flit democrat. HARVEY SICKLER, Editor. TUNK.HANNOCK, PA Wednesday. 3lay 30, 1866. FOR GOVERNOR, HOI. HEISTER CIYMEH. OF BERKS. THEJ DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM. The Democracy of Pennsylvania in Convention met, recognizing a crisis in the affairs of the Re public, and esteeming the immediate restoration of the Union paramount to all other issues, do ro •olve : 1. That the States, whereof the people were late ly in rebellion, are integral parts of the Union, and ■re entitled to representation in Congress by men duly elected who bear true faith to the Constitution end Laws, and in oder to vindicate the maxim that taxation without representation is tyranny, such representatives should be forthwith admitted. •J. That the faith of the ReDublic is pledgtd to the payment of the National debt, and Congress should pass all laws necessary tor that purpose. A. That we owe obedience to the Constitution of the United States (including the amendment prohib iting slavery,) and under its provisions will aceord to those emancipated all their rights of person and property. 4 That each State has the exclusive right to regulate the qualifications of its own electors. 5. That the white race alone is entitled to the con ti '. of the Government of the Republic, and we are uv.vril ling to grant to negroes the right t vote. g. That Ihe bold enunciation of the principles of the Constitution and the policy of restoration con > ained in the recent annual message and freedmen's bureau veto message ot President Johnson entitle hiin to the confidence and support of ail who respect the Constitution and love their country. 7" That the nation owes to the brave men of aur j armies aud'navy a delt of lasting gratitude for their heroic service, in defence of the Constit u tion i and the t'moD ; and that while we cherish with i tender afi'cction the memories of the fallen, we j pledge to their widows and orphans the nation's j ire and protection. 8. That we urge upon Congress the duty of equal- t ising the bounties of our stldiers and sailors. Gold is quoted in the yesterday's * papers, at $1,37. The rise is attributed to financial difficulties in Europe. The news from Mexico brings us accounts of the massacre of upwards of j 500-inhabitants of Hermasiilo, by the Lib . erals. Thirteen American residents of thatj town were also murdered. The popular indignation is so great, that the citizens of Sonora, without respect to party, have risen en masse to put a stop to and revenge these atrocities. SAVED IN SPITE OF RADICALISM. —Re- ferring to the fact, that the Committee on Ways and Means have reported in favor ! of reducing taxation So.uol>,UoU, the Brooklyn Eagle* ays: If the Freedmen's Bureabill had passed, the Government w<>uld have needed the j taxes remitted tor its support. The peo ple are under eighty millions obligations lo I President Johnson. Con;reM Cringing to the Cash Applied by a Negro. "George T Downin, Piesidt nt of the ; colored delegation at Washington, has ad dressed a card to their friends in Congress against the report of the Committee on Re construction, passed by the House on the P>th inst., ami which will be considered next week in the Senate, in which he says ttiis report falls heavily on the hopes of the colored man, and disappoints the expecia- t tion of the times, and is altogether far short j of what the best interests ot our country j demands, Amongst other things it is re- j marked there is scarcely a member of the j bouse who voted in favor ol the*proportion, J but who believed that uot only according to but in accordance with the spirit of the Constitution and the principle on which the government is based, the right of every citizen, without regard to complex ion, to have a voice, or representation,w ith every other citizen, is unquestionable, and there is nothing in the Constitution which forbids Congress securing this right unto evwry citizen. When during the history of this has Congress opened its doors for the inter lcrei.ee or presumption of a white man, to have his "card" corsidcred as of para- i mount consequence ? Yet here we have the fact faring Christendom, that the COD i GR "F,S of the United States w ilts under the I X-buke of negroes for Dot doing as their ruperior wisdom indicates. A PLTTTDICTION THAT WILL BE VERIFIED. THAD. SIF.VENS has told the truth for once > in a recent speech ou the Reconstruction imindnccnt, arguing in favor of its speedy adoption, be says : •'Before another Congress shall have as sembled here, and before this can be carried into full effect, there will be no friends of the Union party (disunion be meant— ED )left tp this side of the House to carry it out" God grant that this prediction of the old /sinner may be verified. We have no doubt! but it will. If the American people are to Aovern themselves —if this government : was made for white me# and is to be con- 1 trolled by them—if the laboring classes are not to be enslaved, and degraded to a leve with the negro— if we are to have a Repub ifcc and l'ennsylvanuns are to remain P.enn- j -•Mrtvsnians—then the halls of Congress : ' mitst be cleared of that of niggerdoir,and scion of monarchy—the dis union party. That STEVENS' prediction may come true, is the prayer of every pa triot. I Vet aof the Colorado Bill by the Presi dent. lo the Senate 0/the Uni'ed States: I return to the Senate, in which House it origin at 1 if, the hill which has parsed both Houses of Congress, entit ed, "An act f<>r the admission of the State of Colorado into the Union," with my objec tions