MOP THE tWIE V/ItIOK. Treadtpg the alleywaya dark lad-damp, By the Ilekerhig ilebt of It feeble lamp, • ,Breaktng the algbt with bit r ghostly tramp, Bbo totters aong—alo no, alone, From hovel to hovel, from street to gnat, Site picks leer pausal, tirough rain nd sleet; With not a frind ID the world to greet, Not • bonnet to wear, nor a moiled to eat, =l= Wearing her life out Ilay by day, Throwing her rigidaa soul away, Shunning for very *hang the ray Of the nun of bears., the glorioue nun ! Weary of life,land afraid to die, Afraid of the earth. and afraid of the sky, Afraid of the light she know, got why, She woos the night as she Imres a sigh And thinks of a race that is almost run Phantom of life and beauty fled, litindowe uniting the unlink and dud! I knew bar before her null was wed To the demon of hatred and dwell' ; I knew her a happy, thoughtless child, When she prattled and laughed, and leued and • smiled, When her heart was ptini!me . :writs wild, And all her troubles "ee light as sir. I knew her again, In womanhnnorr i• • When beauty and wit no heart withplood— iitand and lovely, yet gentle And good Afirnined and fused by the wipe and great— Pesfeed In ell that grandeur lends' To waive beauty—ln all that tends The crowning gem on cluster of frien4, A queen in NOW and a queen In pinto. , know her now—yet I know her not! Where Whist prates rem the senselese sot, Where all that is pure is npunied, forgot, loathing know but n holy dread. Steeped in misery and alegrotee, The eye of map no more can trace • In that chattered form and shivered 4ce A single mark of their ancient grace--• The figure is there, but the Ironton it dead! Shades of immaculate woman I when Shall the curse of nod come down on web Vof woolens'. wrong. ? for not toil then 'Shell he stone for thy nameless woes! When thy oppressor, unhonied, unfed . Shall stalk the earth ; on Maros and dread, With a wreath of scorpions' around hi. head To sting the wreath wherever he treed, • Till on uppermost hell he tnekim his hod, lie map pay a part of the debt be owes. SPEECH OF HON, C. L. V ALLANDIGHA M AT ROSIOILL6, 0 , 110, Oft. 4, 1866. 1 eta here, then, to a Deninernt, to address Democrats, In support indeed of the policy of the President, so a great living issue of the hour, - end because that policy is thor. _mighty cansistent --with- Deinoeratie-princi-, plea, and because f could not address to you a Democratic speech unless 1 advocated the Union and the Constitution. I aw not here to-night to as a Democrat I to eulogize the policy or principles, or per sonal attributes of Mr Litwin. I leave ,that entirely to thorn who supported Mk during the administration, whether they voted for Mm in 1860, or become subse quently bin friends. It is not for me ;it is not for Democrats who opposed him to ar gue that the present Enecutive is but per. suing the line of policy prescribed by Abra ham Linito;au Neither am I here to Assail men who were Ms supporters, and whi;En 1 am accustomed to hear continually de. nounced, It is the fashion to assail Beecher, and Lloyd Damson, and Wendell Phillips, and Stunner, and Wade, and Stevens, nod a 'core or two of others like them, for their funalicism,, radicalism and violence; pad fer • Theif. Ifial•egard Lad contempt for all the ancient and settle principles end insti tutions of the Government and the country. And yet they were the men whose pioneer ing steps Lincoln,'more slowly in his own time, but most surely In the end, followed till the close of his career I will not de vo nounce these men abd -spare Lincoln. It is, the fashion, or was till the otherday, - to Resell Willlant If Seward, because It was he who spent a life-time In creating and gathering together the enemies of fanatical and elect ions! discord and strife wh lob burst, at last, with such desolating fury all over the land; he, who first of all men, pro claimed the doctrine of the " Higher Law," and of the " Irrepressible Conflict; he, who, schooled in the devilish politics of the hied litittWrtnv-Itteschinvels and the Richelieu. of " — Nsly and France, in the fiftenth and six month centuries, developed, complete in all its parts, in the very first weeks of the late civil war, a system of despotism and terror never exceeded in conception, detail or exe cution, in anciebt, oriental or medieval ty rane:r; he at whose instance the privilege id the writ of habeas corpus wee, by execu , live order, first suspended, and the Supreme ourt mud the Chief Justice sat at defiance; :I he who first eloped and barred the case. mates of Forts Warren and Lafayette upon "prisoners of State," and then by epeeist order declared to them that he would "not reougutre any one as an attorney for po litical priponera," and would regard the employment of counsel by them as "an ad ditional reason for declining to release them ;" and finally, who boasted to Lord Urn, the British hlinieter, that he could &twit a bell at leis right hand and arrest any man in Ohio at his- will, and touch it. again and arrest another a thousand miles instance in Maseachuseite. and then with a charming affectation of simplicity, which Sentries or (Jolley might have envied, asked his Lordship, ,' Can her Majelity do at much 1" And yet for snob end every one of these things, or in spite of them, was he ap plauded. honored, cherished as his chief ammeter and friend, by Abraham Lincoln. to the time of his death. I will not con ; damn the servant and approve the master. I will not denounce Seward and spare Lin solo. It ie the finable. to assail Edyrin M. Stan ton foil his rudr s, his brutality, his eras, : ii city, his reckless disregard of humett i likeri ty, human suffering and human life; fpr his heartless refusal to exchange prisoners during the war, whence the horrors of An derville ; and for a thousand other arises and enormities by which his name and memory are blackened and defiled day by tiay. And yet for every one of these, his characteristics, or in eptiluif them, he, too, was retained in oboe—honored and ober ished as oeunesier and Mend, by Abraham Lleoole, to the hour of his death. I will not denounce Stanton and spare Lincoln. It is the &anion to assail Joseph Holt for r htifiliiircilese and cold-blooded persecution for po i kioal prisoners through the agency of the moat odious and execrable of all the to nitrations and Juvenile°s or the war, the infamous "Bureau of Military Sestina"— °dime in name and execrable in preotice— over which be was oblit, and for his head long and murderous subornation of perjury to promote °emelt:taut. And yet, tor all these things, or la spite of them, be, too, was