The Watchman AANAAAAASAAA A Friday Morning, August 28, 1863 PALS Pr Democratic State Ticket, FOR GOVERNOR, GEORGE W. WOODWARD, OF LUZERNE. FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPREME COURT. WALTER H. LOWRIE, ~ County Ticket, C. T. ALEXANDER, of Bellefonte. FOR PROTHONOTARY, JAMES LIPTON, of Mileshurg. FOR REGISTER & RECORDER, J. P. GEPHEART, of Millheim, FOR TREASURER, JOHN SHANNON, of Centre Hall. FOR SHERIFF. RICHARD CONLEY, of Gregg Township. FOR COMMISSIONER, JAMES FORSMAN, of Sncw Shoe. FOR AUDITOR, J. W. SNYDER, of Ferguson Township. FOR CORONER, JOSEPH ADAMS, Democrats! Rally !! MASS MEETING. A GRAND MEETING of the citizens of Cen. tre, Mifilin and the acjoining counties, who are im favor of the supremacy of the Constitution and the enforcement of the laws, and opposed to all arbitrary arrests ard every other feature of ty~ runny and despotism, will be held at CENTRE HILL, Centre County, Pa., on SATURDAY, September 5th, 1863, at 2 o'clock, P. M Rorgnr Swineronn and Josern Bucnen, Esqs. of Union County, Josgrit PArxon, Esq, of Mif- lin, Jon IH. Onrvis and C. T. ALEXANDER, of Centre, and other able speakers will be present to addiosg the Democracy. By orcer of the COMMITTTE en ———— o— "A Second Draft. The Union Leaguers of Bellefonte have determined to make another draft, if they cannot get zo/unteers on their ticket within two weeks, 1 he quallifications necessary to entitle a man to a ticket, are that he must be a ‘shoddy patriot”--that is, wilimg to steal from the government, rol, the soldiers, and plunder the people. Ile must be “un- conditionally loyal,” that is, he must say amen to all that the abolitionists utter, from Abe Lincoln down to Sam Bike; and fiom him down to Curtin ; he must believe that the Constitution is a “covenant with death and an agreement with hell ;’ he must believe that “John Brown's soul is marching on ;” that this trait-r, horse thief and murderer was equal Lo our Savior, he must believe that a negro is far better than a white man, and that all the guarantees of pursonal liberty known to the law were meant only for Sambo and his cubs, And he must b:ever willing and, ready to du- nounce the followers of Jefferson and Jack- son as *“Copperhcads” and “traitors.” All who 2annnt come up to this standard will beexempt from the first draft they make, ANTED.— Eight men who have reith- er names, characters, nor priuciples— men who can rob the treasury and are wil- ling to divide the spoils—who swear by an anti-slavery Bible and pray to an anti-sla- very God—who believe John Brown was the sccond Redeemer and Abraham Lincoln an angel of light—men who believe the black race superior to the white, and are in favor of amalgamation and equalization— who hate Irishmen as they do the devil, and believe that all Dutchmen have ‘‘double skulls” —who are in favor of carrying on the war, but opposed to going themselves —who believe all contractors are honest and all Government officials wise—who be- lieve Jeflerson was a traitor because he was a “copperhead” and a “barbarian” because he owned mggers—who are willing to swear that IL. N. M'Allister is the prince of pat- riots and the members of the Union Leagua the bravest men in the country. Each one must believe that “military necessity’ de- mands the hanging of “copperheads” —the imprisonment of 1nocent men—the outrag- ing of women—the murdering of children —the burning of property--the destroying of towns--the preventing of clections, ete., etc. These men are wanted to run as can- didates on the Union League ticket this fall. Apply at the head-quarters of the Union League, in Bellefonte. P. 8:—No objections on account of color. N. B.—“No Irish need apply.” Christianity and the War. —— A few years since, America could, with propriety, claim for herself a position as the most Christian nation on the globe, For, while she prescribed no religion and fatten- ed no petted sect at the public treasury, in millions of hearts swelled the pure spirit of Christianity, — peace on earth good will to.mau’ Prosperity smiled upon us, and the will which ove:threw other pations dis- appeared in our triumphant march until we were flattered into the belief that our Re- public was under the special direction of Heaven. Men skilled in such lore declared that our nation had been pointed out, by the prophets ot old, as the very perfection of of human governments. The great princi- ple of Christianity, without which all else is as “sounding brass and a {inkling cym- bal” —Charity—led the the people of every section of the Country and unbounded pros- perity, peace and happiness was the result, for half a century. But, during all this time a faction led, by Satan, was busy in a little corner of the family, seeking to create discord. —A remnant of the very brood that deluged England in blood, and no doubt de- scendents of those who crucified the Savior, were busily working out a falc of bloodshed and ruin for such as no pen has ever record- ed and no imagination ever depicted. At first it was so contemptible as to be un- worthy of notice ; but gradually and surely 1t stole over the land, like a cloud of deso- lation, and now the tempest is upon us and death. First it stole into the hearts of pro- fessing christians and carried with it the most bitter hatred against brethern, the church fell before its baneful influence and with its fall was herrd the sad wail which is said to precede a storm at sea, To-day, | four fifths of those who are professing to teach the will of Jehovah are the emissaries of Satan.