TRUTH TRODI THE RECORD OF 1864. Shoddy against the Private Soldier. CLYMER FOR THE SOLDIER,. The disunion press is full of lies in re gard to the action of the Democratic Sen ators in 1864, before the Senate was or ganized. After its organization, viz.: on the 30th of March, 1864, Senator Hopkins offered the following resolution : (See Record, page 536 ) Resolved, That the Committee on Fed eral Relations be instructed to bring in a joint resolution instructing our Senators and requesting our Representatives in Congress to vote for a law requiring the payment of non-commissioned officers and privates in the service of the United States in corn or its equivalent. 'Upon this resolution Senator Clymer, now the Democratic candidate for Gov ernor, spoke as follows : (See Record, p. 538.) SENATOR CLYXER'S SPEECH. I did not know, sir, that the Senator from Washington (Mr. Hopkins) was about to offer a resolution of this kind : had I been aware of the fact, I might have been able to. form a more correct judg ment as to his intentions in so doing. JZ.rSTICE TO TUE SOLDIER I presume he designed to perform an act of simple justice to those who, on the tented field, are struggling for the main: tenance of this Government. He himself avows his intention to place this meritori ous class.of our ferlowk.iitizeng, so far as relates to their pay, upon a footing with those sleek, well paid, well fed, tru ly loyal, and most discreet gentlemen who in this trial, are idling sunny hours in the courts of Europe as our foreign ministers, while the soldier is enduring the pains, the trials and the dangers of a campaign. Contemplate the picture; the one class clothed in purple and paid in gold, the other clad in homespun and paid in green backs ! The one surrounded by all the luxury which gold can buy, the other in their individual persons and in their fami lies enduring all the want and misery which paper money ever entails! An un prejudiced observer, sir, would not, it seems to me, be likely to attribute any sinister or improper motive to one who attempts to equalize in some degree the condition of these two classes. Surely, sir, the disparity between one hundred and sixty dollars a year—the wages of the soldier—paid in greenbacks—and the salaries of our foreign ministers, ranging from seven to twenty thousand a year, paid in gold, is of such magnitude that it should not be " disloyal" to attempt to equalize it. TALK AND NO WORR To me,sir, it is strange, passing strange, that those who profess so much love for the soldier, Mho are eternally parading themselves as the " soldiers' friends," who would make the soldier believe that every one onside the pale of their political com munion is his enemy,whose whole stock in trade is to yell that they are " loyal," and to boast that they love the soldier better than wife or child, should here to-day re sist a proposition so fair and just.. By your deeds you shall be tried. Honeyed words of flattery cost nothing. To BUS lain this resolution and the enactment of its purpose into a law, might impose some slight additional taxation upon your "loy al" gentleinan, and that would cost some-'' thing. You cannot afford that. Oh! no ! Fulsome praise, laudation without stint ; that you can give ; it is in your line ; but when the soldier asks for the- means wherewith to supply his wife and little ones with the bare necessaries of life— which, owing to the vicious system of fi nance inaugurated by Republican rulers, have been raised to fabulous prices --you turn your backs upon him and brand as "disloyal" every man who dares to advo cate his:claims. That is a species of dis loyalty of which I, fer one, am neither ashamed nor afraid. If it be " disloyal" to stand hy, guard, protect and defend the poor and humble against the rich and pomerful ; to be in favor of the soldier ra ther than of the shoddy contractor, then I am disloyal. gentlemen is a kind of disloyalty of which-you gentlemen on the Republi can side, will never be accused by those who know yon. Where the spoils are, there will your hearts be also. VSEIIPATION IN TUE SENATE. Possibly, sir, the Senator from. Wash ington offered the resolution with an ad ditional motive—that was, to relieve him self, and those who act, with him political ly, from the base and unfounded charge that we were opposed to an increase of the pay c f the soldier. When this Sen ate was unorganized, as we then believed and as you,subsequently admitted by pro ceeding to elect a Speaker, a resolution was offered on the opposite side of this chamber, instructing our Senators and re questing our Representatives in Congress to vote for