~i.l. ~i lie Will. H. /AMOY, Editor. ==! .- =l= t M. rairthautht. & Co., 37 Park Row New York are duly authorised to solicit and receive eitlierrop tiros and eilverlisies far the Poiserral 4 Star, pub, tldad at Illoomoburg. Columbia toasty, Democratic State Convention. The Democratic State Cutumittae, at its meaing, on January 29th, at Harrisburg, adopted the tbllowmg remlutions : let. That the regular Convention of the party, fur nominating a candidate for the Supreme Bench, be held at Harrisburg, on the Second Tuicaday of J une, 1667, at twelve o'clock 1!4., and that said Conventioti be com posed of the usual number of delegates. 2nd. In addition theretmit iN recommend ed to the Democracy of Pennsylvania to forthwith eled, in the usual manner,. two delegatea, of wscognized position a nd maw ence in the party,, for each Representative and Senator in their respective district, who ahall meet in Maw Convention, at Harris burg, on a day to be fixed by the Chairman of the State. Central Committee. By order of the Pemocratie state rum., WM. A. WALLACE, Chairannu. The Abolition-Reconstruction Committee. The anomaly, self styled, ''The Union Congressional Republieun COM .ni cc, ' ' have Waled an address to the Southern people, entitled "The policy of Congress in Reno.- ewe to the Restoration of the Union," We have not space to publish the entire address, but will quote a few lielltlVT3 which fairly show the character of it. Following the two reconstruction acts of Congress, which are 'embodied in the address, it says: *he Republican party) will be true to its friends in the South, without regard to color or previous condition." This is certsiuly one of the'n►ost open and undisguised bids for voters that we have ever known a party to nv►ke, and at the name time is a threat against whomsoever may Lot be the friends of the Republican party, A geed citizen should be true to frieude and foes, of whatever party, and willing to do justice unto all men according to Law, but the party in power in a free country should more particularly he willing to declare itself as standing upon honest and lawful grounds. The Republican party by this cemmittee promises only to he flithful in respect to its Mewls. Its enemies may expect all Ellalltler of wron;!,. within the power of that party to con►mit, But it will he true to its friends "without regard to color or previous condition." This we under rand as a bid for the vilest rebel in "eeeessia It says to hint vote with the Republican party--be its friend, and we, holding the power of government, will take care of you. You shall nut be injured on aeeouut of having engeged le the wir ageism but it' you will le. 4. perverse as to oppose us (the Republman party) we will not be true to you—we will hound you down on account of your previous condition, and ee account of your Again : "But there must be co operation of the races, and there must be co operation upon the principle which prevail in the North, and to which the Republican party is folly committed." The principles of co-o l erutiuu in the North are kotrue(l flow the followiv &tin rations of the Committee : "We (the Republican party) will recog nize no distinction on account of race or color", * * * * ** "Accept the plan universal suffra(;o as the fawn; of political. Educational, and industrial prosperity and power. * ) 6 * * * * * "The owners of large estates should di vide and subdivide their lands and sell diem a t re a s ona ble rates ti these who need them and who can improve them." * ° * "But beyond these conditions Corgress must be satisfied also that the people of the proposed States respectively are, and are likely to be loyal to the Union by decisive and trustworthy majorities." These are the principles ofeo-operation no destruction of races—negro suffrage ai the basis of politics, education, Sze. Notice that the people must hose their educational syl,tetu upon negro suffrage and the cpiality of races political and social. More, the ownsrs of large tracts of hind must divide their lands, and sell them at rcasonalde rates, and we suppose Congress will appoint a committee to set the price. Finally decided majorities must be given for the Itapnblictin party. Tile embodies the restoration policy and basis of .co-opera tion proposed by this God and inornli:y, temperate, intelligent and honest part). advices from St. Louis us late as the 29th ult., information of the great diffi culty and danger from the Indiana of Montana.is given. Much excitement ex lets in the Territory on account of Indian outrages. The Governor has, announced a plan of operations to retaliate and calls for volunteers, arms, horses, &e. Volunteers are cooing