@he TW atchnan, JOE W. FUREY, A Yer re BELLEFONTE, PA. Thursday Morning July, 18, 1862. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL. ISAAC SLENKER, OF UNION COUNTY. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL. JAMES P. BARR, OF ALLEGHENY COUNTY. The Ticket. Now that the Democracy have made their nominations and the campaign has been fairly inaugurated, it may be proper to say a few words in regard to the men who have been chosen as the Democratic standard tearers mn the great political contest so nea r at hand, and which is to decide whether or no the people of Pennsylvania are willing to submit longer to the reckles and uaprinci pled course of the present party in power. Isaac SLENKER, our candidate for Auditor General, is a gentleman against whose char- acter, both politically and morally, no man can utter a word. _ An honest, faithful. con- scientious Democrat and an upright mane his name is the very one to inspire the great heart of the Democracy of Pernsylvania with that determination to win the vistory which will overturn all obstacles ad place him in the Auditor General's chairamid the glad huzzas of the joyful thousands who will rejrice to see the reins of Government once more returning to the hands of that great party, to whose wise and lib1al policy in days not long gone by, this country is in debted for all of its past and prospeciive greatness, prosperity and glory. Mr. Slenker was, for some years, a mem ber of the Senate of this State, and proved himself an able man, reflecting great credit on the constituency who sent him there ; and the recent large vote which he received in the Union county District for President Judge, shows that he is very popular where ho is best known. That he can be triumph antly elected, we have no doubt, and we therefore cali upon all Democrats, who love the time honored principles of the glorious old party of our fathers, to rally enthusias- tically to his support. For Surveyor General, we have Jayes P. Bag, of Pittsburg, a veteran Democrat and «an Israclite indeed, in whom there is no guile.” Mr. Barr has been, for a long time, editor of that sterling and incorruptible guar dian of the rights of the pcople—the Pitts- barg Post, and his election will b: but a just complunent, not only to the man him. self, but to the great principles which he has 80 long and so ably espoused and advocated to the great benefit of that hitherto triumph ant party, which is but too proud to claim him as one of its brightest ornaments and most efficient members. With these gentlemen as our candidates, we cannot fail to te successful, if tie proper cfforts be made. We, therefore, call upon the Democracy to organize, and be prepared to meet the relentless and embittered hosts of abslitionism, who will be ujon us wilh all the fury and despair which rage within the besotns of the poor, delude! and miser- able followers of that great tunis fuluus which is only alluring thew to their own ruin, HE Lael E 07 The new requisition for three hundred thousand more troops to fill up the ranks of the Union armies, appears to be causing little or no excitement in this county. Not a man that we have heard of has rarsed a foot or made a movement to show his read iness to serve in the ranks of our “country’s difenders,” and. fom present appearances, there is little or no probability of a compa- ay being raised in this locality, Pennsyl vania’s quota of this late requisition will be atout 50,000 men, making Centre county's share somewhere in the ndghborhod of 500 soldiers. The question is beginning ‘o be asked “where are these men to come fiom The answer is yet in the fulure.— From other sections of the counry we have pews of “great uprisings” and of men en- ‘hsting by the hundred, but here all is quict and nebody seems to be in the least con. cerned. We presume, however, that an ef- fort will be made after harvest to raise the complement of men for this county, when We may again expect to hear the martial sound of the fife and drum. In another col- umn we publish the Governor's Proclama tion, together with “General Order, No. 28” and ‘orders from the War Department,” to which we call the attention of our readers. Joux M. Baus, editor of the Lewisturg Argus, died in that place recently. Mr. Baum was a writer of more than ordinary ability, and his loss will be most severely fel; by the Democracy of Union county. Mr. Winnegardner, the local editor passes a most beautiful and just tribute to his em- cry, and we may exclaim with him, ‘Peace to his ashes.” A J The tide of battle seems to have turns ed, the Confederates arc having a “run of luck ;’ during the past week they have cap tured Bator. Rouge, and Murfreshorro, ta~ kiug about three thousand prisoners. Tt is also said that they have so strengthened Fort Dowling. that it will be almost ims possible to take it. tre ene No important news from Gez McClelan‘s army this week. Is it Not So ? Had we ever believed that the present ad- ministration was carrying on this war for the preservation of the Constitution and the perpetuation of the Union, that belief would now be scattered to the four winds of hea- ven. Its recent acts of abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia, the