TIME 13.0 1 1 0 1? The following L prenowed by the Wonsan ,grr 'Rena. to be nsiqiiittlonably tlle hut Aserlena rue Tr, imam: , With's; the Bober realms of Sienese trees, The rueun pie Mold the dressily WO; Like tome humid reaper la hie hoar drew When ell the, lbsl4e ore Iyhan brown end biro. .The gnsy basso looldng, from that/ bag Ws. Mir the don 'welet.titdenter be the MU, Sent down the olt tiniiithni . to the tale, ' On the than thOoder ef anima Ws. All eights Irene insiUshred, , dad all wands sub dued, Tlie hills eibeneed further and the Weasels swig loss As lo • drians-tbe Ottani woodman hewed ills whiter log, with Annoy a muffled blow. c'he embattled foredo, erserlille armed :Star gold, Thal? Mumma bright Wig *eery marital hoe, Now Mood ilke some god itseitsm host of old, Withdrawn afar in Nimes remotest blow On sombre wings the voltam tried hie The dove seam heard his sighing mate ■ com plaint; And like a star, slow drooping Ie the light, The village church veseeeemedAn pale and faint. The oenlluel itoek upon the hillside crew— ' Crow thrlee--and all MU stiller time be tali; Silent, tIU, borne replying warbler blew Hu ellen horn and then was beard no more. Where snit the Jay within the eI.S tall creep Made garrulone trouble round bee nailedged go d oriole hung her 'waving nest, By every light wind like a enter swung; Where mop the noisy martin's of the the busy .wallow* denting ever near— Foreboding of the rustle mind believe., An earthly harvest and • plenteous year. Whets every bird that walked the vernal feast, Shook the sweet slumber from Its wings at morn ; . To warn the reaper •I' the roay lost, All sow was sonless, empty and forlorn. Alone, from out the rtubble piped the quell ; And croaked the crow through all the dreary. gloom, Alone, the phemant, drumming In the vale, Made mho in the distant cottage loom. Then VW no bud, no bloom upon the bower., The spiders moved their thlu shrouds night by night, The thistle down, tbb only ghost of !loiters, Sailed slowly by—passed noiselees out of sight. " , • Amid ail this—is thi. most dreary air, And wham the woodbine shed upon yha porch Its trims,. leaves, a. If the year Mood there Firine-the blood with Its Inverted torah , Amid all this*the center of the seen, • The whita.balre,l matron, with m ,notonorm triad. Plied tbe swift wheel, sad with her joyous mein Sat like a fate, and watched tbellying thread. She had known a sorrow. He had walked with her, Oft supped. end broke with her the ashen cruet, And in the dead leaves etilltklmerd the stir Of his thick meads trsili the dust. Whiteet 6r cheek was baighL with summer bloom, Her country summoned. and she gave herein; And twice war bowed to her his sabie n plume-- Ile gave the sword to rust upon the If, gain the sword, but not the hand that drew, Ahd etruok for liberty the dying blow; Not him who, to hie etre oountry true, Fell 'mid the ranks of the Invading foe. Lons t bsit not loud, the 'drooping wheel went on, Like the low murmur of a hive at noon ; bong, but not loud, the memory of the gone Breathed through her lips a sad and tramn lona tone. At tut the thread was snapped. her bead we bowed; Life dropped the distaff through her bands wens, And loving neighbor's smoothed her careful shroud ; While death and winter closed the autumn seene. , PRESIDENT JOHNSON ON THE OON VENTION. On the 18th lain., the Committer' of two from each &ate appointed to wait on the President end deliver to him an ofilolal copy of,t he proosedings of the Philadelphia mass meeting, ♦ielted the White Honse, in corn- pony with a large number of the ravens del egates. Hon. Reyardy Johnson. no chair man of the Committee made a short address to which the s Preohlent responded lb fol lowsz— MR. CirAIRBIAN A i n GENTLFAIIN or TOO Commirrsa:—Language is inadequate to express the emotions and fpeilngs produced by this occasion. Pettey§ I could express more by permitting Zenon to speak and you to infer what I ought to say. I con fess that, nothlthetanding the experience I have had in public life, and the audiences I have add d, this oocasion and this as. eemblage are well calculated to, and do overwhelm me. As I have said, I have lint language to oolvey adequately my preasnt feelingsand emotions In listening to the address whioh•Your eloquent and distin guished Chairman has just delivered, the proceedingb of the Contention as they tran spired, recurred to my wind. Seemingly I partook id the inspiration that prevailed in the Convention when I received the dis patch mint by tiro4lloistingulshed mem bers, ooniaying , ,in fordo lithe scene which has just been deseritied or /South Carolina aoirldesesoblOns, atm.in.arte, marching Into that vsataiseliblage, add thus giving evidence that the two extreme. bid eerie tpgether, add that fo'r the IY3rivilliksy "dere uniledai they ball tbeen id fish , for the p lion Of the Union. When the dis patches Informed ate that in that vast body of men, distinguished for latelleet and wis dom, every eye Wee suffused with on beholding the scene, I could not finish reed it% Jbe dispatch to ens associated with me in the one*, for my own efeelings overcame tn. [Cheers.] I think we may just conclude we are moving under a proper inspiration, and we used not be mistaken, that the vin) ger of an Ovenullug eind Unerring Provi dence is In Ml* walker. [Loud etieers,] The maims ia as mril. W• hews Jon pee ved through et mighty, a bloody'; 1336111011- ions ordeal, yet do not And ourselves free from the dillioeitlea and dangers that at firel sorrousidnd, ne. While cur breve men have performed their' duties. both' -officers - and men—ltnreing to General Grant, who stood at bla riiiitd—while they have won laurels imperishable, there are situt greater and more Important duties to perform, and while we have bad their co operation In the field, we now need their support in our efforte to perpetuate peace. [Loud °hears.] Ito far ea the Executive IM- partment of the Government Is coneerned, i the effort has bdon =Ode to restorPthe trn -, ion, to heal the breech, to pour oil into the wounds which were consequent upon the struggle, and, to speak in common phrase, to prepare, no the learned and wise pbrel ,,, elan wound a Rimier, hf . •ll, l l(r,irettitarneter e . "; and co-eixtensive with the wound. (Loud ~ `,ehoore.] We thought, and pet think, that we bed. . partially