retained In alas, supported and ap plauded by Abraham Linnets while be lived. I will not. denownee Halt and spare Lin coln - it is the fashion to hussailf:Benjantin P. Butler in language which I need not repeat, for crimes _and mimeo*, against religion, - against morals, against liberty and the Con stitution and %swa t against honesty. against decen.ey—Xeltort, offences and crimes of every &lAA Piyiem petty perfidy to mighty wrongs," Aud,y6 at every step,4° his se rver, from,birinsidts to women, to his lar ceny of millions, be was praised, Yelled, honored sad promoted by Abraham Lincoln up to almost the last moment, hid then re moved from his high commend for the only wise, humane and praiseworthy set of his 4 -4 (Tij )11 ecutridit VOL..XI. whole life. 1 will not denounce Butler sad @flare Lincoln. It in the thshion to /mull the monster Mc. all, for his ruthless massacre in cold blood Of ten innocent citizens of Missouri, under circumstances o( more then cannibal bar barity. And yet, for thin very act., or in spite of it. be was promoted and intrusted with high military commend by Abraham Lincoln to the end of bin life. I will not denounce McNeil and spare Lincoln. It M the fashion to an the Milroys, tbe Schencks, the Menem the Burnsides, the Moseys, the Burriidges, and a host of petty strops, despots and military murderers,— And yet all these were the appointees and /serenely, the minions of Abraham Lincoln, retained in commend, honored and promoted by him to the day.eiValianth I will not denounce thernAnd spare Lincoln:. Finally, it is the fashion to assail Turohin whose deeds of horror no language can do scribe, because at Athena, Alabamd, be gave over for the space oiLwtt, hours, a 'whole seminary of the first "yOittig ladies of the South, to the brutal luet.4l l his soldiery, whom he invited to the act of outrage. For this deed of unspiakable atrocity he was tried by a Federal court-marshal, found guiltS , and condemned to dismissal from the service And yet, with this official record before him, Abraham Lincoln not only re fused to confirm and execute the sentence, but upon - ttie spot rewssisifeolooetTurchin with the commission of a Brigadier General ,in the army. I w„ill not denounce Tdrohin and spare Lincoln. These are thy reasons for not smiling the men I have named. These are my reas ons for deelaring that, as a Democrat, I am prelim toot to eulogize Liticoln,nor to pretend that Andrew Johnson is - I:li:eying out the policy of his predeceemor, which policy, throughout, we of the Demeeretio party steadily, consistently, and, I think, rightly opposed from the beginning I never learned to stultify myself, and I do not, propose to begin at this period of my life. Others can exercise theielloft judgment and their own rights—l propose to exercise mine. lkave said to you, fellow-citizens, that I amid not speak the language or sentiments or maintain the doctrines of the Democrat ic party without defending the Constitution and advocating the Union, and hence I am the firm, earnest and determined supporter still, as from the time it ices finally declared about one year ago, of the policy of the President. Igo no further back. Ido not now assume to discuss the question whether in the beginning that policy was properly proclaimed. I have an earnest and decided opinion upon it. As elsewhere I hare tied, and believe, it would have been far wiser end better Avery way, for the whole country and infinitely better, especially for the pence of the country, now and hereafter, bad the President approved of fhb terms ■greed upon between Gene. Sherman and Johnson, in North Carolina, fn April, 18115. 'But the explanation is satisfactory, at least to my self. The Preeldent had but for a few days been in the office of the Chief Magistrate. Ile was surrounded by men of whom he was almost, even personally, ignorant=men who bad be dared to plane himself in their path way, as since, thank God, he has had the courage to do, might have disposed of him as summarily as they did the body of Booth. For Ads reason, I think we ought not to quarrel with him for this mistake—and a mistake I think it to have been, for had those terms been accepted they would have accomplished whet General Sherman de clared in bin order to the army accompany ing the announcement—made peace in four and twenty hours with Union from the Po tomac to the Rio Grande. They were terms of immediate restoration of the Union— They required only what the Crittenden resolution, demanded—the surrender of the southern armies, the laying down of their arms, eubmission to the Constitution, and obedience to 'the laws and the Federal au thority, and with that the return, also, to the exercise of all rights under the Consti tution And this woe statesmanship—high, noble statesmanship ; and more than that, the highest and noblest patriotism. I hove said that the President has now s policy which every Democrat endorses. It is our duty to support him earnestly and cordially in carrying cata that policy—the policy of immediate restoration to full Fed eral relations of all the Steles, so that we shall hove a Union, not of ell and twenty, but of thirty-six Statue. Now itco happens OM the very issue of to-night was the is sue six years ago When last I addressed you from this very spot, in 1860, what was tim question? : Mr. Lincoln expressed it In his inaugural—" the tettos of intercourse between the Ncirth and the South." It dif fers now only iu ro far to the status of the question has een obanged„,by the long and bloody war whiolihatrinlervened. We then debated in publio assemblages upon what thyme of intercourse the North and South should lire together. At that time theoz— treme men of t ,. 0 South were claim ing . that they could no remain in the same Union with the North and the Plastrunleas Myr had guarantee's to protect them in the en joyment of their .slave property, over and above what the old Constitution bad given them; and now after this long period of bloody and devastating warfare, what is the question? "The terma - of inthroontee still r' and a party of extreme men here tie North, controlled by Congress, are claiming that they cannot live with the people of the South, unless Choy have new and additional guarantees to protect the North against the South, lest oue of these days they rise up and oonquer the North. hear Lincoln in his inaugural: Suppose you go to war. You cannot light always; nod when, after wool' low irteboth side, and na pin on either, you cease fighting, the tdontie l old questions as to torms of inter/cane gm a upon yrs." I heard that. I remembeethat es , pedal sentenoe. Standing la the mutat portion of the Capitol, under that magnifi cent statue of Christopher Columbus, shin sled out of solid !marble, unhappily net by an American, but an Italian artist, I listen ed to tfiose y 0014411 tbq rem from his Ups, cud they bat sonfizeia me in the course of public conduct which I bad preterribed for mynlf—because It was the profound and !solemn tionelotion of my Inmost soul that If war could settle noodling, If at the end of the fight, the " identical old questions" were to remain for adjustment, thou reason, and religion, and humanity, and every ma terial, moral and political interest of the country, required that they should besjust od without war at all. • • r- ___.