COLUMBIA )EMOC AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER Levi l, tate, editor. "TO HOLD AND TKIM TUB TOUOII OP TRUTH AND WAVE IT O'HB THE DARKENED EARTH." TERMS s 82 00 PER ANNUM. VOL. 17. NO, 31. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PENN'A,, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1863, VOLUME 27. RAT, m CAMPAIGN SONGS. Woodward and Freedom. .Mi-DATTLU tjiTv" OP FREEDOM. Yen, We'll rally round the Flaj, boya, fcally on co again, tehoutlng for Wooilivnrd and for Freedom; We'll rally from (he lilllsMrs, We'll Bather from the plains, tth jutlng for Woodward nndfor Freedom 1 Tho Union forevur I hurrah, boys, hurrah I Down with Oppression, Up with the law I While we rally round the Flag, boys, ltnlly once again, Shouting for Woodward and for Fuecdam I Wo arc rallying to the polls, boya. Three ilr;ii thousand more, Shouting lor Woodward and for Freedom , And we'll march In sulld ranks, As our Fathers did of yore, Shouting for Woodward and for Freedom I The ballot-box forever I hurrah I boya, hurrah I Down with Opprcs.ion, Up with the Law I While we rally round the polls, bo) a, Rally mice again, Fhouting or Woodward und for Freedom 1 We will welcome to our number The Honest, True and Dravo, Ehoutlng for Woodward and for Freedom I Although he may be poor, lie shall never be n slave, Shouting for Woodward and for Freedom ! , The Union forever, tc. We will hurry tntho rolls boys, From the East and from the West, Shouting for Woodward and for Freedom, Aud wo'll teach Oppression's uew, With tho Niggers and tho rest; To about for Woodward and for Freedom I Tho ballot-box fntevcr, &c. The Freedom of Elections. -YANKEE DOOBJX. While some on rights and some on wrongs, Prefer their own millions. The people's righti demand our song, Hie Right of Free Elusions; For government nud order's sake. And law's iinpoitant section, Let all stand by the llalht-Bcj, For Fuir and Free Elections, Cuom."-. -"l.nw and order" be the stakn, With freedom and protection, Lit all stand I y the ballot-box, For fair and free election. L'lirh town tnd country's wealth and peace. Its trudc and all connection, With sci.'iice, art niun all increase Ily Fair and Free Elections. Then thnt-rt tho schemes of factious har.ds, And traitor dlsatroitlon ; Hand up with rilling hearts and hand, I'or Fair and Free Llcclion. Cuor.i's "Law nnJ order," Slc. fhould enemies b"set tu round Of negro fierce compaction, Undaunted wo can stand oar ground, Upheld by Free elections. Elections ar' to make us laics. For tnde, peace and protection, Who fails to vote forsakes the cause Of Freedom and 1 lections, Ciioiits -"Law und order," t.c. COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. EOITF.D BY LEVI '!.. TATE, IT.OI'ltlETOIl SATURDAY MORNING, OCTODES 3, 1863. SPEECH O F lion. Jeremiah S. Black, AT THE -Democratic Mass Coireonlioii ik Lan caster illy, Sept. 17, 1SC3. Fellow-citizens : I havo not accepted this invitation to address you with any hope of giving you now light on the issues before tho people. There arc some things too plain lor discu-sion, and the man who i dues not understand the fundamental prin ciples now in content, is below the reach of an argument. This Government this Constitution and these laws were made by the patriots of tho Revolution to secure the blessings of liberty to themselves and their posterity. Their blood and trcasuro expended upon tho erection of the Government, gave them sn inheritable estate in it which has como down in the rcgu'ar course of descent to tlcir heirs. We, the whito men of Amor- I tea, arc their heirs. Tho Government being our property, we have the samo right to savo it from iovenhrow, by warning one another of its danger, that any one of you has to pre vent the destruction of his houso by rais ing tho cry of fire when he sees tho flames bursting from the roof. And this is a duty which will surely be performed ; for the neoplo of, this country have beon so long accustomed to speak plainly what they believe sineerely upon tho subjects which conosrn their temporal salvation, that thoy could not bo silent if thoy would. This great combination of independent sovereignties, uniting all tho powers of a consolidated cmpiro for the common de fence and gcueral welfare, with all the ad- vantages of local self government in our Ldomostio affairs, was the grandest politi- eal structure ever mado by human hands, ; end its preservation was the most Bacrcd Irubt ever committed to any people on the globe, If wo shall be compollud to close this contost without a restoration of the Union, our wortt mibfortunes are yet be- foro us. . No imagination lias measured