sumeedeid, hot as the work pro greeted, as reconciliation seemed to be ta king place, aid. the country becoming toil ', tett, we found a disturbing sad marring e 1,., ,., emeht opposing no. in alluding to that el meat I 1,11•11 gam no further than did.,yetut Convention and the distimpsished gentile wan who ii 4 daliVered to me the report df itY proimedlema I shall make so reformat. to it which I do sot bairn the time sad eke etteselailwelifiy. WI hive witnessed is one lkipartmeat of tie alfierament eras effort, an it wave lispretail .4,(\1,11 ISM VOL. XI. of peace and bafmany in thd Union. We have seen halfg,iftglspon the verge of the Government, as it were, a ' body called, or which assumes to be, the Congress of the United Stateerbul, in foot, a Congress of only part of the States. We have seen this Congress assume and pretend to be for the Union, when its every step and act tended to ptspetbaka distinion and make a disrup tion of the States inevitable. Instead of promoting reconciliation and harmony; its legislation has partaken of the character of penalties, retaliation p,nd revenge. This bas boob the course and the policy of one department of your Government. The humble individual who is now ad dressing you, stands the representative of another department of the Government The inannerirt which be was called upon to occupy that position I shall not allude to-onteltis occasion ; suffice it to ea; that he is In hire upder the Constitution of the country, and being Sere by virtue of its provisions, be takes his stand upon the character of our liberties, as the great ram part of civil tied religious liberty. [Pro binged cheers.] Having been taught in my early life to bold. it seared, and having practiced upon it during my pilot.. public career, I shall ever continue to reverence that Ctlestitution—the Considution of the Fathers of our Country—and to make it my guide. [Enthusiastic cheers.] I know it.,has been said, and must be per mitted to indulge in the remark, that the Executive Department of the Government has been tyrannical Let me ask the audit ones of distinguisned gentle aroun I me here to-day to point to • vote I ever gave, to a speech I ever made, to • single act in my whole public life, that has not been against tyranny and despotism What po sition have I ever occupied, what ground have I ever assumed, where it can be truth fully charged that I failed to _axivocate the amelioration and elevation of the great masses of my 000ntrymop ![Crlos of "nev— er," and greatt applauvihl 8o far as ehergewileTtliat kind are eon earned, I will say that,ther are ■imply in• tended to deceive anti delode the publie mind into the belief that there is some one in power who is usurping and trampling upon the rights and perverting the princi ples of the Constitution , It I■ done by those who make such charges for ti4e pur pose of covering their own acts [Cries of "There so," and ahem ] t have felt it my duty, iu vindication of principle and the Constitution of my country, to call atten- Houle these Proceedings. When we come to examine who has been playing the tyrant, by whom do we "Sod that despotism has bean exercised! As to myself, the elements of my nature, the put suite of my life have not made me, either in my feelings or in my practise, aggres sive. My nature,on the ettestesiry, is rath er defensive in its character; but I will esy that. having taken my stand upon the broad principles of liberty and the-Consti tution, there is not power enough on earth to drive me from it. (Prolonged Mitering.] Raving placed myself upon that broad plat form, I have not been awed, dismayed, or intimidated by either threats or encroach ments, but have stood there, in conjunction with patriotic spirits, sounding thb tocsin of alarm whenever I deemed the oitadel M liberty in danger. [Great applause.] I said on a previous occasion, and repeat now, that all that was neeeesary in the 'great struggle against lyranny:aud despot ism was, that the struggle should be sum oiently audible for the American people to hear and properly understand They did hear, and looking oa and seeing who the contestants were and what that struggle was about, they determined that they would settle this question on the aide of the Coo. stitution and of principle. [ Cries of "That's so" and applause.] 'proclaim here to-day as I have on other occasions, that my faith is abiding in the gre at mass of the people. In the darkest moment of the stuggle, when thenolonde seemed to be most 'lowering, my faith instead of giving way, loomed up through the dark otoud far be youd—l now that all would be safe In the end. [Cheers.] My coautrymen, wo all know that, in the language of 1110020.8 Jefferson, "tyranny and despotism even can be exercised and exerted more effectually by the many than the one." We have seen a Congress grade• ally encroach, step by step, upon Constitu- Jiunal rights, and violate, day after day. and month after month, the fundamenta l ' principles of the Government. [Cries of “That's so."] We have 00011 a Congress that 'seamed to ?beget that there was a Con . etitutten of the Unite States, and that there was a limit to the sphere and scope of legislation. [Renewed cries of "That's se] We have leen a Congress la a minority as. scone to excise powers irhibh, if allowed to be carried out, would rolt in despotism or monarchy Itself. [Cries of '"That's so,"' and enthusiaktio cheers given for the Presi dent.] nix is truth I and homese others as wail as myself bare seen proper -to:ap ;Mal to the patriotie and republicanAheling of the country, we have been:denounced in the most severe terms. Slander upon slan der, vituperation upon vituperatioß, of the most villahtoali eiressimr, has mad* i 4 way through the public press. What gentlemen, has been your and my • Mal What has been the cause of our offen ding? will tell yob—Match% to stead, bir' the Constitution of our fathers:a[ftond cheers.] The President hers approached the shot where SenatarJohinaon was Winding, and said: . "I consider the p rowdily, of tits Clinsoms lion, Srr, as more important than those of any Convention that mar atnlNdled in the Untied Bata. jOreat applanits.] When I loOk With My nature eye upon that collection of citizens, coning together froluntarily,and sitting in eounoil,wlth ideas with principle' and •lews commensurate