ebt fantasia 3lntelligenter " I . . : SANDERSON.. Associsits. LANCASTER, PA., MARCH 10, 1863 spe. L M. PriSSMILi k 00:8 AIMOMISING Afilfdar, M Park Bow, New York City, and 10 State 'Lest, Boston. 8. M. Parfet= & Oct., are Agents far The Zesscarter Istellipencer, and the mut Influential and basest cheat'. Keg Newspe. In the United States and the Cluntdan , — They are a torised to contract for no at our lowed rates &Or Marmot & AMOTT, No. 335 Broadway, New York, are authorised to receive advertisements for The Intel2f ' gamer, at our lowest rates. Atir Jesse Winunwa's dovisruenro AMNOT is located at N 0.50 North sth street, Philadelphia. He le authorised to receive advertisements and subscriptions for The Lancaster" 1 11 Naas, No.l Scolley's Building, bowl Bt., Boston, L our authorised Agent for receiving advertisements, &c. WV. B. nuns, the American Newspaper Agent, N. E. corner Fifth and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, is authorised to receive ombecrlptions and advertisements for this paper, at our lowest rates. His receipts will be re. girded as payments. ° OUR FLAG_ Now oar flag Is flung to the wild winds free, Let it float o'er our father land, And the guard of Its spotless fame shall be Columbia's chosen band. "CLING TO THE CONSTITUTION, AS THE SHIPWRECKED MARINER CLINGS TO THE LAST PLANK, WHEN NIGHT AND THE TEMPEST CLOSE AROUND HIMP-DANIEL WEBSTER. TO THE •DEMOCRAC.Y OF THE CITY AND - COUNTY OF LANCASTER. In pursuance of authority given the undersigned by a resolution at a meeting of the Democratic County Corn. mittee, held on Thursday the sth inst., you are requested to assemble in the several Wards of the City, Boroughs and Townships of the County, on SATURDAY, 21st day of MARCH, to elect not lima than three, nor more than five delegates, to represent such district in a general County Convention ; to be held on WEDNESDAY, 25th day of MARCH, at 11 o'clock, A. M., atFulton Hall, in the City of Lancaster, for the purpose of electing six delegates to represent the Democracy of the County of Lancaster in the coming State Convention, to be held at Harrisburg, on Wednesday, 17th day oS.June next Also in'accordance with a resolution adopted, and in pursuance of the same authority, the Chairman would most earnestly recommend to the Townships and Boroughs of the County, to effect a thorough and convenient organi. zatlon, by the formation of Democratic Clubs in their several districts. By the established usage of the party the several die• tricta will each nominate one person to serve as a member of. the County Committee for the ensuing political year, and also nominate Ward, Borough and Township Com mittees, being particular to designate their names in their respective credentials to the ensuing County Convention. R. B. TdRUDY, Chairman. A. J. STEISINATI, Secretary. LIIICASTEII, Match 6th, 1863 Delinquents Razeed. We have given notice from time to time, for the last three or four months, of our determination, as a matter of necessity, to strike from our list all delinquent subscribers to, THE INTELLIGENCER. We have al ready erased a number of names, and shall continue the process from week to week until we have the job completed. Those who have not received the paper for several weeks, or who may not receive it hereafter, will know the reason. Delinquents who are able to pay, but who neglect or refuse to square up their accounts, will have costs added from and after the first of April. At the present enormous price of white paper we cannot any longer afford to furnish the printed sheet "free gratis for nothing." This is our ultimatum, and no further indulgence can or will be granted ; nor would it be fair to our paying subscribers, nor just to ourselves, that mom time should be given. The Delegate Elections It will be seen by the proceedings of the County Committee that Sat urday, the 21st inst., is fixed upon for the delegate elections, and Wed nesday, the 25th, for the assembing of the County Convention, to ap point delegates to represent Lancas ter county in the ensuing State Con vention. At the same time the names of persons to compose the County and Township Committees will be handed in, and the prelim inary steps taken for a thorough or ganization of the Democratic party in Lancaster county. In view of the great issues of the day, and the vast responsibilities which are de volving upon the people, if they would save the Union from the hands of the spoilers North and South, we hope every Democrat and every conservative man in the coun ty will attend the primary meetings on Saturday week, and elect such men as delegates who will fearlessly and faithfully reflect their sentiments in the County Convention. The Conscription Bill. The Conscription has now become a law, and therefore the people may as well prepare for its enforcement. To say nothing , of its sweeping ob literation of State rights, and its concentration of all the military power of the country in the hands of the President, there is one other feature in the bill which we consider decidedly objectionable—we allude to the commutation provision. It will be seen from this that the bill will raise an army exclusively of poor men, who will be compelled to leave their families for the field, whilst the rich will be exempted from service by the payment of the comparative ly small sum of $3OO. This will, of course, yield the Government an enormous amount of revenue, but the hardships and perils of actual service that will have to be under gone by the working classes will be vastly more burdensome than the payment of the re-Venue by the rich. It is well enough to have some pro vision for the payment of an ex emption, for many can do the coun try more service by paying an equiva lent in money than by taking the field; but it ought to be equable, so' that the military burdens shall fall upon all classes alike, and the com mutation provision be graded in pro portion to their means of paythent. As it is, the law will prove unfair and an instrument of oppression— the poor must, of necessity, go to war, and the rich will go scot free. MR. BUORALEWS LETTER. We direct the attention of our readers to the letter o f Senator Bucumsw,-on our first page. It has the ring of the true metal in it, and merits a careful reading. . The "Union Leagtie."i This is the new name the 'oppo nents of Democracy have assumed to cover up their Abolitionism and all the other heresies of the so-called Republican party. They had a meeting a week ago last evening at Cooper's Hotel, in this city, l and ofganized by electing officers, &c., as follows : President—Dr. F. A. Muhlenberg. Vice Presidents—Thos. E. Franklin, Benj. Champneys, Wm. B. Fordney, Gottlieb Setter, Peter McConorny, C. Hager, James M. Hop kins, George Martin. Standing Committee—Dr. Patrick Cassidy, Jacob B. Amwake, S. W. P. Boyd, Geo. M. Kline, Johh J. Cochran, Amos Henderson, Peter Martin, John Sheaffer, John M. Kelly. Treasurer—Rudolph F. Ranch. Corresponding Secretary.-James L. Rey nolds. Recording Secretary—Amos Slaymaker. The officers were unanimously elected, and Judge Hayes, and Mr. Cochran appointed a committee to inform Dr. Muhlenburg of his election. On Motion of Thomas E. Frank lin, Esq., the following preamble and resolutions were unanimouslradopt ed : FUNDAMENTAL ARTICLES The undersigned agree to associate under the name of " TEE UNION LEAGUE or LAN CASTER," and to adopt the following funda mental Articles of Association, to wit : 1. The condition of membership shall be unqualified loyalty to the Government of the United States, and unwavering support to its efforts for the suppression of the Rebellion. 