recognition of Hay and Liberia, (negro republics) and the prohitntion of slavery in the Territories, are enough to convice the most doubtful of the real objects of the war. Hide it 2s we may—guise it under what name we please, the course pursued by those in power shows plainly that it is nothing more nor less than a war for the extermination of slavery and the equality of the races. Did not Mr. Stevens, a member of Con gress {rom our own State, and a man high in the estimation of the administration, say, in his debate with Mr. Wickliffe, on the 5h of July, 1802, that he was for ‘arming the slave population of the South in this war for FREEDOM,” that the “South could not be conquered so long as slaves were permitted to till their soil,” that he was for ‘raising a hundred thousand of them to-morrow,’ that he would “seize every foot of land and dollar of property and apply it to the use of this army,”” and would “plant in the South military colonies and sell the land lo these soldiers of FREEDOM, holding the heritage of traitors, and building up institutions without the recognition of slavery. Was not Wendell Phillips, the noted dis- union Abolition Kepublican, who has de- clared time and again, that he has labored for nineteen years to destroy the Union, and that rather than see slavery perpetuated, he would *-burn the Constitution and let the Union be eternally broken up,’ feasted and flattered by the whole administration party ? Was he net metin thehalls of the United States Senate and warmly welcomed by the Vice President himself. Ins not that “¢owardly squirt from the red republican ¢espools of infidel Europe,’ Cal Schurz, repeatedly asserted that our Constitution was a “wooden nutmeg,” and a “Yankee trick,” lately been appointed Brigadier General in the ¢ Union army,” and when taking command of his brigade, did he not declare thet if Jeft Davis and his army surrendered and repented at the foot of Capital ilill in sack cloth and ashes that it (the Union) should never be restored with slavery.’ These are not the only men who speak thus, Congress has dozens of them —the Senate is full of them, and they are in the Cabinet of the United States. Men express- ing the same sentiment are promoted to high offices in the army. Men advocating the tame doctrine are filling offices through out the North, and yet some people would close their eyes to the real danger and say these men are abolitionists and do not 1ep- resent the administration or the teelings of conservative Republicans. If not, why are they appointed to fill high stations and per~ mitted thus to misrepresent the true chavac- ter of the war? For our part we can sce no difference be- tween a Republican and an Abolitionist — one advances ar. idea, the other upholds it, Not a single resolution brought up before Congress by the abolitionists, no matter how radical, infamous or unconstitutional, but (with a very few honorable exceptions) re- ceived the support and was endorsed by the whole party. Tsit notso? Has not the J ast. and does not the present course of the ‘powers that be,” prove conclusively that this is not a war for the preservation of the Cousitution and the perpetuation of the Un- m? Where will it all End ? Such is the question daily asked by thou sands of patriotic Union loving hearts, and who is there among us that can answer it ? Never, since the Pilgrim Fathers set foot on Plymo'h rock —never, since the voice of the white man was heard echoing in the wild woods of America—has the future loomed up us black and dreary as it does today. — We have looked, we h-ve longed in vain for aray of light to break in upon the gloomy prospects of our beloved country. We have hoped, we lave prayed that the Union, ce~ mented by the blood of our ancestors, would be perpetuated, and peace, with its balmy wings, again hover over us ; but that hope has died out, and we can sce ahead nothing but war, anarchy and oppression. Could we bulieve as others pretend to, that one portion of the American people can be held willing subjects to another—that the spirit which wor us our independence was buried and the love of liberty no longer buras with- in the hearts of Jur citizens—then could we look for an end to the present war, and ex pect soon to welcome to their now loneiy homes, those of our friends who are braving the toils and dangers of the battle field ; but no such hope beams forth on our path- way—and we will not delude ourselves with the vain idea that war, under the present cucumstances, wiil restore peace and bring back prosperity. We may raise nen and lavish money un- til the army of the North numbers millions, and its victorious legions march m triumph over the untilled fields and desolated homes of our Southern “encmies’’—our victorious ships may “‘ride the waters” of their broad lakes and mighty rivers—we may plant the stars ard stripes upon every housetop and garrison every city, town, and hamlet south of the Potomac, with an armed soldiery—- but will all this restore the glorious old Un- ton given us by our forefathers to perpetuate and defend a Union whose foundation was laid in the affections of the people and in the fraternal attachments that the citizens of all the States bear to one another as members comprising one great family.