a Dh Muse. {Written for the Watchman. ] PARTING. BY WILLIE. . Good bye, dear lady, since tis so The time has come that we must part, Give me one kiss that I may go, And enter life with fearless heart. Often {though my path be clouded With many trials, dark and drear, Tirm I'll he—my heart enshrouded, 1n the smiles you gave when near. Strong temptations may aasail me, Trying me from good to turn, Yet they may not, cannot change me, While thy thoughts within me burn, The gentle words that thou hast spoken Inhappy times I spent with thee, Of evil they will give betoken, While they guide and counsel me. Then fare thee well, my lady dear, One word of courage only give ; Then I shall not the cold world fear, For intby smiles and love I live, Aaronsburg, Rep. 5th. 1863. PM AN ABOLITIONIST. BY “BRICK’’ POMEROY. I'm an Abolitionist, and glory in the name— A nigger revolu tionist without a bit of shame! A sweet amalgamationist who in wedlock would be tied Toa thick lipped niggeress who'd be my petted bride! . I'm an abolitionist— One of the oily crew: I don’t care a curse, I don’t! For the damage I may do! I'm a secessionist—if the nigger can’t be free The ruins of this loved land, is home enough for ma, I glory in the nigger—he is my only Cod, And dead be all the white men burried ‘neath the sod. Tam an Abolitionist — One of the ranting kind ! While brave men to battle go! I eneak and stay behind. I’m an aboliticnist—fur one nigger dear to save I’d soe a hundred white men thrown into a sol- dier’s grave— Blood running red in rivulets from prairie to the sea— White men killed or slaves could be free. I'm an abolitionist, Oue of the Devil's pride— And when the call to arms comes I'll slink away and hide. made Jif the nigger & I'm an Abolitionist—TI glory in this war, For I know when it is over I cannot show a soar. 1’ stay at home and glory in ths mischief I have done. Stay until I am drafted, and then Zura tail and Tun, . T am an abelitionist— Of that there’s no mistake 4nd want some wench to kiss me Just for my mother’s sake. ~ AMiseellangons, READ, TAX-PAYERS. THE RECORD OF A. @. CURTIN. Our readers will remember that we have published, during the past month several articles, from the Pittsburg Gazette the lea- ding ergan of the Abolition party in Wes- tern Pennsylvania, proving the corruption and imbecility, of Andrew G. Qurtin, We give another one below from the same source which we hope every voter in the county will read. After such evidences against him from men of his own party, who have stood side by side with him du- ring the whole of his administration, let the honest laboring tax-payers whose hard earned dollar was taken from him ang giv. en over into the hands of that mammoth Corporation, the Central Pennsylvania Railroad Company say whether he will support A. @, Curtin, the corruptionist, in preference to the honorable, honest, and no- ble Geo. W. Woodward. Tho Governor and the Tonnage Tax. We have already treated our readers to a curious chapter 1n the history of the ad- ministration of public affairg of this State under the auspices of Governor Curtin, — Whether it was calculated 10 recommend him for a second tern they will be able to judge for themselves. But there was an other act more damag- aging by far, and that was his signature of the infamous bill to repeal the Tonnage Tax. He knew and confessed that it was atroci- ously wrong. He could not but know that that it was procured—as hag since been shown by the report of committee of the House—corrupt and illegal influences. He was solemnly admonished, as was the Leg- islatur® that it would be ruinous to the party .& himself, and that the men who voted for it—outside of Philadelphia —would be left at home by their constituents. Ife admitted the probable consequences, as to the party and himself, and was solemnly and repeatedly pledged to refuse it his as: sent. He signed it with indecent haste, du- ring a recess of the Legislature, under the pressure of the principal counsellors, Thom as A Scott and A, K. McClure, in opposition to the remonstrances of his Attorney Gener- al [the Hon, S. A. Parviance, now of this city,] and hig secretary of State, and after having given to thoge gentlemen the most positive assurance that it should be vetoed. He signed it too, immediately after these assurances were given, without the know- ledge of the former gentlemen, who were his constitutional advisers and upon a private ne Scott, for the Committe to pay the sum of $75,000 per annum into the Treasury, which agreement ho concealed from the people and afterwards surrendered to the company, without even preserving a copy of it. When ! interrogated at the next session upon this point, he admitted the fact of agreement and its surrender, and excused his conduct on the ground that the Company was actually | paying more than that amount in taxes to | the State already, and that of course it was of no further value to the people. The re- cord showed that they had not been pay- ing the half of that amount, and the whole statement was contradicted