2. The primary object of the Association shall be to discountenance and rebuke, by moral and social influences, all disloyalty to the Federal Government; and to that end the associators will use every proper means, in public and private. These " fundamental " articles, which are to be the supreme law of the Association, are, first: Unqualified loyalty to the Government, which means, if it has any meaning at all, a full endorsement of all the public plunder, illegal and arbitrary arrests and imprisonments, the suspension of the great writ of habeas corpus, the freeing of the negroes of the South at the cost of the tax-payers, the arming of the negroes and plac ing them on an equality with the white race, and all the other mon strosities of the last two years.— Secondly : The primary, or leading object of the Association is avowed to be to discountenance and rebuke, by "moral and social influences," all disloyalty to the Federal Govern ment ; and to that end the associa tors will use every proper [and im proper] means, in public and private. In other words, and this is the plain English of it, they discard all social intercourse with Democrats, which, of course, includes business inter course—for we take it that where there is no social intercourse between parties, there can be no business transactions either. And they are going to carry out this resolve both in public and private. If they cannot injure a Democrat in his business and social relations publicly, they bind themselves to do it privately; or, to use a common expression, they will, assassin -like, stab in the dark where they are afraid to do it openly and in the light of day. This is Know-Nothingism revived and in tensified. We ask the Democrats of this city and county to mark these men, and all who connect themselves with such an organization and subscribe to such principles. If these exclu sives and would-be Aristocrats can live without the Democrats in.a so cial and business point of view, we suppose the Democrats will have to try to get along without them. We do not believe that the Republicans as a body can sanction such princi ples, nor can we believe that all the gentlemen whose names are men tioned above will endorse them ; but, be that as it may, wherever and to what extent it is done, let the Demo crats take note of it and pay them back with interest. We have pro fessional and business men enough in our own party to attend to all our wants, and therefore need be under no necessity of seeking business or social relations with men who avow such infamous doctrines as their standard of faith and practice. pip= The readers of the filth sheet in South Queen street must be a gullible set of people if they believe the " cock pad bull " stories pub lished in its columns of Thursday and Friday evening last—the first in reference to a colloquy said to have taken place a day or two before on the street between a prominent coun try Democrat and the Mayor; the second in relation to the conduct of the Mayor and certain rowdy boys in Chesnut street, on Thursday evening. These stories contain a very small grain of truth, covered up with a huge mountain of unmiti gated falsehoods and misrepresenta tions. This is all the reply we have at present to make to the base and infamous scoundrel who penned these malignant, unprovoked and unjustifiable attacks upon us. A man who would be guilty of com mitting the high crime of forgery to cheat a poor woman out of her hon est dues, cannot be expected to have any compunctions of conscience about slandering his neighbor. The next time we may have occasion to notice the scurvy fellow, we shall do so by publishing a certified transcript (now in our possession) of a Docket Entry in the Quarter Sessions of Dauphin county, of August Sessions, 1847, in relation to a little business transaction in which this pink of hone!ty was engaged. When this is done it will open the eyes of the good people of Lancaster city and county, and they will then see, in its true light, the character of this self-constituted censor of morals, and know where to place him for the fu ture. AO GRANGE At a meeting of the Democratic State Cen tral Committee, 27 members being present, held in Philadelphia on Saturday evening last, a motion to change the time for - holding the State Convention was disagreed to. The Convention will therefore be held at the time originally fixed, the 17th of June. SPRING ELECTION.—The election of Town ship and Borough officers, will be held on Friday, the 20th of March. The choice of thesO officers is a matter of grave importance, and should be carefully considered. Let our Democratic friends take efficient steps to do their duty at - these elections. STATE /ELECTIONS. The New Hampshire election takes plaoe today—the Conneotient and Rhode Island elections on the let of April. A Few Words in Reply. Two weeks ago we copied an arti cle from the Pottsville Standard, without note or comment, as a com pliment tothe Reverend gentleman who is the subject of•the notice. A few days thereafter he was in this city, and in the course of the week, it would appear that he paid a visit to Mr. GEIST, whether; to do penance or not we do not pretend to say.— But certain it is that he called upon him, and the result was the follow ing article in the Express of Satur day the 28th ultimo: «A PATRIOTIC CLRRGYBIAN." We notice that among the religious intelli gence in oar local column, it is announced that Rev. J. FRANCIS MEREDITH, late of the Army of the Potomac, will preach in the Duke street Methodist Church to-morrow evening. This gentleman is a brother I f the Pastor of that church, and moreover, happens to be the "patriotic clergyman," whose prin ciples were so grossly misrepresented in the Intelligencer of last ,weeE, in the following article copied from a Copperhead journal of Pottsville: "A Patriotic Clergyman: Rev. John F. Meredith, Chaplain of the 50th Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers, preached two ser mons in Minersville on Sunday last, in which he took occasion to give his audience his views on the manner in which the war has been conducted. Mr. Meredith has had ample opportunity of, observing the evil effects of the policy adopted by the abolition administra tion, and does not hesitate to speak his mind fully and freely on all subjects connected with the war. The removal of General McClellan he regards as one of the most suicidal acts that could have been committed. Mr. M. went to the war a thorough-going Republican, and we are glad to know that he has detected the hypocrisy of the abolitionists, who have arrogated tt themselves virtues which they do not possess." Mr. MEREDITH IS now on a visit to his broth er in this city, and we had the pleasure of forming his acquaintance to-day. We there fore. know, personally, that the above is a gross misrepresentation of his views and prin ciples. We have always regarded the present worthy and patriotic pastor of the Duke street Church as being as thoroughly loyal and earnest a supporter of the GovernMent in its present policy for crushing the rebellion as the most loyal man could desire ; but his brother, who is the subject of the foregoing extract, is, if possible, " more so," and if any one doubts it, they should see and hear for themselves. The Pottsville Journal of Satur day, however, in replying to the Copperhead slander, thus authoritatively defines Mr. MEREDITH'S position : "This gentleman, who is Chaplain, of the Fiftieth Regiment, P. V., Col. B. C. Christ, yields to none in warm support of the Ad— ministration in its policy for crushing this hell-born rebellion. Mr. Meredith admires