C T. 'B. 7 :CHASE, } VOL. - IX Business Cards: F. W. KNOX; • at:tin:HEN at 71.41 D, Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the Courts 111 Puttercoliwy, • ARTHUR ti. OLMSTED. gttortun&Teounsetor ataatu, i2onderspori, Pa., will attend to all business rntrasted lo his care, with promptness and unite—in the Temperauca Bloe4, up stairs, ijAin-st.eet, ISAAC BENSON • qttoritcp at Ealu,_ CoUDERsPORT, O:llce corner of West and Third street,, t. P. WILLISTON, aftgrnt•R at Rath, wegsboro', 'no g t Co., Pa., wi;l attend the 42uRrts t 4 roue!' and .Wkiean Counties. - A. F. VONZ, Attorney at Ran), Tiozl enTluty, l'a, willr eg o 4 r lti Attezal c•aulb.ur Yotter,r4wity, „luue 3, 1398. JOHN S. MANY, attoritrusjQ,"oittioclor at. ILAID, c ou Jer,po,:, irttead the -st..veraj I..!.surts ui retts r and :11 . K.-ats connfi.s. trseesseN, essts-ststs s.l ia care, ssiii rccri ce ',1 . 4).111rt a:1C.116.W ou nppw.ite the Com; t_ULII;USPORi' HOTEL oh! State prayer4otni4ed! VacWei hung (alarismire Such choice upon a people's tongue, it et P rt t F. Trt It . Such power to bless or bath t,r 4lain t.s7econd s :r ee :,,, Con- As that which makes il l y whisper Fete. 1 , -„ttor Co., Pa. 44. For wh:ch on thee the centuries wait, And destine; of men, W. K. KLZIG, urinv)r, 7raftsn:an, attar (tontiruz.rnrcr,; .3rh - ,01 Co., Pa.. :otend to 4a4iitti,-: for hothrer.itlent !ond •fers, reiewitab:e thruti. iteleretice. 4 g;reu if reps . :y.4. P. S. Jlapi of any part of the CG liuty made to order. - t -- H. J. OLMSTED, .Surinvor and Draftminalt, At the race of J. S. Mann. CQuilir,por, ABRAM TOUNG, Mattic- . lll;ritrr arc?! 3Jrlictrier. All work w.trranted. A o.ock of R'i'che: ' p.od lewe'ry iml-a!l4 firs do, Call at : f :ire of :Smith 41 Junes, Cozidur-yert, BENJAMIN RENNELS, = All ;roe: in big line. done to or4r and IVe:4ll..reet, below Th.rd Cendrr-port, Pe, SiJ I I - I %• JONES, I)P4‘ori ii/ Dty Groearie,i, Jy & UrJicutes, rain Fancy arie e-, Acc. Alain street; Caith r , por: ra JONES. MANN. & JON ES General Grocery and l'rovi ! iicin D e. ,, e , s _ A i 4 ay thy :lard Buo:i arai 41./ti %%ha,ever meta want to Loy. Maitt S.ree , i'ooder:por, D. E 0 L 11S Deier - at Dry Goods, Reidy-made Clothing. j t rocor;es, Crockery, LC. Coudersport, .1. W. SI.IITII, lloa!er awl intifac:iire of Till rapper, and .N:ain street, Civider,por:, l'a. MANN, Dealer in Books & •:_ilafionery, and oppnsiie N. W. ouriier plthe public square. Cuuderrport, Pa. A3IOS FRENCH, Physician S. Surgeon. East side 31ain-st , bar•'4th st., Coudersport, Pa. DAVID B. BRONV.N, • rotindrywan and Dealer in {'loughs. Lp per tuj til3lp,tl street, Coudersport I'a., JACKSON & SUIItit)3IAKEII, Deniers in Div Good:, CrocV.ry. and Re:idy-trade Clothing. Mani strovt, Cuu ! ersport, Pa. J.VIIENEY, • Herel 4 act Tailor, and Den!er in Reidy }n~da Clothing , oldie public square t.ouderspurl, 114; . A. B. GOODSELL, ,r2t. , ..N§,s9:7ll,couderspurs,p. Fire Anw. k.ituaritifirdtired and repaired at life shop, on Alien notice. March 3, 1648. • . . • J. W. HARPTAgi Fashionable Tailor. All Work egtrosted tp hig e3re will be done with neatness, t. nytnibr and durability, Shop over Lewis / 1 140 1 1'o Ears. ALLEGAINY HOUSE , SAMUEL, M. MILLS, Froprieto _ . On the W(4111 , 1118 road, seven nhilgs ?iorth of Coutisispera, Pi. " TIIE: . :: - :':P:--itOPLE:S' . ,::- -- Jt:UItNAL. THE -PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING Terin Advance One copy per annum, TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 square 10 lines 1 or 3 insertions. $ 1;50 Each subsequent insertion lass than 13 - '25 1 Square, 3 months, - . - • 2,50 1 " 6 months, . - • 3,50 1 " 9 months, - - - -5,00- 1 4 . 1 year, - . - - 6,V 0 Rule and figure work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3,00 Evert- subsequent insertion, 50 1 column, six months, 20,ti0 i 4. ' f i f + 9.00 A ~ . I' ~ 12.00 One-half column per ye it . . . 2:1,00 one column - - 35,00 Administrators' or Executors' Notices, ‘2,00 Auditors' notice. each, Silures Sales, per tract, - Marriage notices Death notices, each. Professionaknr - ifusinoss Cards, net exceeding sit lines. per year Merchants advertising by the year, not exceeding '2 squares. with occasion al notice:, (in all c.ises coolined to their bus:ness,) e the paper is sent to the dyer espeet.illy for reason of his n4iver:isetnent being in it, the rune will be ehurged'at the rune ,-($ 1 per noatn. 