by the testi mony of the Attorney General himself who swore before the Hopkins Committee that the paper was given by Scott, and placed in ls hands as an official document, that it was afterwards demanded from him by John Edgar Thompson, President of the Company, on the ground that Scott had no right to give it, that he refused to surren- der it for the reason that 1t was a Public Record, and that it disappeared from his office, without his privity or any knowlege ps in writing, made by Thomas A. {on his part as to the way in which it was withdrawn! These facts were before the Hopkins Committee, and ignored in their report, the Chairman (Mr, Hopkins) consen- ting reluctantly to their suppression, for the purpose of securing a unanimous report which he could not otherwise have got from a Committee, whose good will the Governor, if notgreatly misrepresented, had spared no pains to secure. They are still of record, and well known to the copper- heads who favor his nomination, and will be duly paraded, of course, if the Union party of this State should be so unwise as to in. vite it, by selecting him as their candidate —& step which, by the way, neither the Pennsylvania Railroad Company nor hiscon- fidential advisers and managers, who as the newspapers tell us, have been so recently resummoned to; Harrisburg on the occasion of the invasion of the State, nor any other of the parties who took so much in- terest in securing for im the prom- ise cf foreign employment, would be likely to desire. The same legisiature passed three other acts, all part and parcel of the same !gigan- tic scheme of spoilation and domination— one robbing the Treasury of seven millions of dollars, in the name of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad company —and the other two to perfect the whole arrangement by author- izing either the merger or transfer of (hat road itself to the Pennsylvania Central Railroad Company, which has smece been ef- fected under the form of ninety years’ lease. Governor Curtin, with no apparent will of his own, approved . them all, apparently, according to programme, thereby stripping the Sinking Fund of at least eighteen mil- lions of dollars, aud waking this monstrous corporation the permanent master of the State and its Legislature, Whether it owns them now or not, may he judged by the fact, that although it had been solemaly found by a committe of the House, that this legislation was procured by Thos. A. Scott by fradulent and illegal means, that he had evaded the process of the House, and that the President of the Company had de- clined an examiration on a doctor's certifi- cate, a second feeble effort to repeal the law was baffled and defeated at the last session, and no attempt wasmade to direct a prose- cution, or even to revive the inquiry, and bring the defaulting witnesses before the leg islature ! These facts wil be 50 new and so start ling to many of those who have been inno- cently, because 1gnorantly, advising the re- nomination of the present incumbent, as to male it necessary, perhaps, to furnish the evidence of them. We accordingly subjoin the message referred to, the Report of the Auditor General, and the testimony of the Hon. 8. B. Purviance, in regard to the facts attending the signature, The first has no precedent, we venture to say, in legisla- tive history. The last is equally curious as illustrative of some ot the peculiarities of the Governor, and his eminent unfitness for the position, All will be useful, by way of reference, in case any one shall be dis. posed to‘press his claims in the face of such a presentation. —Pittsh” “g Gazette ——— ———ig- REPEAL OF THE TONNAGE TAX. THE GIGANTIC SWINDLE. Tax-payers of Centre county ! 30u have an account to setttle with Governor Curtin, The Legislature of this State, in 1861, re- leased by law, the Pennsylvania ‘Railroad Company from the payment of Tonnage Tax, which deprived the State of a just revenue to the amount of some 4ree hun dred thousand dollars a year! Nay, more, at that time the Railroad owed the State $700,000 for the two previous years tax.— The Legislature in a section of the same bill repealing the Tonnage Tax, wiped out this debt ! So by this one act of the Leg- islature— which was then composed of a two thirds Republican majority in both Houses— the State sustained a loss of the Tonnage Tax, then amounting to $300,000 a year (it would be a million a year by this time) and also the $700,000 that was due her ! Governor Curtin engineered this plunder- ing bill through the Legislature and placed his signature to it. Remember these facts, people of Cen're, when you go to vote in es a I mii. October. THE PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEER DEPRIVED OF HIS VOTE BY TH# ABOLITIONISTS] The hypocritical -Abolitionists, at the present time, are affecting great sympathy with the soldiers, who, under the Constitu- ton of Penusylvania, are not permitted to vote while absent from their'State, That they should attempt to impose upon the peo- ple with professions of friendship for