SICKXJBH, Proprietor.] SERIES, Buttrli priimrrM. weekly Democratic Bjuer,devoted to P"1 /& ! KMWR ma. I Term*—l copv 1 year, (in advance) 81.50. If pain within six months, 5'2.00 will be charged. ADVERTISING . ■ , make three < four two three six i one I m 'tquare iceeks weeks >nd th mo'th mo'th year I Too Til Ti 2.97 3.001 5.00 I M o p,j 250 3,25 3.50 4,51< 6.00 ■ £' LOO 3.75, 4,75 5.50 7,0f 9,00 ■ f/,' m , n 100 4,50 fi.so S.OC 10,00 ( 15,00 I J Column. , 7 moo 12.n0 17.00 25.00 I! Z 800 9.50 11.00 18,00 25,00 35,00 ■ [ J®; 1 0 ]0( 17,00 22.1- I Business Cards of one square, with paper, 85 JOB WORK Ban kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit ■the times. I Business potirrs. ■nACOV STAN!>.—Nicholson. P u - C. L Hp JACKSON, PP'prL-tor. fvlu49tf] ■fj S. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SLUG EON fl, Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. KEO. • TUTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Tnnkhannock, Pa. Office in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga street. lir.H. M. PI ITT. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Of \V fice in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., i'unk inni'k, Pa. r ITTLE .<► DEWITT, ATTORNEY'S AT U LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tunkh.vnnock, 'i R. R. LITTLE. J. DKWITT. F~Y. SMITH, M. D , PHYSICIAN A SI'RGEON, ), Dffi.-e on Bridge Street, next <1 -'-r t. the Demo rat Office. Tunkhannock-/ I'a. JARVEY I( kI,EK. ATTORNEY AT LAW 1 and GENERAL INSf'UANTE AGENT Of e*. Bridge street, opposite Wall's Hotel. Tunkhan rk Pa. r.W. 11110/YRS, IVI. 23 . Graduate of the University of Pcnn\t. ) Respectfully offers his profos- onal service.- to the itiiens'f Tunkhintio -k an I \ i-inity !!.• can be wnd. when not professionally engaged, either at his Irag Store, or at his residcu -e on Putn tin Street. VI. J.GvCORSELIUS. HAVING LOCAT- U ED AT THE FALLS, WILL t • •m; iv attend ill calls in the line of his pr fi*s- 11 — niav found Itlieeiner's Hotel, when n r j.: fe.-ri<.iisi:!y ;. sent. Falls, Oct. 10, IBCI. 1)R. J. C MKCKI H .V PHYSICIANS ck SURGEONS, Would respectfully announ ••• to the citizens <>' Wy tming that they have located at M.-hoopanj*, where ;hev will promptly attend to all calls in the line of liieir profession. May be found at his Drug Staro then not professionally absent. M* CAR EY, M. I),- Graduati - r P. M. Instit e, Cincinnati) would respectfully aaounce to the citizens of Wyoming and Luzerne 'ounties, that he c mtinues his regular practice in the irinus departments of his profession. May ne found this office ur residence, when not professionally ab ut vr 'articular attention given to the treatment Chronic Diseas. entremorelan 1, Wyoming Co. Pa.—v2n2 WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE, TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., 1A. THIS establishment has recently been refitted and furnished in tbe latest style Every attention ill. be given to the comfort an i convenience of those 'to patronize the House. T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor. Tnnkhannock,September 11, 1861. WITH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA RILEY WARNER, PropV. JAUXG resumed the proprietorship of the above tJL Hotel, the undersigned will spare no effort to 'Mer the house an agreeable place of sojourn for "who may favor it with their custom. , RILEY WARNER. September 11, 1361. MAYNABD'S hotel, TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING COUNTY, PENNA. *0 H N MAYNARD, Proprietor. f ft ken the Hotel, in the Borough of ■ Tunkhanncck. recently occupied by Riley bK| Qer ' P ro P netor V'Spectfully solicits a share of >-patronage. The House has b.'en thoroughly Paced, and tho comforts and accomodations of a < Hotel, will be found by ;l || who mav favor !tt> custom. 11 161 M. GILMAiN, DENTIST. yj OILMAN, has permanently located in Tttnk *• haon-ck Borough, and respectfully tenders his tessional services to the citizens of this place and ■wounding country. hCTWs° RK WARRANTEI) ' T0 GIVR SATIS- over Tutton's Law Offio* near th e Pos W U, IS6I. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, Aro. r> . HHfLADELPIIfA. Vin',/ Distressed, afflicted with fnrtk n r* a * on * e Diseases, and especially i*Zi, Cu , r ? 0fl) " ea * es f If" Sexual Organs Tiluahi! c S lve " gratis, by the Acting Surgeon e P° rt on Spermatorrhoea or Setninas t#don ' XJ I er L)'senses of the Sexual Organs h. wn , Qe .r' ew k e DO'liesemploye t in the Dispei*,*- t a ®' cte( l ' n sealed letter envelope ie ® e ,' wo uv three stamps for postage will be TOV iK?