! f. i if. . ' ' J L I 9 1,2 i ' t t . hi r: ill TH15 freeman. 1 -' " - " " 1 - - - &X3BUfiG, PA., Thtrsdat, : : : : : Skft.110,?1SGS. DEMOCRATIC XOMI.T 1TIOSS. Foil FEFSIDENT : HOX HORATIO SKYMOUJt, OF NEW YORK. XIt VICE PRESIDENT : GEN. FRANK P. BLAIR, OF MISSOURI. rott aupitor geskiiai. : HON. CHARLES K. HOYLE, Of Fait It County. FOB SPRVKYOR GFNKRAI. : CEX. WELLINGTON II. EST, Of Columbia County. roa coxess : COL. JOHN V. LINTON, Juhr.stown. TCtt ltEI'RE.-rjATIV- : Capt. J Oil N PORTER, Washington Tp. for i-ROTFfoxoTAnY . Capt. J. K.IIITC. Johnstown. roa II?TRICT ATTORSEY : F. P. TIERS EY, E--q.. Ebensburg. r, r commissi o.v sr. : MAURICE M.N AM A HA. .T..hnstown. por rooB norsc pikectoh : CHRISTIAN SNYDER, Jackton Tp. FOR AEXjITOB: JAMES NULL, Allegheny Tp. row srEVtTuis : HENRY SCAN LAN, CarroIIiown. JoSEi'il M'DoNAia, Eq., oilers bim ifclf in our paper to-day as an independent candidate for District Attorney, and we fet.rpuie that his true friends everywhere will regret the step which he himself cannot have decided upon without deep tbnme and painful remorse. Having ta t ken the step, however, he mutt abide by j the defeat and political dishonor which I awaits him, for when too lata to remedy th mistake he will discover that the party which has honored mid sustained him in days gone by, will now turn from Lim in houett indignation at his political recrcur.cy and unfaithfulness at a tinio when duty more than ever demands that ell Democrats should be faithful and firm support of right principles tind" carrcct j measures. DeuiU eC Cx-Govscymuur. Ex-Gororw Thomas II. Scvmourdied fit l.Ls rciidetico in Hartford, Conn., on Thursday evenirg last. He was educa ted nt the Middletown Military Institute, tt-jJ:,1 1 Kaw, and piT.cticed the prifes?ion ; was Representative in Congre?s from Conre?icLt fr.m lu 13 to 1813. In IS So bo went to Mexico n3 a m:ijor in a Itv Ejig'aiiu rcime.it, and w:?s promoted to a colonelcy. In ISOi) ho was elected Govntrr of Connecticut, and was re i Icctcd three times; was minister to Rus sia Jjriig I'iercc's Administration. He was n prominent member of tho Masonic fraternity at the time of Lis death. He was eixty-one years of ago. TAX I.4YC:iS, REI! If erer ihe burden of our national debt is to be removed it will be by the most rigid economy, and yet Radical extrava gance is multiplying the dollars of our debt at a most fearful rate. We propose to glance at a fer of the expenditures of the Rnrap Congress, nnd contract them with former years. The pc-li have a right to knovr where their raxen go, and it shall not be our fault if thcy are not fully informed on this sub ject. Iu 18C1, tha last year of the war, whrn tht expanses wouiu be tx jvcted to reach tha highest figure. Uij stationary Will for (jongrvfs amounted to In 1S68, when there is profound peace, the Stationery amounts to 433.C00 61 0&0 Increase in fotir years Radical rule. or much more than doublo. We next select from Miscellaneous Document No. 31, 2 J Session, 40th Con gress : Amounts received by N. Q. Ord ' way, Serjeant-at-Arms, as per Clerk's Report. Jin. 1st, 16C9." foot up the comfortable sum cf $33,169.13 We plain country folks would be at a lo?3 to know how such n bill couhl be made up, were the items not furnished officially by Congress Uself. The mileage of the Sergant-at-Arms is ten cents per mile, and this includes travelling expenses and all other chasges. Your Sheriff gels only Jour cents a mile. We do not complain of this the law gWcs it. But Scrgeant-at-Arms Ordway has ren dered a bill for his year's travelling, at 203,403 miles ; or, taking the earth to be 24,000 miles itr circumference, this man has travelled a distance equal to eight trips around the earth, and 16,403 on the ninth round ! Ia addition to this are these if ems : Horse car tickets. $ 6C.84 Horse aud carriage and street rail way tickets for the year ending Jimaary 1st, 1868, , 016.84 J973.68 During the mmo time the boarding of fcrt man and his assistants are charged again the country at eight dollars per day an amount greater than ia charged at the costlist hotels in our eastern chief. One night in congress there was no q ic . rum present, and a call of Ihe house was -Ordered, The doorkeepers brought in the itrafgEng member. Our friend, Hoa. A. A. Barker, the then member from this district, happened to be absent from his scat The charge of the Sergeant-at-Arms for this evening's work was the soup nome of five dollars for ertch member, or $577,20 in all, including 222 miles of mileage, when the whole distance 'ravelled could not have been five miles, it being all done in Washington city, and mostly in the Capital. We have neither time nor space to go into a derail of these wholesale stealings of the people's money. A record of them would fill i 're volume Instance the item of 2,730 penknives, costing ;, 020, which would give each member of Con press 15 penknives at over $2 apiece Now we do not charge, nor do we suppose, tiiat our member of Congress got the-e fif teen penknives but if he didn't somebody did. The same authority established the fact that the House expenses for the year lSGo increased over iViat of 1804, 8128,231 ; 18CG increased over ISfU, S10S.80S ; 18C7 increased over 18Ci, 148,-151, and 18fi8 increased over 1881, $371,923 No wonder that twelve hundred thous and dollars a year wrung, from the hard j hand of labor, does not suffice to pay the interest on our national debt, but that under Rnd.e rule it goes on increasing j and multiplying. Let the people apply the corrective at the polls. Important Correspondence. Want of time prevents any comment upon the following correspondence, which has been handed to U3 for publication, but it tells its cwn story so plainly that we are sure all our readeis can draw their own conclusions without any aid from us TiiRASirur Department, Seorwl Auditor's Ofrioe, Aug. 31, 1868 j! Dear Matt I have been thinking of writing to you, fjr some time pnst. in order to ascertain your precise "slatun'' in regard to the selection of a Conrt-sntun in your district. I know your influence iu the North of Cambtid, and I also know that you and i Sheriff 1) act, in conceit. If I were a i candidate I would spare no effort to secure j your combined influence. j Am I asking too much in requesting you ! to write to nie in that same Id spirit of j confidence which, in times gore by, mutually j animated U4 in ourpoliticalintercour.se. You . know me to ba the frit u 1 cf Mr. Morrt-11. I ' could u t be otherwise. I am free to s?ay ' that 1 would be most happy if you could give ' him your support. There does not exist the j shadow of a doubt cf his election, but as the local interest of Cambria county ib so inti- j uiatcl3' connected with that election, it is to j be hoped that the vute wiil give proof of an j appreciation f that inU-re.-t. j lri me have y..ur vi" freely and unre- j served!y. You know that you cin write t j me in perfect confidence. 8 j I will write you more at length when I hear from 3'f'U. Direct yr-ur letter to me in Second j Auditor's 02i e. Washington. D. C. My j warmest rec.-irds to Durbin when you see ; him. Your old fiend, ! Tn .mas A. Maguihe. j j CiiESSON, Ta., Sept. 5, 1S03- ! Ii:ar loll lour letter ot the olst tilt, is before me, and I give it all the weight which the letter of an old fiiend is entitled to, more especially as it emanates fiom the -Traniry Department, Second Auditor's Ginee,'' at Washington. You desire to know my "('5'"in regard to the selection of a Congressman in your district." J can tell you that in a word, and I thought you knew me well enough to know it. I am a Democrat from sincere, conscientious convic'i .n. I never doubted for a moment that ths Democratic party was the only organization to which the des tinies of this great country couhl be safely confided, and never were n;y convictions on that 8'ibjct so strong as they are in the present fearful condition of our country. I am for Col. Johk V. Linton for Con gress and opposed to Mr. Morrell. Person ally. I believe Mr. Morrelt to be a clever man. I have nought to urge against him. He has already been in Congress, more than a year and I ju'Ige him by his acts and votes. lie is in favor of negrj supremacy I am not. He is in favor cf military gov ernment at the South I am in favor of peace and union. He voted t degrade and destroy the President of the United States, whom Le helped to elect, and whom he called you and me traitors for opposiuj four years ago I was and am opposed to impeachment. He is opposed to tho suc cess of the Democratic party I am iu favor of it. You are candid eDough to let me know your "glutus.-' You say, "you know me to be the frivnd of Mr. Morr.ll. I could not be otherwise." I am sorry for you. It is deplorable that a man of your mind thould place himself in a position in which he cannot exercise his best judgment. Fortunately for myself, I am under no personal obligations to either candidate, and can take an impartial view of them and their principles, which you ad mit 3 ou cannot do. And I am sure in your bonester moments ycu must regret that by accepting uplacc under Mr. Morrell you have prevented yourself from supjorting Col. Linton, a man who, in addition to the rec titude of his principles, adds the the great est purity of character a man who has grown up amongst us and knows our wants a man who bared bis bosom in the hour cf his country's need, and bears on his pers on enduring marks of bravery a man who is morally, at least, the equal of Mr. Mor rell, and mentally far his superior a man who has the advantage cf Mr. Morrell in every qualification except thos3 of wealth and power. I shall present your "warmest regards" (Oh. how warm they are ! ) to Sheriff Dur bin, and you can rest assured that fie will lie found where I am, and where you were in better days. Your former friend, M. M. Adams. . .The Radicals are not quite so jubi lant over the Vermont election as they were a day or two ago. Later and more definite returns reduce their majority con siderably below the fir.t reports, while they show a vast increase in the Democratic vote. The same ratio of increase will givo every important Northern State to tho Democrats. . . A western newspaper reports that the corn in Iowa has grown so fall this sum mer that a man oh horseback cannot reach the tasida of the stalks. Sulpher Springs Correspondence. Gen. Rosecrans' Letter to Gen. Lee. rtfcrLY OF GEX. LEE AND OTHER DISTIN GCISMKD eOCTHEIiXEKS. The following correspondence fully ex plains the purpose of Gen. Rosecrans' late visit to the Virginia White Sulphur Spiings, in relation to which there has hern so much idle newspaper gossip. The correspondence exhibits in a very clear liiiht the sentiments and disposition of the intelligence of the South, and ought to act ns an antidote to the poisonous j si.,in,; rg 4)f the Radical press, which con- tinu illv misrepresents Jnd falsifies them. GENERAL EOSECRAKS 1 GENERAL LEB. White Sulphur Spri gs, W. V., Aug. 26. 18o8. General: Full of solicitude for the future of our country; I come with my heart in my haud to learn the condition, withes and intentions of the people of the Southern States especially to ascertain the sentiment of that body of brave, energetic and self-sacrificing men who, after sustaining the Confederacy for four years, laid down their aims and swore allegiance to the Gov ernment of the Utdted States; wnose trusted and bi loved leader you have been. I see that interpreting "States' rights" to conflict with national unity has produced a violent rca .tion against ihcin, which is drift ing us towards consolidation ; and also that so great a country as ours even new is, cer tainly is to be, nii:st have State governments io attend to local details, or go farther and fare worse. p. is plain to us at the West and North that the continuance of semi-anarchy, such ts has existeil for tho last three years in ten States cf our Union, largely increas. the danger of centralism, swells our rational expenditures, diminishes our productions and our revenues, inspires doubts of onr political and financial stability, depre-.i ttes the value cf our national bonds and currency, and places the credit of the richest below that of the poorest nation in Christendom. We know that our currencj' must bj de preciated so long a? our bonds are below par ; and that therefore the v.vt business and emmerce of the country must suffer the terrible evil of a fluctuating btandard of value until we can remedy the evil condition of thms at the South. We also see other mischief quite possible, if not probable, to arise ; such as from a failure of crops, a heal insurrection, and many other unforeseen contingencies which may still more depreci ate cur credit ar.d currency, provoke dis content and disorder am mz our people, and bring demagogical agitation, revolution, repudiation, aud a thousand unnamed evils and villauies upon us. We know that the interests of the people of the South are for law and order, and that tl.ey must share our fate of good and ill. I lieli-ve- every one, I know, who re flects, believes that if the people of the Southern States could bo at peace, and their energy aud good will heartily applied to re pair the wastes of war, reorganize their business, set the freedmen peacefully, pros perously and contentedly at work, ir.vite capital, enterprise aud labor from elsewhere to cotne freely amongst them, they would i i soon rebuild their ruined fortunes, multiply manyfotd the value of their lands, establish public confidence in our political ttability, bring our government bonds to a premium, our currenc3" to a gold standard, and assure for themselves and the whole nation a most happy and prosperous future. Seeing this, and how all just interests concur in the woik, I s-6k the cfiiceis and soldiers who fought for the Union ask every thinking man of the great West and North a.-ks why it cannot be dot e ? We are told b3' thoe who have controlled the government for tha last four years that the people of the South will not do it that if ever done at all. it must be dene by the poor, simple, uneducated, landless freedmen and the few whites who, against the public opir.ion and fentitmnt of the intelligent white pec'ple, are willing to attempt to lead and m;ke thir living off of these ignorant, inexperienced colored people; mostly men who mu-t be needy adventurers, or without any of those attributes on which reliance for good guidance or government can be 1 1 iced. We are told that this kind of government must be continued at the South until six or eight millions of intelligent, energetic white people give in to it or move out of the coun try Now, I think the Union army thinks, and people of the North and West, I dare say, believe there must be, or there ought to L, a shorter or a surer way to get good government for all at the South. Wc know that they who organized and sustained the Southern Confederacy for four years, against gigantic efforts, ought to be able to give peace, law, order and protection to the whole people of the South. The3T have the interest aod the power to employ, protect, educate and elevate the poor freedmen, and to restore themselves and our country to all the blessings of which I have just spoken. The question we want answered is, are they willing to do it? I came down to find out what the people of the South think of this, and to ask you what the officers and soldiers who served in the Confederate army, and the leadirg peo ple who sustained it, think of these things. I come to ask more. I want to psk -ou. in whose purity and patriotism j hee ex press unqualified coifider.ce, and as man3 good men as you can conveniently consult, to say what you thiuk of it, and also, what you are willing to do about it. I want a written expression of views that caa be followed by a concurrence of action. I want to know if you and the gentlemen who will join in that written expression are willing to pledge the people of the South to a chivalrous and magnanimous devotion to restoring peace aud prosperity to cur com mon country. I want to carry that pledge high abeve the level of party politics, to the late officers and soldiers of the Union army, and the people of the North and West, and to ask them to consider it, and to take the necessary action, confident that it will meet with a response ao warm, so generous and confiding that we shall 6eo iu its sunshine the rainbow of peace in our political sky, now black with clouds and impending storm. I know you are a representative man, in reverence and regard for the Union, the Constitution and the warfare of the country, and that what you would say would be en dorsed by nine tenths of the whole people of the South, but I 6hould like to have the signatures of all the representative Southern men here who concur in your views, and ex pressions of their concurrence from the prin cipal officers and representative men through out the South, when they can be procured. This concurrence of opinions and wills, all tending to peace, order and stability, will assure our Union soldiers and business men, who want substantial and solid peace, and cause them to rise above the level of party po'itics, and take such steps to meet yours as will insure a lasting peace, with all its countless blessings. Very truly, your friend. (Signed) W. S. Rosecranr General It. E. Lee, White Sulphur Springs, ,'Wcat Virginia. rkply cf okskhai, i.f.e. White Sulpucr Spkisgs, Wkst Virgin ia, Aug. 12G, 18tS8. General : T have had tho honor to receive your letter of this date, and, in accordance with your suggestion, I have conferred with a number of gentlemen from the South, ia whose judgment I have coiifi-led, aDd who ora well af qua:ntea with the public sentiment rf their respective States. They ha voikindly consented to unite with me inVeplying to your communication, and their names will be found with my own i appended to this answer. vvith this fxplai.ati n we proceed to Rive you a catidid statement of what we believe to he the sentiment of the S-'tithe. n peop'e iu rt pird to the uij ct to which you rfer Whatever opinions nav have Drevailed in the past in regard to African s'averv. or the right of a State to secede from the Union, we believe we exrre-s the almost unanimous , .i e i ii judgment of the Southern pecide when we i , .i , .i . , ?, ' , declare that thev consider that those ques- tions were decided by the war. and that it is their intention in good faith to abide bv that decision. At the close of the oe wcly me oomn- em people laid down their arms and nought to resume their former relations with the United iStates Government. Through their State Convention, they abolbhed slavery' and annulled their ordi nance ot Recession, and they returned to their peaceful pursuits with a sincere pur pose to fulfill all their dines under the Con- stitutior. of the United States, which they had sworn to sunnort. If their action in these particulars had been met in a spirit of frankness aud cordiality, we believe that ere this old irritations would l ave passed away, and the wounds inflicted l.3' the war would hive. leen in a sreat measure hal-M. As r i r i .u ' ? r .u c .! far as we are advised, the people cf the South ,....-..,: r.:...i!.. r,...i; .. entertain no unfriendly feeling toward Ihe Government of the united States, but tbey complain that their rights under the Gnsti tution are withheld from them in the adniin-t.-tration thereof. The idea that the Southern people are u . .-.. n . : ' lii'Mi.i: w loc iir"iue. huh whuu ouuress I . . , . i mem i it were n tn-ir power to no so, is entirely unfounded. 1 hey have grown up in our m:dst. and we have been accustomed , from childhood to look upon them with kind ness. The change in the relations of the two races has wrought no change iu our feelings toward them. They still constitute the im portant part of our laboring population. Without their lalor the lands of the South would be comparatively unpioductive. Without the employment which Southern j ! agriculture affords they wou'.d be destitute oi me means oi suosibtfr.ee, ana uccome puu , I Pendent on public bounty. . j e.f-intertst even if there were no higher ' ; motives would then fore prompt the white? j of the South to ext. nd to the negroes care and protection. 1 he important fact that the ! two races are, under extstuig circumbtances, : i nei.e-.Miry to ertcu oiner, is firiioudoy occuui- ing apparent to both ; and we believe that but for influences exerted to stir up the pas sions of the negries. the relations of the two races would soon adjust themselves on a batio of mutual kindness and advantage- It is true that the people of the South, to gether with the people of the North and Weft, arp, for obvious reasons. oppcseJ to any system of la ws which would place the j , r " i- -- .. .... ......v. v.. j i me nero race, dji ims opposition springs I from no fhng of enmity, but from a deep- , j M-a.en couv.ci ou ai precu-. ioe m-groes ficatiors w hich arc nect s.-ary to make them c . sat,- ftepoMtones oi poiiticai power. lney I would inevitably become the victims of dem- ; tWl,ilia Convention in June. 1S65. agognes, who, for se.fish purposes, would . , , ... . . . v mislead them to the serious injury of the! And the editor of that journal says Ji puh'ic. tonally : The great want of the South is peace. The I We have the evidence that Colfax was iu people earnes estly de-ire tranquility and tho j cf the Ui-iou. They deprecate j restoration disorder and excitement, as the most strious obstacle to their prosperit'. They ask a ret o.atiou of their rights undar the Cnstituti.)ii. Thej"desire relief from op pressive misrule. Above fell, they would appeal t: their counts-men for the ' re-esMb-lishment in the Southern States of that which has justly been regarded as the birth right of every American the right of self government. Establish these on a firm basis, and we can safe!3 promise on behalf of tho Southern people that they will faithfully obey the Constitution and laws of the United States, treat the negro with kindness and humanity, and fulfil every duty incumbent on peaceful citizens loyal to the Constitution of tlK-ir county. We believe the above contains a succinct reply to the general topics embraced in your letter, and we venture to say, on behalf of the Southern people, and of the officers and soldiers of the late. Confederate Army, that they will concur in all the scutiments which we have expressed. Appreciating tho patriotic motives which have prompted your letter, and teciprocating j-our expressions of kind regard, we have the honor to be, very resr ectfuliy and truly, R. E. Lee, Virginia. G. T. Beauregard, Louisiana. Alexander II. Stephens, Georgia. Alexander II. II. Stuart, Virgiuia. C. M. Conrad, Louisiana. Sinton Stephens, Georgia. A. T. Caperton. West Virginia. John Echols, Virginia. F. S. Stockdale, Texas. F. W. Pickens, South Carolina. Win. J. Robinson, Virginia. Josrph R. Anderson, Virginia. Willian F. Turner, West Virgiuia. C. II. Subee, South Car. lina. E. Fontaine, Virginia. John Letcher, Virginia. P. C. Adams, Mississippi. W. J. Green, North Carolina. Lewis E. Hanie, Virginia. P. W. Daniels, Jr.. Virginia. W. T. Sutherlin, Virgiuia. A. B. James, Louisiana. Toulant B( auregard. Texts. M. O. II. Nort n. L misiaua. T. I. B ame. Georgia. II. T. Russell, Georgia. Samuel J. Douglass. Florida. Jeremiah Morton, Virginia. John B. Baldwin, Virginia. George W. Boiling. Virginia. Theodore F. Omway, Virginia. James Lyons, Virginia. To General W. S. Rosecrans, Minister to Mexico, White Sulphur Springs. Virgiuia. In 1861, Colonel IL S. Grant wrote to a friend : I am a Democrat ; every man in my regiment is a Democrat, and when I shall be convinced that this war has for its object any other than what I have mentioned, or the government designs using its soldiers to execute the purposes of the abolitionist?, I pledge you my hon or as a soldier that I will carry ray sword on the other side and cast my lot with the Southern people." The soldiers were used to execute the purposes of the abolitionists, and the Radical party aro doin? their bid ding at the present time ''outside of the Constitution," yet General Grant has broken his pledge of honor as a soldier, is the candidate of that party for tho Presi dency, and lias no policy to put in oppo sition to that of Congress. Is such a man worthy of support ? Ta CoJr.tx u ftoovr Nothing t The Examiner and other Radical news paiers are endeavoring to cover up the know-nothing record of Schuyler Colfax. , Ttmt thcy a5t)atnea of w! fa ' , . , . . - ,-T,""cu ,r signmcant indication. Tliey quote a speech which M. Colfax ! delivered imraediattiy after hid arrival t his home a short time since, as conclusive evidence that their candidate for Vice President never was a member of the in fatuous know-nothing organfzation. We j have read that speech, and we are fully i convinced that it is a disingenuous trick. I gt-ttcn up t deceive. It is a lie in terms if not in cx;ict words. Mr. Colfax says : r,,. . ,, ,t 7 lonhrr. Know that there hag not been an ; ,. , , ,:, , . , " T , i elecnn Jvr the past Iteelce yrart that I Itar i ,,,-, tf . ... , , , , ,, TclrLl l " wf " cl,eejM' t 'L?i?t ?" .'' t?"ed,Jr 'l?'1 r -.i i? I hat is his defensa. Mark now the) trick there is in it. "V the just t-ilce yean"' is the time he fixes, duiins which I he has nut refused to vote for forei mers or ' i Catholic?. Twelve years' That take os back , f, f f jg-g T . , , , lc-- . . I j ntluJe 1 Sol and 18oo, the years when I know-nothingtsm was most ratnnnnt. nor ! ; 'he summer of 185G. His denial is only as to time, and the limit is put in so as to save Lim from leirg shown to have ut- I I tered a barefaced falsehood. It is disin- 1 zenuous, uncandid and unmanlr. and i - , uiamj, woo : Stamps ;iir. LOilax ns n m:in larltinr in . n ... piincijj.e anu honor. A correspondent of the N. Y. Freeman's Journal, spcuking of this matter says : ilr. Colrnx well keew that tLe newspa- I pers of June, 1855, would .how, and many j li.n..,-, ,, :,.... .... . . v '"- ran imiiiv, iua ne was an t active vr..luMnt member of the Know- j X,.rhiog National O.uncil. which met, in I strrt, .i..,. ;,. PLjiad-tr.!.;, .-.. i . of Jun, It was well kn.wn, at the 1 i time, that only the most trusted of the secret j ; order gained admission to that Council ; that j for several days, nothing was pub'kly j i known of its proceedings, or who wen dele- j j gati.o to it. A Philade'phia correspondent j wicte: "A lariie number of trent einen of: tvt-., ..,;..,.... y"ro OB,i ,i, ..i ;mnr. sion rms t ;lie that tll " intimate ac- inuintancescf the mysterious; and ubiquitous '. ,s;lm. About the 1 1th June, the orgu.iza- : .-, was vled by the eiecVion of tbe . ofQcerSt atJ)1 a (i,ramittee on a Platform wa. 1 aun,.UI(0.i. TLc second nania on that Com " miltct: Was "Colfix, of Indian." Ti.c er- ' . t-t i thflt .Mp r. !.. th : j member of Congress elect, wants a platform ! to huit Northern Indiana' The n..jurity ' overruled Mr. Colfax, and reputed a pJat : form that did rot suit Northern Indiuafe j Mr. Colfax and the uiinority of theCottia.il ; tee made a minority report, which being ' rtjected, he aid othtrs eub.-equently aban doned the American party, ae they then in)ft t ) .ro.r. t-r. j . uti uvVunt tf K-i v.w of the Slavery question J went oi and joined rl,e raoicai anotitionists, ami nominateJ i'r,n, Ti.i. ;. y. r.'fv'c tr,, rr. ;,,,t ftn(eru,r to .thl, ,,aiit twelve years." f will he, or Ids friends, tow (1-ny that in iqj.u Jift Wjs a.ratnj ixdow .Morning f ask George D. Prentice, of the LcaUtille Jmr- nar wil(, was with t. Qlfax in the Phi)- the "Know Nothing" party, and in the de- j giees, "away up," in that iefamous coo-j spiracy. nnd that ho only diliered trotn it when "Sam" the slang pbrase for ail that was prescriptive did not accept the adjunct and become Sambo. Our correspondent, whose letter is on the fin.t page, may be right. But, cur casual impression is that tha 3-ear he refer to is 185C, and not 1855. At the place, and mo ment we write, we canuot verify this. Rut we are certain of the fact that Gdfax was one of the leading Know-Nothings at the Convention. This fixes it that he war a Ivnew-Nothing ! They did not their work negligently. Tbey put their oicn seal on their doings. Our own honest conclusion in that Colfax is a sworn brother of the nowNothing cr ffaniz-ilion, and that, while trying to fool one other Frenchman, he is hostile to Catholics, and plaj-s the hypocrite when he pretends to be their friends. That the convention alluded to was held in Philadelphia, and that Colfax was a prominent member of it is matter of political record. It cannot be denied.-: I low dipicabl'3 then must the Radical candidate for Vico President seem in the eyes of all honest men, when he stands before the world, guilty of framing such a sneaking falsehood as that by which he attempted to eecape the deserved odium of having been a leader in the infamous and prescriptive Know-Nothing party. The truth i Mr. Colfax is a professional politi cian, and a tricky and dishonest one at I that. He has boxed the political com- pass, and has borne jn turn all tbe aliases i by which the opposition to the Iemocratic party has been distinguished, from ihe days, of Whiggery down lo the present ! time. That he was a Know-Nothing i there can be no doubt. Tiie proof is be i yond controversy, and his quibbling I speech at South Rend can only damage ! him by showing how little regard he has ! for truth, and making it plain to the peo j pie what a contemptible political trickster lis is. Lancaster InteWjenct r. now Do You LiukIt! I o order to givo the honest men who are blindly fal lowing the lead of tbe Radicirls, f5c4 oi the doings of the carpet-baggeri in the South, we give the following extract from a hr-.-anguo of a Mastnchusetta negro, named Elliott, now a member o tbe South Carolina Legislature. Tke speech was delivered at a Radical meefinj heI4 at Sumter, on tho 24th n't , at which speeches containing scnticn l equally as incendiary in their character were de livered by two other colored members of the Legislature, both from Massachusetts, and one of them a pretended preacher. Speaking of the Democrats, Elliott eaid : "Let me tell you, the best th'ng you can do i-j to kill them, and when you bury thena, I want you to bury tLem with their lacee downwards, and so deep that whoa the arch angel's trumpet shall blow and all the dead arise, they won't rise to l.ast"ndjwither God' creation, but will go on. down, down, down." Farmers, mechanies, working men, fioso of you who are supporting the Radi .cal party, how do you like such oo-labor- e.-s ! Can anything good come out of incendiary language like this ? Political and Xew Item. . .The Toledo WtzJc predicts a decline in (he price of wheat nnd flour, and advises farmers not tn hold their crops for a rise. ..An Indian burial grTund was lately dog up on tho Little Red river, Arkansas. The skeletons found there nre of great size, some uf them tiht feet in lergth. . . Fourt-ien thousand people in the Red river country, north cf the Minnesota, are in danger of starvation, grasstropperM hav ing made nlinoH a clean sweep of their j crops. J ..Archbishop Kenrick, of St. LouU, i: i is said, hss in?trutted the Catholic clergv 1 of his archdiocese lu denounce planchette, '; and warns Catholics that if thev do no: i desist from its use, after reasonable ad- monition, they will be excotnmucicared from the chun h. ..During the eight years of Radical j rnle they have stolen money enough to pay all the actual expenses and three limes tne lionpt and ieeitunate expenses cf the lute war. And they are Making tlio privilege oi Mealing tor lour years more. AH the iidicntiona are that the j people are not willing. . .The Radical Revenue Commissioner j Rollins, who, like Stanton, re fu to re- j sign a position he is unfit to fill, has been arrested for inspiring with other Ritdical t thieves to defraud the Government. His i political friends f.re trying ;o make light j of the matter. That is the way they treat all such transactions. t ..The late Q'leen of .M.s.Tasasear tvns! buried in a silver coffin worth $30,000, and- a box of coin, which it took fifteen men to carry, was buried with her. The mourning rrq iire? all her subjects to sh ive their heads and go barefoot for ninety day?. Tber must kls leep on the grouni nnd do no work for that tim1. ..A lady named White, living two tnilfS from Spring Hill, Maury county, Tenn , one day last week, gave birth to four mala children, weighing in ljn ngsre gnte twenty-three pounds, and wl formed and healthv. She has been married about three years, ha? a child now fifteen months ; old, which weighed two hundred and nine poinn.Is two wpeks ago. . .The largest planing machine in fh Ui-itv-d States, if not in lh world, it utated, has just ben coai'pleted tit the Ckirercment workJn.p in Charlestown, blirt. It tun U en several yettrs in build-ina-. It will piano a mass of iron forty fi-e't ia kith, twenty foet in width, and twetrty U-9t in bright. One of tbe bod pieces weighs over forty tons. . . I'inchbaek, the negro SS- nator of Loubdnna who recently declared that if the negroes were not r Mowed to h.ve their own way, 3 thousand torehts would be Rpftl!"i! to the City of New O. letm. recvived his trainir in the woikhoi se. ' In 13C2 he wae rieI and sentenced to ') that u-stiUfIoQ for two years. A noting i champion for the Radical theory. '-Let ..On Sitordav night a horrid murder i was committed in Sharrrslurg, Ant ghenv' , , i I county. Th U ttm wae i,hot through the hentt while sitting in his own house by an onknown man. Two Germans, named Christ, lioch and Ana t I-ernon. were arrested next morning on suspicion The victim of coromitting the deed. leave", a wife and grown up family. That miserable milk-sop Geary has j been making speeches out in the western j part of the .State, in which he abuses bet ter nnd abler soldiers than himself, becnuse they support Seymour and lV.air. Geary cannot speak ten consecutive sentences of grammatical English to save his life. He is an ignorant, malignant and conceited ass, nnd bis own party are ashamed of him wherever he goes. They bad better tie him up. . .Notwithstanding the rainy weather ten thousand poople assembled in New York on Monday afternoon to witness the great match Iwtweei tho champion clubs, Atbletic and Atlantic First inning?, Athletic 2 ; Atlantic nothing. Second inning", Athletic nothing ; Atlantic 4. Third irnings, Athletic 4 ; Atlantic '2 Fourth inning?, Athletic 2 ; Atlantic nothing. Fifth inning?. Athletic 1; At lantic 2. Sixth innings. Athletic 14; Atlantic 8. Seventh innings. Athletic 9; Atlanta? nothing; Eighth innings. Athlet ic 5 ; Atlantic 1. Total. Athletic S7 t Atlantic 13. The battin- of the Athletic on the sixth, seventh and eighth innings was tremendous, and said to be the best ever witnessed in any previous match in ' tue country EBENSBURG FOUNDRY A .41 IX FULL, BLAST! NEW FIRM, NEWBUILDINGS, tic. HAVING purchased the well known EB EXSBUltG FOINDRY from Mr. Edw. Glare, auJ lebuilt aud enlarge! it almost en tire'y, beside refitiing it with new machinery, the i-ubscfibcrs a:e now prepared to furnish COOK, PARLOR 4- HEATING STO VES, of the latest and most approved patterns, THRESHING MACHINES. MILL GEAR ING, ROSE and WATER WHEELS of every deription, IRON FENCING, PLOUGHS and PLOUGH CASTINGS, and in fact al manner of articles manufactured in a firt cla3 Foundry. Job Work ot" all kind attended to promptly and done cheaply. The special attention of Farmers is invited to two newly patented PLOUGHS which we p08OM tbe sole riiit to manufacture and sell 11 tLis eounty, enc which are admitted to be tb beat ever introduced to the public. -believing ourselves capable of performing eny wotk iu our line in the moot satisfactory U-.iT.er, and knowing tht we can do work at lower paiccs toon have been charged in this oominurJty heretofore we confidently hope that we will be found worthy of liberal patronage. F.