Gen. McClellan as a soldier and a man. He also pays the highest compliment to Cal. Christ, who is an able, attentive and kind officer, much beloved by the men of his com mand. To a man like Mr. Meredith it is un• doubtedly somewhat. annoying to have his sentiments misrepresented, as they were by the Copperhead organ of this Vorough in its last issue. We are authorized to state that the remarks attributed to him by the smut machine as having been delivered while preaching in Minersville recently, are utterly untrue. Mr. Meredith is a strong friend of the Government, and heartily endorses the President's Emancipation Proclamation. To give our readers some idea of Mr. Meredith's real sentiments, we will state that he preached recently in his brother-in-law's church in Tamaqua, and in the course of his earnest, eloquent address, t; said, in allusion to leaving this county to enter the service, " I went away branded as a black abolitionist. I come back more so." So much for the Copperhead organ's veracity in the matter. The infamous lying character of that sheet is so thoroughly appreciated in this community that the libel upon a respectable minister is hardly worth the space we devote to its refutation; but we make it in justice to Mr. Meredith and in order that not a single person may be de ceived in this matter." But the Pottsville Stand2rd is not disposed to let the Reverend gentle man, and his Abolition organ of Schuylkill county, off so easily. Ac cordingly, in its issue of Saturday week, we have the following rejoinder to the Journal, which will speak for itself: REP. JOHN F. MEREDITH.—The Viper and black snake organ of this Borough, a paper known only for its infamous mendacity and its gross violations of all the decencies and proprieties of life, has had the unblushing impudence to attempt to deny the truth of the statements made by us in relation to the ser mons preached by the Rev. John F. Meredith, at Minersville, on Sunday, February Bth, 1863. The editor of the viper and black snake organ, says that he is authorized to state that the remarks attributed to Mr. Mere dith, are utterly false. Who his author is, he has carefully concealed from the public. In speaking of the sermons of Mr. Meredith, we did so in general terms, and did not pre tend to give the language used by him on those occasions. We are authorized how ever by some of the most respectable citizens of Minersville to say that Mr. Meredith said much more, and used much stronger language than that which appeared in the Democratic Standard. He said in substance that When Gen. McClellan was removed, the heart was taken from the army of the Potomac, and the only way to restore that heart to the army was to restore General McClellan to the com mand. He further said that he believed that the President was honest, but he had very bad surroundings. Halleck and Stanton were spoken of in a contemptuous manner. The" Emancipation Proclamation he could endorse as an oct of humanity, but as a military measure he was not prepared to venture an opinion. We have also been informed by a gentleman, who ought to know Mr. Mere dith's views in relation to the war, that he (Mr. Meredith) does not endorse the emanci pation proclamation as a military measure; and also that he shed tears over the removal of General McClellan. The statement of the Viper and black snake organ is a tissue of lies from the beginning to the end, with the exception perhaps of the remarks made by Mr. M. at Tamaqua. If Mr. Meredith thinks that he has been misrepresented by us, why does be not come out over his own signature and deny the truth of our statement? Then we should feel called upon to make use of such evidence as has been placed in our pos session. We despise duplicity. The issue is now fairly made up, and if Mr. Meredith comes off second best in the controversy between the Pottsville papers, it is his own fault, not ours. He has chosen to step into the arena of politics, and has caused an onslaught to be made upon us, through his honest and veracious friend of the Express, with out any provocation on our part.— Had he called upon us we should cheerfully have consented to place him right on the record; but as he did not see proper to do so, but pre ferred making his confession else where, he will have to put up with the consequences. If he has return ed from the army more of a black Abolitionist than he was when he went away, and his Pottsville defender puts that language in his mouth, then all we have to say is that Lan caster city is not the place for such doctrine to be proclaimed from the pulpit, whatever may be the case in Tamaqua. We have a high esteem for a Min ister who, in the spirit of his Divine Master, preaches the gospel and that only ; but we entertain the most sovereign contempt for any one who will convert the pulpit into a politi cal rostrum for the purpose of belch ing forth his insane and impractica ble ideas on the subject of African slavery, and other kindred subjects whicl , enter so largely into the heated pi gal discussions of the day. A clergyman has a right to be either an Abolitionist or a Democrat, but he has no right to take advantage of his position to make known his po litical sentiments from the pulpit. We.have made these few remarks not out of any personal hostility to. Mr. MEREDITH, nor because we deem his opinions on the war of any moment one way or the other, but simply to place ourself right on the record, and to answer a vile and uncalled for attack which, we have good reason for believing, was prompted by ,that gentleman him self. If we are wrong in our belief we shall take pleasure, when con vinced of it, in making the amende honorable; but not until then. W hen struck at unjustly, we are very apt to strike the aggressor back, be he minister or layman. RESTORATION OF THE UNION " A majority of the people of the rebel States would doubtless gladly assent to a res toration of ' the Union as it was ;' but the Richmond despotism has already told us that it will do nothing of the sort."—.New York Tribune, Feb. 12. The Abolition papers have for months been singing the song that the people of the South ern States did not and would not consent to a restoration of the Union in no event—that for nothing but a recognition of the Southern Confederacy, as a separate government, would they consent to a peace or close the war. In this, the Tribune confesses that its party was playing its characteristic game of deception, phich they have constantly played since this conflict commenced. The great oracle of the Administration party at length blunders into the truth, and declares that a majority of the people of the Rebel States would doubtless gladly assent to a restoration of " the Union as it was;" which it and its coadjutors in Abolition fanaticism would consider aYgreat calamity. They admit that they do not want the Union restored as it was ; they want it forever dissolved, unless the black race is placed on a social and political equality with the white; they want no Union where white men are equal one with another ; they don't want the Union restored unless the doctrine of State rights, and the right of the people to govern themselves, in their own way, is °bro_ gated, and the country governed upon the bigoted fanatical theory of New England Puritanism, and their love for the negro is on the hypothesis that they can always control the black votes to carry the elections in their favor and thus perpetuate their power. The Tribune's side issue that the " Rich mond despotism has told us that it will do nothing of the sort," has nothing to do with the subject. The majority of the people of the Southern States must take care of their own despotism. This they would be able to have done long ago if it had not been for the aid that " despotism" has consrantly been receiving from the administration at Wash ington, and the radicals of the north. It is the people of the Southern States that the people of the North have to deal with. It is the people of both sections that must negotiate and restore the Union if it is ever restored at all. Neither the despotism at Richmond or at Washington will ever do it, or ever bring either section again to that state of peace, pros perity and happiness the country once enjoyed, when the will of the people was respected,bsr its rulers. Neither despotism reflects 'the sentiment of the majority of the people of the two sections. The people are sick and tired of this war. They do not believe it can res tore the Union, or come to any good result.