—When destruction and death sweegs over the land, like the baleful simoon of the desert, when human lives are lavished as the leaves of Autumn, and immortal sculs sent to their account by tens of thousands, when desolation and woe broods over the nation as the shadow of death, their voices are raised crying for the extermination of the South for the indiscriminate slaughter of their Christian brethern, who love Christ as truly as they ana who aie far more inno- cent, in God's sight, of this bloody tragedy. Not a weck ago we heard one of these Christian (?) teachers say. that ons of his brethern deserved hanging, and that brother was a public minister of the gospel. Fiom such teachers, from all such Christains, good Lord deliver us ! With such men praying for us, with such men expounding the words of life, need we wonder that our condition is so fearful, They have driven peace from us, and when the South came with ontstretched arms to meet them, they hung out as a motto, “no union with slavery’’—thusviolating the com- mands of the greatest teacher of the gospel the world has ever had. ‘And they that have believing masters, let them not despise 2/1em, because they are brethern ; but rather do them service be- cause they are faithful and beloved partak- ers of the benefit. These things teach and exhort. If any man teaches otherwise, and consent not to wholesome words, even the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the doctrine which is according to godliness ; he is proud knowing nothing, but doting about questions and strife of words, wherefore cometh envy, strife, railings, evil surmisings, Perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds, and destitute of the truth, supposing that gain is godliness: from such withdraw thy- self.”’---Pauls 1st, Epistle to Timothy, chap. 6, Ver. 2-5. If the apostle has not here described the teachers of abolitionism, no description will ever reach them. Upon them and their in fernal doctrines do we charge the crimes for which the innocent are suffering with the guilty—may the ghost of cach murdeged victim of their teaching sit heavy upon their guilty souls, ‘Unless ye have the spirit of Chirst ye are none of his”—says the scrip- tures of truth. Uan any posessed of the meek and lowly spirit of the Redeemer thirst for the blood of their Political and Christian brethern ? Can a true Christians benevolence be confined to a narrow 1dea, and to a narrow country ? Wherever the foot of man has pressed the soil the mercy of Christ has reached, and just so far ex- terds the benevolence of the true Christain. Look Christian parents upon the; lonely grave of your son, far from all he loved who wailed cut his death cry, and unwept, un. honored and unprepared to meet the Great Judge was he huried into cternity. Or be- hold, mourning wife, the unburied body of your husband festering in a Southern sun» or writhing upon the field of carnage. Who is to blame ? Your minister urged on the strife, and then put arms in the hands of the innocent, and bade them God speed in the murderous work ? Your minister thanks God for the war, glorifies the ged of his idolatry (slavery) above the bloody grave of your slaughtered son, above the ghastly wreck, which was once your husband. And he says he has the spirit of Christ. Is the Divine Redeemer then the author of the frightful scenes, of the terrible excesses that have made us the scorn of mankind ? Is he, who gave his life “to bend man’s stubborn will,” responsible for the tragedy which is being enacted in America ?—Never oh, nev- er, the man who led your son to the slaugh- ter is none of his, Satan is his master and by him will he be rewarded. The preach- ers of Abolitionism are the authors of it all, They called forth the monster to destroy us, they sct in motion the maelstrom which has engulphed us. In your prayers remember them, in your curses breath their names and they will learn thet God is a God of peace and not of destruction. Pretended ministers of the gospel have so often ascended from the slimy pit, in which they are bred, to the polilical areana, that for once we have condecened to notice them, as the authors of all our misery. et PL = We wonder if the Assistant Provost Marshall, might'nt have the remains of the Union League party, in this county stowed away some place, or hid in his pocket ? Our Ticket. We place at our mast head today the names of the men closen as standard bear- era by the county Convention, which met in this place on Tuesday last. Itis a ticket, worthy in every respect, the hearty support of all honest, patriotic voters--a ticket that docs honor to the men that selected it—and honor to the party it represents, Had the delegates labored for months to find men better fitted in every respect, to represent the people of this county in the respective offices to be filled this fall, they could not have done it more effectually, than in the few