with au the *man, 'sad eo-exteusiee with the wholuprOle, and °untrue it With the oolhiction of gentle Men who` are trying to destroy the country,' regard it De more Wi lk:Want PISA any Convention that has sat nt.least oineal7lll. [Lpud assn.) I thin Limy soy also that the declara tion" that were there made are .equaLyritp OS Declaration of Independence itself ant Awry timfariltrowneww di it *mod 'Doeltrir4ci lisle rrhitom—T. rcro4..9r -0 7 14 aid PoiONSII,II/ Your address end declarations life loathing *MO Cot kis - 1(1141th 114411+114411+ ' 1 1 wittilw fit _ of the constitntion of the United Stales [Cries of "good," and clieere.] Yen, I will go further, and say that the declarations you have made, that the grinelplee.,you have enunciated let yqur address, aped eTr end procranHuion of Intespeipatiota to the people of the United Steam y [renewed' applausa for in proclaiming ► a d hiplocialming these great 'truths, you have laid down a consti tutional platform upon which all con make common mine and stand together for the restoration of the Staten and the preservil lion of the bovernment without reference to party. [Cheers ] The only question is the salvation of the country, for our country rises above all,party consideration's or in. luences. [Cries of "Good!" and cheers ] How many are in the United States that now requre to be free I—that have char Iles ipon their limbs, and are bound an rigidly as though they were in fact ih slavery I I repeat then, that pour declaration is the second Proclamation of Emancipation to the people of the United States, and offers a common ground upon which all perttes'ean stand: [Loud cheers.] f ! MR. CHAIRMAN AND ORNTLIMZN-1.14 me in this oonnectioes ask you what have I to gain more than the advancement of the pub- lio welfare? I am at; mudb opposed to the Indulgence of egotism as any one, but here Ina conversational manner, while formally receiving the proceedings of this conven- tion, I mig be permitted again to ask 'what have I to gain, eonsulting human ambition more than I titiVe gained, except' in- one thing V My race is nearly run. I hare , been placed in the high office which I occu py under the Constitution of the country, and I may say I have held from the lowest to the highest, almost every position to which a man may attain in our government. I have passed through every position—from an alderman of a village to the Presidency of the United Stateg—and surely, gentle men, this should ho enough to gratify a reasonable ambition. If I wanted authority, or if I wished to perpetuate my own power, how easy would it have been to hold and witild that which woe planed in my hands by the =name called the “Freedninn's"Wu BBL— : r [Laughter anti applause . With an army which placed at In, disere oil I could here remained at the °opine of the natiok. i , with its fifty or slaty 'billions of appeopti tions at my diapoeal, with the unehintrx t tu bc.firorked by my own bends, with ml sat raps and dependants in every tows and villiage, and then with the "Clril tighn Bill" following lie an attaitury, [Laugpter,] in connection wi:h all the otheF applinces of the governmput, I could have prodamcd 'nset( dictator! [Cries of "That's Into," and "Three cheers for the President.!] But gentlemen, my pride and my embitint have been to 'ninny that position which retain. all power in the hands of the potpie.— [Grail cheering.] It is upon that I 'kraal ways relied—lt is upon that I rely ion. [A Voice—" And the people will not.diwppoint you."] And I repeat that neither tit taunts nor jeers of Cutigren nor of a stbeldind oalumniiting Frees, can drive me 'om my purpose. I acknowledge no nupter ex cept my God, the author of my istence, and the people of the United Inge. [Pro longed and enGiusinatio cheering., For the one I,try to obey all Ilia command as beat I can compatible with my poor Omani', ; for the other, in political and *presenta tive merge, the high helmets of the pinple have always been reenacted and obeyed by me [Loud sheers ] Mr. CIFIAIMIAX, I have said usre than I intended to say. For the kind illusion to myself, contained In your addr s and in the resolutions adopted by the onvention let me remark that in tale s, and at thin period of my public life Ibold above all price, and abaft ever recur tab feelings of profound gratification to the last rasolUl lion containing the endorsenault of a icon vention emanating spontan ugly from the great mass' of the pm le. [Loud cheers.] I trust and hope my future action may be such that you: nd the con vention may not regret the' sursoce of milldam's you have expretteett f me.[Cries of "We are sure of it "] BefotO separating, my ,friends one and all, otimnitiee and 'lroner., please accept my mincers thanks for the kind manifestations if regard and respect you have exhibited in thin occa sion. I repeat Labatt alwaya continue to be guided by a firm taut eonOtientieus coo victims of duly,„and that elegy( gives one courage, under the Coistitttion, which I make my guide. WHO WAS "DOCTOR" OOSTIE h thus answered by an AuStardom, N.Y ooscespoodent of the World. Let me give you some of I;s anteoedents. 'He was for 'tome time a realii nt of Arorster dam, New ,York, where he puteued the call ing of a village barber. Helms p man of light build, with a sharp,palt'fada,long hair floating over the collar of a solttly black coat, enormous Byron shirt east.; unbut toned at the throat, and a lat IMving the style of a brim affected by the "sports." Altogether his appearance nfde him a ter ror to tlifeetnolll boys, and a aughing-stook and butt to them of larger gthwth. In con nection with his berber-shl, of which he wan sole proprietor and th call, Journey man, he started a dump ba fog establish. 1 meet, consisting of a force limp and two be, wherein the great and mall unwash ed 'Might bathe for six acid one-quarter t 9 OMS a bath. The enterprim, however, did not pat, and Bootie's capita; in pump. and tubs, was all *boat. Wi MO means to pay bin board and washing b' Is, poverty stared it pallet's the floe, notes some th ing should opportunely turn up. T e dental tut sug gested a rented/ for Dost 's woes, and after a Bourse of ,Distfttotiotu Under the village dentist, covering by daunt exactly two tlawu gradua lly. Ins "doctor" ago, whore 1 loot of many a gght a dull rasor,tura- weeks and three days, ted •'doolor" of dent) then migrated to 'Oh slight of hint: till the h between a stiff beard wed radical martyr old tub and Ilth , • been Impoadble ed up a newly mane In New Orleans WI ir-box dye it would kl .liess - acomit" In to Wive found • wan o Dolthi, who was Anuterdara am; "Dot, geaerally regwzded as a But now the redlo•le • dam rank the deceased prow and the lake 4 Awry. , Ithe as • on Moods or • fool. sad about Amotor •Dootor" with John dent , Littooht, sad tyr.r Amsterdam °obi Coliseum ean propriatitm for the martyr's" remains. 