jjAHVBY SIOKIIER, Proprietor.] SERIES, Surtli f cant ji fßmatrat A weekly Democratic paper, devoted to Pol- _ tic?, News, the Arts 1 lished every Wednes- Vv HARVEY SICKLER. Terms —1 copy 1 year, (in advance) 81.50. If not pain within six months, 52.00 will be charged. advehtisikto. 10 lines or| • 1 1 ; t less, make three four two three >, six \ one onesquare weeks weeks mo' th mu th mo'th year 1 enuare 1,00; 1,25 2,25 2,87 3.00; 5.00 2 Jo. 2,00 2.50! 3,25 3.50 4,50 c 6.00 3 do 3.00 3,75 s 4,75 5,50! 7.001 9.00 J Column. 4.00, 4,50' 6.50' 8.00 10,00' 15,00 t do. 6.00' 7,00 10.00 12.00 17.00; 25.00 | do. 8.0U ; 9,50, 14.00-: 18,09 25.00 35.00 1 do. 10,00112,00; 17,00- 22,U0|28,00 40,00 9 ______ Business Cards of one square, with paper, So. JOB "TO-oXIHb of all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit the times. fJltSittfSS Notices. BACON STAND.—Nicholson. Pa. C. L JACKSON, Proprietor. [vln49tf] HS. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. pEO. S. TIJTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, vT Tunkhannoek, Pa. Office in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga street. WM. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of fice in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., Tunk hannoek, Pa. IITTI/E sr DEWITTk ATTORNEY'S AT J LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tunkhannoek, Pa. R. R. LITTLE. J. HEWITT. JV. SMITH, M. D., PHYSICIAN k SUBOEON, • Office on Bridge Street, next door to the Demo cat Office, Tunkhannoek, I'a. H~ AKVEY SICKI.ER, ATTORNEY AT LAW and GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT - Of fice, Bridge street, opposite Wall's Hotel, Tunkhan noek Pa-__ ar. w. mioAus, 3vr. r>„ Graduate of the University oj Pcnn'a.) Respectfully offers his professional services to the citizens of Tunkhannoek and vicinity. He can bo found, when not professionally engaged, either at his Drag Store, or at his residcuee on Putnam Street. DR. J. c. COR3ELIFH, HAVING LOCAT ED AT THE FALLS, WILL promptly attend ai! calls in the line of his profession—iuav be found at Beeiner's Hotel, when not professionally absent. Falls, Oct. 10, I3CI. DR. J. C. I i I .in, and peisonal right. Sir, by no vole of mme can any person holding such views ad lress the people of Pennsylvania in this chamber Never, sir, never so long as I have r. right to forbid him. Let me, sir, tc the cr.pito 1 of ins cvn State, and to whom that boon is denied by Republican Senators, sei zed hold of those discordant materials and with trie hand and mind of genius prepared t'ncia again to go upon the- enemy. I will not trace his history. It is written imperisha bly upon the annals of the past; and it will shine in thoao cf the future. Rut I will turn ft,. - a moment to a period a year later , vrheu another disaster met our arms on the same field, and when the par.ic- Pres'dent and his advisers again crouched with fear within the walls of Washington) when they felt that the Cloths and Vandals were at their gates, when they were provi ding for flight to some spot of safety, and when ttsj tout power and place was van ishing. Again in palsied fear they appealed to him whom for party purposes they had degraded, and again, like a iruo patriot, like one who never acts frutn sordid or improper motives, he assumed command of that routed and demoralized army, and in less that three weeks he had again organized it and had commenced the pursuit of the common enemy across the hills of Maryland and into a plain where many of those who now hear me met the enemy face to face. What did he do? A second time saved the Republic—he save it by snatching victory out of the very jaws of defeat; and I now place upon record the universal sentiment of every man who served under him, and that if it had not been for the confidence of the army of the Potomac in General M'Clellau, Pennsylvania wouid have suffered an invasion which would have been destructive to the life and property of her people ; and yet Senators refuse to receive the protector and defender of the State in the halls of her Capitol. Rut what is tke subse quent history of this matter ? Shattered and broken, his legions lay awhile fo" rest, to be clothed, to be fed, to be restored to their wonted vigor ; and then he was in pursuit of that enemy whom he had met at Antietam and at South Mountain, and defeated. Rut, sir, when he was about to strike his blow, he was again pursued by the miscreants who wished to divert this war from the purposes set forth in the resolution of July r , 18G1 and dragged down from his position as command er of the army. I He left it dispirited, broken hoarted. do jected—obedient, it is true, but without nerve, without vigor, without power. He left it at the dictation and c milliard of the ultra Abo litionists of the North.—George I*. M'Clellan was nt an Abolitionist ana therefore he was not a general!! ! The remaining histoiy of that campaign is written in blood disaster. But sir 1 will tell you that along the camp fires of the Potomac at night, no soldier goes sleep without praying God for blessings upon the head of his commander ; and oh ! sir, if those in power could summon the resolution to cast behind them the prejudices and the passions of those who do not wish to see this Union restored unless slavery bo abolished, that noble commander would be put at the head of that army and he would carve out victory and would bring back to us once more triumph and peace and union. I know it, they know it, you, gentlemen, know it; and if you had the manhood which you should possess, you wouid by joint resolutions speak this truth to the powers that be and make the l hear you ! 11 Mr. Speaker, it may be proper for me at this tirr.e to state what I believe to be the purposes of the great party with which I nave the honor to act. In the words of an other, who i.ora his exalted position has a right to speak, I will tell you " that the Demo cratic party has never agreed, does net now agree, and have no intention of agreeing in future, to a dissolution of the American TTu lou- ' an 1 I will say to yea farther, that we propose to accomplish the preset. ation of the government and the Constitution by the union of the sword with the olive branch. For those who will resist the power of t' e government—r<>t the power of the ad min:stra-tion, not its unconstitutional acts, but the power of this government righ'ful ly administered under the Constitution— we have the swcrd. For those who are trilling to submit to its benign, its health ful and its pL-zcefui sway, we hold ou t the olive branch of peace. And here T will say to you sir, (and in saying it I feel that T cvpvess the opinion of the great Democratic partv of this State,) that vra be lieve, and will ever believe that the laws which have been passed by the Congress just ended—the coutiscation and other acts which have steeled the heart of the people of the South—there is no such thing as a Union man left in those States now engaged in reb ellion, and we tell you that we intend to melt the heart of that people b) repealing your unjust, your unconstitutional laws; and' when jf. is melted, we expect cut of that heart to bring peace and happiness to the people, un le s you have among them allies who are attached to your cause, devoted to the prin ciples of the Constitution and its guarantees, and desiring its protection— that you can never, exterminate or subjugate them. But we tell you, sir that if you will do on ly what the Constitution r.nd the principles springing from it demand, on every hill and and in every vailey there will fx? raised up allies for our assistance. The leader-) who desire place and power may be against us, but when the people of the south, recollecting the glories of the past, and "looking to those of the future, feel that every right is to be guar anteed, every privilege restored to them, them as 1 believe mv God, I believe that they will come hack to the Constfution of the old gov ernment, and the old Union. I tell you now Mr. Sneaker, that all the blood, all the treas ure you have spent or may spend, will be in vain, unless you repeal the unconstitutional, oppressive, and tyrannical laws which were enacted by the last Congress; and I will say in passing (the Supreme Arbiter being my judge.) that if that Congress had never met, or if, having met, they had simply voted ap propriations and dissolved, leaving the whole question to be settled under the resolution adopted in July, 1861, this coutest would eia now have been settled, and at this day we would be enjoying unity, peace and amity. Upon the heads of those who prevented such action—upon the heads of those men who en acted those unconstitutional and damnable laws, and did everything in their power to coinbino the southern heart against us forev er, be the curse of blood and murdering that fill this land. If the demon of destruction and of hate—if the father of evil himself could have been there dictating their councils, actu ating them to deeds which must result in the utter dismemberment of this Union, he could not more thoroughly have effected his hellish purpose than it has been effected by the dominant majority in the Senate and in the House during the last Congress. And when the history of these times comes to be writ ten, (and 1 pray to God that the historian of this era may not be obliged to write of the de cline and fall of the American Republic, but that he may only write of its trials past and present aud of its future greatness,) he wil. record the hour a lien the nation came so near to desolation and death, and he will ascribe the disasters of that hour to the unremitted, persistent, diabolical machinations of Aboli tionists in and out of the last Congress. Such a historian, if ho has the philosophy of Hume—if he has his iar seeing penetration and can traco effects trotn causes, cannot fail in the contemplative hour of the future to say what I say at this moment, that to them solely and sheerly belongs the terrible ca latn ty that still darkeus and enshrouds this |aud. lu conclusion, siij what do we pro- I TI3FIMS: BLSO PER. AJKIBI UM I pose to declare by voting against this reso j lution 2 We propose to say that no one who j has been the instrument, the partaker, the supporter of these ty ran leal, there unconsti tutional, these arbitrary measures which havo fused the Southern heart and dirided our ' own, shall be heard from the eapitol ,of, this State. We propose to say that we will not listen to him as a body representing the peo ple of this State; we propose to say that the verdict of the people of the State at the last election was against all such damnable here sies. We mean to tell you, gentlemen, that although we have not a majority, berg, we have it on the other side of this hall, and we have it among the people. We mean to tell you that that majority counted by three thousand last year will be ten times three thousand at the next election. We mean to tell you that we are going to bring you back to the cause of the Constitution and jthe Un ion. We.mean to tell you that we are going to use the sword and the olive-branch in set tling this difficulty—that whether north or south, we will use the sword upon those who are opposed to tha Constitution— that we will not allow any person whether in the south or in the north, to disobey, to disre gard, to ignore or to rot at defiance the Con stitution of the United States. We mean to te!! you that the same law which ia to be obeyed at the Sonth Is to be obeyed at the North. The people are with us, ?nd by the o .sce of God aud the voice cx the people, be fore nine months roll around we shall have iit in our power to put in execution all that we say. — —— Seymonr, of Connecticut. Among the gallant spirits of the age, there is no one more deservedly conspicuous than Ihomas 11. Ssv-ova, the Democratic candid ate ior (Governor of Connecticut. He is making a thought canvass of his state, and is gaining strength every day by his bold and many expositions of the destructive policy of the imbecile administration at Washington. In a recent speech he made use x> f the follow ing languagj which stamps hhn a patri "l am for getting back the Southern states feu and honorable means if such a thing be P °. 9 t^°h I will hope for the best. .. j 1 h ' e , l n ' on 1 dcs rc, is a Union of hear s n- of , an ,T s r . ;ch „ o , r , itheni -Nothmg i„ s will ratisfy me than the whole Southern States/' no Yet he is denounced as a traito rand se cession sympathiser, simply because he' will not Lend the knee to power, but chooses rath e. to fc; cr.o of that claos of freeman "whom the truth makes froe.' ; Age. i ■ A nESPOTtW M TO ~K -ar/nMSHED. " Another principle must ceruinlj be em bodied in our reorganized form of government. . men who sh apo tha legislation of this country, when the war is past, mmt re member that what we want ia power and strength The problem ui'l bo to combine hie forms of a Republican Government with the pcncers ufa Government.— Philadelphia Press. " Ttl3 wr - r already shown the absurdi ty of a government with limited powers, it •ins shown, that the power oj every govern- mm' ought to le and must be unlimited Philadelphia Aorth American* Such aje the sentiments of the leading or gans of the Black Republican party.—They require no comment, except to .be denounced as the rankest treason to the government. Certain Republican particans appear to be in the last stage of mania a potw—ev erywhere they " see snakes," and are striking about wildly at Copperheads." Thtae/'Cop perheads," however, take things Some spirited young Democrats have adopted the head of the goddess of Liberty on the old copper cent as a badge, which, the Democrat ic party being a hard money party, ia en ex. ceediugly suitable emblem. Apropos Jo tbia subject, and incident occurred at the ropma of the Democratic Union Association, mx the occasion of Mr Vallandigham's recent speech here, that we have not seen reported. Mr. V. was exhibitingan old com as a sort of re membrance of better days gone hy—value one cent the coin we mean of course. " Give it to Mr. Chase for a specie basis !" called out a quick witted Irishman in the andience. Wilmot Provider. For.—The people of Pennsylvania haying repudiated Senator Dave Wilmot, and laid him on the shelf, the President has provided for him by ap pointing him Judge of the Court of Claims salary $4,000 per annum ! Wilmot uaed hit best efforts to involve the country in a civl war, and is doing all he oan to continue the war and ruin the oountry. There- ia not a worse traitor in the Southern army than this blatant demagogue, and hence it i that ho is a favorite the Administration. Abolition State Convention The Ab olition-Republican State Committee met at Harrisburgon Wednesday, and adopter a call for a State Convention to be held at Pittsburgh on the 15th of July, to nominate candidates for Governor* and Judge of the Supreme Court. The Committee alao pass ed a resolution recommending the organisa tion of a " Union League "in each Legisla tive District. " it • VOL. 2, N0.35.