hours they were in session, in the Club Room. Never, since we remember any- thing about tickets or conventions, have we known of one that gave such universal satis- faction to all the memters of our party, as the one we now call upon every lover of hon- est principles, and upright purpcses to sup- port. There were doubtless as good men defeat- ed in the Convention, as those that succeed- ed—men, as well qualified, to fill the posi tions to which they aspired as any that could be found, but the -‘fates’” were against them, yet that has not deterred | them, neither has it cast them down, for like honorable, high minded, deserving | men they are laboring earnestly and deters minedly for the success of Democratic priaci- ples and their more fortunate competitors. Our candidate for Assembly, Mr. Alex- ander is a man of undoubted integrity and our proud nation struggling in the throes of | sterling worth, a lawyer of acknowledged ability, and besides a Demoerat of the right stamina. In him the people of Centre coun- ty will find a representative that will sce that their interests are protected—-a repre- sentative that will stand by the prineiples of Democracy and the rights of his constitu- ents—a representative that corporations cannot control or moneyed monopolies in- fluence, a representative that will know his duty and be willing and able to perform it, at all times and under all circumstances, He is decidedly the white mans candidate, and will most assuredly be the white mans representative. For him we ask the sup- port of every lover of his country and its in- stitutions, in him no one need fear to place their confidence. Mr. Lipton the nominee for Prothonotary, is a man fitted in every respect to fill the of- fice with honor and satisfaction to the pec- ple of the country. Ile is a laboring man, deserving the position for which he has been chosen, and we feel confident that the work- ing men of “old Centre” will give him a hearty and cordial support. There is no man that has stood firmer by the principles of Democracy then has Mr. Lipton,——there is none that will do more for the great cause than will he. A member of the church, so- ber, steady and industrious, we know that every democrat, and hope that every labor- ing man in Centre county will cast their vote for him on the second Tuesday, of October next. For Register & Recorder we have J. P. GePHART of Millheim, a scholar, a Democrat and a Gentleman, he speaks fluently both the English and German languages, and is in every way calculated to fill the office for which he has been nominated, coming as he doer, recommended by the sturdy yeoman- ry of Penns Valley, is enough to insure his triumphant election, by an overwhelming majority. A better man to fill the place of Treasurer than the nominee, JoHN SHANNON could not be found. Loved, honored, and respected, as he is by all, for his many manly qualities, he can not fail to rececive the support of every honest voter in the county. Mr. Shan. non, besides being a sterling Democrat is a scholar and a christian. admirably suited to fill the office of treasurer. Mr, CoNNELLY, our candidate for Sheriff, can not be surpassed as a straight forward, consistent Democrat, able and willing to per- form the duties which will be assigned to him as an officer of the county. Who his competitor will be, we know not and care not, only that we pity the man who attempts to run against Mr. Connelly. For Commissioner we have JAMES Fores- MAN, of Snow Shoe, a man of splendid busi- ness qualifications, and a gentleman 1n whom the most implicit confidence can be placed. We bespeak for him the hearty sup- port of those who would sce the interest of our county well cared tor, The nominee for Auditor, Jas, W. Sxy- DER, of Ferguson, and for Corcner Josepn Apawns of Milesburg, are men both eminent- ly qualified to fill the positions for which they have been chosen. True Democrats, who will command the respect of their op” ponents, and receive the support of all good citizens, There Democrats of ‘cold Centre” is a ticket worthy in every respect your undi- vided support, Men of principle, honorable, honest, upright men, against whom the black tonugs of blacker principled abolition- ists will no doubt raise and report all kinds of infamous lies, calculated to lesson their respective majorities at the coming election. Altheugh success is certain, yet the assur- ance of that, should not lessen your exer- tions in behalf of the men and principles you uphold. If our majority to-day in thie county is one thousand, let it be increascd to fifteen hundred, by tbe second Tuesday of October. It can be done if every domo- crat, but does his duty. To work, then freemen ! There is more at stake then sue- cess of individuals. Principles upon which rest the foundations of our Republic—and in the triumph of which is the only assur- ance, of perpetuating our own liberties. Sn r— lena. 07 Harp Ur.—The nigger worshipers for candidates, What is the matter boy ? Lit- {tle afraid that Andy will swamp you? | Come, come, now, be manly for once, jump into the boat with him and all sink together. 0" BecGiNng.