3461 . ms her sop, and no 'be indnood to Mae on triuteptortotton of 1116 ~ ,~._ BELLEFONth, PA., FRIDAY, , AUGUST 31, 1866. A DIABOLICAL CONSPIRACY. Wel'are, &derma Olt a deep •nd deliberate plot of the abolition leaders ill IV,ash legion lwraprdly being put in operation ell over the flotfthern States, end the external manlf4lons, the speeches And ellitoVal artielee if the Abolition journal. are no per- Notlytwoordnet, that we do not doubt the exlstenee of this most damnable and trait orous Mnspiracy against the pence, pros perity and indeed, the freedom of vhe American people It is sinipfe,loilcal, and in a sre,sensithe as it is,hunian diabolical and n nstroun. Indeed, the legitimate, if not nrvoidablo result of the -anti-slavery enterprise," ...gun by the tools of monarchy and Ahem ies of ftbmocracy thirty years ago in It eastern States. It is designed to area e riots, conflict., murders, arson and all le horrors of eocial anarchy in the, rob. end thus rendering ,the "President'e, poi*" Impracticable, appeal to the North ern brumes, whose great desire to peace, and centring' the northern elections and the neat Congress, to impeach Mr. Johnson, atri setting him aside; remove, as they I.brk, the sole barrier to their final mae stri, the.esi•bliahment of a Mongrel nation ow the rump of the grand old Federal Union olVashingion ! This is the scheme or end in new ; the Miens are the "Freedman's Bureau," with Mat large number of debauched and, mer ibnary generals and military officers acting concert with the head of the "Bureau" at Washington,. the' Abolition agents, school teachels, plunderers:cottou thieves Alld down right lunatics, scattered through the South, with, of course, all the demoralized niggers accummulated in the cities and population." and finally, though concealed and criutiouely wielded, the War Department, with its tremendr powers in the hands of a Stanton or Immo 'Mutsnr tool of these traitors to them race, as well as mummer to Republimin inltituttone Now, ae e•ery sane mind among us 11111.11 know that with the material et his command, the head of the "Freedman's Bureau" at Wash: ingtott, can get up a bloody riot any day he plea/tea and in any and i stony city, front Buffalo to New Orleans—theVenns at the disposal of the Conspirators tor breaking down Mr Johnson's policy of restoration seem simple, deflate and overwhelming. And as every thoughtful man ehould know that the Abolitionists must rule this coon try,or It is no country for them,it.in obvious that they will invoke all in horrors of so cial nnerchy, servile insurrection and every possible agency of hell itself, to accomplish the* purpose, especially as them horrors. are dietani, and will nut, 11.1 they believe, involve themselves or their families To a lane and healthy mind, it seems almost in credible that native born Americans could become so depraved and denionizad as to deliberately conspire to bring upon their (Am kind, helpless women and innocent children, the unpronouncable - horrors of Son Domingo But as Lincoln's proclama tion nod the at ming of negioes three years 'ego involved the principle, theory or name less horror of that of San -Domingo, and un der certain restraints it has been practically carried out on an extensive scale ever since, a large portion of the Abolition potty are now prepared to let loose the bloody, beast fat and remorseless positions of the negro on the hapless women and children of the South, and the country must prepare itself for witnessing scenes of horror and desola tion compared with which, even these of San Domingo were atieolidely weak and colorless. The negro, in his normal condi tion and natural relation to ourselves, is docile and affectionate, as well as useful and happy,and inns no more instinct or ten dency to resist the control of his master and - natural protector thah a child has to Depute the guidance of its father But this negro, forced from his normal condi tion end distorted into a "Freedmen." be comes a bloody end remorseless beast, as iritaable of conscience or of c...:c-"nient of pity as an infuriated tiger or other wild animal. It is nut a sentiment of cruelty or spirit of vengence that ;I romple him It In that his lower nature, his gross, sensuous system, renders him apathetic and incapa ble of remorse, and he only seeks to crier .minate the master race-the child in its cra dle the name as the strong man in battle True, the maddened creature, as an Sun Domingo and lately in Jamaica, does things that ignorant people fancy spring. from cruelty, but eating the brains of their vie titns and mutilating the bodies of little chil dren, spring from their superetitton etc, rather than any desire or inlet:oleo of cru elty. The east majority of white people in the South will be prepared at all limes to meet these horrible contiugencies, but when we reflect that the Abolitionists of the North really have the nogroes in their hands, and through the "Freedmen,. Bureau" can any day they please let them loose onitheswe gen and children of the Bonita, and for three} years past they have armed the de groes to slay their mesterei, and it is not only their interest to get up riots, but their absolute existence pa a political party de pends ou rendering Mr. Johnson's policy impracticable, then we may be certain that this horrible conspiracy is real, std the country must prepare Per its rapid exeou lion. It is probable that they do not con template universal massacre, ..and Thad Stevens, Wade ,k Co , only intead to wield the machinery in their hands to render Mr. Johnso94 polierunpopuler at 'the North and ;hue carry the northern elections. But this playing with hell can be no half-way work, as d•four millions of i negroessdissorted into unnatural relations wiill'elght millions of white people in such a stupendous crime Iffid the materials of tragedy are so awful and -unparalleled, that trill Ting with them may end in a cataetrophy (hat will make the world turn pale for a thousand years to Come. There is hope, however i in the Phil adelphia Convention, bed if they lie and twaddle about the "abolition of slaverg," accepting -the "situation," for Indeed in that case they are like to precipitate the calamities that threaten the country. But if like brave Men and true Americans, they will stead by the Constitution and the tee elution declaring the object of the war, Amy: may save their country from the dangers now impending over it, and neutralise the monstrous conspiracy of the "Radicals" to admit Ike pally-of then Pinsident, and to setup • mongrel nation on the ruin of the hoinegeosous Republic of WashlogMn.