7 ... r — r All le!!er9 on bwinP:3, to secure at entpai. should Le addressed (pus: paid) to the undersigued. T. S. CHASE, Publisher. Etrtert Vamp. Acrotg the Alleghartian chain, \\ ith groauings front a land of pain. The west wind finds its way; Wi:d wailing from Missouri's flood, The crying ()filly children's Wood Is in thy cars to-day. A- unto thee, in Freedom's hours ... of;al,-est need, God gives the power fc To out, tar to To wound or heal, to blight or bless, icith fruitful tield or %wilderness, A. free home or a grave! more, tratiscendiog time and place, qukiiiitiou of the buluitn race.. J thine to sot , . e anew; And. treniblittr, dontant on thv breath, A thrill of cite ur pang of death ~hail reach the wide earth.throu,gh. Then :et thy Virtue match tba Crime, the :eve: of .he tithe ; And ira Non of thine fle'tray or tempt thee, Ilrmas like, For Etcher land and Freedom strike, , isju•itice gives 'tile sign Wake. s"etiper.•front thy drearr t.f ease, The great Occasion's forelock seize. And let the North-wind strong And _olden leaves of Aututnit be I he eurnnal of %ictory And thy trimnrhant song! The man who can read Cromwell's p•-rsonal history and private letters— who can mark hi•s conduct in the day of peril and in the hour of death—and still believe him to halo been nothing but an ambitious hypocrite, must have lost all faith in human nature. Crom well lea a happy home at-the age - of 7 13, unconscious ofany powers self hut those of a good farmer, to fight fur liberty and gospel faith—he and his boy Oliver, whose loss 4 went to his heart like a dagger," and whose me mory fired his charge, and saddened his victory at Marston-Moor, His life Lwas exposed, not only in every bath' e, but in every skirmish, for, what he be lieved to be t he cause of God ;and religion was the great source- of his adamantine courage and hi's univaver. iti4 decision. The hope which it kin dled, shone in him "like a pillar of fire" when hope was extinct in all' other men. It 'raised his• heroism,' sometimes; to Hebrew grantieur..-. What is the' sun of Austerlitz to the morning of Dunbar • -- - How could a hypocrite have formed the Ironsides Q It :was said of those men, that 'they , feared "God, and that they feared nothing besides and the first . Part: of the saying-was'true as the last. They were . not mere ranters and psalm-singers. They , 'sh'owed .their practical religion by religiOusly abstaining' from' all military license; even - iti'sdnquered , When they were disbawietl, from the'best of sol diers; theybecaine the best-of citizens, and peacefulli tlieir duty to God DEVOTED n) - THE PRINCIPLES. OF DEIIJCRACY, AND THE DISSEMINATION OF MORALITY, LITERATURE, AND NEWS. COUDERSPORT, POTTER.COUNTY, PA., OCT. 23, 1856. COM TO PENNSYLVANIA, ar J. G. WIIITT/XR, CEONW ELL. and their State ; while Jesuits, and strumpets, and infidel persecutors, trampled on the Protector's ashes and dishonored the Protector's throne. For the general cause Of -Protest I. - antism he did more than any man ex-. cept Luther—not by publishing prop agandist manifestdes, or threatening to-subvert foreign Government, Or holding out promises of universal brotherhood, to be followed by uni versal perfidy and pillage: but by a course:of policy at once energetic. and discreet, which made all the world feel that the protection of Protestantism Wai the first object of the greatest of nations. Had he succeeded in found ing a dynasty to 'carry out his tradi tions, the Edict of Nantes could never have been revoked, the hopes of free dom in Italy never could have been stifled, and Eurripe might hive been Protestant at this hour. What has damned Cromwell's memory is, not that he betrayed hiS cause, but that he served his cause too well. Perhaps if he had cruAled the liberty for which . his soldiers died. bad married a Span ish P,rineess, and. restored the Angli can as a tool of his political domination, Churchmen and To: ies would not have been found censori ous or unkind. 