—The Union Leaguers, for for some body to accept their nominations—- Rather disreputable that, - A Oem. | 07 Read the article from the Pittsburg Gazette on “Our Andy in an other part of | to-days paper. aA A Black Record ! Let the Voters of Centre County Read! ! Gov. Curtin Portrayed by his Friends!!! The following articlo which we clip from the Pittsburg Gazette of August 5th one of the oldest and most influential Abolition Journals in the State, should arrest the attention of every man who makes the Jeast pretensions whatever to honesty, or has the least particle of respect for the honor of our Commonwealth. It 1s a por- trait of ANDREW G, CurTIN as his own political friends have drawn 1t, not exagar- ated and embittered by party animosities, but facts vlaced on record which prove his imbecility and unfitness for office. Let the honest voters of Centre county read it carefully—Ilet those who desire that the Governor of our State shall be a man of honest upright integrity, answer whether they can assist in placing Andrew G. Cur- tin in the Gubernatorial chair for three'years longer. A Parting Word to the Convention. The delegates to the State Convention are now among us. Before they proceed to do their duty, wehave a word to say to them. We had reason to believe that Governor CurmIN, notwithstanding Is ostensible withdrawal, was a candidate for recomin- ation, and confident that he would be suc- cesstul. We felt assured that he could not be elected: We knew that he ought ;not. It became our duty, therefore. to sound the alarm, and endeavor to save tho party if possible, We have endeavored to show that he im- posed upon the soldiers, by farming them out fo his friends, and then denying that he had employed them, We have exhibited the record to estab- lish the fact that he had approved a bill, acknowledged by him to be wrong, waich robbed the Treasury of many millions of money —that as the condition of this appro- val, he had taken an agreement for the State, which he abstracted, and secretly surrendered to the parties who had given it—and that when interrogated by the Leg- islature, he confessed the fact, and offered as his apology, a 1eason which is shown to have been untrue, We have demonstrated the fact that he bargained away a Republican United States Senator, for the consideration of an adjournment, and the discharge of the Com- mittee, appointed to inquire into the means which had been used to procure the passage of that bill. We have charged that he was unfriendly to the war policy of the Administration, and proved it not only by his Message in relation to the arrest of traitors, and his conduct in relation to the draft, bat by the character of the men whom he has retained about him. We have shown that the effect of his pol- icy has been to break down the power of the Republican party of this State, and that even those who merely co-operated with him in the Legislature, have been placed,almost without exception, under the ban of the people. And we have inferred from all this— without referring to the other matters— that his nomination would be disgraceful to the party, and his election impossible— as the general desire of the Copperheads that we should take him as our candidate, proves it to be, in their judgment, as well as ours, All this we have been compelled, by the necessities of the case, to do, in order to save the cause from irretrievable ruin— We would rather have avoided this, if i had been possible. We have kept these things in the back-ground, rather than run the risk of crippling the State Administra- tion, or driving it bodily into the embraces of the enemy, to which we feared its ten- dencies were over-strong already. We thought it wise to make the best of a bad bargain, 82 long as we could not help our- selves. When the same man was, however presented fo us anew, as a candidate for a second term, it became our duty to speak out before the mischief was enacted and we have done so, in language as moderate as the facts would. bear. And yet even then we would rather have waived our ob- jections, if it nad been possible, and taken the weakest man, and the wickedest of our personal enemies than run the risk of dis- turbing the barmony of the party, at such a time, It was clear to us, however, that with such a candidate, it was impossible for us to succeed. We should be beaten at any rate—and as it could not make matters worse, it was worth at least the trouble to endeavor to prevent it. And now we ask of the members of the Convention to tell us calmly, whether, with the facts before them, as ‘we have shown them to be, there is ove constituency in Pennsylvania; that .would have recom- mended, or instructed for him—and wheth- er these facts, depending mainly upon the recor, and incontrovertible of course, can be now successfully conceaied from them. We ask them again, who there are among the eminent speakers of the State who enjoy the confidence of the people, that will ven- ture tomeet these issues with thevery record to confond them ? We do not know a man of any position or force, in this country at all events, who would not feel himself per- sonly compromised,by undertaking a labor so herculean as this. The question that comes at last whether there are any of the delegates inclined to the support of Curtin, who would consider a triumph