forth rapidly and are placed in corn maod of Gen. Meager, who has summoned six hundred mounted men to immediate ser• vice assuring •them that they may hold to themselves individeally whatever horses, arms and other spoils they may capture. He says the general government has left him to hie own resources and he will move and ad on :Us own respqnsibihty. The In dians are not only munering men women and children, traveling over the plains, and robbing and plundering on routes, but the Sioux Indians have confederated with the tribci in the metutain3 and planned an at tack to plunder, burn, murder ttevaetate Virginia and Helena cities and other towns in the territories. There seems to be no effectual way to treat with these savages, except by extermina tion. Gen. Meager, with his force ofsturtly settlers, who are not only Interested in re spect, to property, but in personal safety will not tight with gloves on, and we may expect soon . •.a hear of some havoc awong sava geF. SENtammr). —Chu. William, the !Ilan who robbed the poet office In Lock Haven, a couple of woeka dam, wee last week oon victed of the crime before the United States gpot at Pitteburs, sod santencei by J.udp bicCiodkos to teu rkitra Miplipmfmtitt m the Waters Butitenttarr. taunt 6 *Tbe Lutetium's*. Censer*alive We have quoted the above heading of this article from the Philadelphia Doily Mars—a paper whkh has bent professedly 1 1 tig Conservative during the reit , PFevioua to that it was known a ''' - blsl and lir / ..lid of the . telfit luk ?ai in ed '‘is few peibons calling thetnee 48 mums, es to induce even time editors: of Country papers wishing to be called Democratic, to say and publiab in their sheet that the Daily Arms is a Dew oeratie paper. We do not wish to deprive the most Radical of the right of repentance. Nor do we wish to may anything that may oppose the action of such tepentent radicals in joining the Democratic party, but we do with it understood that we for ourself- - others may do as they wish—will not sell our birth-right for an imaginative thing which bas no existence, and has no fair prospect of ever gaining one. The Daily Mes, when stating its own political Mend ing, says it is of the NierioNAL Urinmi PARTY, and not only denies union with the Democratic party, but absolutely declares it will not support any sae who may be the nominee of the Detuouratic party. Hut use its own words published on the 17th, of last mouth:—'The intelligent conifer. , alive element of the country will not loin the Delnevratie party, neither will it be induced to cast its suffrages for a ticket made 1w it." We have been blamed for being too out spoken in the came of Democracy. Let won who think of gaining the votes of this prestunptive "intelligent conservative Ow mete for Democratic candidates ponder over this asoertion of the leading "intelligent conservative" newspaper in Pennsylvania, and if they can find that which show:4 a spark of Nympatily with the Democracy we, upon being convinced. will change our course, and adopt the system of their Wel. ligcaoe which now is, in spiv: moire but as Moe to gain position. A plan to secure tlac offices of Revenue As.4- , sors,. Post Master, Collectors, &e. They will not vote for the nominees of the Dean:envy, but hat: us (0 vote with a party which has no txi..;tenve. MN rurilitisitolltspolism. The rule of the itepti.alican party, which is a lieeal dcicetdaut and heir of the Puritan r,arty of New Eiiy h tnd, is marked, at every step of its progress, by intolerance, pr o s e rip. tien, and persecution. In 1695, they made it erimnal for a man to kiss his wife on Son day, and burnt and drowned old women tin the absurd eiwrge of witeheral't. In IS t 7 they are repeating the same or like acts o f cruelty and despotism. Not content with imptmilig their pharisaical discipline and legislation upon the people of Ma/ism:lnt setts and its contigiuus States, they are seeking to extend them over the whole country. While setting negroeserazy in the South v.itit the widest ideas of equality, and a; , rarianisin, they tire abridging the re served natural rights o!' tits., white people of the North by means of the most imperti nent and vexatious sumptuary laws. Here, in Pennsyb,•tmis, they deny the laboring classes, who are the majority of the commu nity, the liberty to get out of the stifling and fetid air of the city into the men fields of the suburbs. with their wives and ebil dren,' on the :tl.bath, which is their only day of rest and refreshment in seven and true to their old instinct of crushing the will of n, euy under the power of die few, they have even denied to the masses the democratic privilege of eaves:4,lg their wishes on the , juvAion by sutragc. Baling interdicted the egress of the population into the (votary, b,‘,; means of the Sunday e a-,:s they nest seek to aggravate the tui:wy of their close imprisonment it: the city en the only holiday of the working million, by moms of the sunday liquor law. Thus will it coma to peas that a vast niaj.wity of the people. will be denied all solid enjoyment within tie wile of the 3letropulis and pre vented from reeking health and innocent recreation in the suburbs. These are fair specimens of the sort of government which the puritanical Yankees, will, in tbo end, seek to enact laws , prenri bing what a man shall eat and what he hall drink, when he shall rise up and when he ;shall lie down, 'llow - he shailprty and where withal! he shall be clothed. I.7xcroartrurioNAL--On Monday last the Supreme Court of this State, in session at I I arrialun g, declared the Act of Assembly, passed by the Legislature, creating a sort of new judiciary to try Quarter Sessions and •Oyst and l'erminer COOS, in Schuylkill, Dauphin and Lebanon counties, unconstitu tional. The law gave the new criminal court exclusive jurisdirtion in Schuylkill county and only concurrent jurisdiction in 'Dauphin and Lebanon. Dauphin and Lebanon are Radical ()aunties, and were used in making up the district so that the De mocracy of Schuylkill slight not be able to elect the next Prosidaat judge after•the ex. piration of the tern of .ceary's appointee. That little gaTne, 'however of the Radical isditiciaus has been nicely upset. :kir CI RCULATE' DEMOCRATIC 141'EliS. -- The time has arrived when every Deniourat should select one of his Republican friends and try to make a Democratic voter out of hint. The sins of the party now in power are flagrant, and the leaders are accusing caul' other of so many crimes, that all good men win want to leave it. There isa great deal of good that eau be done now by circulating Democratic papers. The Radicals have for feited all claims to a :further control of the gov ernment and all that is nownocessary to prove this to the misguided masses, is the circula tion of the theta through the people's me dium, the Pares. MR ERA or FRAUD.—The entire of frauds, embezzlements, or malfeasance in office of any kind, during the long years of Democratic rule in this State, conoentrated and then thrice magnified, would be invisible to the naked eye placed side by side with the fraud •and corruption being practiced this very hour by,the Republican toyagne. The entire peaty Jug become one pestiferous masa of corruption, and will remain so un• tii futigated by the people, Teti& we think deep will do about Oetober neat. IEIIOIII49W' Model Temperanee Mledomary. Mr. A. M. Bates, who was brought bake the Publie Court, at Chicago, a few days sleek charged wt:th having drugged and rob mute ma, thus addressed the 'aegis- Lodi in his differtne At this moment, sirnou Hoy despise me, hut - before I finish you will pity me. lum a Christian—one of the Lord's guerrillus.— They fight for the Chrikian faith on their own hook, ISW also a missionary. 1 try to make people sign the temperantoldedge. I don't belong to the regular society for that purpose. Our ways of doing the thing differ. Mine is the best. I don't have to beg fur money as they do. My system is self supporting. I often say jokingly to myself ►ad family that we are Bates fur intemperate people. The juke is original with me, and I don't want any of the reporters to pan it off as their own, Thu way T convert people to the teiriper ance cause is this: When I see a luau about to drink I drug the liquor. When he sleeps, I take all the &ley and valua bles ho has. I spoil his clothes, and some thuus beat him. Then 1 put him in the gutter, where a policeman ran find hint. But first 11111 his pockets full of tracts showing the evils of ill knipertuAce. What is thu result? That man is brought here awl finedCo fur dritukellllPS! , . lie finds all his money g o ne, anal Ws clothes spoiled. Thus does he sec and feel the effects of intempertunx. It is better than a thousand huts. Then he reads a few of the tracts in his pocket, and they complete the good work. Be goes and signs the pledge. 1 have thus saved that man from a drunkard's grave. All honor io me. The money and valuables whieh I get front him are enough to support me until I find another man to convert. I know that the world may mistlle my motives, but you, Judge, will not. Von will say at once: "Let the uti ,, r-tottury !zt.L i 1 ivoLlvau.*Jug hutny." Awl so 1 am. Ilnee I converted,gin tuLt ohnine in this way. It cost, her r 2.50 but Ale doer , not drink any inure. it is sweet to we to think how twiny