a bill increasing the pay of the soldiers. We then voted against it as un der similar circumstances we would to day. We told you then that by no vote of ours would. we ever recognize your high-handed act of usurpation. We, told you we would vole against any and every resolution, even should you off er one As serting the divinity of God himself. We stood up for a principle, and we triumph ed. You .offered the resolution, as you offered others, for the purpose of makirti clap-trap capital against us among the sol diers and others. You paraded our vote throughout the State as a high crime and a sin, when you knew in your hearts that every representation you made, as to our position, was simply false. But the reso lution of the Senator from Washington has unearthed you. Ithaestirred up IMO- fnl commotion amongst the ranks of the faithful. You gnash your teeth in impo tent rage, and are swollen up with undis charged bile. You rave, and fume, and sweat—all to no purpose, gentlemen.— We Intend to expose your duplicity, and we have done it. Hence those tears. I advise. you to cover your intentions. in some more skillful way, or I shall again draw aside the flimsy veil which shields you from open contempt. PAY OF fliE PRIVATE SOLDIER : But, sir, what will be the effect of the resolution should Congress enact a law in accordance with its spirit? Will it not be precisely what you gentlemen forced us to vote against, when you attempted usurpation ? The soldier will be paid in coin or its equivalent ; that is to say, his wages will be increased by the difference between gold and greenbacks. If gold at the end of any month is wax_ per cent. above greenbacks, the common soldier will receive twenty dollars and eighty cents, instead of thirteen dollars, for his month's services. If you were honest in your proposition to increase his pay, how can you object? When he entered the service, his pay was thirteen dollars per month in gold, for then gold was not above par. The resolution simply pro poses to keep our plighted faith with the most meritorious of all our public ser vants; with him who defends our homes and firesides. Tell me, gentlemen, were you honest or dishonest in your proposi tion ? You shall not evade an answer by calling me disloyal. The word has no terrors for me. Three years ago you paid the foreign minister and the private sol dier in gold. Why, to-day, do you con tinue to pay him who is basking and rev elling in the smiles of royalty, and refuse it to him who, amid the roar of cannon and the storm of bullets, is, battling in your defence ? Answer me if you dare. We will not be deterred from making the inquiry by threats or denunciations. We on this side of the chamber claim for our selves as much intere.;t, in and devotion to the Government founded upon the Con stitution as you claim to possess. We do not impugn your motives—you shall not ours. We are not to be cajoled or intimidated here or elsewhere. We are your peers and equals here and eery place. We know our rights and will maintain them.'We will stand by the Con stitution and Union of these States, and we tell, aye, we charge it upon you, that you are the only men who would destroy both. Charges are constantly made against us of a want of fidelity to the Govern ment, of sympathy with treason, and of aiding the rebellion. We defy you to make them good. Thin matter had bet ter be understood and settled here and now. It is true, we are not the slaves of any administration. You shall not set the blacks free and enslave white men.— We know of no Goveinment which is not based upon the Constitution and we will neither obey nor be "loyal" to any other. Is my language sufficiently Trecise ? Is it clear ? Ido not wish to be misunder stood. lam not "loyal" to any adminis tration ; I am ever so to true government, founded upon and acting in accordance with the Constitution, of which it is the mere creature and exponent. More than this, you nor any living man can demand of any one: To do so is to make your selves masters and those of whom you make thg demand slaves. We wish you to fully understand that you shall never ex ercise any such power over us. The his tory of the past should,teach you that the race to which we belong may possibly be exterminated, but never enslaved. —Senator Clynier - and every other Democrat voted for this resolution, and the Disunion Senators voted to kill it by amending it, and having a majority, 'ef fected its amendment, and thus defeated the original proposition. The Democratic Platform. The Democracy of Pennsylvania in Convention met, recognizing a crisis In the affairs of the Republic, and esteeming the immediate restoration of the Union par amount to all other issues, do resolve : 1. That the States. whereof the people were lately in rebellion, are entegral parts of the Union. and are enti tled to repreeentation in Congress by men duly elected who hear true faith to the Constitution and Laws, and in order to vindicate the maxim that taxation without representation is tyranny, such representatives should be forth with admitted. 