.., • , • _ ,- • _ _ .• • C•0 7 t'77, -- I f- f , 311 1 • • "---••••...../ •I ‘ \ • fe) f i tip C44°) Lt , -NO • Lr ) he 1101) "••• 3 fate') Vaptr---Poottb to Ilditics, 3griculturt, fittrotftre i sriture t Art, foreign, domestic nub @twat jutelligturt, acc. ESTABLISHED IN 1813. IifFWAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PUBLISHED BY R. W. JONES & JAMES S. JENNINGS WAYNESBURG, GREENE CO., PA grOIIVICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC SRUARE• -Ca traztucet Suascairrion.-912.00 in advance ; 92.25 at the ex piration of six months; 12.50 after the expiration of the year. *Dtnanrienisnva inserted at $1.9.5 per square for Wee insertions, and 25 cts. a square kr each addition s) Mention) (ten lines or less counted a square.) ♦ liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. Joe PRINTING, of all kinds, executed in the best sty e, and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" lob Once. sar•No paper sent for a longer period than ONE YEAR without be ing paid for. agnesburg Yilusintss Cubs. ATTORNEYS. PPM. 1.. WYLY. J. /. J. BUCHANAN, D. V. P. Hon WYLY, BUCHANAN & HUSS, ttoraaeys 4 Counsellors at Law, WAYNESBURG, PA. Id ill premise in the Courts of Greene and adjoining enmities. Colleetiope and other legal business wilt re ceive prompt attention. Office on the Bough side of Alain street, in the Old Bank Building. Jan. 28, 1863.-13. •.•. P PU URll•llll.ancum RMAN & RITCHIE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Waynesburg', Pa. Aar OFFIrlt Main Street, one door east of the old B - tnk Building. ...usinces in Greene, Washington, and Fay sus counties, entrusted to them, will receive plump attention. N. B —Particular attention will be given to the coi lection of Pensions, Bounty Money, Back Pay, and 000 011111111 the Goverporeat. Alrept. !I, B. W. Dowarzr, - ATTORNEY AND COUNBELLOR AT LAW. 02 - oBice in I edwith's Building, opposite the Court Douse, Waynesburg, Pa. • a. A. IeCONNZLL. IrOONN3II4T. irTTOILIVEYS AND COMNIELLORS .er L. 9►► Wayatabarigi Pa. filarrOillee In the "Wright fit se," Ems Door. coliersions, &c., will receive prompt attention Wa!fleshing. April 23, 1862-Iy. DAVID CRAWFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at law. Office on Main Street, East and nearly opposite the Bank. V Waynesburg, Pa., July 30, 1863.—1 y. C. 11. SIACIC. BLACK lc PHELAN, /ATOOffiYiS AND unC OUNSELWLa O y RS e bAuT .LAW Sept. 11,1861-Iv. BOLD=IB I WWI CLAIMS I MCI7IEIIIEI4 AITOIIIIIIT AT LAW, IV ATIMAIMUIIO, IAS received from the War Department at Wash ington city. D. C., official copies of the several we passed by Congress, surd all the necessary Forms and Inetructions for the prosecution and collection of PICXB/ORD, BOUNTY. BACK' PAY, due dis charged and disabled soldiers, their widows, orphan children, widowed mothers. Dithers, einem and broth ers, which business, (upon due notice] will be attend ell to promptly. and accurately, if entrusted to his care. °face in the old Dank Building.— April 8, 1863. O. W. a. WADDELL, ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW, OFFICE in Campbell's Row opposite the Hamilton House, Waynesburg. Penna. Business of all kinds solicited. HSI received racial copies of all the laws passed by ' ongress, anii .other necessary instruc tions for the collection of PENSIONS, BOUNTIES, BACK RA Y, Use discharged and disabled soldiers, widows, Orphan children, &c., which business if intrusted to his rare will 1e promptly attended to. • May 13,'63. PHYSICIANS DR. A. G. CROSS wOULD very respectfully tender his services as a PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, to the people or Waynesburg and vicinity. He hopes by a due appre ciation of Inman life and health, and strut attention to bashers, to insrite share of public patronage. Waynesburg, January 8, 1882. DRUGS M. A. ILARVEY, Druggist and apothecary, and dealer in Paiute and Oils, the most celebrated. Patent Medicines, and Pure Liquor@ for medicinal purposes. dept. I I, 11161-Iy. 1110111t0FLAWTS. WM. A. PORTER, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Foreign and Domes ( Thy Goods, Groceries, Notions, Ace.. Mein street. dept. 11, 1861-Iy. • R. CLARK, Healer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queens /ware and in the nonillion House, opposite tbe Court House, M ain treet. Sept. 11. 11361-Iy. MINOR & Co ., Dealers in Forei g n and Domestic Dry Goods, Gro Queeusware, Hardware and Notions. opposite the Green Rouse, Main arrest. Dept. 11, 1861-Iy, 300 T AND snoz znimuns. J. D. COSGRAY, Boot and shoe maker, Main street., nearly oppoeite the ••Farnter'e*nd Drover's AMA.", Every style of poots andithdes constantly on Land or made to' order. Sept. lt, 1861-Iy. GROCIIIRIBB & VARIZTIZIS. ----- JOSEPH YATER, Dealer in Groceries and Confectioneries. Notions, Medicines, Perfumeries, Liverpool Ware, &e., Glass of an Mum ruslGilt Moulding and Looking Class Plates. Opr'Crish paid for good eating Apples. feapt. JOHN MUNNELL, dealer in Groceries and Contectibiteries, and Variety Goods Geestany, Wilsen's Nt.w Building, Main meet. Mega. 11. 