Term of Puhlioatlott. I J a-JtStsV. ' ' V ' ! l , , ' V ?&stsf". . 1 V A,sW tun Wnarji RtarvnttcA. Oflle la Mayan' bulldlni.eMtof the Court House, Is pub lished mrt Wedneaday moraine;, at par tiiun, ta DT.ifii or If not paid with U toe year. All aaiaweriltllcei uvin be settle r.llr. fa mt Will t Mnt oat of the HUU unless plttl for ih adVancC, and U such sultarrlptlons will Invariably ba discon tinued at the expiration1 of tile time for Which ,m3iPnaca'tlmtobJtaofliwlorilnfrn Interna aro respoctrully aulli-llnl. To ensure attention furors of this kind mint Invariably he accompauied by tha name of theaiilhnr, not for pdblli'ntlon, hut as aiiamntvaanlnst I insult Ion. All letters p"rtalnln to husineaanf tut olBce tauat be addrMSsed to the Eilllor THI t'OPPKRHCtle. Of all tha factious men we're teen, Existing now or long since dead. Koona was ever known so mean As blin we call a Copperhead ; A draft evaillna Copperhead j A rebtd aiding Copperhead A (rowllnii alamloriug, Hoowllni, panderinif. Vicious States' rights Copperhead t Plant blm tha decencies of life And all Ita courtesies, have tied He lives In fretful, factious strife ; A testy, touchy Copperhead t A negro fearing Copperhead i A rebel cheering Copperhead ; -Aa nnlearned, unllcked, Oft spurned, oft whipped, Doughfaced, cringing Copperhead. When "Save the Union," was Hie cry, And thousands of the Union bled, The Nation's right he did deny To save Itsi'll-thls Copperhead ; A Hon of Liberty Copperhead ; A Ooldon Olrclo Copperhead ; A scheming, lying, Hcreamlng, Hying, Mean, Canadian Copperhead. When Southern miscreants designed Thilr hnlplsiiftirtson ifs' hi n l to shed. And Llhby 1'rlson undermined : Who then approved t The Copperhead ; The soldier shooting Copperhead ; The patriot hooting Copperhead ; Tha war abusing, Aid refusing, Crime excusing Copperhead. WhosrofM at Pillows bloody fray, And Andursonvtlle's murdered duod ; Who victory 's hour did long delay T Tha traitorous, treacherous Copperhead : The crime creating Copperhead ; Assassinating Copperhead ; The strife exciting, Wrath Inviting. Death delighting Copperhead, WTien widows mourned their lonely lot, And orphan children wept their dead Who said their Jnst deserts they got. The Northern rebel Copperhead j Tht widow libelling Copperhead The grief deriding Copperhead ; The false conspiring, City Bring, lioolh admiring Copperhead, Kor woman's grlof, nor orphan's'tears, Nor even a Nation's honored dead, Arc sacred from the Jibes and sneers Uf every brutal Copperhead; Koch church aspersing Copperhead ; Each preacher cursing Copperhead ; Each Union hating, War creating, Repudiating Copperhead. Crawl to yonr dunghill, viper crawl ; For General Orant with conquering tread, Marches to crush the thing men call In politics, a Copperhead ; A modern I'opiwrhead : A vlln fanatic Copperhead ; A murder Jeorlng, Widow sneering, Assassin cheering Copperhead. fthe Wttjjttttburg $qmbUciut. taximu uovt:Knt:T BOMD. In tlie early part of week before last A resolution was introduced into the House of representatives by Mr, Cobb, requesting tbo Committee of Ways and Means to immediately report a bill taxing Government bonds ten per cent, per annum on the amount of in terest hereafter paid. This measure was passed and the Committee have reported the bill Q ordered by, the House, but in so doing they declare that "they act in obedience to the pos itive directions of the House, and con trary to their own best judgenfcnt. They reserve to themselves their rights, aa members of the House, to oppose in every possible way the adoption of a measure which they regard as hostile to the public interest and injurious to the national character, a bill to au thorize an internal tax on the interest of the bonds and other securities of the United States." We give below the text of the bill, in order that our read ers may be fully acquainted with a measure which, if it should become a Jaw, will bo followed by important results: Be it enacted, etc. That from and after the passage of this act, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a tax of ten per centum on the amount of inter est hereafter due and payable on all the bonds and other securities of the United States. To secure the collec tion of said tax, the amount of interest hereafter paid on any bonds or other securities of the United States, bearing interest at six per centum, shall be at the rate of only five-tenths per centum shall, be at the rate of only 4 5-10 per centum , and if bearing interest at the rate of three per centum shall be at the rate of only 2 7-10 per centum per annum. higher rate of interest than is here prescribed 6hall be paid on any bond or other security or the United States now outstanding or au thorised to be issued. All conditions of any such bonds or other security, and all laws