— The Southern people are weary of drafts and conscriptions. The Northerners are weary of the same thing, and are oppressed with high taxes. • They are alarmed at our depreciated currency. They are sick of paying twenty five cents per yard for calico, fifty cents for brown muslin, and similar increased prices for everything they consume in family use.— They want to see sugar, coffee, tea and other groceries once more brought within reach of the poor, who cannot now afford them at war prices. They want to see the loved ones now in the army, and about whom they are so anxious, restored to the family fireside. .They want the Union restored as it was, not as Lincoln or Jeff. Davis—not as the Abolition ists or Southern traitors would restore it, but upon the basis of the Constitution, under which we so long lived and prospered. Let the people act, North and South, and they will do it in spite of all the despotisms on earth. SCUTT vs. ➢IcCLELLAN The Abolitionists, in their anxiety to dam age the fair reputation of Gen. MCCLELLAN, have published a letter written by Gen. SCOTT to the War Department, dated October 4th, 1861, in which he complains that Gen. Mc- CLELLAN did not advise him of the arrival, number and distribution of his troops, and that he was in the habit of communicating with the President, Secretary of War, and other officers of the Government direct, instead of making him (Gen. Scorr) the channel of communication. This letter received no at tention from the War Department at the time it was written, and for very good and sufficient reasons. It was notorious that Gen. SCOTT'S son-in-law and private Secretary, Captain H. L. SCOTT, who had his father-in-law's entire confidence, and who was advised by him of all the important movements of the Federal army was a sympathizer with the rebels, and stron , ly suspected of holding secret correspondenee with them. The plans of General McCLELLAN which belied submitted to Gen. SCOTT, were revealed to the enemy, and according to Gen. SCOTT'S own statement he had not communi cated them to any one save his private Secre tary, H. L. SCOTT. Indeed, the circumstantial evidence against Captain SCOTT was so strong that the old General deemed it advisable to take his son in-law to Europe where be will probably remain 'until the war is over. That was the reason why General McCLELLAN did not make General SCOTT the medium of com munication with the War Department, and his course was doubtless approved by the President and Secretary of War. DECLINE IN GOLD The adjournment and expiration of the late Abolition Congress, has had the effect to re duce the price of Gold from seventy per cent. down to fifty. This fall in the price of Gold is clearly traceable to the fact that the monied men of our large cities, have always regarded the Abolitionists as dangerous and fanatical men, whose object has been to carry out their sectional views at the expense of our Republican institutions. Capitalists and business men were afraid to trust the Aboli tionists - of the late Congress. This one fact speaks louder than language can express. It shows that the business men of the country, have settled down into the belief that if the rebellion is to be suppressed and the Union restored, it will have to be done by the Demo cratic party. The decline in Gold is proof positive of the fact. No better evidence is needed of the patriotism and loyalty of the Democratic party, than the fact that the accession of the Democrats to power in the lower House of Congress, has had such a favorable effect upon the money market. We hope the Abolitionists will make a note of this fact. LOCAL DEPARTIdENT. A GLIIRIOI7B DEMONSTRATION—ORGANIZA TION OF THE DEMOCRATIC CENTRAL CLUB OP THE CITY RID COUNTY or Leactorru--;The meeting of the Democracy in the large hall (second floor) of Reed, McOrann & Co's Banking House, on Wednesday evening last, was a glorl• on, demonstration. The hall was crowded, ea well as the antechamber end stairway leading thereto. with the nn. flinching and unconquerab'e Democracy of this city. A little after 7 o'clock the meeting was called to order by HENRY C. Winn. Deci , upon whose motion Dr. HENRY CARPENTER was called to the chair; and upon motion of W. W. Blows, Esq , ALFRED SANDERSON was appointed Setae tart'. The object or the meeting was briefly stated by the President on taking the chair. H. B. Swoon. Esq., then arose and moved that a com mittee of five he appointed to report permanent Officers for the Club, abich wee adopted. Committee—Messrs. H. B. Swarr, George W. Brows, Henry C. Went; John H. Ref gart and Dr. D. McCormick. The committee then retired for consultation. R. R. Tenon, of Litiz. moved that a committee of five be, appointed to draft a Constitution and By-Laws for the goiernment of the Club—the committee to report at the next meeting. Adopted. Committee—Messrs B. IL Teludy, IA H. Reynolds, W. W. Brown, Capt. John Wise and A. Z. Rtngwalt. . During the absence of the former committee B. H. MIT- CoLna, , was called upon to address the meeting. Mr. H. briefly responded in a happy and eloquent manner, ex toeing himself from making any extended remarks on ac count of the soreness of his throat- The committee then returned, and through Mr. Swazis, Chairman, reported the following officers: President Gosi. ISAAC E. RIESTER. Vice Presidents : Dr. Hinny CORPLNEES. S. W. Ward, ADAM Thom., N. W. Ward, Joint DEANER, S. E. Ward, Ms.toris, N.E. Ward. Treasurer: Gen. GEORGE N. STEINMAN. Recording Secretary dIFILED A.LNDERSON. Cbrresponding Secretaries: • R. R. 'Dintruz, Caeauts E. Wscirz, City. The report was unanimously adopted, and greeted with much applause. The same gentlemen were also appointed a committee to inform the officers above named of their election. Mayor SLNDZILSON, who was in the back part of the hall, was loudly called for, and came forward to the platform and briefly addressed the meeting. His allusions to the Union League were appropriate and to the point, and his remarks throughout created great enthusiasm. H. B. SWAIM, Esq., was called out and briefly respmded. He paid his respects in the right style to the principles enunciated by the stecalled Union (I) League of this city. His remarks were greeted with great applause. Capt. Joint Wigs was neat called for, and responded in his usual happy style, making the fur fly from the backs and the wool from the top of the heads of the Nock-snakes and nigger -hinds. The Captain was warmly applauded. Dr. CARPLIVITA closed the speaking with a few happy, eloquent and well-timed remarks, which were well received by the'meering. Mr. Alizarin= PATTON moved that a committee be ap pointed to congratulate the Democracy of Trenton, New Jersey, then assembled in