2. That the faith of the Republic Is pledged to the pay ment of the National debt, and Congress should peas all laws necessary for that purpose. 3. That we owe obedience to the Constitution of the 13..iteci States (including the amendment prohibiting shivery.) and tinder its provialona will . accord to those emancipated all their rights of person and property. 4. Thateach State has. the exclusive right to regulate the inalilications of its own electors. 5. That the white raze alone is entitled to the control of the Government of the Republic, and we are unwil ling to grant to negroes the right to vote. 6. That the bold entmciation of the principles of the Constitution and the policy of restoration contained in the recent annual message and freedmen's bureau veto message of President Johnson entitle him to the confl. donee and support of ail who respect the Constitution and love their country. 7. That the nation owes t &the brave men of our ar mies and navy a debt of lastini , gratitude fo• their hero. is services In defence of the Constitution and the Un ion ; and that while we cherish with tender affection the memories of the fallen, we pledge *co their widows and orphans the nation's care and protection. • 8. That we urge upon Congress the duty of equalizing the bonsitiea of our soldiers and sailors. Democratic .Victory at Hartford. The result of the •Hartford City elec tion to day was a full vote, and the elec tion of the entire city ticket by the Dem ocrats totally changed the political charac ter of the city government. The Demo crats elect Charles R. Chapnian Mayor, over Allyn S. Steliman; the present May or, by 233 majority, and Henry H. Fitch Collector, by 200 over H T. Sperry, the present collector. They also elect the City Clerk by 200 majority, the Auditor and City Marshall and have a majority in the city council. —The conservative Republicans—or ra ther the only Republicans within that so called organization—intend to hold a State Convention at. Pittsburg in July, for the nomination of& candidate for Gov ernor. Rionirost pemocrat. A. J. GERRITSON, • - TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1866 FOR GOVERNOR: HIESTER CLYMER, OF BEMS COUNTY tar Th e. negro citizenship bill passed the House, over the veto; by a vote of 122 to 41. The result was greeted with much joy by the amalgamators, and a crowd of negro women rushed into the Hall of the House to present bouquets and other nice things to their brethren who voted for the bill. A grand hand shaking and general mixing up of the black-and-white element of the party took place. Questions for Gen. Geary. There are two questions which the peo ple desire Gen. Geary to answer without delay, and which we shall continue to ask until we get explicit replies to them. 1. Is he in favor of negro suffrage? 2. Does he support the restoration pol icy of Andrew Johnson ? Let there be no quibbling or dodging. Give us plain and unmistakable answers. If the General imagines that he can get through the s'x months campaign before us without meeting fairly and squarely these two important questions, he will find himself sadly mistaken.--[Ex. Geary has answered ; he accepted the nomination of a party that votes in Con gress and State Legislature for negro suf frage and against the President. Besides this, be authorized a friend to say to the Convention that be fully 'agreed 'with Thad Stevens. As Stevens is a full-blood ed amalgamationist, and bitter enemy of President Johnson, it is settled that Gea ry's answers are : to the first question, yes; to the second, no. What is Treason? Various definitions are given to trea son ; but the latest is that it is treason to turn an advocate of negro equality out of office, and put a soldier in. The Rnrrisa burg P. M., who published the Telegraph, has been dodging between Johnson and Congress, for some time, but recently, when it was understood that General Knipe was to be the next P. M., tLe Hes sian says: " We did not condemn his veto of the Freedmen's Bureau bd., because we could not then believe he had deliberately made up his mind to become a traitor to those who made him what he is. But we now owe it to the good of the country—to