those in the service of their country is utterly amaz- ing,” when the history of this important question’ is well known, and is so entirely of the “soldiers’ friends,” We propose to refresh the memories of our oblivious Jaco- bin friends by faithfully recalling the past, and plainly showing the persistent manner in which the Aboiitionists labor to deprive the soldiers of the exercise of the elective franchise. ; In 1861, when the returns of the elections held by the Pennsylvania volunteers were cpened, they were found to contain a forged return from a regiment alleged to be eom- manded by a certain Col, Wi, Shimpfeller, which gave the Abolition candidates in this city, a majority of over eight hundred votes. This return, although a palpable forgery, would, with others equally fradulent, have been certified to by the return judges, (a ma- jority of whom were abolitionists;) and would have been made by them the basis of certificates in favor of their candidates, had not an injuction been obtained from the Sa- preme Court, then in session at Pittsburg. Foiled in this attempt to overcome the genu- ine vote of the volunteers, the Abolitionists then resorted to another scheme equally base and fradulent They ascertained that a large number of the officers in command of companies which had voted, had not re- ocived their PAPER commission from Goy- ernor Curtin, and they endeavored to use this as a pretext for withholding their re. turns of these companies from the return Jjudges—the result would have been that the Democratic majority in the very few companies in. which the commissions had been sent to their officers, would not have been sufficient to overcome the Abolition army and home vcte. The prompt and fearless uction of Judge Ludlow then hold- ing the Court of Common Pleas, prevented the execution of their nefarious project, and the Prothonotary was compelled to lay be- fore the return judges the whole legal army vote, as the law plainly directed him to do, But the disgraceful efforts of the Abolition- ists to have the soldiers’ vote rejected did Bot cease here, and the majority of the Board of Return Judges refused to count the votes of the companies in which the offi- cers had not received their PAPER commis. sions, This refusal led to proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas, by which, un- der a peremptory mandamus, the return judges were compelled to perform their duty and count all the votes. In spite of this uc- tion of the Court, and in violation of the plain letter of the statute, the Abolition ma- jority of the return judges, after uniting with the Democratic minority in giving certificates of election based upon the whole legal vote cast, met in secret session after the adjournment of the regular board, and made out certificates in favor of the defeat- ed Abolition = candidates.—Tnese latter fraudulent certificates were, of course, re- jected by the Court, but not without the presiding Judge, Altison, indulging in some complimentary remark in reference to the parties to the foul conspiracy, The failure of these criminal attempts to disfranchise the soldiers only redoubled the the exertions of the Abolitionists, They immediately filed petitions contesting the election of the Democratic candidates, in which every alleged omission of the most insignificant details in conducting the elec- tious in the various camps was taken hold of, and every infamous charge which parti- san malice could invent was made against the ‘men for whom they now pretend so all, they insisted that the statute confering in direct violation of the Constitution of Pennsylvama! Whilst these petitions were pending, it was ascertained that a case would come be- fore the Supreme Court, from Luzerne coun ty, which involved the decicon of the con- stitutional question raised, and al] further proceedings were suspended to await the higher court. But it was afterwards dis- covered that the Luzerne case involved a point of jurisdiction and that, possibly, the Court might not be compelled to consider the constitutional question. This was a new difficulty’ which required prompt atten- tion from these Argus-oyed patriots. The plan hit upon by them was certamly novel, if not ingenious. Tt was alleged that a soldier named Kunzman, who had returned to the city from the Army of the Potomac, Nad voted at the election held by the Penn- sylvania regiments, he being at the time an unnaturalized foreigner. An indictment was framed against him in the Quarter Ses- sions, and he was immediately arraigned. Unlike defendants generally, who perverse- ly insist upon giving the Commonwealth the trouble of proving the charge against them, and after the facts in the case have been proved still avail themselves of every im- perfection of the law under which they are arrainged, the accommodating Kanzman admitted the facts alleged in the indictment, and by a demurrer based his defence solely . adverse to their spurious claims to the title’ much concern and sympathy. —But, above $ the elective franchise upon the soldier