-ur reductions made to wholesale dealers. t3TThe highest pi ices paid in cash for old metal, or castings given io exchange. 0r TOiiMS ARE STRlCTLT CASH OR COCJTTRT reopucR. CONVERY. VINUOE & CO. Loensburg, Sept. "2, lfc68. fICENSE NOTICE. The following -i persons have filed petitions for Tavern and Eating House Licensed in the Clerk's Of fice of the Court of Qaarter Seiions of Cam bria oountr, which will be rH-p-.cn ted to tha Judges of said Court on tbe first Monday of -septemoer next : Tavern Samuel Kennedy, Johnstown Bor., 4th ward ; Joseph Shoop, Millville Borough. Eating House -Geo. Heuser and A. Krause, 3d ward, Johnstown Bor.; John Belzaer, Con. emaugh Eorough. Quarfc John C rouse, 3d ward. Johnstown. GEO. C. K. ZAHM, Clerk. Ebfloabrs, Aug, V), lS6S.-3t. ROHRER'S WILD CHERRY TONIC BITTERS ARE TRE BEST IN USE ! E MMS TOXIC BITTERS, The very best in the Market. R. E. SELLERS & CO., LYo. 45 WW St.. opposite St. Chatles IMeL ! Also, Eutrauce Xos. U2 & 1C4 Th:rd St., PITTSBURGH, PA ISPWboIesale Agents for the West. For le by A. and Ticinitv. A. BARKER, for Ehomburg je.ll.'Gd -It. The Last Grimm 5uess( PJISTO HAlKDRESSrM will quickly restore Gray Hair to its natural color and beauty, and produce luxuriant growth. It is perfectly harmless, and b preferred over every o:hcr preparation by those who have a fine head of hair, aa well as those who wish to rcitcrs it. The bea-aaful gloss and perfume imparted to the Hair make it desirable for old and young. For Sale by all I)rns?'. DEPOT, 19$ GREENWICH ST., T. PK.OMEDollR. HOOK FOR EVERY CITIZEN" A.ND ron TICaL STUDENT. WUuii bat no.., wi..i li u oomg, iU W lial It will lo. Bt Hon. HANSOM ii GILLiTT, FormrUpicn.'.er oi" Cu;ih fo.n S:. Liw. rtnce Co.. N. Y.; more rtve..tl.- KepUtntr '' o.'-eoor oi u e c o ur'irj Department, snl Solicitor for the untie 1 btates m the Court - of Ciaims, tic. ! Dedicated, by special permis-.iun. to Hon Ho- ratio S-.Y.--C--, an 1 written i.uJer ti e v!vk- aivi with the cor.eurrci.ee of IfiJins; leaw cratie Stitene. Ia one eieg:Hii volume, large l'Jmo. of orer 40il p es, bound in exir.i cloth, and eon:. ..:. splendid Pirtr.iits on steel, of Jelro.. .ind Jackson.. Friee. 00 II ided, po.-t p.i t anj- ptit of the United Statw on recei u$ jcic-tf . This admiraVe work contain n complete -n i spirited history of the Democratic p.utjr, frru its origin down to the present time. It depicU the devotion of the Denjocratior party to llie Constitution and the lnw, in a'.t the crises and cmerceneies of the country. It trices the conflict befaeeD Federali-iin an.t Democracy, and contends that the DeTJocr.-ttic pnrty has always been true to the Union, wlieih er disunion was threatened bv Northern Feder alists or Sou'hern Secessionist... It gives a history of every interesting incident and event in each ot the powtie.d punk. It gives em'uent'y inte: eating sLetoh.- of every Democratic Statemnn. The bock, in brief, is a vast roTerfr;ry of po litic 1 and historical facts, of pi'iiuiimi in'erest to every citizen, and of value to every po.itictau for reference. The athor' experience date far back ia ihe early portion of the century : l.e was au associate of Silas Wright ; he ei.joved thecon- l SJence and friendship ot Jai l sou. Van Biinrn, Polk, laylor, Fillmore, Piert-e, aoc lct.iii.m, and, probably belter thin any nun llirii g, fc acquainted with what the internal workings oi parties have been for the last fiity ye-srs. Agents wanted to sell this book in every part of the Union. Clubs and Democratic organi zations will tie suppliel at special rate. D. APPLETON Jfc Co.. Publishers. 90, 92 & 94 Grand Street, New Yerk. AMCIllCAX Anti-Incrustation Company's Office Ne. 147 Soith Focrih Street, PHILADELPHIA. TIIE AXTI-IXCRUSTATOll Will remove scales trotn STEAM P.OILERS and keep them cleas, reader the Biler less liable to EXFLOSIC-f, A.ND C At SING A GREAT SAV iio or FCtL. These Instrcmests ha.e been in scccessfito use during the last two yfar in many of tha large establishments of Philadelphia "and oth ex parts of the Unite t Suites, from which the MDfeT FLAITKRINO TFSTIMOM ALS Of their WON- dkkkci. 6.W1XQ ok fCEL axd labor have beeu received PARTIES having BOILERS would do well to call at the office and examine testing nials. etc. JOHN FAIiEIRA, Pres't- Ezra Lvkess, Sec y and Trea-s. ju.4. 3m. OHN C HOUSE, WH0LFSALE DEALEU IH FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINES 4.I nqioiis. BEST BRANDS OF BRAKDY, WEISK.T, IRISH WHISKY, GIN. &c. Ac. Xh very best qualified of Liquors, Wines, 4s., for Medical purposes. Prices LOW. SyHotcl sad Saloon keepers will do -well to give me call at my store on Canal street, in building formerly occupied by T. G. Stewart & Co. Johnstown, Aug. 27, 168. tf. GOOD, BETTER, BEST. The best and cheapest Tobacco and Cisara 13 to are at M. L. Oat-nan V Go aun see. i "