— Will it guarantee *‘equal and ex act justice to all men 2 Will it bring us back our fors mer prosperity and greatness 2 Will it make our country the home of the oppressed the asylum for the down trodden of other nations ? No ; it will be but a Union held together by force of arms—a military des- potism supported by cnormous taxation- where political priests and partisan dema gogues will ride on the backs of people and the laboring American will be trampled un- der foot worse than the serfs of Russia or the white slaves of England. Li By Their Fruits Ye Shall Kno W Them » Congress has at last passed the confisca- tion bill. The conservative (?) Republicans such as our Representative Jas. 1. Hale voting Aye. Such bills will surely be hails ed with greatjoy by the thousands of Union men in the South of whom we heard so much last summer ! No difference whether they were impressed into the Confederate service, or took up arms willingly, the for- feiture of a// their property, imprisoament of ten years, a inc not exceeding ten thou- sand dollars, is to be their reward. Not only do these hegto worshipping abolition” 1sts in Congress legislate against the Union men of the South. but against you, laborer of the North. They have declared, “ All slaves of persons hereafter engaged in the rebellion, or who shall in any way give aid and comfort thereto, escaping to and taking refuge within the lines of our army, and all slaves deserted by their masters and coming under the control of the Government of the United States, and ALL SLAVES FOUND AT PLACES occupied by rebel forces and after wards by the United States troops, shall be held to be captives of war, AND FOREVER FREE FROM THEIR SERVIIUDE AND NO LONGER HELD AS SLAVES.” What think you of that, poor white men —ye who earn your bread by the sweat of your brow ? This Black Republican Aboli- tion negro worshipping Congress would place you side by side with the lagy negrocs of the South ; in fact, they hace dene it,— Their work is to come into competition with yours. You will be forced to labor for the same wages that these worthless thieving “‘niggers’’ will. They have cut down your wages to twenty five cents a day in different parts of our wi State already, and what will be the fect When all the slaves where- ever our tidops arg quartered be turned loose. 1s this legislation for white men 2 Isit “homes for the homeless” and money for the poor ? And here we come to another clause of the bill, which we place side by side with the latter part of Scetion 24, Article 4th of the Constitution of the United States : “ No person held ‘to “ No slave escaping servitude or labor in one | from one State to an- State under the laws | other shall be delivered thereof, escaping into | up, e xcept for crime or another, shall in con- | some offence against sequence of any law or | the law, unless the regulation’ there:n, be | claimant first make oath discharged from such | as tohis lawful owne;- service or labor, but | ship, and has not born SHALL BE DELIVERED | arms in the present re- ar on claim of the par- | bellion, or “given aid ty to whom such servi-| and comfort thereto.” ces or labor may be due.—Section 2d, "Art. 4th of the Constitution. ‘Have not these men oa ths registered in Heaven, to preserve INVIOLATE the Consti- tution which they have thus trampled ujo + Lovers of the Constitution of our forefath . ers look at it. Are such men capabls of controlling affairs in a crisis like this? Are taey the men to bring peace and prosperity back to our bleeding couniry 2 Were they sent as representatives to trample upon the Constitution or to violate their oaths and legislate for the benefit of the negro at your expense ¢ If not, give ther such a rebuk at the polls this fall, as they shail not fail to remember. Ye Breckinridgers. We wish to warn the country, and espe- cially the young girls and good old grand. mothers of the nation against what the ser. vile truckling tools of abolitionism cal Breckinridgers. The ** Breckinridgers, when analized are curious animals. First, they consist ot such men as Vallandigham, Richardson and all the personal and politi cal friends of Judge Douglas; second, of the former friends of Breckinridge and Bell ; third. of thase in this State who voted the Reading ticket ; fourth, of all who seek to restore the Union as it was and preserve the Constitution as it is; fifth, of all who de~ mand free speech, free press, obedience to the civil authorities and the right of a trial by a jury of their countrymen; sixth, of all who denounce the stupendous stealings of this administration and its army of plunder- secking contractors, horse jockeys and li- censed robbers ; seventh, of those who be- lieve that the laboring man is better than a nigger, and go in for protecting his labor from unjust and humiliating negro competi- tion ; eighth, of thousands and tens of thou- ands who are swelling the ranks of our ar my or slumbering iu the green graves of ou battle fields ; ninth, gll the conservative men of the country who voted for Lincoln but now declare themselves nn favor of a constitutional government and go in with the Democratic party to maintain the inals ienable