—N. Day Book. '} WHAT THE DEMOCRATIO PARTY WAS FORMED ,roir,,r The Detnocratid party took it, rise in 1798, and resulted in die election of Thomas Jef fersonto President in) chair: President Allot)s hail became odious us the eyes nf !lie peopp. Under hie administration,the •• %li en aid Sedition Acts - were passed ity the first, Chore bor . ') in 'foreign countries were not to lie itilde citizens until they resided in this country twenty one years, end by the second, nolonl welt to criticise oh, nets of' the Admiiiretration The President like the King could do no wrong Ile wan Kent upon concentrating and onneolillating power in bits hitrule. Thomas Jefferson arose and denied this theory of -the Union, and he formed the Democratic party, to protect the rights of the State/sand (lie -MAWS of the , ,peoplo In the Presidential election be tween Jefferson and Adams, the former was successful and these odious laws were re pealed The men who were thrown unto prison under l'he Adam's Adminnurntion, like men were iandir the Lincoln-Seward Administration of more recent memory,Were released and sot freer The people then tri umphed over consolidation of poWer . Between 181)0 and 18t30,the cotAsis mace nearly alwnysbeen between the same prin ciples In 18.12, Oen Jackson's eetionil election, the United States Bank question entered %Willy mite the Issue It WWI be tiered dint an Institution of that kind, with such en etiormoue capital and II branch hank in emelt State, could if &spoiled, wield too much power, if fit entered into petit ncnl movements, dangerous in the liberties of the people The Democratic Party opposed its re charter, and it Won Iluccensful In 1844, the Tariff question was up in is tine, the Democratic Parvaking the posi tion for such a Tariff us would promote air the interests of the penple It war again successful In 1818, issues Were not clear ly thfined, and there were Ihree s .Parties In 1852, it planted itself upon the ••Com. promise measures,"and was OVerwherining ly successful. In 18/G, it Wlns again sue taking strong Constitni hale, grounds on the sectional question before the country. t Since then it has not hem' tom 'hsseefti In nll the contests, however, in which it was successful, it bad !liken strong grounds in favor of the rights elite people Itql4,ntitl intrepid it attacked what IL though ' wrong and fearlessly stood by what it eon Are.] right. It was efbly in ben it faltered that it fell It eras formed to uphold the"mgas and interests of the masses Let Democrats be impressed wt,t . ll yhen—facts, and let them ,consider very closely the principles of any other party, bufore tt l ey abandon the Dem ocratio l'arty. Sometimes the argument et 'Conservatism' . is used, the Democratic Party always ,Lave been “Consor•ative " Its great "Conservatism" preserved the country for upwards of seventy years, in peace, prosperity and greatness If mob want to be conservative, let them rally to the principlewpf the DemObratic Party. It cannot go to tlibm:iVerrisiotra Register Address of the Democratic State Com- Mil 1).14,en STATX COMMITTEE f ' oams, 828 %V k1.81 , T STRE E T. Itilatlelpliut, August 20, 1800 To II People of Prngsyhansa • Theiseues of the canyon s a fe made up. The reidoration of the UlllOl.l and the pree s eridtion et your lostt of government aro the vital questions that now oonfront you Secession is dead, but disunion still lives Slavery is extinct, but* fanaticism The rights of the white moo are submerg ed in efferte to elevate the negro, and the blanch man is sought to be made a coutroll ing element in the politics of the Republic Centralisation seeks to rear tie despotic power up. One ruins of the Constitution ♦ anal foreshadows a war of races for to ma eumplaslitnent Proscription and disfranclkisemen i usurp the places of Magnanimity and clemency, and dienOrdlld 1111(e combat Chi notion char ity alln 111111(.1ml concord Congress refuses to nourish thy reebprces necessary for payment of the debt of the Republic, and loads with taxation the in dustrial interests of the North Congres sional extravagance is the tale, economy to , pubbo affairs, the exception k Cenveussoo of represessfassve mess Irons each of she Visited States has Islet within she past weel. ; they have forecast the future agreed in setstsuseut, and dispersed to klisest homes. • Their work has passed into a history , to the impartial mind that well is a perfect answer to the charge that the South is not ready for restoration Composed of nice of every sect ion, hold ing every shade of political optnion, they have re-enunciated the eternal zinciples that lie at the base of our institutions, renewed their vows of fealty and of broth erhood, and have joined hands in an united effort to restore the Union and preserve the government created by the Con•iitution. )man need err In thisbonteat • ' Support Congress and you sustain die uoion, attack your government, and elevate the negro at the expense of your own race. Support the President and you restore the Union, preserve your government, and protect ate white man. On the one aide are Stevens, Sumner, all Motion and disunion. On(he Mbar, the President, the Union peace and order. lly order of llentoetsiie Slate Committee. WILLIAM A. WALLACE, Chairman. ' Tue. Alsiuss's Tow.—The Mammoth Cave in Kentucky is not with out its story of love and romauoe. Some twenty years ago a dashing Tennessee girl promised her moth or that As would never marry a certain tutin;.