mass meeting, on the demise of the 37th Congress, and also on the recent municipal vk. tories in New York. The motion was adopted amid much applause, and the following committee appointed Messrs. Alexander Patton, H. B. Swart' Bernard. McGrann, Col. John Rankin and William Cox. The committee sent the following despatch at 9 o'clock, P. M, by telegraph: "The Democratic Central Club of the City and County of Lancaster congratulate the Democracy of Trenton, N. J., in mass meeting assembled, on the demise of the 37th Congress, and also on the recent municipal victories In New York." The despatch was sent to Judge NAAR, the gallant and veteran editor of the Trenton True .American, and the fol lowing reply by telegraph was received on Thursday "The Democrats of Trenton to the Democratic Central Club of the City and County of Lancaster, Greeting May the fate of the 37th Congress be that of all other ene mies of the Constitution and Union, viz Political death and oblivion." The Club adjourned, with three rousing cheers for the Union and the Constitution, to meet on Thursday evening next, at 7 o'clock, at the same place—the hall having been rented and fitted up expressly as a reading room and for the meetings of the Club. Among the prominent Democrats present on this occa sion was our glorious old friend, Col. JOHN RANKIN, former ly of title city, now of Williamsport. The Colonel wan warmly welcomed by hie old friends, and invited to take seat on the platform. "CROW, CHAPMAN, CROW!"—A GOOD OMEN. —On Tuesday afternoon last, whilst Mr HENRY WILHELM, Janitor, and several other gentlemen were engaged in fit ting up the hall of the Democratic Central Club, a Rooster (belonging to a Democratic lady) deliberately walked into the building, up the stairway. into the hell and up to the platform, and there flapped hie wings and crowed! He staid there for about an hour, in the meabwhile crowing several times, and then as deliberately left. Surely, a good omen! The ball was properly christened. Lturreay.—The British Quarters Reviews and Blackwood, reprinted in New York by Leonard Scott & Co., have been so often noticed in oar columns that we need scarcely add an additional word as to their merits. The London, Edinburgh, Westminster and North British Quarterly Reviews. and Blackwood's Monthly Magazine, are the known and acknowledged fountains of English literature. They represent incidentally all the political and religions opinions of all the people of Great 'Britain, and are of authority there and here as to the literary ability of the authors of the World. It is through the pages of these able periodicals that all the great English writers have first appeared before the public—Walter Scott, Macaulay, Lockhart, D'lsraell, and the long array of names con nected with the literary glory of England. We direct at tention to the advertisement of L. Scutt 8, Co.. in to-day's paper. It will be observed that they will continue to sup ply the re-prints at old prices, notwithstanding the ex, infant cost ofpaper, to alt who pay before the first of April next, This is a very liberal offer, and should induce many to subscribe for the seri. of Foreign Periodicals, who have never taken them heretofore. Goose FO Alma —The March number of this superb Magrsiue is ahead of all competitors. It opens with one of the most beautiful engravings ever presented in any Magazine. entitled, "The Expected Letter." Then follows fashion plates. patterns, etc. Godey to.day stands at the head of Magazinedom in America. It has reached a point of excellence which defies all rivals, and we cannot well understand how any lady, who wish to keep well inform. od upon all matters pertaining to dress, to., can well do without the Lady's Bonk Terms, $3 per year in advance. Address L A. Liodey, Philadelphia, Pa. DEMOCRATIC PURPOSES " THE FEDERAL UNION—IT MUST AND SHALL BE PRESERVED."—Andrew Jackson. "WE MUST PRESERVE OUR LIBERTIES OR PERISH IN THE LAST DlTCH. " —Andrew Jackson. The above words of the Patriot and Hero. ANDREW JACKSON, describe the whole end and aim of the Democracy every where in their present struggle with the hosts of abolition disunionism. The Union is in danger both from rebels in arms and their allies who con trol the policy of the administration, and both must be put down or that Union will be destroyed. Our liberties are menaced by the men in power at Washington, and they must be rebuked by the people and induced to change their course and policy, or we shall cease to be freemen. To the preservation of the Union and of our liberties the efforts of the Democracy are devoted; and in this great and glorious cause they invite the aid and co operation of every patriotic citizen. Every true friend of his country and every man worthy of the name of freeman cordially con cure in the above noble sentiments of JACK soN ; but it is not enough that they concur in them, they must do something towards car rying them into effect. There is but one way to do that. It can be done only through the ballot-box ; and much may thus be done. A 'Democratic victory next October in Pennsyl. vania will do more towards preserving our liberties than has been done by all the fight ing of the war. And if the glorious old JACKSON was now alive, we have no doubt be would say so. We must preserve our Union and our liberties by and through the ballot-box. There every man can do his part and exert his proper influence. Now is the time to strike an effective blow for the Union let no true lover of his country fail to do his duty. REIGN OF TERROR--GOOD ADVICE The Abolition press, secure, as it fancies, under the military protection of Abraham the First, indulges, says the Harrisburg Patriot, at times in most diabolical threats against those who refuse to bow the knee to the idol of its party. Very often it holds before our eyes the prison and the gallows to deter us from a'free expression of sentiment. Nay, it has even threatened extermination, to drench the gutters of the Capital with Democratic blood ; and in this city the very negroes have pledged themselves to aid their white Aboli tion brethren in massacreing those whom they are pleased to designate as Northern traitors and secession sympathizers. The New York Times, one of the most venemone of the species, has recently been threatening to play the Robesperian game with the unter rifted of New York, who refuse to cry " long live the King." Thereupon the Express, in a very cool manner, volunteers the following excellent advice, which the coadjutors of the Times outside New York, as well as in it, will do well to profit by : " If the editor of the Times has in contem plation any imitation here of the French cut throat guillotine models, we would advise him, first, to make his peace with God, strong and sure, and next, to insure his establishment against all the perils of war in the richest of fice in the city. The Faubourg St. Antoine here is Danocratic. Forty thousand majority ' of the ' Hage Paws,' in sound of the City Hall bell, now protect the majesty of liberty, on this side of the river alone." THE CONSCRIPTION It is a notable fact that all the Abolitionists who are loudest in their laudations of the con scription act are either over age or have got money enough to purchase exemption! These are the patriots who are getting up "Union Leagues" to crush the Constitution, prevent a re-union on the old basis, and establish a despotism on the ruins of our republican in stitutions. Let them be marked and re membered. For Tbelntelligeneer. THANK GOD: FOR THE FOURTH OF MARCH, 1883. Mamas Enrralts: Never was there a more devout thank God! uttered than was raised from thousands upon thous. ands of patriotic and honest hearts within the borders of the Northern States, as when the light of Heaven dawned upon the 9th of March. 