gllngoter Xtttelligencer. THURSDAY; JULY 2 .8,1884. "The printing presses shall.be tree to every person - •who under:l,lms. „to examine the pro eeeffings of the legiSiatilrer or :any .branch' of government: and ..no be made to restrain the right thereof. The free commu nii3attorior thoughtandiopinionsiszne orthe invaluable rights of men; and every citizen may freely.spe,ag., Nitrite and print .curang ject ;. being responsible for -the:abuse' of that liberty. '• In prosecutions for the .ptiblication of Papers-investigating the official conduct of offi cers, or men In .piablie capacities, or where the matter publisliedis proper for public informa tion. the truth thereof may be given in evi dence."..,--Cuusiiiigioit of Penarytranta. OUR PARTY AS AN OPPOSITION PARTY— ITS PRESENT DUTY. • Foiniore than three years past the DemOcratic party has been placed in the periition of - an opposition party. It has beeiC its - duty, during that time, to watch the course of political events, to scrutinize the conduct of those acting theiart:of our rulers, and, while giving credit for whatever was wisely and rightly done, to protest in the name and on behalf of the people against whatever it deemed to be injudicious or unwise. That is the peculiar province of an opposition party, and by this means alone can those in power be re strained from excesses in a government such as ours, and the rights of the peo ple be secured against the insidious en croachments of arbitrary power. The temptations of rulers to transcend their_ legitimate authority is so great that very few have been found who did not need to be vigilantly watched by the people. The law of the land is always a rule of political conduct to good rulers, but few are to be found so perfect as not to be in danger of making some departure therefrom. Hence the necessity of an opposition party, whose business and whose bounden duty it is to sound the alarm and bring the weight of public opinion to bear with a view to restrain the rulers of the people ; and hence the necessity of changing the ruler of a re public at short intervals. It may pos sibly occur that the leaders of apolitical organization in a republic will occasion ally display such' wise forethought, and such statesmanlike sagacity, as to enable them to remain a long time in power; but such has not been the record of our history. While it is undeniable that the Democratic party have chiefly moulded the destinies of this nation, almost from the earliest pdriod 'of its existence, and that during all that pe riod its political life was a pure and honorable one, still it is not to be taken for granted that It • might not have abused the power it so often held, had it not been constantly subjected to the scrutinizing criticism of a powerful op position party. Occasionally, taking advantage of mistakes made, its op ponents came into power, but so in experienced were they in the art of governing, and so illy suited were their peculiar political theories to the genius of our institutions, that they never had the satisfaction of enjoying more than a single brief term of office. The Dem oerafic party has never been more vig orous, or more powerful to mould the public sentiment of the people, than when it occupied the position it does to-day. Hefetote, political organ ization has proven stt•ong enough to prevent its speedy return to the position for which it has always shown itself eminently well fitted. it was always as strong in adversity, and as vigorous after defeat, as when elated by success, and possessed of the reins of power.— Never in the history of nations has there been greater need of a great, strong, vigorous, compact opposition party than has existed in our republic since the advent of Abraham Lincoln to power. If this government of ours be saved, and the rights of the people se cured to them in the future, to the valor and the vigilance of the Democratic party will it all he due. Mr. Lincoln and his minions have done their best to crush it out of existence. Where bri bery would avail they have been most lavish with the people's money ; where men were found too pure to be corrupted, all the appliances of despotism have been employed to silence them. A sys tematic and sustained effort has been made to crush out opposition, that Mr. Lincoln and his parasites might ride in triumph over the liberties of the people in the unrestrained exercise of arbitrary and irresponsible power. Any party less compact, less vigilant, or less active than the Democratic party might have been forced to succumb. But it was too resolute to be awed, and its leaders weir too pure to be bribed. Amid dange - rs.ot arbitrary arrest, and trials of false im prisonment, its spokesmen have refused to be silenced. The Democratic pre , s, has fearlessly exposed the usurpations of -power, the tyrannical acts, the viola tions of the Constitution, and the many outrages on vested rights, attempted and perpetrated by the peesent dynasty of Abolition fanatics. Dungeons have not been able - to dampen the ardor of DeMocratic orators, and prison istlts and bars have not been able to shut out the sound of their voice from the ears of the people. The Democratic party, as an opposition party, has done its work well and manfully. While we were acting the part of an opposition party we had one task allot ted to us; now, that we aspire to the position of the administration party, another and different work is set before us. In a few short weeks the Demo cratic National Convention assembles at Chicago. It will be the duty of the delegates there assembled to make a a plain, distinctive and most unequivo cal enunciation of principles, in the shape of a strong, positive platform. It must be broad enough for every conser vative man in the land to stand upon. It must be eminently national, and most unmistakably Democratic. The day for mere negative action will then have passed away. We must apply the known and safe principles of our party to the issues of the day. We joust not fear to be perfectly outspoken. The time for a bold stand and fearless action will then have come, and we must show ourselves ready for it. We have no fear but that such a platform will be adopted as will stimulate every true lover of country to exertion in behalf of our candidates, and lead the tried friends of the Consti tution and the Union everywhere to take their stand firmly with us. Who the candidates shall be is a mat ter of ( secondary importance. We have plenty of good material front which to choose, and we have no doubt the right man will be found in him to whom - the popular voice shall most clearly point. When the Democracy assemble, it will be with full confidence in each other, and a universal impulse to close up their ranks and present an unbroken front to the foes of the Constitution and the Union, whoever they are and wherever they may be found. The signs of the times are all in our favor, and the future glows with the hue of well-grounded hope. THE AUGUST ELECTION Tickets for the election to be held on the 2d of next month have been printed and_ are now ready at this office. A proper person from each township should call and get them. It has been corieldered proper to print tickets both against and in favor of the proposed amendment allowing soldiers in the fielilto vote. Either or both kinds can be had. If - it requires three years of hard fighting to rake " Wwthirtgton safe" against the at tacks of a few thousand rebel raiders, how "? long Will it take to conquer and subjugate the undo) Southern people? THE PEACE PROPOSITIONS. - We publish elsewhere a full account of what took place at the late peace con ference at the "Clifton House," Canada. It was a quere assemblage to be sure. There was Horace Greeley, with his in evitable white hat, cheek by jowl with - the self-constituted ambassadors from the rebel dominions. It is no .wonder the whole affair looks to be decidedly "mixed." Our readerwlill no doubt peruse the entire corradence with much interest, and a sigh of disappoint; ment that so far no feasible basis, for a speedy and honorable Niece has, been hit upon. But, the affair has made one point 1 long disputed entirely clear, even to the dullest comprehension. "Old Abe" in his characteristically vulgar note, "To whom it may concern," lays down his ultimatum. He boldly avows that there can be no peace, nor any-steps taken to secure it until the last negro is free.