1861-Iy. T02411.000117.11T1L HOOP rat & HAGER, lessitilusairams ised wbiMsslt and mall I rein dmir zeo, .0 11 A_ ex t, owe% P 44 . 1", &c., Wilirosea sesingt aim O.K. U. AY, MO. =and allimadmisf. Oak Ilhale and Phiplitt mu Nor eire Zeirratare. Maim Serest. Wit. Thickland, in his Curiosites of Nat ural _History, gives the following ac count of a lawsuit in France about a rat. The action at law was brought by M. Triguel against Gir ome, a retired Zouttve, The Plaintiff. " Gentlemen ; this individual has created me out of a hundred franca (ti2o), and has, at the same time, willfully abused my confidence. He knows that I am much interested in geology, antiqui ties, natural sciences. I have collec tions of fossils, of medals, of rare animals, of curious plants. One day ho called upon me and said: 'Sir, 1 bave a kind of animal which has never been mentioned by any natur alist.' What is it, sir ?"It is a "trumpet-rat." "What do ytiu call the trumpet-rat ?' 'sir, as the name indicates, it is a rat which has a trumpet.' Where is it?' 'On his nose like a rhinoceros.' And you have it alive ?"Alive and well ; if you wish to see it, you have only to come to my house.' 'Directly; come along.' "1 was very anxious to see this strange animal. We arrived at his house, and he shows me in a cage an enormous rat, very lively and in good condition, and which really had on its nose a sort of slender excres enee about two centimetres long (two thirds of an inch), covered with nair like the body of the animal, with a vertebrie in it, and, a most extraordinary thing, larger at the summit than at the base, contrary to what it ought to be in the usual eourse of things. I asked to exam ine this phenomenon; he puts it in to my hand, and holds its paws and head that I might examine at my ease this extraordinary trumpet. 1 ask him if it were not a dupe and mystification; and, to convince my self; I take a pin and force it into the trumpet. The animal cried out, winced, and a drop of blood came from the prick. The experiment was conclusive—it was really a trumpet forming a part of the rat. "I wonder. I ask this man if be would sell his rat He answers in tho affirmative. I ask his price.— Ftty francs. I pay it without any bargaining, and I. bring the animal home. 1 invite my friends and ser vants to see it, the cry of admira tion was universal—l was enchant ed. J. J. HUIFYIA'S =1 "Some one says to me, 'You ought to procure a female ( this was a male).' I had thought of that. but having seen but one rat at the house of the person ,vho sold it to me, I concluded that he had nu more. I determined, therefore, to go directly to see, and I asked him if it were poshble to get a female. 'Nothing easier,' he answered me ; I have written to Africa, and they have sent mo many trumpet-rats, of which 1 have two females.' With these words, he brings out a cage full of rats like that which be had sold me. lie chooses me a female, for which 1 pay him fifty francs (610). I carry it off more enchanted than ever Some months afterwards the female has young; I look at them, they had not trumpets. I say to myself; 'Without doubt, they will sprout hereafter like elephants' tasks.' I wait one month, two months, six months; every day I look at the nose of my rats, but the trumpet never appeared "In a house where I go frequently, I make the acquaintance of an offi cer who bad served a long time in Africa. 'Tell mc,' I says to him one day—'you have been in Africa—do you know the trumpet-rats.' 'Per tectly,' he answers tne3 . ‘Ah ! then you can inform me; I then tell him my story. Then this gentleman be gan to laugh, as though his sides I would split I say to my-self, 'Cer tainly then I have been duped!— When he was calm I beg him to ex plain the motive of his hilarity.— rhen he tells me what follows: "The trumpet-rat,' he tells me, 'is not a supernatural thing—it is an inven -1 1 tion due to the leisure moments of the Zouaves This is how they make them : you take two rats; you tie their paws firmly on a heard, the nose of one close to the end of the tail of the other, with a penknife or a lancet you make an incision into the nose of the rat which is hinder most, and yea graft the tail cf the first one into the nose; you tie firm ly the muzzle to the tail, and you leave the two rats in this position for 48 hours. At the end of the time the union has taken place, and the grown together; i two parts have then you cut off the tail of the rokt which is in frOnt, to the required length, and let him go, but still keep the other tiedsto the board, but with his head loose , and