and parts of law to the '-contrary, are hereby repealed. c On Thursday of last week, Mr. Butler offered a bill which advocates the tax of ten per cent, on the interest of Government bonds, but suspends the existing income tax of five per cent a fax aa it applies to the interest de rived from the bonds. We doubt whether either of these bills will pass both Houses, but as the decision is at present uncertain, the 'effect is injorioos to the credit of the Government, checking the eagerness , (to invest in national securities which ' mrrHalisti have lately manifested, and 'pausing a decline in prices of bonds. - II- bjM)MMMIaa Itmm . . .s llf , Til' I til Ml I II iiwiihii JAS. E. SAYERS, VOL. XII. OE.GBA3n' AWl-Tnr. WATJfEaJUtJBO nc.sr.vutu." IsmiU on THIS r-tCTClSl ASD THK 0 TUtSt It Is-becoming more: Wendell Phillips It evident that tile Kadi, not yet .alluded witb cul, Jealous of the well Grant. For heaven's established fame ofi'nsuK what would you Urunt, are dom-i Imn imvetha wrelehOmiitl best to undermine his dot II isn.lhei aten dirt rcputution. UutH re- enoug'if llusn't he told c. iilly thesa hmhuIis llex-noughT llium'the werecovert. Within a sum;ieuily proved him few week, however, sirll the dlrilest tool of t.'ie "I'rlbuiie" has ad- the dirtiest parly that milled Into ittcoiuiniu over disgraced this a num!Mrol'undlgui- earth? Ii ihiitdnej not cdriiiut it ins mil.tii-quai'iy him for rrcji-ryr.-u;iUitloii, whue the J. ntlal nominee of the lust number of ma -An- l'lillllps parly, what a-ti- . Slavery Htiuidard" mount ol mental or prints In n m l coil- moral nastlnea would splouous place an aril-dolt?Hileanger,Feb. cle from an olMeura pa- M, 1 per In Missouri, whU'h . con iniliH un open elmriie agalnit Uen. Orant s . private eliuraeter, txt gross, In faet to lie prin ted In any decent news pnper. iMeiiHttiigor, of May 29, in the enrrent discus- We cannot Imagine' slonoi (tneral Grant's howanv man of houor p tllticnl r.datlons, Deiu nblesentlini'iitseanjus oerallc journals are a-tify I lie viwlllatlng, lllUHC'l Bliei'Ittloi unit- ni'iuui nnn unniin- cr than iutereHtcd par- ous course of Grant. tii-immiN . licinocraU PiHirilmnthasput him arequlte tattiitled with self Into the hands of Ueiierai I mint numn ." iiiiiuiniiiiiii mi'i nr niu tor. and have so much find Ita very hard and eoiitldi'nce In his poll- exacting master. All ties that they do not fret the frankness of the thcmHelveHtnlouiicoiii soldier has been lost in tortuble curiosity res- the trickery of the poll peetliig him. They are tlelan, Messenger Feb nsculiu as Omi. Grant as, iijjj, himself, not being yell reaily to make a n iiul nation fur the I'residen ey, lint assureil that tho ll.l.i;STIllol'H l.'ONSIiltV ATIVKWlLHir.il will not sochiingii lilsprlncipli'S between this an I next year as to impair the eonfl'lenee tmy now feci In hlm.-i.Mcsscii-ger, Aug, U, lW. Theseextracts! Who was responsible show lien, i Irani to be u for this refusal lo ex ilian of broad, 1 benil change prisoners, nnd and national views. for the eonstqiU'iit li'ir iiiiil In favor of settling rors of Andersoiivlllef Hie evils of the war by Thitlsniiesllnn which amnesty. Ills policy Is natumlly recurs loeve-a- far as posslbln from'ry one on the instant, thenarrow, bigoted, nnd It can be re.idlly an sectional one proposed awered. in the ranks by Congris uml tlie:.,fthet'nlon army there llndical party proper.'wus only one man wii h li. ..u iiin im it imssible nsnffl 'lent la k of hit f ir Nucha man to he the inanity lo thenntnor favorite ot i lie Itndlcals ol so murderous a poll r,.niw. truiiitnv9 llnt'cv. end thnt men was he is not. Indications, linncm! U. H. Orunt. fromOouuressliinal lea iMauengcr, July 1, ISO. ders and prominent - ..r tiio1 Hadical sentiment off the country, unmistak ably point to chase as inociiniliniueoi iniu io- tiri s!. We beg to re mind conservative Ho- puhllciius wlio ure so anxious for Gran I's nomination, Ih it no na tional Convention ein budyingthn oiposltlon lo ilHinoeracv. can convene in which the Hi l Icais will not pre dominate nnd have the nower to dictate the candidate nnd the pint form. The past expe., rlenceof these conven tions should oonvime. them of this. We do not hesltnte tol" Oen. Oranl was unan predict then that It Imously nominated by tl.