. ...... -,r-i Two Dollars per Annnta in Advance Y & ISCLCSj Pcblishcrs. TRUTH AND RIGHT QOD AND OUR COUNTRY. 6l. Xxx.i BLOOMS BURG, COLUMBIA CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 30,1866. IVE1T SLR ICS j VOL. !' NOr -14 OLD SERIES. i . . ff 1 I' J MltM:. DEMOCEAt F'lWJWKTJLfc IS 1 ) i 0' '::) 1 THE EMOClUT AND STAR. Js VuRLISHED EVERY WEONESDAT, IN TBLOOMSBURQ, COLUMBIA COUNTY. PA BY , JACOBY 8c IKELER. TERMS, Z1 00 in advance. . If tiol paid till the W-d-nf tfc year. 50 cent, additional will be charged. y SU No paper discontinued until all arrearage are paid except at the opi'.ion of the editori. RATES CF ADVERTISING. 1 Xn LINKS CONSTITCTtg a SbCUtK. One qnaT !, or three insertions .......... $1 SO ivery subsequent insertion less ttian 13. AO 1m. 2x. 3m. Cm, It. Oka square. Two square. Three Foar squares. Half column. One column. 2.C0 3.0o 3,00 6(0 10 no 13 OO I 3(10 I 3 oO 700 8.UO 13 00 IB 00 4.00 ft.lX) 8.30 H),"o 1 C.oa I I 9.01 I 14 UO Iri.DO SO 00 1 4.0U M 0 I 13 21.00 I 30.00 5U 00 F.teraior'i and Administrator's Notice 3.0O 'And itnr's Notice 2.20 tKber advertisements inserted according to special nalra -t. Husinc.s notices, without advertisement, twenty, cents per line. Tran.ient advertisements payable In adtanee, all I Others due after the first msurtaou. - C7" OFFICE In Hiiive'a Cluck, Corner of Main and Iron iSireels. - .Address.,. JACOBY . IKELER. , Uloomsbttrg. Columbia County, Pa. Fob th D.wocb.t abo trn.J , . ; A FABLE- - n tins. ' The riper Lords, onca held a meet inf. !And over witheata courtly g retting. , iAnd Msing seated to a man,- ' ' 'The chief the business thus began. ' 'My nlle L'r's if every station. '. . A King Is need I for the truss, Ona like ourselves. In every part,' ,v A viper, true in bead and heart." L One. who'll yield to sofi persuasions , And be controlled on all occasions. For though we ara a little lower, 'You kaow w are thi source of power. C " 'Another, too, must be selected, ' In cae of miihap unexpected, '" A kyal Prince of Loyal Una. ' Who will the Loyal all combine. ""' l-el, then, two eggs at once be bronght, 1 And if not given, they must be sought. ' - Let them be exactly matched. . ILen proceed to have tbeu hatched Assenting inrrmurs went around. ' All thought tha two egjeouM be found. The one waa very ntar at band The othar down in Cixie's laoj. ( ' .The time of incubation came. The time with butu was Just the same. When to I two creatures broke the shell And pleased their Lordships, very welt. A ad now tiieir brood they must exhibit. And invitations must distribut". -That all the world might come and see. The King and Prince that is to be. The aae 'twas settUd 'a justU4 stripe, ' A loyal viper to tba life. The other, aouie said, with a giggle. Has sout-rtbiag strange about Us wijgle. Tbef watched ita n otioor, with much wonder, Then exclaimed in tones of thunder. The creature sure did potion take. . Or else his Lordibip not a snake. -So for the present here it ended. They could not see how 't could be wended. And then they all brsan ti sing Ye gods protect oar reigning King. Hut whether out. or hard of hearing, 1 be gods, regardleao of their beariag. -(And they best knew the reasons why,) Allowed the Viper King to die, J The other then so hard to name. , To the throne and sceptre came, "Conie listen to my proclamatioa. Consider well this declaration. I've always labored for the Union. I'm friendly to the States communion. And all 1 ak lor restitution. Let all obey the constim i . Tbeir Lordships tbnn council called. Pome spoke In whispers, others bawled, The thief arose amid the cl.uter. Determined to decide the matter. "Ye Lords ; the thing at which we wonder, " Is but the fruits of our own blunder, " :rorire as we would freedom barter, ' We've hatched a king and caught n tarter." Kaow then each ignorant lordly elf. That history oft repeals itself. And in this case be not surprised For you've been onty Tyterixed. Gubernatorial. No. 6. Editor Democrat and Star: In contin-.-nlng my brief notes on the Gubernatorial campaign, I am happy to believe and free to 'write, that every indication in the political world unerringly point to the triumphant election of the IIox. IIiesteti Clymet. Have not the people of Pennsylvania, rob bed, wronged and oppressed, as they long have been, by thS shoddy crew who assume ; to engineer for them the affairs of St3te,had . a sufficient experience in the school of afflic tion to assert their sovereign majesty and resist further oppression and taxation. The answer and the antidote are alike with them, and will be duly furnished by the change of rulers, with which we shall have partial in ' demnity for the wrong of the past, and ample security for the justice of the future. Gentlemen, I long to witness a return to lbetter times, and enjoy the beneficent influ ence of Democratic Government. This ol ' talncd we have gained everything. With out it our future is veiled in