14t'Untalter 3MtUtgenter GEO. INAND/011•031, MDITOR. A. SANDIIIRSON. Amoebas. LANCASTER, PA., MARCH 29, 1864 dir• B. 311. - Psmansna t Oa?. Anmaninto JAMS, 37 Put Bow, New Poet Otty, and 10 &ate shad, Boston. O.IL Parma= 02. an AIWA/ for Tie Lowed/fa tow, rad the most InfinenUal and largest &emir nemi to the UMW Rates and the Oanadss.-- Ise •orMld to mama Mr as at mm lowed rota Kamm * Amiore, No. 336 Binadway, Now are anthcsised to maitre adradisamauts lbr The row, at oar lowest rites. -one Wormer Annum= AZINCIT Is located at X 0.60 Muth 6th strut, Philadelphia. He i• authol teed to rongdodro r odrior er thoromte and subscrlptkuu ibr The Lowodeger ie. Seollars Building, Court Bt., Boston, IS out aafLorleed Agent tbr receiving advertisaments, OUR 7 1 1., .A. Ct. - Now car flag b flung to the wild winds free, Let it float o'er our father land, And the guard of Its spotless fame shell be Columbia'. chosen band. " CLING TO THE CONSTITUTION, AS THE SHIPWRECKED MARINER CLINGS TO THE LAST PRANK, WHEN' NIGHT AND THE TEMPEST CLOSE AROUND HIM."-DANIEL WEBSTZR. giir Subscribers who change their residences on the Ist of April, will please notify us at once, stating where, they moved from and where they moved to, naming the Post Office where their paper was sent and where they desire it to be sent. Those in the city will please leave the number of their old and new resi dences, in order that the proper changes may be made on our mail books and carriers' books. The State Convention. The Democratic State Convention, which met at the National Guards' Hall, Philadelphia, on Thursday last, was fully attended, and the proceed ings were characterized by great harmony and enthusiasm. The preference of the Convention was expressed for Gen. MCCLELLAN for the Presidency. The nominations for Electors, Delegates and the State Central Committee are excellent ones. The selection of our well known and esteemed fellow-citizen, Mr. PATRICK MCEVOY, as Elector for this district, is a compliment to his orthodoxy as a Democrat and his high qualities as a gentleman and a citizen. We hope to see the National,Con vention laying down a strong 'plat form. No milk and water stuff; in the shape of meaningless resolutions, but a bold and determined adherence to the platforms of 1852 and '56, and the doctrine of States' rights. Upon no other platform can we expect to win in the coming election. r- Some Abolition sharks in Cincinnati having for sale a fac simile of the President's Emanci pation Proclamation, advertised for agents, stating that the entire profits were to be devoted to the ,benefit of the " Soldiers Home." A maimed soldier applied for an agency, when lo ! he discovered that the parties procured the copy for $lOO per hun dred, and sold them to agents for $l5O per hundred, thus clearing $5O on each one hundred. The soldier makes this statement in the Cincin nati Gazette, and remarks "Is not this feathering one's nest under the plea of charity ?" We think so indeed. Yet this is an every day occurrence. We see long appeals in the Abolition papers for contributions to charitable asso ciations, sanitary associations, sol diers aid societies, in nearly all of which men are feathering their own nests under plea the of charity. Abo tion philanthropy and love for the soldier looks entirely towards putting money into the pockets of a few po litical beggars. ABOLITION MALIGNITY The Democratic ladies of Ohio are raising a fund for the benefit of Mr. Vallandigham. Mr. V. possesses very little property, and was entirely dependent upon his professional earnings for the support of his family. By the infamous tyranny of the petty Burnside, and its heartless approval by the " smutty joker " Lincoln, he was driven from the country, leaving his family destitute of the means of support. The Democratic ladies organized an association, with committees in every county, to raise a fund, by ten cent contributions, for his relief. It is stated that the - Central Committee have now definite in— formation that the fund thus raised will exceed $50,000. This popular movement in behalf of this noble victim of abolition tyranny, has so maddened the Abolition lead ers of that State that they have introduced into their Legislature a bill making it a penal offence to subscribe to any fund for the benefit of any person exiled by the President! Such disgraceful malignity was never excelled ; but it is characteristic of the heartless crew who are fattening upon the ruin of the country which they have caused. But they will fail of their shameful purpose in this case ; for, if they pass the law, the money can still be given to either the wife or mother of Mr. V. THE AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTI- TUTION PASSED The Amendments to the Constitution, pro posed by the last Legislature, allowing soldiers to vote in the field, &c., have passed both branches of the present Legislature. An act has also passed providing for a special election, at which the people are to decide upon the proposed amendments. Seotion first of this act, provides that the Governor shall issue writs of election to be held on the second Tuesday of August, 1864, and that the people shall then vote upon the adoption or rejection of three proposed amend. menu to the Constitution, viz: First. Allowing soldiers to vote. Second. That the Legislature shall not pass upon mat ters over which the Courts have jurisdiction. Third. That no bill before the Legislature shall embrace more than one subject. These three amendments are to be so arranged on tickets as to be voted upon separately by the people. Section Z. provides that the election shall be conducted as other elections. Section 3. That a board of Canvassers shall assemble to publish the returns. Section 4th authorizes sheriffs and commis sioners to perform all necessary duties. 4, LOYALTYM There is nothing in a name save it be a good name, says the Johnstown Democrat, and that is " rather to be chosen than great riches," according to the Proverb. The Abo lition party, after exhausting all the Lexicons to find a title at once euphonious as well as strikingly patriotic have christened themselves the Loyal party. Certainly, we have no ob jection to this. To some it may seem to imply the stigma of disloyalty fired upon the Demo cratic party, but we can not see it in that light, because charging a man si im disloyalty does not make him disloyal, especially when the charge is made by those who use their unused loyalty as a cloak to cover up fraud, peculation, and a desire to trample under foot the Constitution and laws of the land. The word loyal has not been in use in this country since the days of the Revolution.