-n. Grant Is a eandl. the Chicago Convention date for the Prnslilency. last week. The smok it will beas theeiindl- lug hero, like "poor old ilntnofthe conservative dog Tmy," will meet sentiment of the coun- hlsdoom bv being found trv.i Messenger, Dec. 4, In bud company. Mes lsiiT. sengcr, Slay U, Tlienlwve extracts, clipped from the eilitwinl column of the Waynesburg 31esengr, were probably from the same pen, that paper being under its present control during tho time inclu ded. It must be confessed that it lias offered its readers a mixed dish in the last few months, but the illustration is fair of the change that came over the spirit of Democracy's dreams with the nomination of the "illustrious Conser vative soldier" by the Republicans. Here vou have it in black and white, that all they required was Grant's willingness and they would have run him on any platform. Of conrae, poor fellows, we don't blame them for denouncing him to-day. We trust our readers will not fail to read the left hand column to their Democratic neighbors, and it won't hurt to read the right hand column either, as evi dence of the amount of confidence they can place in the teachings of our "hand some" neighbor. Do that, will you ! TIIBEATESIXG. Fcndlutoniaus, before the New York Convention, knowing well how popu lar rascality is with the Democratic party, threatened the bondlwlders of the party without absolute repudiation unless they acceded to their demand for paper money expansion. This ac counts for that plauk in their plat form and explains away all doubt that the ultimate end of the scheme is ruin. They knew they could command the same force on either issue, yet if they roped in the bondholders on the expan sion movement, their prospect would be better for success in the fall. Once successful it will be an easy matter to carry out the repudiation policy. Is there any one hardy "enough to vote for the greenback issue with these threats staring him in the face ? GREEXE COrifTT DEMOCRATS HEAB In looking over our file of Mcsscn f(Two notice a number of articles ap. plicable to the times, several of which we publish on this page. Had we continued our search, enough might have been found to make our readers think General Grant the candidate of the Democrats for the Presidency, and all their recent charges against him concerning the exchange of prisoners and bis political sentiments false. It is hoped our Democratic readers, (and we have quite a large constituency of that faith between those who pay and they who tttal their reading,) will see the consistency of their county organ .andguagc their faith accordingly, FIHMSES8 IN THE MOHT AS 0()D OIVE8 C8 TO SEE TIlK WAYNESBUKG. BLAIR AMD REVJLUri-.lt. Gon. Frank P. Blair U tha Dinm- cratio nominee for Vice-President. Gen. Blair wm a Republican, but lias, for the last two of three years, been a bitter Copiierhead. Tho following letter, of verv recent d.tte, embodies Gen. Blair's bid for the li umr he lias achieved, It will bo seen that he takes ground distinctly lor overturn ing the new State Governments at the South bv force and violence. A Demo cratic "President elect" is to treat those governments as nullities, em ploy the Army to overthrow them, and allow others to bo set up wherein none but W hites ure to have any voice. And then Congress is to be "recon structed" accordingly. Hear him s From The World of Julys. OEN. FRANK P. lH.AIH DEFINES II 19 POSITION. Washington, June 30. Col. Jan. 0. Iiroadhcad. Dear Colonel: In renlv to vour inquiries I beg leave to say that I leave to you to determine, on consul tation with my friends from Missouri, whether my name shall be presented to the Democratic Convention, nnd to submit the following, as what I con sider the real and only issue in this contest: The Reconstruction policy of the Radicals will be complete lie lb re the next election; the btates, so long excluded, will hive bacn admitted; nuo-ro s 11 Urine csaahlisheu. and the carpet-bagger installed iu their seats in both brandies ot Congress. I here is no possibility of cliairgintlie polit ical character of the Senate, even li'tlie Democrats should elect tiieir Pi cedent and a majority of the popular branch of Congress. W'e cannot, therefore, undo the Radical plan of Reconstruc tion by Congressional action ; the Sen ate will continue a bar to its repeal. Must wesnhmit to it? How can it be overthrown ? It can only be over thrown by the authority of the Kxecu tive, who is sworn to maintain the Constitution, and who will (ail to do his duty if he allows the Constitution to perish under a series of Congress ional enactments which are in palpa ble violation of its fundanientiil principles. If the President elected by the Democracy en Ibices or permits others to enforce these Reconstruction acts, the Radicals, by the accession of 20 spurious Senators and 50 Represent atives, will control both branches of Congress, and his administration will he as powerless as the present one of Mr. Johnson. There is but one way to restore the Government and the Constitution, and that is for the 1'resident elect to declare these acts null and void, compel the army to tndo iU usurpations at the South, disperse the carpet-bag Stale Govern ments, allow tlie White people to reor ganize their own governments, and elect Senators and Representatives. The House ot Representatives will contain a