the honor of our friends and the sacredness of the great principles, no longer to pass by with indifference or with seeming ap proval the acts of a man who begins to prove not only-false to himself, but false to humanity, his country and his God !" Look out Ibr like demonstrations in oth er quarters in due time. Pennsylvania Legislature. That body adjourned sin die on Thurs day. Hall of Blair was made Speaker ad interim. It is hoped that plundering will now be lessened for a season. Over $200,- 000 were taken from the treasury to pay for additions and repairs to the Capitol, although one fourth that sum was the contract price. Sundry loyal thieves did not steal enough before the war closed, and the garneecontinues. Bottled Froth Butler made a rabid negro equality speech for the edification of that party on the 11th, after which the follow ing was offered and defeated : Resolved, That the clerks of the House and Senate be instructed to provide the joint committee of the legislature on the reception of General Butler with four ban ners bearing the following inscriptions: The Hero of Big Bethel; The Hero of Fort Fisher ; The Hero of Dutch Gap Canal ; The Hero of the Bottle of Petersburg. The reminder of the Report of General Grant who compared Butler's position to which he fled, to that of being in a bottle tightly corked, was rich, but bard on the pretender. One of the last acts of the negro-party majority, was to present and adopt to go on record, a memorial from negroes ask ing that the word " white" be stricken from the Constitution of Pennsylvania, so as to admit negroes to full political equal ity. This is now the Republican creed, and will be forced upon the State, unless that party be hurled from power. An act was pending to regulate the pay of County Superintendents, but we can not learn positively that it bas become a law. If it does we will publish it next week. It raises the pay to about $lOOO for this county, and as much more as the Directors may choose to vote from the county school fund: The Members fixed their pay at $lOOO. —The recent municipal election in the city of St. Louie, heretofore strongly re publican, resulted' in st Demoomtio.tri umph by 8,000 majority. The End of Zifitary Despotisni. Great events crowd upon us. We are making history now of a kind which our children will not blush to read. On Mon day President Johnson gave us the glad tidings of restored Union, and proclaimed peace over the length and breadth of the land. On Tuesday the Supreme Court of the United States pronounced its decision in the great-Military Commission case, and gave it on the side of liberty. There never was any question adjudicated on earth which involved more preciouarights or which concerned more people than this one. ...Three citizens of the State of Indi ana, in civil. life, and far away from the theater of war, and in a district where the courts were open and exercising their functions without interruption, were tried last year by a tribunal called a Military Commission for alleged acts of "disloyal. ty," and were sentenced to he hung. The President commuted the sentence to im prisonthent for life. Thereupon the pris oners were brought, on a writ of habeas corpus, before the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Indiana, and upon a certificate of division of opin ion between the judges of that tribunal, they were remanded to custody, and their case was carried up to the Supreme Court of the United States. It was argued there by some of the most eminent counsel in the count ry—by Attorney General Speed, Henry Stanbery of Ohio, and B. F. But ler of New Orleans, for the United States, and by Judge 13Iack of Pennsylvania, Judge McDonald of Indiana, Mr. Garfield of Ohio, and Mr. David Dudley Field of Now York, for the petitioners. Its dis cussion occupied many days, and evoked an amount of learning, ingenuity, and elo qnetice, rarely displayed, even within, walls where great speakers are not un o 'mmon. The Court, atter long delibera tion, decided that upon the facts set forth in the petition, the writ of habeas corpus should have been granted by the Circuit Court; that the Military Commission had no jurisdiction in the premises, and that the petioners are entitled to discharge from custody. - - Editor, • This decision, which was pronounced by Chief Justice Chase, while it should be a matter of rejoicing for every man who values the rights which his fathers sought to secure fins him in the Constitution, is especially grateful to the hearts of the Democracy. For five long years we have asserted precisely the doi trines which I the Supreme Court has