— That is plain and pointed. The North ern people now know exactly where the rail-splitter stands. "No peace till the last negro is free," must henceforth be the rallying cry of every man who casts. his vote for Mr. Lincoln. What an in spiring sentiment! How it will shine on the transparencies of the Union Leagues throughout the land in the coming campaign. Let them post it up in big letters before their club room doors, and carry it on elevated poles in triumphant march thrtugh the streets of every city and town in the North. " No peace till the last negro is free!" Let it be adopted, repeated, and re-ech oed until every man in the land shall hear it, and comprehend it fully. Lin coln cries " no peace till the last negro is free." Jeff. Davis yells back "no peace until our independence is estab lished and recognized." The people of both sections will yet say, " hang you both, and let us have peace and a re union on the good old terms adopted by our fathers." With the triumph of the Democratic party, we firmly and candidly believe a peace possible on terms honorable to each section of our country ; and we are assured that the masses will rise up in their might, and hurl Lincoln from power, in order that his follies may no more stand in the way of a consummation so devoutly to be wished. lie himself said in his inaugural address, " suppose you go to war ; you cannot fight always and when after much loss on both sides, and no gain on either, you cease fight ing, the identical old questions of inter course are still upori"you." That is truth from a source not now considered very reliable, but, if it was a valid argu ment for pacific adjustment then, it, is equally valid now. Our only hope of a speedy and honorable peace is through the success of the Democratic party in 'the coming campaign. Let every man who desires peace and a restored Union labor earnestly for its success. THE CONSCRIPTION Ilse repeal of the commutation clause, by the act of Congress and the sanction of the President, coupled as it is with a proviso exhonerating certain classes of r•>li ions stet,. front its operation, is one ”r the outrages yet perpetrated by this Lcranniral Administralion. The whole scheiro• is a blow aimed at the laboring classes of the country. Ilcre toron., under former conscriptions, by th e aid of friends, many an honest poor man Wa.F , saved to his family ; but now nothing can protect him from the clutches of the bloody desp aisin untie which we live. He must be torn from his family and leave them to beggary and want; for the price of substitutes will rule so high that none but the rich can atlord to procure them. .Not only so, but the wealthy German farmers of Lancaster and other counties, who hap pen to belong to the Mennonitsh or sini ilar Christian denominations. are ex- Attnipted by paying the paltry sum of three honored dollars And for this Loon they are mainly ind bted to TnAll uEt i"TEVENS who wants their votes this fall to re-elect him to Congress. Is it possible that the laboring classes will any longer permit themselves to be thus used and abused by the despots in pow er? Will they still adhere to a party whose constant effort appears to be to sink them into a more hopeless bondage than that of African slavery or Russian serfdom ? Rather, will they not rise in their might and hurl from power the base miscreants who would thus tram ple them in the dust under the iron heel of a military despotism? To the mechanics and laboring classes of the country the times are pregnant with fearful portents and forebodings. They must act, and aet like men, or the chains which are now being forged will bind them and their children for genet.- atioias to come in hopeless bondage. The ballot-box, when left free and untram meled, is their sure remedy. But, in this by reason of fraud and mili tary interference, which may again Inc used to defeat the will of the people— hen the final resort is revolution. Let rants beware. There is such a thing as forbearance ceasing to be a virtue. Let the people act like freemen who " kuo - wing their rights dare maintain them," at the polls in October and No vember next, and their freedom will he won in a peaceful and constitutional manner. Let them cringe and cower before the satraps of despotism, and kis the hand that smites them, and year, may elapse before " the reign of terror" is over, \ and a bloody struggle be rco tiered necessary to secure rights which have been surrendered through their cowantice and folly. THE DAILY INTELLIGENtER We have received our new steam power printing press, one of Hoe's best. The first number of the Doily biedii ifi ne•'r will be issued in about two weeks. It is iniffOrtant therefore that our friends throughout the eounty, and elsewhere, should at once send in their lists of those desiring to subscribe for it. 11ur agent;: will please attend to this matter at once in order that we may make up our mail and - packet lsmk in time for the first issue. Come friends go to work with some system and all your energy, and let us start with our lira of subscribers as full as possible. It will take some ten daysor more for us to get fixed up properly, and in the mean time all preliminary arrangements should be promptly made. GREELEY HOPES FOR PEACE Horace Greeley says he has strong hopes that we shall yet obtain au hon orable peace by negotiation. He appears to have abandoned the theories of " un conditional submission," and "complete subjugation." With a sagacity superior to that of his party, he is sensible of the idiocy of supposing that the Mouth can ever he subjugated in any such sense as that the property of all Its citizens will be at the disposal of the Federal govern ment. He commends General Fremont for stamping upon instead of standing upon the confiscation plank in the Cleveland platform ; and he reprobates the folly of the unconditional submis sion " insisted upon by the Baltimore Ckmvention. To use Mr. Greeley's ex pressive epithet, those who believe in stitch absurdities are zanies." He is said to have parted with the self caustituted rebel commissioners with regret, and to have gone so far, when shout leaving the Clifton House for the American side, as to say to Mr. Sanders, " This is not the end of this affair. You must not think all the RepubliCan party arc blackguards." This is interpreted by the .2V. Y. Herald to be a direct hit at " Old Abe." Whether it was meant for him or not, there can be no doubt about its being deserved by him. 1 WORD MORE ABOUT THE FREEDOM OF SPEECH. The Express, in its issue of the 22d, attempts a reply -to our review of an ar ticle which appeared in its columns, ad vocating the right of the Administra tion to restrict freedom of speech and of the press. Its rejoinder is very weak, but possibly worth a passing notice. First, the Editor takes the entirely un tenable position, that our Constitution was intended for times of " profound tranquility." No more false and un warrantable assumption was ever made. He who reads the record of human pro gres's by the shining light of past his tory, will, unless he wilfully closes his eyes to the truth, easily discern that the great work which has always been set before a people desiring to be free, was the task of guarding well:: their rights against assaults likely to be made, not in times of profound tranquility, but, in periods of popular commotion, and when their rulers were engaged in war. The safeguards which our fath ers wisely set up were intended not for times of peace, and not as restraints upon good rulers; but were especially designed for just such days as these, and meant to apply with all their force to such rulers as we are now cursed with. If in any nation the times are pro foundly tranquil, that is a sure indica tion that the ruler is governing wisely and well, keeping within the recognized bounds of his constitutional authority, and carefully guarding the rights, and providing for the happiness of the peo ple. Popular excitement is a