majority of Democrats from the rsorth, and they will admit the Kcp resentatives elected by the White peo ple of the South, and with the coope ration of the President, it will not be difficult to compel the Senate to sub mit once more to the obligations ot the Constitution. It will not be able to withstand the public judgment, if dis tinctly invoked and clenrlv cxnressGil on this fundamental issue, anil it is the sure way to avoid all future strife to put this issue plainly to the coun try. I repeat that this is the real and only question which wa should allow to control us: Shall we submit to the usurpations by which the Government has been overthrown, or shall we ex ert ourselves for its full and complete restoration? It is idle to talk of bonds, greenbacks, gold, the public faith, and the public credit. What can a Democratic President do in re gard to any of these, with a Congress in both branches controlled by the carpet-baggers and their allies? lie will bo powerless to stop the supplies by which idle negroes are organized into political clubs by which an army is maintained to protect these vaga bonds in their outrages upon the ballot. These, and things like these, eat up the revenues and resources ot the Govern ment and destroy its credit, make the difference between gold and green backs. We must restore the Consti tution before wo can restore the fi nances, and to do this we must have a President who will execute the will of the people by trampling into dust the usurpations of Congress, known as the Reconstruction acts. 1 wish to stand before the Convention upon this issue, nut it is one which embraces every thing else that is of value in its large and comprehensive results. It is the one thing that includes all that is worth a contest, and without it there is nothing that gives dignity, honpr, or value to the struggle. - Yonr friend, Frank P. Blair. Americans I if vou want another Civil War inaugurated, vote tho Blair ticket! He tells you just how he will set it going. ' L The effect on tho money market of toe repudiation l'Jattorm was imme diate and significant. . Gold rose to 1 41, and Goverment Saouritiesdeoli oed one per cent. A tremor went through business circles when the action of the Convention on the Platform became known. The Otlumwa CburUr says that a woman in that city has been fined and aanf. in iail "Cnr rJaimlner Inkai nur'i Iwife and notting with him unlawfully.' PKNNA.. WEDNESDAY. JULY, 22, 1863. tml.HT'S .LtEOSil win i cor liie. Oen. Grout has been repeatedly e' ared with an extravagant waste of life in the cotr I art, ot lus catnpaitriis. ami particularly in that one which re sulted in the overthrow of Lee's army. But it is an interctiiig nad Instructive fact that the (ii-nialties incurred by the Army of the Potomac during its ca reer from Bull Run up to tlie failure of the Mine Rim campaign, at the end of 18G-J (a period in which, iiotwith stamliii the partial victories of Antic- tain iiml uettvsburg, it gained no sub stantial success over its hardy and persistent antagonist), were greatly in excess of those incurred by it while under Grunt's immediate command. Tlia only satisfactory recompense for the loss of life incurro I in warfare is victory, fuilowed by the triumph of the cause for which war is undertaken. Considered in the light of this princi ple, and not forgetting that Grunt was in command of all the armies, and therefore could not regulate details for any of them, the following carefully prepared statement, drawn from ofll cial sources, ought to put an end to the charge of butchery and needless wttsteot life so unjustly made against the greatest as well as the most hu mane general of his time : LQ3.SEI BEFORE GRANT TOOK COMMAND, H Hull Kail Hall's lliuil' Orttliwviilu... Yorntowii waim:nj:;u.4 Hanover Coui-t-llou KairOagH ist 2:1 7 VII 71 i I no 1,1111 2JU :t7 071 M m 411 1,0.71 1, Stum's raid loun.i trij Anuy of me Colooiaj... Sevi-u days irom .Meonan 161 Icsvilte to tile 1'jloiiiacj 1.MJI Jill II' tin 7.7W 5.951; 11219 611 Moul.i Mountain CrHtunt'm s liap Haroor's Keriy Alltlet.illl Mlu-puer ixtoWilllll'l t ill' suit Kreaenu.i4our4 Oetlyslmi'g Heconl Hull Run Cam paigu CliHiiuellorsvllle limii.ly tttutl'tii iiiiU re treat norlliwir 1 l,i 4(4 J, It J. tl.llil l II,!! 117H1 I, )ll UloJ l SO 1.JH I1I7 II, 111 22 J 4 irr !Hi 1.1 ll! D.l'll a,n li,; r.i 8.w 17,0 m a.iw ii,i7j 1M SOW 1..00. i;ii)7 1UI 71) 100 ; im SK) iir) lmio Pur.-mit to Itappaliuu-j llO'.'K M Retr.int on Waiiliu;ton U'ipiananuoi;K million.. Mine Run KIuhco IK) tit luu Totals ' lii.lli hii.hu n.iwHulls AFTER QUANT TOOK COMMANn. r. I a i 0,781 NAMES OF BATTLES. Wilderness S,'i 11V.18 Hp'jtlij Ivuula unu North ,:) 11.0-9 n.ivi 9,i5 5.11 i 4.I04 6,000 4,111 a.irc l,n 1.201 i,inw 5,770 tooo 1,'XW 1.009 S.'JW 9.0l! 1,705 U.'IU l,li S,1M . Will 2,1'jl! iu, i.'tru; 400 8,500 311 l'li aiiiiii Cold Harbor Petersburg Welilon Uoad eetersburu .Mine 606; a, HI 1,1111 Deep ltotlotn anil North of .luinos lltver Keur I'etersbiirg, Aug Is, 21 Near lt-utu's Hlatlou, 1.U10 J.1W 4,176 1,7 VI Aug. t Ciiapin's Farm, Aug 2-... Hulcller's Run. Out. 27... 117 111 1.3a 2T2 III' 7 1,1117 l.Ofl'J l,iW J.i-ri iiM "(ii'l m Second Hatelier's Run, February 0 Fort Hteii'linnn .. 1711 Hatelier's Run mid l-'lvu Forks, Mar. a) to Ap. n. Assault ou lVtenljiirg,' April x Denienvllle I,0OI ii) 4,000 700 75o Karm Ilia ami 11 1 g It linage 50 Otttls....... ......lll,im!lM,lV!'2,4l I0ll,.iol During the battle of Bull Uun, -McClellan's mijveiiient to Richmond, Pope's retreat to Vushington, the cam paigns of Antietain, Fredericksburg, Chaucellorsville, Gettysburg, and Mine Uun, with the various inarches and counter marches between the Iiapidan and Washington, not count ing operations in the Valley, nor the cavalry raids, tho Army of the Poto mac lost, first and last, 1G,145 killed, 80,063 wounded, 44,100 missing, or an aggregUc of 144,118 hors de com bat! Of these, 52,01)G were lost under MeClcllan, tho most cautious nnd the most unfortunate commander the army ever had. It must be said of these losses, that while they resulted in holding the rebel army in check, yet by having correspondingly lowered the efficiency of the arivy, they contributed indirect ly but largely to excess of loss inctircd during the final campaign. Notwith standing this fact, and the essential change in the nature of the fight ing, due to. tho persistency with which the rebel General covered his men by entrenchments before giv ing battle, the aggregate los9 of the forces acting under Grant's immediate command (not counting operations in the Shenandoah Valley they being fairly offset by those of 13anks,Shields, Milroy, Kelly, and others), during the overland campaign, from the Iiapidan to Petersburg, with the siege of Peters burg, and all the battles incident there to, up to tho final surrender of Lee at Appomattox Court House, was 13,001 killed, GG,452 wounded, 26,933 miss ing aggregate, 100,501. , From this it is evident that tho Ar my of the James lost nearly 40,000 fewer men after Grant took command than they lost before that time. The contrast between the captures made and advantages gained in the two periods is still more striking, but needs no illustration. Aew York Sun. Na tvnthinluai. The Democratic papers say "there is no enthusiasm for Grant" It is very seldom we have any enthusiasm over a certainty. - Why should . thero be? Euthnsiasm implies doubt, ditSculty.a contest, now can people be enthusi astio about a certai nty ? Fancy a set of men eettine up at daybreak to irive three cheers for tlie coming sunrise I If the Democrats that made a nomina tion at New York gave us some pros pect tor a fight, there would he eothu siasasm, andjilenty of it But while half of tha party disposed to aban don its principle",' surrender at dis cretion, what is the use of ling enthu siastic. " ' ' ' I Z 4 NAME1 OF D.VTTI.ES. & i i z r HIOIIT. tiiltoln: HOYS I BI.UK. Tbo following stirrin? ndddrcss has been issued by the Soldiers' ltepublic an organization of this State,' which lias ulrearty commenced its lalmrs, and will be heard from in due time : IlKADQUlKrKKS AoLntKlts' & SlUnuS' 1 Surii C4,Tint. m , HIS Uhkmi;tSt ' f.ULAD: l.rilli, July li, 18U3. ) Comrades: When the rebel arm ies were overthrown and the rebel lead ers forgiven by our magnanimous Llnet, the whole world wondered at the generosity which pardoned meu guilty of so great a crime. The least wo expected wa9 that the Gov ernment for which we had fought, nnd for which 9n inatlv had tiven up their lives, was secured against the possibil ity of another conspiracy. Jiut warn ci'l by history and taugfit by our own experience among the tho misguided people ol the south, we, maintained our organizations, and now, in the forefront of another peril congratulate ourselves upon the nisdnni of that de? cission. bo thoroughly hnve our mil iary brothers re-uilitcd themselves, that only a few who wore tlie Union blue can be induced to join the ranks of the Rebel democracy. Our camps extend cast and west, from the Atlan tic to the Pacilicj and there is not a veteran who does not realize that the mblic danger mav once more call lim to the field, 'flic alarming spec- taelu of a formal combination between the two great columns of treason the rebel army of the South and the rebel sympathizers of tlie rorUi is the living proof of great impending calamities. These desperate men the one side still vaunting their treason against the country, and the other still oi lasting oi t lie uiu unu eoniioii ex tended to them profess to be confi dent of success in tho nniiroacliiiig election. The animosity they bore to our beloved