•mrlthe lane of the earth," said suitor being partioularly objectionable to the old lady. So there was quiet in a family for some time. But one pleasant dsj the gay girl and her lover ran away and 4 went into the eare,..lo a spot now smiled the "Bridal Chamber," and in the promos of a few vrit• nesse were there matrimonially united, about 826 feet below the lace of the earth'. . 1 .--I'he Watertown Democrat says brisk - blocks, Intended for stores are in course of erection In that City. , " TIMES HAVE CHANGED A few short monthe ago, it large pnrty in the Nnetit ntritle the welkin ring with their argunTot that the Atlmintetratton is the tilovernment Tnnrr Farr chariged .7A ehott perlnd Ito the came party con tended [hot the Preenlent wen lie Qorern Times hare Changed. A brief spell in the pent ibry paid that to denounce the President wan as great a 'erinae ireasan. nnrs hai't CAunged. .1 rbort period ago. Andrew Jobasun. wan proclaimed by {line men one of..lkp purest iftrint, nut greatest statesmen that ever lived. ' Tunes hare Changed. • fi brief spell in the past we nere.told that the Un,ion wee made to he perpetual, and that to preserve it woe worth any sacrifice that could be made Times hare changed. A short period ago it was proclaimed that thEwnr was waged solely for the perpetua tion of the Union, and when that was no cohiplished the States were to have all their rights unittiparedi nners hat e Changed A Imer spell in the past the negro wan looked upon us an infeuor lice, unfit for equal social and political t Ight. nal. the white man Tllll,l hair C'hanyed A abort period ago the republican party denied that tilt object was to force negro suffinge upon the people. Tuner hare Changed A few }ears in the poet we bad no roar -111011 s debt, the people were comparaiirel7 free ffoortilation, and everybody woe pros perous Tames hare Clamart! A few years ego ihe Cott,tilulion was re epeeted, our rulers 'Mere honest men and patiot., the laws wore obeyed, gold and silver was die currency of Ilie natifin; our expenses Were hglu, North and South re garded one anal her as brethern, we did not require the service• of q mighty army and navy, anti 11l the people lived in happiness lager liar Mee h., Changed A few years ago the (boleros lenders were regarded'as mischievous men, whose doctriuee were eniiiled to ibedisopprobn. lion of every good col:en Times hare Changed. " .- A . few years ago stalemate,: like Clay and Wobnler. on the Win ig side. Benton, Cass, Douglas and Wright. on the De lie: were in Congress. Anil directed.; Ake law making power of (lie Damian Times have Changed In fact, look in what direct ton we may, the studious mnu cannot fail to he unpressed with the aatonishing wanner to which times have changed Whet was once thought evil and dangerous, is now considered the per fection of wisdote and public virtue Whether the change has been for the advan tage or disadvantage of the people, we leave for the future to disclose —Exchange. —Tire Democratic party have a great advantage in their candulaie this fall l'ly mm is of the firm old Pennsylvania stock of Germans, in whose veins is the blood of the —A nosegay Is easily obtained. Four brandy toddies a day will soon pat you in the 111111enbtarge, the l'lporre and ibelliest way of one that will astonish all your friends. t erle of Berke, and in a Mittelman of tore and acknowledged ability, Integrity an d —An exehangesays "Forney isn't very experienee_ueeessime to obsequious to ! high strung,' but he ought to be." There is no httwev-r, that he is very .iow set." none, a noble patriot and true beach d man denying ' (t e ary I. n airmttag, coin, pompous u •p a i —Obverse fact--not a Geary organ la start, who commenced manhood in that sink the State drainnegro being in favor of tug. . . . of corruption, t he Allegheny Portage Rail road, and who as n roetngtgolist, has been etrolling m California and Konen•, and in ditierent places of the Key.ione, seeking notoriety, and generally puffing himself through newspapern ulienoser editors were ♦erdai t enough to give place to his produc tion.. , lie was a Squire in California, which in si catamount country, wee of course, acoord ing to his own report a "big thing " 11. was appointed Goescruor of Kansas by Pierce—took hin message from a filaayaclin erne Governor anti was soon dismissed He was a Collie' in tho Mexican War, lint his regiMent on their return, at n public festi val given them, phased unanimously, reso lotione expressing their "abaing aultyna hoe of his conduct That he procured his election by falsehood sad deception" and that his conduct was inconsistent with the character of a gentleman or a man of honor That it was "corrupt" and "mercenary" and that It was characteristic of a low grov eling creature seeking popularity for courage and patriotism which he never earned" Ile Was in the late war, and through his secretary, filled a whole page orate Phila delphia Ingusrer with a graphic account of the battle of Snickereville, making lihnself a great Ilero, when no such battle was ever fought—Not A Gun Firrd—not a prisoner taken, not a Mai of 1103 , one injtd'ed ! lie made a speech recently at York, denouncing as Hessian.] the 'Soldiers who whould not vote for ,s him ! and forced him self upon a Sunday school pie nic,composed ornate boys and girls, near his own home in Cumberland county, and read to them a political speech abusing ISlonifillmery Blair and the Demooralie party. He le for negro suffrage, negro mtuality and IT•union—tbe same as Thad Sterens, and should be defeated by one hundred end eerenty-fire thousand in the /Mite —Narthd' Democrat WHO AV* osi s. oiev.s Now?—Self-styled "loyal" newspopera made the uanntqf Floyd synonyteous with •thief'—and why? Because, whop secession was about to be inaugurated, betook possession of and die tribdrted among the Southern States • large amount ofmrma and warlike inanition. be longing to the Governomut. What are the Disunionist@ now at? Attempting to get control of the warlike property' of the Gov asumant for distribution among the New England States and other States whose offi cials ■re known to be favorable to the Rump usurpation I Who arm the Floyd. now ? Every Rump Disunionist who voted for the resolution to distribute Ara mane of the Government is a thief and a revolution ist, and the country will hold Blinn all re sponsible for the bloodshed and anarchy witioh may result from the Lreasonsble tots whlob they are perpetrating, and which, s ooner or later, must end in civil war.