- -- =EI The recent civil or sectional war Is ever. The Confederate armrest have siliendered and been ffispersed, and the Federal army, 1,200.0000 strong i,. have been diminished to less than 60,00 . The war is over ; but the Union is not, restored. Did war restore the Union? Let every soldier and officer an swer. If war did restore it, what are they doing here, advocating the President's pol icy? They all did their duty like brave Men. It was no fault of theirs that their worhodul not restore the Union They broke down the armed hostility to the Federal Governmpt, and it sae only because is the eternal nature of things, by the decree of the amoipotint God, force could nut cement • Union made by consent, that the Union was not restored; and now that the entire Dem'octhtio party is ether° it has clear; beith, and every soldier and officer who, reflect. in that war ought to come forward swetunite with, that party in achieving thropgh thshapot the work that war could not accomplish. Again, raid believe Troia the beginning that the war was ter the abolition of slavery, and not for the restoration of the Union.— True I heard Abraham Lincoln any, on the 4th of March, 1801, in the inaugural to which ['referred, that.he had menthe? the right nor the desire to °boiled', it Again, on the day afTell thic .. 6iittle of Hull Rau, I saw John J. Crittenden present for the sec ond time a resaluilmi toWbietr, -- wtren - offered a few days before that battle, bad been laughed out of the House; and I saw every member of- that Mona. - vote - for - ttTexcrept two Republicans I voted for it because I thefght if we were to have war, it ought to have been declared, at least a war only for the supremacy of the Constitution and the reeWation °t i the Union. I remember, toe, that in the several Executive orders calling for an Increase of the army and navy, and in the first message of the PresideotAleCon• gress, it was aonouneed that the purpose of the war was to restore the Union. Rut I remembered that Abraham Linnet° wai cho sen President by a sectional party--that be had avowed the doctrine of the irrepressible conflict, and declared that this Union could not endure part shave sad part free, and was therefore resolved that it should be all free. Remembering theta things, how could I be deceived? Knowing the character of the Republican, party, bow could I bemistakent I remembered further, that after the first Monday In December, 1861, the Republican party never had re-affirmed the Crittenden resollition. I remembered that in the sec ond and third sessions of the Thirty-seventh Congress and throughout the whole of the Thirty-eighth Congreps, that resothapn, in some form, was offered by Denim:huts and moderate men, and laid upon floe table by Republican majorities. I remembered. fur ther, that on the 226 of September. 1862, or about th,,t time, the President issaedThis proclamation declaring slavery abolished .th the United States. I believed then, that the war was not for the Union nor the Consti tution. but for the abolition of slavery, and that this would lead us to the very question which is threatening us to-day with another civil war. Now, who was right in all that? Was it not for the abolition of slavery f Has it not set free three or four millions of Mateo and are we not to-day debating the status of these divas now freedmen ? But candor oompeis 111. to say the 1,1,13 Tight on these two great questions, 1 ems wrong in another. I did not believe that even the whole power of the Federal Gov ernment, put forth with Ruch terrible ener gy and earnestness en the other eide,eould, in any reasonable period of time, break down the military !strength of tht. South. in that I was absolutely and totally wrong. Dot I could not foresee that the reettorces of ten years would have been no wasted away by the dims in aontrol v of the Confed erate Government, as to 'noble, exhausted In foot years ; but upon the the main prop ositions, that war oonld not rent re the Union and that it was for the abolition of slavery, I wan right—and so,. toe, as the other considerations I believed that when the South should be broken 0 own—if bro ken dowsrehe could be—the country would be perplexed and harassed by questions tan times more difficult of adjusibient than the slavery issue itself. These lore the ques tions now aad to-day before us. As Slr. Linooln predicted, the identical old goes. Lions of terms of intercourse are again upon Now for,the facts'. The President, and with him the National Uni on or Johnson party, and the ,rholeDemocratio party pro claim that the terms oginteroouree between ~the North and the &tab shall ,be. the old Constitution of )lad loon, Washington, Jef ferson, Jackson, Clay and Webster. The Republican party proclaim that the terms otintereouge shall be the new or amended Constitution 64 Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner; Ind Benjamin Wade. That is the 'lssue wirielt is forced upon us now, directly and plainly stated. /31.11 behind all this lies the question: What shall be done with the negro, now"beet First,the Republican party proclaim, as part of their policy, that it is the duty of the United States to hike I tare of the../blaok children of the nation," [laughter,) as they are affectionately term r ed ; scoordingdy we have bad. for eighteen mouthe-pagt. a Freedman's Bureau. It is still in existence." ' The bill, for Its enlarge ment, was In a modified form passed otter the President's Vad ; and that Bureau has appropriated, for its support during the current year, levee millions of your money and that by the rote of your repreeentatire. Robert C. Bebenek. " Reset! .. teiJlitins of money 1 But that is not. all. They were not content with one old ; a now one must be.previded, of rarer and more costly mate rial and manufacture, a Bureau bill which the President has deolat'ed, If it boa become a law, would