eml odicd in i s decree. We have maintained the immu nity of the citizen from military arrest, and have denounood the whole system of military tribunals as grossly in violation of the supreme law. The case of the pe titioners, whose freedom is given them by this dcci-ion of the Court, was no excep tional one. Hundreds of citizens less for tunate' than they, in that their plea for a fair trial never got 1 oyond the barrack room, where their live; and liberties were adjudged to be forfeited, were sent to dungeon and scaffold during the past five years, without a word of pro' est against the hut , e tyranny which condemned them, save that Spoken by the Democratic par ty. On the contrary, the Radical jour nals and orators made mtrry over the work of despii.ism and . decounced the champions of the Constitution as "dom s- tic traitors," " sympathizers," and "cop perheads," deserving of the same fate. We never doubted that a time would come in which the right would be vindi• cated, but how soon mortal man could not pred.et. It 14 here already, and we should keep it asa time of rejoicing. Fare well forever to spy and ititin.mer—fare well to kidnapping provost marshal, and shoulder strapped judge. The work of blood and tyranny is at an end. The wor thies who found their plea-ure in it are now criminals answerable to those laws on which they ruthlessly planted the arm ed heel. A better day has dawned upon us—a day of peace, of liberty, of law. "For it was but for a little while that the face of the sky was black, as with the preparations of the night; but suddenly the cloud was torn and rent, the vielence of thunder parted it into little portions, • that the sun might look forth with a wa tery eye, and then shine without a tear." —Age. OPINION OF STEPHEN A. DorGLAs.— In the discussion before the people of Il linois just previous to his last election to the U. S. Senate, Judge Douglas said : " I hold that .a Negro is not, and NEVER OUGHT TO BE a citizen of the United states. I hold that this Government was made upon a white basis, by while men, for the benefit of white men and their posterity forever, and should be administered by white men and none others. Ido not be lieve that the Almighty made the Negro capable of self government. " Now I say to you, my fellow citizens, that in my opinion, the siemers of the Dec laration of Independence had no reference to the Negro whatever when they declar ed all men equal. They desired to ex press by that phrase, white men of Euro pean birth, European descent, and had no reference to the Negro, the savage In diana or other inferior or degraded races. At that time every one of the thirteen Colonies was a slave hol&ng colony, and every signer of the Declaration represen ted a slave holding constituency,, and we know that no one ofthem emancipated his slaves, much less offered citizenship to them whenithey signed the Declaration." t Congress has at last passed the bill to reimburse the State of Pennsylva nia for the expenses in calling out the Mi litia of the State in the government ser vice. It authorizes the Secretary of War to pay Pennsylvania a sum, not exceeding $BOO,OOO for the purpose named. This is now a law. —A tremendous fire took place at Ash land, Pa., on ,Sunday night, destroying property to the amount of $70,000. Circuleifficiin ' fhe President. The President has just issued the fol lowing circular to heads of departments, in reference to appointments to office : It is eminently right and proper that the government of the United States should give earnest and substantial evi dence of the just appreciation of the ser vices of the patriotic men who, when the life of the nation was imperiled, entered the army and navy to preserve the integ rity of the Union, defend the government and maintain and perpetuate, unimpaired, its free institutions. It is therefore directed--First, -That in appointment to office in the several exec utive departtuents of the general govern ment, and the Various branches of .the public service connected with said de partments, preference shall be given to such meritorious and honorably discharg ed soldiers and sailors, particularly those who have been disabled by wounds re ceived or diseases contracted in the line of duty, as may possess the proper quali fications. Second, That in all promotions in said departments, and the several branches of the public service connected therewith, such persons shall have preference, when equally eligible and qualifi.