rights of the people to restore the Union and protect the treasury and gnain tain the credit of the nation. It will thus be seen that what the Abolitionists call Breckinridgers are bad fellows. They tell the people that the Chicago platform is not the Constitution ; that the negro is not as good as the white laboring man, and that the Abolitionists formed a sectional party and made the North hate the South, until disunion followed ; and a host of other things which the mobites call treasonable. It is possible that some of these chaps have horns upon the top of their heads and it is believ- that many of them haunt the bed chambers of thieving officials, patriotic quartermasters and contractors, and it may be possible that they have in some cases even made babies cry at midnight. We woull warn our friends against what the abolitionists call “Breckinridgers.”’ — Northumberland Demo- crat. BARE CU {IZ “If anything could excel in infamy,” says the Mississippian, ‘the brutal and di- abolical order of the miscreant Batler, in New Orleans,” it is a prayer which has been “offered in a New England church” beseech- ing “famine in the South, and the perpetual barrenncss of every Southern woman's womb !” [7 Late Ricmond papers contain a prec- lamation of Gov. Letcher, requiring the peo- ple to close their stores, and suspend their business every afternoon to drill in the rebel ary. nt i —— to Sure to be elected —Slenker and Barr. ons iid . Cost of the Negroes. The President ana the Congress of the Un- ited States have solemnly pledged the Amer- ican people to buy of their owners, if they will sell them, the four millions of slaves now held in bondage in the South. This emancipation policy is now part and parcel of the policy and financial programme of the present Administration. Under the influ. ence of that policy the slaves of the District of Columbia have already cost one million of dollars, for which appropriation has been made by Congress, Mr, Goodloe, an Abolitionist, and office - holder under the General Government at Washington, has written a pamphlet inten- ded to ¢laborate and expound the views of the present Administration on this engross ing subject. Here is an extract: . “I have shown what the compensation to the Boarder States would be at two different rates of payment per capita for the slaves, and it will have been seen that I have favcr- ed the more liberal scale. I now proceed to show what would be the cost of redeeming tie whole slave population of the Union at the same rates. ¢* By the census of last year there were 3,052, 801 slaves in thc United States and Territories. I have already shown that 454,- 441, which belonged to the Border States, would be worth, at $250 each, $113,610,250 and at $300 cach, $136,332;300. There remains to be disposed of, therefore, 3,498, - 380 slaves, embraced in the country sabject to the rebels, but including, of course, large numhérs belonging to the friends of the Un- ion, who have been constrained into obedi- ence to the rebel authorities against their wills. At the lowest estimaied average val- uc of $250, thase slaves of the rebels would be worth $874,590,000, and adding the com- pensation to the Borrder States on the same terms, the aggregate cost to the Govern- ment would be $988,200,250. At the high- er rate of $300, the glaves mm the rebel States would be worth $1,049,508,000 ; and adding the cost of compensation to the Bor der States, at the same rate, the aggregate expense of emancipation would be $1,186,~ 840,300. Or for the convenience of round numbers, the cost of emancipationjwould be at $250 per head, $1,000,000,000, and at $300 per head, the cost would be $1,200,~ 000,000.” Thus it appears by Mr. Goodloe’s calcu :ation that the slaves of the South will cost the white men of the North $1.200,000,000 and as the money for this purchase must be borrowed. it follows that, at six per cent, the interest or annual tax paid for this phils anthropic purpose will be seventy two mil- lions of dollars ! Now, as the interest upon the public debt at the expiration of the war cannot be less than one hundred millions, the annual appropriations for the support of the Government, including the support of the army and navy, at least one hundred and fifty millions ; pensions for the support of our wounded and maimed volunteers, for the widbws and orphans of the brave men who have been killed in battle or who have fallen a prey to disease, not less than one hundred millions; for the multitudinous claims againsc the Government arising from the contingencies of the war and the expen® ses of a vast system of negro colonization, at least one hundred millions of dollars, it follows that ere long the annual appropria- tions required to be made by Congress, and to be extracted from the pockets of the peo~ ple, to pay for the expenses of a war fomen- ted by Northern negro-worshippers and de clared by Sccession negro owners, will amount to upwards of FIVE HUNDRED MILLIONS OF DOLLARS! and this enor- mous amount of annual taxation, not inclu- ding one penny for a sinking fund to reduce this monstrous incubus upon the industry and energy of the people. The population of Pennsylvania is one. tenth of the entire population of the United