have taxed the people fifty thrill Williams a year for the support of this blest population. Now, lt beg to know upon whit principle of the Coistitution,..or of right and justice, the black . min 'or ilat black women, or . the jut entitled to money out of the treasury of the United Bfittes, for lispd, lodging and clothing, when that trosteury Ii not called upon to lure, the same fee the whits paupers of,tbe Ufa led SWIM Agala—for lam hers to speak plainly— I do not believe that the President bad • right to anftexionditions of any sort to tke admission th‘thtrezerolse of their right. by. elicM; litittoswhiaboaeoording to his theory ; acoording to what is admitted by Dem/yore be eisrywbors, Med -what never was iitrohst M eat with the diuland dostriase of the D tat- "lITAWM 71.110111111 AND BELLEFONTE, f' ''.,.FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1866 °anti° party in national ever may have been the private opinions of individuals, what is now recognised, even 'by the South in eyery Mine deolarlng . their ordinances ornecessitie null and void. Isere never out of the I'M.. Ile bad no better right as Commander in Chief or as President. in rnylumble judgment, to require of them cionditionn precedent than Thaddeus Stevens, Or' Vineries Sumner. or Benjamin Waders But it ie Summits. to die cuss that . question. 'The Sosth accepted these conditionl,fradilincorporateill them in to their State conntitutions; and now, after one year has peeled, the President bas pro claimed that, whereas they have submitted to the Constitution and obeyed the laireouril subjected themselves to nil the burdens of government, they are entitled to admiepion, to the Senate and House of Reprerentatives, end in the Electoral College. It is said by tune° who concede that flies. 4 j Stales are to the Union tot they always I were in tho Litton—their ordinances of tte ceseion being mill and void—that they, are entitled, therefore, to representation, but that it can be only in the persons of "loyal' men. I agree to that, except that I quarrel with the word. I never see it but with worn nod contempt lVe never heard it until 141: It is not an American word, not a Republican word, not a Democratic word . It does not belong to a free country . it is - peculiar to monarchs, and monarchies,to de note personal attachment or fidelity to an individunhora orowned head. It ha. no bend - nee here h never - would have been in trodueed. except by men who attempting— as men are still attempting—to establish a strong or monartillical government in this country. , The true old fashioned word was "patriotic " That is the word you are ac customed to hear from the .beginning of your lives, on liatt2llteof February, on the Fourth of July, and wherever add whenever any man addresseteyou appealing in your love of country. Now, however, med'use the word "loyal,"anti tell us flint in IhE Senate and Rouse of Representatives, as in the electoral college, none but loyal men should be admitted to seats. Now, I w . roit pose to take the definition of loyalty as giv en ez the President, not by any of those smallir lights who undertake to interpret the signification of ,j se word, anti comment upon the text laid down by the Pregident I choose to go to the fountain, 'not" to.,fille muddy stream lower down Let us see In remarks to an interview with ecommittee of the Legislature of Virginia, on the 10tb....pf Fehruary,lB66,Mr. John 11. Raldwin,Speak er of the Aquae of Delegates from Riohmond, fieing chairman of the delegation, Andrew °beaten, referring to - thic very question, ,maid "On the cardinal principle of rep• 'resenration, to which you refer. I will make a sin to remark. That principle is inherent. torstfetitutes one of the fundamental ele ments of this government The repreeen wives of the Staten and of the people eboitid bare the I pmlnfient tons prescribed by the Constitution of the Untied States.'t There alone I find the authority to declare qualification., and I find, moreover, an oath ,prescribed ; and for one; deny the right of Congress, or any other authority of the Federal Government, to euperndd one sylla ble, hr letter, to the oath ;illicit our fathers set down In that instriurnitiiit ; and the Su preme Court—and I state it on the authori ty of General Frank Blair, and other au• thorium, which I need not and will not name—has already decided Gilt only the I oath prescribed by the Constitution is the oath which i3bgrese can exact The Pres ideut continued in words which are strong- emphasized . "Their vtlalvirimorti most un guralsoneibiy reply joyaliy." Now, again protesting against the use of that word asta substitute for pa L trjotism or attachment to the Constitution, as Jefferson called it, .1 May unquestionably the nyeaideat is right. No man can be attached to the Constitution and not have the •iloyar e qualffioations to enAitie him to a seat se a Senator or Repre sentative During the war, men who were in rebellion, or it is called—men in armed hostility Witte Federal authority, who re jested the Constitution and laws, could not I have a seat in the Senate or House, or a vote in the Electoral College, because they were not loyal, not attached to that Canati tution. Therefore, they could have been justly excluded. How stands the case now' They have surrendered, ..gifitided obedience to the Constitution and maws, acid are loyal. &therefore, to day. I mean loyal no*, with ot.'t reference to their past record. Do you go back and ask of one who would join a cbu.-olt, Whether he was sincere once, and if he b.od been a sinner, do you therefore deny him the right to unite with you' No,these questions are not asked, midis° with regard to this matteeof loyalty in Representatives and Senatars, and members of the Electoral College. Any man who to day is in fervor o f 'supporting the Constitution, who is for m aintaining the 'Union, for obeying the la we and suhatitting to the Federal authori ty. —that man is loyal in,the ironer the word, if indeed it be applicable in any ease a in a republican goornment. &-I le who come' 111 f Representative," says the President, "hawing the qualifica tions prescribed by the Constitution"—not by Cot tgress—iito.fit him to take a seat in either of the deliberative bodies which con stitute the National Legislature, must nee. Ily according to the Intention of the Consifto tie°, be a loyal maa, willing to abide by and devoted to Alm Union and the gonadial but of the etaged." Th a t i s the only quatifieettere of ..loyal ty" that at T justly or properly was known hi th e Ihd. lam aware that wo have had othe r t es o bin the lost four