now, as more important than a triumph at the election, and a sufficient compensation for a defeat at that time—or who would be willing to stake the result upon a doubt : Ifit be true, as charged, that he sists on playing the part of the dog 1n the manger, and sacrificing the party of which, it is said he claims to be the builder, to himself, is there any man in the Qonvention who will allow himself to be used for such a purpose? What is to be gained by it for the advantage of any body but fie rebels and their Northern sympathi- zers We have stated more than once—and we canot repeat it too often—that whatever may be the opinion of the Convention and whether right or wrong, the feeling against Gov. Curtin in this county at least—grow- ing out of his own acts and policy—is so strong; that we could no more‘ control it, even if we were so disposed, then we could steam the torrent of Niagara with our hands. We might ruin ourselves by advocating his election, but we couldn’t help him. It is not we who are resporsible for the ex- istence or origin of that feeling. We 1e- fect it only, and have but thrown ourselves into the current, which was flowing as rap. idly before we undertook to fathemor direct i", There are good men here who doubted, in 1860, whether he could be trusted, and refused to vote for him, and yet this county gave him a majority of about 6400 votes. Less than a month afterward, it gave Lin. coln 10,00. With a stronger man than Curtin, there should have been 8.000 at least, With an unexceptional candidate now we are as strong as ever. With Gov. Curtin, we doubt whether it could be car- ried at all, and those who reflect that his coaduct at the session of 1861, brought in a Democrat even here, at the election which followed, will realize the mischief that such a nomination may inflict. It is not this county only, however, in which it is important to make the machine run smoth. There will be like difficulties elsewhere, aud particularly in those coun- ties where the strength of the Republican party lies, If he should be nominated, it will not be by the voice of those districts, which will be expected to elect him. It will be counties liks Berks, we suppose, that are to be cast as make-weights into the scale. Would 1t not become them to re- flect, that if they want us to do the work, they must put us into a condition to run without weights ? Are not even the pre- judices of our people—if they choose to call them so—to be consulted # If they can find a man who is free from objection—-and we are in a bad condition, indeed if they cannot—what is their duty as men—as patriots —as lovers of their country ? How can they excuse themselves for insisting— from mere pride or self-will—on one of the opposite kind, whois known to be unpal- atable to any respectable section of the party? We shall guage their patriotism by the way in which they deal with the diffi- culty. With men of the heroic stamp— men suited to the times—it can prove no serious difficulty at all, The Ledger's Idea of Humanity and Tenderness. Except in the employment of negroes as soldiers, the Ledger thinks ‘the United States Government conducted the war as humanely and tenderly, and with as great regard for civilized ;1ules, as any Governe ment possibly could do,” Our penny neigh- bor has evidently forgotten tke burning of Pensacola and Jacksonville in Florida, of Jackson, in Mississippi, and Darien, in Georgia, to say nothing of other towns and villages wantonly burned by our troops, without a word of subsequent rebuke from “the Government.” The Ledger has for- gotten the sacking of churches, and the des- truction of private property in those places, and in other places. It does not remember that Colonel McNeil [since made a General we believe], caused ten innocent men to be murdered because one alledged ¢Union” man in Missouri was temporarily missing, [The same man afterwards returned alive, it is said.] That paper forgets that Colonel Turchin [afterwards made a Brigadier by “the Government,”] gave his regiment sey- cral hours license in Athens, Ala, where they entered a young ladies’ seminary, and committed outrages which the Ledger would not dare describe ; it forgets that Blenker’s regiment, in Virginia, scole or destroyed the property of Unionists and rebels indis- criminately, outraged women, and even cut the tongues out of the mouths of living cows, sheep, and calves, it forgets the mur- der, by Union soldiers, of Robert E. Scott, in Virgina, a man who wasso Joyal that Mr, Lincoln came near calling him into his Cabinet, while outraging, in a manner, that cannot be described, the wife and daughters of Mr. Scott, who was ‘an old, gray haired man. The soldiers murdered him for attempting to interfere. The Ledg- er forgets this and forgets also, that ‘the Government” has ever made any attempt to convict or even detect the offenders. That paper does not even remember the account, which it published very recently, of a squad of negro soldiers near Island No 10, murdering two men and four little children; first ravishing the oldest girl, the St. Louis Republican says. 1t forgets all these things else it could not even for pay, patronage, or popularity, say that ‘the government” has conducted this war with “tenderness and humanity.’ We might remind our neighbor of many more outrages committed by Federal troops without punisnment, or even rebuke, at the hands of the government, but let the foregoing suffice. The Ledger has full knowledge of Schenck’s outrageous doings, every cay. He acts under the very eye of ‘the government.” He banishes women and children from their homes, sends his sol- diers nto ladies’s bed chambers, taxes in- nocent men to pay for buildings burned— sometimes burned by Unionists, that those opposed to them in politics may be punisa- ed. A volume might be filled with the out- rages committed by Schenck aud approved by “the government,” but the greater atro- cities which we have hastily detailed above ought to be sufficicet to show how tenderly and humanely our +*Government”’ has con- ducted this war, and yet they are not a tithe of the atrocities that have been com- mitted in the name of liderty by this ad- munistration,— Evening Journal. Another Substitute Murdered by a Mil- : itary Upstart. We learn from an individual employed in the neighborhood of St.George’s lock, on the Chesapeak and Delaware canal, the following version of the shooting of James Young, who left the city in company with a detachment of substitutes, during the week, under the com- mane of Major Sellers: ~ On friday between nine and ten o'clock, while going through the lock, Young was seen near the engine room, when Lieutenant Parker asked him what he was doing there, and received for an answer that he came up to get some fresh air. The Lieutenant threaisued that jas fai not tell him how he got there he would shoot him, there bein, gaurd at the hold. ? £8 The substitute became nervous at the pre: sentation of the pistol, and could not answer. He pointed to a place from which he came. This was a hole cut through the bulk head. The Lieutenant shot him. At the same moment the guard exclaimed,” Shoot the s—b—,”” and he, it is said, also fired the bail taking mortal effect. Young fell backward into the engine-room—-he was dead, The lock tender and one of the soldiers brought the body from the engine room and searched the pockets, There was nothing found therein beside the money that the un- fortunate young man had received in pay for becomeing a substitute. His bodywas taken, to Chesapeake City, aboutjnine miles distant when 1t was thrown ashore and there left. Some of the inhabitants took charge of the remains and buried them. There was no inquest held, nor was there any officer, municipal, State or National, to take any legal notice of the affair. News of his death having been sent to Philadelphia, a few of his friends proceeded to Chesapeake City, brought the body to this city, and it was decently buried yesterday.— Philadelpia Sunday Transcript. OC There are fifteen or sixteen thousand Federal troops now in about New York City to superintend the draft. Twenty thousand were in Philadelphia, and in a similar ration they are and will be scattered all over the country. No one who knows any thing about it suposes that Lincon will get half as many conscripts as he employs ticops to get them Is he engaged in a war agaist the South or the North? A i Great Democratic Meeting. A grand meeting of the democracy of Centre County was held in the Court House, in Bellefonte, on Tuesday evening, the 25th inst, The meeting was called to order by the selection of James Macmanus, Esq., of Bellefonte, as President. The Vice Presi- Jets were one from each township, as fol- ow : John A. Mallory, Spring ; Michael Grove, Benner : Wm. Foster, Harris ; Frederick Kramrine, Ferguson ; W. W. Love. Potter ; Col. Johr;Rishel, Gregg ; John]Smith, Penn; Jacob Hosterman, Harris ; Dr. Strohecker, Miles ; A. 0. Geary, Walker ; John Gar- brich, Marion ; N. J. Mitchell, Howard ; Campbell Delong, Liberty ; Wm. McClos- key, Curtin ; Andrew S. Kreamer, Boggs ; John Pownell, Mileslurg ; Jas. Alexander, Union ; W, Greist, Unionville ; John Camp- bell, Huston ; Wm. Pruner, Worth ; Wm. M'Coy, Taylor; John A. Hunter, Haif- moon ; Reuben I. Meck, Pattoa; J. H. Holt. Burnside, Austin Hinton, Snowshoe ; John Howe, Rush. W. J. Kealsh, of Bellefonte,’and Freder- ick Kurtz, of Haines township, were, on motion of W, F. Reynolds, chosen Secreta- ries. On motion, C. T. Alexander, John II. Morrison and Wm. Allison, Jr., were ap- pointed a committee to wait upon Samuel H. Reynolds, Esq., of Lancaster city, and re- quest him to faddress the meeting. After being introduced to the audience, the speak- er commenced by expressing his pleasure at meeting so many of his old friends after an abseace of nearly ten years. He stated that it was not his purpose to tell them of the efforts of the abolitionists of the North and the secessionists of the South to destroy the Union, but it was his purpose to tell them of the present adminis- trations both State and National. He discussed the different counts in the indictments against the National and State administrations with much eloquence and with arguments of the most convincing character. At the close of Mr. Reynolds’s speech, J. H. Orvis, Esq,, of Bellefonte, was loudly called for. Mr. Orvis responded in his usu- al interesting and argumentative style, ma- king no