States ; therefore, according to the above calculation. which time will prove to have been underated, the direct and Indirect’ an- nual lax, payable by the people of this State to the National Government, will amount, at the expiration of the war, to FIFTY MIL LIOXS OF DOLLARS, being about ene hun- dred dollars to each voter! Surely this is paying rather dear for the whistle of eman- cipation, which has, for years past. been blown into the cars of the people by the Northern Abolitionists | Greensburg Dem- ocrat, Flow the Taxes nre to be Colleelod. To carry into effect the tax bill passed by Congress, a small army of officers will be appointed, over whom a Commissioner of In. ternal Revenue is to be placed. The salary. of this official is fixed at $4000 per annum. The officers under his direction, and the'r duties will be, in brief, as follows, viz : First.—A Collector for each Collection District, to be appointed by the President, with the consent of the Senate, whose duties will be to collect for the Government the taxes to be paid m said District. The com- pensation of his services is in the form of commissions on the amount collected. Second.—An Assessor for each Assess- ment District, to be also appointed by the President, whose duty it will be to furnish the Collector with a list of the persons to be taxed and the articles on which the taxes are to be levied. is salary is to be $3 per diem when engaged in preparation, and $5 when in actual performance of his duties as Assessor, He is also to receive a commis- sion of $1 for each hundred names on the tax list. Third, —Deputy Collectors to be paid by Collectors. Their duties aro to act as Assis- tants. Fourth. —Assis(an® Assessors to be ap- pointed by Assessors. Their salary is fixed at $3 per day, in addition to which they will receive the same Commission as Assessors. Fifth.—Inspectors of hquors &c., to be appointed by Collectors, whose duties will be to measure and examine the proof of liquors removed for sale, from which they are (o receive fees from the owner thereof, the extent of which is to be fixed by the Commissioner of internal Revenue. The officers above classified are to carry into effect the provisions of the bill, and are to be held strictly accountable for their actions — Collectors through whose hands must pass very large sums of money, will be required to give heavy bonds for an honest perform - ance of their duties. In some districts it is probable that bonds to the extent of $200, 000 or $300,000 will be required. The First Regiment of South Carolina olunteers. The title of this regiment would, at the first blush, appear to be an anomaly in the army of the United States. The supposi- tion that one thousand citizens of the nullify- ing, rebellious State of South “arolina could be found to muster under the * Star Spang- led Banner,” 1s one so far remote from the range of probabilities, that the bewildered reader may pause in doubt, after reading the caption of this article. Gentle reader, although there is such a corps as ¢ The First Regiment of South Carolina Volun- teers,” we do not desire to mystify you— we will expiain, Gen. Hunter has organized, at Port Roy- al, a regiment, composed of runaway slaves mostly pressed into the U.S. service, who are armed and equipped at the cost of the United States. This negro regiment is offi- cered by non-commissioned officers taken from the Pennsylvania and New York regi- ments, and who have been promoted for that purpose by Gen. Hunter, to the rank of captains, and first and second lieutenants, The regiment is commanded by Col. Fessen- den, of the State of Maine. At first the negroes, like children fond of toys, were pleased with the ‘‘poinp and cir¢umstance of glotious war.” But when they were brought down to the drill, their unconquerable dislike of all labor, got the better of their love of glory, and so, on all’ favorable opportunities, they ran away !— This valient regiment, originally consists ing ot some nine hundred men, has already dwindled down to three hundred! The uns tiring efforts of Colonel Fessenden and of the white gentlemen 1n command, have sigaally failed before the vis inertiae of the black rank and file. The First Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers is afilicted with the galloping consumption, and before an official report can be had of General Hunter of its existence, it will be ** non est.” The phil anthropic efforts of the Massachusetts school masters who repaired to Port Royal with primmer, slate and pencil ip hand, to teach the black idea how to shoot in the South as vigorously asin the New England.States, and to draw fat salaries for the same, have met with as little success in teaching the arts of peace as our officers 1n their attempt to teach the art of war. ‘I'hese combined efforts on the part of the civil and military power, to raise the blacks to the level of the whites, are sad failures. — The white officers of the black regiment are disgusted and may well exclaim, with Fal staft : «If IT be not ashamed of uy soldiers I am a soused gurnet.’’ “Ill not march through Coventry with them, that’s fat.’ — Althougk: they may ‘not march througy Coventry with them,” they have already got themselves into Coventry on their ac count ; for the soldiers of the white regi~ ments hold them in such contempt that they hail them in derision as Captain Cuffee, Licut. Sambo, and such like vile epithets. As regards the New England philanthrop 1c teachers ; supported as they were, by all the tenacity of Yankee perseverance, they have succumbed before the insuperable re- sistance of negro stupidity. They reluctant- ly admit their defeat, and take the first boat to the genial climes of New England, where they will resume the manufacture of wooden nutmegs, or of fine spun theories of Utopi an philanthropy. The summing up of all these facts shows that there are some 5,000 runaway negroes at Port Royal and viemity, who, with praise- worthy appetite, eat up Uncic Sam's rations and in return, bask io all the luxury of Af- rican laziness in the rays of the broiling sun. But when these dearly beloved objects of Abolition’s most tender cares are asked to drill, or work. or learn, they skedaddle to the swamps, and, ungratcfully, leave their benefactors to raminate over these practical results of Abohtion theory. In this late disastrous experiment of ou’ Abolition friends at Port Royal, the impossi- bility of raising the blacks to the level of the whites having become apparent, there is’ nothing left for them but to attempt to pull the whites down to the level of the blacks, — With the view to the accomplishment of this laudable object, we would advise the immediate resignation of Colonel Fessenden and of the Yankee Superintendent of negro schools, and the appointment, in their places respectively, of the Hessian proprietor of the Telegraph and his renegade editor who have long since reached the moral level cal culated to qualify them for the satisfactory realization of this new. experiment,—Patri- ot and Union. ME IR AN ApoLiTioN SENATOR BrouGiT 10 A St- LENT Har. —A private letter to the Chicago Times from Washington says : The excitable and spiritual Senator from Michigan is said to have been brought up all standing. a few evenings since at Willards, while ¢enouncing most bitterly and ungener- ously Gen. McClellan. Sturgis, whose:a- reer in Missouri prove him to bea worthy offi- cer, was near, and heard the remarks made, and stepping up to this ungenious civilian re- marked, **I do not know you, sir, but you are a liar, scoundrel and coward. My name is Sturgis, Brigadier General in the United States army. Whether this was strictly parliamentary or not,T leave others to decide but the resuit was a moving adjournment sine die. This Chandler is the fellow who wrote to the Governor of Michigan, telling him that a little blood-letting would be necessary to settle the difficulty between the North and the South. Iles very liberal of other peos ple’s blood, but spares enough of his own, Ota 0 Turkey owes $207,000,000, ¢ sick man’’ as he is, and a large portion to Eng- lish capitalists. Russia owes $412,000,000. Italy, $420,000,000. Austria owes $1,500,« 000,000. France, $1,960,000,000. Eng: land, now lecturing this country upon the korrors of national obligation, owes $4,237, 000,000. The debt of this country in July will not be far from $850,000,000. 177 A Mr. Miller, of Circleville, Ohio, has recovered a judgement for $500 against a Miss Beldon for a breach of promise. This is the first case we have heard of where a man has recovered anything from a lady for a breach of promise. Should the principle be established the fair sex would be in much trouble. Ohio Democracy. The Democracy of Ohio also held their State Convention on the Fourth of July. The proceedings were cqually harmonious and enthusiastic with those of our own State, — Every county in the State was represented, and wany of them by immense delegations, and the nominations and resolutions met with the unanimous sanction of the Conven- tion. The following State ticket was nomi nated : Judge of Supreme Court, Rufus P, Ranney, of Cuyakoga ; Sucretary of State William W. Armstrong, of Scnaca ; Attor- ney General, Lyman R. Criichfield, of Holmes ; School Commissioners, Charles W. H, Catheart, of Montgomery ; Member of the Board of Public Works, James Gam ble of Coshocton. The resolutions are preceded by a stirring address to the people of Ohio. From the resolutions we select the following : 1. Resolved, That we are,as we ever have been. the devoted friends of the Con stitution and the Union, and we have no sympathy with the enemies of either. 2. That every dictate of patriotism re- quires that, in the terrible struggle in which we are engaged for the preservation of the Government, the loyal people of the Union should present an unbroken front. * * * * * 7. That we are opposed to being taxed to purchase the freedom of negro slaves. 