Commander-in-Chief now the candidate of the great Repub lican party survive the hollow grat itude with which they bailed his lib eral terms of pence ; and now, remem bering only that he struck them in the field, and coldly forgetting how he forgave their great oifciiee, they nre toiling; with superhuman energy to defeat him for the Presidency, and to in that high ofhee a lit successor ot its present guilty occupant Their ha tred of Grant extends to nil our hero ic leaders with one or to exceptions. The only offense of these accomplish ed soldiers is their fidelity to the conn try for which they fought. Gen. George If. Thomas in Tennessee, Gen. rwln McDowell in Jli89ippi, Uen. George G. Meade in Georgia, Gen. Canby, in South Carolina) nnd Gen. IteyuoliU in lexas, with their prede cessors, Sheridan Sickles, Pope, Swayne nfid Mower, are proscribed and slandered like common felons, while every Union man in the South black nnd white, is suhjected to incon ceivable cruelty and oppression. This wholesale mnlevoleuce, looking direct ly to the restoration of tho relief gov ernment, tearthes lis not only the wis dom and justice of our organization, out invokes us to renewed efforts in fa vor of Grant and Colfax, the standard bearers of the Republican party, nnd fir our gallant comrades, Hartranft and Campbell, our standard bearers in tlie State contest. The fundamental ideas of this rcliel combination are that nothing has liccu gained by the success of our arms, but that everything has been lost, lo for get the sanctified dead, to ignore and outrage the gallant living, and to re member and reward those only whose crimes in nnv other nation would have been punished by death or con fisKttion. is the insnirin? motive of our adversaries. What American sol dier docs not feel the insult ? What American citizen does not burn to re sent it? Instead of cordially submit ting to the laws passed by overwhel ming Congressional majorities, and carried into effect for the grand pur pose of reorganizing tho South upon the basis of equal justice and ctial righti", our recent adversaries ojicnly threaten a new resort to arms. . At no period iu the rebellion hnvo they been at once so defiant and so cruel. United iu antagonism to the laws, to the national credit, to the na tional current?, to the public peace. aud to those great principles for which we contended, and succeeded in main taining, they coolly appeal to the peo ple and ask a verdict in favor or their incredible crimes. : 8peaking now for the returned volunteers of Pennsylva nia, who were disfranchised by tlie Democracy, .wo solemnly renew our devotion to our beloved country, and assert, not simply our readiness to support our candidate; at the ballot- box, but our determination, at all times, to march to our Government's defence against her enemies. i ... , Bv order of the Committee, 'Cuas. H.T. CotxiS, Chairman. A. L. R ess ELL, Secretory. It is said that there are ao many children io Indiana named aftcrSchuy- f n.i".. .l.-i .11 tketnni-CUttora in ler Vyoiiaiij uiu ; tha State ke?p gravestones on hand carvdV'flaered t6 the memory or Schuyler tix 1 157 the patronvmio in -the, blank apace when ue orycr js'"' ' .- : ' ' , . i kv senisMl IB Mfth ' WJo"r "7 a : : of the Jlousea, na paswu ww iuv Vlding imtt DOIIB , in nm uuui iros States shall participate in the approach ing presidential electioi,' except such as shall previously have reconstructed their govormeutsi :l:t.:udi EDITOR AND 1'UIiLlSHER. NO. G. lit A Mi P. I1LAIH, JH. Frank B. Blair, Jr., is selected as the Dcniocratic candidate for Vice Presidency, to balance Seymour upon tlm same priuciplu that our forefath ers in inrrylng their grain to mill, having put the grain into 0110 end of n sack, lound it necessary, to keep it from sliding off, to put a stone into the other. .Seymour, with his peace record, Is the grain, nnd Blair, with his i tr record, is the stone. Seymour represents tho North-East, and Blair the Sout'i-West. Seymour represents the men who didn't fight, aud Blair represents the uun who fought, but were sorry for it. Not to leave the figure Incomplete, the ass that carries the sack is the Democratic parly. Frank P. Blair, Jr., has a record much more national and conspicuous than seymour. rrann r. liiair, jr., was bom at Lexington, Kv., Feb. 9, 1821, was educated at Princeton Col lege, N. J., ami rein ivtng to St. Louis, adopted tho profession of the law. Entering upon political life, be became a leader of the Free Labor or Eman cipation party of Missouri. He serv ed as a private in tho Mexican war, In 1848 he sustained Van Buren and the Free Soil party, opposing the ex tension of slavery into the Territories, and advocating its abolition iu Mis soiiri. Iu 1852 he was elected from St. Louis County to the legislature ol Missouri as an abolitionist, re-elec ted in 1854, returned to Congress in 1850, edited The Missouri Democrat, a Kuilicul Republican paper, and con tinued in Congress until the outbreak of the R"bellion, and was Chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs. Entering tho nnny in 1801, as Col onel ot voluute'-TS, lie was soon after appointed a Brigadier Genera! by President Lincoln. II divided his services between Congress nnd th? army to the great disgust of his pres ent political u.