or fee years To be loyal., a mart must swear that Abra ham Linea in wa a the greatest statesman and truest pat riot that ever lived. To be die. lord, hMett only area vary to °mare any set of 'ale administration, and Demoorate waft pit= ed, presented, arrested,tried by mRtL ry oo mmlesions, ex lied, thrown into budl as, of • murdered, because they ,weryt, i aot I wet 6 a the sense of a harty,which par ty h ad beet a the pruner advocates for y_estre of ft.. spit °eh and a free press. the Pre*. Idtmt proo eeda •'He cans lot be for the ConsUtatlos—be dee r et, fro for I he Unlon—he canna eeknowledire , thedieraee t o ell the levee—arthose be. Ii lova., Agreed. Then loyalty In the Ropnwen- Wives who are to bq sent from the Beath eqpidetsja Wing for the Constitution; be• ing for the Union, and acknowledging obe dience to all -the laws. Good t That, Is sound %num ratio dootrine—Just precisely what we pipe lalm, and any ran who owlw- UNION." pies that position to•diii'in a loyal nun• whether he be a citizen of Ohio or of South Caroline And there' in no other doctrine Spot. which we can hope I. have lasting pac.fiention in the Untied Stales Uptrt any other theyAiill be As II ting ity until the Emperor of tuvria wan obliged in give to Ilungariape ihb full rights of Atirtrlll... vubjectx : ne Pol.ind is ta.day, and has been for a century , and an Ireland, gluttimin old Ireland, has heel for live hundred 1, ear' but thank tied a• she will ti ll years—under rule. , And further saym the I'renidetu mil - 11110 clinchee the pelf;t which I utukr :•when the people send ouch tapir tit pod faith, they are entitled to repre...eitt :111011 through them i stimil'ispon the ihicti Me el the I'n•-,dent I ant not his partizan, tied I t riot 4 11pport ar such. I am a dentocrat,aLd ever intend to be a Demount, without Pretic tfir Ye' for one al leant, I mean to be, L, our. consign, a mengter ors convention. .4 lift tIOIIIII Umrenllen, to nomingir Deng, tun for Priondent ninl 1 We 414 I S.W. though that convention .hatitil he no kluge,' than a scounty eoilIPI., i .11 and err onti' I' mean to r at 1113 vtr I ors he Di, °erotic eatithilatti, though they ,iiihould rr ultra W. more notes than James t. Inn tiry 1811. Let the men who tali, allow banding the Democrat ty, ohm' ux hi. 1i44/I,i whom "the wi.l,li• father lothe ir: them tlk: 4 ,11tolli`o that there are t,wo millions of men, who weir born in the/ party,wimire - chitdren trove born' baptized it, and who mean to sitionin 1 1 at every hazard, an long an they still! live I " Will any man tell me' Iv it beeitui.e the negro is better than the white man, or is it because, an Benjamin F Buller declared in his speech at Toledo, reported (correctly, I ant sum) In:the Cincinnati Co rt. r I I quote bie own words: 'reject, with un utterable loathing and scorn, the doctrine that this is, a matte HUM ' S GOVerlinielil. " Dare he repeat that declaration in Dayton' Will he, upon Saturday, in old Butler coon ty—not called 1.0 honor of him, but of a far braver, nobler man, utter it again ° I chill 'lenge him to declare here.that he rejeets,with, unutterable scorn and loathing, the doctrine that this Is a white man's Government It not a white man's Government,then it must ha either I black man's— ctorcrnment or, worse still, a mulatto Government. There in no other alternative. If it le not a white man's Government, then it in either totally black or it le mixed [Applause ] I was taught—ti, was the doctrine of the fathers, It was the idea of the Constitution, the fun dainental theory °fall parties—l hat this wa y ; • white man's Government, "made try white men for the government of white n 4 6— That 11 the doctrine of the President to-day, and o( the whole Democialic party of the United Staten, end by that doctrine we . must stand or fall. if 111111 la to be a block man's Government—no, if it is to be a mu Ilotto Government, part black and part white —then I rdbounce it forever. [Cues of "So do we ] It is Lot the land of my nativi ty For forty yearn I ham; been mistalan; these aro imeithe I oiled Stales, lids is not the Republic of America CLOUDS OF DARKNESS It Callool be disguised that the gloomiest view' seem to peNade the South since the I hoe Mongrel victories at the polls. (lopes of speedy rehabilitation, which ware light ,Mg the honson, have been dashed to the earth The madness and malignity of the Mongrel leaders, the destitution of mosey and bread, the disorganization and mut& .eienay,of labor, short crops and a dark, un bertaig future, seem to be weighing more heavily upon the brave and generous heart of the South than the reverses of war or its appalling disasters. God only knows what may be in store for us, North or South ; but if there are any principles in this universe, any reward for virtue, any punishment for the most flagrant:mimes ;--if there is such f thing as divine Law, and lie in very truth, is the ' Magistrate of the earth is well as of •Ilear en—if "justice and judgment are the hab itation of Ills throne," there is an ordeal at hand suck as few nations haAbeen subject ed to. A storm is gathering which will shake .be continent as it has never been shaken before. We are daily more and more impressed with the folly of attempting to reason with Fanaticism It is labor lost to jagrue with much lunatics as Sumner and Thad. Stevens, and Brownlow With the rational faculty they have lost the power of human senti ment, _Like Butler, they are mere ••beasts', in broadcloth! Our mission is to men of reasoning, sense, and human seneibilitics. To such men of the Mongrel party, if such there be, we appal, in this hour of na tional fate, to pause in tht mad career of party; to contemplate with thel.ondon TAmes the siiir wreak of constitutional gevern mentWhich they have already bees allowed to be efTeoted; the bloody ruin of alimateri• al interests and social order which must rpnult from the contemplated measures of the dominant potion. To northern Democrats we say again, es ever, when we learn to fight for principles we may hope for victory and the salvation of our country, end not till then. To Pres ident Johnson, vainly striving, like Sydney Smith's Mrs. Partingion, to sweep the sea oetiOrro piton sad revolution with the broom -stick of Executive patronage, we say "Too Lergl" You moot meet the issue on its mrrits. The greatest question 'that was ever presented to any generation for its de cision, is upon us. Whot is the proper rela table of distant races to each other? That is the'real questirn which we are blindly and reoklessly, trying to solve, Igntranee and folly are rusbing4in where angels might fear to tread. The Southern States are der obit, sad Impoverished. Tha northern Stern aro coolly poor, bat ander the low otgroeubsek inflationsdo not yet know ft. The issue tat be made, so that we may lift the veil IST delusion front' the public mind, or we ire utterly ruined.as a people. —Dap Book. Conouus.