8. That the unparalleled frauds and pec- ulations upon the Government, revealed by the investigating committee, and otherwise, demand the sternest condemnation of (vory honest man aud friend of the country, and call for the severest punishment prescribed by the laws. 9. That the patriotism, courage and skill manifested by our armies has never been exceeded in the history of the world, and de- serves and reccives our highest admiration and gratitude. * * x - * 13. That we view with indignation and alarm the illegal and unconstitutional seizure and imprisonment, for alleged political of- fences, of our citizens without judical pro cess in States where such process is unob- structed, but by Executive order by tele- graph or otherwise, and call upon all who uphold the Union, the Constitution and the laws, to unite with us in denouncing and repelling such flagrant violant of the State ‘and Federal Constitutiors and tyrannical in fraction of the rights and liberties of Amer- ican citizens ; and that the people of this State cannot safely and will not submit to have the ficedom of speech and freedom of the press, the two great and essential bui- warks of civil liberty put dower by unwar ranted and despotic exertion of power. As to the address and resolutions, the Ohio Statesman says, they are just what the times and occasion demand. They are able, forcible and true. —— ——— Keep it Before the People. The Republican editors, unable to defend the Abolition actions of their leaders in Con. gress—indeed, driven to the wall at all points- -seek to shift the responsibility for the present state of things, with its vast expense of blood and treasure, from their own to the shoulders of the Demncratic par ty. But no seasible man can be cheated by any such transparent dodge. Look ata few items in the record : The Democratic party was unanimously m favor of settling our national difficulties upon that fair and honorable plan. the Crit- tenden Compromise. The leaders of che Republican party opposed this, and having a majority in Congress, DEFEATED IT.— Why ? Because such a settlement would have finally arranged the slavery question— removed it from the arena of politics—and in the language of Governor Andrew, of Massachusetts, “would have broken the back-bone of the Republican body,” which they considered ‘‘ a greater calamity than cil war I” This was in the beginning of the troubles. What followed ? Corruption of the most stupendous character. The Fremonts, the Cummingses the Morgans, and hosts of other Republican clans, put their arms shoulder deep, into the public treasury, and millions corruptly disappeared ! In the first year of a Republican Ad- ministration, which came nto power upon professions of reform and retrenchment: there as indubitable cvidence abroad in the land that somebody has plundered the public treasury well nigh in that single year as much as the entire current yearly expenses of the Government during the administra: tion which the people hurled from power be- cause ofits corruption.” ls the language of a member of their own party, (Mr. Dawes,) whose sworn duty it became to investigate these frauds. The present Republican Congress voted ONE MILLION AND A HALF OF DOL. LARS for the negro in the Distriot of Col- umbia, besides other appropriations for his beaefit in quantity yet unknown. Then it is estimated that ONE HUNDRED THOUS- AND blacks are in the aggregate supported by the Government, at various points, in al« most total idleness. Saying nothing of the clothing, the *¢ rations ’’ of this number, at 2 cost of twenty cents each, amount to twenty thousand dollars a day, or over SEVEN MILL(ONS OF DOLLARS per an: num ! We could add count after count of the same character. For all of these enormi- ties the Repnhhean party is responsiole, and its leaders know and fee: it. They may seek to hide their heads from the frowns of honest and patriotic men, by giving their organizalion new names—:* ¢ Union party ” —¢ People’s party "-—or anything else but its true title : yet there is no escaping the righteous condemnation which the people have in store for them. In the language of Senator Wright, of indiana, * radicalism must be abjured,” AND IT WILL BE ! — Gettys- burg Compiler, - oo ® Oo Tue Bexicrta Boy.—John 0. Heenan is cutting quite a swell in England. He is with Howe’s American Circus, at a salary of $500 per week. le gives exhibitions in the ring of the art of self defence, with Linsey. the *¢ Lancashire Sampsan,” Mr. Howe has recently purchased the Duchess of Kent’ carriage, at a cost of five hundred guineas, to convey the renowned John to and from his hotel to the circus. Four carriages and two liveried footmen are attached to the tournout, ‘What Does This Mean ? Thurlow Weed the publisher and Editor of the Albany Evening Journal, is known as the intimate, personal, and political @ friend and partizan of Wm. H. Sewaad, President Lincoln’s Secretary of State.— The following is from a recent editorial of the Journal. What does it mean ? From The Albany Evening Journal. The Chief Architects of Rebellion, - before 1t broke out, were aided in their infernal designs by the ultra - Abolitionists of the North. Tus was too true for without such aid the South could never have been united against the Union. Bur For THe INCEN« DIARY RECOMMENDATIONS wrICH REN- DERED THE OTHERWISE HELPER Book A FIRE BRAND, North Carolina could not have been Jorced out of the Union. And even now, the ultra Abolition press and speech makers ARE AGGRAVATING THE HORRORS THEY HELPED TO CREATE, and thus b PLAYING INTO THE HANDS OF TH Leaders of the Rebellion are keeping down the Unron men of the South and rendering reunion difficult, if not IMPOSSIBLE. Any such assertions