inimitable dark besn. Every election in our State, formany past years, has been carried by fraud, brute force, and corruption. The tyrants and satraps cf the Government have strutted their brief hour and abused their authority in the vio lation of our wholesome laws and the plain brovisions of the Constitution. They have tad their day and a dark day it will be for them and their posterity in future history, fes many of the loyal scavengers have already come to grief and the balance of the theives f tnd robbers, if they get their dues, will ere i long find their place in the penitentiary. Like the" Hibernian's pig?, "While they lived, they lived in clover. And when they died, they died all over.' Tly fellow-citizens, are you fully aware of the momentous issxicss involved in the coni ini elation in Pcnnsvlvania ? Need I tell you that it will perpetuate the reign of des- pot?:i, or re-estawia upon it3 ruins, the giorv-js structure ci consucuuonai jjiueny and I res toleration. The issue clearly is, "Geaixt nejro tvjfraffe, or Clymeb asd .ten's f-icnxs. 'ids i.v.!3 i3 now boldly made by the JtcTrp Conrress and their statclites through out the country. It 13 clear and uneq-uivo- cal. ' Acd it is rpon tin4" i?sne that ULYMEa and Geary are now before the people', and ivn.ccrk-y ena to E2r.t it oui J . AT., upon . Returned Soldier's Soliloquy. Good bye, blue ? ruin I Go into the dye tub into the rag bag, anywhere out of my sight. For three years I wore those blue duds, and now, thank God, they are off, and once more I am in command of myself. And if I wasn't a d d fool, I'll be d d! Learned to swear in the army. What in the devil did I co to war for? That's the question? What did I eat hard tack for drink commissary whiskey carry a mule's load sleep in the mud suffer in the hospital and lose this limb for? Who knows? I enlisted to save the Union. I went to war to put down the rebellion. I fought to punish traitors. I killed people to restore the harmony of things. I went to war because that was in old times the way to patriotism. " And what was there gained? I had thir teen dollars a month. .' I rode Shank's inare from Bull Run to the Red River, and tramp ed from high living to hell almost for noth ing. I fought tokeep this union whole, and now, when the war is ended, I am told that fight ing divided, and that legislation alone can restore the Union ! Then why in thunder must I lose three years of time and a limb if all this work must be done by Congress? What did Congress want of men? Why were a million of uskilled by drunken, theiv ine, silvcr-ware-hunting, conceited, upstart, political generals who went up like rockets and came down like sticks, if Congress can or could restore the Union by legislation ? I went to war in good .faith. I fought a scoreof times, and the more I fought and the less I stole the slower came promotion. I helped make a dozen generals, fifty col onels and a hundred other officers rich. I have lugged many a piano, rosewood bedstead, marble-top table, cabinet of books, mahogany sofa and such stuff out of south ren homes,' to Be sent north for the use of my superior officer, and the adornment of his home in the North. This was the big dart for putting down the rebellion. Great God wnat fighting some of our generals did! And I went to war for less wages than I could have earned at home. And my wife was often starving while I was away. And my children became dirty and ragged my farm ran to weeds nfy ehop ran down my tools were stolen or lost my place is filled by another I came home a cripple, filled wUi disease, and am now looked upon by the same uien who wanted me to go to war, m ach : s people look upon some dead beat who has gone through them for all their spare stamps. An the Abolitionists who forgot to take care of soldier's familiesthe abolitionists who told us that the Democrats wanted the Union dissolved the abolitionists who said Democrats were traitors the abolifionists who staid at home and dare not fight, except in the form of a mob, in the attack of some defenceless democrat, now tell us the d d cowardly traitors and rascally thieves we have found them to be that The late war did not restore the Union ! The war was therefore a failure ! The white men of the north were no match for the white men of the south. The war would have ended in defeat for the north but for the niggers ! This is what abolitionists tell us. Reckon they will have a good time getting us return ed soldiers engaged in another crusade for cotton, niggers, mules and stolen plunder, taken by force of the bayonet from women and children. ' It seems to me as if the late war was a gag a humbug a d d wicked, treasona ble, unconstitutional gag. It did not restore the Union, but it made a pile of abolitionists and war democrats rich It never prevented secession, but left this Union in the shape we did not find it. It never benefitted any one north or south except thriving