— It smacks of Kingly courts and servile men crooking the knee to sovereign power, right or wrong, and loyalty, in its accepted sense, means nothing in a Republican Government, unless the terrible fallacy that " the King can do no wrong" be tranefered to the President, and his " subjects " acquiesce in the new Abolition teachings that the Government and the Administration are one and the same— that any thing but profound fealty to ABE LINCOLN is treason to the Government. Between the loyalists of 1776, and the lop. allots of 1864, there is really very little dif ference, hence our willingness to aceede to them the name. The tones of the Revolution were in favor of a strong centralized govern ment, which could crush out the liberties of the people under the iron heel of despotism— the loyalists of to-day are no better. The ancient loyalists were either the paid pension ere of government, engaged in the collection of revenues from His Majesty's subjects in the American colonies, and filling the fur nished offices of honor and profit; furnishing his Majesty's armies with supplies, or who believed in the few governing the many at the point of the bayonet. Now where is there any perceptible or essential difference between the loyalists of the Revolution and the loyalists under the reign of LINCOLN ? The word loyalty to-day means something or nothing. If it is disloyal to oppose an Administration which is trampling under foot the Constitution and the laws, subverting the government, and inaugurating a military reign of terror in the States not in rebellion, by what name shall we classify the opposi lion to the war of 1812, and the Mexioan war, both successfully carried through by Democratic Administrations against the fiercest assaults of the party now in power ? The fact is that by disloyalty, the shoddy ites mean to imply terror, and in the heat of passion sometimes charge it upon Democrats. This is especially the ease when fraud and peculation on the part of the knaves in gov ernment employ are discovered and laid bare, on the charge made that this war has been diverted from its original purpose into a war for the Abolition of slavery in the Southern LET US TAKE COURAGE We have this consolation, that thus far in the contest for President, there is greater unanimity in the Democratic than in the Ad ministration ranks. The Democrats in Penn sylvania are nearly unanimous for the nom ination of McClellan—so are the Democrats of New York and New Jersey—while, on the contrary, the Abolition party are muoh divided in sentiment. In the Western States they are for Fremont in opposition to Lincoln, and they have made up their minds to stick to him whether he is nominated by their National Convention or not. Even in New York there is a strong Fremont party. It is questionable whether it is not, as between Lincoln and Fremont, the stronger party.— At all events, the Fremont men held a meet ing uu Friday week, and spoke their senti ments very freely. Among others Mr. Gree'ey took part, and spoke openly and boldly in favor of Fremont. Let us take courage from these signs of the times. The Baltimore Transcript has the following account of the proceedings: NEW YORK, March 19 The radical wing of the Republican party held a mass meeting at Cooper Institute last night, whioh was largely attended. General Fremont was nominated by acclamation for the Presidency, and declared to be the choice of the friends of freedom throughout the country. A number of speeches were made, the burden of nearly all of them being an unmeasured condemnation of the policy- 7 military and civil—of Mr. Lincoln. Greeley was, of course, among the speakers, and an nounced his advocacy of the " one term " principle, and declared a decided preference fur any other man in the Republican ranks over Mr. Lincoln. THE NEW REVENUE BIM By the new Revenue Bill before the Cum mittee on Ways and Means, a Tribune cor respondent states that tobacco is taxed twenty five per cent. ad valorem in the leaf, and forty cents a pound manufactured. Pe troleum five cents a gallon on et ude, and ten cents on refined, and distilled spirits a dollar a gallon. The great difference in the quali ties of Jur tobacco, the Connecticut River being about as good as Cuba, and Michigan not a quarter as good, made the adval,,rem tax inevitable. Two of the sub-Committee are said to be opposed to a high tax on to bacco ; one of them is said to be obstinate in his faith that a tax of fifty cents a gallon on whisky will produce more revenue than a tax of a dollar. So the taxes imposed in the bill prepared at the Treasury on tobacco and whisky may go into the Ways and Means Committee reduced, and possibly, but not , probably, go into the House reduced. It is estimated that the charge of ten cents on refined petroleum has been already raised by the sub-Committee. In addition to the above a very large increase of the revenue is sought to be made by the new bill by doubling the price of stamps on notes, bonds, &c., and taxing instruments and forms not heretofore reached, such as letters patent, deeds for conveyance of personal property, copies of instruments and documents read in court, executions, processes from justices' courts, &c. There is no tax whatever on malt. Beer is taxed $1,50 a barrel; this inoludes lager.— The temper of the House and of the Senate grows daily in favor of higher and bolder taxation. FREE NEGRO IRIPUDZINCE It may be interesting to our colonization friends to 1.; , ..w that the celebrated " progress of opit.iou " ih kn. ckir g the bottom out of their arrangt [neon , . l'he I , il, wing spirited resolutions we d a' a meetingof "free Americane. • f , esvent," lately held in Boston; 1. Resolved, Thai when we wish to leave the United States, we oan find and pay for the territory that shall snit us best. 2 That when we are ready to leave, we shall be ready to pay oar own expenses of travel. 3. That we do not want to go now. 4. That if any body else wants us to go, they must compel us. What do you think of that for a negro meeting ? Think of how they lean back on their assumed dignity, and put forth sueh un• rivaled impudence ! This is a single example of how big a negro will feel if patted up and encouraged. What will it be when the former colonizationists raise their voices (as they are doing) in favor of the disgusting doctrine of " miscegenation " PROOZIADVSOIIiWTIOCI - DZEOC - MICTIC . I VATIC CONVENTION The Itemooratks State Convention, to select dele gates to the National Convention at %low, mat at the National Guards' Hall, in Philadelphia, on Thareday last. The Convention was caned to order by Hon. CDASILDIP d. BIDDLII, Chairman of the State Central Committee, and Col. T. B. Samaras; of Fayette, was appointed temporary Chairman.— Mr. H. T. SHULTZ, of this coanty, war one of the temporary Secretaries. After the list of credentish wail read over the permanent organisation of the Convention was completed by the selection of Hon. Hussar H. Wirtz, of Montgomery, as President, assisted by a number of Vise Presidents and Secretaries. Mr. Joan fdcSvssassr, of this county, was one of the Vies Presidents, and Mr. B. T. ISHIII.II continued as one of the Secretaries. Messrs. GEORON SANDZREION and SJUCOEL H. BaTNOLDB were on the Committee on Resolutions. The following gentlemen constitute the Electoral ticket, delegates to Chicago, and the State Central Committee : FIRST DISTRICT. Elootor—William Loughlin. Delop/co—Samuel G. Zing, Dr. George W. Nob loser. . . _ State Committee—Lewis 0. oa:llday, Joseph hie gray, George A. Quigley. BLCOND DIEITEIC?. Bleotor—Edward R. Balmbold. Delegates—William M. Riley, G. W. Irwin. State Committee—Charies M. Leisenring, Dom thick Muller, Frederiek E. Brown. TRIED DISTRICT. Eleotor—Edw. P. Minn. Delegates—William Curtis, Simon Arnold. State Committee—Hobert J. Hemphill, Merles Btiokwaher, Philip H. Luts. 7017E111 DISTRICT. Blector—Thomas McCullough. Delegates—William W. Burnell, Isaac B. Cassin State Committee—Peter Armbruster, A. R. Soho Add, Richard Simpson. IfITTR DISTRICT. &lector—Edward T. Ham Delegates—H. P. BASS, Charles W. Carrigan. State Committee—Charles Vansant, H. W. Ditt man, J. D. Miles. SIXTH DISTRICT. Eleotor—Philip b. Gerhard. Delegates—J. D. Stiles, Perry M. Hunter. State Committee—A. L. Rabe, James F. Kline, Jacob Danehower. ■ETEATH DISTRICT. Eleetor—G. G. Leiper. Delegates—John H. Brinton, John C. Beatty. State Committee—Dr. E. 0. Evans, Dr. W. D Downing, George W. Weaver. EIGHTH DUITEICT. Rleetor—Miohael Seltzer. Delegates—J. Glancy Jones, Win. Rosenthal. State Committee—kliohael P. Boyer, Jonathan See, George Smith, Jr. NINTH DISTRICT. &teeter—Petri,* McEvoy. Delegates—George Sanderson, Henry A. Wade. State Committee—R. R. Tahndy, A. J. Steinman, S. R. Reynolds. TRITE DISTRICT. Elector—Thomas H. Walker. Delegates—Franois W. Hughes, Dr. C. B. Glon- Inger. State Committee—A. Wilhelm, F. P. Dewees, James Ellis. ELEVENTH DUITILICT. Elector—O. S. Dimmiok. Delegates—Philip Johnson, Carlton Burnett. State Committee—H. B. Beardsley, A. G. Broad head, Jr., Samuel 1:1. Neiman. TWELFTH DISTRICT. Elector—A. B. Dunning. Delegates—Charles Dennison, A. J. Gerrittson State Committee—E. W. Stardevant, Daniel Ran kin, John Blanding. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. Eleotor—Paul Leidy. Delegates—John F. Means, David Lowenbeig. state Committee--Harvey Biokler, George D Jackson, C. S. Russell. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. .Eleotor—Robert Swineford. Delegates—Hamilton Alrioks, Wm. H. Miller. State Committee—Solomon Mellott, E. S. Dety, A. Patterson. PITTBEINTEI DISTRICT. Elector—John A. Ahl. Delegates--Peter A. Yeller, H. D. &golf. State Committee—John F. Spangler, J. A. Blat enberger. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. Elector—Henry 11. Smith. Dalegates—Henry J. Stable, B. F. Meyers. State Committee—William P. Schell, J. MoDawell Sharpe, Levis Leiohty. IIEYENTBENTH DISTRICT. Elector—Thaddeus Banks. Delegates—R. Bruce Petrikon, Daniel M. Dull. State Committee—James D. Rea, Jamul'. lamp bell, Jos. W. Parker. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. ;. Eleotor—Hugh Montgomery. Delegates—John H. OrTis, Stephen Pierce. State Committee—Miles White, Huston Hepburn, S. R. Peale. NIA.ISTZENTH DUITBIOT. Eleotor—John M. Irwin. Delegates—C. L. Lumberton, James K. Kerr. State Committee—R. B. Brown, R. L. Cochran J. D. Gill. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. Elector—Joseph M. Thompson. Delegatos—T. B. Searight John Latta. State Committee—ki. P. Laird, J. B. Sansom, E S. Roddy. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. Elector—Erastua Brown. Delegates--William A. Galbraith, William A Wallace. State Committee—Benjamin Whitman, T. J Boyer, A. M. Benton. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. Eleetor—James P. Barr. Delegates—William D. Patterson, Samuel P. Ross State Committee—Franois R. Sellers, Joseph R Hunter, Andrew J. Baker. Elector—William J. Koontz. Delegates—J. A. McCullough, F. H. Hutchinson. State Committee—B. S. Golden, James Braden, William H. Magee. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT Elector—William Montgomery. Delegates—R. W. Jones, S. B. Wilson. State Committee—William Swann, Charles Carter, D! S. Morris. lion. C. L. WARD, of Bradford, was elected Chair man of the State Central Committee, and Gen. GEORGIC W. CASS, lion. WILLIAM BIGLER, BOIL ASA PACKER and WILLIAM V. McGRATH Esq., were elected delegates at large to the National Conven tion. HOW RICHA.RD yeux., of Philadelphia, and Ros /MT L. Josirrarosr, Esq., of Cambria, were nominated for Electors at Large. The Committee on Resolutions, through the Chairman, Hon. J. GIANCY JoNaa, reported the following : Essayed, That as we have no State candidates to present to the people, and no issues involved in the coming election other than those which affect the welfare and liberties of our sister States equally with ours, we leave it to our representatives 111 the Chicago Convention to unite with the representa tives of the other sovereignties of the North in em bodying the sentiment of the people in a declara tion of principles acceptable to all the States, on which we rely to elect a President, and bring back peace and union to this distracted land. Resolved, That the Democracy of Pennsylvania hereby express their preference for the nomination of General George B. McClellan, as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency by the Chicago Con vention, and that the delegates to said Convention be instructed to vote as a unit on all questions aris ing therein, as a majority of the delegates shall de cide. li.e.rolved, That the first necessary step to restore the welfare and prosperity of the American Repub lic is to get rid of the present corrupt Federal Ad ministration, and the lure way to accomplish this end is a thorough organization of the time-honored Democratio party, and the prevalence of union and harmony among its members, The resolutions were adopted unanimously with out dissuasion. The members of the Convention were entertained is a magnificent style, on Thursday evening, by the Pennsylvania Clab, at the Club Rouse, 1129 Chestnut street. THE NATIONAL CEMETERY AT GETTYSBURG. —A letter from Gettysburg, in the Baltimore Sun, says : " All the bodies of the Union soldiers have now been disinterred from the pits and trenches, where they were hastily thrown after the battle, and carefully buried in their appropriate placrs in the cemetery. The total number of bodies thus removed and entombed is three thousand five hundred and twelve. About one thousand of them are unknown, and deposited in that part of the inclosure set apart for those unrecognized. Nearly or quite a fourth of the whole number of the slain belong to the State of New York. Many of the unknown bodies have since been recognized, their names having been discover ed from letters, photographs, medals, diaries, clothing, and other things found upon their corpses. Quite an amount of money, in small sums, ranging from the fractional part of a dollar up to fifty dollars, was also found upon these bodies by those who disinterred them. Thirty-six dollars in gold were found in the pocket of one, and thirty to forty dollars— paper and gold—in the garments of others, besides many relics, mementoes, &c. All this money and these relics have been taken care of by the committee, properly labeled, and held in safe keeping for the relatives, should they ever be discovered. An elegant hunting case gold watch and five or six silver watches were also found upon different bodies. mar An Abolition paper d in an adjoining county says, "it is evident the Copperheads would rather have any other candidate than ' honest old Abe.'" This is undoubtedly true. For a worse man for the Presidency, we verily believe, could not be found, were the whole world ransacked for a candidate. No country on the face of the earth, in all times past, has been so thoroughly ruined and depraved from the highest state of civilisation and prosperity, in such a short time. Before his election to the Presidency, all was prosperity, peace and happiness, but now, where are wet—Hanover aticen. ~~ .~ ~eom the BaHand ( Yt) Oonrier GREELEY ANSWERER The malignity, duplicity and hypocrisy of Horace Greeley, as exhibited in the four under quoted lines from the N. Y. Tribune, is well answered in the following article from the Newport (Vt.) News, whose editor is a Repub lican and in favor of the re-election of Mr. Lincoln to the Presidency, but who will not silently consent to'hear General McClellan ma ligned and slandered by knaves, fools, fanatics or hypocrites. Many of the Vermont Republi can papers are down-on the' News' for its manly and outspoken sentiments, but dare not give the article from its columns that we quote below. The secret of the matter is, the editor of the News served, fought and bled under Gen. McClellan in the noble army which he created from which he was so suddenly, ruthlessly and unceremoniously torn away by radical enmity and jealousy, when victorious ly driving the enemy before them, so recently defeated at Antietam. Greeley and his elan may sneer about Gen. McClellan being a " true man " to the negroes and to the fanatics, but he had better keep away from the soldiers when he slanders " Little Mae," whom they love the more he is abused : " If there be one sincerely loyal man who still clings to General McClellan, we ask him to answer this question : If Gen. McClellan is a true man, why is every traitor his noisy champion ?" [N. Y. Tribune. To which the editor of the News, replies thus: " It galls us to the quick to see a man who has been as instrumental as Gen. McClellan has, to