or intimations as these would, very lately have been denoun- ced ‘treason’ if uttered by a Democratic press, but coming from the source it does, the faithful followers of the ‘irrepressible conflict” champion will take it as all right. But is there not a meaning in the article not apparent at first glance 2 May not this idea of the impossibility of a restoration of the Union, be thrown out by the organ of the wily Sccretary as a feeler to prepare the public mind for something more open and in the same direction 2 We presume it is not treasonable to pro- pound those questions. They force thems selves upon us, especially when we take the Journals article in connection with the ru-~ mored apprehension that France and En- gland are on the point of tendering their mediation with a view to a termination of the war. The fact that the President calls for 300.- 000 more troops, is without force, as against the interpretation of the Journal's language, which we have ventured to suggest. Scc- retary S ward prides himself on his shrewd. ness and ‘Old Abe” claims to be smart; and we all know that the history of our country is not without instances of Admin- istrations doing, very suddenly, that to which they had professed to be unalterably opposed. anl which was not all anticipated by the public. Government policy at times becomes mighty uncertain. — West Chests Jeffersonian. Ee Four Oratiors in a Nut Shell. Our fellow citizens who own and till the soil. who drive milk carts and mills, and hammer out their own iron and leather on their own anvils and lapstones, may like to hear what Waslungton and Jackson have said touching scedonalism : in contemplating the causes which may disturb our Union,” said Washington, *1t occurs as a matter of s:rious congern that any ground shenld have been fu nished for characteriza pariics by ogrphical dis- criminations —Northern and Southern, At- lantic and Western —whence designing men may end avor to excite a belief that there is areal difference of local interests and views.”? We make no appication of this language » but tun ww Gen. Jackson, who declares that, * Every Stato must be the sole judge of the wessure proper to secure the safety of its citz ns and promote their happiness and all efforts on the part of the people of other States to cast odium upon their insti- tutions, and all measures calculated to dis turb their rights of property, or to put in Jeopardy their peace and internal tranquility are in direct opposition to the spirit in which the Union was formed, and must en danger its safety.” This is what Gen. Jackson said. P.rhaps the gentlemen who pound paving stones, and others, would like to hear what Web- ster said of disunion and its consequences : “ Gentlemen,” said he, ‘if these columns fall, they will be raised not aga. Like the Coliseum and the Parthenon, they will be destined to a mournful, a melancholy ime mortality. Bitterer tears however, will fom e: over them, than we ever shed over the mon. uments of Roman or Grecian art ; for the: will be the remnants of a more glorious edi- fice than Greece or Rome ever saw—the ed- ifice of Constitutional American liberty.” — Perhaps all classes,-~including Massachu - setts members of Congress, who refuse to compromise our national troubles- will bo pleased to hear Choate once more. Turn to his great oration in 1858. (n that wonder- ful far-sceing speech, he says: ¢ There ia another condition of our nationality of which 1 must say something, and that is that 1t rests on compromise. America, the Con. stitution, practicable policy, all of it are a compromise. Our public is possible—it can draw its breath for a day—only by compro- mise ” We command these sentences from these great and illustrious Americans to the people of the United States.—Boston Cou- rer. What Has Been Proven. The events of the past year have proven with other facts, the following: « That the election of the Republican ean- didates, in November, 1860, was the direst calamity which could have befallen the na-. tion. That the Democracy were right in their predictions that the triamph of sectionalism would create civil war. That the Republican party is the natural enemy of a free press and a free speech. That the Republican Congress 1s incaps + Ula of legislating for the interests of tha people. Mog. i That a Republican cabinet “is... the most corrupt of any which has ever assembled ir Washington ; That the Constitution may be suspended by a Republican President, with the appro- val of his party constitutents : That the greater the thief, the greater hig reward at the handsof a Republican Presi- dent. That the army could not have been sue cessfully led except by Democratic Gener als. That the Republicans desire the subju. gation of the Slave holding States, and not the restoration of the Union. That the party in power would substi. tute negro labor for white labor, wherever the opportunity is favorable for so doing. That the public Treasury is not safe ia the hands of the present administration. That New England manufactures rule th - party mn power. ‘ That so long as the Republican party c 3 tinues in power, the people must be “ent mously taxed, and the laboring populati must bear the bulk of the burden t