THE HUNTINGDON GLOB DIi,MOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GEN ii,RAL SEWS, &C. are regularly rising to wealth. We have all, therefore, a common interest, as it is our common duty, to protect the rights of the la boring man ; and if I believed for a moment that this bill would prove injurious to him, it should meet my unqualified opposition. "Although this bill will not have as great an. influence as I could desire, yet, as far as it goes, it will benefit the laboring man as much, and probably more than any other class of society. What is it he ought most to desire ? Constant employment, regular wages, and uniform reasonable prices for the necessaries and comforts of life which he re quires. Now, sir, what has been his condi tion under' our system of expansions and con tractions ? lie has suffered more by them than any other class of society. The rate of his wages is fixed and known ; and they are the last to rise with the increasing expansions and the first to fall when the corresponding revulsion. occurs. He still continues to re ceive his dollar per day, whilst the price of every- article which he consumes, is rapidly rising. He is at length made to feel that, al though he nominally earns as much, or even more than he did formerly, yet, from the in creased price of all the necessaries of life, he cannot support his family. hence the strikes.for higher wages, and the uneasy and excited feelings which have at different peri ods, existed among the laboring classes.— But the expansion at length reaches the ex ploding point, and what does the laboring man now suffer? He is for a season thrown out of employment altogether. Our manu factures are suspended ; our public works are stopped ; our private enterprises of different kinds are abandoned ; and, whilst others are able to weather the storm, he can scarcely procure the means of bare subsistence. "Again, sir ; who, do you suppose held the greater part of the worthless paper of the one hundred and sixty-five broken banks to which I have referred ? Certainly it was not the keen and wary speculator, who snuffs danger from afar. If you were to make the search, you would find more broken bank notes in the cottages of the laboring poor than anywhere else. And these miserable shinplasters, where are they? After the re vulsion of 1837, laborers were glad to obtain employment on any terms; and they often received it upon the express condition that they should accept this worthless trash in payment. Sir, an entire suppression of all bank notes of a lower denomination than the value of one •week's wages of the laboring man is absolutely necessary for his protec tion. He ought always to receive his wages in gold and silver. Of all men on the earth, the laborer is most interested in having a sound and stable currency. "All other circumstances being equal, I agree with the Senator from Kentucky that that country is most prosperous where labor commands the highest wages. Ido not, how- ever, mean by the terms "highest wages," the greatest nominal amount. During the Revolutionary war, one day's work comman ded a hundred dollars of continental paper; but this would have scarcely purchased a breakfast. The more proper expression would be, to say that that country is most prosper ous where labor commands the greatest re ward; where one day's labor will procure not the greatest nominal amount of a deprecia ted currency, but most of the necessaries and comforts of life. If, therefore, you should, in some degree, reduce the nominal price paid for labor, by reducing the amount of your bank issues within reasonable and safe limits, and establishing a metallic basis for your paper circulation, would this injure the laborer ? Certainly not; because the price of all the necessaries and comforts of life are reduced in the same proportion, and he will be able to purchase more of them for one dol lar in a sound state of the currency, than he could have done, in the days of extravagant expansion, for a dollar and a quarter. So far from injuring, it will greatly benefit the laboring man. It will insure to him constant employment and regular prices, paid in a sound currency, which, of all things, he ought most to desire ; and it will save him from be ing involved in ruin by a recurrence of those periodical expansions and contractions of the currency, which have hitherto convulsed the country, , "lhis sound state of the currency will have another most happy effect upon the la boring man. He will receive his wages in gold. and silver; and this will induce him to lay up, for future use, such a portion of them as he can spare, after satisfying his immedi ate wants. This he will not do at present, because he knows not whether the trashwhich he is now compelled to receive as money, will continue to be of any value a week or a month hereafter. A knowledge of this fact tends to banish economy from his dwelling, and in duces him to expend all his wages as rapid ly as possible, lest they may become worth less .on his hands. "Sir, the laboring classes understand this subject perfectly. It is the hard-handed and firm-fisted men of the country on whom we must rely in the day of danger, who are the most friendly to the passage of this bill. It is they who are the most ardently in favor of infusing into the currency of the country a -very large amount of the precious metals. "The Senator has advanced another posi tion in which I am sorry I cannot agree with him. It is this; that a permanent high rate of interest is indicative of the prosperity of any country. Now, sir, a permanent high rate of interest is conclusive ,evidence of a scarcity of capital, and is indicative of any thing but prosperity. I think, therefore, it would puzzle him, with all his ingenuity, to establish his proposition. To render a coun try truly prosperous, capital and labor must be so .combined as each to receive a fair re ward. In England, when the rate of inter est was very high, the country was not at all in a flourishing condition; but as capital grad ually accumulated, and the rate of interest consequently sunk, she became more and more prosperous, though she did not reach her highest elevation until money yielded con siderable less than five per cent. But this subject is so little relevant to the question un der discussion, that it is scarcely necessary to pursue it. If it were, it would be easy to show that a high rate of interest, generally, if not universally, enter into direct conflict with the wages of labor, which the Senator is so anxious to maintain. .Suppose, for ex ample, that it required a capital of $20,000 to put and to preserve an iron manufactory in successful operation. In one country, the interest on this sum at ten per cent. would amount to $2,000 ; whilst in another it could be procured at four per cent., or $BOO. The difference would be $1,200 ; and, unless this amount can be saved either by a reduction in the wages of labor, or in some other man ner, the manufacturer who pays the higher rate of interest cannot endure the competi tion. A higher rate of interest almost al ways presses upon the wages of labor. "If the gentleman's theory be correct, Wall street must be a perfect paradise of prosper ity. There, the rate of interest for a long time has been permanently high, varying be tween two and four per cent. h month, or be tween twenty-four and forty-eight per cent. per annum. Post notes of the Bank of the United States have been discounted freely at two per cont. per month. ; With these facts before him, lilr. Jeffrey would not now de clare, as the Senator informs us he formerly did, that this country was the heaven of the poor man, and the hell of the rich.' lie might probably reverse the position, though it would be equally extravagant one way as the other. A country in which a rich man can realize from twenty-four to forty-eight per cent. for the money, would certainly be anything but a place of torment for him.— But what is the condition of a poor man in such a country? When capital commands such an extravagant interest to liquidate com mercial debts, it will no longer be used in the employment of labor; and hence, poor men must necessarily - be thrown out of em ployment. Such a condition is anything but a heaven for them." Condition of Affairs in Kansas—Official Correspondence, WAsnixoroN, Sept. s.—ln order to correct the false and exaggerated statements regard ing the condition of things in Kansas; and the acts and purposes of the Government of the United States, and to show the precise truths in both respects, the Union of to-mor row will publish the following and other in teresting correspondence : SECRETARY MARCY TO GOV. GEARY. DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHINGTON, Aug. 26, 1856. Sin:—The present condition of the Terri tory of Kansas renders your duties as Gov ernor highly responsible and delicate. In the instructions heretofore communicated to your predecessor, in February last ; in the annual message of the President to Congress, of the 24th of the previous December, and in the orders issued from the War Department, printed copies of which are herewith fur nished, you will find the policy of the Presi dent fully presented. It is, first, to maintain order and quiet in the Territory of Kansas; and second, if disturbances occur therein, to bring to punishment the offenders. Should the force which has been provided to attain these objects prove insufficient, you will promptly make known the fact to the Presi dent, that he may take such measures in re gard thereto as to him may seem to be de manded by the exigencies of the case. It is important that the .President should be kept well informed as to the state of things in , Kansas, and that the source of his informa tion should be such as to insure its accuracy. You are, therefore, directed by him to com municate constantly with the Department. Such facts as it is deemed important to have early known here, you will cause to be trans mitted by telegraph as well as by mail. The President indulges a hope that by your energy, impartiality and discretion, the tranquility of the Territory will be restored, and the persons and property of our citizens therein protected. 1 - am, sir, &c., W. L. MARCY, His Excellency John W. Geary, Governor of Kansas Territory. In a letter to the Department, dated Au gust 22d, Gen, Smith speaks of the exagger ations relative to the contemplated attacks, but says that, "on the assurance of both the Governor and Major Sedgwick, that there are 800 armed men now assembled at Law rence, who can be increased in twelve hours to 1200, and that it is expected they would attack and destroy the capitol of the Terri tory, Lecompton. I have ordered Lieutenant Johnston's Second Cavalry•to go there with all the troops at Fort Leavenworth, except a small company, and have ordered all the men from Fort Riley, except a small garrison, to the same place. I have sent down to have all the troops, recruits and others at Jeffer son barracks to be sent here, and will send them and arty companies of the Sixth regi ment that may arrive to reinforce the com mand on the Kansas if necessary. A large force may prevent any violence—a small one might tempt to the commission of it. Ile further says, I enclose also a commu nication from an fficer of the militia, on the western border of the Territory, showing how contradictory and inconsistent are the ac counts spread over the country, for the par ty that Lane brought from lowa, is on the northern border, and in Kansas at the same time. Col. Sumner's regiment cannot now mus ter 900 men, including a detachment under Lieut. Stewart's company on its way to Fort Lawrence, and a detachment under Lieut. Wheston, en route for Fort Kearney, with the Sioux prisoners. Lieut. Col. Cook's six companies have a little more than 100 horses. A letter from Governor Shannon to Gen. Smith, dated Lecompton, says that he had just returned from Lawrence, where lie had been with the view of procuring the release of nineteen prisoners that were taken,. lie saw in that place at least 800 men who mani fested a fixed purpose to demolish this town. lie remarks that he knew they intended an attack - , and that too very soon. It would seem that the business of "wiping out," as they term it, the pro-slavery party, had been commenced. Under these circumstances he requests Gen. Smith to send from the Fort all the disposable force. Major-General Smith, of the Kansas Mili tia, under date of August 10th, says to Gen. Smith: In addition to the extra herewith en closed, I had reeeived besides information that a state of Actual war existed in Douglas county, and that in other parts of the Terri tory, within this division, robberies and other flagrant violations of law are daily oc curring by armed bodies of men from the Northern States. In the absence of all in formation from the Governor of the Territo ry, I have taken the liberty of exercising the authority in'ine vested, in case of invasion, by ordering out the entire strength of my di vision, to rendezvous at various points of the division, to receive further orders. General Smith, in his instructions for. the officer in command of the detachment of the United States troops ordered to assemble in the neighborhood of Lecompton, on the re visition of the Governor to repress insurrec tion, concludes ;Is follows :—The General begs and directs you to avoid, as long as pos sible, any appeal to arms. Use every endeav or in your power, to bring those who are in opposition to the law, to a sense of their er ror. Especially avoid "small" conflicts, and consider the shedding of a fellow citizen's blood as the greatest evil that can happen, except the overthrow of law and right, which must end in civil war. But when the neces sity of action and the employment of force does unhappily arise, employ it at once with all the power and vigor at your command but continue it only until you have suppressed the insurrection, and then interfere to pre- - vent any cruelty from others. The Governor of the Territory should, if possible, take means to keep the prisoners arrested under his authority, and such as may hereafter be taken. Their custody embarrrasses the troops and diminishes their efficiency. SECRETARY MARCY TO GOY. GEARY. DEPARTMENT OF STATE, IVASRINGTON, Sept. 2, 1856. Sin:—Reliable information having reached the President that armed and organized bod ies of men, avowedly in rebellion against the territorial government, have concentrated in such numbers as to require additional mili tary force for their dispersion, you will have the militia of the territory completely enroll ed and organized, to the end that they may, on short notice, be brought into the service of the United States upon the requsition of the commandant of the Military Department in which Kansas is embraced, ,you will fur nish by companies, or regiments, or brigades, or divisions, such number and composition of troops as from time to time you may find, on his report to you, to be necessary for the sup pression of all combinations to resist the laws of the United States, too powerful to be sup pressed by the civil authority, and for the maintenance of public order and civil gov ernment in the Territory. W. L. MAucy. To His Excellency Alin TV. Geary, Governor of the Territory of Kansas, Lecompton. Secretary Davis to Gen. Smith, under date of September 3d, says :—" Your dispatch of the 22d of August and enclosures, sufficient ly exhibit the inadequacy of the force under your command, to perform the duties which have been devolved upon you, in the present unhappy condition of Kansas, by the orders and instructions heretofore communicated.— To meet this exigency, the President has di rected. the Governor of the Territory to com plete the enrollment and organization of the militia, as you will find fully set forth in the enclosed copy of a letter addressed to him by the Secretary of State, and the President has directed me to say to you that you are au thorized herewith to make requisitions upon the Governor for such militia force as you may require to enable you promptly and suc cessfully to execute our orders and suppress the insurrection against the government of the Territory of Kansas, and under the cir cumstances heretofore set forth in your in structions, to give the requisite aid to the of ficers of the civil government, who may be obstructed in due execution of the law.— Should you not be able to derive from the mil itia of Kansas an adequate force for these purposes, such an additional number of mili tia as may be necessary will be drawn from the States of Illinois and Kentucky, as shown in the requisition, a copy of which is enclos ed. The views contained in your instructions to the officers commanding the troops, under date of Aug. 10th, are fully approved and accord so entirely with the purposes of the Executive, as to leave but little to add in re lation to the course which it is intended you should pursue. The position of the insur gents as shown by your letter and its enclos ures is that of open rebellion against the laws and the Constitutional authorities, with such manifestation of purpose to spread devasta tion over the land as no longer justifies any further hesitation or indulgence. To you as to every soldier, whose habitual feeling is to protect the citizens of his own country and only to use his arms against the public ene my it cannot be otherwise than deeply pain ful to be brought into conflict with any por tion of his fellow countrymen ; but patriotism and humanity alike require that rebellion should be promptly crushed, and the perpe tration of the crimes which now disturb the peace and security of the good people of the Territory of Kansas should be effectually checked, you will, therefore, energetically employ all the means within your reach to restore the supremacy of the law, always en deavoring to carry out the present purpose to prevent the unnecessary effusion of blood.— In making your requisition for the militia force, you will be governed by the existing organizations of the army, and the laws made and provided in such cases. When compa nies, regiments, brigades or divisions are pre sented to be mustered into service of the Uni ted. States, you will cause them, before they are received into the service, to be minutely inspected by An officer of your command ap pointed for the purpose. Secretary Jefferson Davis, under date of September 3d, in the requisition to the Gov ernor of Kentucky and Illinois, says: "'To suppress insurrectionary combinations against the constituted government of the Territory of Kansas, and to enforce the due execution of the law, I am instructed by the President of the United States to invoke this, his requi sition upon you for two regiments of foot mil itia, to be furnished to Major-General P. F. Smith, of the United States Army, command ing the Military Department of the West, whenever the exigencies of the public ser vice shall induce him to call upon you for said troops, to be employed for the purposes above indicated, within the limits of said Territory. Other documents of minor importance will be included in the publication. Who are the Ruffians in Kansas? We publish the following letter, as the most effectual and conclusive answer that can be given to the momentous question that stands at the head of this article. The wri ter is well known in -this State as a gentle man of honor and unimpeachable integrity, and his statements can be relied upon with unhesitating confidence. If the startling facts which he narrates do not startle those who are aiding and abetting treason and civ il war, then we are nearer a frightful abyss than we had imagined. We commend what follows to the careful consideration of every patriot in the land: INDEPENDEXCE, MO., Aug. 27, 1850. DEAR arrived here yesterday en route for .New Mexico; and having leisure on my hands, will give sonic account of the ex isting difficulties in Kansas. 'This unfortu nate Territory had remained in a state of comparative quiet until the entrance of Lane and his regiment, when disorder and civil war were again renewed. The first that was known of the coming of these free-hooters, for their conduct shows them to be such, was noticed in the Chicago papers near a month ago to that effect ; and they were next heard of at Fort des Moines, in lowa ; thence they marched for the Mis souri river, which they struck in the vicinity of St. Joseph. When they arrived at the latter point, they were said to be in quite a starving condition, much dissatisfied, and that they were disbanding rapidly, and not much attention was paid to them; but it is now thought they placed these reports in cir culation to deceive the inhabitants of the Ter ritory as to their true object. They number ed from 500 to 600 men, and were well arm ed. Before they entered the Territory they sent word to the Governor that they wished to, enter as bona fide settlers and not as an armed force; after which they came into the Territory, and marched to Lawrence in par ties of twenty and thirty men, where-they organized. Their first act was to take a has ty enumeration of the inhabitants of the counties of Douglas and Franklin, to see how they stood upon the question of slavery; af ter which Lane's men went to the farms and houses of the settlers, and told the Pro-Sla very and conservative meal that they must declare themselves in favor of Free State measures, or leave the Territory. They im mediately commenced committing outrages upon those who refused to comply with their demands, such as driving the families from their homes, stealing the horses and guns, and sometimes money. Among others, they drove a settler, named Davis, from his home, near the town of Franklin, who was overta ken on the road with his family, by a party of some twenty-five of Lane's men, who made a young man, in company with Davis, dis mount from his horse, which they took and rode away. They overtook another settler, named Muir, when they took the horses from his wagon, leaving himself, wife and children in the road, with no means of reaching their friends, except on foot. One family had to fly from their house in the night, naked, in which condition they sought safety and shel-. ter in Missouri. Their next aggressive movement was upon the settlers at Hickory Point, whom they drove away, and burnt some houses, not more than two or three. They then moved upon Franklin, which they attacked early in the morning. There were only twenty-five or thirty men in the place, who defended theta, selves for three hours, and until the enemy were bringing a piece of cannon to bear upon them, when they retreated, with the loss of six Free State men killed, and one or two wounded. They burnt two or three houses, took all the arms they could find, including a piece of cannon taken at Lawrence last spring. They then attacked the house of Col. Titus, where some twenty settlers had assembled for mutual defence, who defended themselves until the Free State men brought their cannon to bear upon them, when they surrendered with the loss of one man killed, and another wounded. A small party of Lane's men missed their way, and were cap tured by some of the settlers from Lecomp, ton, whom the Governor exchanged for those taken at Col. Titus' house, and the piece of cannon. The free State men now moved up, on Lecompton and told the inhabitants that after they should get through at Topeka, whither they marched, they would come back and regulate them; but they did not return, nor can I learn of their doing any damage at Topeka. Lane's whole force numbers near fifteen hundred men, whom Im has distributed as follows ; Between two and three hundred, under Brown, are at Ossawatomie, or Sugar Grove, where they have surrounded 65 pro slavery men; and when Brown told that he had come down expressly to regulate that portion of the Territory, one of the pro-sla very men attempted to escape, and come into Missouri, when they took his horse, and thus cut off his retreat, except on foot. Brown is a man of notorious bad character, and is said to have been a robber in his day. lie was formerly from Illinois, but of late hails from Missouri. The main body of the free State men is under Lane, at Lawrence, and num ber near a thousand strong, and are entrench ing themselves. He has also stationed three small parties at as many points on the Mis souri river, in lowa, to keep open their com munication for provisions and men, and also to assist them in case of retreat. Yesterday the acting Governor of Kansas issued his proclamation, declaring the Terri tory in a state of insurrection, and &ling upon the militia to turn out in defence of life and property. lie also requested assistance from - Forts Riley and Leavenworth, which will probably not be rendered under existing orders. The militia of the Territory have turned out in considerable numbers, and a detachment under Richardson have marched to thelower line,to intercept any reinforcements that may lac coming in, and also to disperse the parties left on the river. The flying set. tiers of Kansas have appealed to their fath ers, sons, and brothers, in Missouri, to come to their rescue, and protect them from the Free State freebooters ; and they have respon ded in considerable force. At this time about fifteen hundred men, under Atchison, Doni phan, Reed, Majors and others, are encamp ed at New Santa Fe, on the western frontier of Missouri, twenty miles from this place.