to its becoming a law at this lime. First, From the best inf irmation which I have been able to obtain, I do not consider ! the establishment of a State government at present necessary for the welfare of the people of Colorado. Under the existing j territorial government all tlie rights, priv : ileges and interests of the citiz< ns are pro tected and secured. The qualified voters choose their own legislatures and their own local ifficers, and are represented in ; Congress by a delegate of their own se- I lection. They make and execute their own mu nicipal laws, subject only to revision by Congress, an authority not likely to be exercised un ess in extreme or extraordi nary cases. The population is small, souie estimating it so low as twenty-five thousand, while the advocates of the bill reckon the number at from thirty—five thousand to forty thousand. The people are principally recent settlers, many of whom are understood to be ready for re moval to other ftiining districts, beyond the limits of the teiritory, it cireunistan ces shall render them more inviting. © Such a population cannot but find relief from exc-. ssive taxation if the territorial system, which devolves the expenses of; the executive, legislative and judicial .le nartments uj>on the United States, is for the present continued. They cannot but; find the security of person aud pioperty increased by their reliance upon the na tional executive power for the mainte nance of law an * order against -the dis turbance necessarily incident to all newly organized coinmnnitie*. Second. It is not satisfactorily estab lished that a majoiity of the citizens of! Colorado desire or are prepared for an ex- J change of a territorial for a State govern- j ment. In September, 1854, under the an j thority of Congress, an election was law—' fully appointed and held for the purpose) of ascertaining the views uf the people. I Upon this particular question 6,1921 votes were cast, ainl of this number a ma jority of 3,152 was given ajainst the pro posed change. Ju September, 1865, with out any legal authority, the quest oil was) again presented to the people of the tcrri-! Tory, wiih the view of obtaining a rccon- ! sideration of the result of the election held i in compliance with the act of Congress approved March 2lst, 1864. At this election, 5,905 votes wt-ro polled, and a small majority of 155 was given in favor of a State organization It does not seem to tne entirely safe to receive this last mention d icsult, so irregularly obtained to out -w; igh the one which had been le gally obtained in the first election. Reg ularity and conformity to law arc essential [ to the preservation of order and stable gov ; ernment, and should, as far as practicable. : always be observed in the formation of : new stales. Third. The admission of Colorado at this time as a State into the Union, ap pears to me to l-e incompatible with the i public interests of the country. While it is des ruble that territories when suffioient | ly n attired should he organized as States, ( yet tli • spirit of the Coustitution seems to require hat there should bean appr<>xima tion towards equality among the several states comprising the Union. No State can ha*e less or more than two Senators iin Congress. The largest State has a pop ■ tilai' believe that the Hon Heister Ciymer, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania, holds upon all the great principles or public policy views similar to our own, and is a firm supporter of President Johnson, and that i therefore we will support him with uur voices and votes. We learn from the Gazette that the meeting was a great success, and that the club formed at that time is increasing in numbers and influence. The "boys in blue," who fought for the Union, sustain President Johnson, and cannot give their votes to the mock "hero" of the Rumps— j John W. Geary—who is joined with the Radical disunioniats in their revolutionary and reasonable attempts to overthrow the Constitutions. |j| The export of specie to Europe from the port of New York, on Wednesday last, footed up nearly three and one-half millions. This sent the price of gold up a ' little, closing at ISO}. { Local and Personal. ! New Firm aud New Goods.—Mr. Frisk M. Buck has now assjoiated with hiin in business James Fitch ; under the firui of Fitch k Buck ; and io connection with their former stock of family groceries, fruits, fish Ac, they havo roceived aoi opened a fine stock of Dry Goods and Notions, which they propose to sell as cheap as at auy place in town They charge nothing for exhibiting goods, Call and see thein. E, 9. M. mil Esq, of the Seranton l Uguftr, has been placed in nomination by the Democrat!* Convention of the City of Seranton, for the £offlioe of Mayor. This is an excellent selection and will Bo / doubt be ratified by tbe people of this New City at their selection for city officors, which comes off in a few days, A Temperance lecture was delivered at tha M E Church on FriJay night of last week. Tha ■ Lecture was a most admirable one—one of tbe best, if no / ths best we ever listened to. The very slimv atten lance on tbe octas on, surprised us and indie*-* , ted that even the Templars and others who profeas great interest in the cause, are growing apathetic.