1883. On that day the Thirty- Seventh Congress explied, and with it the power of a party which for the last two years has been dragging the country at lightning speed into bankruptcy and ruin. The em bodiment of all the corruption and infamy, which has no- cumulated from the birth of the party until It. found Its grave in the bosom of the mighty past, the last Congress Mss written for itself a page in the history of na ti ons which will carry to the latest posterity the conviction that in it culminated all the elements of rottenness, political chicanery, sectional, fanatical tom-foolery, and infatuated Abolition iniquity that the country was capable of pro di:lring. or that could find birth or position In the mind of m•n. The sad condition of our beloved country at this moment is principally attributable to the faithiessnees and corrup tion of the Republican party, in and through its President, its Senators and its Congressmen. From the day that gave it an organic existence, until the present hour, it bee lived and breathed a mass of deception and perfidy. Its whole life and ultimate success rested In its duplicity, for in a fair, open avowal -of its principles and purposes it never mold have mustered a corporal's guard to its sup port as a party. Its very name is a monstrous fraud, for, if honesty had been an element In Its formation, Its leaders would have given it the title of the Abolition party, and in an open, manly contest would have sought its sun. cess upon its merits, and not under the guise of a National name, for sectional purposes. For the lest two years the Republican party has exer cised the full powers of the Government, and In no gov ernment, upon earth has there been the same amount of corruptien, reckless legislation, and disregard for the power of the Constitution and the will of the people as upon the part of the present Administration and the Con gress that has just closed. And as a consequence of their ruthless conduct, the country is loaded with a mass of corrupt legislation, which it will be found exceedingly difficult to put into practical force, or if such can be ac complished, it never can reach the end for which it was ostensibly designed. By reason of the change which has been made in the object of the war, there has been what they regard as a "decay of patriotic sentiment," and as manifest withhold. lag of the means necessary to subdue the rebellion—and thus it bas been shown that the legislation referred to is a necessity. This is an adroit stroke of policy, and designed no dcubt to extricate them from the maze of difficulty their conduct might have thrown around them without such excuse. But with the people the matter !tends differently. The silence maintained is not an ac quiescence or quiet submission to their perfidy and politi cal charlantry; but the enormity and boldness of their conduct in the face of the Constitution, and in-the midst of a free and patriotic people, has caused public sentiment to stand aghast, and to be stricken almost dumb with amazement at the presumption and impertinence of the powers that be. Two years ago an Emancipation Proclamation a Negro Soldier bill, and a Conscription bill, which practically ig nores the Constitutions and laws of the several States, would have called down upon upon those now ire power such a torrent of universal anathemas as would have hurl ed them from power. Now, however, after having schooled the country into a tact submission to their acts, they can find it perfectly convenient to pass bills not only of the character of such as above enumerated,. but others fully as offensive and of a character equally pernicious and de structive to the true interests of the country. Atjhe commencement of the war the rebellion was held in such utter contempt by the Administration that it re fused to exchange prisoners, lest by that act It would be obliged to acknowledge the Confederacy as a belligerent power. The cartel of exchange since arranged has evinced a great change in its policy, and now it holds precisely the position it then indignantly repelled. Then the prevailing sentiment North was that the lettere of marque and reprisal issued by Jefferson Davis was a monstrous crime, and that the privateers sent out by each letters were pirates, and their crews and offi cers when arrested were tried and convicted as pirates - -Now they can feel a safety and comfort in passing bills in Congress authorizing the President to issue letters of marque and reprisal, the very thing for which they held such holy horror in the beginning. The proclamations of Fremont in the West, Hunter and Phelps in the South, freeing the slaves of men who were in arms against the authority of the Government, and the report of Cameron, while Secretary of War, recommending the arming of the slaves for the suppression of the rebel. lion. called down upon the Administration such an ava lanche of public indignation that it became necessary to remove two of the offenders and to issue a counter procla mation upon the part of the other. Now a sweeping pro. denotation, reaching as far as the rebellion itself, covering far more ground than all the others pat together, and usurping the very same powers, setting at defiance the very earns public sentiment, and outraging all the guar antees of the Constitution, can be issued by the man who then appeared alarmed at the rapid pulsation of the public heart, as it swelled with indignation and rage at such ruthless disregard for the very elements of life and pros perity, and the very cornerstone of - our great Republic as it was laid by the founders of the Government. Congress, too, with the same nonchalance, can feel it perfectly safe and proper to make soldiers of the negro, arm him to the teeth, and even encourage him to deeds of the most horrible barbarities, notwithstanding the pres sure in the Northern States which hurled Cameron from, power for simply recommending such a course. Then the thought of a draft was an outrage upon the courage and patriotism of the people, and the conscription resorted to in the South was a monst rous! piece of tyranny, characteristic of the despotic tendency of the "slave oli garchy" of the South. Now the Republicans, who rem posed a majority of the Congress which has just expired, can force upon the people a bill containing every offensive feature of lbst in operation in the Southern Confederacy, and, in addition, delegates to the President not only all the powers constitutionally belonging to Congress and the Judiciary, but invests him with supreme control over the laws and Constitutions of the States, thereby annulling States' rights and the organic principles upon which they hold a government pent - Mar to themselves, and for their own cl:re.tir direction and safety. - . . . hut why ell this change ? How is it that In two short yeas every principle upon which we stood in oar common nationality as a great Republican Government has been subv.rted and dragged into the whirlpool, which Is rapidly carts ing,,is into ilia dark chambers of a hopeless despot ism' If the party now in power had started out with the avowed purpose of dissolving the Union, and destroying th,, Government, what steps could they have taken more effectually to accomplish that object, end effect that result than those they have token Have the sentiments of the people changed in regard to the practicability of self-government, or the powers of the Constitution to reach and