- Adflre *' Dr J SKILLIN HOUGH list)! c. Surgeou, Howard Association. Nsoly Mreet, Philadelphia p a , ln2oly. p resh Ground Plaster In (luantlties and atprieeg to suit purchasers, now for sale a try HOWRY JR. , poet's Corner. [Written for the DEMOCRAT.] MIDNIGHT MUSINGS. BY MEKIBA A. BABCOCK. " As all places at the South occupied by the Fede rals, are cut off from all communication with the Southern Army, many of us here have not heard from oar husbands in twelve months If they fall we shall never know when nor uhere , especially those who went oi#as privates under the Conscript act." Extract from a Letter. The moonbeams came so bright, Charlie, The moonbeams came so bright, And wove their soft, white drapery Round the baby's erio to-night, That I wondered if the soldiers And you among the rest, Were talking 'nea'h the moonlight Of the hearts that love you best. There are days when storm-clouds thicken, And the rain comes falling fast, Days wherein no summer sunshino Smiles away the howling blast, Theu I wonder if the soldiers. And you among the rest, Ilave outside warmth and comfort, And hope within your breast. There are days when burning sunbeams, Kiss the parched and arid earth, Days when violet eyes are turning Towards the banks that gave them birth, Pleading vainly for the wavelets That so oft have washed away, The dew that droops their eye-lids At the early peep of day. Then I wonder if the soldiers, 'Neath the fiercely burning sun, Are panting out their ltl'e-breath On the field just lost or won, And I tremble as I wonder Whether you of all the rest, Are lost on uv\\i forever, To the heart that loves you best. Select Stoni. PAY AS YOU GO. BY MRS. N. M. CON-U'UHY. '• Wilson," said a young man to his friend, £t you and I have about equal salaries, and .-.pend about equal anvvint.* in the course of the year; but you are always free and easy, with plenty of money in your pocket, and aparently not a care on your mind; while I am always behind-hand and worried, and fret ted, often with not a dollar in my pocket. 1 am not extravagant neither is my w>fe, yet, for some reason, we never have the least good of our money. It is all due long before we get it, and I am mortified with duns when I have nothing to pay. If you have any secret hy which you manage to get along so well on eight hundred dollars, I do wish you would impart it." " Wfll, Lewis I have a secret which ena bles ine to live very comfortably, and never be troubled by a dun from January to De cember. It is i very simple, unvarying rule I have laid down : " Pay as you go." If I don't run in debt nobody can dun me. Live on the right side of your income, and you will always have plenty and no anxiety ; but live on the wrong side, and, as you say, one is always behind-hand and always worried- The habit of paying as you go keeps you out of many extravagances you would otherwise fall into and think nothing of. But then I must confess that I should hardly have kept to the rule as faithfully, If it had not been for Mary. It was a lesson she learned from her father, and urged upon me when we first be gan housekeeping. " Let us live on potatoes and salt," she used to say, " before we run up bills." We began humbly enough, and lived pretty plain for the first quarter, though Ma ry could get the best meal out of nothing I ever saw. But when we once got a quarter's salary before-hand, we could live as comforta bly as we desired. The experience was good for us, as it had taught us to ecouomize more than we should if we had begun by running in debt. Every man I deal with looks on me as a cash customer, and I am sure to he ac commodated if possible. Ido not doubt but it makes ten per cent, difference in the prices I pay for articles, and eight} dollars a year is quite a consideration to you anrt to ine. Just try my rule Lewis, and see it it don t work like a charm." " But how can I get started ? It w'll take nearly everything I can command to pay of! lulls this year, and I shall have nothing to buy 'with until I obtain my next quarter's salary. We cannot leave off the next three months and stop eating, you know." "It will take close economy for awhile, that is true, and you must make every dollar go a great ways. But I would try it even tf I sold two or three articles of parlor furniture to do it. It is a matter of life long import ance to you and your three boys after you. You can afford to make even great sacrifices for such a permanent benefit to you all. Just win over your wife to the project, and I atn not a bit afraid but' that you will succeed. Women arc thrice as good managers as we are in regard to the particulars, as it is in the little things you will need to retrench in or der to get started. It is these little drops that waste away the whole reservoir. Get Fanny to come over and talk the matter over "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RlGHT."—Thomas Jefferson. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1863. with my Mary, and if they put their heads togetheo to plan out a campaign, the field will be won you may depend." And bidding his friend good-evening, John Wilson ran up the steps of his pleasant home, while two boight faces disappeared from the window, and the little watchers were at the door ready to " catch papa," the moment he entered the hall. The good, wholesome sup per was on the table in five minutes' time > and gentle, womanly Gracie helped her little brother and sister, while mother poured out the fragrant tea. There were pleasant little every day matters to be talked over by moth er and children, and iehearsed to father, all which he listened to, and commented on with as much interest as if he had not been all da} delving in dry old ledgers and day books, and counting up endless columns of figures, keep ing the mind on a continued stretch for the working hours of the day. lie needed just such a home in which to relax himself, to keep him from growing irritable, and unsocial, and prematurely old. As Mary and her husband sat, that evening by the pleasant lamp light, he related the con. oersatiou which had passed.with Alfred Lewis, the families had been old acquaintances before their removal to the city, and each took an interest in the other's welfare. u I wonder," said Mary, if" Fanny would not sell her piano. She told me herself she did not open it except for company to play, and it was no use to her, as the boys had no taste for music. She never was much of a musician, and has forgotten the little she did learn when we were at schoul together. 1 would as lief have it for Gracie to learn on as the new one we hoped to get imr next birth day. Fanny's instrument is an excellent one, and I know, if she parted with it at all, she she would rather I should have it than any one else." It was decided that John should make the proposition, at least, the next time he met his friend, and Mary sent an invitation to the Lewises to all come and take tea with her the next evening. It was a merry little party. The children were all so fuil of glee, and Grace managed so excellently to harmonize everything among them. The oldest boy was near her age, and baby Frank wore dresses still. They spent the evening together in the dining room, while the elders conversed in the parlor. A good, cheerful supper is a great help to nmia bilty. It puts people on good t- rnis with themselves and all their neighbors. Mary's tact had taught her that lesson long before ; so she never introduced business until that was fairly over. But when they were all comfortably seated by the glowing grate—the gentlemen in the arm-chairs, and Fanny and herself in the licht rockers, stitching away at some light needle-work—then the momentu cus questions of ways and means were freely discussed, and some very valuable decisions made on that well remmbered evening. A bar gain was made for tbe piano, with the under standing that it might be bought Lack at any time, if they choose—so it did not seem like a sacrifice altogether. With economy, thev thought, they might live on the sum it brought them for the next three months, without running up the accustomed " terrible bills." Mary inducted her friend in(o many little mysteries of economy she had never thought of before. " That old Valencia plaid of yours, Fanny, would make lovely suits for Frank, this win ter. Make little skirts to button on white waists, and an open jacket like the skirt.— I make Nendy's waists out of the plaits of worn-out shirt fronts, and finish them, about the neck and sleeves, with a little worked edge, or a plain, narrow rullle. I have bo't nothing but shoes and stockings for him for six months." " Well, you are a manager, Mary. I will certainly try to follow your example. I have often wondered how you could allord to dress your children so handsomely. " I intend, when Neddy is older, to cut his father's worn out clothing into suits of boy's clothes for him. Only get good pat terns, and it is a very easy matter. I used often to help my mother about such work.— 4 A penny saved, is two pence eai ned,' she she used to say—an old-fashioned proverb, quite out of date now-a-days, but as true as it ever was." And so the friends spent a pleasant even ing, imparting and receiving valuable les sons in practical economy, which gave a very different coloring to the future comfort and success in life of one of the parties. Though it was working against wind and tide, lor the time, Fanny Lewis and her husband per severed in their dete r inination to adopt tbe motto of" Pay as you go ;" and, before the year was done, the habit was well establish ed. Mr. Lewis, too, was astonished to find himself the possessor of a handsome surplus, which was deposited, with great satisfaction in the Savings Bank, though he had always been well assured that could lay up nothing for a rainy day until his salary was much in creased. What an advantage it would be, if all heads of families could adopt the same rule of life ! What a world of harrassing care would be removed from the mind of both debtor and creditor ! How much more in dependently a man cm walk the streets, who feela that bis only debts are those of love and good-will to all mankind ! It is not only, an excellent wordly maxim, but also a Scriptu ral injunction, to " owe no man anything." Savs Dr. Todd, in his valuable work for students. " All the efforts of denying yourself the luxuries, and even the comforts of life, are light in comparison with the burden of ow ing. ——■— PoliticaL ADDRESS OF HON. D. W. YOORHEES He fore the Democratic Union Association of New York. Mr. Yoorhees began bv saying that he owed his loyalty to the people. The people have settled down, he said, to understand the great fundamental principle uhich lies at the foundation of our govern ment, which is expressed in the first line of the Constitution, that the peoj le make this government, and when 1 stand before the people and talk to them I am talking to the only goverameut I owe any allegiance to. S. -Applause.) Loyalty is often defined bv some speakers and by men in tho halls of legislation. I can defiee my loyalty in a single word. I owe my allegiance to the Constitution of my country. I owe it in that sense in which our fathers wrote it The sovereign power of this land was placed by them in the hands of the people in ex press terms—not by construction, and in ex press tartns, not Mr. Lincoln and bis cabinet. (Hisses.) No President and no cabinet, 110 office-holders constitute yonr government. 1 hese are times, however, when a few office holders whose time is soon to expire, hav ing the power to-day, promulgate the strange doctrine that they are the government.— Let that doctrine once prevail and this a free government no more—your government is overturned, and you niii accept a monarchy or despotism or any other form of govern ment from the other side of the Atlantic, and our form will be no more. I atu not here because anybody lets me come—be cause any master, provost-marshal, Presi dent, or Secretary of War says I may be here. I ain here because iti 3 tny right to be here, because you invited me here, and when I look iu the faces of those before me I ten der my allegiance to you as my government. I owe none to those that would overthrow the liberties of my country. (Applause.) I owe them simply commendation and sup port in that in which they are right—l owe them opposition and denunciation in all that they do that is wrong. (.Cheers.) The speaker th en reviewed at some ' length the history of the Democratic party, saying that it had always been a noble organization • to which any man might have been proud to belong, aud contrasting the condition of the country under Democratic rule to its condi lion uow, he said : I see its history written in every bright line of your country's pros perity and happiness. The people were safe ; the Union was saved; the Constitution was preserved. The fruits of labor came to the sons of toil ; no gigantic debt, no taxation, no wailing widows or sobbing orphans mark ed its lrack and the policy of this govern ment, and yet would you ask me to-night to abandon this time-honored and glorious or ganization for this pirate of the high seas of politics that I shall speak of directly? I saw in the morning papers of the other morning that a distinguished gentlemen of your city said it was good once in a while, as we were progressing along, to get oukof the old stage of the Democratic party—that John Van. Buren (groans and hisses) said it was good to get out of the Democratic om nibus and walk ; and I understood him to say that he was out ami walking now. I will tell you how to do : just instruct the driver to whip up the horses and let him trudge the balance of the journey on foot— (Applause.) A man that would rather walk on foot, and trudge along in common with Wendell Phillips, and Horace Greeley, and Lincoln, and Stanton (loud hi-sing,) and that class of foot-passengers, I do not think is fit company to ride inside a stage-coach full of Democrats. (Great cheering.) Mr. Voorhees read from the debates in Congress, showing that Douglas said in the Thirty sixth Congress that if his party had triumph ed in the last election the people of the South ern States would have rested in the security that they were safe, and the Union never would have been dissolved. Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Clay, and Webster pre dicted that the result of a sectional party would be disunion and civil war, and yet the Republicans are excessively sensitive about being charged as being the authors of this war. I am 6ure, said the speaker, if I felt that the blood of this war was in any way upon my hands, or that any vote of my band had brought into existc nee this thousand miles of graves upon the borders of the South, had caused this mourning of mothers for their first born, like Rachel wee ping for her children because they are not. If I thought that I was responsible by word or deed for this war, I should feel that upon my fingers was the blood-red damned spot of murder j that would incarnadine great Neptune's wave, 1 and that all the waters of the ocean would net wash out. (Great applause, and " three cheers for Yoorhees the patriot" given beart ily.) There would be no repose for me this side or the other of the grave, I would have to have a lighted candle in ray romn to keep away specters of the murdered dead slain in battle. I thank God to-night, and love to look in the faces of an audience that partici pate in the feeliug that no Democrat has to tike the guilt of this great crime against na ture and humanity. You know it well that if everybody had voted as you voted, and talked as you talked, and minded their own business as you minded yours, and let the slave states alone in slavery, and let them have the guarantees of the Constitution— who does not know that there would have been peace and union before to day ? The man that pretends he don't know it, falsifies his own internal convictions. Every man knows it. He who stands before you and says it is not true don't even represent his own heart. It is an instinctive feeling in your breasts, and you know it. Consequent ly when you ask this question of Republi cans, how anxious, nervous, and sensitive are, how quickly they put up their hands and say " Let's argue this question when the war is over"—it is like Banquo's ghost threatening Macbeth. Their eyeballs are scared by the awful sight. They ask that the day of reckoning may be postponed ; like some guilty wretch upon the verge of hell itself they say, " Forbear a few days, let us not discuss these questions now."— How loving they are with Democrats that will give them time—with men who will agree to say "we will speak of these things when the war is over." Ah, gentlemen, short accounts and quick settlements are best. (Great cheering.) I propose to settle this account all along the line. It is best te do so, because they will be asking us to trust them again directly. I propose to keep this record bright. I propose to keep the rec ord of their infamy clear before the public mind so far as my humble powers may go, so that the people may be deceived by these miscreants no more. (Cheers.) They were very anxious to have no party when Congress met in July, 18G1. in extra session. There were just a few of us there—some seven or eight when the roll was called—that felt their feet were on the deck of the Constitu tion, and who did not intend to be washed off. They told us, you know, that we were a little nest of conspirators, that we were going to be overwhelmed, that people were not going to stand by us. But I have read history in vain if that man is not always sup ported who merely takes the rudder of pop ular liberty for his guide and follows it.— (Applause.) We could have had places, emoluments, epaulets, rich contracts, bought horses and got rich as old Cameron did, (loud hisses) stole as much as anybody else, had we been willing to put up the inward consciousness of uprightness and integrity at barter and exchange, had we been willing to bow the knee and whisper with pated breath. We could have gone on swimming on this current—no newspaper offices mob bed, no personal safety imperiled—how easy it would have been. Did you ever reflect | how much it cost to be an honest man some times, and how easy it is to be a scoundrel ? How easy it has been to jump upon a frenzy —a popular side and come into power, into place, into position ? The men who have done this are called loyal and 6elf-sacrilicin g, and the little band of men who have taken the Constitution as their pillar of fire by night and their cloud by day through this wilderness, that have been sacrificing every thing and making nothing—we are the li centious and profligate men. What cause have we had to do as we have done except the cause of truth, the cause of the country, the cause of the constitutional liberty ? (Applause.) The speaker referred at some length to the efforts of the administra tion to bring the negroes to an equality with the white race, and of the uniformity with which they have falsified every promise of a prosecution of the war for the Union and have carried out all the most extreme de sings of the abolitionists, while crying out for no party, lie continued : Thus, my follow citizcns, I have traced some of the pernicious causes which have led to the present deplora ble sta'e of the country. I have shown you the broken faith of those in power, and that even if this war could restore the L T uion it has not been prosecuted for such a purpose. The blood and treasure of the country have been obtaiued on (alse pretensees. 1 have shown you these things. I will show you some other things tiiat make the public heart sick and weary of this war—that make them long for halcyon days of peace. (Great ap plause.) The South have not been told that they might come back like the prodigal son to the mansion of their fathers ; they have not been told that the old mansion would re ceive them. If they had come back to-day what would they find ? As Mr. Cnttenden taid, that "your confiscation law to-day lines the borders all along with gibbets and ropes, and they would have tu bend their necks recumbent under lines of gibbets, and suffer beneath the judgment of that law which you pronounce in advance of the return. You have stripped them of their property—even the widow whose son is in the rebel army to whom she has given a crust of bread ; even tho infant babes in tho cradle have been swept of their possessions by this confiscation law. Do you suppose it is in the nature of i TERMS s SI.GO PER ANigtTM' man to ret urn to the embraces of the govern ment under such circumstances ?" ("No no.") Wise laws, just enactments, conciliation compromise in the mid3t of peace, rot in the midst of war, may once more restore thb shattered and bleeding remains of this repub, lie. War will no more do it than I would have the power of standing before a corpse here and place my hand upon its face till it should rise to life again. Our hope is in peace. (Great applause.) We have tried war, ed upon brotherly affection, can be restored by killing each other are proved to be right, and I w-ong, I will retire to my profession, or get a piece of ground and spend the remain der of my days in obscurity, acknowledging my error. I challenge the judgment of histo ry ;I am ready to go before it. There nev er was a time when there was so 'imperative a necessity for the perfect organization of the Democratic party as now. (Applause.) Why, the black man has the fostering hand of this ad ministration to elevate him in every possible' way. Look at the encouragement they have met. Down with the white man and up with the black man has been the motto of this ad ministration. Step by step the habeas corpus swept away personal liberty, in evfery form violated the key that Lafayette gave to Washington to hang up at Mouut Vernon as a lelic of European despotism, has been trans ferred, I have no doubt, to turn the bolts of and what have you done? Continue to try it as I have no doubt you will until the end 5 of this administration, and lam ready to' abide the issue; and if it should come to pass that those who believe that this Union, found that fort named after that hero of ilberty,- Lafayette, as if in mockery of liberty, and as if hi insult to the teachings of the revolntioq as if in derision and disdain ol the teachings of the past. Everything seems to have been perverted, and Fort Lafayette, named after him who shed his blood for us , has been used to incarcerate innocents. Let me say this; I am a law-abiding man. I counsel obedience to law. You have heard the con scription act discussed. You have heard all those laws discussed by the eminent gentle men who have preceeded me. I shall not dis cuss them to-night. lam for no revolution against laws legacy enacted. Let them be decided in the courts ; let them have fair tri al ; let them be swept away by the ballot-box. We can abide that. But one subject has nev er failed to produce revolution, to cause tha proudest governments the world ever saw to rock from center to circumference when your blood and mine flowed in the veins of the citizens of that ccuntry. It is the question of personal liberty. You cannot enslave a Saxon, a Celt, or a Tenton. It is the proud blood of Northern Europe all combined here, and he who lays his hand upon the great monuments of personal liberty might as well expect to lay his hand upon the name of tha ocean to make it be still. I say boldly to these men, " Walk within well defined lim its of law and all will be well; but when yoo walk outside of them to strike me or my fel low men with ine, then I am your peer, and I resist force by force. (Tremendous cheer ing.) Life is not so precious as to be bought at the expense of personal dishonor and pesonql degradations. (Applause.) I shall say to my people when I stand in their midst— an intelligent and noble constiuency—as I shall on next Saturday if I live, that 1 shall hold the persons and property of these men who countenance arbitrary violence as hostages for the peace ol the community. (Applause.) We are good as they are. (" Better.") They feed on no meat that enables them to stride across our diminutive and prostrate forms. I recognize no master of that kind in this government and of this administration, and if its millions are determined to try this issue then woe to this land, woe to this country. A new desolation and new horror will seize the hearts and limbs of men, but "whatever may betide I know very well how the Ameri can people will respond to that issue. They will bear much, but will not bear all. And it is well and better for these men to ander stand that. (Applause.) M. Voorhes closed by urging the Democracy of New- York to join hands with the Democracy of the West in this struggle to main tain the Constitution and the Union, which are the only guarantee# of our liberties. (Great cheering.) The Bill to purchaso " American citizens of African descent" from tbeir DIM* ters in Missouri, has passed the United States Senate by the usual Abolition vote. Ths price set upon each negro is S2OO, to raise which the tax payers of the north are to be worked and starved. If Missouri wants to get rid of the institution, let her do as the other northern states have done. We ven ture the prediction, that if her cupidity leads her to accept of the bribe offered by the United States Senate, she will fail. It will never be paid. While the people of the north ern states are willing to let slavery alone whci ? it exists, they will not submit to a tax to become wholesale dealers in niggere.—JEx duintjc- The Tax payers' Manuals has jaat been published, and, iu brevity, it beats tbe Military Manual all hollow. It has but three principals orders, which are as follows : 1. Draw wallets ! 2. Fork over! 3. Retire I VOL. 2, N0.33,