tho full extent of that calamity, or seen to the bottom of that ftightlul abyss, If any one hero feels pity for-tho Southern peo ple, lot linn bestow it ;not for tho suffer ings they have already endured, but (or tho evils which await them in case they mcnt by depleting its Treasury and stuff succocd in the rash and rebellious enter- ing its money into their own big pockets, prise of disolution. Neither can wo of , With such a mail, wielding all tho power tho North look in tho face such a inisl'or-1 and influence of this great Staro, the Qov- tuno without dread and terror. A simple i commercial view of it (and that is the lowest of all views) is enough to startlo us. Wo lose an internal trade with the South worth to us at least one hundred millions per annum in clear profits. Wo lose tho larger part of that groat foreign commerce which heretofore made all tho world dependent on us. A financial re vulsion must follow this bloated system of fictitious paper credit as surely as tho night follows the day. With all these elements of weakness we must shoulder a debt of perhaps three thousand millions of dollars, Pennsylvania paying about twenty -five per centum as her share of the interest, a bur- deu which even a prosperous people could hardly expect to carry without being cru-hed. With business everywhere par alyzed, property universally depreciated, in debt beyond hope of redemption, ground to the earth by taxation, political insig nificance in the eyes of the world, aud a consciousness of national shame and deg radation in our own hearts, we must begin the world again, like a broken-hearted man who has lost his character, his pro perty and his hopo, When these thiugs are recollected, let j no man lorgct that tho Democratic party is the only one which ever appreciated the J value of the Union. No other over made devotion to it a cardinal principle of its creed. There never was a time since that purty first came into existence, when any j man could remain in its communion for an hour if ho trhowed indifference, much less it he expressed opposition, to tho Union. When any one of its pretended members declare his willingness to let the Union slidu, he wes .promptly notiiod to slide himself over to the opposition, and he always -obeyed the order. If there be a man among us who would not freely give all he has und all he is to bring back the Union to the condition in which it was threo years ago, he is not in his proper placo ; he ought to be in secret conclave with the 'Loyal Leaguers." plotting against that Constitution and those laws which alone can biud the Union together. That vc arc as tree as ever to our an cient faith that we have not given up one inch of the high ground we occupied in all time past is proved, if proof is neces sary, by the character of our present can didate tor tho highest olt;ce in tee State. I think I know that gentleman as well as one mau can be known to another. I can savi with a profound conviction of its truth, that no word has over been heard from I i 3 lips, usr a line secu from his pen, which did not breathe the most fervent de voliou to the Uuion. Indeed, he has been all his life tiino uncommonly sensative to the dangers which threatened our national institutions. The Union of the States, ' with their rights unimpaired, and all the liberties of the people proteo'ed, was and parly had been successful in 1800, this , tlieir pleasure and plund er us for their is the polar star of his political course and country would now have been uuitcd, pros- - profit. the supreme object of his affections. No 1 perous, happy and tranquil. Tho Auwr- j They avowed their purpose of destroy man, even among tho great patriots of the can flag would havo waved orer ovory , tj,js Government more than thirty past age, has been more eloquent in his inch of our territory, "not one star ex- yL,ars ag0 'j'i10y maj0 no sccrct 0f tUc warnings against disunion, or predicted inguished nor one stripe erased," and no Inalignant hatred they bore to the iustitu our present 'roubles .more accurately. In I concession to tho South would have been tioI13 established by our Revolutionary a huudrctt conversations or a scoro ot written communications, I, and mtny others, have seen the evidence of his love for the Federal Uuion and his hatred for every species of treason that might weak en or overthrow it. Few nersous havo I ever been in contact with him for a short J lime, without being impressed with tho (great truths which make so largo a part scurity trow which tney ougut never 10 j,eaccfui village to organizo a general sys ' of his on ustronc and clear undcrstandiug. i have emerged. The Democratio party torn of butchery and actually commenced Friends and enemies admit his sincerity, I built up this Government, kept tho Union gtootinj, ii0VYU tho unsuspecting inhabit for feelings so intense and convictions so together for soveuty-fivo years, and was ' (m, wljilo Q niuudcl.e( th0 Government i 1 fl, . M l! !i I habitually urged upou others could not possibly be counterfeited. Ho has fairly earned tho title of a "Union-Saver." Ho ! has deserved the sneer of tho opposition j when they said ho sat constantly "besido 1 the sick bed of the Union ;'' und if tho Union is destined to expire in the insanity ' of civil strife, his devoted affection will 'keep there to the last "like lovo watching ' madness on tho bed of death," ' If we had been iu any sense opposed to ' thcGovcri racnt oruufai'bful to tho Union, 1 would we have proposed such a cdndidato ' for Governor ? No; wo would havo nom ' inatcd some black Abolitionist, who be lieves tho Constitution to be a covenant 'with hell, and who, by destroying the Constitution, would make an end of the ( Union as certainly as you take tho life of a man by cutting the heart out of his body ; or wo would havo worked out our destruc tive purposes by nominating some mighty contractor ouo of thoso largo-handed robbers who arc weakening tho Govern- crnmcnt surely could not last long. In i - w short, if wo had any evil intent against the Union, we would have taken any can didate wo could lay our hands on rather than Gcorgo W. Woodward, the Union- saver the man ot upright character and downright speech whoso hands arc clean of all crime, and whoso pockets aro empty of all gains except wkatcamo there as tho just toward of his honest labor. Much as wo honor and love him person ally, it is not for his sake that wo desiro to make him Governor. Setting aside his fidelity ami ours to the National Govern ment and Union, wo could do something a great deal more for his profit than that. Let him avow his apostacy from the faith of liis fathers ; let him prostitute his con science and his intellect to the purposes of Abolitionism; let him forget that ho be longs to tho Caucasian variety of the lni man species aud enter tho service of the negro ; let him make a few speeches to show the superiority of tho African over tho Saxon race ; let him contrive the ways and means of promoting negro insurrec tions, and always stand ready to tukc the part of the negro right or wrong ; above all, let him denounce tho Constitution as it is, and curse the Union as it was ; let him abandon the principles of liberty in which lie was bred, and degrade himsclt low enough to call every freeman a traitot who is not willing to be a slave. If he will do tlii; he may get a contract on which he cm cheat tho United btates at the rate of a hundred thousand dollars a month. If his inexperience should make him awk ward, and he should be detected and ex posed so that even his confederates in knavery arc compelled to admit his guilt, there would still be a resource for him. When the worst comes to the worst, we can get him a foreign mission send him to cool his blushes in the snows of Russia, or harden the bronze upon his check under the hot sun of Spiin. But stealing the public mouey or tramp ling on the Constitution is not his idea of loyalty or yours cither. lie would re store the Union by defending the Const! tution, by giving to tho laws their just supicniacy by guarding tho lights of the people, aud by driving off thoso obscene birds of prey that aro now gorgiug them selves on the prostrate carcass of the na tion. I knew there are those who think that tho Uuion can never to restored ; who believe that the great gulf of blood aud fire which now rolls between the North and tho South has been made by this Admin- j istration so wide and so deep that it will 1 rimrln fnr.irnn ininn:flln. 1 nm Tint nun of those who regard restoration as a for- lorn hope. Every man who has sense enough to know his right hand from his . . . .. . left must bclievo that, it the Democratic - .w.j.. Oj me uuiiBiuuuuu ur uviuaimcu uy niau magnanimity which the stronger party ought always show in its treatment of the weaker. , As our troubles began with tho advent of tlic Abolitionists to power, so they will cud when tho people scourge back that band of malignants to tho ob- j "ways reauy "io suieiu u auu au i. i nensli Mere too." J uo &awo party wm in . i. ...i ii r bring back tho better days of tho Repub lic, and remove, if not immediately, at least in process of timo, that hugo moun tain of sorrow which is now etching tho lifo out of the country. One thing is perfectly certain : that if tho Uniou U ever restored, it must bo on tho basis of the Constitution and laws. Other hope of salvation to us thoroisnono under heaven. When tho Constitution was put aside aud another system of Gov ernment, compounded of tho proclama tions and confiscation acts, was substituted in its placo, all possible chauces of tho Union were postponed until tho Constitu tion could bs brought back again. When you rcquiru tho Southern people to oboy tho Constitution and tho laws, which wcro mado by their fathers as well as ours, it is but their reasonable duty to submit, and if thoy do not sco it so, it is our duty to make them. Hut it is a widely different thing when you offer them a confiscation act which strips them of land and goods, coupled with a proclamation which lets looso four- millions of ignorant negroes, with Abolition prcaoher3 among them to incite insurrection and urge tho indiscrim inate slaughter of the whito inhabitants. Whether thoy ought to give themselves up to this appalling fate, is a question which I leave to bo decided by thoso who have the authority. But that thoy will never voluntarily consent to a union with us up on thoso terms, I think is certain. If thoy did, wculd that bo tho Union that Wash ington made 1 Would not a Union without a Constitution bo as dangerous to us as to them ? How long would a Union removed from the rocks of the Constitution and rebuilt upon the sandy foundation of a proclamation, bo able to sUnd when the winds blow aud the rains beat against it? That there is something radically and fatally wrong in a war which has for its object a negro proclamation inconsistent with tho white man's constitution, is a self evident truth which pervades tho wholo popular miud. Tho negro policy has changed the whole public feeling every where, North and South. When Mr. Lincoln sent his first message to Congress, race cannot possibly have any human feel he declared it to ho his opinion that there ' ing for another. Besides, they know very was not a majority for secession in any State of tho Union, except perhaps youth Carolina. He was right, Nino-tenths of tho Southern people were then as true to Union as any part of tho North, and far i truer than New England over was. The i North was as nearly unanimous as any equal number could be on any subject. Where now arc our Union friends in tho ! South ? Aud where is the Northern cn siasm which two yearn ago marshaled the ! wholo population into "ranks and squad- rons, and, aud right form of war? Let the Conscription law answer. Away, then, with these negro measures. Give us back our Coiutitiou and our laws. Let us have these to fight for, and a million ol true hearts will leap to the conflict, where now there is nothing but apathy or some thing worse. The men whose influence brought about tloa- As,i tno man '3 tuo'r undoub ted fatal policy have done it with the will- ' tc(J loader in this coauty and State the ful and malicious intention of preventing i mau wu3e talents entitle him to that bad the restoration of the Union. It was not cinincnce and he will tell you what he a mere blunder, but a crime against the bas oflcn SJ'ltl in publics well as in pri- country deliberately performed. Lct us do justice to our opponents. Tho masses of the Republican party (so called) did Uot mean it; even their leaders were mis led. The President is technically re sponsible, but not in tho souso of intend ing all tho consequences. It was done by tho nltra-Abulition party, whoso principal scat of power is New England, with dis ciples thinly scattered over the Middle r.nd Western States. That is tho power behind tho throne greater than the throne itself ; that is the influence which shapes ' all our measures of civil administration aud regulates the flow of our blood in the I . .... field. These aro the men who rulo us for ancestors, incy wrought earnestly in 80ason antl out 0f BO-1Son to CXCltO illSUr- reotion and murder in the Southern Stat:s. Thcy not wait for war ,0 )cg!1.jzo Moodghod. Whcn ono of their number, , a3 coarse a rufflai) a3 they had among tho(U) aQ imp0St0Pj a tliiof, a traitor and a ,nuraerer) sneaked at midnight into a propoity, tho Abolitionists of New Eng land clapped their hands, applauded aud rejoiced with exceeding joy. They utter ed tho most furious maledictions agaiust tho authorities for a-rcsting him. When ho was hung thoy mourned him as a mar tyr. Wbou he was buried they pronoun ced funeral eulogies over his grave. At this day thoy worship his memory and sing hymns in his honor. By their fruits yo shall know them. Thero can bo no mistake about tho patriotism, tho honesty, or tho benevolence, of a party that canon izes a traitor, a thief and a murderer. Whilo other parlies wcro discussing questions of policy which concerned tho prosperity of tho county, tho Abolitionists wore planning tho destruction of the whole fabric; whilo others wrangled about tar- ill's, banks and improvements, they kept aloof, cautiously and cunningly contriving how thoy might engulf tho wholo nation in a sea of blood. As a tiger crouching at tho edge of his junglo waits for tho right moment to spring upon his victim to crunch his boues and lap his life-blood, so1 Abolitionism waited aud watched for the opportunity to make its fatal spring upon the Federal Government. Tho Constitution stood in their way, and thoy spurned it as an agreement with hell The Gospel of God was opposed to them, and their conventicles resouuded with ri bald blasphomics against tho Christian rc ligijn. Common honesty forbade tho gross breach of faith thoy contemplated, aud they invented a new system of moral ity called "higher law," which, when it came to be defined, meant nothing but the impulse ot their own unregulated passions. The Democracy saw through their de signs aud warned the country against thorn, aud thoy slandered us with all the brutal strength of criminals. Tho adherents and sympathizers of this party attempt to excuse their hostility to tho government ol the whito man by ascrib ing it to love for the negro. But of all the cants that wcro ever canted in this j hypocritical ago, the Abolition cant of I humanity to tho negro is tho most dis ' gustingly hollow and false. Tito men who I have no drops of mercy for their own well that a contost for negro equality in this country must necessarily terminate in making the negro's condition a thousand times worse. They cannot hope to scc-thc Anglo Saxons of America sink in their own blood as tho Fronch inhabitants of San Domingo did before the negroes ol that island. No ; thoy know that when their policy is pushed to tho last extremity, tho negro can have no against tho white man. ultimate chance Their object is intensely and purely selfish. Thoy de sired to kindle the flames of civil war throughout the country, reckless who might J suffer so that they could but remain mas tors of tho burnt and blackened field. I think there can be no mistake in say ing that these Abolitionists aro opposed to the Union, and that the measures they sustain aro intended to prevent its rcstora- vatc, that it sickens him to hear of the Constitution as it is and the Uuion as it was. Think for a moment of this most atrocious sentiment ! Tho "Constitution as it is" is tho fundamental law of the laud, which they swore to obey ; acd now they would insult the God who was their wituess by declaring that oath to bo a sham, and their sdemu covenant with the country a delusion and a snaro. The I Union as it was results from the Constitii' tion us it h, and this nation, which lias ; hied for it at every pore, is to be told that I a their terrible sacrifices of life and prop- crty slla11 E for nothing, because, for- I ., . ... I .1. f TT I t0" injir ruicts re sick ol the union Tho history of the world gives no account of any -ether people who became the dupes of such an awful impotturo. Tho men who proposo to perpetrate it are not only treacherous aud unfaithful to a sacred trust they arc remorseless to death and cruel as the grave. But how came it that a party so insigni ficant in numbers and so destitutoof gen eral conlidenco should acquire so com plete an ascendency in tho public coun cils ? Their own voto was probably not one-tenth of tho people, and the other nine-tenths would as soon havo polled all tho mad-houses of tho country, and selec ted tho wildest luuatics they could find to rulo over them, as to havo given tho New England Abolitiouists tho reins of their Government. Thoy got their power by a scries of base frauds, They went into tho Chicago Convention declaring themselves entirely satisficd with the exclusion of slavery from the territories. Although that would not make ono slavo more or less, they averred that the pleasure of in sulting and defying the judicial authorities, by getting a decision of tho - Supicme Court reversed by a convention of boss politicians, would "wrap them up in mea sureless contentmont." They agreed to self-denying resolution abjuring all power and all intention to interfere with tho rights of tho States on tho subjoct of slav ery or any other subject. How did they keep that pledge ? If any ltcpublican would now dare to stand on that plank of tho platform, he would be bullied out of countenance, But it was necessary to gain still further power by another falso pretonce. When tho war broko out thoy tho samo men who had plotted tho destruction of tho Uu- ion for thirty ycar3 shouted for the Uu- ion so loudly that nearly all believed them sincere. That shout for the Union thrilled the heart of tho whole Democracy, and they crowded all tho ways to tho bat tle field as if thoy were going to ti festival. When tho disaster at tho first battle of Bull Hun made another uprising ncces sary,thcy put on the records ot Congress a solemn declaration that tho war was not for conquest or subjugation, but solely for the Union as U was before tho war, and lor tho Constitution with all tho richts of tho Slates and people unimpaired. Again the Democratic response was universal, enthusiastic and efficient. These repeated pledges were shame fully broken. The Abolitionists went to the President and insisted on having a proclamation which would openly traniplo them down. Tho President refused re fused for many good reasons. Tho argu ment by which ho justified his refusal was certainly the most respectable one hoover made in liH life. It became necessary, therefore, to impose upon him also. They promised that if ho would issue tho pro clamation, nine hundred thousand volun- tccrs would be forthcoming to strengthen j the army. I am not aware that a single man of these nine hundred thousand ever made his appearance1. They soon threw off the mask entirely, and got a Conscrip-1 tion law to compel others to fight the bat- ties. When tho drafuwent into Massach-; usctts, that State, with the "hardy ponula-1 tion" of which wo havo heard so much, I suddenly became the sickliest spot on tho , continent. Forty-seven per cent, ll think that is tho proportion) wore afllictcd with divers diseases, which rendered thorn incapablu of doing military duty. The others, when they were drafted, cither tan away to Canada or chc paid their commutation like the rest of us. ll is by these repeated breaches of faith that tho Abolitionists got the power which they aro now abusing; The Republicans, the Dcmociats and the Executive Admin istration have beon successively overreach ed by them ; and they have used their advantages always against the Constitu tion and Union. QMierc aro men among us who would bo very indignant if they wcro cheated in a horse trade or defrauded of ten dollars by a false token, and yet they look without emotion on the impos tures by which the nation is swindled out of its life. I Not only that part of the Constitution which affects tho relations of the States is in danger, but thoso common liberties which every freeman of tho race wo belong to has enjoyed for three huudrcd years aro in imminent peril. 1 need not en umerate the outrages perpetrated on in dividual rights. Tho Democrats have steadily protested agaiust them, and resis ted them wherever they could. Every patriotic ltepublicau has seen them with sadness and sorrow, and if tho Abolition- ists have approved of tliem, it is only as part of their general system of insult and contempt for the Constitution aud laws. Though none justify, and few will even try to excuse a bold and open outrage on the laws, there aro those who tell you that it is unimportant at such a crisis as this in compaiiseD with other groat interests at stake. Do not suffer yourselves to be cajoled out of your liberties in this way. Every willful violation of law is a tiling of transcendent importance if it is not instantly rebuked aud puuished. Crimes naiust public liberty never stop where they begin. Those who commit them get on a down-hill track whero there is no halting-placo unless the people themselves apply the breaks. One outrage begets another. A single individual is kidnap ped, and twenty others arc taken for com plaining of it. All is insufficient if the habeas corpus is not repealed, and tho Ex ecutive must, therefore, tako upon him self a power which the Legislature ulono can cxerciso. Tho officers who Ftand up for law and justice must bo deposed and imprisoned and if a majority of votes can bo influenced neither by venality or fear, tho right of suffrago will be forcibly violated. Then we aro wholly enslaved. Tho truest man may bo dragged from his bed at midnight and torn away from his shrieking family to prison or to exile. Tho most respectablo woman may bo taken, as Mrs. Brinsmado was in New York, thrust into a dungeon, kept there for weeks, debarred all communication with her family and friends, whilo she was exposed to the daily and nightly insults of the beastly knaves who bad her in their power. If you think that your local courts might still give you protection, ro niombcr the caso of Judgo Carmichael, who laid down tho law as he conscien tiously believed it to be as it certainly was- aud as ho know tho peace of society required that it should be and, becauso tho law did not please tho Abolitionists, was dragged from tho bench by a band of ruffians, knocked down with the butt ends of their pistols, and carried awny to prison, whero ho was kept for eleven mortal month?. Such has been tho history of thoso en croachments in all past time, Thoy begin with petty violations of justice, and swell with frightful rapidity into tho most stu pendous crimes. Their first victim is a solitary, helpless and perhaps unpopular individual, but they end by forcing tho yoke on the necks of millions. Tho people of Holland livo in a country where the land is scvoral feet below tho level of the sea. Thsy protect themselves against constant inundation by a largo ffurthwork, which they call a iliket ex tending all along the coast. What thoy arc most troubled with is a large species of rat, which burrows under and makes holes through their dyke. Now, a ratholo is not a very alarming thing it itself; but tho action of the water makes it larger every moment. If it bo neglected for a single night, by the time the morning dawns the rat hole has widened into a huge C7cvar.sc, the ocean goes pouring through it, and tho whole land is laid under water. So it is with the Constitution, which is our dj- 11 luo once maao ll ' llic cver-to.nng wave ol arbitrary power," which is coLtinualty surging up against it, will constantly enlarge it until all protection for our rights is washed away. I tell you, gentlemen, if you de sire to save ope remnant of your liberties, you must watch the rat holes in your Constitution. But there is a necessity, some tells us, (or these violations of law. It is woudcr ful that any man possessed of reason could bo imposed on by an excuse so weak so shallow and so childish. This ncces' sity has often been urged as a reason for acts that everybody condemned ; it has never in all tho world's history had tho sanction of ouo true patriot or ouo great statesman, but it has been branded as"tho tyrant s plea" by tho universal sense of all mankiud. By all our ancestors in tho old world, by all our Revolutionary heroes by all who administered our Government heretofore, the nccesity was always thought to bo precisely tho other way. The supreme necessity which presided over all others was obedience to the law. That is tho very purpose and the only purpose for which magistrates arc chosen. When a man, who is appointed and sworn to guard the laws, and sco them faithfully executed, tells you that ho will necessarily violate them himself aud encourage others lb do likewise, your plain and obvious an swer must be that he is not fit for his busi- j noss. ah mrsc Heresies must do extirpated before we can hope for peace, or protection or Uuion, or prosperity, liut the election of Woodward will bo tho forerunner of a national triumph for tho Democratic party. When that happens, though wo caunot certainly promise, wo can reasonably hopo for a restoration of tho Union. If our Abolition enemies leave tho country iu a savable btate it will be saved, and this great nation will ttart on a new career, whose glories will make the sp'.'-udors of tho past look dim in comparison. At all events we can bring back tho reign ofordcr and law, under which every citizen who is conscious of his innocence may breatho tho deep breath and sleep the sound sleep of a freeman. tl1.1 .tr ii . .. The Latk Ex Sk.n.vtoh Buopiiead. The Hon. llichard Brodbcud, who died at Easton on the 17th ult , for many years took a prominent part in public affairs in Pennsylvania, having represented North ampton county iu the Legi-laturc thrco years, his district in Congress six years, and Pennsylvania in tho Senate of tho United States six years. Ho was greatly respected as a good citizces, und as a man of honest impulses and strict integrity. . z CSaf A Republican paper says : Tho great mass oi the Democracy of Pennsyl vania arc not copperheads. Of course not especially as we aro on the eve of the elec tion, aud some ot them may pustibly bo honey-fugled into vo ing for Mioddy'Cur tin. The election over, howoverand they will all no doubt again degeuerato into "copperheads" in tho estimation of this Abolition poscy. Fool who I - . COT Near Stcubenvillc, Ohio, tho Abo litionists undertook to throw a railroad, train off tho track, supposing that Hon. Geo. Pugh, Judge Thurman, ami other Democratio speakers, were on the cars going to a meeting at Cadiz. Fortunately, these gentlouicn wcro not on tho cars, but had gone another way. The train wai full of men, women and children. f