was |, upon the unconstitationality of the law un- der which the election was held. Here, then ‘was the opportunity of making the Supreme Court face the mosic. The liberality of Kunzman had relieved the District Attorney of the difficult task of proving that he was born in a foreign country, had never been naturalized inimny of the Stafes, and had voted at an election held hundreas of miles away ; and the only question presented fop argument was the very one desired to be. brought before the Supreme Court, shaped in such a way that it could not be evaded. Accordingly, on the same day on which Kunsman was arraigned and demurred to the indictment, the constitutionality of the law authorizing the soldiers’ vole was argued before Judge Allison in the Quarter ter Sessions by counsel, all of whom, in- cluding the District Attorney and counsel for the parties, who, in the election cases, were endeavoring to have the election law pronounced unconstitutional. The decision Was a summary one. The learned Aholi- tion Judge did not invite the attention of his associates to a question of such grave im- pore as that declaring void a solemn actog the Legislature, nor did he require time for deliberation, but, when the argument was concluded, promptly pronounced the law un- constitutional, and gave judgment for the defendant. The Commonwealth appealed to the Supreme Court, The record was hastily made up, and the District Attorney, not waiting for the next session for Phila- delphia cases, submitted the matter at once to the Court when engaged in hearing coun- try cases. As no oral argument was de- sired, the Court acceded to bis request, and took the case into consideration. At the ensuing term Judge Woodward delivered the opinion of the Court, holding that one who was not a citizen of Pennsylvania could not be indicted for an offence committed in the State of Virginia, and that the con- stitutionality of the law allowing soldiers to vote was not necessarily inyolved in the case, il was unnecessary to express any opinion upon that point. The Luzerne case had in the meantime been argued, aud as the constitutional question was fairly pre- sented, it was squarely met and decided by the Court. The decision made was received with intense delight by the Abolition party in this city, and the benefits resulting from that decision, outsting as it did a Democrat- ic Sheriff, are now enjoyed by the Abolition- ists, including McMichael and Forney. Of the Judge who heard the argument and took part in the decision —Chief Justice Lowrie being absent—none was. from the outset, more emphatic in expressing his opinion against the constitutionality of the soldiers’ vote than the Abolition “member of the Court, Mr. Justice Reed. We have thus endeavored to present a plain unvarnished statement of the case, and we ask the honest judgment of the men of all parties upon the shallow and miserable hypocrisy of the Ab- olition leaders now claiming to be the ex- clusive friends of our gallant volunteers. — Age. —_—t 7 If you want ‘negro equality’’ vote for Curtin, [7 If you want hard times to continue, vote for Curtin. [ZF If you want the country to go the devil, vote for Curtin. I= If you want to defeat a pure, upright and honest man, vote for Curtin. 2&5 If you want to crush out all kope of ending this war, vote for Curtin, Be If you want to elect a sycophantic and unprincipled demagogue, vote for Curtin IZ If you want to elect the rea? “soldiers friend,” vote for Woodward, IZ If you revere the Constitution of our fathers, vote for Woodward. [5 1f you want to give a death-blow to aboli tion-niggerism, vote for Woodward: UZ If you want the Union restored as our fathers made it, vote for Woodward. [=~ If you have any regard for the wel fare of your posterity, vote for Woodward: 157 It you want peace, plenty and pros- perity fo reign in the land, vote for Wood- ward. 027 If you want to elect the purest man since the days of Frauk Shunk, vote for Woodward. [= If you want to kindle ahope in the hearts of the people that the country . may yet be saved, vote for Woodward. 127 If you love God and your country, vote for Woodward, I= InPorTANT.—Robert Dale Owen, Jas. Mclsane and Samuel G. Howe, announce themselves as appointed by Government to ascerlain Nigger Statistics, as to whether mulatto females usually have as many chil- dren as white females. This is the pro- gramme of amalgamation of course. SB BOP 177 A Republican who professes ‘not to be an abolitionist, but supports the abolition paity, is like a tad pole, merely in a state of transition, He will losa his tail'by and by. TTT Rr DP. Let every Democrat when he writes a let- ter to a soldier, encloge him a Democratic ticket and and ask him to vote 1t. TT Pp nn: [I Since the beginning of the war a great majority of the Wide-Awakes have become fast asleep, and cannot hear the call to arms, ) hi gle al dL A Yankee TrAom.