you give him something to eat. At the end of a month or mare the *Mod is perfect ly healed, and the epos Of the' most curious scrntators wind(' not see a tritoe of the grafting. This is ' what these &moves ,diert the rats have no trumpet—lon he*e been deceived Oa 11014 **it pig de tramps 601164110 et 00'o! the da delfranti, ft, Z ia* Who: 'OW be lite 004144 J; isttliannuo. THE TRUMPET-RAT. WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1863. made up the rats as had been stated; bnt he affirms that he had not sold them to the plaintiff as rats "born" with a trumpet. The President. "Is this true, Triguel ?" riguel. "Yeaunderstand, sir, after the experiment which I made with the prick of the pin, which bled and made the animal cry, I ought to believe that the trumpet was natural." The President. "Then the defend ant told you that it was a particular kind of rat ?" The Plaintiff' " F os. without doubt." The Defendant. "In fact, it is a particular kind of rat." Verdict for the Zouave—the rat trumpet maker. OVERTAKING A THUNDER STORM. Mr. Willis, writing to the Home Journal, from the West, says : To overtake a thunder shower whirl , through it, and outrun it,, was the first of the day's exciting novelties. Wesaw it ahead of us on the prairie, as you see a single black cloud in the sky, with the sunshine all around it. It was moving in the same direction as ourselves, probably at twenty miles an hour, and we sooti began Li overtake it with our better harnessed thunder and lightning.— The conductor pointed the dark masses out to me some ten or fifteen minutes before we entered the out skirts of the shower, and we were in a, pelting rain, with lightning and peals of thunder, for perhaps ten minutes emerging in fair weather on the other side, and leaving the storm to lag after us like a 'slow coach' that it was I But, certainly, it was queer thus to give thunder and light ning the go-by. Ifut it is to the wild animal of the prairie that the swiftness of the rail train is inexplicable. Ages upon aaes have established certain relative rates of speed between man and the subject races of creation— the mountain hunter being the last est pursuer for which the elk and reindeer, the bear and prairie wolf the fox and the wild eat, the skunk' otter and martin, . aro at all times prepared, The small line of the rail track, nearly hidden in grass, is not recognized by these wanderers over the vast plains of the West, and while thinking themselves safe in their own horizon-edged wilderness they suddenly see the coming of the new monster. It is daily experience of the trains on this road across Il linois, to overtake some one or more of them, and it is currious—so the different conductors and brakesmon all toll me—how none of them seem to have the sagacity to escape off at right angels. Almost invariably they flee before the pursuer, and are rttn down at last, to fall fainting with terror and exhaustion in the neighborhood of the truck. DEFENSIVE AND OFFENSIVE W The life of governments is like that of man. The latter has a right to kill in case of natural defense; the former have a right to wage war for their own preservation. In the case of natural defense I haven, right to kill, because my lite is, in respect to Ili.;, what the life of ►ny antagon ist .s to him. In the same manner, a state wages war because its Ares ervation is like that of auy other L ing. With individuals the right of natur al defense does not imply a necessity of attacking. Instead of attacking they need only have recourse to pro per tribunals. They cannot there tbre exercise this right of defense but in sudden cases, when immediate death would be the consequence of waiting for the assistance of the law. Bat with States the right of natural defense carries along with it sometimes the necessity of attack ing; as for instance, when one• na tion sees that a contin•.tance of peace wilt enable another to destroy her, and that to attack that nation in stantly is the only way to prevent her own destruction. Front thence it follows that small er nations have oftener a right to de clare war than great ones, because they are oftener in the case of being afraid of destruction. The right therefore of war is der ived from necessity and strict justice. It those who direct the conscience or councils of princes do not abide by this maxim, the consequence is dreadful; when they proceed on ar bitrary principles of glory, conven iency, and utility, torrents of blood must over-spread The earth. But above all, let them nut plead such an idle pretext as the glory of the prince. Ills glory is nothing but pride; it is a passion, and not a legitimate right. it is true the fame of his power might increase the strength of the government; but it might be equally increasecl, by the reputation of his ji,istice. From the right of war comes that of conquest ; whic,h is often-times the natural consequence of that right and ought therefore to follow its The right , the eoeleeror hss over s. 00aquVINI W 0..: .Ar 4 4 by Off 4ortikalliffiti thfhiff at PoP" Wools mass wvorythang 1444 to the preservation of the sperties; the law of natural reassn, which teaches us . to do to others what we would have done to ourselves; the law that forms political societies, whose dura tion is not limited; and in fine, the law derived from the nature of the thing itself. Conquest is an ac quisition, and carries with it the spirit of preservation and use, not of destruction. The inhabitants of a conquered country are treated by the ;on queror in one of the four following ways. Either he continues to rule them according to their own laws, and assumes to himself only the ex ercise of the polit cal and civil gov ernment; or he gives them new po litical and civil government; or he destroys and disperses the society; or, in fine, he exterminates the peo ple• There is no such thing as a right of reducing people to slavery, hut when it becomes necessary for the preservation of the conquest.— Preservation, and not servitude, is the end of conquest; though servi tude may happen sometimers to be a necessary means of preservation.— Even in that case it is contrary to the nature of things that the slavery should be perpetual.—Montesquie's Spirit of Laws A NOBLE SPEECH. The following truly eloquent speech was made by General Car rington to the One Hundred and Fourth itegiment Illinois Volun teers, preparatory to his bidding farewell to that body of men. It would be well if the same speech were read to every regiment of sol diers in the service of the Govern ment, and it would be of incalcula ble benefit if all men now doing sol dier's duty would respond in prac tiee to its noble sentiments. The language of General Carrington on the occasion referred to was as fol lows:-1 soon leave you—do not ex pect a speech. 1 am a man of few words; they may seem homely, but they are the result of experience.— First, avoid profane speech. He who is the God of battles, and holds the issue of life. should be revered, if you would have His blessing. The man who honors his holy name is a true soldier—he fears not to die, be cause he is prepared for the issue of death. Temperance is the next vir tue. The best stimulus to the soldier is his coffee. Liquors are temporary, and bring relaxation, and they also involve bad habits. Water should be used frequently, but in small draughts; too much water at a time involves perspiration and weakens the body. Drink of it often, and al ways in moderation. Be chaste and truthful. Be as good citizens in the service as out of it.— Bathing is important. Keep clean. if your feet are sore after a march, bathe them in salt water, and you will be fresh in the morning. In closing, let me say that nothing pains me so much as to see a soldier who forgets his duty as a citizen and a christian.. Be so pure that your sweethearts will honor you ev ery step of your progress as a sol dier. if we meet again, it will be my pleasure to serve the country with you ; if not, be true to the flag, and your country will honor you.— To yourselves, all I have to say, after two days' drill—l ant satis fied. Tako that as & soldier's good bye. A FAMOUS LAND, If there be part of tlic, world which ought to tempt .the traveler, it is assuredly that region of Asi a which lies between the Caspian and Black seas. Tradition declares this to be the cradle of the human race. Here, say the Persians and armenians, was the garden of Eden ; here, as every one knows, stands the Ararat, from which mankind spread after the deluge. Here are the best and most un deniable physicial evidences' of that astonishing catastrophe. Here hunt ed the Biblical 'Nimrod, here Noah planted the vine. Hero languished Promethius, chained to the rock with vultures ever gnawing at his liver Hither sailed Jason and the Argonauts, and hence departed the enchantress Medea. One of the rivers of this region still bears the name of Cyrus the Great. Alexan der of Macedon is a household word among the Caucasian villagers. - Hence flowed Greeceward that stream of gorgeous fable which wi dened into Hellenic mythology.— Here pompey conquered. and the soldiers of 'emperial Rome bled in vain. Here Gregory preached, and Tamerlane and Genghis Kahn spread havoc; the Turks uprooted the Geor gian on these shores, to be themselv es uprooted in due time by the more opportune Russians. Over the Cau casian wall, at the dread hour when Allah's time shall sound, • tkg and Magog shall cross to put an end to the empire 0,1 Islamism on earth, and destroy the kingdom of the true believers. When .t.tt e Rus s i ans swept away the Georgian throne i n 1800, learned meu atUlla exclaimed in their anguish that the fallen Monarchy tad existed without inter ruption since the time of. Abraham ; there is good historical eyidesoo to prove a line of kings entending over a period of 2,345 .years. A CAPITAL SPEECH BY NON. SAMUEL S. HAYES, OF ILLINOIS, PORTLAND r MAINE, August tOth, 1863. [Concluded from Last Week. 3 And now is the third year of the war, when sheer physical force, with immense and countless , waste of human lifer and treasure, Erna gain ed some victoriesovhich with policy and statesmanship should lead to peace, we find the country divided, the future all dark and threatenimm and vast and momentous issues in volving the preservation of our prop perty and our liberties, and very ex istence of Constitutional Govern ment, shaping themselves rapidly in the midst of the suffering and gloom which surrpund us, It is true there are some who know of no suffering, who have no children or friends in the war, or whose hearts do not beat responsive to the voice of kindred and of friend ship, and who have added to their stores by contracts and speculation. But the humble mechanic, the toil ing farmer, whose taxes and outlays are grinding them into poveriy, the poor lone widow, the loving mother, who frill never again see the loved ones that left them at their country's call, who mourn and refuse to be comforted , such as these can toll you of suffering that will make your hearts bleed. And the thoughtful old men, who have 'owned wisdom from refection and experience, who remember the better days of the Republic; and have solved tho prob lem of th 9 growth and decline of nations; these will tell you our coun try suffers, and trembles on the verge of destruction. [Great ap plause.] Now upon these issues we have two parties, the party of the Admin istration, sustaining•all that the Ad ministration have done or may do in the direction in which it is moving, and the party of tho opposition, the time-honored Democratic party yielding obedience to the laws, and sustaining the Union, the Constitu tion and the rights and interests of the States and people, against all who oppose them, North or South, in power or out. [Cheers.] These issues are embraced in the proposition on the side of the Ad ministration that the 'object of the war shall be the destruction of sla very, and every institution and right that hinders its destruction. The Democratic opposition stand upon the proposition that the war and every other policy of the Govern ment shall be limited by and shall contorm to the Constitution of the United States, which guarantees our Federal system of State indepen dence and individual liberty. I have no special love for slavery. The Democracy are not its advo cates. But we do not bold that re ligion, morality and sound states manship require that it should be treated as a crime, or the nation ruined to procure its extinction.— There aro other and larger ideas that should govern Christians and patriots : humble worship of the Deity, obedience to His law and to the Constitution which He has or dained for our government, with the faithful observance of all its obliga tions. It is in advocacy of those ideas that I am speaking to you to night. What do you gain by the prose cution of this war for its present pur pose ? [A voice: "Freedom. ']— Freedom :? You are mistaken, my friend. It is not your that they seek; it is the freedom of the negro. [Cheers.] Your freedom you enjoy ed bolero the wg.r. You are to lose your freedom, unless you change your rulers or their policy. When your neighbors were arrested with out law, a blow was struck at your freedom.. When they were impris oned withDut a trial, your freedom received another blow. The writ of habeas corpus is a part of your freedom. Trial by jury is your freedom. Liberty of speech and of the press pertain to your freedom.— When any of these rights, sacred by the common law and the Consti tution, are stricken down, in the per son of a Democrat, your freedom suffers. •Wben an eminent citizen is dragged from his home, tried by court martial, and banished to a for eign land, your freedom has receiv eda fatal stab. When these rights are gone, when thesti outrages can pass unpunished and unquestioned, then I say you. may have freedom for the negro, but you have slavery for the white man. You are slaves all, Republicans as well as Demo crate, slaves ground in the dust be neath the iron heel of military despotism. [Voices, " That's so i" and numerous 'cheers.] The man is iiporant indeed - who does not know ' chat the porposee and objects, the whale theory of the war time nn domino imirange. When the broke oat; theSoaliketas almost equally divided. After the S. C. act of secession, Tennessee gave tfty thousand majority for the Union, Virginia was for it. Alabama and Georgia and North Carolina were doubtful, and everywhere, except in South Carolina, the Union party, with manly front, breasted the tide of treason. They still loved end clung to the Union of their fathers. [A voice : "Why ain't they for it now ?"] Because you Abolitionists robbed them of their property by striking down their domestic institu tions. Because by your Emancipa tion Proclamation you have sought to deprive women and children, wid ows and orphans, non-combatants and Union men, as well as the strong est rebels, of the property which be longed to them under the Constitu tion and law's of the land. [AP . planate- A person near the stand here caused some disturbance by noisy and continued vociferation.