control every principle upon which our Government was founded, that they thus eu• pinely slumber upon the very threshold of national rein, and b Israte a full development of the conduct of men who ha, been laboring for twenty years for the overthrow of our republican institutions, in order to wipe out t,l3e slave power and give force and efficiency to a system of moral ethics which has ever beon hostile to dectrines which would In the least compromise its idea of a system of government other than its own idea of the guidance and rule of the Saints, and can form no permanent attachment to civil liberty, except on it squared with what It conceived to he the teachings of the Covenant? We can unhesitatingly utter a solemn and earnest nega tive to all this, and pint t the uulookod.for and unex pected change in public sentiment, as evinced in the elect tions of last fall, and as developed in the Legislatures in some of the Northern States which are entering their solemn protest against the stupendous strides to despotism which are, and must necessarily be, the result of the infamous legislation the„hist Congress has loaded upon the people. Too mock praise cannot be given to the little band of living patriots who composed the minority of that Con gress, and who rendered themselves immortal for the manly and courageous manner in which they met and on. deavored to resist the tide of corruption and rotten profli gacy that rushed upon them from the floodgates of Black Republican rule. Th.y aff..rded the only light in the gen eral gloom, and will receive the great reward the people have in store for them as good and faithful stewards, when the dark waters of eternal oblivion shall have closed for ever over the miserable demagogues who have destroyed our country and ruined our prosperity and happiness es a people. OBSERViIt. March 4th, 1863. For The lotellfgencer "THE UNION LEAGUE." The spirit of eentimental fanaticism In oar midst, which seeks to elevate the negro to the social and point.' equal. ity of the white man, failing to convince the public mind of either the feasibility or practicability of such a heresy, by the only means justifiable in a free government, viz: reason addressed to the Judgment of men, has resorted to a new method of accomplishing its wicked, unholy and impossible purposes by the establishment of what it is pie tsad to term a UNION LEAGUE" The professed object of this Union Lenge° "is'• to discountenance and rebuke by more/ and social influences all disloyally to the /Meru/ Government. and to that end the association toiQ use every proper roams in public and private" With men auffici nutty narrow minded and bigoted, to become members of such an association, loyalty to the Government means the support of all the despotic and unconstitutional mean. tires of the imbecile administration of Abraham Lincoln. Irk their estimation the present National Administration is the Government, and every person is disloyal who is taught to believe in those principles of Constitutional Gov ernment adopted by the framers of the Constitution, and which, up to the period of the accession of Abraham Lin coln to the Presidency, were strictly adhered to by every Chief 31agistrate of the Nation. The whole Democratic party of the country being of that belisf, every individual member composing it is, In the estimation of this " Union League," disloyal, and the members of the League are pledged to use every means, public and private, to die. countenance and rebuke Democrats. No business transac tions are therefore to be had by Union Leagneists with Democrats. No social intercourse Is to be had between the families of members of the Union League with the families of Democrats. No Democrat is to be empleyed profession ally by a member of the Union League. No Democratic merchant is to receive any patronage from members of the Union League. No mechanic or laborer is to receive em ployment from them, if he is a Democrat In politics. All clams and conditions are to be brought under the ban of reproach, to be rebuked and discountenanced • morally and socially, in public and private, for the offence of being Democrats. This is the real and professed object of the association just formed in this city. What has become of our boasted institutions of freedom Where is our high civilization? Have they all fled from the laud? And has fananticism usurped the throne of reason, and impelled respectable men to commit them selves to a course of conduct of which, when the political passions and prejudices of the preseot day shall have passed away, they most feel heartily ashamed? No Dem ocrat lives la oar midst who cannot conscientiously claim as high and unfaltering devotion, and feel as fervent a mal for his country, ea any member of this Union League. The Democratic party is influenced by no principles or meareires of policy but such as spring from an intense pa triotism. The form cf government adopted by our fathers, the Union under the Constitution, and the laws made in purananre of it. are dear to the heart of every Democrat, and to sustain them he is willing to make every sacrifice. It is his loyalty to his country that induces him to oppose with his whole power the acts of tho mad and evil spirit of Abolition which, since Lincoln's accession to the Presi dency, have sought to destroy the -Union of the States cre ated by the Constitution, and to erect in its stead a cen tralized domination, whose controlling genius is the eman cipation of the slaves in the slaveholding portions of the Delon. As the blood of the mertyrs in the seed of the church, so is this persecution of Democrats the means of increasing their power and influence, to enable them to again have the legislation of the country placed in their hands, when they may restore peace and harmony to our distracted country, which the fanaticism of the party to which all Union Leagueints belong has convulsed the country in the throes of civil war. Then and not till then will the time honored emblem of our nationality again float over a peaceful and united people, which is now, by the action of Union Leagueiets, made to sadly float over bloody fields of civil strife. In the meantime the principles adopted by the members of this Union League, In pledging each other to discoun tenance all Democrats, compels every Democrat, through self respect, to accept the issue thus voluntarily tendered. Hereafter if a Democrat wishes to employ a mechanic or laborer, let him seek out a Democrat upon whom to bestow hie employment. If he has occasion to purchase dry goods, groceries, coal, or any thing else, let his patronage be be stowed upon a Democrat. If he has occasion for the ser vices of a physician or a lawyer, let him employ none but a Democrat. Let the Issue be accepted as broadly as the members of the Union League have tendered it. It has been forced upon every Democrat, and none will be so craven as not to accept it. Junica. GREAT REACTION The town elections in New York have re. salted everywhere in favor of the Democracy. The New York World is of the opinion that the Democratic party will carry that State next Fall by 100,000 majority. ger The lady who called at our office yes terday, is requested to call again, as we wish to obtain her name, so as to be able to inform the people who it was that brought us that box of Bryan's Pulmorio Wafers, for it re— lieved no of a severe cough in is few lima. Amocious worm. Let the people of Lancaster county read the following from the New York Tribune, and then ask themselveS whether this is the devil's work for which they have sent forth their sons and brothers to (mann