sure indi cation of popular discontent, and it may generally be safely inferred that when this exists to any great extent, the ruler is in fault. The whole theory of those who at tempt to palliate and excuse the usurpa tions of power, and the tyrannical acts of the present Administration, on the false plea put forth by the Eapress is utterly baselesß. The Constitution of the I:nited States gives all needful pow ers to the President. Any power not therein conferred was expressly reserved and never intended to he granted. Had Mr. Lincoln been content to confine his acts within the limits of proper consti tutional restraint, had he carried on the war for legitimate and constitutional purposes, he would never have felt any necessity for violating the sacred and fundamental law of the land. It was only when he resolved to assail the rights of states, and to convert the war into a mere mad crusade against slavery, that he was emboldened by fanatic zeal to repeated and most gross violations of the Constitution. When he thus stepped beyond his Province, and unlawfully assailed the rights of States and of individuals, thou sands of the best men in the nation en tered their earnest protest. Then he had resort to the means always em ployed by despots. Newspapers were suppressed, editors and orators were seized without any warrant of law, and thrown into prison to he released without trial, and without any specific charge ever being made against - them. The /atbro, corpus was suspended. Re dress was nowhere to be had, and the will of one man was, during a short reign "I• terror, supreme Over the Con stitution, and all the well recognized and clearly defined laws of the land.— More daringly despot i.• acts were never perpetrate.] by ally all tOerat in the world, than have been witnessed within the United States since Mr. Lincoln came into power. And yet, strange to say, Abolition newspapers have the audacity to attempt to excuse and palliate these excesses. in so doing, f o m ever, they are forced to the sad strait of our neighbor, who denies the doctrine of " State rights," puts in no plea for the preservation and security of the rights and liberties of white men, but directs his admiring gaze to " the coining man," the negro. With what unctuous eloquence does he dwell and dilate on this, his favorite theme. All the grand revelations of history, all the heroic etTorts of our ancestors to curbe kingly power, sink into utter insignificance, in his estima tion, when compared to this surpassing ly glorious struggle of his party to ele vate the negro at the expense of the white race. Before our Congress of negrophilists the assemblage of sturdy English barons at Runnymede sinks into insignificance, and the renown of 1215 pales away before the huninous splendor that now encircles the negro with a resplendent halo of coming renown. Bah! We are siek and tired of suet, pretended philanthropy. The first great work for this nation, as recog nized by the framers of our Constitu tion, and by :ill sensible and patriotic men since,, is to take care of, and secure the rights, the liberties, and the social and material advancement of the white race. There is no glory. and no true philanthropy, in sacrificing our own race fo• one which to this day is in a state of the most degraded and barbar ous slavery in their native land. To those who are here the boon of freedom can only add increased misery, ending in their destruction. Not even "mis cegenation," the dream of many abo litionists, and the praetice of some, can save the " freedmen " front such a fate. There is neither glory nor profit in car rying on the war for such a purpose. But, from the tone of the Express, we notice that he is entirely in favor of " fighting it out on t hat line." We are not. To our challenge for him to find a single Democratic paper in this State from which to prove the existence of any such order as that of " Knights of the Golden Circle " in Pennsylvania, he replies by a quibble and an extract from some paper in support of the Ad ministration in Illinois. Suppose some such organization does exist in the \Vest. Suppose, too, for the sake of argument, that the members thereof are engaged in treasonable pract ices. Would it, therefore, be right to silence news papers in Pennsylvania, where no such organization exists, or even to restrain wen from l'reed,,ni or speech where it does exist, When they do not belong to it or even allude to it" Would not the just and proper plan he the legal one— to arrest those connected with it, and try them for treason before a proper judicial tribunal, and if found guilty thereof, sentence them to death ? Why is this not done? Why do not Aboli tion newspapers tnlvocate such a course Why? Simply because they do not be lieve the lies they daily tell. They get up reports which they know have not'• a word of truth in them, and because the Democratic party commits no overt act of treason, but ever hears itself pub licly and privately in a patriotic man ner, they meanly insinuate from time to time that a secret and treasonable organization exists in its ranks. That, like much of what we read now-a-days, is au abolition lie, patched up to serve a base purpose. It is certainly a most contemptibly slow basis on which to found a plea for granting Mr. Lincoln the right to muzzle the press and sup press freedom of speech. We would respectfully suggest, that the day when the mouths of Democrats can be shut up by force or fear has gone by forever. The sooner Mr. Lincoln and his party recognize this fact the better for them: Any attempt to renew outrages, such as have been already committed, would be resisted by all the force given by the God of nature to freemen. hi Thursday next, August 4th, has been set apart by the President as a day of fasting and prayer.. STILL IF THE SLAVE TRADE. ".Loyal," abolitionised, -puritanical, .canting, hypocritical Massachusetts was the first State to engage.in the African Slave trade. Her commercial adven turers coined money out of negroes stolen from Africa. They went long voyages, and traded trinkets and glit tering gew-gaws, it may be wooden nut megs, certainly divers kind of "Yankee notions," to the barbarous kings of Con go and Guinea for black flesh and blood. This was all right then, for it put money in their pockets. 'When a proposition `was made in the convention which framed the Constitution to abolish the slave trade at once, Southern men fa vored it, but Massachusetts objected. She wanted a chance to make a little more money out of the negro. At her instance, and by the aid of her vote, it was declared in the Constitution, that Congress should pass no law abolishing the Slave Trade prior to 1808." When was Yankee cupidity ever satisfied, or Yankee selfishness and meanness equal ed.? Massachusetts, philanthropical, negro-loving, negro-worshiping Massa chusetts, after having first brought the negro from Africa and sold him at high prices to Southern planters, turned round and headed a orusade to deprive them of all right to, and all use of pro perty she had disposed of for a valuable consideration. Rut now,with a draft hanging over her head, Massachusetts, Sumner's home, goes into the Slave trade again with her cupidity and cunning sharpened anew. She has agents out over all the border States stealing and buying up negroes. They are not wanted now to work in cotton fields, or on rice plantations, but to be slaughtered in a war which, but for Massachusetts fanaticism would never have been. There is still money in the negro, and money, whether it be gold or " greenbacks " is the Yankee's God, the divinity he most devoutly wor ships. The negro, poor wretch, is still worth money, and is therefore just now an object of Yankee solicitude. He can be put in the army as a substitute for the cowardly carcass ofn "loyal," loud mouthed, prating, Massachusetts' abo litionist. Wretched negro! In vain will he endeavor to escape. His loving friends, those who talk of making him their equal, the Massachusetts Yan kees who stick at nothing are after him, and he is bound to succumb. A story is told, in a Washington pa per of one of these agents, which illus trates Yankee honor and Yankee cupid ity