-S'iciates, who tried hard to have him either deprived of his seat in Congress or of his commission iu the army. He served with average credit in some of the earlier campaigns of Grant and Sherman, commanded a division of MoPhnrson's corns in May, 1802, and was appointed aMnjor-Gen-end late in tho same year, resigning his seat in the XXXVIIIth Con gress to devote his entire time to the command, but by the action of the House subsequently the sent was as assigned to his contestant, Samuel Knox. The Democratic party stead ily reviled him' as a civilian general, or military poli man, indebted for liis position to political favoritism. After MePherson s assignment to tho Army of the Tennessee, Oen. Blair succeeded to the command of the 17th Army Corps, formerly Mcpherson's, ami continued to command it with credit during Shermans march to the sea, and in the subsequent march to Rich mond. In 1800 he was appointed by President Johnson Collector of Cus toms for the port of St. Louis. To ward tho latter days of President Lin coln's adiiiinistrat'.oii the Blair family fell into disfavor with tho Republican party, who, at their Convention in Baltimore, requested tho removal of Montgomery Blair from the Cabi net. Since then Frank P. Blair and the rest of the family have ranked ns Conservatives or "soured Radicals'' and supporters of reconstruction on the rebel basis. The grist which the Democratic parfy is carrying to the mill is not Blair but Seymour. Tri bune. W II IT P. NIX'S UOVCKX.IfEXT. There is nothing which can raise as much indignation iu the breast of a Democrat ns to tell him that the Radi cal party is in favor of negroes voting and holding office. The masses do not know thnt in l.onisinna at the recent election, the Democratic candidate for Governor was a negro, nnd was sup ported by the entire party in that State. In many Northern States negro suffrage, with a property qual ification, was established by the Dem ocratic party when it held power. The great idea of this being a white man's goverment, has become a portion of the regular sensational cry of the Democracy, and on every occasion we nre reminded of the fact that only white men must rule this land. We have alwavs contended that if black men are to be counted in our represent ative ratio then should they be allow ed to vo(c. This organization of allow ing tho negro to count one in appor tioning our members of Congress, and then allowing a few hundred white men fo do the voting of thousands' is a part of a white man's goverment that wc do not admire. HEW TWM "Syracuse, July 8, At the after noon session of tho Republican Stats Convention, General John Cochrane was made permanent President ' Ad informal ballot for candidate for Gov ernor resulted, John A. Griswold, 217: ww l- A . il. T Morace ureeiey, ao; oicwun u. Woodford,' 46. Tho nomination of Mr.'GriswoM was then made nnini- ' PbesIdest Jonraox as a bid for the Presidential nomination from the 'Democratic Conventionissued en Fri day week before last hia long talked of proclamation of Universal amnesty for all acta done during the late civel war. No exceptions are made whatever' save in cacs where the party is now coder proseciitiori.for some offence before a Vofinm of AdvertiWarf 1SI Will. 1 A nmfnHimi InaurtMl At SI 86 BAT MttATV siiuareforsseh lultluaal Inwirtloni (trn llns f.r lsa nMhls tvn.1 Minntri a snusr!. All two, . . t , . 1..... ... I.u,. .nlU MIS Btf (lent ail vpMisi-'nit'Uts to. bo paid for In sdvsnoe. lit'HI.nuw Mrrii'mei nnuor me mna ui news will b I'liftritMl InvMlstiljr IS eestua Una ror fiu'ii insertion. . A liberal ilwlui'tlon mads to person! tdTrtlj Inn br tlm iiiini tcr, hnlf-yiiir or yenr. Special notli-rsrlim-Ki'd uno-liall more than rcaular t. VrrtlMMll.-lllx. , , j ' .ton iutvTiMnnf evervltintl In Plain ana Fan cy colon; ITiin.l-blllss, Blsnka,rari)s Parnptjletl At:, ni ev.