the hardships and incur the dangers of the camp and the battle field : We have from our special correspondent at Port Royal the startling announcement that a force of 5,000 negroes, led by whites and sup ported by regular troops, is just ready to enter one of the most densely populated districts of the Department of the South, in order to sum mon its emancipated blacks to arms. Com munications have been established with the negroes, and they wait only for the appear ance of the liberating force to spring to arms and rally under the National flag. :Sudden and irresistible as an avalanche, this blow will fall where preparation and defence are alike impossible. The Republic is at length about to strike at the heart of the Rebellion, and the Proclamation of Freedom, hated and derided by every enemy to the nation, shall be heard in trumpet tones on the plantations of Caro lina, and echoed on the battle field by the cannon's opening roar. The Tribune gloats over the anticipated re sults of this infamous expedition with devilish satisfaction. But let honest and humane peo_ ple reflect upon it. We have been assured that under the sweeping conscription of the Confederate G)vernment, all men able to bear arms are with the army, and that none are left at home but the feeble and the aged, women and children, and the negroes upon whose labor these subsist. This negro raid, led by whites and backed by regular troops, is to be made into a department "most densely populated " by feeble women, 'aged and sickly men, and young children. " Preparation and defence are alike impossible," and the district is to be given up to the savage rage and brutal passions of the negroes and their white leaders I We are told by the Boston Journal's corres pondent from the South that these negroes are "debased and ignorant"—that they are "semi barbarians." Yet an army of these savages are to be let loose upon thousands of defence less women and children, and encouraged to gratify their brutal passions in all the atro cities that the mindsan conceive. Yet the scenes of brutality which must inevitably follow, end at the thought of which the whole civilized world must shudder, are anticipated with fiendish satisfaction by the Tribune and its philanthropic followers $> Wendell Phillips, in a public lecture at Brooklyn several days or nights ago, thus referred to Mr. Lincoln: He has sat for thirty years at Springfield, Illinois—to the north of him was a portion of the State free, educated, and republican. To the south was Egypt—ignorant, pro-slavery, worse than dough face— [laughter] —Southern, servile, dark. Mr. Lincoln has been balan— cing his life between these two elements to he popular with both, and he is the result of the balance. [Laughter.] This was his educa tion fur thirty years—no crime—because he lived there he ertic' not help it. [Laughter.] He has succeeded in being the favorite of that Mosaic State, Illinois, and the result is Abra ham Lincoln. * * * * * * * * If we are saved, we are to be saved in spite of the Administration. If we are saved, I be lieve we shall be saved because it was not possi ble for Abraham Lincoln to ruin us. Now, I say it, notwithstanding I afluw the honest purpose of the man. Such are the thanks Mr. Lincoln gets for yielding to the " pressure " of Phillips and his associates. Mr. Lincoln will evidently have to turn over very seen a new leaf of some sort with these insatiable anarchists.-- They have already pricked him to the extreme margin of the present leaf, and they aro still plunging their sharp sticks into his midriff with unabated fierceness. Isn't it about time for Mr. Lincoln to prick back? If he will begin in good earnest, we promise him a whole people for his backers. We respectfully sub mit the suggestion to his private considera tion.—Louisville (Ky.) Journal. General Hunter, President Lincoln's favor ite negro General, has been enforcing the Abolition policy with a high hand at Hilton Head, South Carolina. He evidently intends to degrade every white officer to his own level. They are to be compelled to fight with ne groes or be - arrested, tried by court martial and shot, or dismissed the service. Dates from Hilton Head to the 20th ult. furnish these particulars of his recent action : Gen. Thee. J. Stevenson, of Massachusetts, was arrested by Gen. Hunter on the 16th ult., for publicly declaring that he would rather be beaten by the rebels than fight with negroes. Gen. Stevenson was recently promoted for services rendered in North Carolina, at the instance of Gen. Foster. Gen. H. has also ordered all Gen. Foster's staff officers out of the Depart ment of the South for the utterance of senti ments tending to create disaffection, insubor dination and mutiny—in other words, for censuring the negro policy, and refusing to go into battle with negroes. FOREIGN NEWS We have news from England to the 19th February. In the British House of Lords, Lord Stratheden gave notice that he would move for copies of dispatches from Mr. Mason to the English government, relative to the recognition of the South. Meetings endors ing President Lincoln and his emancipation proclamation were being held all over England. One held in London condemned the action of the Lord Mayor in inviting Mason to his dinner. $200,000 in specie has been sent to England to pay interest on the bonds of the Alabama. Rumors are .afloat that France considers the blockade of Charleston as raised. A FIENDISH Acr.—A fiendish transaction transpired on Tuesday last in Upper Saucon, near Pleasant Valley, Lehigh Co. The par ticulars as far as ascertained are as follows : A man by the name of Jacob Brinker, a poor but very industrious man, purchased a horse some time ago, for the purpose of huckstering, from one of his neighbors, giving his note fOr the same. Long before the maturity of the note, the owner of the same called on Mr. Brinker and demanded' the payment; which was refused upon the ground that the note was not doe yet, when some angry words passed between the parties and they separated. On Wednesday morning, the day following the conversation between the parties, as Mr. Brinker went to the stable to feed the mare, he was horror stricken to find the animal , lying dead with her throat cut, and worse than all, the demon in human form. had ri,pped open the body of the poor creature and tore out the unborn colt of some six mouths old ; on the dead carcass of the mare lay a letter addressed to Mr. Brinker, stating that if he said a word about the affair he would be served the same way. Tracks were seen in the snow indicating `that there must have been two persons engaged in this act. Suspicion rested upon a person upon circumstances that were so strong that a warrant was issued for the arrest of the party and placed in the bands of the Constable who arrested Herman Yeager, the former owner of the mare ; the second party, a young German in the employ of Mr. Yeager, bad left for parts unknown, and has not as yet 'been arrested. Mr. Yeager has given security for his appearance, at Allen town, for a final hearing. Whether the proof is strong enough to convict the party, time will show.—Easion Express. To DEMOCRATS !-RARE CHANCE-FOR SALE• —The Printing office, good will, &0., of a neutral newspaper, where a Democratic journal is wanted. Any Democrat who will purchase, can have a great bargain. The Job Office will also be sold, if desired, in connection with the newspaper. This establishment is worthy the a)tention of Democrats. Failing health compels the proprietor to sell.: Enclose stamp and address the Editor of the LanOster, intelligeneer for further partionlars.-;cy