—Free the negroes and make slaves of white men. ~ LET FREEMEN REMEMBER, That the country was iwarned for yearg that the tridmph of the sectional, disunion, aboli'ion party would give a civil war and dissolve the Union, : LET THEM REMEBER that as soon as this abolition Darty came in power, the Union crumbled, and that while democrats wero in favor of the Crittenden compromise, which the South ‘promised to accept, the abolitionists were opposed to it and voted it down against the petitions, the protests and the votes of the democratic party—thus throwing us into this stupen- dous cil war. LET THEM REMEMBER that the abolition designs of the party in power, were soon after developed, by try- ing to strike down the freedom of the press, of speech and by the adoption of the uni- versal emancipation and awalgamation po- licy. LET THEM REMEMBER, that the party in power have plundered the government of millions upon millions of dollars, have made an odious and oppres- sive system of taxation, have burdened ug with a most stupendons national debt have created scores of new offices for the benefit of their favored partizans, have quartered troops upon us without cause, and have shown the most astonishing profligacy and extravagance to enrich their own partizans at the expense of the country, LET THEM REMEMBER. that the party in power, after making the most solemn promises of free press and free speech, and keeping the motto stand- ing 1m their papers, have since shown their disregard of all pledges, by trying to des- troy by mobs and brute force, these great rights of freemen. LET THEM REMEMBER that their promises to the poor man, like all the rest, were false and deceptive, as the poor man must now pay double prices for all he consumes, must compete with ne. gro labor and be classed by this administra. tion as a negro’s equal. and not only that but must, because he has not $300 be fore- ed by bayonets, away from his family into the army, while the rich do not feel the loss of the price which exemps them. LET THEM REMEMBER. that this is the old Know Nothing party with Cartin and Know Nothing at 1ts head, In favor of breaking down the sovereiguty of the States, and erecting a despotic form of government, in which the wealthy and aristocratic shall have a monopoly and rank above the laborer, as in despotic countries in Europe. * Can the poor man aig them by his own vote to destroy his own liberty? if he does, he is not worthy to be a freeman, and will not be one long. LET THEM REMEMBER. that Andrew G, Curtin is only a Know Nothing, in favor of denying forcigners rights which he would give to negroes, but that he is reported as having once asserted that th Pennsylvania Dutch all had “DOUBLE SKULLS?” and that he bas favored the violations of both State and National Coastitutions by arbitrary arrests, and has favored mobs, outrage and riotings by pardoning rioters and ruffians, after they were tried and eon- victed for vatraging decency, law ‘and hu- manity: This he did in the Columbia Cp riot case, and in the riot ease in Muncy, and yet he asks law abiding and Constitu- tional men to give him their votes ! They will give him an invitation to leave Harris- burg: LET FREEMEN REMEMBER all these things when they go to vote on the 13th of October, and cast their votes for Woodward and Lowtie, men of character, who respect the law and obey the Constitu tion, who hold principles of equality between the rich and the poor, and who make no licing promises to the people as the abolition party have done. Let them remember that deniocratic principles do not change—that a a 2 an = = SRR WHO WILL VOTE FOR GEORGE W. WOODWARD. The Bucks county Intelligencer having asked the question, “Who will vote for George W. Woodward 2’ the Doyelstown Democrat, (owned by Colonel Davis, who | has showu his patriotism and valor upon many hard fought fields since the war began) thns answered the question + 1. Fivery soldier who was provided by An- drew G. Curtin with shoddy uniform —with worthless shoes, and with defective blankets in order that the friends of that distinguish- ed patriot could make large contract profits on which the Governor would receive his commission. 2. Every soldier who was seduced into the service of the United States for six ‘months, upon the pledge, solemnly given by Andrew G. Curtin, that the man 80 volun- teering should be exempt. from the draft 7.— A pledge which was violated almost as soon agit was made. 3. Every member of the gallant Pennsyl- vania Reserves, who, after performing pro- digies of valor, were tetained in the Federal service without being allowed to come home and recruit, while New England regiments were farloughed ; because Governor Cur- tin had not manliness enough to demand this well earned reward of their faithful services. 