— Cries of "vat him oat," and a move ment of the crowd. Mr. Hays, re suming.] Let him alone, my friends. lis conscience is awakened. My statement of the truth is having its effect upon him. lie will come right after a while. [Slicers and laughter,' is it surprising that such a policy should have converted friends into foes, and made the South a unit, ready to dare all and suffer all for the bad cause in which they have embarked ? On the other hand, where is the united North of two years since?— The assaults upon constitutional lib erty and State rights have divided us, as they have united the South. But the Administration, instead of becoming wiser and returning to the maintenance of the Constitution, seem to be devising now schemes for its overthrow. You have ail read the report in the papers that the requesktof Louisiana planters for the re-admission of that State as a Union State has been re fused. I saw to-day, in the Boston Trav eler of the Bth, a letter, of three col umns, from Mr. Whiting, late Solici tor of the War Department, who, it is said, has just gone from Washing ton to Europe, on a mission to in struct our foreign ministers as to the views of the Administration. His letter is able and elaborate, and I presume, before its publication, was submitted to at least a portion of the Cabinet. The argument is substan tially this: that the rebellion has ceased to be a rebellion, and becomes w tat he calls a territorial war. That by the laws of war, all antecedent, relations between belligerents are destroyed by a territorial war—and the close of the war leaves the defeat ed party, including all non-combat. ants Inhabiting the territory held by it, at the mercy of the conqueror, to take such a State, and hold such po litical rights only as the conqueror shall prescribe. That, therefore, in the event that the Federal Govern ment shall succeed in putting down the rebellion, the Southern people will no longer have the rights of suf frage and representation, but will be obliged to receive such a form of government, and obey such regula tions, as Congress or the Executive shall impose upon them. The result of this argument is, in a word, that if the Norf.!, succeeds, the Southern people, - Unionists and all, become slaves , if the South succeeds, the Northern people become slaves, in the sense of losing their political rights. [A voice -'WIK) believes that ?"] Mr. Hays—Mr. Stanton be lieves it and approves it. How many more I do not know. The answer to that argument is, that there is no such law of war in the United States, which exist as a nation only by virtue of a written Constitution, of limited powers. and which pledges to every c;tizen a re publican form of State government in the Union and protection against insurrection and civil war, as well as invasion; protection and support, not for the. destruction of his political rights, but for the preservation and restoration of those rights. The claim is only stronger fbr the citizen, if, by the neglect and weakness, or misconduct of the Federal 'authori ties, the insurrection has grown into what Mr. Whiting calls a territorial war. More than that, the Constitu tion guarantees the same right to the rebels when they have laid down their arms, until they have been tried and convicted of some crime that dis qualifies them from exercising the political rights of citizens. Bence, when the rebellion is sup pressed, the sovereignty of the States now in arms against the Government, the State legislatures and courts, the elective franchise, and representation in the Federal Congress, all come again into-full operation and effect, with equal force and dignity as in the other States. To attompt'to pre.. vent this result is to attempt to revo lutionize the Government, and over throw the organic law that gives it life. Against such an attempt, eith er in execution or design, the De mocraey- of this country will be found united, as against all the other' deejotie and d:sloyal teadeneies of this Administration- [Cheers.] Anioaz she trightfei heresies of 'which the party in point is guilty, NEW SERIES. --VOL. 5, NO. 17. . is the assumption on which the Ernan cipation Proclamation is based—WOO assumption that in time of war all I the powers of Government are merge etl in the President. For hundreds of years Rome was never at peace. We are a warlike people, and me t y make the same history. Is it poser ! ble that our fathers, when they oaf fered so much for us, and applied such wisdom in erecting the temple of liberty, should have built it on such a quicksand as this? Did they leave us at the mercy of every ambi tious traitor who might reach the Presidential chair? Is it in his power at any time, by involving us in war, to subvert our liberties and make himself a despot ? God forbid r Now let me ask you, my friends, when is this war to end ? Never in the history of nations has there been a war of such magnitude--arch vast armies—at least among civilized na tions. A quarter of a million men on one field ! A quarter of a million men rushing together in the red surge of battle, to bear back again their thousands of pale corpses—their ' legions of torn and mangled, maimed and wounded. After three years of '.this war—after giving a million of men to the service—the rebellion is not crushed, but we are called upon again for three hundred thousand men, this time not as volunteers, but, as conscripts. The Democrats ate ready now as ever to fight for the Constitution and the Union. I would ask how many of you Portland Re- publicans are ready to fight Aar the freedom of the negro? How of you chose tent when drafted the day? : "One!! Re newed excitement.] Now I Would suggest to you gentlemen who here shown so much spirit to-night, who have clamored so loudly-o%olkb I assure you I have borne With perfect good nature, for I know you mean no harm, it is only a way yea have [Laughter}—l would suggest to you that this fiery zeal and spirit which you have shown to-night in the cause of Abolitionism would prove of great value in the army. [Laughter and applause.] I suppose you are all ex , empt—a little lame or hard of hear ing, or under age, perhaps. [Great laughter.] Never mind, the heat haul of the conscription net will take just such men as you. Yon will then realize some of the truths We Ere trying to hammer into you. My friends, it is not clamor or excitement that will settle these grave and momentousqaastintil A have touched upon to-night. The industrious and toiling mwow—the workman who toils by candlelight in his little shop and thinks as ha works—the farmer who turns up the soil to raise your food for you, and studios common sense and hon esty as he follows the plough-- m mon aro settling those questions now; and you will know they heave settled them when you see the re turns of your approaching election. [Applause.] The people of Illinois have defined their position by a majority of thousands. Indiana has done the same, and so has the great Empire State of New York. [Here three &leers were given for Governor Seyinour.] Those States have array ed themselves on the side of De mocracy and the Constitution, in opposition to the mistaken and ruin ous policies of the Administration. The rest of the Northern States, or most of them, will follow. As I have said, the Democratic party yields obedience to the laws. [A voice "You can't help it."] Mr. Hayes : No; we can't help it. Be cause duty and patriotism demand it, and we always listen to their voice. [Great Applause.] The Dem ocratic party bus conducted the country through several wars; and, were it in power, it would bring the country safely and honorably through this—for it l ,would demand nothing but obedience to the Consti tution and the restoration of the Union, and that it would be sure to have. But if I. understand the posi tion of tha Democracy, at least of the Northwest, it is this, that while they will pay their taxes, and obey even the conscript law, odious as it is, and if drafted and obliged to go, will perform military duty, and obey all orders of their superior officers; they will not sustaiu the Abolition and despotic polities of thill Admin istration, either at the polls or through their reproyientatives.— • They will sustain a war fOr the Con stitution and Union, if that be ne cessary, as long as ieir is any hope of success. When there ceases to be any hope of success, they will prosecute such a war no longer if they can obtain an honorable peace. They value too higitly the lives er their countrymen, and the material interests of the countX7, out of which life is supported- the sweat .• of the laborer's brow is precious in their 03 - es. His small earnings are the sustenaute of his wife and little' ones, who grace his cabin and clam ber upon his knees. The great De, inocracy, made up of the people, aM true to the people, will never tig_ these kicauty.es.rnings to stipport c ps.F. he extravagance or wasteint sad , useless wars. [Cheers.] Whatever the prospect of molest