— It is their present intention to cut off the re treat of Brown, when the main body will move down upon him, at Sugar Grove, and give him fight—after which a force of some two thousand men will march upon Lawrence,. The Free State men at Lawrence are said to be almost in a starving condition, and that they made application toGeneral Smith for provisions,who refused to supply them. I have earned, while writing, that the set tlers on Pottowattamie creek, some sixty-five in number, who had assembled together for mutual protection, were attacked to-day by Brown, when several were killed, and about forty ent'off, but it is not known what has be come of them. The settlers from that region are all coming in, and some of them are al most naked, having to make their escape in the night. I have no time for comment.- The above items you may rely upon as cor rect, as I have obtained them from men.of undoubted responsibility, and who have nev er been engaged in the difficulties in Kansas. I will write again before I leave. Listen to the Mechanics A large gathering of the persons lately employed at the United States Armory, at Springfield, Mass., was held in that town on Thursday last, to take into consideration their situation, having been thrown out of employment in consequence of the Black Re publicans having failed to pass the Appro priation Bill. Several able and eloquent speeches were made, and the following res olutions were adopted unanimously 1. Resolved, That in the opinion of this meeting, the suspension of operations at the United States Armory, is due to the action of the so called Republican majority in the House of Representatives of the United States. 2. Resolved, That the action of that major ity is unprecedented in the history of this Government; that it is revolutionary and an archial ; and calls for the earnest reprobation of every conservative citizen of the country of whatever party. 3. Resolved: That the Senate has again proved itself to. be the bulwark of the consti tutional rights of the several co-ordinate bran ches of the government, and vindicated the wisdom of the founders of our republic. 4. Resolved, That the refusal of the so called Republicans of the house to pass the Senate bill for the abrogation of the uncon stitutional laws of Kansas, and their deter mination to stop the wheels of government, in order to force upon the Senate their ob noxious proviso, prove beyond a doubt that there is no sincerity in their professions ; that their object is to compass personal or party ends ; and that for those ends they are -wil ling to sacrifice the best interests of their constituents and jeopard the existence of the government itself. 5. Resolved, That in the sudden loss of the means of supporting ourselves and our fami lies, we recognize the legitimate effect of the passion and recklessness which control the present House of Representatives. 7. Resolved, That we are convinced that there is no safety either for the public inter est or for private rights, to be expected, ex cept from a return to the principles and prac tice of the earlier days of the republic ; and that under this conviction we call, earnestly and sincerely upon all good, true, conserva tive, sober-minded citizens of all parties to unite, and not only banish bigotry and pas sion from the halls of legislation, but, if pos sible, to wipe out from the records of our country all traces of their baneful action. The Adjournment of Congress—The Army Bill Passed—The Constitution Triumph ant—The Presideflt Vindicated—:-The Fall of the Conspirators--The Evil One in the Dust. Every announcement we here make is true, and will carry a thrill of joy to the remotest parts of the Union. The Army bill passed this evening by a majority of four votes. The conspirators ate utterly broken down. The constitution is saved, revolution is rebuked, and the course of the President vindicated. It is not only a total change of the aspect which was be fore us, but it may be received as an unques tionable assurance of the final overthrow of the enemies of our institutions. Never, in our history, has there been a more anxious time. Each particular element of the occa sion has been, in turn, the subject of discus sion. When Congress first met, for the extra ses sion, there were some of our friends who doubted the wisdom of the policy pursued by the President. It was a doubt expressed in the best terms of faith and confidence, and therefore, springing from the right spirit, was removed. Oar enemies were un measured in their abuse and denunciations of the President; but guided by a sense of duty, he had acted as a patriot ought to do, and summoned Congress back to the dis charge of the high trust committed to them by their constituents. A factious majority of Black Republicans, varying from one to three, had steadily refused to vote for the ar my appropriation bill except with an ;uncon stitutional and arbitrary proviso. In the face of all these discouraging circumstances, the President met the crisis, and we owe our pre sent triumph to his firmness and his sagaci ty, It reminds us of the truth, that from the first assembling of Congress in December un til the hour in which we write, his civil path way has been lined with brilliant triumphs. He began by rebuking conspirators, and he has closed by a signal triumph over their fall. These are recorded honors which will live in the grateful hearts of his countrymen. But let us advert for a moment to the state . of the case which was before us. The House of Representatives had no more right to usurp the whole legislative power, and dictate to the Senate and the Executive in the exercise of their respective duties, than the Senate had to imitate such a pernicious and danger ous example, or the executive to assume the one-man power, and attempt to Co7ll7lland both. Let us inquire, for a single moment, what might be the effect of these pretensions on the part of the House. We know, for in stance, that it is quite possible there may be, in the progress of the life of the nation, a majority of one in the House for four ses sions ; but if it were so for only two, the ex ample is sufficient for the illustration. Let us suppose, in consecutive sessions, then, that majority of one should be exerted with the same obstinacy, and with a like evil purpose as now, to refuse supplies for the support of the government, how could we continue its ex istence? Would not revolution and anarchy follow? Is it possible, therefore, we can predicate government upon such .an abs,ur dity ? lf tine had written a constitution expressly prescribing such a rule of power, could it be preserved for ten years? or even for four?— By no possible wisdom or prudence which has ever been known of the human family. Man must become more perfect than he ever has been before he can be trusted with such absolute and uncontrollable power. That ma jority of one in the House, which might thus become so absolute, would certainly aspire to the supreme abuse, both of the one-man power and of the one-house power. It would be precisely the example before us. It has had, for the present, so far, but a fitful and temporary reign. It is, nevertheless, now, the one-house power, with all its evil por tents, which has passed away. If we had submitted to it, our government would have been revolntionized, and our republic des troyed. No argument lies against the truth of 'this conclusion. But we turn from this view of the subject to apart only of the other mischiefs, which would have followed by their locking up fif teen millions of the public treasure ji•om, 'l:2*- C2(1(16011, That is about the sum for the sup port of the army which the conspirators had determined shoidd lie uselessly in the treas ury. That fifteen millions would probably pay, in the progress of its numerous changes, if put into motion, one hundred millions of private debts ; and the circle of its direction would administer to the comforts and neces sities of several millions of people. In the list of its beneficiaries, besides the soldier, are to be found all the classes of our social system, from the farmer to the mechanic, the laborer, the artisan, the man of science, the lawyer, the preacher, the printer, the mer chant, and the trader. It is such classes and such interests, equally various and impor tant, embracing all the pursuits of mental and physical enterprise, which they haVe had the senseless and criminal hardihood to attack. The notorious licentiousness of their un constitutional triumph over the vital interests of those people, for weeks,past, is only equal led by the dangers they would have entailed upon their country, and the shame they would have brought upon its good name in the pres ence of the civilized world. They will go W. 11. W. D. The End of the Struggle. [From the Washington Union, of Saturday Evening.} dowisto posterity cursed in more ways than. one. Usually the mistakes or the offences of a party incur only such degrees of guilt as are applied to it as a body, which are lost upon the individuals of it at its dissolution. But such is the deep disgrace, and the vast and, perilous Consequences of what they would have done against the welfare of the repub lic, that the sal of condemnation is not on ly fixed upon them in their voluntary and of ficial association, but through all their future lives, each one of them will stand, by the public judgment of their country, attainted in his person. They may please themselves with the thought that they have escaped the rigors- of the law by being entitled, as legis lators, according to parliamentary rules, to the infamy of perpetrating the worst of trea son. But they may be assured they will never escape the present verdict of their con stituents, nor the just judgment of posterity. They have done what Satan did to Paradise. They have entered in and. betrayed its peace; and like him, after his crime, their sentence will be, for the remainder of their days, to crawl in the political dust, and to seek to do mischief by the lowest invisible means. It is well under such circumstances, that they have already begun to harden their hearts, because that worm which never dies will, for the evil which they have done, enter into their consciences, and their ears will finally hear