4. Every mechanic who ig compelled to take orders upon his employer's store, in- stead of receiving cash for his services, will vote against the man who vetoed the bill to remedy this evil, which wro ngs the laborer of his hire, 6 Every farmer in {he Cumberland Val- ley, who was robbed by the rebels, be- cause Governor Curtin had not the manli- ness and the ability to do his sworn duty by the Commonwealth of which he was the Executive Chief, 6 Every tax payer who fully understands the great robbery perpetrated by the bill repealing the tonnage tax, which Govern- or Curtin gigned after he was pledged to veto it. 7. Every man who believes that a State is an independent sovereignty within its constitutional sphere, and who is unwilling that State independence should be sacrific. ed to gratify a Federal despotism, 8 Every honest man who knows all the corruptions practised "by Curtin and his friends, which were 50 gross and monstrous that his Attorney General, Purviance, was forced to resign his office, desiring to remain an honest man, : 9 Every naturalized citizen of Penusyl- vania who recollects that Andrew G. Curtin was the Iligh Priest of Know-Nothingism in 1854-5, when he was Secreiary of State to Gov. Pollock. 10. Every mon who has had a son, broth- er or friend drafted, or who wag dratted himself in October last—when Govornor Curtin permitted Pennsylvania to be com- pelled to furnish by draft a surplus over her quota—when other States, which had not furnished their ful] number, were exempted from conscription. 11. Every man who believes 1n personal liberty, free speech and a fice press—that great triad of rights which Governor Curtin has suffered the generalgovernment to {ram- ple under fot in Pennsylvania, in defiance of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of the United States, 12. Every man who believes shat this gov- ernment is a government of whize men, and1s opposed to the negro equality —the great end and aim of Gov. Curtin and the Abolitionigts. , 13. Every man who believes in the Union as our fathers framed 1t, and who locks to this war as a means of preserving the latter and restoring the former, and not as the great machine by which States shall be turned into provinces and negroes into equals, 14. Every man who is in favor of peace, based upon a restoration of the Union as it was, with equal rights in all the States, and they have blessed the nation with peace, plenty and prosperity in the past and will do so hereafter, Remember these things and vote the democratic icket.— Northum. berland Democrat, te Republicans are Monarchists. As an evidence that the Republicans are in favor of a monarchy, it is only necessary to refer to the following facts : 1, They strike at the very root of human the inherient rights of free men preserved and perpetuated. These classes will give George W. Wood- ward at least thirty thousand majority in October next, MURDER BY NEGRO WHOLE FAMILY MAS- SACRED. SHOCKING SOLDIERS — A correspondent of the St. Louis Dally Union thus describes {the following revolt: liberty by denying the citizens the privilege of the writ of, habeas corpus. 2. They have imposed stamp duties such as the colonies refused to regard, 3. They introduced the conscription act, the offspring of the bloody Jacobins of France. 4. They have inaugurated a censorship of the press. 5. They claim that all power is in the President, and ‘that the people have no rights save such as he is willing to bestow upon them. : . 6. They whip men at the etake as in the days of old John Adams. 7. They pardon mobs and justify them in tearing down papers and riding men on rails for their opinions. : 8. They are proscriptive in religion, asin the case of Know-Nothingism, 9. They trample Constitutions and laws under their feet, and resort to despotic pow- ors. ing scene :— A most shocking butchery was perpetrated about half past nine, A. M., on the 4th inst. at Beckham's Landing,in Ten- nessee, opposite Point Pleasant Iilinois,— Twelve negroes, each of them armed with a revolver, musket and bowie knife, went that day to the house of Mr, Beckham, a well know merchant, who had for years kept store at that place, and who gave came to the landing. There were in the house at the time Major Becicham, his son Frank, and the four children of his son. All them were first tied by the negroes, and then butchered, the fiends cutting off the heads of some of the helpless victiins and stabbing others. Tle lifeless bodies were then drag. ged to the river and thrown into the water. A safe in the house was broken open, and every thing in the dwelling destroyed, — Mrs: Beckham, wife of Frank Beckham, with one of her children was absent at the time, This fortunate absence saved their lives, as Can honest men of freeman sustain them by their votes ? they did not return till the murderers had left. A niece of Mr. Beckham wag passing by the Louse just as the murderers had tied his hands. He ordered her t, run for her life. She did 80, ard althongh the villains fired eighteen shots at her, she succeeded in making her escape, being mounted on a mule, which bore her out of reach of danger. She gave the alarm and the whole neighbor hood turned out after the murderers. Nina of them were captured, half way be'ween Island No 10 and the landing, by Lieuten- ant Felson, The other thiee iad not been heard of up to the evening of the 4th. The arrested negroes all confessed the deed, but declared that they were ordered 65 commit