-4t si. tbfe to p e Soh*, through Its BadrliiTiNfiatile will tax you. We will propose eopetttalamend ments, and demand that y 44611 ratify them. We shall establish „parts among you. We will goverruyou. Bat you obeli not bare any representation In Congress They call this a republlean form of goy stomat. `THE OLD FLAGa It does not often happen that our Radi cal cotrtopot,r), , be Connor H of Severiiit and rhe.dt...ll, rty W. 1,411 lilt pro,o ut . Litt .•-..sttt.trll:, it aunt. a tinily glinuttir. df it nth rrtwi tr tvolly tetreshtng ui tic' m.l-1 ..1 not threat •itt)ollt 44 which u..unly yeti ade• .ts ..111111, Thy n.;taltle titittance k,nki 1,1,41 on h‘ . P.' • tl.r (•11 11i5 gr.tpla • ull to 11le naroing I.e bolo lo nl od 1, , y itt,SaVa, that no vett party, for ally 1 , 111 . - 1,040 or expediently or permoord rob'. Cita ati Ord to rot, flea 0,11, and lea.l of ell to part with the winoe it. w tart, i lu. e, n 115 niihrre.l ' f 11 , hair said it better, it te. 1111.1 lewd It is it whole lohtme, brief awl -i truce ft i• +:1 Zking tinvu,r 5., Ili non which the Ilndn'r ls +Ci ty-asking, in the yte•ent t.o•i imp 01 the Relit Pamper:me 1r r t! li county Iti. , orarrnce and •in , •..ie ply to any Inquiry that may ari, reuartl to the tutu, [mite:, of Met hate honored' organtrittion so who.. heliall we hot iti Gully ati.l etalon.l.4 btlm , ed I\ me not name Ili. I , ..peetable minority even ot too Detilocrattc pat ty,now onions' to what the flail/oat- are e, treitatay ,hoot, should be done by 11,1. lit ntoctary If there are any to 0111 rp tko are witting 110 zllll/ off their wu4 , rm be. n battle ha• heel, lust, tillerty - rn do - eor. and Tire sonnet - Itry du it the ',pour i'mt we opine that all will nut expect to he tt n.guirovi airy long, r in the lienmeratie fill bolo altielt they have voluntardy dt iyell, and we at c - lain Oust they will vpretlily take tbtn plop er place id the victoriois. columns hen old foe•, to whom, doulitlee., they a 111. 111 time, became valuable allies. rditeild tit , ir new uniform reel uncomfortable fo, it is none •I' our hwone...., th e y se l ec t e d the color end put 'for a nd 1,.; them wear it as Inolt nn they can Rut it they iMaguie they can drag any Cllllll,ilettt ble number with Mein 11110 the ranks of the opposition, they are wohilly mistaken We epealS advisedly. Wu know we utter the plain and unmistakable sentiments tit the, untied Deinocrarylf 'the „Union. The De- Macre' he party is etronger to-day to defeat, than it was before the lute disaster over took Lt. ° The old flag, the old name, the old prtnetpErn, ore itnerr to as . endiusiaet le mil lion than they sire ire, befiire, and at no pre- VIOIIS period of its or , mind history teas a more determiner! to "stand - Jai its yiiiis"V than at the: ?resent hour. a hen 10 I °lora are erallio and (Wain( hearted few are 1 . 41..r00y Honestly entertaining theme opinions we distinctly and ramisocally repudiate the recent utimanees of the Chicago Tanen and the host our Pool, upon the question of negro suffrage in connection with the future pol icy of the Pernocratic party, having and unceasingly opposed that doctrine, in every shops and forin.when the contest was raging we cannot now lower our flag and lrhalffee the legend ihseribeil upon its folds, when the smoke of the Imltlo ban cleared away anithe tummies of the day have been...l decided against us. Our canoe is the same to day that it was yesterday, and though. defeat may discourage the tinavi ne L id linie• serving, it cannot alter the great principles whidle nerved the heart and strengthened the arm of the Democracy in the tininstreu s struggle from wlidffi they have just emerged la this position we shall have at least the respect br every manly and honest foe, and, whether •ititbrious or defeated its after etruggles, we will hare the satisfaction of knowing that we neither helped to purcliasec victory by the abandonment of principle, I nor invited and deserved defeat by striking hands, with common enemies of the !tepee lie. It may, perhaps,be old fashioned thus to speak , but if instead of temporizing, rule, trag•to expediency or sacrificing airs jot or tale of ,as ancient principles, the Democratic pony remains lets, to ter old traditians onefshmes the bold, fierce, .and aggr”sire spirit of its better dap'. Ike time a not far qrstant when it toil note more be to the ;Ye, ii hat it Ira, of vote, "us terrible as an army with haniters."--,49r Tun Faieuetert —Rev Pr l'lumer, of yirgtoia, writen"to the New York Observer: "1 am sad when I, think how fast they ore perishing, I was in Virginia and Wen Vir ginia more !hen thirty days, end saw thou sande of black people; but among them all I saw was but two children under four years crtage. An eminent lady,,who had extended.opportunines of informali di, said that she had known but two or three births among them in eighteen mouth., and that oonitoooly the while people did not benr of sickness among them till a coffin was ap plied for A recent letter from a Christian gentleman in South Carolina says: 'There aro but few birthastoong Own.' A dietiu. guishod gentleman in the South, • native of Pennsylvania, said within a month, that he Jul not doubt that 500,000 negroes bud died in tho last twelve months. A gentle man has lately.-vieltssi ones fifty plantations , mists near the Mississippi. He reports the number of graves made within • year on these plantstions as in no case less than twenty and from that up to two hut:tared. filejor Gonersl of the 'Unified Btelos army offiaially stated that in one year during the war, in his Military district., 88,000 of these people perished A Untied Slates Lisa ntor recently made this statement officers say that at least a million have per ished.' Randall Hunt, of New Orleans says the same. They give reasons. Some bale Allen in battle. But terrible diseases bass prevailed among them, and the has swept them away all over the land.