1.50 1,50 1,00 GO 5,00 10,00 In war, Cromwell was the. most merciful of soldiers; for in his earn paigns he always sought decisive bat tles, and his battles were soon .ended by a decisive charge. When Le com manded, the carnage was small, the resulti immense, and few brave men died by misery, pestilence or famine. His five great and decisive victories of larstorr, Naseby, Preston, Dunbar -a•rd Worcester, did not together cost near so marry lives as the hideous and froitleSs butchery of Borodino. He treatorwar, not as a science in which ... he was to show his skill, but as an ap. peal to human.- fortitude. which, for the sake of humanity, was to be tried ' w ithout delay. War under him,. was • far less savage than under other .c.rm manders of that time. His men al -1 ways spared the country, and almost al'' ays - gave quarter, even to those Aiello gave no quarter to them. The 1 s torm of Tredaeh :was the single noted: ex centi•or to his and their humanity. ‘"!Thaf bitteraress" he justified dn the ground that it had saved. as undoubt edly it did .ave, ranch effusion of blood in what would other wise have been*a len; a (2 e• desolatic war. We must rememl er g /too; th at' frightful atrocities had Irectintly been commit ted by Roma'i Cathrcs upon Prot-. estants,,botli in :Ireland and elsewhere. The blond. of Tredagh was a drop in the ocean of O'Neal's massacre or the sack of Mageburg. .That any' of peaceful inhabitants . ofDroglieda were put to the sword is a confuted calum ny. which NI. GuiZot ought not to have I reported. CromWell's political genius is ,a hackneyed theme of literary praise, 1 to which M. -Guizot adds the attest ation of a statesman. His reign is in deed the marvel of history. In every department, from our 'Navy arid our Commerce down to our Postal corn munications, we still feel his benefi cent energy, and pay homage to his shade. It was. not -his fa tilt that much wasleft to be done by the Parliament ary Reformers of the present . day. He es'ablished.our diplomacy on the soundest basis: and his own bearing •to foreign nations has been aped,:•but scarcely equalled. He dealt with the most difficult character's, from Maaa tin to the Anabaptists, with equal . and almost invariable success, - And we must Aay, in spite of trejudice, - that his administration was as• upright as itwas, able, He. steadily- promoted merit in the, public service, without regard: to . personal interests.. - He fix-, ed a high property - qualification for the sufferafte. though-his-own popular ity was .chiefly among the lower or. , ders. He put down the 1 4 evelers, most mercifully indeed,. but firmly;,, without . a - moment's hesitation. though ; at greatlrisk •to Iris. min' persone and: influence; and thereby, perhaps, saved English snciety_from areign gf , ,terror. , Considering the perils -and -"anxieties with which he was beset; his iOwers of concentration and' self-command must have been such as has•sehlorn been given to man... We must-add:id this, that his public .lifp begaw,at 14p. age when trething. be t genius is:young, and'thathe,reigned for ftVeYearS'oVer M a utinous - army andirehellioui pea; pie * with assassins' constantly seeking his fife, with his mother Availing ffrr terror in his, house, with armaments and enemies at his Council Board. Such well might be the greatest man that the English race couldproduce'in its most heroic;' though its saddest hour. •• . . •• • Cromwell's .grandeA visions, says M. Guizot, were bounded by his prac tical good sense. No higher praise can he given to a statesman. But his visions were limited also by his pat riotism. He was not the . man to un- dertake chimerical schemes of aggran- • dizement, and to sq.uander oceans of . blood and treasure, to gratify his own selfish and miserable pride. y Through his ambitior! no English citizen ever put,ou mourning. After 'Worcester be -was expected to puthimself at the head if some gi eat military enter prise, by a nation which expected.Armaged &ln and had not forgotten- CreSsy But after WOrcester. he sheathed his sword forever; he sought the etnpire of England on the sea, and gave the command and glory' into other, and those unfriendly .hands. First since the great Edward ho saw that our strength must rest, nit on con , quest abroad, but on the consolidation and union of the three kingdoms. Wp , have ratified his West Indian expedi tion by - retaining what.: be acquired, and even the r oot i n , on the Continent which he sought at Dunkirk, we may almost he said to have kept