaitolthroon Arbootty tooter then' Ideas, WAN. or : , It piled o big debt ugoat•us ore k from so two- Ibtrda of cotetoikao to pep 11:+t, , ' A Ti ii fit kt* tsrir , fr 00 7 71 1 1 0. _ . 1. r' — io..lhad dud' I - most pay , the poet losorbttord Aextto —end to *Ol tbss obiAlsOline,s a — d,_ mass, grxr,rl,46-4t-Vtrr94: i". and, Is Asb, itijk, ► sits ps st sir * Stiles notes arketsdi, tot which I heOit Art 41111 e balatiel'OmllikdOt to pop Ills iNelet on, whim ha mooopee tiiatioi r ota !Spiels idleness. tWO AttioNot lortsio*uty to go to oir,, -- ,: Noir ksosioddisi Mist ei• town, oimeith ibli sea kite ilifitoWitrellto moneyitrootilth' • orj,bi oikollii. b ' in 14'. . •_, K how4rit . t l / 4 4640. .t -borrowl4trirli=paitile . .ri•mi- , , ' ' - 041: Oki" an d o" ~ ' • 04 livisirlit,'• • 7` ,- L', * '' . ** 4o l P.l* ssiserneAlfils,,ligittorlikesl6o7,4iii it Iffirk*ol l l:, :4 . !ilt Ni Ilia fee sussis*ss girds. ;.1, - ..5e. 5 .-) •,,, ' ~, , • 4 ,4, ~ ,i, 4 1!. hobs* lotski is saliammild " I / AV - ..**I4OI4IPICAM at .4.2/11prAirekodhe