— They have not beep used to caring for tbn own diseases. and they have perished by thousands. And I believe, when we take the census of 1870, two-fifths of the colored population will have perished." —A young lady oboe addressed her lover in these tome; like fou eloeed burly, but I cannot iluft,iny . home; I am a widow's only and no husband could equal soy parent in kindness." "She maybe kind,'`teplie4 her wooer enthumae 4loatly, "bat be my wife—we-Ai all live together, anti 'eel ill don't best your NotA er —Ah artist invited • 'friend to ' mill Mee a portrait be had painted of Mr. Smith who wan given to drink Putting bi baud toward it, the artier exclaimed, "Doti' , touch it, it Is not dry." "Then," said be "It tenet be like my friend Smith."—Ab 111411, THE OLD MISER I.ollftt up ) our CAIIIA from day to tiny T.,i I vn 11 ntmerly man Df play; Seth •our burden .4 stnnin% nr. • Inotl /1 rout that Iradr to tonre Fr• , al. and a rait.lingArrneft 1n l the p •rtrr rralpen the e1....r If hill ape. fall .f ule far pair - I and,,ear+elf not for the I..tg of .iff+ty In {I he It ',it elpep to your onretul heart !fine drew•, ram. and earn° rt tot P- %thee fa fpfhf nod dint to. du+l.•• It lap men f nap their Mole port %%odd •• :de a 'lran. And death a morrow gut. tohl n,.n, , let the ultoit te ,, r1 , 1 galore In • Put it up% er Itailteurd, early ttr late, Th it mortal ha- !tamped through the rar•tir gate 11 rII the worth of n •Ln7le pin. Von hate roux. I alone through heat and roll--- I.lh. ne, serghed down wnlik 4ctrobs of guld Ile.l rotuld . Sim 1,„„ .1,t1e4 and loltorcernlong .tll.l the clunk ~ 1 gold woe the only song 1.11 ,nr,lleurt hoc ..unil. I h.. )..L. 1.a.,i` , 1 .via „.1..,, 1,1 Lil 11.1 t? the 1,11.1/411/ . • er). tll , olqht a ,art.. neap. , g. 1.1 'rue Bats. m o , lilt 4.1 IX iv. own. 111111 .1..11 ,• , t,r Lunt E.. 1 ,,t, ../.l plea. %tot. hut itthp t hat •g t, And tt the 11 , 11, he por ..r [rat el a deem ati.l.ll,tual p.. 1 II I want .vl , l v., • rt'• r m r ' lll/II •/, hear I. ~, tr her n, %/I 1•I, I, 11l /•111 . •• rt , nbitle 3 , r 3 ean. 1, • .1/ / ti / I Itte I hrit% I Iht Al 3 or" _ , .11, - At," ll ill , i. 111,1. 15'11 ..t, , -here aatber. , the ehtl . . damp 111 Orntli nl. n rattrltrint - 11, y , e,, 1,41 on tone I,,,iht ear rellow .I.'l l them...l3ot ten, Amt n lut and • , ,er.., .1 ~,,, 1 , 1 11,1,1 /111/1 Iflllt 11/ 1 tremblift , neck , herity'• rate h, It et bela .iett Mato. Hai JI , PI, ohl tnen Then 111 /11 /I king It 1, float , . threntrl, thering,tu , l I/ -/ .r l / 1 ,1/11 'lark, on I lit. 31 , age gam Ind the rtei, tint Ito , I are •111,e re him-- The hot3t n ie.° halve t• Oh he trill got , 3,11 h‘ern hew. 1,1.1 1,, , L1 you fart 1,3 aletl•elea , art.!, tint - Nth and aim th ~,tr bed , And your band willelutelt at the efteeka that fly lien. 4.1 , 1 there to the tutsts, 'lyre the glaring rye fir one ,Iml •1 e•I 0, the world IA a bauble and life a spit n. A n•I !loath is a narrow gate, old man' Yet thin whole world enttys Itat net er has it happened edrlg or late, That mortal haa entered the no 000 gate. With the worth of ony.pitor pin • —Rad/pr. THIS, THAT AND• THE OTHER --Wouldn't he plocked—t he klaryland —Tilde are thud} thoh•en.l hkeryerr, in tyr United Fie tee --The •'unreeonstructed" shouldn't hiptse Bottled Butler. `lie never injured them. —There ern 40,1100' tinrkis• in Baltimore nod 200,0110 In the Stale of Itaryhtnd. —J. C. Fremont prtMosea to himself the Cone) States Senatorship 1'1..1 Missouri. —The hog cholera In non{ ternbly in Tennessee.---Er. , Brownkyr had hurter gut hie hie insured. --,-Mnd—the Mongrels, becalm the White Stool of Mnrylend didn't tarn out to he • Meek 1311:1 --The Governor or Ileorgle,in his message to the State Legielature, opposes the Conetitet tional amendment. -----Feruey calls the P;esident a wicked and Tibttinste iograle. Then what it Forney r Gen tle shepherd tell us what prisoner in an Indians Jail made enough by a , Sr work to exhibits& blintelt In bointeem when Ins eentonee expired. . • to a constant abeam of millers pouring into the Southwestern States from the North. --The Drahrbios 'ad Moberemedasks bor e fixed upon ISOles a year of some remarkable antl,llronelione °bongo.' —Another India. parson hoe lately eloped with o widow, bearing los wife and children desolate During the war he was tory "loyal" —to a neighbor's wife —An old hateheler, botritlaughed at by • party of pretty girl., told them ; You are small potato.. We may bril i small potatoes, cried one of them, hot We are seism ones. —Poor Greeley ! After striving to enhght.- en the people of New York city, for thirty years boo repudiated by ,10,00 f majority in hi. own Congt;onsional do trio[ ! —.Atlanta Word says there are no daily papers publisoed in his town,, but there in • la dies' sewing eirefe, whinh answers the name pur pose. —Three-fourths of the laboring population of Eastern India harp perished nr rill perish of oter ration, on errount of the failure of the rise ----Ono hoop-shirt establishment In New York employs seventebn hondred pereone. and uses three tons of steel doily in the production of hoop-skirts —Sixty-three peesengev trains come and go et Chicago, every day, that city belnk - th e terminus of thirteen or more railroads, and the charters for more have been premed. ---Our • political opponents are eo badly mixed at present on the queetloo of Negro Suf. (raga, Miscegenation and DisanietL that we must sail them .11Wrole. —The Arkansas Legislature Is about to deelinemeting u t pon the Rump amendment until the State shall be admitted to repreeentation.— That is mood position. felloNng are. the edictal Agana of the vote of New Rusk city at the late eltretten freeman 90.677; Fenton 13,492; Detmerotie majority .17,185.. —Gov Ward, of N. J has 'kapok:ail Fred *aria T. Frellnghoysen United State. Senator, to fill the vaeatiey caused by the death of the late Senator Wright. --Senator Sumner hes been roasted to Mn. 'Hooper. ,We ere glad of it. If he hadn't ben hooped he would have bursted dating the neat neaten of Congrou. —The?law York Now recoommendiAar ace Grisly !or United Stated Senator. If Mor 11 - mse awed iy Penneytweak we certainly weold prefer b ha to Cameron or Curtin. —Kilkenny Is about being eclipsed by the oat fight of the Mongrels °retake U.S. Senator ship in this State. the time the Leedo. tare emote not irews their tells will be 1.11. —Tea stated that s rasped tiontrootor fbr the entresmdlen and rplarrial of Yelled ma dam to Virgisin has boos deteated ka, saline the bodies into quintets end One appearing to bury four Indeed of ace. Thum be gets 4112 Instead of but Mi. Be muM ben Measaishsteette Yankee. C . -1W —lt Is add flat O. lib Profit DeMeeristit aerernar—deari—te lasting about tbr mega, Demosersgs for Ms Cotoiset. /are flood 'mil John Cessna are laid to belbraXialibre". ' ?km other renegadse—snd rissik aY airWinpabago °Quotas's "Mildn's Cabi net," and Geary Is acting of muss, under their advice. If education is a ghost