— the candidates o county. being made to This is not a ne ¥ Editor. BELLEFONTE, PA. P. GRAY MEEK, al principles, { AA AA AAAS RS PPI ANP mmm Friday Morning, Sept, 18, 1863 -— - = Democratic State Ticket, FOR GOVERNOR, GEORGE W. WOODWARD, OF LUZERNE. | is sloughed off geons, and whe! all his life been mire errs | under the plea FOR JUDGE OF TIIE SUPREME COURT. WALTER H. LOWRIE, OF ALLEGHNY. Ri MANET EEA 32 as County Ticket. TOR ASSEBMBLY, ‘C. T. ALEXANDER, of Bellefonte. and he even emmy | ject of the d 80 plainly tha of this kind s ¥OR PROTHONOTARY, Democ rats. JAMES H. LIPTON, of Milesbhurg. FOB DRGISTER & RECORDER, J. P. GEPHEART, of Millbeim. Democracy. FOR TREASURER, JOHN SHANNON, of Contre Hall, POR SHERIFF. RICHARD CONLEY, of Gregg Townrhip. low pretense. brance prove you trust them way. POR COMMIREIONER, JAMES FORESMAN, «f Sncw Shoe. TOR AUDITOR, J. W. SNYDER, ‘ef Ferguson Townehip. foreigners. No FOR CORONKE, JOSEPH ADAMS, ©’ Milesburg. on the floor of t, denied that he e denouncing the - Drmocratic Meetings ! Meetings of the Democracy will behold at the following times aud places: Whisky Hollow, Friday Evening Sept. 16th a, Saturday, 2 o'clock, P. M.. Sep. 19th Centre Hall, Tucsiay Evening, Sept 22d. Kebersburg, Wednesday, (2 o'clock ) Sept 28. Independence Schl Dist. Thursday Evefept. 34th, PLEASANT GAP, Friday, (2 o'clock,) Sept 25. Pino Grove, Satarday, (2 o'clock.) Sept. 28. John Ii. Orvis, W. J. Kealsh, W. F. Reynolds, P. Gray Meck, Joe W. Furoy, C. T. Alexander, Jolin P. Mitchell, Col. Reuben Keller and other speakers, will moet and address the people at the above naved localities. against him ? feat Woodward ys DEMOCRATS! RALLY!! MASS MEETING! A GRAND MEETING of the citisens of Cen. se. Clinton and the adjoining countive, who are in favor of the pupremscy of the Constitution and the enforeement of the laws, and opposed to all arbitrary srresta ard every other feature of ty~ yaany and despotism, will be held at PLEASANT GAP. Centre County, Pa., on FRIDAY Beptember 36th, 1863, at 3 o'clock, P. M. HON. CHARLES R. BUCKALEW, LOX, WILLIAM A WALLACE, Jeux II. Omvis and C. T. Anxxaxper Esq and other able speakers will be present to address the Demcorucy. By orcer of the COMMITTTE Mass Meeting. Me Weonwa the country. gentleman from of last week, A grand Democratic MEETING To ratify the nominaticn of WOODWARD AND LOWRIE, will be held in Bellefonte, Centre, County, ON BATURDAY, OCTOBER 84, 1863. Sita prolontio. 1 Let the Democracy turn out, | they will not do en masse, from every portion of | pot tolerate it. be mistaken in his politics. opponents of Democracy. Democrats be not Deceived. Last week we announced the names of f the abolition party of this It will be noticed that among them appears the nameg Foster, of Miles t Haupt of Spring township. An attempt is Captain Harry p, and Samuel palm these men off upon the people a8 Democrats of the war school or ‘‘military necessity” kind, and they are asking the people to vote for them as such, w idea with the opponents of the Democracy. Having no constitution- because they ignored tke Constitution long ago), at stake, they at all times have shown a willingness to gobble up all the corruption that from time to time from the Democratic party and make it tke idol of their party. They hang out the bait of office to catch gud- never a Democrat who has after office, but has failed to receive it, will bite at their bait, they haul bim in and reise a shout of victory over theirprize? In the last three years they have twice deceived the democracy of this county ty the supporting of such men that they were Democrats, Last fall they told us Hale was a Democrat went so far as to give some pledges in writing to that effect, but as 80.u as the election was over and the ob- eception accomplished, he showed the cloven foot of Abolitionism t the people could no longer Two lessons hould be sufficient, and we are very inuch mistaken if an intelligent { people can be deceived now into supporting Foster and Haupt by the cry that they are What party they have been attached to heretofore can make no differ- ence as by the acceptance of the nemination they identity themselves with Abolitionism they endorse the doctrine of that party and frem that mowent cease fo be part of the Democrats beware men, Remember Forney and Ilickman and the deception practiced upon you last fall and do not be caught again by such a shal- of such Men who will