from every patriot the terrible rebuke, Get thee behind me, Satan I—their political existence will have had a short du ration, and, saving the making of "a good thing" out of some committee, will have the slightest possible consolation left. Consid ering, it is thought, that they have always made money a condition precedent to any of their political acts of personal kindness or public utility, it would be quite a blunder with them to forget the inimitable fiction of the Devil and Torn Walker. They will find it in the classic pages of Washington Irving. He tells us that the ambitious Tom had made a compact with the Evil One, and suc ceeded to the last, as he thought, in all his projects. He had chests full of money and of mortgages. He had ground down the poor. lie had deprived the laborer of his wages. He had ruined the rich, and set his neighbors at war with each other; and the village where he lived, which had once been ' peaceful, ho had made a hell upon earth. But, at length, when his term was out, he was snddenly kidnapped by his master, and disappeared from the scene. His friends, who administered upon his effects, found. that his silver was dross and dirt, and his mortgages were ashes. And the whole peo ! plc said amen ! As certain as there is a heaven above, the same doom awaits the par- ty who have been conspiring in the House against the country. They have made a like compact. Their time is nearly up. Their sudden prosperity will perish, their gold will be gone, and their political power will soon be 'nothing but dust and ashes. It is all, emphatically, the devil's own. The parallel will bear quite a minute tracing. He made his instrument plunder the poor and the laborer. They have, by their legis lation, tried to deprive the mechanic of his wages, and his wife and her children of their bread. Ife obtained mortgages against 'the people. They have endeavored to enforce a mortgage upon the Executive, and get into their own hands the entire power of the State. He set the neighbors at war with each other, It has been the endeavor of all their pres'ent public life to have the blood of a brother shed in Kansas by the hand of a brother. He had changed a beauteous village, where peace and happiness reigned, into a scene of strifes, anarchy, and rank offences. They have already embroiled the passions of the people of a great nation and now aim at the total destruction of its social order and politi cal security. The likeness, we think, is per fect, and a plain and honest man would be lieve, if they had one 'moiion of kindness or patriotism left, they would be startled at the contemplation of their own terrible work of iniquity. Their sin has found theM out, and will pass beyond the generation in which they are. It will go down—down—with the memory of their defeat. Time, distance, and tradition - will blacken their conspiracy with a deeper shame because it dishonored the most enlightened century, and the most Christian country of the world. Democratic Conference The Democratic Congressional Conference of the 38th Congressional District of Penna., met pursuant to notice, at the Exchange Hotel, in Johnstown, Cambria County, on Friday, the sth day of September. On motion of H. Orlady of Huntingdon, Isaac Hugus, of Somerset, was appointed President, and P. Gallaher of Blair, Sec'y. The fopowing Conferees presented their credentials and took their seats. Blair--Jon, D. Lcet, Wm. G. Murray and. P. Gallaher. Cambria—H. A. Boggs, Wm. Palmer and Wm. A. Murray. Huntingdon—Wm. Lewis, H. Orlady. Somerset--A. H. Colfroth, John 0. Kim mel, Isaac Hugus. On motion of H. Orlady, the Conferees from Huntingdon were allowed to cast three votes, one of their number being unavoidably detained from attending the Conference. -On motion, the Conference do now proceed to nominate a candidate for Congress. Win. G. Murray of Blair, nominated Cyrus L. Pershinc , ,Esq., of Cambria. A. H. Coffroth, 6 of Somerset, nominated Win. J. Baer, of Somerset. On motion, the nominations closed. FIRST BALLOT. C. L. Pershing, SECOND BALLOT Q. L. Pershing, THIRD BALLOT. C. L. Pershing, 6 W. J. Baer, 6 Mr. Coffroth withdrew the name of Mr. Baer. FOURTH BALLOT. Cyrus - L. Pershing, On motion of Mr. Boggs, a committee of three was appointed by the chair; to notify Mr. Pershing of his unanimous nomination, as the Democratic candidate for Congress in this district. Chair appointed Messrs. Boggs, Lewis and Coffroth said Committee. In a short time the Committee returned with Mr. Pershing, who thanked the Confer ence in a handsome manner for the honor conferred upon him. Mr. Baer, G. N. Smith, Orlady, Leet and lino-us ' being severally called upon delivered shat addresses, they spoke of the prospects of the Democracy in their counties, and gave assurance that the Democracy throughout the District would poll the heaviest vote this Fall on record. After returning thanks to the officers, mine host and hostess of the Exchange, the Conference adjourned SINE DIE with three times three for the National Democracy and. its candidates. ( Signed by the Officers.) 6 I W. J. Baer, 6 1 W. J. Baer, 12 votes