organize a military force to suppress rebellion, defamed, traduced, and treated with such extreme enmity by men who have done sa little to fight traitors, as the editor of the N. Y. Tribune. We do not question Mr. Gree ley's loyalty, or his zeal to save this country from overthrow—and we say the same of Gen. McClellan. But we do contend that den. Mc- Clellan has shut the mouths of one hundred traitors, where Mr. Greeley has not so much as heard the report of a single musket dis charged at the enemy. We say this not be cause we intend to rebuke Mr. Greeley— though he richly deserves it—or beCause we desire to laud Gen. McClellan, but we have been a soldier under him, and like thousands of others, have contracted a soldier's love for him, which will cling to us to the last. Should we deny this, even in our present capacity as a journalist, we should blame no man if he treated us as scornfully as he would a desert er. We therefore say to Mr. Greeley that there is one sincerely ' loyal man' who is not ashamed or afraid to answer this question. General McClellan is a true man, because one hundred thousand, yea, two hundred thousand good and true soldiers of the United States army respect and honor him as an officer and a soldier—a man who is ready to sacrifice his life to save the government of a people who will revere his name long after his traducers are dead and forgotten. We make these remarks as an independent journalist—and though we never expect to support Gen. McClellan in any political con test, we will never abuse him because he has been so unfortunate as to have bad men for his ' noisy companions.' If there is any truth in history, the same sort of clique at one time attempted toswarm around our Washington. We have no kind of idea what kind of men Mr. G seeks for his companions, but of one thing we are certain, soldiers will never make much 120183 where he is, and he will never cut much of a figure where soldiers are. It is possible that an article like this may of fend some of our readers, and perhaps some may decide to forsake us. If so, we cannot help it. The man who thus boldly accuses Gon. McClellan of treachery and treason, says no less of every soldier who has been under his command. We accordingly resent it mildly, yet decidedly. If we are to have such men as Horace Greeley to put down this re— bellion, and tie the hands of such men as General McClellan and his soldier friends, the sooner we stop this fight the better for us." PAYING DEAR FOR THE WHISTLE The war between the North and the South has now been waged for three years, We have called into the service 1,775,000 soldiers. We have now in the field say 500,000 men. There have been discharged on account of wounds, disability and sickness, together with the desertions, say 375,000. This leaves 900,- 000 men now dead and buried. This is a lib eral calculation in our favor, for if we could reach the exact loss in our army the totality of deaths would nut fall short of a million of lives. We have stolen and freed, from the rebels, from 75,000 to 100,000 negroes : admit it to be 100,000. This war, from the beginning, has been a war for the liberation of Southern slaves from their owners, in the intent of the instigators, though it has only been publicly avowed fur the last two years. To say noth ing of the injury, loss and cruelty to nineteen twentieths of the poor slaves, to say nothing of the destruction, loss of property, demorali zation of our populatiot, the untold miseries of the wounded and broken down constitutions of the discharged soldiers, to say nothing of all this lose to the body politic, it has cost the United' States in debt, entailed upon future generations, already $.3,000,000,000. To sum up the gross amount, we have, in order to lib. erate 100,000 slaves, and make them worse off than they were while with their masters, cre ated a debt of .$3,000,000,000, and sacrificed the lives of 900,000 of our fellow citizens! Is not this, in the language of the immortal Ben Franklin, " PAYING DEAR FOR THE WFIISTLF.." So thinks the Patriot & IThion, and so think we. MR. DAWSON'S SPEECH We make the following extract from the great speech delivered by Hon. Joure L. Dnwsori, in Congress, on the 24th ultimo : This war cannot last forever. Sooner or later contending parties must become ex hausted, the armies dwindled, credit destroy. ed, the land filled with graves and clothed in mourning, and an adjustment upon some terms will be the only cure for the evil. The uncompromising obstinacy of Charles I lost him his head ; that of James the II his crown ; that of George 111 his colonies:- Shall these States again be lost by imitating the exam ple? Shall we not rather learn a lesson from that chapter in our history in 1812, when Mr. Clay, aided by Calhoun, pressed the war of that period upon the Administration of Mr. Madison in resistance to the British _preten sion to the right of search? The wae'lasted for three years. There was great sacrifice of life and vast expenditure of money. During that period the Navy upon the waters of the Chesapeake and the Atlantic covered itself with imperishable glory, and our soldiers poured out their blood like water upon the Raisin and the Thames, at Tippecanoe and Lundy's Lane. And yet Mr. Clay, at the head of the American commission, met the British commission at Ghent, and there ne gotiated a treaty of peace without saying one word of the matter in controversy, and which yet was deemed honorable and satisfactory. Nearly fifty years have elapsed since that period, and the right remains unadjusted to this day. In the meantime our relations with England, social and commercial, have 'grown more intimate and important. Mr. Speaker, there is everywhere an anxi ous and earnest looking forward to a termina tion of this contest I believe there is no obstacle so potent against a return to peace as that spirit which has given a new policy and a new object to the war. To refuse, be cause of the institution of slavery in the Southern States, to adhere to, the Union of our fathers, is all one as if we should refuse to treat with the Ottoman Empire or the Bar bary Powers because the one is the sovereign of a nation recognizing polygamy, and the other the slavery of the whites as well as the blacks. The man possessed with a single idea is of all the most unfitted for a statesman.— That high character implies a condition of mind which contemplates things as they are, and which forbears the removal of a less mis chief when this would be productive of a greater. He must aim in his policy at the production of the best good of society, but will carefully refrain from great, sweeping in novations, preferring to leave the correction of evils to the gentle hand of time, which, as Lord Bacon expressed it, " is the greatest in novator," well assured that no Government clan be successful which does not adapt its policy to the various characters of the people to be effected by it, and to its diversities of industry and sectional intevests. ser Chief Justice TANEY, of the United States Supreme Court, celebrated his 87th birthday on the 17th inst. LOCAL DYIPAR=ikT, PansoneL.—Jaoob Matz, a well known preacher of the religious sect of Drinkers, died on the 12th loot., rear Ephrata, In the 83th year of his ago. Rev. L 8. Demand, pastor of at Peal's German Reformed Church of this city, has severed his connection with that church and denomination to accept of a pastoral relation with a Reformed Protestant Dutch Congregation la Pater. son, N. J. On Tuesday evening last the catechumens of his present congregation presented him with a handsome silver pitcher elegantly chased, as a testimonial cf their regard and esteem. Rev. A. X. Shoemaker, formerly pastor of the Union Bethel of this city, has accepted a charge in Chicago. He leaves for that city early in April. Rev..l. H. Babcock, late Principal of the Yates' Insti tute of this city, has been assigned to a charge In Minne sota by the Protestant Episcopal Bishop of that Diocese. E. H. Ranch, Req., formerly of this city, has purchased the Bezbachter, a Gorman paper published at Reading, Pa., and will hereafter conduct It in connection with an Eng lish paper. William R. Gerhart, eon of President Gerhart, of Frank lin and Marshall College, this city, bee passed an exami nation before the Board of Examiners at Washington, and been recommended for a Major's commission in the 11. 