the murder by Captain Thomas, comman- ding the contraband at Island No. 10. There is something mysterious about the whole affair. The negroes were contrabands from Island Ne. 10, brought thither from Cairo, about four months ago. They could not leave the Island without passes, and they could not have been so completely armed without the knowledge of the officers. Its said that Mrs Beckham held a negro girl whose mother had escaped to the Island. — There are also two stories afioat of cther depredations committed by the white offi- cers of the two negro companies, on’ the is. land. Be that As it may, the atrosious deed has spread among the inhabitants of the neighborhood, who believe that the long expected massacre has commenced Some are preg aring for fight, others for ven- gence. ———— A saeco “THE SOLDIER'S FRIEND." The Tnguirer anhounced a few days since, that Gov. Curtin, while in this city, had been ealled on by several members of the Savitary and Christian Commissions, who had not seen him since they had met on various battle-fields.” This is truly rouch- ing, Tender, indeed, must have been the meeting between Andy and the pious gen- tlemen, parting, as they had done last, ‘‘apon various battle fields,” But there iy Something puzzting abou the statement, What m the world was Andy doing on these battle-ficlds ? Ife was not there fighting, for we know that in spite of his promise to head the forces of Pennsylvania duting the recent invasion, he maintamed a Secure position in the rear, He 13 willing, like Artemas Ward, to sacrifice al his able-bodied rela- tives, down to his wife's brother in the good - cause, but has no idea of exposing his own precious person to rebel bullets. We pre- sume therefore that the battle-fields on which Andy met his sanitary and Christian friends were fields on which the bloody work was already done. Sad indced must have been the spectable, to Andy, of men maimed and slain, piled in gory heaps, with no shroud save the shoddy rags with which he had ciothed them.—Many a son of Penn- sylvania, for whose comfort the country had made every provision, marched to the field in tatters, that Curtin and bis confederates might be enriched. Many a brave boy slept cold under his rotten blanket while Aboli- tion 10bbers filled their pockets with the money which the State had paid to buy him a warm and good one. And the man who sanctioned these outrageous frauds, and profited by them, goes wanduring over the country on the hunt of battle fields ; shecs crocodile tears over dead Pennsylvamang whom ke kept hungry and ragged while alive ; shakes hands with the Christian and Sanitary Commission ; wipes his eyes with a cambric handkerchief, and snuffles about being “the soldiers’ friend.” (Jod save the poor soldier from the murderous friendship of this battle-field tonic ! BOB Omen [77 The Democratic party, called into ex- istence by the **Alien and Sedition laws" and other attempts to abridge the rights of the peopic tinder the elder Adams, has sl. ways been the sturdy champion of liberi rights of the States or individuals, and have rolled back the waves of oppression which threatened to oversheln us jn the past, It was the Democratic party that repealed the odious “Alien and Sedition laws,” and maintained for the people the constitutional right of diseussing the acts of their rulers, and condemning them whenever they trans- cended their delegated powers. When the Masonic fraternity were perse- cuted under the leadership of the notorious Stevens, it was the Democratic party who stood up against every species of persecu- tion, and maintained the right of all per- sons to enjoy their peculiar beliefs, so long as they did not trench upon the rights of others, or violate the laws of the land. — And when in 1838 the proscriptive policy of the Anti-Masonic party under Gov. Ritner, culminated in an attempt to *streat the elec- tions as though they had not been held,” and {o retain their power by force, it was the indignant Democracy that rose up in defence of constitutional rights, and res‘or- ed the supremacy of the laws, When the Catholic Church was assailed by bigoted New England fanatics, and when, through their teachings, a besotted mob was raised fo burn a nunnery near Boston, at the midnight hour, and drive out innocent and d:fencelesss women and chil- dren naked into the inclement night; and when, through. the same teachings, Anti- and two other children were at school. Catholic mobs were raised in Philadelphia, churches burned, houses broken into, prop- erty stolen and destroyed, women insulbed and outraged, Luman lives sacrificed and every species of outrage and wrong practic. ed, it was the Democratic party that rallied to the rescue, defended the persecuted, put down the mob, punished the ‘offenders, and bringing order out of chaos, restored peaco and an acknowledegment of the constitu. tional right to worship God aftey the dictates of our own consciences. — Patriot and Un- ton, and law, They, bave always resis 47 tia 7 op enc ouchhidus ar power No Die th Ast: