COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. JM, " ' - -- Lf?1 X" 'rATB1 Editor. TO HOLD AND TRIM THE TOI10U OF TRUTH AND WAVE IT O'ER THE DARKENED EARTH." . TERMS: 92,00 VKll ANNIHII. VOL. 16. NO. 21. BLOOMS BURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PENN'A, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1862, VOLUME 26. V COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. PUBLISHED EVBUY SATUUDAV, BY LEVI L. TATE, IN BtOOMSBURQ, COLUMBIA COUNTY, FA. offTce Vii tht m Mot lluiUUng, eppo$lle thu Utchnngi, ty itJl ' rflh Ceilrt Jltuit. 'Dtmi'cmlic Iliad (juiwliri," TERMS OP 8U1I8011IPTION. ))1 00 In advance, for out copy, fur all intuitu. I 7S In advance, for on. copy, ono year. 00 If not paid within tbs lint thru, months. i Wlf not paid witliln tlie Ural ail mouths. & SO Knot paid within tkoycar. Zy No iHtxcrlptlon taken fur less than sU months, ind no paper.dlacoiitinued until all arronruEcaaliallhava tr.cn paid. 17 OrillnarrAoTEiiTUBMENTa Inserted, and Jod Woek wt.cuted. at tho uatatilialieilprieuk BALTIMORE LOOK HOSPITAL .EaTABlilSIIEO A3 A UIIFUOB FROM QUAUKERY. The Only Place wliae a Cure can be Obtained, DR. J0IINBTON hot discovered 111. moit Curtain, Speedy and only Kireclunl Remedy In the World fur all private Diseases, Weakness uf llio Hack or Limbs, HtrtcturcK, Aiftcilima iif the Kidneys and Iliad er, Involuntary Discharge". Impotoney, Ueiu-rnl Do cility, Nervousness. Dyspepsy, Lnngiior, Low Spirits Confusion of ideal, t'alpllution of tho Heart, Timidity. Tremblings, liimnoss or disht or Olddiness, Ulaenae of tho Head, Throat, Nose or skin, Atl'ectione of the l.lvcr Lungs, Stomach or llnwrls thoau tnrriblu Disorders arising from tho Solitary Habits of Youth those su-rkt mid a.litary practices inoro latal to their victims than in song of Syrens lo the .Marines of Ulysses, blight ing thtlr moat brilliant hopca or anticipations, render ins marriage, ice. Impossible. Y O II N U URN Ilspeolally, who hnvu become the victims of Solitary Vie., that dreadful unit dostructivu habit w hich annu ally sweeps to an untimely grave thousand of Voun Uen of th. mol einlted talent' and brilliant intellect, who might otherwiso havo -iitrancd listening Senates with the thunders of eloquence 01 naked to ec.lnsy the jiving lyre, may cull with full tontideuce. M A It II I A U K, Married persona, or Yon.ig .Men cnntemplnilii; mar rlage, being nwaru of physical weakness, organic dcabili r, deformities, ic., sp-iodily cured. il. who places hiinaell under the earn of Dr. Johnston, uay religiously eojifidu In his honor ns n geiitleiueu, and oMifldently roly upon his skill ns a physician. O 11 U A N I U V K A K N U a U immediately cured und full vigur restored. This lllitreislng Aifoitloii which renders life mis erable aud marriage impossible is thu penalty paid by the victims of Improper iudiilgsneis. Young per .ans are too apt to commit excess from not b'-iiic aware of tho dreadful coniu-pieiicu that may ensue, Now, Who that understands thu subject will pro tend to deny thut the power of procreation is lost sooner by those railing Into improper habits than by thu prudent, ilssidas being deprived of thu Pleasure of healthy off springs, the most serious and destructive symptoms to bulk body and mind aiiso. Thu system becomes derimg '.4; th. physical aud in--nt.il (unctions weakened, loss of procreallva power, nervous irritability. Dyspepsia palpitation of thu heart, Indigestion, constitutional de bility, a wasting of tho Frame, Cough, Consumption, decay and death. OrFlCE.No. 7 SOUTH FREDERICK BTUIiRT. Left hand aid going from rtaltimuru street, a few doors ftouthe corner. Fail not toohscrve iiamu aud number. Letter, must be paid and contain u stamp. The Doc t.r's Diplomas ban in his oihce. AOURK WARRANTED IN TWO DAYS HO MIKIUIIY or XSI'llOUS PKUOS. mi. jou.varux dumber of th. Rouil Collien of Burgeons, L.nduu. ir.a.tusiA from out. of tho most ei'Mtieut Colh-L'es of the United Ht.ltos, and the greater tiart of whose life has l.u. n nM-nt in the first llosoita s of London, Paris. Phila alslphlaand elsowhere, has elfected pomu of the most as louisulug cures that weru ever known; many troubled with ringing in tho head uud card when asleep, great sicrvousDess. bclus alarmed at sudden sounds, and bash- felussi, with frequent blushing, atleuded sometiiiies with 4Mangomenl of mind, weru cureu immeoiaiciy TAKE P A II T I (' U I. A R NO T I O E SI A R U I A (J E. Dr. J. addresses all those who have injured themselve k linnroncr indulgence nnd solitary habits, which ru In both body and mind, untiling them fur either busi' asss, study, society or niarnuge. Timn arc inmo of the sad and melancholy effects pro' tfuctd bv earlv habit of youth, viz: Weakness of the ltsrk and I.lmhs. I'.iiu in thu Head. Dimness of b'icht Las. of Muscular Tuner, Palpitation of the II. art. Dys noils. Votvoiis Irratabilltv. Darauiiemenl of tho Diges tlve Functions, Ueneral Debility, syiupWms of Consump tlou, ke. WENTALI.Y. The fearful ellects on the mind are uiorh in bi dreaded. Loss ol .Mi morv. Confusion of Idea Depression of thu Bpirits, Evil Fon-bodings, Aversion It Hocletv. sell-dl.lriist, love of solitude, i unity, ic. sra sntna of the evils produced. Thousands of persons of all ages ran now Judge what Is tbtt causa uf their declining health. Looting their tleor. beeomlnz weak, nale anil omaciated, having sin stujar npoearanc about the eyes, cough and t) mptoms ot oonauuipiion. Y O U N (5 M i: N. Who have Inlurud thmselves bv n certain practice indulged in when nlonun habit freio-ntly learned from svil cnmnanioiis. or at school thn i.lfects of which aro uishtly felt, even when asleep, and if not rured reud. rs iMarriaga Iuipnssible, and deslro) s both iniud aud body should aunlv Immcdiatelv. What a iiittvthat avuuua man, the hope of his rountry and the darling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects and cnJo nients of life, by the conn'MUen s nf deviating from the natu of nature, aud inilulein iu a certain secret habit. .Such pcdoliH hu.srbel'ure contemplating letloct that a sound uiiii.t and body Arc the most ne sysrary rciulsitn-s In pnitnulu louunuiai nappiues lHdeed. withnut these the louruev thrnueh life become H weary pilgrimagti, tho prospect hourly darkens to .Urn view, the mind heroines ehadoned with despair t nucd with the tnelaiiihoiy rctiertiou tuat tne uajipincs ot another ueenmes piignieu wilt our own, n i h k a s i; or i m p ii u d e N c i; When the misguided nnd imprudent votary of pleasure anils n nas imuitieit tuu sceus "i tuis pmuiiu oiscneu, it too ontu happens tiiut an in umeu sense oi siiHiue o dread of discovery, deters him from applying to thus, who from education nnd respectability cau alone nefrh-u . film, dclavine till thu constitutional symptoms ofthi horrid disease i makes their appearance, surji as ulcerated cor. inroai, niseaseu nuse, iiocumi.u, pains in uiuurai and limbs, dimness nf riebt. deafness, nodes on thu shii iinues. and arms, blotches on lluj head, face and cxtrcuiu ties, progressing with rapidity, till at laht tho palate of in. moutnouu uouesortuu Nine i.iii in, nun me viium oi Xhlidcscase becomes u horrid ollectuf cmumissoration -till death puts n period to bis druaujui tunerings, ny sen oing mm to "tiiat uourne irom wneuce no uavuitr ib lurns." It is a ntlantkely fact that tliniiFands fall victims to Sm tcrrititu disease, owing lu tno unsaiiuuiiuess oi it, oorant pretenders, who, by tlie me of Hint Deadly I'vi Mimiry. ruin tho constitution und mako thu resi du. of life miserable. U T R A N (S E R S j Trnst not your lives, or health, to the tare nf the nia jay umearnoa ana worinioss rreteiiucrs, ucsuiuiu oi inowledge. namu or eharaLler.whncooy Dr. Jonnrton'i dvorxiseuents. or stvle themselves, in the uonspapers jegularly Educated Physicians incapable of Curing.lhi-y Jieen you tritSiur luoutu after inonlh takinc their filthy ' vind poisonus coiubo.iuiIs, or us long as the smallot feu can bo oDtniucd. audjn despair, teai-u you with ruineu ixalth to sign over J'uur gniiung uisappoinimeiit, Dr. Johnson is thu only Phyririuu advertising. His credential or illidnmas ulwajs hang ill hisolfice , His remedies or treatment are unknown to alj .ujiera rope, tho first in this country and niioire extensjve Pn prepared from a lifu spent lit the ereat nnspitais at r.u car. i r.cries man nuv oiuer i uyMcntii hi um wiu. INDORSEMENT OF THE PRESS. Th. auny thousands cured et this institution year nf- tr year, aim tie numerous iiiiiuutaiit curgicai upera lions performed by Dr, Johnston, wjlncs-ed by tho ru porters of tho "Sun." "Cllooer." juil many other paper notices of which have appeared again nnd again before tht public, besides his standing as a gentlemen of char ortcr and responsibility, la a suUtcJeut guarantee to the aiiMttcn. SKIN DISEABEB DPEEDll.Y CURED. rarrons writing should le jiaitlruiariii dirccling the! - Iir tonis intlltutien, hi tue miiomng manner. fh JOHN M. JOIINbTON, M. D. Of tho Halllmore Lock HomuuI. Itnltimore, Maryland Jan IB,-1663. March 17, leOO. TINWARE k STOVE SHOP. I.- rnllE undcr.lined respectfully informs his old friend X and customers, that lie haa purchased his brothers i tarsal Indite abnve establlshinent.andthe concern will hcrcaltiir bo conducted by himself exclusively. H naa just received and oilers for sale, the larg- I est and mnst rvtteniive assortment of FANCY BTO VEB ever .introduced into this ninrkct, Uis stock consists nf cnmnlete assoitment nf tha best Conkjng and rarlnr stcvei in Ihc market, tegetb r with Hlnve futures nf e.vivy description, Oven and 5oi Mores, Radiators, Cylindar Stoves, Cast Iron Air. Tight Steves. Cannon Stoves, 4:e., kr, Btove pipe und Tjnwar. emitmly on hand and manufactured to order AU kinds of repairing dne, as usual, on thnrt notice Th paltaruga nf eld fricsds and new riittoinsri t spmfully sofleitod A ,M RUTERT JJoomibarj, Nov-mber SdC'UO, if COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. KDITED JY LEVI L. TATE, PROPHIETOR. BLOOMSBURG, PA. SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 26. 1062. Tho Thing is Working. Tho Dayton Empire, alluding to tho rapid increase of negroes in that part of Ohio, gives us tho following : "In one shop in this city, there arc four negro blacksmiths. In a certain gluo fac tory all the hands aro negroes. A white lunu making one dollar a day, running a stationary engine in a certain carpenter'" shop, had to leave to mako room for a contraband at eighty couta per day." Our Ohio contemporary dwells upon thoje facts with spirit and indignation, but before six months will roll around it will bo- como u?ed to them ; aud, if wo aro not egregiously mistaken "eighty ceuts" per day will be quito acceptable to auy nie- hanic whoso labor is reduced to competi tion with that of ruuaway or contraband negroes. In tho Southern counties of Penusylvania, bordering on Maryland, there aro hundreds of theso contrabands now ungaged iu harvesting, but there aro none receiving the sum of ''eighty" cents a day for their services, Up as far as Dau phin county, wherein is located tho Capital of our State, this runaway labor has crow ded out freo white and free negro labor too. Iu and arouud Harrisburg, there are bover al hundred contrabands, borne of whom aro laboring in tho field for twenty-five cents per day. We havo heard of one philan thropic Abolitionist, living a short distance from Harrisburg, who had a number of blacks engaged at the liberal turn of ten cents (the Buchanan standard,) per day, and after he could use them no louger, and fearing that they would become it bur- thon to him, he, on oue fiuo morning, an nounced to them that their masters wero after them, and in that tender and sympa thetic manner, our Abolition pecksniff, after robbing the poor wretches of their abor cot clear of them forever. Hero wo have 'a practical illustration of tho meanness aud tho workings of Aboli tionism. It is a simple compound of trcachory, hypocrisy, meanness and trea son. Wherever you find a snflling, cada verous lean and hungry looking dyspeptic, turning up his pious eyes, lamenting tho condition of the slave, you may bo sure that he will, for gain, uot only oppress tho uegro but tho white man ; and if ho has money to loan, he will raise his per cent age in proportion to tho borrower's neces sities. Tho greatest scoundrels aro always the greatest professors ; and tho meanest creatures wo have ever seen arc professed philauthropbists. Tho hardest mastors, the crudest landlords, and tho meanest men on thi3 side of perdition aro your can ting philanthropists. They arc loud in tho advocacy of every eutopian scheme of char ity which costs nothing but theories of wid ows nud orphans iu their own hearing, re ceives no response in their atony and bloodless hcat'ls. Their cold, glassy eyes aro full of speculation, but no pity, and, when beggary and poverty sue to thorn for alms, they iuvariably refer them to tho overseers of the poor. If it waro possible to ascertain the facts, it would bo found that those who are loud est in their wailing over slavery and in favor of its emancipation, aro such mon sters as wo havo described. Freo the slaves and they will find in this cluss their greatest tyrants. Thoy will uot go to war, nor will they contribute to assist others to go ; tho widows and orphans of dead pa triots thoy ehun as if thoy were lepers, and their ouly aim in advocating tho war, eveu with words, is, uot to restore their couutry, but to bet freo four millions of poor wretehcu, who, after being freo, would find in these heartless fanatics their mean est and most merciless oppressors. Remarkable Tho Tifo of J?. Walsh, across tho Creek, gave birth to a child on tho Fourth, which makes tho fifth of her children that has tho birthday of the na tion for its own. Wo doubt wether tho country auywhero eau rival such an in stances of tho systematic oonformitj to the divino injunction to inereaso any mul i'ply. Scrunton Republican, fieC'It is asserted that every pound of cotton sent North from Hilton Head will .cost the United States $2 such has been the expense of fancy abolition planting. (Select Poetry. The Battle oi' Liberty. by ox noE r. Monats. At early dawn the roll of drum, Tho bugle's shrill alarms, Tho pickets warned our foes had oonia And summoned us to arms, The sun, Just rising from the flood, Flecked earth's majestic arch, As our battalia ready stood To meet them on their march. Onward their legions came to feel How bravely freemen fight, For man to man. nnd steel to slocl, We strove from mom till night. The air was filled with fiery sleet Which thickened on the field, Until, amidst tho battle's heat, Our foes were forced to yield. The Conflict ceased at set of sun, And hanishod treason's herd.; Tho wreath of victory was won, And peace again restored. Thus ended in defeat and route, A buso and lawless band, Whoso fustian flag no more shall flout Abovo the free-born land. GREAT SL'JEtiCII OF lion. C. L. Yallandigliam, Made al the Democratic State Convention of Ohio, on the th day oj July, 1802. Following the reading and adoption of tho resolutions, loud aud continuous calls woro made for Mr. Vallaudigham ; and when he ascended the platform he was greeted with rapturous cheers. He spoke as follows : Mr. President, and fellow Democrats of of the tstatc of Ohio : I am obliged again to regret Unit the latenes of tho hour pre cludes nie from addressing you, cither iu the manner or upon the particular sub jects which othorwi-ic I should prefer. This is my misfortune again to-day as last night; but speaking thus without premed itation, and upon such matters chicflv as may occur to me at the moment, if I should I happon to get fairly under headway, it may turn out to be your misfortune. Laughter. I I congratulate tho Demooraoy of Ohio,! tnat in tne unust oi great puonc trial anu , calamity, ot persecution tor Uevotion to t tUU UUUtl lllC.-l Ul bllU IUU1U1B II1U 1 IUU UUUJ ana strong tlio tounotitions oi tno L-onsu-tution and tho Union uuder which this country has grown great aud been pros perous tho fathers, by whoso principles one and till, tho party to which wo arc proud to belong has always been guided to-day wo have assembled in numbers creator thau at any former Convention in i i Ohio. I congratulate you that despite tho ' threats which havo been uttcicd, and tho denunciations which have been poured out upon mat uiiie-uuiiuiuu .uiu mutt uuiuuiiu organization, peaceably and in quiet, with enthusiasm aud earnestness ot purpoic, wo are hero met, and ir. harmony, which is the secret of strength aud tho harbinger of success, have discharged the duties for which we aro called together. Thero was I a tiuio when it was questionable if in freo America in the United States boasting j of their libortics for inoro thau eighty! years a party to which this country is j indebted for all that is great aud good aud grand and glorious would have been per mitted peaceably to assemble to cxurci.o its political rights and perform its political fuuetions. Threats havo even been made in times inoro recent, that this most essen tial of all political rights, secured to us by tho precious blood of our fathors in seven years' revolutionary war, should no longer bo enjoyed. Tho Democrats of our noble sister State of Indiana, second born daugh ter of the North west, havo been menaced withiu tho laet ten days, with a military organization and tho bayonet, to put down their party. I hold in my hand a telo graphic dispatch from tho capitol of that state, boasting ot tuis intanious purposo. I will read it, gentlemen ; because i Know that the samo dastardly menaces havo been proclaimed against tho Democrats of Ohio, and because L am Lore to-uay to re buke them as becomes a frco-born man who is resolved to perish Great applauso in tho midst of which, tho rent of the sentence was lost Some months ago, a Democratic State Convention was held iu Indiana. It was a Convention of tho party founded by Thomas Jefferson, and built up by a .Madison and a "Monroe, and consolidated by an Andrew Jackson applause a party under whoso principles aud policy from thirteen States we have grown to thirty-four, for thirty-lour there were, true anil loyal to tlie union ocioro ine Presidential election ol ibUD a party under whose wise and liberal policy the course of empire westward did take its way, until the symbol of .American pow er tne stars anu stripes wavcu prouiiiy from the Atlantic lo thu Paeihc, over tho breadth of a whole continent a party which, by peace and compromise, and through harmony and wisdom and sound policy, nrougnius upirom lecoiu anu im poverished colonics, struggling in tho midst of defeat and disaster in the war of the Revolution, to a mighty empire, foremost among the powers of the earth, the foundations of whoso greatness wore laid broad and firm, in that noble Consti tution and that grand old Union which the Democratic party has ever maintain ed and defended. The Democratic par ty, with such principles and sueli a his tory tud record to point to, held a Stato Convention in pureuauce of its usages for more than thirty years, and under the riehts eeeured by a Rtate tnd Federal Constitution older still, in the capital of the State of Indiana. And yet, referring to this party and its Convention, the cor respondent of a disloyal aud pestilent, but influential newspaper in the chief city of Ohio, dared to send over the tel egraphic wires, wires wholly under the military control of the administration, which permits nothing to bo transmitted not acceptable to its censors, a dispatch in these words : "The fellows arc frishtcned, evidently not without cause." "Well, gentlemen, I know not how far Democrats of Indiana nuiy be frightened and a nobler and more tearless body of men never lived but I see thousands ol Democrats before mo to whom fear and reproach arc alike unknown. Frightened at what ? Frightened by whom ? Wo arc made of sterner stuff. "The militia of the State," ho adds, 'will probably be put upon a war footing very shortly.'' And who, I pray, arc the militia of the State? They are not made up of the leaders of the Republican party in Indi ana or Ohio, I know. 1 never knew that sort of politicians to go into any such organization) in peace or in war. No men have ever been more bitter and un relenting iu their Opposition to the ridi. eulc of the militia : and none knows it better than I, as my friend before nio by his smile, reminds me that one of my own offences is that I am a militia briga- dier in lavor ol the next foreign war. Hut who are the militia ? They arc the free born, strong-armed, stout-hearted Democrats of Indiana as they aro ol Ohio. Let llicin be put on a war footing. CJood ! Wo have hosts of them in the army al ready, and on a war