combined in a manner entirely characteristic of the State that boasts of standing on Plymouth rock. The fellow S had come across a newly arrived " con traband," who was a good subject for a 'sharper. Finding that his sable brother was ignorant enough to believe any thing, he assured him that he was a mustering in officer, duly authorized to force men like him into the service. In vain did the negro protest and appeal to his sympathies. When was a genuine Yankee ever known to'let " a chance to make a good deal " slip through his lingers, either from motives of honor or of pity? The white scoundrel intended to put his black brother where he would stand a " first class " chance of being killed, get credit for a substitute with out expending a clime, and quietly pock et the price paid by his district for a man. Some interloper, happening to overhenr, interfered in time to break up " the nice little arrangement," to the infinite disgust of the skin-flint" Yan kee, and the inexpressible relief of the terrified negro. The game is still going on, and it is said Massachusetts will soon have tilled her quota by such foul means. How she will chuckle then over poor, old, slow-paced Pennsylva nia. The puritan State, much as her silver tongued Sumner prates of the " barbar ism of slavery,'' is still in the Slave trade. Her philanthropists now accord to the negro, whom they pronounce the white man's equal, the precious privi lege of being shot in their stead. They purchase him, or Steal him if they can, to make a victim of him, and freely offer him up on the bloody alter of hate which they have erected. It would be quite as humane, and a deal cheaper, always the chief desideratum with a Yankee, to re-open the Slave trade with Africa at once. If negroes must be got to fight the battles of the abolitionists, why not get them in all 'their pristine vigor and martial excellence from their native land ? These would not be afflicted with any terrible fears of falling into the hands of enragedland vengeful masters. By all means let Massachusetts take a contract to furnish negro warriors fresh from Dahomey, and Congo, and Ashan tee, and from the regions beyond the Mountains of the Moon, at the rate of, say, one half million a month. It would he an economical way of supplying the waste of war, and we verily believe it would puzzle the "Johnny Rebs" to find powder and hall to kill them off faster than that.; besides there would be some hope of their giving up eventually, from shere exhaustion, caused by the over exertion of such constant butchery. If we could only keep up the supply of fresh victims, we do not think they could stand it more than twenty years longer at the ,most. Let no one fear the supply would be exhausted, for if Yan kee cupidity had fair play it would de populate Africa, but what it would come up to a contract, so long as it paid. If negroes are superior to white soldiers, as the abolitionists say, why not have all negroes, and why not get those who have not been debased and depreciated by the barbarous usage of Southern masters? We go for re-opening the Af rican Slave trade at once, on the above conditions. It would take about two big ship loads, crammed in after the most approved treble deck style, to ease the terrified souls of our Lancaster coun ty abolitionists from their dread of the impending draft. There are but two difficulties in the way that we know of. The Florida still roams the seas, if the Alabama has gone to the bottom, and, perhaps, the king of Dahomey, and other ignorant African potentates, might not be disposed to regard " green backs " as a " legal tender " for the flesh and blood of their subjects. But these difficulties might be surmounted. Let grandmother Welles be wakened up to the full brilliancy of this scheme, and, our word for it, he would have the Flor ida sunk In mid ocean, " deeper than plumet line ever sounded," even if had to flank her with a hundred thousand of Ericson's most improved iron-clads. The second difficulty might he easily overcome, by sending over with the first vessel a delegation of abolition orators and editors, including Mr. Chase him self, to oonvince all the African slave factors that our greenback paper is a better circulating medium than their cowrie shells, or even their Guinea gold; Who that witnessed their Success in this regard with a large portion of " the most enlightened people on the face of the earth," can doubt that the same ar guments would be equally satisfactory to mere " outside barbarians." The scheme is entirely feasible. Let it be adopted at once, that we may feel that the rebellion is at last really about to be crushed, and have the glorious eon• sciousness of knowing that " the re.. public still lives." Democratic exchange very pertinently inquires " what has become of the Republi can party catch-word that in time of war there can be but two parties, patriots and traitors?" We now dnd within their own harmonious household at least two partials --.0410 for Liamain and *no far Bust► WORK FOR ;WORKING MEN. The other , dayi while-riding-in the cars, we overheard a Conversation be tween several men. The one was a brawny hard-fisted mechanic, dressed in his every day working apparel, but having a fine massiVOleaff..on::ihis shoulders and a countenance that indi, cated much more than ordinary hit& lectual capacity. He was boldly advo cating the principles, and defendingthe policy of the Democratic party. In doing so he was having a general set to with two or three well-dressed individ uals, who looked as if they Shad en joyed superior advantagee of education. It did not take long however for them to discover that they had " waked up' the wrong passenger." Our mechanic omitted an "h " occasionally, and now and then put one in at a point which plainly indicated his English origin, but he talked with remarkable good sense, and with all the impressive earnestness of one who completely understood his subject. His sentences were not polished, and he did not take pains to round off' his periods gracefully, but what he said was impressive, be cause he clinched every assertion he made by plain, homely, practical illus tration. His statements of the effect of the depreciation of the currency, and the necessary high price of every thing the laboring men used in his family. were perfectly convincing, because per fectly true and unanswerable. He showed very satisfactorily 'that the ad vance in wages was not nearly equiva lent to the advance in prices. He showed how hardly the conscription bore upon mechanics and other laboring men. In short, he had been carefully reading, not only Democratic but Ad ministration newspapers, and was well posted on the vital questions of the day. Finally, he shut up the mouths of his opponents completely by .announcing that he was an Englishman by birth, had been opposed to the Democratic party, and had voted for Lincoln in good faith ; and he thereupon proceded to explain, in a manner that if not con vincing was at least silencing, why he could not be induced to support him any longer. He also averred, with an air that admitted of no doubt, that lie knew many mechanics and laboring men who, having also voted for Lin coln, now entertained precisely similar views with himself. Throughout the conversation, while decidedly in earnest, he was entirely courteous and inoffen sive in his manner. This, thought we, is the most effective kind of speech making; this is what is just now needed. Why, we asked our self, should there not be more of it ? No professional speech-makers can so well appeal to the laboring classes as can one , of themselves. Why should they not do their own talking ? They are more deeply interested in a right administration of this government than any other single class of men, for the reason that they are by far the most numerous class of our population.— Why, then, should they not do their own talking on political subjects. IL is not necessary that they should get on the stump to do this, not necessary that they should be able to make a set speech. They have daily, and almost hourly opportunities to express their honest convictions, and the times are such that these convictions can be forced home on the minds of their fellows by the most forcible practical. appeals.