beaky sedribidd of librty,yell-develaped industry le equal bathe sheild tad bungler of individual in dependence. A. an unfaTh , g soros through life. give your eon, equal with ■good edn iatiapr, a good. honest trade.' Better any trade than none, thank 'hernia ample &Id for adoption of every Inclination in this re erect. Learned pelfeasions are speculatbre amploymenta--msy fail a man; but honing. band-craft trade seldom or never—if to po•eeseor choose to use it. Let him feel, too. that honest labor crafts are 'honorable' end noble. The men of trades, ski real erectors of whatever lo most rosentialto the becesalties anderelfare of mankind, cannot be diopensed with. They. above all others, what repute they hoe been he'd by the .c NO. 47 most famidioulfrllowa, Inuit , work at Ilia aAr of human progro., or all is'l.l.l Uyt Por brown bandnl tradelmen rklok 'f elite. appro,riate I ho teal p ,wer poatilrwl ihey COMPANS. I i 1?. ' , our 1.011 6 1(100. Ito matter what fortune hr ma) nare .tr h.. ttoberit Wtth 11u. Le ro. 14 MIR with temporal Rant eud allta). De Indepehtient Oveneowsitan, Sot Woirvato % , ecorre+ pondeut of he I.oamille who be longed to llant,..ti• brigade to Wheeler 'e cavalry, refaaroolg to the cloo•ong tteettev of the. war in North l'arolips; (elle to the ("I lowing !outgun.. an inoraltut wuttby of a VlRei• in lantoiy : The enemy bad, been pressing Johnson, who was toren-marching towards Greensboro' rigoroudy fur nr•6ral days , end corning suddenly upon our brigs& thus it would' scent at their mere, with wild }ens, sabres gleaning shore their heads, they rushed upon as The Bieeenth Texan hemg from the order in which we were en camped nenresi the toe, roar pistol in hand. awl met .them on loot The enemy hid 11/wle a terrible mistake. Ile had ebarged will, drawn Pllhrell, a thing Tesiostm al en}-:lnuithed at. NOW.' he rangers mounted in lenm time titian it taken to tell it, and with etr- Were •1 work upeu the bend of the , y column _, and though ro II forcemeas hilted the whole back ground yet too late, for, therout bad begun and only ended when the enemy checked further pursuit by a strongly formed flee behind a Atone fence, and the elrien stars of the teat cause" there went down wietorioun. VERY FORCIBLE AND TRUTHFUL UT ' TERANCE,B,_ flovernor Seytdour, of New York, in Lis late speech at Ow Cooper inetituiri,said, with truth, that '•we have inner to fear from the Routh Wit accepts the doctrine of sub jugation than we aver had to fear from Ito armed rebellion we cannot cooler, man without enslaving ourselves We cannot have a Uoveremewt wholfe Northern (see shall smile devotion to the popular will, awl whose Southern aspect shell trews con tempt, defiance and hate to the people of eleven States. The South has Compara tively, little to fear frees misgovernment. It is not wise or safe to trample upon Nose who for years, with desperate courags,held their ground against the millions we. sent to the field, and the thousands of millions of treasure we spent in the COMent—a eon. lent which filled our homes with mourning loaded us dower with debt snit taxation,and wrought great and lasting changes in poll 4, the maxims, and structures of our Gov ernment.. A wise settlement of pending questions will do much to build up this pros peritj of the South ; an unwise pone' will do more tnlioreak down . the wealth and pros parity of the North."—Gefreston (Tern Nemo. THE EDITOR AND THE FORTUNE TELLER. A Kentuoky editor visited s fortune-taller lle mikes the following report of the revelations °oncoming him poet end BIM Thou bail served three years In the penitentiary for • horse that thou Mast not meal Thou wilt be Governor of the State and afterward decline a seat In the Senate of the United States. A wealthy young lady, with bine heir, unborn eyes, and very be►utifui,ife now about to graduate from the Hones of Correction, whom thou wilt marry as coon as thy present wife dies, which will be at the fourth full of the next moon. Thou wilt become possessed of this lady's wealth, and elope with the 'wife ea coal-boat engineer. Thou will go to hew Orleans, and start a keno bank, which will bring thee in great riches. After an eh gettoo of nineteen yams. thou wilt return to - thy repining wife, lay thy princely fortune at her fat. be forgives, and alter miming a family of nightee• ahildrern, die happy, at the age of ninety ulne..flx —One of tha leading features of the Doily Post is the allotment of duties of the editorial lase It ban its heavy, its light, it■ deep, and it, !Shallow writer.. Then again libel 'its r.responsible" and its "Irre sponsible editors—lts knave and Its clown. iu bombutio etnd its furlong—lto Barton. Koltun, and Ils comic "Elorstehairl." The Post has also what might be called en edi torial nomencletor, Whose turmoils sre up could' names strung together, like bologna. with 'petty perversious. The itnesess et this latter le to hash up satiates from oppo sition papers, taking a sentsote bore sad a *faience theta, toreeetting them with a lie or two, and swirl sig them will tuudemete, ridicule, and male ettempta at wit, and passing tan off time dressed es genuine env:mak/0 and opinions of the astiOre thus mutilated... The articles of this writer may be known by their title, which ia al ways the same, whatever the subjeet, "The bushwhacker mind perrille," ete.—Astmett Um ion. B6IMSTOIIIII OnAronr.—Earetend Colonel Chivington, of eland Creek Indian sonseaare notoriety, recently—addressed some of 'his admirers at Connell Blof, lowa. The fol lowing le-given se-wee of the gems of hie di■ooane : "If we go to Amami. and env Dentooost dome intrude there, we will kink Ma out. If we re to kdl , enewill ham Amend brio alone on them. Yon, I wool 4 mend olt the battlements of INK= and kid Dementale Into boll; and it rico to 601,1 will pour meltdown sited hot I, down wpm theme Tbie lauxuaire would eased atremply from lie meant of* hue dltiNtaq eteldier; but oomivig hurt Obittimpita, Maw one military exploit eraihibti emit Weikel lina more ott►o Sigatemikladha sramisout children, it le Piet *bat siglatbabeelliel for. —ln the 64b, and dth ‘1411 . 0f the Santos% returned a surpben 'of viten, which othopethun the Weald rot eatwanenth throw the whole vete et - buth wands _oak., Tibia, to the wortilleetl ea ofthe Beak MOM the whole Dethoterlie wthel7 eat 1 0 . 111111 . 41 • tthe tickets. The Radian Wtojertty Ifitaahigite• setts at the lace allleAkti was obese IMAIXed . toes el about ftwebte, thowewad illadiu• Tide wee owing to thethertwoodtoret Trk keit soot into Now Teri Mate to ettla thee • Teuton and the other Raabe& ' HUN A