footing, but who arc as sound Democrats, and as much devo ted to the principles of the party as they were the hour they enlisted. They have been iu tlie South, and I have the author ity of hundieds of officers and privates in that gallant army, for saying that not only aro the original Democrats in it, more iievotou to tne p.irty to-uay man ever before, but that hundreds also who went hence Republicans, havo returned, or will return, cured of tho disease, Laughter ami applause. Sir, the army is fortunately, most fortunately for the colmtr.. turninc out to be a sort of polit i(.al hospital or .sanitary institution, and 1 only regret that there arc not more ice publican patients in it. Laughter, Well, put the militia upon a war footing, Put arms in their hands. Thoy never can be made the butchers or jailors of their fellow citizens, but the guardians of free speech and a free press, and of the ballot-box. Standing armies of the mer cenaries, not the militia of a country, are the customary instruments of tyranny anil usurpation, But tlii correspondent proceeds : "If the sympathizers with treason and traitors" We sympathize with treason and traitors! We, who have stood by the Constitution and the Union from tho organization of the party, in our lathers' clay and in our own day, in every hour of trial, in peace and in war, in victory and in defeat, amid disaster and when prosperity beam ed upon us we to be branded as enemies to our country, by those whose traitor fathors burned blue lights as signals for a foreign foe, or met iu Hartford Conven tion to plot treason aud disunion fifty years aito ! We false to the Constitution and to our irovernmont. thu bones of whose fathers lie buried on every battle field of tho war of 1812, from tho massa ere at the River Raisin to the splendid victory at Nov. Orleans : wo who bore aloft the proud banner of the Republic and planted it in triumph upon tho palace of the Montezuiuas : AVc by whose wis dom in council and courage in thu field for seventy years, tho Constitution and tho Union and the country which has irrown croat under them, have been pre served and defended ; wo to bo donounccd as sympathizing with treason aud traitors, by tho men who for twenty yoars havo labored day and night for the sucooss of thoso principles aud ot that poiioy ana that party which aro now destroying the grandest Union, tho noblest Constitution and tho fairest Uountry on tlie giono. laiu to mo about sympathizing with disunion, with treason and with traitors I I tell you , wen of Ohio, that inthreo months, in six weeks it may be, theso very mou and ttieir masters in Washington whose biddiug they do, will be the advocates of tho etorual dissolution of this Union; aud denounce all who opposo it as enemies lo tho peace of tho country. Foroign intervention and tno repeated anil most tonous disasters wbioli havo lately befallen our amis, will speedily forco the issue of separation and southern independence disunion or of Union by negotiation and compromise. Between these two I am aud 1 horo pub- lioly proclaim it for tho Union, tho wholo Union and uothinu less, if by any possi bility I can baveit; if not, thon for so much ot it as yet cau bo rescued and pre served ; and iu any ovcut and uuder all circumstanocs, for tho Union which Uod ordaiucd,of tho Mississppi Valley and all which may cling to it, under the old ntrno, the old 'onstitution and tho old flag, with all their precious memories, with tho battle Gelds of thu past aud the songs ana tho proud hhtory ot tua past with tho birth placo and tlo burial placo Wusiiingiou the toundor aim J.noKscn tue presorver of tho Constitution as it is aud tho Union ac it was. Great applause. But this correspondent agaju procoeds : f If the sympathizers with treason and Iraxtors meditate to carry out their plans in thi auarter." What plans! Justsuoh as to day havo been tho business of this Convention ; tho plans of tho old Union party, laying down a platform and nominating Democrats to fill tho offices and control tho policy of the GoTcrnmont, to tho end that tho Constitu tion may bo again maintained, and tho Union restored, and pcaco, prosperity and happiness once inoro drop healing from their wiug. "rians" tno fellow proceeds, "in tins quarter they will doubtless find tho work', quite as hot as they bargained for." And I toll tho cowardly miscreant who tele graphed the threat that ho and thoso be hind him, will find tho work Gfty fold hot ter when they begin it than they had reck oned on, both here and in Indiana. "Ten thousandstand of arms," ho adds, "havo been ordered for tho State troops." For what ? To put down tho Demo cratic party. Sir, that is a work which cannot bo done by ten, or twenty or fifty thousand stand of arms in tho hands of any such dastards in offico or out of it. If so full of v?lor and so thirsty for blood, lot them enlist under the call just issued for troops in Ohio and Indiana, Let them go down and fight tho armies of the "rebels" in tho South, and let Democrats fight tho unarmed but wore insidious and dangerous Abolition rebels of the North and West, through tho ballot box. Forty thousand additional troops, I estimate it, are called for in the proclamation of yosterday, from the State of Uhio. Where arc tho forty thousand Wide Awakes of 18G0, armed with their porta ble lamp poits and drilled to the inusio of the Chicago platform 1 Sir, I propose that 35,000 ot them be consoripted forth with. They wiH"nevcr enlist ; they never do. They are "Homo Guards." They "don't go," but stay vigo.ously at homo to slander aud abuse and threaten Democrats whose fathers or brothers or sous are in the Union armies or have fallen in battle I speak generally certainly there are ex ceptions. But I will engage that if the records of the old Wide Awake clubs in the several cities and towns of Ohio shall by procured and tho Kepublicaus will de tail or draft 35.000 from tho list, I will fiud 5,0110 stroug-armed, stout-hearted, brave and loyal Dcmoerats to go down and see that they don t run away at the first fire. fGreat Laughter. Svmpathysers with treason aud traitors! Secessionists ! Sir, it is about time that we had heard tho last of this. The De niocracy of Ohio und of the United States, arc resolved that an end shall be put to this sort of slander and abuse. But I do not propose to discuss this particular sub ject just now. Uo on, go on.J Well, then, Irom that which conoerns the Democratic party to a word, a single word, about what relates to myself; and 1 ho n ardon for the digression, i am re joiced that it has been permitted mo to be here present to day in person betoro you Had you bckived the reports of tho Re publican press, you would no doubt have expected to see tho most extraordinary compound of leprous and unsightly flesh and blood ever exhibited. Laughter. Well, my friends, you see that I am not quite "monstrous" at least, and bear no special resemblance to theboast of tho Ap ocalypse, cither in the heads or horns; but am a man of lilco tasniou with your selves. To the Republican party alone, and its press and its orators, 1 am indebted, no doubt, for a large part of tho "curiosity" which I am sorry to say, I seem to have oxcitod ; aud which has brought out even some-of them as if to "see the elephant." They have never meant to be friendly to- wards mo, I know, but as I seo some of thoin now within my vision, let mo whi.-per iu their ears, that I never had bettor friend , and no man ever had since the world began. They have advertised ine fico of cost, for tho last fifteen months ; yes, I may say for souio five years past, all over tno Umted states, Why, sir, a Republican editor without "the under signed' lor a text, would be the most un happy mortal in tho world. Every littlo "priutor's devil" in tho office would bo hollowing for copy, and no copy to bo had. 1 know that they aro tnends, by the usual sigu, "the remarks they make." Gentle- men I have had my sharo of what Jefi'er - sou called tho unction, tho holy oil with which tho Democratic priestwood has al- ways been anointed tiandor, detraction and onlmnny without stint, really I am uot suro that with mo it has uot reached "oxtromo auction,'' though I am not ready and do not mean, to depart yet. Well, I will not complain. It has co6t mo not a tiuglo night's loss of sleep from tho begin - uing. My appetite, if you will pardon the rcferonco if you will allow me, as Lincoln would say, to "blab" upon so delicato a subject has been in no degree impaired bv it. Others before mo and with mo, havo endured jtho s-ituo. Hero is my oxcel lent friend naar mo, f Mr. Medary. Oh bles scd Martyr! Great Laughter and ap plause. For ono and sixty years, the storms of partizan persecution and inalig. nity in evory form have beaten upon his head ; but though time and toil have mado it irrav. tho heert beneath bents still to-dav 1 . 'i ..V ..... .. -V r." us duuuu uuu it uu uv its luauuuia in j-ri? mooraoy and patriotism, and of humanity too, as wheu bo laid his first offerings up on the altar of bis country just; forty years of ago. What othors" havo heroically sufl". I P M I r erffifl naar irn tnr r a i i n n 1 t -k Viu4 (Ask st7 Y P--1 ' W U n tj VtlWIUi Vo aro all, indeed, still iu tho midst of trials. Hero before mo, is tho ecatleman of whom J. hare just spoken, whom you havo honored with tho Presidency of this noblo Convention, for forty veurs a Democratic editor for forty years devotod to tho tho very author of all human woo and Constitution and the Union of these States, Bufforing wounds, too, rangling and fes a man who, through ovil and through good tcring for the want of surgical aid if report, has adhorcd with tho faith of a i thoso places, I say, had first been seised, devotco and tho firmnes3 of a martyr, to 1 and then it had becomo necessary for tho the principles and polioy of that grand old comfort or lifo of tho thousands of other party of tho Union; and now that tho sick aud wounded who aro borno into tho fro3ts of three scoro years havo desoended city every day, to occupy tho churohes of and whitened his head ho, I say, has j Washington, I know of no bettor or holier lived to sco tho paper to which ho gives purposo to which they could havo been do- the labor and tho wisdom of his deoliuing years, prohibited from circulation through a part of tho mails, as "disloyal" to tno Government! (Cries of no, no, shame.) Samuel He dary disloyal 1 and Wendell Phillips a patriot 1 Sir, it is not many months sineo. that in tho city of Washington, in that maguiGccnt building erected by tho chari ty of an Englishman who loved Amorica, I wish thero were moro'liko him, that tho art and scienco might tho inoro widely flourish in this country the Smithsonian Institute Wendell Phillips addressed an assemblage cf men as false to tho Union and tho Constitution as himself. Upon the platform was the Speaker of tho IIouso of Representatives, tho third officer in the Government; by his sido tho Vico Press dent of tho United States, and between thoso two, in proportions long drawn out, the form of "Honest Old Abraham Lin coln." Am I mistaken, and was it at an other and oarlier abolition leoturo by that other disuniouist, Horaco Grccly in the same placo thero have boon many of thorn that Lincoln attended ? The Spea ker aud Vice President I know woro there; and with these two or threo witnessos be fore him, and in prcsenco of tho priesthood of Abolilionism, the Sumners und Wilsons tho Lovejoys and the Wades of tho House and Senate, (great laughter and cheers,) surrounded by these, tho vry architects of disunion, he proclaimed that "for uino- tien years ho had labored to take nine teen Mates out ot the Union." And yet this most spottejLtraitor was pleading for disuuion iu life city of Washington, where women ore arrested for woanng of rod, whito and red, upon their bonnets, and babies of eighteen months arc taken out of the willow wagons drawn by their nurses, because certain colors called seditious arc found upon their swadling clothes I The next day, or soon offer, this samo Wendell Phillips did dine with or wai othcrwuo cn tortaiued by his Excollenoy tho President of the United States, who rcl&tod to him one of his choicest anecdotes. Yet Demo cratic editors, Dcmocaatio Senators and Representatives, and thoso holding other olhcial portions by the grace of the States or of the psoplo, aro "traitors" forsooth, because they would adhere to their pnnoi pics and organization of their noble and patriotio old party ! Suoh are some of the exhibitions which Washington has wit ncsscd during tho past winter. Congress, too, has been in session. Sir, I saw it announced in oue of tho disloyal papers of .1 . .....1 T.r r. uus cuv vesicruay. iuui, ueu. jjuvta auu Toombs, and Yancy, and llhett, and oth er secessionists of tho South, would doriv much comfort from this day s meeting, Well, sir, I have just come from a body of men which I would not for a mouieut pretend to compare for statesmanship, re speetability or patriotism with this Uon veution. That hody has devoted its time and attention to doing inoro in six months, for the cause of seoessionism, than lieau regard, and Loc, and Johnston, ond all the Southern Generals combined have been able to accomplish in one year. Said a Senator from tho South tho other day, a ' Union man :" Jeff. Davis 13 running two j Congresses now and is making a d d sight more out of tho Washington Conrrcss , than the one at Richmond." Laughter, and many remarks ot approval. The legislation of that body has been almost wholly for the" Almighty African." From tho prayer in tho morning for, gen tlemen, wo are a pious body, wo are making long faces, and sometimco wry fa- ces, too (laughter,) we open with prayer but thoro is not much ot tno Almighty Ala kcr of hcavon and earth in it, from tho prayer, to tho motion to adbourn, it is no - , gro in every shape and form in which he cau by any possibility bo served up But it is not only tno negro lnsiue ot ine Houso and Senate, but outside also. Tho 1 city of Washington has been, within tho past three woeks, converted into ono uni- versal hospital-overy church, except ono for each denomination, has been seized for hospital purposes; and whilo tho sanctua. , rics of tho over living God tho God of 1 Abraham, Isaac and Jacob not tho new God ol the Burlingames nnd Summers and ' other Abolitionists, not that God whoso ' gospol i written ia the new Bible of Ab. ' olition but tho Everliving Jehovah G&d, havo boon confiscated for hospitals, every ' theatre, every eoneert saloon, every other l placo of amusement, from tho highest to the lowest from tho spacious theatro in j which a Forest exhibits to an enraptured audience his graphic rendonngs of tho immortal creations of Shakspcars' down to tho basest uen ot revelry and urunltcness. aro open still; as in the Inferon of tho I groat Italif.n poet ''IV gates oXliel stand open nijtt aud day," Sir, if theso placec of amusement in noocnt somo of thom,but not holy,ccrtainly had first been seized us hospitals, for tho comfort and cud of tlo thousands of bravo and honest men, who wont forth bolieviug in their hearts that they woro to battle for the Constitution and tho Union, but who now lie wasting away upon their lonely pa.llets, with no wife or is,tcr, or mother there to sooth, groaning in agony with every description of wound which the devlish ingenuity of man cm inflict by weapons, wboso inventor was inspired by voted Aud now, sir, not far from tho stately capitol, within whoso marblo walls abolition treason now runs, riot, is a build ing, " Green's Row" by name, iu which 1100 fugitivo slaves ''contrabands" iu tho precious slaug of Master Butler daily rcccivo tho rations of tho soldiers, whioh aro paid for out of tho taxes levied upon tho people Ono hundrod thonsand dollars a day aro taken from tho public treasures for tho support of theso fugitivo slaves, while tho army of Shiolds, and other Union armies in the field oven so lately as six weeks ago, marched baro foot ed, bare headed, and in thefr drawers, for many weary miles without so much as a cracker or a orut of broad with which to allay their hunger. Aye, sir, whilo many callant young soldier of Ohio, iust blooming into manhood, who hoard tho cry that went up hftccn months ago, "rally to defend tho flag and for tho roscuo of tho capitol," and went forth to battle, with honesty in his heart, his lifo in his hand, with courage in every fiber, and patriotism n every vain, lies wan und sad on his pall et in tho hospital, your surgoons are forced to divide their time and oaro botwoen tha wounded soldiers and theso vagabond fuci- tivo slaves, who have been reduced or forocd from the servico of their masters Theso things and much moro I have told yon not a titho ot all aro done in Wahinton. We know it thoro, though it is withheld from the pcoplo ; and whilo overy falso hood that the ingenuity of man can invent to delude aud deceive, i transmitted or allowed by tho telegraphic oensor of the Administration themselves usurpers un known to tho Constitution and laws thoso facts arc not permitted to reach tho pcoplo of tho United States. Your newspapers, tho natural watch dogs of liberty, aro threatened with suppression if but tho half or the hundredth part of the truth be told. And now, too, when but one other means remained for the redress of this and tho hundred other political grievancies, under which tho lands groans party organiza- tion and public assemblages of tho pcoplo even these, too, are now threatened with suppression by nruied forca. Ayo, sir, that very party, which not many years ago, boro upon evory bannor, tho motto "Free Speech and a Free Pross," now day by day forbids the transmission through your mails of tho papers from which you derive your knowledge of public evonts,aud whioh advocate the principles you cherish.- And Democratic editors, too, arc seized, "kidnapped ' in tho midnight hour torn from their families gagged their wives with officers over them mcnaoing violence if thoy but ask ono farewell grasp of tho hand, ono parting kiss thrust into aoloso capringo iu tho felon's hour of midnight, and with violcnco dragged to this Capitol aud here forced upon an express train and hurried off to a military fortress of tho United States. Yes, men of Ohio, to a fortress that bears tho honored name of that first martyr to American liberty -tho Warren of Bunker Hill ; or it may be to that other bastilo desorating that other name sacred in American history, and hon ored throughout the earth the name of thitt man who forsook homo and gaye up rank and title, and in the first flush of youth and manhood oamo to our shores and linkod his fortunes with the Amerioau cause the prisoners of Olmutz, tho braya and gallant Lafayette. Ayo, freemen of tho West, fortresses, bearing these honored uamos, and meant for tho defensooftho country against foreign foes, and out of whose casemates bristlo cannon planted to hurl death and destruction at armed in vaders, echo now with tho groans and aro 11 . 1 i . 1 r i watcrca uy vtie tears not ui muu utuy iron) ; States seceded and in robellion,or captured in war, but from tho loyal States of tho ' North and the West, and from that party which has contributed nearly three fourths of tho soldiers iu tho field to day, Aro theso things to bo borne I (Never ; uo, never.) If you have tho spirit of freemen 'in you, bear them not I (Great nppluso, j and cries of that's it, that's tho talk.) What is life worth ? What aro property nud personal liberty and political liberty I worth T Of what value aro all theso thing, if wo, born of an ancestry cf freemen, i boasting, in tho very first hours of our boyhood , of a more extended liberty than ( was ever vouchsafed to any other pcoplo, aro to fail now in this the hour of soro trial to demand and to defend them at overy ( hazard I Frcodom of tho Press ! Is tho man who sits iu the White IIouso at Wash- iugton, and who owes jail his power to the press and tho ballot, is ho now- to play I tho tyrant over us I (No! never, never.) . Shall the man who sits at ono onaof a tele graphic wiro in tho War Dopartnicn or tlio Department of State, u mere clerk it may be, a scryant of servauts; sit down and by ono singlo click of tho instrument, order some minion of lis a thousand miles off, to arrest aauiuel ftodcry, Judge Jiannoy. or Judge Thurm an and hurry tbcui to a bas tilo I (SI o; it can t bo none; wo wijl nevor allow t.) I he Constitution says " no maD shall bo held to answor for crime except oa duo proooss of law. Our fathors, six hnu dred years ago, aetcmbled upon tho plains of llunney Mede in old Englaud, aud ros ouod from tyrant bauds, not by arms but by firm resolve, tho God-givn right to bu free, Our fathers, in tho time of James