13: Colored Volunteers. -• • •• • • • ••• •• First Lieut. Thomas U. Carpenter, of this city, hew been promoted to a Captaincy In the 17th Raptler Infantry, his commission to bear date March 4, 1863. • George M. Franklin, Sag , of this city, has been appoint ed an Assistant Adjutant General, with the rank of Cap• Min. Capt. Franklin Is now doing duty on the Staff of Gen. Franklin, In the Department of the Gulf, Louisiana. Samuel Wright, Seq., late editor of the Columbia Spy, has been ePnointed an Assistant Adjutant General, with the rank of Captain. Capt. Wright went out as an Aid on the Staff of the late General Welch. CoL F. B. Pyf,, of the 77th Regiment, a prisoner at Richmond since the battle of Chickamauga, has been released on parole, and has arrived at Annapolis. tient. Col. Miles and Lieut. Holbrook, of this city, are still de• tained as prisoners. Mr. Benjamin Bnckwalter has been appointed Postmas ter at Greenland, this county, vice Michael MacGonlgle, resigned. Martin B. Immel, Postmaster at Highland, this county, vice John J. Tripple, resigned. ON A FAREWELL TOUR.—GOTTBCHALK, the most eminent Pianist living, la now on a farewell concert. icing tour, prior to his departure for Europe. One of his Inimitable entertainments will be given at Fulton Hall, this (Tuesday) evening, upon which occasion he will be assisted by a number of well known and distinguished artistes. Mr. Gorrsonata is a great favorite with our music-loving folks, and although he always draws good houses here, upon this occasion, we think, he will have a crowded audience. An artist of his unequalled abilities Is deserving of nothing lees. CHANGED HANDS.—The old Fountain Inn Hotel, in South Queen street, probably the very oldest tavern stand in thi s city, has changed hands—Mr. JACOB HUBBB retiring, who to succeeded by Mr. Faexras Eficr.sar, a brother Typo and one of the Xxaminer proprietors.— Fun" is an A No. 1 Printer, and from his well known business qualifications and go sheadtiveneas will keep up the reputation of the "Fountain Inn," and make a capital landlord. In short, he will know "how to keep a hotel." We wish him success. PROPOSED CITY BOUNTY.—The City Coun cils held a special meeting in their Chambers, on Tuesday evening last, and passed the following resolution: Resolved, By the Select and Common Councils of the City of Lancaster, that Councils will appropriate, under the prospective law on the subject to be enacted by the Legislature of the Commonwealth. the sum of $276 to each recruit that will enlist in the United States army and be credited to the quota of the city in the coming drafts; and that the money and expenses paid by individuals in the city towards making tip the quota of their wards in drafts ordered, shall be refunded them out of the appropri ation allowed by Councils for bounties to volunteers. —The City Councils hold another meeting on Saturday evening, and passed an Ordinance vesting in the Mayor authority to borrow a sum not exceeding $144,000, for the purpose of filling up the city's quota under the calls of the President. The Ordinance, as published in to day's Intel ligencer, gives full particulars as to bow the amount to be borrowed Is to be Lquidated, &c. " MUCH ADO," &c.—The "loyal" papers aro extremely exercised because Ton INTEL/SI/INC= did not publish Private MARTIN'S speech in reply to the Mayor's remarks at the reception of the 79th. Our prin• cipal reason for not doing so was that we were crowded with other matter. But to calm this "tempest in a tea pot," this "much ado about nothing," we have concluded to let our readers em exactly what this speech is, and here it is In cztenso: Your warm welcome has not been unexpeoted. We have had, from time to time, kind assurances that we were not forgotten by our friends at home, though for two years and almost a half hundreds of miles have intervened be tween yourselves and ns. When you sent us those beau tiful colors, nearly fourteen months ago, we felt that Pennsylvanians had not forgotten their 79th; and, amid the din of battle, we read on them that which our friends, with a Spartan satisfaction, had placed there, and added another blood bought name, making a trio of unsullied stars in the great American constellation, that we feel will shine brightly to the future history of the mon of Lancaster county. Many of our fellow. have fallen be neath those bright folds, and we who are here to-day have signified tar willingness to stand by them through the storm of more battles, until our cause shall triumph and the death of our fallen be avenged. Away down in Georgia we learned that the ladies of Lancaster were working hard for the soldiers in the field. To hear thin, did as good; gave us assurance; nerved us veterans. In the same catalogue we often saw the names of those who should have been with us in the struggle; those we passed by, for when we knew that noble-hearted women were enlisted in our cause, we felt it a stronger acquisition than any accession of these champions of words would have been. You know who I mean; if they can feel justified in their actions, our c nsciences would never allow us to parade the streets of this city in kids and beaver, and, God knows, we have at least a record to show. Wh o,, a living wall of brave men were battling back the ins f assails of treason, protecting our h• roes and firesides from the ruthless hands of the enemy, whim we revel in easy luxury, instead of shrinking from the duty, we should rather thank our God that he has favored us with power to protect the helpless nod the loom:aut.— What will-the future say of those lb ostrious predecvsvors who dared not cress the State? While the graves of the bendy men of every State have rendered immortal the field of Gettysburg, it was a blot la the history of our Commonwealth that has taken the best blood of her truest sons to obiterate. But we know that a soldier's and a citizen's views of this war are rarely alike. When we look at the hundreds of young men around us, in all the energy of youth, we think, with pain, that Pe nsylvania,.the Keystone of the Old Arch, one of the original Thirteen, the State that responded so nobly to the first beat of the long roll as it Came surging on Southern winds from the walls of Sum ter, need, yet thirty thousand men ton her quota, while her sister Staten, of less than a quarter of a century's growth, are sending forth their thousands whenever called upon And may we not hope that when our short respite is over, and we go forth ng.in, our ranks will prove that the old garden county Ooes not wish to be behind in men or means, even though the hardest of the task is over and the rebellion virtually crushed. The bulletins of another battle may announce disaster to our reuse It is well that we should have overwhelming numb,rs 'at every point, so as to leave no shadow of doubt as to the issue, and at 'nee summarily close the war. We have come home as veteran volunteers. Our friends, no doubt, will ask us why we re-enlisted, when there are so many on whose services the country has as good a claim as on ours, who have never undergone a single privation. We answer proudly, we belting to the Old Guard, the first Three Hnudred Thousand—the men who have brought this rebellion down from the flush of manhood to the de crepitude of old age; who have set it on its crutches, and are even now moving those crutches down the pathway of time to an ignominious grave. It is true the festering carcass of Rebellion may turn, cast them a ay, stand for a moment erect without their support, bat it is the death struggle; the wounded bison is most dangerous and most powerful in his last agonies. Now, then, is the time to strike. Davis and his minions are blind with mu , y and rage at their hitherto lit success; their followers are deserting their standard not by tens or hundreds but by thousands. He is even now casting lots with the poten• totes of Europe for the spoils of our fair country, as the Jews of old did over the raiment of our Saviour. Would we be American soldiers and tolerate this, or standby and have it told us that a levy of ronscripta decided the fate of the great Republic of America? No! a handred thousand veteran volunteer. are ready to carve with their bayonets and write with their blood, if need be, the glorious inserip• lion of Freedom and Liberty to all mankind. Yes, to rear with their sabres and muskets a shrine that the world will bow before, and the lovers of Liberty from every clime kneel devoutly at and worship--art idol of hope—a beacon light to the down trodden Hungarian and the Italian trembling in the chains of their forefathers. What! should we desert the ship now, after hawing stood at our poets through two years of storm and night and rebellion. when her decks were red and slippery with the best blood of the loyal North? Desert her now, when one by one her broken planks are being placed in their former position, and her course Is becoming more steady under the skillful guidance of Lincoln and his eubordi. mates, Grant, Thomas and Meade, with their faithful and disciplined crews? Abandon her now, when we can feel that, with a little more sailing and a few more stitches of canvass, we can outride the heavy sea and the black piratical craft of Rebellion will be our prey? No! we mean to stand by the bulwarks of our own good ship until their flag is struck and their crew suspended at every yard arm. To the friends of our comrades, whose graves mark the green hillsides of Kentucky, or can be found amid the dark cedars of Stone River, or by the waters of the fretful Chickamauga, the river of death of Georgia, I wish to say a word. You have the proud consolation of knowing that they fell in a muse, the sacredness. of which is second to none ever contested on the• face of the earth; that they felt fighting to demonstrate the feasibility of self govern ment ; is prove the superiority of Freedom over Slavery; civilization over barbarism; light over darkness; with their faces toward the deluded foe, doing their whole duty to their God, their country, and humanity; that their bones will form a part of the corndr stone of a superstruc. lure the like of which was never presented to the gaits of man—a Republican Government uncorrupted, majestical in might, sublime In its majesty. For The intelligence? Maxims. F+nlreas—Gsntlenun : Some of the good old citizens of Caernarvon township, God sheer them in their good work, have'been trying to raise money, by subsoription, to buy substitutes to fill our quota; they have been working at It about two weeks with all the energy with whioh mankind is generally en dowed, and have not yet raised more than half of the necessary material. The mechanics and labor ing men, with the exception of a very small num ber, have paid very liberally, and some of the farm ers, with a Boman liberality, gave freely of their abundance ; but many of them that are liable to military duty have not given one cent; men who own scores of acres and are making money by the thousands, and at the same time desire to see this unholy rebellion crushed—are very busy about elec tion times, but do not intend to shoulder the musket, nor give of their affluence. As long as our poor men are willing to volunteer without remuneration and be immolated on their oountry's altar their patriotism runs down our streets like a river ; but if called on to .keep time to the music, or open their long purees, they have a friendly monitor within their noble breaats which tells them it is wrong to give any more than their moral support to wipe out this rebellion, which consists in voting, /Lc., &e. We had a meeting on last Friday, on the eleotion day, to raise funds, and the result of it was, to avoid this glorious prerogative, many of our patriots staid at home. But it is not at all surprising to me when I reflect upon their economical habits and their pecu liar characteristics ; for some of them could make a mourning suit out of a - yard of black tape and have enough left to circumnavigate their hats. A. CEURCHTOWD, itiarail 23rd, 1864. THE BATTLE OF GkITTTSBURG The testimony of General Hancock before the Committee on the Conduct of the War, in relation to the battle of Gettysburg, detracts somewhat froth the glory which has been claimed by General Sickles and General Meade. It is to the effect that on the morning of the lot of July General Meade directed General Hancock to proceed to the front and assume command of the First, Third and Eleventh corps.— Upon arriving at Gettysburg he found that the First and Eleventh had been driven back and were in considerable confusion. He relieved General How ard and proceeded to form a line on which an en gagement might be fought—this being in accordance with General Meade's instructions. He was engaged in forming the line, when the Third eorps came up, and position was a ssigned it. He then reported by an aid to General Heade, and the remaining divis ions of the army were ordered up. The line thus selected was the one on which the three days' bat tles were fought ; and General Hancock commanded the left eantre on the third, when Lonptreet was repulsed from his deperate charge upon our lines.— General Meade had nothing to do with the selection of the line of battle and trusted entirely to Gen eral Hancock's Judgment as to its value in a mili tary Pant of view. Prom Wiltlb~s Now Tait World. THADDEUS STEVENS AND THE PURI. TY OP ELECTIONS. Some one said that whoever cracked Thad dens Stevens's skull would let out the brains of the Republican party. = But other fissures disclose the brains of that party, and none have seen harder service than ;hat one with which ungenerous Nature herself endowed the able and unscrupulous Pennsylvanian who is the chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means. The brazen effrontery with which Mr. Stevens, on Monday, denied before the House of Representatives that the nation was being made to pay transportation bills for Republican soldiers and civilians to go home and vote at State elections, was his master piece. He has done hard work for his party in times past ; no one but he had the courage first to scout openly the idea of a restoration of the old Union, and laugh at a re-establish ment of the old Constitution—that mask of his party he was the first to pull off and reveal its purpose of a war for abolition ; but that job (to use a word which Mr. Lincoln has made classic), that " job" was not tougher than the one which he undertook on Monday, and in the few years which remain to him of a long and ill•spent parliamentary life, Mr. Stevens will -never again find hie moral hardihood so taxed, his effrontery eo strained, his sense of self-respect, or at least his desire for the respect of his truth-loving fellow-men, so utterly abased as it was when he backed up, with his personal word, the denial that the administration had thus pros tituted its power, tampered with the purity of elections, bribed a specious popular