at Gibral tar. His quiet domestic court, and his solethn but modest state. were the true image of that prlicy of good sense, superior to vanity, which has been the mark -of all I ur greatest statesmen, and most of all of him. A id therefore he died qiumphatit. His People were subdued undet him. I His deign for restori rig the constitu tional' monarchy Was still advancing) against obstacles which he never tin-, derrated and before which he never ; Succumbed. Europe was at his feet. The thiings rf Cadiz and Tenetiffe were in his .eara, and the' laurels of I Worcester were untarnished brow. , He went down, 'as Mr. qar lyle says, like a summer son, as glori ously 'and as calmly. The one cloud ; that hung over bi. setting, was that of ; bereavement, not of failure. or fear. It is true that he so guarded his life. from Tt,yalistattd Prelatist assassins that no assas4n eVer' ap arnaehed his person ; it is not true tint the fear nr. assassination entered, into his soul. i But another"darer"ger" found its way ;- i In the stormiest and most perilous mo ments of his life he had watched over ) the welfare and the religions progress of his children with anxious andvin , ceaAng care. He declared that (unli t ing but the comfort he found in the Bible had saved his life when he lost • his eldest son. And his end was the crown, and in some sort, the reward of his affection ; after so many petits, he : died of grief at Lady Ciaypole's death, and of illness brought on_ by watching by her side.-- 7 -Loadon Times. A NEW MANNER OE SPEECH AT THE SOUTH One of'the most significant speeches delivered during the present Presiden tial canvass, was that addressed by the Hon. Jorux MINOR BOTTS, of Virginia, to the citizens of Ricmond, some few weekssince. It vave forth anew sound in the South, and the sound was a gond and wholesome one. It fell up.m the ear of that -t.reatllemocratic preacher of disunion, the Richmond. Enquirer, like the sound of a . trumpet, and must have produced a tingling sensation in . the' ears of the great disunion letter writer; Guy. Wray.. Mr. Burrs, spoke in obedience to the call ofliis fellow citizens, represented by the Executive Committee a the American Party of "the-State. We would cheerfully give place to the whole speech, but the crowded state of our columns confines us to a few extracts. 1- As a sort of pleasant introduction to the more iifterntablows he is abbot to give, Mr, Borrs,7;in the commence-• rhea of his speech; taps the • Democrat in'party on the head 'thus: "_All arauments are-thrown. away upoa those benighted, ignorant, and be sotted partisans who prefer party to country-; but if there are any here of file democratic partY - whose -minds are open to copviction, - - - and who prefer :heir country to their -party, - I.thiak that f may say that before Lhave c,Op :chided, if they will give me their at- . tentioic, 1 will ':how them that insteadi Of coining- forward with a boldness and liodacity, _defying. all. shame, sincriOg s that sweet syren song which we have, heard periodically for the last-twenty years, of "Help - uS to save the ilpinn; this democratic party'.WOnld how - their •headi in-shaine, and ask forgivetieta For the past, and more especially would .. . . they ask forgiveness of the South, and cinnati, arid they have fully endorsed . , like honest men and. patriiits, if there 1 the policy and measures of ilr.Pierce's ... . - was patriotism among them, they would Administaation, that has produced civil acknowledge their incapacity to . ad• war, that has sacrificed all_the Terri- minister the gever nmeot with credit tory ef the United States tci'the-cause to themselves or advantage to the o f t h e VreeSoilers,andthathisbrotight . country, and ask to he relieved of the -about a conditipaaif things in which - responsibilities resting upon them. Disunion is 1/1:1011yi threatened, in a , One can almost hear the sound of greater or less degree, in every Con this as it descends on the bold heads gressional Di - Strict -throughout the qui- . ted 'States. ' They-lave eadalied 'all .. - of the PIERCE and BUCHANAN Democ- their measures, and they have put their racy. One can quite - hear the blow I candidate, Mr. Bdcbanan .upon the - • which follows thus : . Platform, and be tells you that he - , stands not only upon