— • Certainly a man of the speaker's well known cspaci ' ty to interst nd instruct an audionse, should net have been subjected to tbe humiliation of talking. te so maey empty pews. Regard for so estimable and so talented a man, if not sympathy for the caoee h>; advoc • tcs. fhould hare secured him, in this com munity, a crowded bouse. Shame ! A Drunken Revelry was kept np for some days aud nights last week, by several of the young meu in town It being a sort of protracted "spree," and apparently a difficult one to break off, it ran nearly or quite into the edge of the Sabbath of thm week Certain it is, that, if the revellers did not , indolge in a glass or two on that day, they indulged c ; quite lreely in glassy ayes Now, while we eutertain tbe kindliest feelings for these young men. and hope still to see many, if ( not ell of ihem, become sober and respectable citi j ins —ornaments to society—we must declare k tbat , their conduct for the pist few days has been intoler | ably outrageoas, eul disgraceful. Disgraceful, nA only to themselves but to tbe community in whieh they live. Such exhibitions of recklessness, vulgar : it y and_obscenity as can be seen and heard daily in : our streets, and such hideous bowlings as rend the air by night, show, not only a depraved and vicious : mind, on the part of those who do these things, but a lamentably loose aud ruinous suite of public sen ! tiui'nt in our community. i These disgraceful seeues can be stopped and for I the peace, security and good order of the town, they t should be stopped. ;i _ I3ied. I CAIIRY—III Siutibboro, N", Yoa lb. 17thof Hj, Samuel Carey, aged ti6 years. 1 | The de~eael was a well kuown and highly re™ ! spected eitisea for inanv years, of Centremoreland I in this County ; wliera the announcement of his * | death will be heard with regret,by his many frieals I | and acquaintances. Special Notices. . TOP THIEF. . 50 DOLLARS REWARD. p j Stolen from the stable of tbe fnbscriber in North i ! morel ml Township, Wyoming Co. P<„ on the night !of the 28th of May inst., a dark Bay Horse, black * i mane and tail, white spit on the heel of the right I j hind foot, lg hands hiuh, 9 years old. f I The above rew.tr I will be pail for the eppreben * j sion of the hief. secured in any jail of the Common- ! wealth, and the return of the horse, or 925 for the B return of the horse. JAMES D. GALLUP. Northmoreland. May 29tb 18^6. INFORMATION W ANTED Of the whereabouts of John Snivel", who left my r- siJeace, in Falls, Wyoming County, Pa. about the 2(."b East . Is about sft 2 inches high, light com plexion and hair. Had on, whea he ieft, a pair of blu- aoldier-pauts. a gray mixed coat, considrn bly worn, was bare-foot. He is subject to fit* of iosan tity and is feeble minded. Any information in re- * lit ion to hint, by letter or otherwise, will be thank fully received by his father, JAMES C.SNOVE&. Falls, Wyoming Co. Pa. ADMIN ISTRATOR'SJNOTICE. Notice is hereby given that letters of Administra tion on the estate of Joseph S. Vaow, late of Fork ston Township dee'd , hiving been granted to the undersigned ; all iers'>ns indebted to taid estate, are rt-que.-iel to miike immediate payment, and those hiving cla : ms the same will present them duly authenticated for settlement without de lay. JOHN G. SPAULDING, Adm'r. Forkston, Pa , May 16. 1566. Orphans" Court Sale. Notice is hereby given that, in pursuance of an order of the Orphans' Court of Wyoming County,all the right, title and interest of Jacob Flummerfelt in bis life time, late f Meshoppen township, dee'd, in and to all that certain tarin or lot of land situate in Meshoppien township aforesaid, bounded North by lan iof George Fclkir and Jacob Arnts, East by land of James Jennings ; South by land of Andrew Bush and Jacob Decker' an l West by land of Robert Clayton and George Arnts ; containing about one hundred and seveD acres, more or less, will be sold to the highest bidder at public vendue.at the prem ises aboe described, on the 9th day of June, 18gg. at 1 o'clock, P. M. JOHN FLI'MMERFKLT. Adm'r. ERRORS''OF YOUTH. A gentleman who suffered for years from Nervous Debility, Premature De'-hy, and all the effects of i youthful indiscretion, will for the sake of suffering humanity, semi free to ail who need it, the recipe • and directions for making the simple remedy by ■ which be was cured Sufferers wishing to profit by the advertiser's experience, can do so by addressing JOHN B OGDEN, No. 13 Chambers St., New York. vsn2l-lyear.—S M. P. A Co. Orphans' Court Sale. OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE I The undersigned administrators of the Estate of George Rosengrant late of F.aton Township Wyo tiling county and State of Pennsylvania, deceased, will by virtue of an order ami decree of said court expose to public sale, by vendue or out cry on the premises in iviion Township IU Wyoming county on the 48th day of June 1866 iAt 1 o'clock P M oi said day, THLEE \ AL UABUE TRACTS OF LA FC D for farming or mill purposes. One, Containing ninety acres more or less, about 60 acres improved, with a frame dw Hing house,two barns, corn house and apple orchard* ALSO- One other tract, e. ntainiug 25 acres, about II acres improved with frame house, barn and fruit trees thereon. I ALSO. * One other tract, containing nearly 200 acres • bout 80 acr< 8 with two frame dwellings, frame hara and shed, one saw-mill, out-buildings, fruit trees Ac. thereon. TERMS or SALE —One tenth of one fourth of the I purchase money to be paid down at time of sale, one ' fourth (excluding thojoue tenth aforesaid) at time of ' confirmation absolute, and tue balance ia eneyear from conformation absolute, with interest frous time of conformation nisi, to be secured on the premises. LYSANDER HARDING, ) A 0 f CHARITY ROSENGRANT. GEORGE ROSENGRANT, Doc'i. Katen, May 29th, 1866.