approba tion of its imbecilities, its faithlessness to its oaths and to the supreme law. The House . had gone into the Committee of the Whole on 'the Army Appropriation bill, and' Mr. Kernan, the able conservative mem ber from this State, offered an amendment, providing that no part of the money appro priated for army transportation should be ex pended for transportation of civilians employ ed in the departments to or from their homes at the . public expense. Whereupon arose a sharp altercation, departing considerably from the subject thus raised, in the course of which Mr. Stevens, hard pressed by hard facts with vhioh Mr. Kernan supported h;e amendment, made the brazen assertion which we have cited. Of course he had a pack yelping after him. The chance was too good a one for hilwl ing Buncombe, and your Philadelphia Kellys are not the sort to stint their yelping when the staunch hounds are ahead and yelping is safe. We shall not follow the windings of- the debate, nor is Mr. Gooch's defense of the whitewashing proclivities of the Committee on the Conduct of the War worth heeding. Mr. Kernan was perfectly right in demand ing to have the subject of transportation of Republican voters at the national expense re ferred to 'an honest and disinterested commit tee ; of course, therefore, not to the Commit tee on the Conduct of the War, which is a whitewashing and partisan committee. The republicans refused one of their own party, General Frank Blair, an investigating com mittee, after he had charged openly and ex plicitly, on the floor of the House, that the Treasury Department's management of trade and traffic at the West was reeking with corruption from head to fingers, and backed up his charge with the whole weight of his personal, civil, and military character and position. He offered to prove his allegations true, to an honest committee. Such a com mittee was denied him, and the subject was referred to the Committee on the Conduct of the War and suppressed. Mr. Kernan took warning by that experience ; nor did he yield to the fierce and insulting demands of the leader of the administration party the name of his informants, nor suhject them to that party's persecutions. " Give me another, not " a whitewashing committee," said he, "and I " will furnish witnesses. In the hope that there are enough honest and patriotic men in the Republican majority to j , in with the Democrats of the II ,use in yet 'voting fir such a committee, and willing to defend the purity of elections, and to brand a corrupt expenditure of public moneys, even at the cost of punishing members of their own party, we propose to show them that such corruption - , such profligacy, such tampering with elections, can be proved by other wit nesses besides those whom Mr. Kernan is ready to name, to an honest committee. First, Let such a committee summon before them the head of the transportation branch of the Quartermaster's Department in Wash— ington, and demand of him who authorized oue of his assistant quartermasters to issue transportation orders, just before the Penn— sylvania and the New York elections last year, and to iodorse them thus: " This transportation is given on the order of the Secretary of War, November —, 1863." Second, Let an honest committee summon before them the President of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, and his agents in and out of the ticket offices at Washington last fall, and demand to know of them the number of tickets which they furnished on such or similar orders, and for what points all, or nearly all, or a majority of those tickets were issued. Third, Let a committee which desires to preserve the purity of elections in the United States call before them the medical officers at that time serving in or about the Washington and Alexandria hospitals, and demand of them, by stern and rigid cross-examinations, whether, bef ire giving furloughs or sanction ing them for soldiers going home, they did not ascertain, directly or indirectly, how those soldiers would be likely to vote ; and whether they allowed any considerable number to go who said they would vote the Democratic tickets, and whether they did not allow all those physically able to go who asserted or suffered it to be thought that they would vote the Administration tickets. Fourth, Let such a committee ask these medical officers if they had not an order, or a request, or an intimation to pursue such a course with the soldiers in their charge, and if they had, wbo gave it to them, and then continue the investigation with the parties implicated. Fifth, Make the same inquiries of the med ical officers then serving in the hospitals in Baltimore, Philadelphia, and the vicinity of New York. Sixth, Make the same inquiries of the medi cal officers at Throgg's Neck, David's Island, etc., at the time of the late elections in - New York and Connecticut. Seventh, Let an honest committee summon Secretary Stanton before them, and demand to know of him if he did not promise to a Republican politician, five minutes after hav ing left with him the presence of President Lincoln, that the Pennsylvania election should be carried for the Administration candidates. Let them demand to know of Mr. Stanton if he did not order the transportation of all sick soldiers to their homes and , back to be paid, at the time of that election, and the one in New York, and if there was not an intima tion, given, hinted, or acted upon, that none but those who voted the Republican ticket should he permitted to leave. Finally, Let an honest, not a whitewashing committee summon President Lincoln himself before them, and when he is confronted with Secretary Stanton, let them demand of both if the Secretary was not complained of, in the presence of the President, for having attempt ed to defeat the nomination of Governor Cur tin at the Pittsburg convention and charged with injuring the Republican party in Penn sylvania and with the responsibility of their defeat in case they should be defeated. Let them next demand to know of those high officials, - whether at the same interview with the same person he did not demand of them that the Pennsylvania election should be car. ried anyhow, by such means as we have indi cated above, and whether any intimation was given then, or at any other time, that they would labor to have it thus carried, either by the President or by Secretary Stanton ; and let them demand of Secretary Stanton if he did not, after the interview, upbraid the per• son who was with him for having broached their plans in the presence of the President, and assure him that it was needless, and that the eleoti)n should certainly be oarried. Lerthem then demand of the President if, at that or any other time, he ever forbade Secretary STANTON so prostituting the power of his office, or ever after rebuked him for having so prostituted his power and so mis used the public moneys, in order to carry, and in carrying, the Pennsylvania election. Mr. KERNAN'S amendment was rejected. But if the honest Republicans in Congress will join the Democrats in demanding such an investigating committee, and that commit tee will call his witnesses and ours, we will furnish them with still other clues and facts whereby the troth shall be made known— painful though the consequerfow:te to Mr. STRVINII, to hie party, and to the administra tion whose corruption hea sown corruption round the land. Prom the Philadelphia Bendy Merem. THE caTECiliasios THE' CHURCH OF SHODDY. Designed Expressly for the Shoddy League, which mud be 'vacated by every Shoddyife before he is allowed to enter Abraham' s bosom. BY PET= PEPPERCORN Question.— What is your name ? Answer.—Shoddy. Q.—Who gave you that name ? A.—Abraham, William and Salmon, where in I was made a member of the Shoddy League, an enemy of State Rights, and an in heritor of a bundle of greenbacks. Q.—What did Abraham, William and Salmon do for you ? A.—They did.promise and vow three things in my name. First, that I should renounce free speech, free press and free elections. Second, that I should believe all the articles in the Shoddyite newspapers; and, thirdly, that I should keep and silently obey Abra ham's,'William's, and Salmon's sole will and commandments, and walk in the same all the days of my life. Q —Dust thou not think thou art bound to believe and do as they promised for thee? A.—Yes ; and verily, by the help of the Provost Guard, so I will; and I heartily thank Abraham, William and Salmon for shaving made me equal to the nigger, and I hope I shall continue so to the end of my life. Q.—Rehearse the articles of thy belief. A.—l believe in Abraham the First, maker of great_debts, high taxes and proclamations. And in William, the Auburnite, who peeped under the British lion's caudal appendage and discovered an orifice, through which he crept out of the Mason and Slidell affair. And in Salmon, the greatest paper manufacturer of modern times, upon whose articles there is always a very liberal discount. I also believe in the Almighty Dollar, the only god of the Shoddyitds, and in carrying on the war as long as I make money out of it, and go in for the last man and last dollar,' providing that I am the last man to go, and get the last dollar myself. I further believe that Abra ham the First has split more rails, expended more money, wrote more proclamations, told more stale jokes, caused more misery, saeri • feed more lives, and ran the country more into taxation and debt than all the Presidents which have preceded him, and ought to be re-elected again either by bribery or fraud, so that I may continually feed at the public Drib, office without end. Amen Q.—What dust thou chiefly learn in these articles of thy belief? A.—First, I learn there is nothing like Shoddy. Second, that black is white, and white is black, and that thesis is no distinction in colors, and that it would be an impossibility to distinguish any difference between myself and a nigger. Thirdly, to brand every man as a traitor that dares to think, speak or act different to myself Q —Y , ,u said that Abraham, William and Salmon did promise for you that you should keep their commandments. Tell me how many there be? A.—Ten. Q —Which are they? A.—The same which Abraham, and Salmon compel all their lick•epittles to take before they become members of the Shoddy League, saying we are your masters, and have raised, you to an equality with the darkey, and filled your pockets with shin plasters. First Commandment, thou shalt have no other masters than us. Second, Thou shalt not support any 1110,14 ure, frame any bill, speak to any Copperivad (unless to abuse him), put up any one except one of us for President, for we are jealous men, and we'll set our dog Forney on any one that dares to break this commandment. Third, Thou shalt not take the nam s of Abraham, William and Salmon in vain, as they are all expecting to receive high titles of honor, and one of them to he King of America. Fourth, Remember that On all Thank,giv• ing days thou kneeleet down on a pad of Shoddy, asking the giver of all good to aid the black legions in cutting throats, flogging women, , burning houses, and rubbing hen roosts. Fifth, Honor the nigger, and if he wants to marry your daughter don't refuse him, under the penalty of dismissal from the League, and being denounced as a Copper head. Sixth, Thou shalt not call the draft a con soriptive law, or say that poor white men are sold for $3OO a head, whilst the Shoddyi,es remain at home. Seventh, Thou shalt not grumble at high taxes. Eighth, Thou shalt not disbelieve any re ports of great victories, though they never happened. Ninth, Thou shalt bear false witness against all opposers of the church of Shoddy. Tenth, Thou shalt covet and receive a share of all stolen property, whatsoever it be, after Abraham, William and Salmon have had their share, for you know the largest dogs have a right to the largest bones. • Q.—What dust thou chiefly learn by these commandments ? A.—l learn two things—my duty to my masters, and my duty towards myself. Q.—What is your duty towards your mas ters ? A.—My duty toward my masters is to obey them, fear them, and honor them with all my words, with all my cringes, and with all my bows. To flatter them, give them thanks, idolize their names, and serve them blindly all the political days of my life. Q —What is thy duty towards thyself? A.—My duty towards myself is to love nobody but myself, to sacrifice even my father, mother, sister or brother for my own interest; to lick the dust from the feet of my superiors, and be as cruel as possible to inferiors ; to give my hands to picking and stealing, lying, slandering, and doing any dirty action what soever. To all the aforesaid creed I do most solemnly swear, and, if it is required, will willingly swallow the book, so that I may con tin-e a faithful Leaguer, office without end. Amen ! MR. VAL LAN DIGHA M ON REPRISALS WINDSOR, C. W,, March 7. Messrs. Hubbard & Brothers, Dayton, Ohio • GENTLEMEN : I read, several days ago, the telegraphic announcement of the " riddling " of the Empire office by " furloughed soldiers." I offer you no sympathy, for that will avail nothing now or hereafter. I do express to you my profound regret that you were not pre pared to inflict on the spot and in the midst of the assault, the complete punishment which the assailants deserved, but am gratified to learn that some of them did soon after reooive their deserts. But these cowardly acts cannot always be guarded against. And they do not primarily come from the soldiers. There is, therefore, but' one remedy for past and preventive of future injuries, and that is, instant summary and ample reprisal upon the persons and property of the men at home, who by lan guage and conduot are always inciting these outrages. No legal nor military punishment is ever inflicted upon the immediate instru ments. Retaliation, therefore, is the only and rightful remedy in times like these. I speak advisedly and recommend it in all oases hereafter. It is of no avail to announee the falsehood that " both parties condemn it." after the destruction has been consummated. The time has gone by for•obedieuce without protection. I speak decided language ; but the continual occurrence of these outrages frequently at tended with murders, and always without re dress—demands it. They must be stopped, let the consequences be what they will Re• prisals in such cases are now the only way left for a return to law and order. Very truly, C. L. VALLANDIGHAIL RETURN OF COLORED EMIGRANTS IRON HATTL—During the last session of Congress the sum of $600,000 was appropriated for the colonization of colored persons declared free by the act of -emancipation and confiscation. Taking advantage of this appropriation about 420 colored persons embarked, in April last, at Fortress Monroe under a contract with Forbes and Tuckerham, of New York, for the Isle of A-Vache, belonging to the republic of Hayti. During the passage the small-pox broke out, and they suffered terribly 'there from. After their arrival out their sufferings, from want of attention, beoame so great that Secretary Usher, under the direction of the President, despatched Mr. D. C. Donohue, of Indiana, to examine into their condition, and Mr. Lincoln determined, upon his report, to have them returned to,this country with out delay. Accordingly, the Alp Mario& C. Day was sent to the Isle of A-Vaohe during the month of February; and on .Sunday_ she returned and cast anchor 'the - Potomac, near Alexandria, with the eoxviving colonists, uow 368 in number, on-biffird.--;