— There is scarcely a laboring man in the nation to-day who is not pinched in I ,basket and store, compelled to forego luxuries, and even many things once deemed necessaries of life. Who can talk to this class of men so convincingly of the evils to which an Abolition Ad ministration has reduced them as one of themselves? Let every laboring man recognize the fact that he indi vidually has a mission to perform, and a work to do in the present Presidential campaign. Let him read and think for himself, and let him reason calmly and dispassionately with fellow working men. Thousands everywhere can thus be reached, and convinced of the error of their way, who can be influenced in no other manner. Let every Demo cratic laboring man who can possibly afford it, and they should strain a point to effect it, take at least one good, reliable Democratic newspaper during the coming campaign. He will thus be enabled to keep himself posted on the issues of the day, and will be fur nished with sound arguments, such as cannot be refuted by Abolition sophis try. After reading his paper he should,if possible, induce some one of his fellows, who differs with him, to do the same. If this work is done, done thoroughly, done kindly and courteously, we shall witness such a revolution of sentiment. :unong the masses as shall he astonish- ing. It is now going on. Thousands who voted for Lincoln *lll wisely repu diate him with utter scorn and loathing. Let every right-thinking laboring man in this community make a strong, indi vidual appeal to his fellow-man, and we shall see such a ground-swell of pop ular opinion the world never wit nessed. This is the work set before every thoughtful laboring man in the nation. Let each one see that his share of the work is done, and well done.— Never in the history of the world were so many or such strong incentives oar ed to any people as those which now address themselves with peculiar force to the working men of the United States. The depreciation of a paper currency, which should never have been issued, has so advanced the price of every article used, that luxuries are now out of reach of many who once enjoyed them, and even the necessaries of life very hard to be obtained. There is no prospect of a decline while this war continues, nor indeed speedily after its close, except through a period of great suffering and wide spread distress. There is scarcely a single right of which we were once so proud that has not been violated and rudely assailed by the fanatics now in power. And, to crown the public distress, and render deeper the despondency of the nuieses, a re morseless and sweeping conscription renders every able-bodied man, who is unable to pay from one to two thousand dollars for a substitute, liable to be torn from his family and dragged off to per' ish in a struggle whose avowed object is no longer a restoration of the Union, hut the freeing of the negro. It is high time t hat working men everywhere were fully aroused to a true sense of their con dition. There is a great and glorious work set apart for them to do. Let them rise up en. ?muse, and hurl them from power who are warring against their best interests. This is their work, and they must do it. If they fail to seize the favorable opportunity that is now presented, they will plant a thorn of regret that will sting them painfully in the future. PROPHETIC DANIEL WEBSTER During the latter days of Mr. 'Webster, he was assailed by the Abolitionists on ac count of his 7th of March speech. It is in teresting now to turn to that speech and mark the prophetic wisdom which pene trates every line of it. The following Is a passage from Mr. Webster's remarks to a gentleman in Washington, a short time be fore he left that city for the last time. It sustains all that he ever uttered iu his speeches in the way of warning against the ruinous party of Abolition, and its authen ticity has been fully established ; "If the Fanatics and Abo/itionfsta eyet get the power in their hands they will over ride the Constitution, set the Supreme Court at defiance, change and make laws to suit themselves, lay violent handi-on those who differ with Mein in their opinions or dare question their iandlibiiity, and finally bank riga tha rountry and daLuga ii with blood." LINCOLNILLIP ORATORY. "`Since the Ofealon'Of Mr' ncolri; with all his low tastes and smutty sto ries, we have had a surfeit of vulgarity and blackguardism. It has cropped out 4tilibrindtmtly in public places as to'as- Kline the appearance Of 'being-the pro 7 vailins sentiinent of the party in power. Never until the recent upheaval of the lowest strata of society_ o the surface has this country failed to appreciate the decencies and proprieties of life. Now, however, a miserable low buffoon dis graces the presidential chair, and in the abolition ranks.the biggest blackguards seem-to bear off the palm. They have nominated a certain Major General Oglesby for Governor of Illinois, and he is proceeding to make speeches after the most approved style of Lincolnian ora tory. Here is a report of one of his re cent attempts, which will do as "a specimen brick : " Major General Oglesby, the lion of the evening, came forward and was well re ceived. He began his harangue in his usual style, which, was continued for about an hour. He was sorry to see men despondent over the "little squirt" of sad news from Washington. Should Washington be cap tured, and the whole District of Columbia laid in ashes and its people annihilated, he would not quail, no, not him. " Great God Almighty," to him it would he "the hour of jubilee." He could not be frightened, and was not afraid. "If," said he, "my loyalty ever gives out, may God Almighty strike me dead." There was no cause of alarm. Grant had "the rebels entirely at his mercy." He continued—nobody is hurt. Why are you sad like an old sow with the hog choler[? We are more than a match for the long-legged, yaller-haired, and tal low-headed rebels. The whole world can not whip us. I bet one thousand dollars to a cent that I could lead you to whip the in fernal hounds. I don't want any compro mise; compromise! the devil! that ain't my style. I have faith in Father Abraham —the father of the faithful lie is my man. He has done all he could to save us from the hellish degradation we are now in, and you are all hellbent on voting for him." After this burst of eloquence, the speaker was obliged to borrow a handkerchief to wie the perspiration from his face. "Notwith standing." said he,'."all that has been done, there is somebody opposed to us—yes, as sure as there is a God in Heaven, somebody is opposed to us, and to them I say, I dare you--yes, damn you—l dare vou to say what you are afraid of." This eloquent language was continued for some time to the infinite disgust of all respectable citi zens. The Louisville Journal copies the foregoing specimen of Republican ora tory, and wants to know what has be come of Jim Lane. The admirers of the latter, the JoUrnal thinks, should loudly call upon him to look to his lau rels. A few more speeches from Major- General Oglesby, and the name of Jim Lane may pass into total and everlasting eclipse, if something is not done. "Some thing must be done." Let the great jayhawker whet his hill and plume his feathers. Let him prepare to soar high er and swoop faster than ever. Shall it be said that Oglesby out-Jim-Laned Jim Lane? Perish the thought! If Jim Lane is to be surpassed, let him surpass himself. livery genuine Abolitionist ought to cherish his unique fame as a sacred thing. PROFANATION OF THE • PRESIDENT'S GROUNDS BY I NEGRO PIC-NIC. The 4th of July, 1510, witnessed what no other day in the annals of our country ever saw. On that day the negroes of Washing ton city assembled in large num hers on the grounds south of the President's House, and there, beneath the very eaves Or the buildiM• erected by white men for the reAt lence of the Chiet Magistrate of a nation of of white men, made a nation's bark the chosen scene of their feasting and revelries, under thesanetien of the hat h at's President. The incident bears a terrible significance front the eircumstances comweted with it, :cad the horrible condition iillo which the voulitrV has been placed. Here in Ihe tupltol of the country, on the banks of the Petennte—within the grounds surrounding the mansion of the. Country's thief Magis trate, assembled a vast herd of negroes to enjoy themselves in th , gayeties of a Me na.. The warm .1 illy sun lamning in a itloutiless sky shone upon them protected front the fiereelieslf el its rays by the leafy branches the thickly clustering trees. The breezes from the blue Potomac cooled t heir dusky 1 rows. The fountains sparkled in the glittering sunshine for their delight. Their hearts were cheered tie gayeties of the °erasion, and joyously excited by the thought that in front of them was his house who, to bestow upon them such pleasures, had steeped the country to the very dregs of the bitterest cup of - woe ever hold to a natit m's Anti but a few miles away fruni them, be neath the hot glare of Virginia suns, and in the stillingatmosphere of Virginia swamps, rendered still more horrible by the decaying (torsos of thousands of their comrades. toiled and fought the noblest of the land. No trees to shelter them—no cool river breeze to re fresh them—no lbuntains splashing music on the air for them. Parched with heat and worn with toil—their hearts saddened by reeollections of their noble comrades whose dead bodies tilled every mile of that terri ble march from the Rapidan to the Appo mattox—yisions of happy Fourths of July stealing over their minds—this noble army of white men—the very flower of the land— were hurling themselves fruitlessly upon ahnost impregnable fortifications at the commands of a headhm , and unreflecting leader, tbr whit' That the negro should have the privilege of enjoying himself soci ally and pleasurably on the 4th of July in the public; gzionds of the Nation's Capital. We clip the above from the 'Washington Constitutional Union, and, with pain and sorrow at the degradation brought upon our country by the mis erable Abolition dynasty now in power, call the special attention of our readers to it, as also to the subjoined extract. from the same article, which speaks of the deed of outrage as it deserves : The question may be pertinently asked, for what are we now fighting, when such disgraceful scenes may be witnessed as the legitimate result of the efforts of those in trusted with the management of the War? We see the country torn and rent, tears in every mother's eye, agony at every father's heart ; the proud prestige of the great Re pablic l , .Hms forever gone ; constitutional liberty and law ruthlessly immolated upon their own altars, and contemptuously tram ' pled in the dust; the last and the brightest hope of humanity withered in the grasp of the cowardly tyrant, like flowers in the fr,,st of tm autumn blast; order and security beneath the iron heel of a foully corrupt despotism ; with the insane cry still going up for the continuance of this infer nal dance of death ; and as compensation for all these, we have the proud elevation to social and political equality with AmeH ean freemen of a race idelibly stamped by the litinits of the Creator with the mark of degradation—of a race whose fittest instincts are a coarse brutality, and *hose highest aspirations are a beastly sensuality. (treat God ! is this a compensation for the ineffable hor rors- of the sacrifices the groaning country has made for the past three memorial years? Is this the restored and happy Union the Republican party promised us should emerge from the fiery furnace Of this mi -1 holy war? or is it but an experiment on the part of these, blood-thirsty and vision ary lanafies to overturn the immutable laws of physical nature, and by destroying all that is dear to man, attempt an improve ment on the work of the Almighty? It is well that the people should ponder these things. It is well that they should think deeply upon the fact of negro enjoy ment of the delights of.life purchased at the expense of thousands of lives and countless millionsof monev. It is well they should ask themselves if the Union is to he irre trievably ruined—themselves crushed into hopeless poverty by the unendurable weight of public debt—their sons dragged off by the conscription like sheep to the shambles— their recollections of past glory and their hopes of future greatness alike buried in the inextricable ruin to which all things are tending, merely to increase the pleasures of an inferior race which a true and innnuta ble instinct of our nature has pronounced unfit for any relations with white men but those of a servile type. And it is especially well that the people should ponder these things when this party whose policy inaug urated the existing horrible condition of af fairs—in whose treacherous embrace Union and Constitution have perished, and who, in the name of Freedom, assassinated Lib erty at the vary foot of her altars—who pulled down the temples of constitutional dc yotion, and dedicated groves to the worship of the falsest and foulest heresies that ever disgraced the political religion of a nation— who have proved most terribly to the coun try the truth of the old Roman maxim of " whom the Gods wish to destroy they first make mad "—when this party, we say, come before the people, and gravely demand that people's support, because the country's salvation. rests solely with them, it is well that they should deeply meditate this glar ing incousistency—this worse than suicidal policy—this horrible but legitimate result of Black Republican teachings. 14 la said that 'Stewart, the tullliopare uterchroit: of New York., got badly bitteu on gold, lie wanted's naillionl6 pay . fOr ipa portatious, Gold wits 150.• - Ile thought it would go dowp, and borroWed a guiliton. If he is reqtdrad topay at preaept rates it will blU3m. . abarpry. pat 44 eIPI 6 4 1 nd it PEACE NEGOTIATIONS. The Correspondence on the Subject—The President's Note "To Whom it Nay Concern "—The Negotiations Broken Oft BUFFALO, Thursday, July 21. The follolving _correspondence explains itself ' - NIL SENDERS TO StR. GREELEY. [Cc;riy. Private and confidential.] CLIFTON HOUSE, NIAGARA FALLS, C. W., July lf.t, 1864. Dear Sir: I am authorized to say that Hon. Clement C. Clay, of Alabama, Prof. James P. Holcombe, of and Georg N. Sanders, of Dixie; are ready and willing to go at once to Washington, upon complete and unqualified protection being given, either by the President or Secretary of War. Lot the permission include the three-names and one other. Very . respectfully, 4EORGE N. SANDERS To Hon. Horace Greely. MR. GREELEY TO THE COMMISSIONERS NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y., July 17, 1864. Gentlemen: I am informed that you are duly accredited from Richmond as the bearers of propositions looking to the estab lishment of peace, that you desire to visit Washington in the fulfillment of your mis sion, and that you further desire that Mr. George N. Sanders shall accompany you. If my information be thus far substantially correct, I am authorized by the President of the United States to tender you his safe conduct on the journey proposed, and'to ae oompany you at the earliest time that it will he agreeable to you. I have the honor to be, gentlemen, Yours, HORACE GREELEY. To Messrs. Clement C. Clay, Jacob Thomp son, James P. Holcombe, Clifton House, C. W. REPLY OF MESSRS. CLAY AND HOLCOMBE. CLIFTON HOUSE, NIAGARA FALLS, ) July 18, 1864. j Sir: We have the honor to acknowledge your favor of the 17th inst., which would have been answered on yesterday, but for the absence of Mr. Clay. The sate conduct of the President of the United States has been tendered us, I regret to say, under some misapprehension of facts. Wfmi have not been accredited to him from Riehmond as the bearers of propositions looking to the establishment of peace. We are, however, in the confidential employment of our fioV ernment, and are entirely familiar with its wishes and opinions on that subject; and we feel authorized to declare that, if the circumstances disclosed ill this correspon dence were communicated to Richmond, we would he at once invested with the au thority to which your letter refers ; or other gentlemen clothed with full pow ers would be immediately sent to Washing ton with a view of hastening a consumma tion so much to be desired, and terminating at the earliest possible moment the calami ties of the war. We respectfully solicit, through your intervention, a safe conduct to Washington, and thence, by any route which may be designated, through your lines to Richmond. We would be gratified if Mr. George N. Sanders was embraced in this privilege. Permit us, in conclusion, to acknowledge our obligations to you for the interest you have manifested in the further ance of our wishes, and to express the hope that, in any event, you will afford us the opportunity of 'tendering them in person before you leave the Falls. We remain very respectfully, Sc., C. C. CLAY„) R. J. P. HOLCOMBE. P. B.—lt is proper to state that Mr. Thomp son is not here, and has not been staying with us since our sojourn in Canada. I=2l INTERNATIONAL HOTEL, NIAOARA, N.Y., July Pi, 186-1. j Gent/emen: I have the honor to acknowl edge the receipt of yours of this date by the hand of Mr. W. C. Jewett. The state of filets therein presented being - materially dif ihrent from that which was understood to exist by the President when he cutritstod me with the safe conduct required, it seems to the on every accouni advisable that 1 should communicate with him by telegraph and solicit fresh instructions, which I shall at Once proceed to to. I hope to be able to transmit the result this afternoon:and, at all events, I shall do 9r it moment. Yours truly, HORACE tI REELEY. Til it us:it-h. Clement C. Clay and James I'. llolcombe. Clifton House, C. W. 'LIPTON I LOUSE, NIA f:A RA FALLS, , July 15, 15114. To Mu. IL Niagara Pall 4, !C. Y.: Sir—We have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your note of this date, by the hands of Col Jewett, and will await the fur tiler answer which you purpose to send us. We are, very respectfully, L te !Signed) C. C, CLAY, JR., JAMES P. HoLcomsE. INTERNATIONAL. HOTEL, t NIAGARA liaLts, N. V., July HI, Gentlemen: Al 't late 11 ,, ar last evening, {me lat 4, for o,llllllunicat with you,) I received a despatch informing me that fur ther lnsTructlOnS test li'n , hlngton last. eve ning, which must reach me, if there is no interruption, at noon to-morrow. Should you decide to await their arrival, I feel con fident that they will enable me to answer definitely your note of yesterday morning. Regretting a delay which I am sure you will regara 115 unavoidable on my part, I remain, yours truly, HonACE GREELEv. To Hon. MOSsrs, C, C. Clay, Jr., and J. P. Holcombe, Clifton House, Niagara Falls, C. W. CLIFTON HOITSE, NIAGARA FALLS, , July 19, MIA. j Sir: Cut. Jewell hum just handed us your note of this date, in which you state that further instructions from Washington will reach you by noon to-morrow, if there be no interruption. One, or possibly both, of us may be obliged to leave the Falls to-day, but will return in time to receive the com munication which you promise to-morrow. We remain truly yours, ke., (Signed, JAMES P. HOLCOMBE, C. C. CLAY, Ja. To Hon. Horace (reeley, now at the Inter national Hotel, ExEct:TrvE MANSION, IVA.suINGTos, July 18, 1864. To whom it- may concern Any proposi tion which embraces the restoration of peace, the integrity of the whole Union and the abandonment of slavery, and which comes by and with the authority that can control the armies now at war against t.be United States, will be received and considered by the Executive Government of the United States, and will he met by liberal terms, on substantial and collateral points and the bearer or bearers thereof shall have safe conduct both ways, (Signed, ABRAHAM Lizicom:, FROM 31.A.J. HAY TO PROF. HOLCOMBE Major Hay would respectfully inquire whether Prof. Holcombe, and the gentlemen associated with him, desire to send to Wash ington by Major Hay arty messages in ref erence to the, condnunication delivered to him on yesterday, and, in that case, when ho may expect to he favored with such mes sages. IMEMEMEI INTERNATIONAL HOTEL, Wednesday Mr, Ithlcombe presents his compliments to Major Hay, and greatly regrets if his re turn to Washington has been delayed by any expectation of an answer to the cmn munication which Mr. Holcombe received from him on yesterday, to be delivered to the President of the United States. That communication was accepted as a response to a letter of Messrs Clay and Holcombe to Hon. H. Greeley, and to that gentleman an answer has been transmitted. CLIFTON HOUSE. NIAGARA FALLS, Thursday, July [A copy of original letter held by me to deliver to Hon. Horace Greeley, and which duplicate I now furnish to the Associated Press. (Signed) Cf4.47..;.ti.14.. JEWETT.J FINAL RESPONAE FROM CLAY ANT, EfOL- NIAOARA FALLS, CLIFTON HOUSE, July 21, j To Hon. Horace Greeley : Sir—The paper handed to Mr. Holcombe, on yesterday, in your presence, by Maj. Hay, A. A. Cl., as an answer, to an application in our note of the 18th inst., is couched in the following terms : EXECUTIVE MANSION, I WASHINGTON, D. C., July 18, 1834. Tb whoyi it /am/ Concern Any proposi tion which embraces the reetor4tion of peace, the integrity of the whole Unimi, and the abandonment of slavery, and which comes by and with authority that can control the armies now at war with the United States, will be received and considered by the Ex ecutive Government of the United States, and will he met by liberal terms, on other substantial and collateral points, and the bearer or bearers thereof shall have safe eouduct both ways. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. The application to which we refer was elicited by your letter of the 17th instant, in which you inform Mr. Jacob Thompson and ourselves that you were authorized by the President of the United States to tender us his safe condnct on the hypothesis that we were " duly accredited from Richmond as bearers of propositions looking to the estab lishment of peace," and desired a visit to Washington in the fulfillment of this mis sion, This assertion, to which we then gave, and still do, entire credence, was accepted by us as the evidence of an unexpected but most gratifying change in the policy of the President, a change which we felt author ized to hope might terminate in the conclu-, Won of a peace mutually just, honorable' and advantageous to the North and to the South, exacting no condition but that we should be "duly credited from Richmond as bearers of propositions looking to the es tablishment of peace." Thus proffering a basis for conference as comprehensive as we could desire, it seemed to us that the Presi dent opened. a door 'which had previously been closed against the COnfederate States for a full interchange of sentiments, free discussion of conflicting opinions arid un traingli464 0. 152 0 to /*WI% /a emus .ac controversy by liberal negotiations. We, intleett - distdd notelaim -the benefit of a safe conduct which had been.extended tons in a character we had no right to assumeanclhad never affected to possess ; but the uniform declarations of our. Executive and Congress, and their thrice repeated, and as often re pulsed, attempts to open- -negotiations, fur- . niilia . sufficient pledge to - aastire Us - thatible conciliatory. manifestation on the.partof the President of the United States Would he Met by them in a temper of equal magnanimity. 'We had, therefore, no hesitationln declaring that if this correspondence was communi cated to the President of the Confederate States; he-would promptly embrace the op portunity presented for seeking a peaceful solution of this unhappy strife. We feel confident that you must share our profound. regret that the spirit which dictated the first step toward peace had not continued to an imate the counsels of your President. Had the representatives of the two Governments met to consider thic question, the most mo mentous ever submitted to human states manship, in a temper of becoming modera tion and equity, followed as their delibera tions would have been by the prayers and benediction of every patriot and Christian on the inhabitable globe, who is there so bold as to pronounce that the frightful waste of individual happiness and public prosper ity which is daily saddening the human heart, might not have been terminated ; or if the desolation and carnage of war must still be endured through weary years of blood and suffering, that there might not tit least have been infused into its conduct something more. of the spirit which softens and partially redeems its brutalities? In stead of the safe conduct which we solicited, and which your first letter gave us every reason to suppose would be extended for the purpose of initiating a negotiation in which neither Government would compro mise its rights or its dignity, a document has been presented which provokes as much indignation as surprise. it bears no feature of resemblance to that which was originally offered, and is unlike any paper which ever before emanated from the constitutional Executive of a free people. Addressed "to whom it may concern," it precludes nego tiation, and prescribes in advance the terms and conditions of peace. It returns to tho original policy of "No bargaining, no nego tiations, no truces with rebels except to bury their dead, until every man shall have laid •tiown his arms, submitted to she Govern ment, and sued for mercy." Wi.aL may be the explanation of this sudden and entire change in the views of the President, of this rude withdrawal of a courteous overture for negotiation at the moment it was likely to be accepted, of this emphatic recall of words of peace just uttered, and fresh blasts of war to the bitter end, we leave tor the spec ulation of those who have the means or in clination to penetrate the mystery of his Cabinet, or fathom the caprice of his impe rial will. It is enough for us to say that wo have no use whatever for the paper placed in our hands. \\'e tould not transmit it to the President of the Confederate Stat. with out offering hint an indignity, dishonoring ourselves and in..arrin.r tha wall-mhited scorn of our countrymen. Whilst an ardent desire for peace per vades the po , ple of the Uonfederate States, we rejoice to believe that there are few, If any among them, who would purchase it at the expense of liberty, honor and self-re spect. if it ,sin be secured only by their submission to terms of conquest, the gene ration is yet unborn which will witness its restitution. If there be any military auto crat in the North who is entitled to proffer the conditions of this manifesto, there is none in the South authorized to entertain them. 'Those who control our armies are the servants .1 the people, not their masters ; and they have no more inclination, than they hive right, to subvert the social insti tutions the s. , vereign States, to overthrow their established Constitutions, and to bar ter away their priceless herit a 4e .f eminent. This eorre.tpolidel tee wtll not, heWeVer, We t I'll , l , prey, wholly barren of br nil rt,ttlts. If there is ;on citizen of the Confederate States \tip. has clung 0. a hope that peace was p...sible with this A..lininistratton of the Federal (...vernment, it will strip from hi, lOW of Stich delusion. 0r; if tr,r4! 1. any whose hearts have grown faint the sullt.ring and agony ..1 this struggle, it will 'inspire them with fresh energy to endure :Old btuiu , whatever may yet I, requisite t preserve to them -Jet \ their t•ltiiih',ll ;di that give; dig nity tool Valli, 10 life or hope and consola- Lil,ll to death. And it there lie any patriots ur Christians in your hunt, who sitruik ap palled fr.nu the inimitable Vista of private misery and public calamity winoh stretches belbre them, We pray that in their trrioni.i a resolution may hi, quickened to recall the abused authority and vin.liento the outraced civilization of their For the solici tude you have notnill.sted to inaugurate a movement which contemplates reiutts the most noble and humane, WI , return our sincere thanks; and are, most rettpactfuLly and truly, your obedient servants, C. C. CI.Av, JR., JAMER P. HOLCONBE. CLIFTON HOUSE, NIA.OARA FALLS, July 20, 180.1.—Cot. Tr. c. Jewett, Uutaract Frouse, Niagara Palls:—Sir—We are in receipt of yutar nolo adnrio”iithing ie of the departure of Hon. Horace Greeley from the Fails; that he regrets the sad termination of the initiatory steps taken for peace, in conSe (mance of the change made by the President in his instructions to convey Commission ers to Washington for negotiations uncon ditionally; and that Mr. Greeley will be pleased to receive any answer we may have to make through you. Wo avail ourselves of this offer to inclose a letter to Mr. Gree ley, which you will oblige us by delivering. We cannot take leave of you without ex pressing our thanks for your courtesy and kind offices as the intermediary through whom our correspondence with Mr. Greeley hits been conducted, and assuring you that we are, very respectfully, your obedient' servants, C. C. CLAY, JR., JAS. P. lioLdomuz. THE TRUE DOCTRINE The New Nation expresses our views to the ltter when it says of the suppression of the World and Journal of Cbmmeree : "The man who gave the order and ho who executed it are culpable, and the people await the just retaliation which the majesty of violated law demands. " If tyrants could Lind no complaisant instrutnents, law would never be violated. " The duty of the general commanding in the State of New York was to send his resig nation in reply to the President's order. He preferred his command to his duty, and it is just that he should bear the conse quences. "The innocence of the citizens who wero deemed guilty and arrested as such has been acknowledged, and the _guilty party has been arrested, but the dethment occa sioned to individuaLs and to public morality still remains, and it should he repaired and avenged," The man who executed the order was General John A. Dix, he who once claimed to be a Democrat, but whom the tinsel of office and the dazzle of power has converted into one of the most obsequious tools of that Abolitionism which a few years ago he de spised. Had he possessed a title of the spirit which should characterize every American citizen, he would rather that his right arm had been torn from its socket than to have obeyed a mandate which will consign both its author and executioner forever to the depths of iniquity. Democratic State Central Committee. The Democratic State Central Committee met at Brant's Hall, Harrisburg, on Tues day, July 19, 1894, at 3 o'clock, P. M. The Committee was called to order by 0 L. WARD, Esq., Chairman. A quorum of members was present. ROBERT J. HElNtrutt,L, of Philadelphia, was unanimously elected Secretary. On motion, R. E. SHAPLEY, Esq., was ad mitted as a member of the Committee from the Fifteenth Congressional district to fill a vacancy: On niotiun of Mr. LEISENRINO, it was Rest/bed, That the Chairman be author ized to appoint a Treasurer, two Clerks, and Standing Committees on organization, 5- nanctis and printing. On motion of Mr. QUIGLEY, It was Resolved, That twenty-four members of this Committee constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at all future meet ings. On motion of Mr. SANSO3I, it was Resolved, That this Committee procure for the use of the Chairman, the names of the Chairmen of the Democratic 06unty Committees in each county of the State, and the Chairman be requested to send a circular to each of them urging proper stops to be taken to immediately organize the party in each township and ward in the State. On motion of Mr. SPANGLER, it WEI 3 Resolved, That a committee of five ba ap pointed, in accordance with a resolution of the last Democratic State Convention, to re port rules for the government of future Democratic State Conventions. On motion, the Committee adjourned to meet at the call of the Chairman. The next meeting of the Committee will he held,at the Merchants' Hotel, in Phila delphia. ROBERT J, HEMPHILL, Secretary, WHERE ARE THEY? The Government wants more men. Be fore they are furnished the country ought to be informed as to what has become of the 2,000,000 already supplied. n The calls which have been responded to are as follows: April 16, 1861 - 75,000 Allay 4, 1861 84,748 From July to December, 1861... 500,000 July 1,'1802 • 300,000 August 4, 1882. • BOO,OOO Draft; summer of 1863.. 300, 000 February 1,1884.. ' 600,000 . Tata.. - . 2,039,748