charge or assertion that he did not substantiate by undoubted proofs. Tne Committee on Resolutions, consisting of John T. Hoover, Edward Kreamer, P. G. Meek, Hon. Wm. Burchfield and George W. Jackson, reported the following, which were unanimously adopted : Resolved, That the Union of the States, founded by the Constitution of 1787, formed, as it was, by conciliation and compromise, nurtured by fraternity and kindly feeling, strengthened by concessions and common interest, can no more exist in an atmosphere of coercive, despotic or dictatorial powers, than man can exist without the air which he breathes. Resolved, That, in the opinion of this Convention, the war, as it is now carried on by the present administration, is, simply, a crusade against the institutions of sover- eign States, waged, not for the restoration of the Union and the preservation of the Constitution, but for the perpetuation of its own power, the abolition of slavery and the destruction of the Union. We are opposed, now and forever, to a war for any such pur- poses, honestly and solemnly believing that our only assurance of peace and restoration 1s in the success of the Democratic party. Resolved, That we will earnestly support every constitutional measure tending to pre- serve the Union of the States. No men have a greater interest in 1ts preservation than we have—none desire it more. There are nope who will make greater sacrifices or endure more than we will to accomplish that end, We are now, as we have ever been, the devoted friends of the Constitution and the Union, and it is because of our devotion to them, that we are compelled to oppose the present administration, which is pursu- ing a policy destructive of both as estab- lished by our fathers. Resolved, That the power which bas re- cently been assumed by the President of the United States, whereby he has suspended the writ of Habeas Corpus—declared mar- tial law over States where war does not ex- ist —imprisoned citizens without authority of law—dragged Judges of State Courts from the Bench--overthrown the suprem- acy ot the civil law—abolished the right of trial by jury—suppressed newspapers, let- ters and documents and denied them trans- mission through the Government mails—es- tablished an odious partisan censorship over the telegraph and press—ordered illegal searches and seizures of persons and papers —prevented the people from peaceably as- sembling to petition for redress of grievan- ces—destroyed the freedom of elections by placing whole States under martial law— sta- tioning armed men at the polls and permit- ting none to vote except his own political pat tizans—is unwarranted by the Constitu- tion, and changes our republican govern- ment into a despotism as absolute and op- pressive as that of Russia. Resolved, That, throughout all these un- paralleled outrages upon the people, by Abraham Lincoln and his minions, Andrew G. Curtin, the present executive of theCom- mouwealth of Pennsylvania, has been their pliant and subservient tool, and has seen the sovereign rights of the State and the un- doubted rights of the citizen, trampled in the dast, without once raising his voice in their favor; that he has permitted the swindling officials of the State and Federal Governments to rob and plunder ahke the public treasury of the State and our patri- otic soldiers in the field, and that through hig imbecility, our State was left unprotect- ed, and our homes and property were given over to the mercy of Confederate soldiers, Resolved, That the General Government, being but the creature of the States, posses- ses no powers but those delegated to it by the States, and that, when it fails to protect the rights of the people and of the States, the only hope left of perpetuating a repub- lican form of government, is ina strict ad- herence to State Rights and State Sover- eignties. Resolved, That our county, having furn- ished 413 men over and above the full quo- ta required of it to carry on this war, was justly entitled, according to the decision of the Provost Marshal General, to be credited on the draft with that amount, and that we hold Andrew G. Curtin responsible for neg- lecting to have that amount duly credited to the proportion required of this county. Resolved, That under no possible emer- gency, not even in msurrection or amid the throes of civil war, can this Government jus- tify official interference with the freedom of speech or of the press, any more than it can with the freedom of the ballot. The licen tiousness of the tongue or of the pen is a minor evil compared with the licentiousness of arbitrary power. . Resolved, That we call upon our Legisla- ture to enact such laws as will effectually prevent Pennsylvania from being overbur- dened by the consequences of the mad schemes of tna abolitionists. That if they are determined to turn loose four millions of | black laburers from the fields where they | are contetedly and profitably employed, and send them upon the country as paupers, | that we owe it as a duty to ourselves to see | that our own Commonwealth is not overrun | by them. For this purpose we advise the passage of a law prohibiting the immigra- | tion of blacks into this State under any cir- | cumstances, | aa —— tn Resolved, That our Senators and members are hereby instructed to use every effort to repeal the cLarters of all incorporated com- praied of this Commonwealth whicke shall ave at any time removed any of itS em- ployees on account of the political opinions they held, or sought in any manner to re- strain them in the expression of such opin- ions, and also of all compsnies which have at any time obstructed or prevented, or at- tempted to obstruct or prevent the sale or circulation of newspapers in their cars, de- pots or manufactories. Resolved, That we heartily endorse the nomination of Hon. George W. Woodward as our candidate for Governor, and of Hon. Walter H. Lowrie as our candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court, believing that in them the liberties of the people and the rights of the Commonweaith will be secure. Resolved, That we will give the county ticket this day placed in nomination by the democratic convention, our undivided sup- port. A— ae. Democratic County Convention. Agreeably to a resolution passed at last County Convention, the Delegates of the different townships met in Convention, at Bellefonte, on Tuesday afternoon, August 25th, to place in nomination candidates to fill the different county offices. On motion Col. R. KeLLER, of Potter, was chosen chairman and Freperick Kurz, of Haines, and D. H. YeaGer, of Snowshoe, Secretaries. The following delegates presented their credentials and were confirmed : Bellefonte—D. G. Bush, Jery Tolan. Boggs—Wm. J. Yearick, A. H. Welter, Benner—Michael Grove, Wm. A. Kerlin. Burnside—Wm. Askey, Curtin—David McClosky. Ferguson—Jacob Bottorf, Fred, Krum. rine, Wm. J. Meek. . Gregg—Alex. Shanon, John Goodheart, George Jameson. Hames—F. Kurtz, Jacob Hosterman, A. Winkleblech. Howard—Balser Weber, Ilenry Dopp, Huston —John Campbell, Halfmoon—John M’Miller, Harris—Wm Foster, J D Rankin, Marion—John Ziegler, R F Holmes, Milesburg—Joseph Adams. Miles—Gen Jonathan Wolf, II Korman, R Smelzer. Potter—0ol Love, Col R Keller, J D Mur- rey, John Boozer, Penn--John Smith, Capt. Eisenhuth, D, Musser. Paiton—Wm. Rowan, Snowshoe—D H Yeager. Spring —J A S Mallory, Wm H Noll. Taylor—Clinton Mitchell, Union—Christ Hoover. Unionville—T J Geary. Walker—M Shafer, John Divens. Worth—T M’Alarney. Liberty—C Delong. Rush—J M Kepler, John Howe. On motion agreed to sit with closed doors; whereupon the convention proceeded to ballot with the following result ; ASSEMBLY. Ist ballot. OT Alexander 27 Wm Allison, jr. 12 A C Geary 10 Mr, Alexander having received the high- est number of votes upon the first ballot,’ was declared the nominee for Assembly, and the nomination was then made unanirypus. PROTHONOTARY. : Ist ballot. 7th ballot, John Hoffer, fo 1B 18 James H Lipton, :8 25 J S ‘Barnhart, 19 3 N J Mitchell, 6 Mr. Lipton having received the highest number of votes upon the 7th ballot, was declared duly nominated, and the nomina- tion made unanimous. : REGISTER, 1st ballot 3rd ballot J G Meyer, 4 A Bartholomew, 4 Philip Gephart; 18 32 J L Test 18 17 W Rumbarger, 1 withdrawn T Holt, 3 do Mr. Gephart having received the highast nnmber of votes, was declared duly nomi- nated, and the nomination made unanimous. TREASURER. 1st nd 3rd John Shannon, 16 19 26 J D Skugert, 11 11 8 B F Hunter, Tov dl 12 C Derr, 9 7 Q J Hoy, 6 1 withdrawn ~ Mr. Shannon having receided the highest number of votes, was declared duly nomin- nated, and the nomination made unanim- ous. SHERIFF. D O Bower, A Koch, R Connelly, RD Cummings, D Z Kline, H Kreps, E Kreamer, J B Kreamer, J Miller, J M Bush, T McCoy, P W Barnhart, Joseph Gates, A C Carner, Mr. Connelly having received the highest number of votes upon the 5th ballot, was declared duly nominated, and the nomina- tion made unanimous. — Sd CO pd C5 pd Bd 2D CR ST RO La COMMISSIONER. Ist 2nd 3rd Jas. Foresman, 18 20 26 J L Gray, 3 6 6 Joseph Jordan, 3 Mich. Meyers, 4 4 D Derr, 2 Miles Green, 2 P Kechlein, 9 12 17 C Marks, 2 J Potter, 1 . 7 Mr. Foresman having received the highest number of votes, was declared duly nomina- ted for Commissioner and the nomination made unanimous. For Auditor, James W. Snyder, of Fergu- son was nominated by aeclamation. For Coroner, Joseph Adams, of Boggs, was nominated by acclamation. The matter of appointing a repregentative delegate to next Democratic Sit Gono: tion, and the appointment ot Sena trial Con- feress was then brought before the Conven- tion and after a short discussion between Messrs. Bash, Kurtz, the chairman and others, it was agreed to postpoue the sub- ject until Tuesday of next January court, A committee of five on resolutions, ,con- sisting of Messrs. Bush, Kurtz, Eisenhuth, Love ‘and , was appointed, after a shoit absence the committee returned, ready to report, bnt upon motor it was agreed that the committee defer the same and meet in conjunction with a committee to be appointed by a Mass meeting of the Democracy at the Court House on evening of same day and report. On motion a standing committee of seven was appointed, the duty of the same, being to appoint vigilance committees for the dif- ferent townships, § On motion adjourned, to meet again, on Tuesday afternoon ot January Court, next. Frev'k Kurz, D, H. Yracer, Secretaries,