--Ela. NO. 34 THE OLD LETTkR I burned the others, one I y one, kut cour age failed nt last. And I snatched this, scorched arid low.where the Sre'm ItreaSti bad partied, could not let It lie there, for , lt tltrneol like n (hung in Nun. And I lose a for the old clones' sake, that darer ' will comm again . . Thoy used In roll me beautiful I had nothing else besoth— There wan none more pent or wise than be in all the world so Ovule, AO 'us still a sort of pleasure—say mournful though It be— To know he once tumid think such thoughtsand writ; such wools of me But my poor beauty faded—lnas the only thing • ; I had; I woe always weak and foolish, and my whole life grew mail For the cruel, blighting fever left me pitiful to Oh, 'ye le true that "beauty's fleeting"'—and 1n.., no morn lot ed we. Cd have lowed him all the more for that, or a4 r ay grief beside , Buthhen kb was no 11411Frent. Oh, jf I'd only aired ' • And yet, looir can I wish him to hare suffered in toy stead 1 • I think it WO4 Id have grieved hum then to hear that I was Judd I halo nothing e. forwte him—Mill he Icm soon target, • Men have lunch to do and think of, that wenn-It have not A man has tery little thought to 'pare for Inn own ehoren wife. WOMOII . I. are very' narrow, and a girl love vi her Me. They say I ehould forget Iwo, but I could no tt I would, For more no !want) left toe 1 hase teed hard to be good . And htsname talsrays on not lips when I pray to thld altos Oh, surely surely I way pray for one I can never cease to love I was net tor fit to bi his wife, Oten when my fare rots fair, But every one laity pray to heat en we are all egoist there, Alia .1.01, in Hie great ninny, will not puts my ' prayers loy. . r have one thing left to lire Thr-rfol' — uroy for him till I the ' THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —The man who vote. for John W. Geary vote; for n Colonel who hid in a ditch at Chepul —The wife of the French ennui we* seri: lusty wonnfled Fly's stray shot dining the New Orleans riot. —A-Drunkard upon bearing that the earth t ae round, raid thnt Reelfoot.' for his rolling about no mut+. —Governor Pollock, Superintendent gd . the Unload Stntes Mint, al Mandelphit, 'bn been remo•ed from office. —John W. Unary .no a Know Nothing of the wait violent kind boron itholitionirm nwaL lowed up that party —A rnetedi gape 01'1,1111.4e wee recently played at Emporium, Pa. tho proreede of which were devoted to the School, —We have adelces from our friends In Mn Aland that the greaten; possittle s eltange I. going on In the politics of flint State. —A "warm moor in Mexico consists of two cracker', elippeli in pepperrauce. but calculated to become popular —A man In Connecticut has been' lined Si for getting in hie hey on Sunday -to prevent It being ruined by a threatening rain. , —A young man out Went, who martin, woman twice his age, suloroquently ascertain that she had once been his wet nurse. rage' weary himrelf dues and deny the charge —it is eettessted that ar will require twen ty millions of dollars to pay the boontiee voted by Congress 'o be,400 the rl,lorml soldiers. --A man has been arrested in IVeshington for selling blarkherres by the quart, with three inches of paste botit'd fn the bottom of the meas- —A wicked and disloyal Missourian bays, there to no fear that preachers will be arrested for preaching the gospel in tilinuisjor they nes._ er do it 4 • ---ullearltaura, when we wave tourtl4, you were very dear to we, but now you are my wife, and I'm paying your bills, you mein to get dearer and dearer. —A wounded 1101(110r tasked alms of Mester Clymer, at Readtng,and received $5 —The same soldier applied to deary at York, ant recetved 10 cents. Now who is the soldier's friend. —Marriageable young women are in great demand out West. A Yankee writing from that 'fiction to hte father, ”ye • "Sumo,eo you get our girls come new teeth and send them —About a year ago the Disunlolanda tiodar ed th t "Providence gave us kndiew Johnsup as President, fur a wise purpose." Now they declare that the "plague came from John Wilkes Booth." —A Philadelphia clergymen, in the course of a sermon, recently remarked '•You need not clasp your bandit to tight in prayer that you can't get them open alien the eontrthution Los .evines around the celebration of a marriage, a large number of your/411ame present, the adulator aaad • 1 711wedirishsag to he Joined en the holy bends a. matrimony, wall please stand up"— and nearly all arosp. --.-There were peoplein remote rounttee in Pennsylvania who distrusted President Johnson till Simon Cameron pronounced' delbad men faithless to his pruntisearta--an enemy to his euuntry." Then they knew the President was "all right." —puller and Banks, of Massaehusetts,have been deled (by whom no one know.) to relprelent lithium& in the "Southern Union ist.'" Convention at Philadelphia on the dd pros., It is supposed they will represent that State on aproperty onalidoation. —There are so any gallant otßoers of the Union sem, getting Into the shliebeljohnsou' ranks, that the Disunion press can't cut them op fut plough. We never thought it posslblg that the "only truly loyal" mold so easily "go back on" the "men who saved the Republic." --The Wises 'register, the old erten of tbe "republican" party In Indiana {aunty, de• °litre. that It °ulna support the nominations made by its party for members of the Legbla. tare. This is only another indiestion of the feet that the "Republican" party is Mellor to pieces. —There were twelve delegates Irons Bearer county in the Johnsen elytaler Soldiers' Ocetvem• don on Wednesday, Minuet lst. Of them nine were wounded ratip formerly Itepubiktems who never voted the DMitoeVatirtiokit. Tiwy ore row enthuslasila her Illeater — dlieue, and would. cot touch the tyrant Geary with forty feet Pots,• "PEAOE IiEMORATE." No ohms °hunched to bear such burdens during the past five years, as that noble band of ono, who were called Peace Demo cratic They believed 11. t the war cat ried n the part of one mu of Staten against another net of States had no warrant in the Constitutiolt, and that therolltre it tilts on juic mad wrong, sail that it wee not the proper way to restore the Union under ibis Constitution, Bard on two yearn have pas-, .ed away, and the Vision as founded upon the principles of tlite revolutionary fat burs has not been vostortht: - . 4 Pireir position has therefore been. riedletated. They knew of nothing cod desired nothing but the eatsb- 1411ntelit'of the Uutpu upo . u_ the prieterplee of the Constitution They loved all the guts and goerotqeee of the Cuttotttot ton, owl they - held their opinion, sod 'uto , ie then oaet thee% ta the fele et threw* sod mobs end every to,leguity, because they hod eon fideeee in tittle tante Peatee 1/eh...Cede thee likve heels vindicated *rid the Colle,e of lungs hoe shown they Were 'lett DKNOMIATS have then bus to bold fit ni sebum' They will have smilher trial to Fines through, for it to ;brutish their agency amt. the Union will be in ilsoend bare to be restored Let !hell this class of men hold firm, sod •nn! yield now, when they are about again to be tried, more severely perhape then before, and they will have the sat infaciton of seeing the success of their principles, and the rem toratipu of the Union a, founded upon the great principles of the American patriots. Pence Democrats, do al not e be leiNtray, though 4 home who to be of such, now would rather follow the path of cope dioncy,than remain true to their principles. Have n little patience and all will be right. Stood its firm 'so the hills. :1 11i.moms or Moist.—This is ehe maul of our nationsf, indebtedness, so- riling 'to Mr •St.eveus' speech before the ( ' aunty Convention of tine Ifilb inst. Five Billions, or to make its vast magnitude more folly understooll,Pme Thousand Mahon, of Dollar:, as the tegaoy entailed upon the kmertcan people for generations to oome, by the present dominant party to the flee years that - they haw been entrusted wuh iho reins of power ! The debt of Great Britian is about Four Thousand Millions of our money, btu, that debt was not crested in five years, an ours teat It was nearly IJ/0 huntlred,yeps,in forming, 'lnd during that long period 'Eng land was etkalied at least half the time in reign ware anti domeetie broils It the rmel. Government had spent money- as arishly et pure did, their debt uow would sceo , l the :alto of the present debt in the tin of twenty to one. Billions of Money." Think of it, r.payers of all political part!es. and sot .00rdingly al the ensuing election Let e people elect members of Congress who II ni 'emu put a stop to noy further to cream. of the enormous public debt fur the benefit of negroes end shoddy oontran. on, and practice economy in all their eppropri Anon., en that thr credit of the dowerunlent may be mointfiined and ouriast indebted: neon gradually end surely reduced by the prompt payment Of principal and int • —Exchange A Rrrnen nr INJCITION AND PLUPIDID.— The soldier of the Republic receives thirty hire dollar, anti thirty three cents for a year's hard service in' the defence of the American Union. The marnbers of Congress .oche TWO TROOSIASID DOLLARS, In addt on to present,pef, for ten months' marries the unholy walk of destroying the Atm, EX= •'Actions speak loader than words." Profession. for the soldier, tested by works, Professions fo economy and the tax-payer; tested their acts_ Thefollowing are members of Congress from Pennsylvania who voted for the infa moue outrage upon the soldiers and 02 Plunder of the Treasury for their own pV" .onal benefit Led the people remember their name., that popular indignation may compel either a return of the money to the Treasury or lie devotion to some purpose of publio charity: Charles O'Neill of Philadelphia; J. C. Moorhead, of Allegheny Gamily; W D. Kelley, of Philadelphia; Leonard Myers, of Pb iladelphia ; George Miller. of Union county —Pittsburg Republic. AN IMPORTANT PUPPY' Geo. M. Gray fills the position of General Passenger Agent of the Michigan Southern Railroad. The ticket agent in the Union °Mee •t Milwau kee mail& into irg., ot,blm nn - Wednesday lut whether delegates to the Philadelphia Can. vention could pate 00* tbat Railroad at a reduced rate, to which Gray responded by telegrapb—""Nii reduction in rates to the Steramon Convention. Signed G. M. Gray. This chap represents a great corporation dependent, cot cut the Rump for patronage, but upon all classes of the public. Tho Michigan Southern Railroad Company was at perfect liberty to reject applications for reduced-I'l'l're, but it seems rather import"- uncut for that corporation through their authorized sgent,to PO gromely insult a large portion tf cot a majority of the cations of the country The Philadelphia C lion s n Union and not a &maim Convention, nd unless ibis contemptible act le not pub toly disavowed by the Company, we hope travelers 011ie Democratic ,and Conserve i ire proclivities will seek some other liter oughfarh in going to or coming from the Snot —Ex Governor Vsiece, in an addwiwil before the lberary sooletise of the Univers:- ty of North Carolina, makes the following sad aud beautiful raniarka "Ntrmonuments of viotory are for us, no oat tons 'jubilee can we aelebrate,no imp of umph can our maidens sing or garlands o glory weave ; there is no welcoming of re turning conquerors,nor erecting °flatulent al melte' for us„ to console no for merest suffering We are all alone with our great defeat and that heat y sorrow which, .rnever flitting. still is sitting, still is sittiltyr In our household. and all• we Mimi MA for our comfort is the sad yet tender light which ploys around the memory of them who died to make it othetwiee. _Senator Diree, toff Oonadelleut. ft- Gently presided over • lame tesetiag at New Haven, to ettstain the'Presideat ii his wits and patriotic efforts in behalf of Nalon.lers tendon, and boatlitutiosal. Liberty. for doing so the New York Mime trails ideals apostate. The Philadelphia 4,5 pertinent ly observes—lf ?web apestatry were won oommoo then days mew the lbspalbliesaa, there would be more to hope for thoroustry in the futunk„ 41190 t sooologlon of Obi' ProoldlOot's to. mirk., time .boon' WWI eatbudiotlidolty tier for Andrew Jobe'.., tad *vie idie for esa. Groot. The President ealieee. Great lima tired arm-iaeilea, sod the eeemittee calm the sadism semi reed to dbpsise. —there& DAN silbhubt #4lppedl Oen. Orlist as iwisadidate }Sr UN Seddon try se BM Kellay'm tid et.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers