fist Democrat. HARVEY SICKLER, Editor. TUNiLBANNOZK, PA Wednesday* June 8, 1864. 9. N. Pettengill * Co.— No 37 Park Row Raw Yobk, k 6 Statb Sr. Boctor, are onr Agents for the N. B. Democrat, in thoss cities, and sra author ised to take Advertisements and inscriptions as at ear lowest Rates. MATHER * CO., No. 335 Broadway. N. Y. are oar Authorized Agents to take Advertisements •V this paper, at out published rates. The Draft for this district wag commenced at Troy on the 2d inat. We have been in formed that the drawing for this County, was to be made yesterday. We have not yet ob tained a list of the victims. "Vote for Cur tin, and avoid the draft," said the shoddy itea. last Fall. Ttu War. The news from the seat of war indicates no very great progress in the "on to Richmond" movement. Though several severe engage ments have taken place, with much loss on both aides, Gen. Grant's advance is contested Inch by inch. II ia now on the Chickahvtni ny, almost in the exact position occupied hv McClelian and his army two years ago this month. 4s The second abolition pow wow, the shoddy wing, met at Baltimore yesterday to nomi nate a candidate for President. As yet noth ing Jof their proceedings has reached us. The Rail alias Union splitter is said to have the thing all cooked up in his own way ; and will doubtless be nominated on the first ballot. Gen. Dix, Daniel S. Dickinson or some rene gade Democrat will be put on the ticket for ▼ice President, with the hope that a few Democrats may be gulled into the support ef the ticket. In order t> throw cold water on the Frement ticket, it is predicted that the platform will contain all the uigger planks except that of miscegenation; the abolition preachers, not yet having fully educated the masses to accept the nigger into their conju gal embraces. JEST The Baltimore Convention will be a highly flavored concern if ail the delegates who are chosen to sit injit arc allowed seats. In addition tc the darkies who will claim ad mittance from South Caroliua, there wiil also be a delegation of negroes from Florida These last were chosen at a meeting held in St. Johps, which were presided over by a person named SNOWBAI L, who has also been sent as a delegate. This may read i>iic a ;o!:c but is a veritable fact. Notwithstanding tho love of the shoddy people for the negro, wp fear that if the Snowball delegation is admit ted to the eonvi-ntion and the weather should prove warm, they will be crying "Seme emu goog apothecary.'' A New COIN. —The two cent coin author ised by a recent act of Congress is now in escalation in the cities. It is twice the s'ze of the cent, and is composed of ninety five parts pure copper and five parts tin and zinc. The obverse bears a shield testing upon two crossed arrows, and surrounded by a wreath of laurel. At the top is a scroll containing the words, "In God we trust," and at the bottom the year of coinaga. 1604. The re terse contains the figure 11 2'' encircled b/ a •heal of wbeat, and in the margin are the words "United States of America." The piece is neatly executed, but its value should have been more clearly expressed. • The tax on matches by the new bill, is one cent per box. Mr. Carlton has three establishments in Boston. p*yi p & the government 81,400 taxes per day. The consumer ot course, has it to pay in the end. We are now tax>-d on nearly every thing, and in so many ways, that we pay tax when we do not know ft. rar John M. B -ttssars: Prom the portico of my house, I and my family have seen nine battles fought on my own fields, and just before my own door, between hos tile troops, who but yesterday, as it were boasted of a common history, a common na tionality, and a common destiny. . .- Easily Embarrassed. The way this administration gets '•embar rassed" is a caution to all grannies. If you vote as Christianity and common sense dictates against Old Abe you "era baras*" the administration. If you disapprove of despotism and de nounce the monstrous stealing aud c irruption in the land, you "embarrass" the administra tion. If you don't make a blackguard of your •olf and aing copperhead, as Old Abe and his oilco holders do you "embarrass" the adtnin ist ration. If you speak lightly of the negro, and don*t go in for equality, an 1 advocate nepro suffrage you " embarrass" the administra tion. If you defend free press, free speech, and the Constitutional rights of freemen, you "embarrass" the administration. If you are in favor of the Constitution and the Union of our fathers, you "embarrass " the administration. So vu King George "embarrassed" when he attempted to fasten tho fetters of despot, tern upon our fathers, and so are all tyrants " embarrassed" when lb'rty ilroj;gles with ! The Lincoln Administration * Photo graphed by its Friend*. Tba Democratic preaa throughout the 1 | country are denounced with great virulence 1 ' for even hinting that the Administration of ; Mr. Lincoln la not the very mod&i of parity ! J and honesty. Por one, we hare been very 1 much inclined to deny it, and not wishing to ! J incur the wrathful displeasure of & few who ' believe it to be treason to " oppose the ad- j ministration/' we have t ;ken the trouble to j insert what may be regarded a most faithful photograph, produced by its own friends l lt is true te life, but the half baa not been . told. I The New Nation, a radical paper just I stalled in New York, says ; " After having rashly and prematurely launched the country into the dissensions ; inseparable from a Presidential nomination,' the friends of Mr, Lincoln, who believed that by proceeding thus, they would gain the ad ! vantage of an early trial, and who in this j hope have employed the immense patronage !at their disposal to draw the people in the | wake of Certain over-complaisant Legisla tures. now perceive that they have taken the wrong road." The Commercial Advertiser, another New I I York sheet, says t " The original legal tender bill was a gross ' and shameful violation of justice and equity. ! as it interfered with the pro exisiiug co tracts between individuals ; and it greailr injured the industrial and commercial classes I by depriving them nf the oniy recognized ' standard of value. For this act, no real nec esaity has ever been shown except the mere naked assertion ot its partisans that it was necessary as a war measure." The Harrisburg Telegraph, one of the moat 1 rabid ar.d bloody t-f that stripe, is entitled to some credit for telling the truth con tained in an article a few days since.—. Among many things it says: j "We believe that the great crisis of the 1 war is now upon us. All things seem to i : tend to this belief. And yet strange as it j may appear, those raot interested in the | • business of providing against the w>>rst that may happen, are doing the least. indeed, if j the ruin of the public should cine upon us- ' • if the capna's of the srate.% north and ut the nation, should fall into the hands of the one- j : my, it will be while the representatives of the people are engaged in vain struggles po- ! 'liticallyor projects concerning themselves) pecuniarily ; while Congress is frittering away its lime in exhibitions of black-guard . ism, while one half of its members are pur suing its own interests to the neglect of the j public business—while the speculators ' i are oppressing and almost starving labor and while licientioiisness and riot fi.l the i land Rome to fi Idling Nero did not pre sent a more frightful pic:ore, than do the states that are loyal as well as the states that are rebellious, exhibit to the world. j When all this will end or how it will end, i God only knows, and we can only say, God , save the Republic '. The Now York Tribune, in Speaking of • Congress, says : j '• We are now in the grandest crisis of our National history , we choose dwaifs to ilu the work which may well employ angel* i There may be forty men in b th H lusea who I richly deserve to be there ; but there are at ! least a hundred who would he in business j fully up to their capacity if one half of them were trying twenty dollar suits as justices of the peace, with the other half pettifogging befora thein." ' l)r. Orestes Brownson, * strong abolition :t and very able mm, expressts the follow- i tng opinions of I*resident Lincoln : " The President's intasuivs are generally j wrong measures, or right measures at a • wrong lime or in a wrong place. IBs soul seems ina l? of leather, aid m -apable of any | grand or noble emotion. You leave his pres- i ! race with your enthusiasm damped, your 1 better feeiings crushed and your hopes cast |to the winds. Every wisdom srom bun ; seems but folly. "We believe him s'rong enough, with his i patronage and his demagogic and selfish sup I j porters, to prevent any other man from get- , j ting the nomination, or, if tic geis it, to pre- , ; vent him from being eiected, and we believe • hi:n just the man to do so * * ♦ i ' Cm we doubt that all the patronage of the 1 1 government will be wielded ii his favor, and J against the man who dares to opp >se bun ?" , I "We have been imposed upon long. The i ruin which you have been unable to accom plish in four years w >uld certainly be fully ! consummated were you to remain in power I four years longer. Your military Govern-, i ors and their Provost Marshals override the I 'aws, and the echo of th iron heel rings i forth a* clearly now in America as in France j 'or Kustria. Yon hare en reached upon our : ; liberty without securing victory, and we j must have both." Mr. Van Wyck, member of Con.re.ss from j ■ New York, said in a speech in the II use : " With a single exception, when his one ' | of these men (the plunderers of the treasury) ' ! been court-martialed >r puuishe I ? To-day, j ' they have injured the Republic more than the south in arms ! Ifvl they been arrested and placed under the gallows or i:i Fort Lv ! favette, our army would have been stronger, ! | and our people at home more united. No ' wonder 'hat our soldiers ami their friends at home are dissatisfied. They cannot appre ciate the pa'ri'ltism of stealing." The New Haven (Conn.) Courier, a devot ! Ed Republican paper, says : " Contractors hive carried on the war.— The blood of our men, the iraves of our ki ll i ed, the tears of our orphans and widows. 1 have been coined into money. Tliev have swindled the government out of hundreds j •of millions. They have piled fortune upon : ( fortune. Asa distinguished officer at Wash ! ington said, " All the operations of this war ' ; are managed by txditical swindlers." The Indiana Fee Press, a German Repub ; lican paper, thus raises the atandard of re ; volt against Lincoln : | ' Lincoln's Administration has undermin ed the basis of our Republication institutions and accustomed tbe people to the idea of a despotical government, by violating their | rights and liberties tinder circumstances : which formed no adequate pretext. We do j solemnly condemn the arbitrary arrest <>f citizens of states not in insurrection or nn | der martial law, and its infringing upon the . rights of free speech and free press." | Mr Browns in. in the April number of his 1 IJuarterly Review, says : " No branch of the administration has been ; wrll and faithfully administered tinder hirn. Its spirit anl tone have been loose, fluctu ating, unsystematic, weak and inefficient, in all save expenditure of men aud rsmnev. It has lacked promptness, energy and economy. Its expenditures enormous and little to show for them. i Its yearly expenses, when all accounts are audited, will be found lo be double those of; i Great Britain in her gigantie ware with the Emperor Napolean, when he subsidized near- ! ly all Europe, while our resources re far ! less than hers were at the time. During ' four years it will hare run up a natnnal debt | above that of Great Brittain, and equal to . ore third of the assessed valuo of the whole ; Union, according to the census of 1800.— And no small portion of this enormous suin lias been literally wasted i The administration has not known how to | inspire its own agents with a sense of duty, 1 jor to hold them to a rig'd accountability.— It has not known how to husband its re : sources, or to inannge its finances with econ i ojny, with advantage to public service. The | people gave generously, Congress voted lib— i eraliy ample supplied of men and money, but nothing has come of it but an army of suddenly enrichen contractors, who are us- j ! ing.all their influence to prolong the war. * 1 Suppose the thousands of contractors, specu- . latois and swindlers do fatten on the spoil* | df the treasury, are they not sure to be loyal i supporters of the administration and iho , war 7 Mr. Lincoln's military operations have , shown an equal want of administrative ea- j pacity. The responsibility is not to be shift ed from him to the Generals commanding in the field, or to the General-in chief. " Thirty Years Ago.'* The Carlisle Volunteer cop : es the follow lowing advertisement from the Philadelphia. Ledger , and then comments as follows : GEORGE THOMPSON—ANOTHER MEETING-. ; —Thirty years ago Gen. Thompson deliver jed his first Lecture ih the city in the Cov enantors Church, Che: ry St., below E'ev en'h. Ho is now invited by members of the same Church to deliver another address in the same building, which he consents to , do. The meeting will take place next Fri day Evening, the 6th of May, at 8 o'clock Subject—" The Unionists and Copperheads I of England and America." It appears, theref re, that this foreign em issary (who is the employee of the Loyal J Thieves League.) had the impudence to de l'ver a lecture, in which he denounced as I " Copperheads" one half, if not a majority of ihe people of" the Norih. " Thirty years ago" he delivered his first lecture in (he same Cnurch. Exactly ! That was the very time the Abolitionists of this country commenced their assaults upon j the Union. For twenty years they were a despised faction, and were regarded and spoken of as traitors by both Whigs and Democrats. Ilenry Clay, I) miel Webster, Jackson and other ligh's, denounced them as traitors. Their object, boldly avowed, was the dissolution of the Utii >n, and Thomp son (.lie same Englishman who new laciurcs 1 for tnem.) then "aid, 'n his aaeech, that "the dissolution of the American Union must be constantly kept in view, fir tills wn (,p grand object,''' Fir uttering this sentiment I " thirty years ago" in Philadelphia, he was : rotton egged and compelled to lear c t| ie c ;ty ! in disguise. After escaping from Philadelphia he pro j ; ceeded to Boston, when he attempted a-aiu ■ to advocate a dissolution of the Union, but ! Daniel Webster " still lived." and the Eug i li-sh Abolutionist an I Disunionist soon found • even Boston too hot for him, and he was ' glad to escape to England. But now he returns to see his cherished | hope realised. He sees our country reeling ' and staggering like a drunken giant- He ' seea our people cutting each others throats— fathor against son. brother against brother, 1 ; cousin against cousin ; he sees the Abolition- ! ists whom he addressed " thirty vears ao" ' in power and doing the very work he then i recommended'hem to do. And this man Thompson—this English ; ' disunionist—-is the same who, quite recently j I delivered a speech in the II ill of the House. : ' i at the invitation of the Abolition members of Congress ! He was introduced to the au 1 dinnce by Vice President Hamlin, and Presi dent Lincoln " had a scat near the distin ' guished rascal, who had to leave the country I thirty years ag"." Now he is applauded and countenanced i by the President and members of Congrsss < i for his treasonable sayings; and now. in stead of being kicked from one city to anoth er. he dines at the Executive Mansion ! TIE FLORIDAY ROTTEN BOROUGH.— Mr. Lincoln's plan for getting the rot ten-borough vote from the Southern States, by the one tenth system. >s beginning to crop out in | Florida. A f w hundreds of the army hang ers-on, less than a full regiment tri n ruber, 1 met the other day at Jacksonville ; votod themselves a state, and entitled to seats in the Baltimore Convention ; vowed shut their loyalty had cot swerved, and was not likely to, and finished up. of c. >ure, by indorsing Mr. LINCOLN'S re-election. The O'u.stec massacre was incurred direct ly by Mr. LLiohi's eirrt t > secure tms ille gibuiate vote—his effort with the ballots of a handful of nun to counteract three electo r*l votes of a northern slate, possibly to counteract the vote of the wnole E agire State itself in case of thu election going iuto the House. The Biltun >re C invention will havo the opportunity next w.-ok to encourage Mr. LINCOLN in this roiten barjugh swinib by admitting the Jie<*onville qul to seats in the Front-street Taeater, and Mr. LINCOLN in that case, will have a better chance th.n ' ho lias yet had of stirring up a fatal civil war at the North . World. — A M is TAKE,—AN Exchange says : "Charles to the altar ltd the lovely j 4 de, and to her father's home returned again, where, to convey them on their wedding tour. already stood a bbfUiant coach and four When lo ! the gathering shower* at once do seended, clouds roWed on clouds and war ring winds contended ; tb's moves him net but in he hand* his bride, and seats himself enraptured, by her aide, when thu*, to cheer the fair one, I hope we soon shall have a little sun." But she, to whom the weather gave no pain, who heeded not the blast, ncr pattering rain, but most about her future state bethought her, replied, My dear, Fd rother hate a daughter r " Howard the Forger. The Eaglt has a letter supposed to have been written by A ward in the interior of Fort Lafayette. As a specimen of the "dead beat" style, it will excite the riaibies and furnish food for reflection to all who raav be ! i preparing for a trip to the sand atone fort in the harbor : CELL 5,311 SECOND TIER, I FOKT LVI ATKTTE, May 24 1863. $ DEAR EAGLE: —In the languago of the "magnificent." Vcstvali "I am here." I' think I shall stay here, at least till I get out. : Perhaps you were surprised at my audden j de, arture. So was I. But I received a press- j ing invitation from Gen. Dix to come down \ here, which I didn't feel at liberty to decline —so I didn't. Bob Murray brought the in vitation. Bob Murray is United States Mar shal, and he marshaled me the way I nhould go, so I thought it best to go it. Bob is a nice man ; lis has a very taking way with \ him, but I Wouldn't recomend you to culti— | vate his acquaintance. You may have heard j of Fort Lafayette ; it is a great resort of the I friends of the admininistration—over the left. The location of Fort Lafayette is in the water between the Atlantic Ocean and West Point. It is a good site for a marine resi dence, but I havn't seen any marines here It is inaccessible on all s> ies, except the in side. Its out -accessibility is what I most, object to. fB Thejvay you get in is carious, and "may , interest \our reader* who haven't beet. here. You Can't go by a railroad or steamboat,or i horse and buggy. The entrance is effected ina highly military manner, invented I be liere by Gen. D:x, or " some other man " The way of getting nut I have't discovered ye'. When I io, I'd let you know. The people who keep the fort are of the military persuasion ;it is the r f >rte Tuey in >*tly near guns < fore the law. Sixth. —That integrity and economy are demanded at all tunes in the adininiatration of the government, and that in tune of war the want of them is criminal. Seventh —That the right of asylum, except for crime and subject to law, is a recogn zed } nnciple of American libel ly ; that any vm,* (ion of it cannot be overlooked and uuiai not go unreoiiked. Eighth —That the national policy known as the ''Monroe Doctrine." has become a re cognized princtp'e, and that ihe establish me it ot an ami republican government on this continent by any foreign Power cannot be tolerated. Mnth —'Tint the gratitude and support of the nation are due to the !aith£ul soldier* and the earnest leaders of the Lnion artnv and navy for their h roic achievements and deathless valor in defence of our imperilled country and of civil liberty. Tenth —Thai the one term po'icv for the Presidency, adopted by the people, is strength ened by the force of the existing crisis, and should be maintained by constitutional amend ments. Elecenlh. —That the constitution should be so amended that the President and Vice President shall be elected by a direct Tote oi tin* people. Twelfth. —That the question of the recon struction of the rebellion* -date* belong to the people through lln-ir Representatives in Congress and hot the Executive. Thirteenth —That the confiscation of the lands of the rebels and their distribution among the soldiers and actual settlers is a measure of injustice, A Gloomy Picture. Notwithstanding the admiuistration and some of its organs have attacked the papers and telegraph linn, that published the R jgus Proclamation, the following article from the New York Times, a Republican Alrninistra tion journal, gives veni to as great e'espon dency in the cause of tlie Federal armies, as was indicated by the bogus Proclamation.— "1 his article certainly does not present a very glowing picture of suec ss : TWL FEKLISU IN THE SOUTH While it W"ti!d Lie presumptuous jet to affirm that Gen. Grant will soon con.pier h?s road to Richmond, it is certain that the present cam paign will leave one of the great armies ter ribly wot 6ted. The spirit of the two lead er-, arid of the two armies, will make it im possible for Richmond to be either taken or not taken, this summer, without a blow that shall absolutely disable either ths one army or (he othwr. Knowing that this blow must fall, we have a right to inquire which side is best prepared to c dure it. Would it be alike damaging, or alike fatal, in either case '? A great deal has been said by some well meaning sad our sanguine journals about the growing discouragement of thy RubeU. We ar-.- bound to say that we have seen no evidence of it. On the contrary, we do not recollect a time for the last two vears when the Rebel papers, generally, have evinced so • much satisfaction with the spirit of their i people, and such steady coufi fence that thei* ' cause would triumph, as sinoc this year has j opened. Nor has tiila been entirely without reason. The fact that the Southern people have so calmly submitted to the uuprece- I dented measures of the last Rebel Congress the levy en masse, the conversion, or rather j annihilation of the currency, the appropria- > (ion of all crops, present and future, for the ; u-e of the army, say what we may of it, i shows great staunchness, ft is weakness to j call it theeffectof intimidation. N > G >r eminent that tvt-r existed could eTer cow a people, once free, into an absolutely silent submission t( such measures. Wera the*" serious n'scontent, it would be si""o to Qnd expression in some manner, The fsct that , Southern opiniou s-jstains the extraordinary action at Richmond, indicates determination and not despondency. The military events of the last four months " I the ' warting of all attempts on Charleston, | the overthrow of Seymour in Florida, the ' of Ranks in Lous'ana. the bloody stroke at Fort Pillow, the successes on the North Carolina coast, the discomfiture of Steele—have all been calculated to strength- ! en confidence. Ths fact that gold was rising n the North was taken as n proof that our j financial system was breaking down, an l the noise made by our copperheads about division ' in the Union party,and about the brightening ' prospects of the election of McClellan to the ' presidency, also operated as a stimulus.— We are satisfied when this month of May opened, the Southern people generally be leved quite as strongly that 4< the Confeder acy'' would prevail, as we believed it would be broke* df>w. | LOCAL AND ..PERSONAL. AGI-nt for the Democrat— AHIUA GAT, T*J' j has consented to act as our Agent in receiving aacces' r u! est.iblishvnt in bu-1- ncss nt N. 1 ~ is * matter of ain;e rc congratulation •lb It's numerous friend- an 1 acquaintances in this I vicinity. .Merchants, aid others, visiting the Jcitv, j should not fail io drop in and see him. He will be | foot 1 at 505 Broadway—"M Nicholas" Block. Marrie d. ROSS — EVANS. —OB the 6th i*at, at M*. Mit Bimmli'i, by Re v. Luther Peck, Mr. T. L. to Miss Minnie K\an*. Accompanying the above notice WAD a "green back,'' showing '.hat the '.hippy Bride gr„uni—evea while basking in the sweet rays ot the honey-moon, ar.d sweeter sm.les i f his newly made Biide —WM not forg tful of the "small, sweet courtesies of life," toother* lie even remembered the Printer!— And in away, too, that the printer loves to he remember ed. For which the printer can do no le-s than uiake his most profound bow ; and from the very depths of hi* heart, wish Mr. T. L. Itoss d C'o,(he now speaks of the new firm ) a prosperous, psaccful, and per petual partnership. CORTRIGHT—In Meshuppen, May 31st ISO 4. Har riet t.'. youngest daughter of S. J, and S. C. Corv right, aged 2 years, 3 months, and I day. This little bud had scar'ely bloomed, Death laid her in the sileEt tomb J.Slice on the I)-ath ef Jacob D. Plua erfelt who died In Meshoppeu May 6th 14. Darkness broods e'er the home circle now. And oar hearts are filled with gloom ; F-r one whom we loved and cherished here, Has passed to the silent tomb- Stern dire disease with sadden grasp, His manly form laid low And all the aid of human skill, Could not its power forgo. Ashe hade fond friends a last farewell, lie ielt that he must dia; But ere he entered deaths dim vale, Ha fsls his Savior nigh. In sorrow we mourn f >r our brother now, And parents will miss their son ; While the wife with lonely aching heart, Weeps with her little one. Yet we hope ere long to meet again, In a far off world of light ; Secure from parting care, a id pain ; And son's polluting blight Then we'll not murmur aor ootapUia, Death's shaft* none may re; si ; But meekly bow to his behest. Who doeth all things we'd. S. J. S. ITiTTt lIIKIL Ml. rN ODUOE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 330 GREENWICH STREET, New l'oik. G. S. Maiding, h * I, llaiuinel, v L. Harding. j Fanners having butter and other produce to sell i will receive from this firm the highest mark e pri.-e and prompt returns. Mr. L. Harding, one of the members, who reside* i at Nicholson Depot, will receive and atteud to ' shipment of all articles, and if desired will raako 1 advancements of one half market vale at time of j delivery to him. I LADIES ! LARIRS I 1 LADIES u\ i Don't fail to read the advertisement in tais paper, 1 head"! ' IMPORTANT TO FEMALES. I)R. CHE tsSSMAN. of New York; has devyted I the laatthirty years of practice to Female com l plaints His Pills act like a charm. iAey are \ reliable and iaf. X