that Platform, • " But I set out 'With the declaration but that he is no long.sr'Jamea Buchan that acco -ding to the hest convierions Buchan of my judgment; that Missouri Com- an, but merely the candidate of the Democraticparty. (Cheers and laugh- promise, at ,the timeand under the tiro ter.) W ell met, I avant to know lithe cumstance3 it was adopted, was for the peace of the country, for the interest i Democratic party can accomplish all of-the South 'and for t he perpetuity 4f I this' from the 4th, of March,.lSs3,.ta the Union, beyond all questions the i the 4th of March, 1556, how - much best and wi est measures that ever oh- longer it vi maid take them --to bring ~ . tabled the sanction of an American aboutanactualslissolutionofthe Union. . Congreis, (loud cheers,) and, that con- (Laughter.) . They have acCemelisk requently its repeal, With the consequtn- 1 ed more than three fOurths of. their ces and circumstances that have grown task already. Let this policy be put out of it, was the most wctnton, the most sued but a little longer, and the: Union • • Mischievous, and the most suicidal, and . is gone; and if anything can disiolve• the most unpardonable act that was ever the bonds of this Confederacy, it will committed by the .representatives of the be another Administration of this Dem- - people. ocratic party." • Mr. Borrs next enters on a full his- fa view of this breach of plighted tory of the Missouri- Compromise, faith, and its terrible conseqnences, - showing that it was introduced "not Mr. BUTTS ,endorses- Senator Sgvir:ard by the North, but by the South, pretty boldly and manfully, in the following much under the same circumstances, manner : . •: • . • • .however, that the repeal of the Mis- "You have .been told by Mr. Sew- • semi Compromise was introduced in ar .1 that the day-for compromise has ' 185.1. They selected a Northern man passed away• Mr. Seward is right. Blame him wife may. Saward is right. , . to introduce it, but it was first agreed The day for compromise has pulsed • upon : as a Seuthein ,measure, and it away, and has passed by the fiat of was passed by Southern votes—and Southern Democracy. Theyhavituld what was it that wasthus•agreed to by you they would have no more Compro• wise; they in the minority without the the South, and passed by the South. mwer to coral el; have said to It was not, as has been commonly N I 'unit in the majority, " wei'kvill have. said, a measure imposed upon the no more compromises ; compromises South by the North. It was proposed i are unconstitutional ; either yon or. we on the part of the South to the North, must control this Territory.:'. Th e " that if you will allow us—you bell , . i North said to them, " Gentlemen, we y have the powa . r to control, but we have .- in the Mhavinge control "majority, and thl no disposituin to control. This pies •-if you will permit us to carry slave- i tion has been harmoniously settled fur ry up to the line of 36 deg. 30 min., we i thirty odd years: all these disputed have been harmanitia sly set- wilt pledge ourselves not to attempt 1 rl'iesti"il'O !led ; let them-remain settled, accord 7 to carryslavery beyond 36 de0..30 min." I .s , in-' to the compromises that have been • Taking tliii position, .M r. Bur rs de- adopted." " No:" said the Sriuth. "we livered a blow at the South in this will stand by rro such compromises; • manner: co:npr °rinses are t inconstitntional ; you ' " Under the operation of that law, must have your way, or we will have to which the integrity arid honor of the our. " Very well," said the North, South was pledged, the South obtain- "if you are resolved upon that, and to , ed the admission of Missouri and Ar- present to us the broad issue of wheth kansas as Slave States, when it was in, er you, the - minority, or we, the ma- • the power of the North to have reject- Jerity. shall control, no alternative is . ed them. - They also obtained the ail- left—we must fight the question out." mission of Florida as a Slave. State, of On the Buckanan Ostend doctrine, Texas as a slave State, and never, while Mr. Botts is explicit. He saYS: - there was an elliortunity to make a . Slave State out Of Southern territory . " Whilst politicianS . may..be led 3n- - did- they dream that it was proper to to great errors, arid" yet be - excused, I ~ repeal that law. But when they had will say, that no man can offer an ex . - populated all their own Territories arid case fir Mr. Buchanan . for, eirgaging . ' obtained theadmission of all their Slave in that 0 itenil Confederance, by Which States, when theit was co necessity for he•proclaimertilie . principle there do it whatever, they attempted to rob the tided as one to be acted upon - by the No: th of its just due, and thereby dis- government orf the' United States-- honestly sacrificed the integrity and ' that might males right.' The high. • honor of the South, that were pledged j way robber and pirate's plea. tines not • to carry out, in good faith, the bargain f become a great man; and, if,M.r. Bu-, enter ed into. Bat I will sh iw byline chanan never committed:airy pther er -1 get through that it never was the ob- Iror, I say' his participation in that 05... . ject of this Dem. cratic Party to sane-. tend affair is - enough, lir itSelf, - te just': tion anything that would produce peace fy the people in beanaitig upon him the . , and harmony in thisciiuritry." scalar! their reprobation." , - . . While reciting, after the above -pre- Mt.-Botts concludes his speech.like - liminary, the circumstances, of the dis• a true patriot as follows•:;;I: - ' ' - ' turbance of the Missouri Compromise, . "With reg n-ri to the freauentthreats the blows of Mr. BUTTS on the Demo- r a-disunion, let me say the Union is ill cratic party become thicker and heavier, no danger of a dissolution. There are . and finally fell with sledge hammer but two ways of di 4 Solvingthe-t-Tnion ; force as follows : one is by revolution and ferce..which.• the strong atria of-'the geiieral gevera; Democratic party went w ill ' "I charge upon the 7) al ivairs'be . able trifitit.'ilOivre•: that by the disturbance of the 31;ssouri .and the other la•by a Co'fiventioiidfilfe . Compromise they hare not only sacrificed 'States that adopted - lb - a - constitution, the-integrity and honor of the 'South, r and flamed: the government . - of : , tireir • - pledged in good faith - to the Messouri I choice.' NeWitriper . eilitririiiiid ce , ) 3 3 - Compromise, but which pledge they rio- toad politicians ha Ve. ilk po iyer,to• di i..., lated rifler they had recce redfrom it all solve, Hudithere is uoiv,a.ad 'al,,.i';';' the bene:fit.they could , derive. 1 charge ,"well-.be d.hu,a•senso.erioeoi attar; ii ia • upon the Democratic party that they r conservitiveelementsqrf theeo - nntry • Itave :violated every pledge that was n o w -.engaged: iu - their% gaily ,avorsi-• made in the Convention that rominat- lions in the workeshop, ip:.the frilil,,. . ed Mr. Pierce--,-to resist any, and all iin the .faCtO • rie - 3,;.aiir in eVeri,itirsnit . • efforta, no matter when, wirereov by of life, riot Ireedino•ndr L daiirei fr.ii.ila whom made, io Congress or out of it,. c ry o f ~ we lt! % %N al , *iii i -•,,Ziai::o o - • to re-open the agitation of the Slavery ears have become .familiarized:p li4t -• question. . . who . will,,wheit . ecension, calislor...it: s • s • • • 'ri i_ • se up in their mighty:streggth. a-el ' • e I charge upon them _with exciti n g a trainple .under font these' noisy, mis- revolutionary and rebellious . spirit chiiAinistrialcontentsivlid make ' , eight throaghozit the limits of this broad land,- hithons'lWith their yells of di rib iii.ia ;, and that hiving taken-possession of the- -arid let me tell th. 6 m.that When •ihhy• government when all was peace, theyitft) ~.. attempt . rno bppt,er,63.lk3o:thab. it have brought,, us to that point when has yet barithreateaed, I, for one, threats of dissolution are heard in every Will meet 'thorn - at . ' Phillijap - i, l 'iaa on quarter of • the - land.- (Loud cheers.) that field . ' lt a fi * d ' .•• kneeling theywr • h Oa And now they come, as I said before, at no ether-altar than the altar of the," with that old deceptive syren song of U • I ' Union, wors npp urgat no othersbrino " Help 'usto save. the Union." ‘.• The than• at the, ah rine of the Ceustitutiem, - Union ran:retire:saved except lily the and fighting.under no_ other 13a_g:than Democratic party." (Loud . cheers.) the Stail 'and' 'stripes of the . linked They have had a Convention at Ci.r- States." . - . EDITOR S• =I Milli i. ( .1 OMB NO: 23" .1