-ry variety aim style, printed at tlif liortit notice. The Rkpubi.ican ornca ha list been re-ntled, an.I every tiling in ina i-rins-Inir line can ba exernted In tha moat artistic in;innorand at tha loweat rales. non.tTio Htm at m, A volume of Hrrafto ScVtifofJr'a' political speeches since 1861. would be almost as good a Republican campaign document as the biography of Grant.' To insure his overwhelming defeat Id every Northorn Stnte it is only hecea sary to let tlm people fully understand' Ins position during the war. fortu nately his record cannot be concealed for Mr. Seymour, though not a brave man, has spoken boldly enough,' . He was outspoken in defence cf the rebellion, because lie sincerely belieV ed that it would succeed. He asserted so often that the North could neye'r subdue the South that he convinced' himself that all the victories of Grant and Sherman were inconsequential bat' ties, which only helped to prolong the war. in Ins own wurtis, the only practical question was this "Shall we compromise after war, or compromise without war? In loOtf hisoroakings of defeat were incessant, and' he drew a fearful picture of the ruin of the North by the war, at the very moment that Lee was being whipped at Gettys burg, and Grant was entering Vicks burg. It was to stop the wicked wa -that he did his best to interfere witli the drnfl, assuring the New York riot ers that ho had sent his Adjutant General to Washington to have, it stopped, and telling the mob that it should lie satisfied. It would not do, of course, to send men to the army, when Lec was invading the North'. His admiration of the South Was so excessive that when the rebel Consti tution was made ut Montgomery, ha declared : "It is better than ourown Why not obviate all difficulty by1 adopting it 1" Astounding as this may seem, it is truly w'lmt Mr.' Sey mour said. If the American people could elect to the Presidency a' rnUtf who wanted to exchange the Constitu tion of the United States for the bas tard charter of a foul rebellion, we should tliinl; the country deserved all the plagues of Egypt. Make Horatio seymours record known. Keep it liefore the people.. The Republican party can save it&lf the trouble of argument by simply stating the facts. iJ7a W. From the Wnynestinrg MftMcniecr, Ann. 11, ISB.' EXCuUftR or pnisiosjRiiv-oix. utri.tn-a rkpout. Nkw YortK,' August?'. Tho 2W6 une publishes Gen. Butler's report, as Commissioner of Exchange, during a portion of tho rebellion, from which it appears that in December, 1863, he found the Corrfedffrate Generals am ions to exchange man for nirfa, but the Confederate Government refused to treat with Gen. Butler on the ground that ho commanded negro troops. Notification totliatenuct was Kent to our Governraunt, Which refused to admit the right of the Confederate authorities to outlaw our officers." Exchanges continued until March, 1801, when Gen. Butler had an inter view with Commissioner Ould, which convinced him that retaliation would compel the rcliels to abandon their refusal to exchange colored soldiers.' I lie government, informed of these facts, referred the matter to General Grant, who, in April, directed General Butler to decline, until otherwise or dered, all further negotiations, and shortly after instructed him to consid er the determination of the rebels to! make a distinction between white and colored prisoners as a refusal on their part to agfeo to further exchange.' Gen. Butler was also instructed to tt ceive all tho sick and wounded the' rebels would give up, but to send no mors in exchange. In August the' rebels offered to renew the exchange,' man for man. Gen. Grant then tele graphed the following important order: "It is hard on out men to be held in southern prisons and not td ex change them, but it is humanity to' those Ictt iu the ranks to light our bat tles. Every man releasee) on pdrole or otherwise becomes an active soldior against us at once, directly or indi-', rectly. If we commence a system of exchange which will liberate all prisJ oners taken,- we will have to fight on until the South is exterminated. If we hold those caught, they amount to' no more' than dead men. At this' particular time to release all rebel Srisoncrs in the north wonld insure hcrman's defeat, and would compro raise our safety here." PitU. GaxeUet Tb Democratic l-latfairaa. Carried Into practice, would set the green paper mills at work night and day to supply, greenbacks for the pub lic creditors. V ith the present amount of greenbacks in circulation, they are 40 per cent, discount. JDou bleand treble the issue, and the small est arithmetical capacity would not be able to make out what a greenback dol lar would fetch. In Richmond, thersay that in early days of the Confederacy they went to market with money in their vest pockets, ana came away witb their dinner in theif baskets; bot when Jeff. Davis's paper money mill had worked night and day for a while,' they went with their money in their baskets, and came away with; their din ner id their vest pockets. Tb'ia is the state of things to which the unlimited paper money doctrine of the Democrat-' ic patty would inevitably lead: . - at' S i r, It is the intention of Hon. Edwin". M. . Stanton to resume the practice of tbo law, in partnership ith bis tod at' the close of the warm weather.