►d. over those who have riot faithfully and honorably served in the land or naval forces of the United States. ANDItEW Jon:csos Executive Mansion, April 7, 1860. —A shoddy organ, alarmed at the above, -gives notice to soldiers not to ask fir office, as the stay at homes intend to hold on, but that soldiers may get a chance in when shoddier die or resign I Wait and see. —lt is reported from Washington that several members of the cabinet are deter mined not to heed the above circular from the President. This is carrying hostility to him to an extreme. Some time since the radical Congress adopted a similar recommendation; but the fact that such appointments have not been made shows it was only a buncome trick to keep up a deception towards soldiers. Qs''" The Philadelphia Daily News, the only progsserl Rt-ptiblican paper in the State that Fqn r6I y support.; Preshlent Johnson, opposes the election of Gen. Geary. Natural enough.—Rep. paper. Certainly, every friend of the President will oppose Geary, as he is the nominee of the President's enemies. PROPOSED IMPEACHMENT OP THE PRESt- DENT.—The Chicago l'i - ihtinethe leading Radical organ in the Northwest, is out with a labored and Vehement article ad vocating the impeachment of President Johnson, and his removal from office. The grounds for the proposed impeach ment are stated to be usurpations of pow er aid and comfort given to public ene mies, that is to say, Southern rebels, and a corrupt exercise of the pardoning pow er. The Tribune accuses the President of " high treason," and declares that his conduct is " worse than the treason of Benedict Arnold," ttc. tkc. CITY OF SCITAIiTON.—The boroughs of Scranton, Hyde Park, Providence and the remaining part. of Providence township, have been incorporated into a city. The population is over 22,000, about a fifth of Luzern° county. Daniel S. Dickinson, Died in New York city on Thursday evening last, of strangulated hernia, after suffering a few days. He was a native of connee,ti e nt, having been born at. Goshen in that State cm the i lth of September, 180. Ills father soon of erward remov e: from Connecticut, and settled in the Chenango Valley, in the State of New York. A. Republican View of the Veto. The New York Commercial (I? op.) warmly endorses the veto message of the President assigning his reasons for with holding his signature from the civil rights bill, and especially the part of it which re sists centralization. It says generally: " His reasoning is co! , ent, and must . be satisfactory to all who respect the limita tions of the constitution or federal power —who desire economy of administration, and who correctly estimate the true val ue of State rights. It can only be dis tasteful to those whip have gone wild up on the negro question, and who are anx ious fur legislation which shall especially benefit the black man. Is there not wis dom enough in Congr , ss to discover and adopt such measures, or wi I that body prefer to wrangle with the President in the hope of making rolitical capital ? There is no real occasion of difference, certainly not a shadow of reason for hos tility. Fanatics have but to ignore pet measures of doubtful expedieacy, and to act in strict accordance with the constitu tion, and they can get along with Andrew Johnson." —General Richard Coulter, of West moreland county was Lieut. Col. of Gta ry's regiment, but he repuniates the great (1) paper General and supports Clymer, Johnson and the Union. —General Burnside was elected Gover nor of Rhode Island on the 4th inst. The vote was very light, as there was no or ganized opposition to him. —A 6re occurrad in Port, au Pfince, the capital of the Empire of Hayti, on the 19th ult., by which one , thons tnd buil dings were destroyed, and eight or nine thousand persons rendered houseless. —The loss by the 'recent great freshet in Wisconsin is estimated at $1,000,000 to $2,000,000, the daniage to the Mu Wan kee and Prairie du Chien Railroac? alone being placed at 4500,000 The loss at Milwaukee is stated at $150,000. . Is Piesident Johnson a " Usurper?" The N.Y. Herald in the following i pithy and truthful paragraphs, shows what kind of a " usurper" President, Johnson is : . - The Radicals charge that President Johnson is " a usurper." Can anybody tell us what be has usurped ? - President Johnson has restored the writ of habeas corpus. Does " a usur per" relinquish despotic powers in that way ? Violations of constitutional rights dis tinguish all usurpers. PresidentJobasou obeys the Constitution to the letter. Is this usurpation ? Usurpation, according to the radicals, means surrendering-all military power, as President Johnson. ; has just done iu his peace proclamation.. Civil War is favorable to the projects of a usurper. President Johnson has just proclaimed peace. But the radicals ac cuse him of usurpation. The Civil Rights Bill would have ena bled President Johnson to imprison all State judges who disagreed with him about the negro. Yet he vetoed the bill. Was that usurpation? Supreme control of the Southern States was placed in the hands of the President by the passage of the Freedmen's Bureau a nd Civil Rights bill. He vetoed the IDOL And vet he is called " a usurper." Politicians are so accustomed to nor *ruption and rapacity that when a Presi- dent declines power and patronage they call hi in "a usurper." They do not know a patriot when they see him, but the peo ple do. The Constitution provides that the President. shall veto all bills of which he disapproves. Is the President "a usurp er" because be has vetoed two bills out of the finly-two presented to him by this Congress ? • A usurper is a person who seizes power which does not legitimately belong to him. President Johnson sternly declines a:I such power, even when Congress urg es him to take it. How then can the rad icals call l.im "a usurper?".' Grant is " a usurper," according to the radicals, because he disbanded the great er part of the army, and declared that the war was ended. President Johnson has only restored its to a peace policy, and if he be "a usurper" so is Gra it. Congress' opened the Treasury of the United States to President. Johnson and authorized hint to take out as much mon ey as he liked and distribate it among his political friend 4. He declined to touch a penny of it. Is he a patriot or "a usur per ?" Washington was " a usurper," accord ing to the radicals, because he obeyed the Constitution, refused to become a king, and resigned the command of the army. This is what President Johnson has done, and he is called "a usurper" for doing it. Thousands of new offices could hate been created by the Freedmen's Bureau bill, and under it the President could haN e tilled these offices with his favorites. He refused to take this immense power and patronage. Was that the act of "a usurper ?" Aggrandizement, both personal and ro litical, is the motive of a usurper. By vetoes President Johnson has voluntarily deprived himself of the golden opportuni ties for such aggrandizement placed with in his reach by Con . oress. If this be usur pation make the most of it. --Senator Jim Lane, Republican, of. , Kansas, declared in the Senate, on die( 6th instant, that—" One more victory like that in Conneciicat. would ruin the Re publican party. It.. vas the first scratch of the handwriting on the wall." —While a portion of the so-called Re publican press are asserting that the Pres ident is in opposition to Mr.' Clymer, the radical Pittsburg Gazette says that "Mr. Clymer has been a frequent and welcome visitor at the White Rouse during the last six months." —Thaddeus Stevens, in one of his re. cent speeches in Congress says " this is not a white man's government." It will be when Thad Stevens & Co., aro laid on the shelf. —Last year the Repubicans of Con necticut elected their Governor by npwani of eleven thousand majority. This year they brought out their strongest man for . the same o ffi ce, arid elected him by only five hundred majority. The niggerpest has about run its race. —A woman in Binghamton, N.Y., re cently stole $1,400 and h it, in her wa- terEll. It was several da id ys before the constable could find it out. —From the shores of Nova Scotia the wires flash the unwelcome intelligence hat a steamer from Liverpool, bound to New York, has been obliged to put into llalifitx for medical assistance, having on board one hundred and sixty cholera ca ses, and forty of the passenbers had per ished of the epidemic during the voyage. —The President has approved a bill which provides that any person - who shall make, :trier, forge, or cause the same to be done to any bond, bill or securityof the United States, for the purpose of de frauding the Goveanment, shall bo ad judged guilty of felony, and being there of duly convicted, shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept at hard labor for a I eriod not exceeding ten years, or be fined not exceeding one thousand dollars, or both of said punishments, in the discre tion of the Court. —A letter from Sunflower county, Miss., says a negro employed on ex Gen eral Forrest's plantation, while assaulting his (the negro's) sick wife, yesterday, was remonstrated with by Forest; when the negro drew a knife and attempted to kill him. Forrest received a wound in the hand, whereupohe seized an axe and killed the neg - ric then gave himself up to the sheriff. The begrime on the plantation justify the killing.