soldiers, army chaplains, I swindling contractors, drunken officers, in competent generals, and other such pets of the late administration. It didn't help the white people. It did'nt help the niggers. It impoverished half of the Union. It didn't make the south friendly to nor thern ideas, interests or people. It piled a big debt upon us and took from us two-thirds of our means to pay it. And now I am back from the war to find that I must pay the most exorbitant taxes and to find that old Grudings, a d dmcan, narrow minded, stay-at-home coward, is rich, with a safe full of United States notes or bonds, for which I must work the balance of my life out to pay interest on, while he e scapes taxation and lives in idleness. I had a hundred dollars bounty to go to war. Now I come home to find the town, county, city and state in debt for the money I had the wealth of the country is in bomb the school houses in ruins the bridges in ruins the court houses, &c, in ruins all these things to be built up the bonds and their interest to be paid besides all the other taxes, and the holders of bonds living in luxurious idle ness, with large incomes, and not one cent of tax to pay anybody or for any purpose. It was bad enough to fight for such cow ards. It is bad enough to have it said we could not have whipped the south without the aid of these high-flavored nigger troops who are now to be called our equals. It is bad enough to tiave enormous taxes to pay to repair the damages time and war has wrought . Bat it's worse than all to have to pay six hundred million dollars a year of interest to men telto hold honds exempt from taxation, in other words, to go to war and then come home and pay our select for being shot at, loounded end Tailed. Abolitionism don't pay. , Now Fm as good a man as any of them. No man has a right now to lord it over me.' I wear no badge of servitude, advertising that I am a fit subject for shoulder-strapped dammijCuffs, kicks, guard-houses Ac I'm a returned soldier a poor man who must work or utarve. I love my coun try. I'm a better patriot than the man who asks the poor man to pay taxes and interest on bonds exempt from taxation, and I say it boldly that the next time I shoulder a mus ket w,ill be for equal taxation, equal rights and a free country. I don't like the idea of repudiation, but if government don't tax her bonds, may 1 1 d d if I ever pay a cent of taxes, for my crippled limb is a bet ter and a more honorable bond than the government ever issued. If all are taxed alike, it is welL If not, it's repudiate, or another fight; La Crosse Democrat. Number of sold Watches in the United States- The question "What becomes of all the pins?" now sinks into insignificance beside another inquiry of more serious moment What has become of all the gold watches ? This country has been famous for those glit tering time pieces. Not a well-to-do gentle man in any part of the land but had his gold ticker ; they were an indispensable portion of a young lady's daily attire; and even beardless boys were eager to possess the cov eted treasure, and could not wait for it until they came to man's estate. But, unfortu nately for the owners of these elegant arti cles, the eye of the greedy tax-gatherer was caught by their glitter, and they were to be made to contribute to the national revenue. Any gold watch in use, worth less than one hundred dollars, was to be charged one dol lar, and when valued at over one hundred dollars was to pay two dollars tax per annum. At this precise moment, by a singular coin cidence, a large part of the gold watches in many States disappeared from record. The sudden vanishing of so much valuable prop erty should be a matter of public concern, and we desire to direct toward it the atten tion of all who ar,e interested, in the hope of obtaining some explanation of this remark able phenomenon. The following, from the latest official return of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, exhibits the extent of this startling loss, and may partially aid in its recovery : GOLD WATCHES TJI THE UNITED STATES. (From the official returns.) States and Wc rth less Territories. thai $100. Maine 6 New Ilampahire 33 Vermont 2 Massachusetts -38 Rhode Island. Connecticut New York S85 New Jersey. . 4 Pennsylvania. 1,146 Delaware .. Maryland. M S83 Virginia. 167 Kentucky. 297 Tennessee 162 Ohio. 46 Indiana. 220 Illinois - 4 Michigan 1 Wisconsin Iowa .. Minnesota Missouri l,54fJ Kansas. Califomia. 857 Oregon 293 Nevada. Colorado Nebraska. 19 Utah.. Washington 2 New Mexico 35 Montana. .. Worth more than $100. 3 201 150 91 32 36 77 211 28 39 Total 15.654 1,242 Thus we have only 7,896 gold watches left out of all the thousands which were owned before the war ; and some States have not a single specimen. Rh'de Island, the home of the wealthy Senator Sprague, has not one of the yellow treasures, even of the most in ferior descriptions. Connecticut has not one, and her late patriotic Governor, it is fair to infer, sports only a silver bull's-eye of the most antique pattern. And Wiscon sin ? Iowa? Minnesota? Kansas? and the other blanks ? Alas, we have no answer. Vermont has two, but they are worth less than one hundred dollars. Only two gold watches of any description in all Vermont ! In Michigan there is oce. Who is the fortu nate man? Will not some Historical Society in that bereft Commcnwealth give us the name of this fortunate gentleman who still re tains his yellow time-piece ? Strange to say, Missouri heads the list, and has been the least "spoiled" by the threatening tax-gatherer. Journal of Commerce. London, the negro suffrage advocate of the State Senate, has tiken the stump en thusiastically for Geary in Bradford county the hardest negro region of the State where his "manhood suffrage" appeals for Geary have stirred up the Thad Stevensites to almost fever heat They seem to have got it intotheir heads that if they can elect Geary the word "white" will be struck out of the Constitution of Pennsylvania before his term expires. The fact that the negro ites of Bradford county have been the first to start the campaign for Geary with a mass meeting is very significant of his position politically. Patriot & Union. "Well, Jim, how did you make it down South?" "First-rate, made plenty of money," "What: did you do wiii it?" "Laid it out in houses and lots. ' "Where?': . :". " , "Everyplace I have been .where there was any." - , . r "What kind of houses and lots?" ' ' Coffcc-Acuse and hi of whiskey 1 " Correspondencs of the New York Times. How to Govern the Freedmen. Rao House Plahtatiom, Nka Beaufort, 8. C, ) Monday, April 16, I860. ( I often think it would be of great advan tage to the country, could certain zealous minded men who are so anxious to benefit the freedmen, come South and take charge of a plantation themselves for two or three years. They would then perceive that there is much rose-colored hunianitarianism touch ing the negro which is so only in theory that if he has hidden within his nature the noble qualities of human kind he has also its depraved nature and will neither ap preciate or be benefitted by any laws grant ing special protection or favor to labor. Coming from New York in February, 1863, I have had the charge of them ever since, under all circumstance and conditions, as farming people, and there is not the smallest doubt that they have the elements of growth and development and a good con dition of manhood, in this very generation, if they are not fooled with. They show favorable qualities of industry, of docility, of thrift, and are entirely responsive in their moral natures to just dealing and punish ment, whether pleased with it or not But it is a certainly proved fact that the more they are helped, beyond being helped to labor, the worse they are off. The furnish ing them land at other than a fair price, the supply of food or clothes, excepting only those who arc not able to help themselves or have no kindred fairly responsible, the advance of food or clothing to them on their coming crop, and all assistance of a charita ble nature, is an injury to them of the grav est character ; and for the simple reason that it saps directly their self-reliance. They give no value to what comes to them with out effort, and consequently fail to tuni it to advantage. These statements have been proved here out and out. I had the charge last year of dozens of contrabands who were fed on their coming cotton. The result was a total loss of crop in spite of all that I could do, even though backed by the author ities, on the part of pretty much all who were fed, and what I did get was obtained only by the presence of armed soldiers on the spot Again, those who had credit last year almost without exception came back this year for the same favor. I have had them come to me by the score to advance them money for "a bag of grits." "We'll pay you when dc cotton pick, boss." . Again, those who own lands are worse off in the majority of cases than if they had none, for in that case they would work for wages, would live on what they earn, and would work more faithfully. As it is, their crops go in any how, are taken care of any how, are eaten up by February, and then, when land needs attention for a new crop, they dabble here and dabble there to eke out a subsistence. Of course the result is they come to nothing before they start In finitely better would it have been to have had land secured to them with more difficul ty, so that it could have been obtained only by those whose thrift and industry would have enabled them to turn it to good advan tage, while the rest could have labored for others to the better advantage of all. Be side, the value of the discipline to a person successfully striving for land is immeasura ble. Taking all in all, there is a steady growth ; but I have mentioned these unto ward facts for facts they are for the pub lic enlightenment And in these times of acrimonious strife over these jcople, it is well to take heed to the facts as they exist here. Certain it is that, as a general rulej they need no assistance, only in furnishing them plenty of work, or means of helping themselves. Certain it is, that no laws or regulations should be made to discriminate in their favor ; nor, on the other hand, against them. Certain it i3, that they should be held amen able to the same laws as the whites, and to the same extent The quicker they are molded into the same body politic as the whites, on principles of equity, the better, and this cannot well be done if they have recourse to seperate jurisdictions for relief or protection. They have intense suspi cions against the "secesh," and rightly, and when to this comes to be added separate process of law for jheir protection or aid, it will render all fusion into common inter ests of labor and the public weal almost impossible. Only one thing Is needed and it has been done by the commanding officer here that no law shall be allowed to go into effect so far as it discriminates on ac count of color, and no judgment of Court based on color, shall be executed, and this to be enforced under military law, of which any State is to be relieved, whenever in good faith laws arc enacted and executed impar tially as between the two races. Thus you will leave the black people to work out their own fortunes, as do the whites according to the capacity which is within them, and. the State will suffer from what it brought upon itself, until in good faith it gives all its peo ple those civil rights which manhood and ca pacity demani You may be assured from our extended experience, that you can do the nesrro no ereater damage than to make mucJi of him or make him the subject of special protection and aid. Protect him in his just civil rights under the laws of the State where he lives, and leave him to him self severely. A. 8. ii. Jefferson Davis Indicted for Trea son. On Fridav last the Grand Jury of the United States Circuit Court: in session at Norfolk, Virginia, brought m a true bill against Jefferson Davis for Treason, and ad iourned until the first Tuesday in June, to meet in Richmond, at which tune it is eup- nosed he will be tried. He was informed of the action of the crand jury on Saturday. It is said he expressed himself greatly pleas ed at the result, and )ioped that his case would now be soca dccidcd A Snake Hunt. Mr. Waterton, in his "Wanderings" in Demerara and the adjacent part3 of South America, relates the following incident : I was sitting, says he with a Horace in my hand, when a negro and his little dog came down the hill in haste, and I was soon inform ed that a snake had been discovered ; but it was a young one, called the bushmastcr, a rare and poisonous snake. I instantly rose up, and laying hold of the eight-foot lance which was close by me, "Well, then, Daddy," said I, "we'll go and have a look at the snake." I was barefoot, with an old hat, cheek 6hirt, and trousers on, and a pair of braces to keep them up. The negro had his cutlass, and we ascended the hill ; another negro, armed with a cutlass, joined us, judging from our pace that there was something to do. The little dog came along with us ; and when he had got about half a mile in the forest, the negro stopped, and pointed to a fallen tree ; all was still and silent I told the negroes not to stir from the spot where they were, and keep the little dog in, and I would go and reconnoiter. The snake was well concealed, but at last I made him out. It was a coulacanara, not poisonous, but large enough to have crushed any of us to death. On measuring him afterward, he was something more than fourteen feet long. This species 6f snake is very rare, and much thicker in proportion to its length than any other snake in the forest A coul acanara of fourteen feet in length is as thick a3 a common boa of twenty-four. After skinning this animal, I could easy get my head info his mouth, as the singular forma tion of the jaws admits of wonderful exten sion. On ascertaining the size of game we had to encounter, I retired slowly the way I came, and promised four dollars to the negro who had shown it to me, and one to the other who had joined us. Aware that the day was on the decline, and that the approach of night would be detrimental to the dissec tion, a thought struck me that I could take him alive. I imagined that I could strike him with the lance behind the head, and pin him to the ground, I might succeed in cap turing him. When I told this to the ne groes, they begged and entreated me to let them go for a gun, and bring more force, as they were sure the snake would kill some one ; but I had been in search of a large serpent for years, and now, having come up with one, it did not become me to turn soft. o, taking a cutlass from one of the negroes, and then ranging both the sable slaves be hind me, I told them to follow me, and that I would cut theni down if they offered to fly. I smiled as I said this ; but they shook their heads in silence, and seemed to have a bad heart of it When we came to the place, the seqient had not stirred, but I could see nothing of his head, and judged by the folds of his body that it must be at the farthest side of liis den. A species of woodbine had formed a complete mantle ove the branches of the fallen tree, almost impervious to the rain or the ravs of the sun. Probably he had resorted to this sequestered place for a length of time, as it bore the marks of an ancient settlement I now took my knife, determining to cut away the woodbine, and break the twigs in the gentlest manner pos siblej till I could get a view of his head. One negro stood guard close behind me with the lance, and near him the other with a cutlass. The cutlass which I had taken from the first negro was on the ground close by me, in ca.se of need. After working in dead silence for a quarter of an hour, with one knee all the time on the ground, I had cleared away enough to see his head. It appeared coming out between the first and second coil of his body, and was flat on the ground. This was the very position I wished it to be in. I rose in silence, and retreated very slowly, making a sign to the negroes to do the same. We were at this time about twenty yards from the snake's den. I now ranged them behind me, and told him who stoodnext to me to lay hold of the lance the moment I struck the snake, and that the other must attend my movements. It now only remained to take their cutlasses from them, for I was sure if I did not do this they would be tempted to strike the snake in time of danger, and thus forever spoil his skin. On disarming them, if I might judge from their physiognomy, they seemed to consider it as a most intolerable act of tyr anny in me. Probably nothing kept them from bolting but the consideration that I was to be between them and the snake. In deed my own heart, in spite of all I could do, beat quicker than usual : and I felt those sensations which one has on board a mer chant vessel in war time, when the Captain orders all hands on deck to prepare for ac tion, while a strange vessel is approaching under suspicious colors. We went slowly on in silence, without moving our arms or heads in order to pre vent alarm as much as possible, lest the snake should glide off or attack us in self- defense. I carried the lance perpendicularly before me, with the point about a foot from the ground. The snake had not moved and on getting up to him, I struck him with the lance on the near side, just behind the neck, and pinned him to the ground. That moment the negro next to me seized the weapon, and held it firm in its place, while I dashed head foremost into the den to grap ple with the snake, and to get hold of his tail .before he could do any mischief. 0 pinning him to the ground he gave a tre mendous loud hiss, and the little dog ran away, howling as he went We had a sharp fray in the den, the rotten sticks flying on all sides, and eacli party struggling for supe riority,, I called out to tie second acro to throw himself upon me, as I found I was not heavy enough. He did so, and the additional weight was of great service. I had now got firm hold of his tail ; and after a violent struggle or two he gave in, feeling himself overpowered. Tins was the moment to secure him. So, while the first negro con tinued to hold the lance firm to the ground, and the other was helping me, I contrived to unloose my braces, and with them tied up the snake's mouth. The snake, now finding himself in an unpleasant situation, tried to better himself, and set resolutely to work ; but we overpowered him. We contrived to make him twist himself round the shaft of the lance, and then prepared to convey him out of the forest I stood at his head and held it firm under my arm, one negro sup porting the belly and the other the tail. In this order we began to move slowly toward home, and reached it after resting ten times ; or the snake was too heavy for us to sup port him without stopping to recruit our strength. As we proceeded onward, he ought hard for freedom, but it was all in vain. Trimmers. There is nothing the conservative Repub licans hate and fear so much as to measure swords with the Radicals, and they are in finitely disgusted that the Democrats are determined that they shall. Mr. Raymond, M. C, would like "to run with the hounds and hold with the hare," and, as he is a representative man of a timid and vacillating class, he is naturally enough disgusted at Stevens for lashing him into doing what he both knows and says is wrong, and at certain Democrats for placing him in a position in which he must either stand traight or stoop. As Sir Archy McSycophant said that he never could stand straight in the presence of a great man, your "conservative" Republi can can never say his soul is his own in the presence of a determined one. Of course, if the conservatives in the House had said to the Democrats : . "This joint resolution is mischievous, and we will vote against it, the Democrats would have voted with them ; but they would do nothing of the sort- What they want is to be on both sides of the fence at the same time, which they should not be permitted to be. Let us have some policy distinct and defined upon which an issue can be made and argued. Either take the theory of Mr. Stevens and carry it rigorously out to its cxtremest consequences, or take the President's theory and carry it out to its extremest consequences. There is only one honest course for poli ticians, and there is only one safe course for the United States. Such is the power and such are the resources of the United States that they can endure four or five years more of such fanaticism, folly, and scoundrelism as they have endured for the last six ;.and it is a great deal better to have them and get over them, as mothers say of the usual range of infantile diseases. Sumner, Stevens, and Wilson are no more wrong-headed to day than ten years ago ; no more revolutionary, and no more anti-constitutional. Every thing that has happened was just as clearly the natural consequence of their reasoning and measures as the demonstration of a problem in Euclid. The conservative Re publicans affiliated with them for the sake of power and plunder, and, being pretty well gorged, want to stop short ; but the Radicals will no more let them stop short than the Reds in Paris would allow revolu tion to stop short of socialism If Mr Ray mond anl his fellow-thinkers want what they term the Union, they must segregate themselves from the Radicals, introduce their own measures, annouce their own line of action, and then they may count on aid from the Democracy. If we are to be treat ed as traitors and disloyal, we prefer an ene my who fights ns and seeks only to fight us. We do not intend to be used as well as abused. We like to fight Sumner and Ste- vens and usun. incy may ueat us, out they cannot cow us ; and if we arc in a mea gre minority in Congress, we are not at any rate hung up by the thumbs by our officers, like the conservative Republicans. . Ever since the Republican party has exist ed it has had but one principle of action : to 'whip the devil round the stump ;" to cheat, if men would submit to be cheated ; to rob, if they would not ; but to get any how. The popular supcrstifion among the highwaymen of England was that seven years of success were permitted to the knight of the road. The seven years of the Repub- hcan hnrhwavmen are nearly up; tnere is aw - - - but little more than a year left it. While the gang still flourishes, wc own to more ad miration for such bold "cracksmen" as Ste vens than for the little "foglc" stealers who sometimes dispute his authority only to be lashed into submission. We are going to fight our political fight, come weal or come woe, come defeat or come success, as the Democratic party hold ing the Republican party chiefly guilty of all the blood, all the misery, and all the debt We are not going to any man or to any or ganization. We welcome converts we accept recruits ; but if the great principles of that party which gave the United States so much prosperity and so much glory are not as suf ficient for the future as they have been for the past, we do not know where to find oth ers. Our creed is so broad and catholic and simple that men cannot mistake it A fun damental law above the temporary passions of men, supreme throughout the land, and no "higher law" than it1, an exarrunation into its spirit and intent, as submitted and awvArvAi ' rtnr nnlr crivereicn. the law i OUT IO. f ' , v ""J O J ' ' only allegiance, obedience to it A. Y. Man in a Trance Remarkable Escape from a Living Grave. A young German, recehtly married to 4 handsome lady of very respectable paf e'mV age, was taken suddenly ill at his place of business last Friday. He was placed in i carriage and taken to his residence on Erie Street, where he lay in great agony until Sunday, when the disease so prostrated his physical powers that he lay motionless upori the bed, while weeping friends surrounded - the couch. To all appearances he was dead, and it was so decided. Arrangements were about to be made for the interment, when the young wife feeling she could not give him up so soon, insisted that the funeral be postponed mtil Tuesday morning. To gratify the woman thus brought so speedily to mourn the loss of her husband, the funeral was postponed; Hie disconsolate wife spent most of the day Dtt Monday in the same room with the corpse, , , - a 13 A 1- weeping as tnougn ner uearc -wo urn ureas., and still clinging to the idea that he could not be dead. About twilight on Monday evening, when everything about the house was perfectly quiet, except when the stillness was broaeft by the sighs of the .bereaved widow, there being but few persons in the room, the body seemed to move. It was but a slight mo tion, yet sufficient to arrest the attention of one tearful eye. . .. When the wife insisted that life wis not extinct, that the body did move, her friends became anxiou3 about her reason, and tried to divert her mind from the sorrowful scene. Two long hours were spent in conversation, the friends urging that she was deceived, possibly by the flickering light, as the shad ows it cast might have produced the effect that she ascribed to vitality. The feeling of that little circle of devoted friends is known only to themselves and Him whose all-seeing eye visits the inmost reces ses of our hearts. During the conversation all eyes involuntarily rested upon the habili ments of-the grave and the features of him whom they supposed would soon become one of its occupants. At the end of two hours another slight movement as perceived by all the party, The scene which followed can never be described. , The wife clung to the motionless form of her husband, alternately weepingand beg ging of him to speak just one word, while the friends wept for joy, hastened for a phy sician, alarmed the servants by thier strange conduct, and presented a sconce of confusion generally. When the physician arrived,they assembled about the living man, suggesting and applying all the restoratives ever heard r or dreamed of by any of the party, while the wife, overwhelmed with joy had completely worn out with excessive excitementj had swooned away and was lying at the side of her husband, in the same death-like stillness that had embraced his form but a few mo ments before. The ph3rsician took the necessary steps to restore the woman and resuscitate the man, which was sneedilv accomplished in both cases, and as we write to-day the woman is joyous and happy,- while the man thinks his escape trom the (rrave a living one ot the marked features ot his life Cleveland Her aid. An Item for White Men. " Give us a change 1" was the cry of thousands bf honest, unthinking voters, in the campaign that resulted in the success of belonging to that list of changes then, that may te of considerable interest to those who are compelled to labor for a living, and to the many who are unable to lay up thous ands of dollars in government bonds, which are exempt frohi taxation; At the time this hue and cry about a change was made, there was n the Southren States 4,000.000 He groes held as slaves. Out of this wholo number, such a thing as a negro pauper was unknown. To have intimated then of levy ing a tax upon the white laborers of the .Tsorth, to keen the aLle-lodied but lazy ne groes of the South, would have brought down such a storm ot execration upon the heals of the advocates of such a measure, that np one would have been able to with stand it But time, arKilitionlsm and chan ges, have at last wrought this result, and now the tax-payers of the North, whose blood and sweat brought "freedom for these ne groes, are paying the fullowing enormous" amounts to Keep them in clothes and feed them : Salaries to CoramrV , fnrNiggers $ 47,500 Salaries of Clerk s for Ni pgcrs. 1 2, 800 Stationery and Printing for Niggers.. .63,000 Quarters and Fuel for diggers. 15,000 Clothing for Niggers. 1,750,000 Rations fur Nifrgers 4,106,200 Medicines for Nigeers. ,.5X,000 Railroad fare for Siegers. 1,980,000 School Manns for Niggers. 21,000 , School Houses for Niggers. -300,000 Telegraphing for Niggers -.18,000 Total, . y. $11,584,500 Read it closely, ye rtrugglingt toiling, la borers in the field, in the shops,in the mines and factories ! LlcvZn millions.five hundred and Eighty-four thousand and fire hundred dollars, of your earnings taken from your wives and little ones, to feed and clothe ne groes who arc too lazv to work and feed and clothe themselves ! Think of it as you go to your labor in the morning, and as yott trudge home at night, weary and worn alter your day of toil I Reflect over it as you sit down to your scantily spread table and as you gaze upon your despondent family, who, ii not sunenng irom want are aepnvea oi many of the comforts of life, because aboli tionism robs you of your earnings, to givo to the negroes it is keeping in the South ? And tfs the tax-gatherer pockets the little you have been enabled to save, count how much of it might be retained for you, "were you not compelled to pay your proportion of the eleven and a half millions of dollars, that the legislation of abolition officials be stows upon the negroes they have stolen, to compel you to keep. This is but a Email item in the list of changes many of you as sisted to bring about Is it not time that we laboring, toiling, tax-paying white men, try to make a change that will be for our ben enU Dmvfcratk Wa&chmaju Abolitionism and the placing of Abraham Lincoln in the Presidential chair. Theygot the "change," and here is one little item