accept a nom- ination from such a party are no Demo- crats but as instances within your remem- the most violent, fanatical These men if will serve you in the same rn GO - Ppmm ITF The Central Press last week publish- ed the speech said to bave been delivered by Judge Woodward in the Convention to amend the Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania, against the naturalization of w, do not the persons who write for that paper know that Judge Wood- ward never made that speech? Do they not know that immediately after it made its first appearance, Judge Woodward rose, and up- hat Convent on emphatically ver made any such speech, whole thing as a fabrication of one of the opposition reporters who took down his speach, and as a base attempt to injure his political reputation, and to preju- dice the minds of the foreign population Do they not know that it is an infamous, base lie ? Of course they do; but the contemptible hounds regard ncith- er truth nor justice in their attempts to de- and elect Curtin. The following is what Judge Woodward said in reference to this speech, which has £0 often been quoted against him, We ex-’ tract from the * Proceedings and Debates” of the ‘Penosylvania Convention, 1838,” page 34, as follows: RD explained that he did not wish to be s/andered by any reporter or misrepresented by any member on this floor and he would not allow gentlemen to imputs measures and sentiments 10 him which did not belong to him. propose to exclude the foreigners now in the country, from political privileges, nor those who should at any time hereafter come to He presumed the gentleman alluded to an amendment offered by him in convention at Harrisburg, which “proposed nothing more than an inquiry into the ex- pediency of preventing foreigners who sho’d arrive 1u the country after 1841, from voting and holding office. That was an amendment to a proposition made by the gentleman from Chester, (Mr. Thomas) suggesting an uqui- ry into the expediency of excluding foreign- ers altogether from our soil ; and theamount of it was to give the proposed inquiry a dif- ferent direction from that proposed by the He said he never did Chester. The proposition of the gen'leman from Chester being with- drawn, Mr. Woodward explained, that he withdrew his amendment. ee tl er en. da The “talyented buggers’ we spoke have made appointments throughout parts of the courty to stamp in favor of Andy the shoddy candidate for Governor. They will no doubt enlighten the people of this county upen the peculiar qualifications of Curtin and Agnew for the offices of Governor and Supreme Judge, If they delineate the portrait of Andy as faithfully as d:d the editor of the Pittsburg Gazelle, a gtaunch republican paper—they will vindicate the character of their chris- ike, men, but this we know 88 Andy their master will It would be contrary to the country, and show the tyrant | the doctrine and practice of Abolitivnists ot Washington that the people are yet jealous lof their liberties and are determined to mamtain them. Come with banners and with flags, with sheuts and with tions and strifes songs, and let there be such a glo- | envy, strife, rious outpouring of the people as | perverse dispu shall make the mountains and valleys of old Centre ring again. . himself as they Hon. Geo, W, Woodward for a christian, has expressed his intention to be ! for yourselves with his Centre county friends on this occasion. Hon. W. H, Wirrg, Col. KANE to run counter t you. minds and desti that gain is godliness. From such men ag these Paul exhorted Timothy to withdraw to tell the truth and they cannot be expected o its teachings. They are beautifully described in the sixth chapter of Paul's 1st Hpistle to Timothy as “proud knowing nothing, but doting about ques. of words whereof cometh rallicgs, evil surmisings. tings of men of corrupt tute of the truth supposing were men not fit associates Democrats you can judge under the ipstrugtions of St. Paul whether they are fit associates for RE 0Z"Let democrats remember when they and S. H ReyNoLps Esq , will | are asked to support Foster and Haupt, as v . y . ositively be present t the people, and other able speak. | ory wirsady, ers mre expected. Hale deception, w ' Democrats, that they have been twice de- og address ceived in the same way, and by this same Remember ths Blair and Be Assessed, 177 Democrats, see to it that every dem- ocratic voter in your district is regularly assessed, at least ten days before the elec- tion, Examine the lists of voters as posted at the place of holding elections and if the names of any of your neighbors or friends Coes not appear on the list notify them at once and go to the assessor yourself and do not depart until you have seen their names entered by the assessor. Every vote is of importance for every democraiic vote this fall will be u voice for liberty, for free speech acd a free press, for peace, a restored union and the constitution as our fathers made it. * The Abolition advocates of tyranny are straining every nerve to carry the day and while they do not stand the ghost of a chance at a fair election yet it behooves every democrat 10 be on the alert and do his whole duty. “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.” Be watchful therefore of the liberty you still enjoy for if our op- ponents succeed in carrying the election, it will be the last State election probably that you will ever see. They wish to do away with State lines and state rights, con- sclidate the government, take it out of the hands of_the people, and establish a mon- archy. If you don’t desire this—be as. sessed and vote, and sae to it that every- body else does the same, QB asi. I> Wien Forney, the liar of the Harris- burg Telegraph, states in his yesterday's paper, that Judges Woodward and Lowrie were both seen in a lager beer saloon, on Library street, Phiiadelphia. Well, sup- pose they were! 1t does not require the ‘‘oldest inhabitant’’ to recollect the time when Wein Forney was never seen anywhere ese, savein the gulter! Ah, Wein, iit grieves us to be compelled to revert to such unpleas- ant reminiscences, but you are the last man that ought to throw “lager deer’ in the face or on the character of any one, and least of all. such noble spints as Woodward and Lowrie, Have you forgotten, good sir, how you used to lay around this town, after you had fallen from your high estate as editor of the Democratic atchman, ané beg, ay, beg for balf-a-dime to buy yourself a glass of that same Zager deer or something stronger? Surely, you cannot have forgotten these things, already, for those were sad days for you, Wein, and they vet make sorrowful the hearts of those who were once your friends, when they recollect how undoubted was the evidence of yonr shame, But you Fave reformed, they say. Ab, well, thank God for his great mercy, and we give you credit. Be a man ell your life, hercafier, Wein, but never attempt to throw a whisky slur atany one, for remember your own sntecedents have been very unhappy, We have read you this little lesson in all kindness, Wein. May you profit by it, —————— A Oe Mark Them !—Fellow Democrats, every would-be Democrat wko is not open and de- cided in his support of the Democracy, in this hour of Liberty’s peril, is against us. Such only wish to stand aloof, and after- wards hop along fr office with the * biggest crowd.” The Democracy are bound to come out victorious——but, victory or defeat let us hereafter spurn all such who only go with us when we win. He who professes to be a democrat. and will not join in with us to crush out, at the ballot box, this accur- sed, plundering, negro freeing, white-man casluving, tyranuical, and despotic avoli- tion dynasty, is working with the enemy. Democrats of Centre, the sooner our organ- ization is purged of all such the better ; milk and water men arc a dead weight. — Centre Berichter. So say we. And so says every Democrat throughout the land. The principles ot Democracy are pure and plain—its candi- dates are honest aud patriotic, and the man that pretends to belong to the Democratic party, and does not tome out openly and boldly, in favor of our principles, and in fa. vor of our men, should be kicked overboard at once, and left to founder and sink be- neath the black waves of Abolitionism. 07 The past history and present policy of the Republican party, should teach eve- ry one that it is a Union party.— Abolition Exchange, It should eh! The past history you al- lude to was we suppose, the deings of the Tories, Witeh -burners, Hartford Convention- ists, Blue Lighters, Anti-Mexican War men, and John Brown raiders, they were united, and there is'nt a horse thief, horse jockey, Conseript officer, Provost Marshall, tax- collector, shoddy manufacturer, govern- ment contractors, renegade democrat or Abolitionist but are united to-day and marching under its pure (?) banner and within its broad folds. A sweet union party it is ! ————e Ler the tax payers of this county re- member, that the abolition Admistratin at Washington is spending over two millions of dollars a day. Let them remember that Andrew G. Curtin, is the tool of that Administration, and endorses all of its acts and measures. Let thenr remember that they must pay for this extravagance, by submitting to the most burdensome taxa- tion. Can they vote for men who will a low shoddy contractors to rob them of their hard earned money ? Wa think not. To RsPUBLICANS.—Those [of you wko have been drafied and compelled to pay well, do you hive made anything by a change of Adminstration? Would it not have been a thcusand times better for your country andfor your purse, if both Lincoln and Curtin had been defeated ? This we beliere you can now see. Ifso, your duty will be very clear at the next election. To be honest te your country and to your- self, yoa must go the polls and vote the democratic ticket. By doing this, you will save yourself still futher trouble and expense ———— es. p@=Gov, Curtin was one of the HIGH PRIESTS of the Know Nothing party, — He went into power upon the cry of “Down with FOREIGNERS!’ and tried his bast to strip them of those political rights which Woodward and the Democratic party have always battled to maintain for them, [ZF At the Watchman office is the place to get job-work done on short notice, in neat style, and at the very lowest prices, |A Signifieant Article from a © “Rebel Paper. . The following remarkable article is from the Mobile Register, a paper edited by John Forsyth, one of the ablest men in the South. Let all true Union men vote with the Democratic party—the only party that can restore the old Union. The article from the Mobile Register is as follows : We thank God from the depths of our hearts that the authorities snubbed Vice President Stephens, in his late attempt to confer with them on international affairs, without form or ceremony. It has long been kfown here that this gentleman thought if he could get to whisper into the ears of some men about Washington, the result might be peace on some sort of wnien or reconstruction, Te seemed to forget that Douglas, with whom he used to serve, is dead, and notwithstanding his mantle has allen, by dividing it into four pieees, upon Richardson and Voorhees, Vallandigham and Pugh, still the Democratic party is not in power now, and we may thank God for it. The prospects looks gloomy for the Vice President, whose infirmity of body no doubt casts a shadow over his spirits, and he said that one or two things must be done : either some terms must be made or the whole militia of the Confederacy must be calied out and an immediate aliiance made with foreign powers. President Da- vis gave him full power to treat on honora- ble terms, and started him off to the king- dom of Abraham. But Father Abraham told him there was an impassable gulf be- tween thew, and the Vice President had to steam back to Richmond, a bttle tap-fallen. We hope this will put a stop forever to some croakers about here, who intimate that there are people enough friendly to the South in the North, to restore the Union as it was. And we hope the Government at Richmond will not humiliate itself any more, but from this time will look only to the one end of final and substantial inde- pendence. The North is not less set on a purpose of final separation than we are. The Republican party are not fighting to restore this Union any more than the ola Romans fought to establish the indepen- dence of the countries they invaded. The Republicans are fighting “for conquest and dominion, we for liberty and independence. There is only one party in the North who want the Union restored, but they have no more power —lepislative, executive or judi- cial —than the paper we write on. ‘It is true they makeashow of uvion and strength but they have no voice of authority, We know that ihe Vallandigham school wants the Union restored, for he told us so when here in exile, partaking of such hospitality as we extended toa rcal enemy to our struggle for separation, banished to our soil by another enemy who is practically more our friend than he, And if Vallan- digham should, by acident or other cause, become Governor of Ohio, we hope Lin- coln will keep his nerves to the proper ten. son, and not allow him to enter the con- fines of tWe State. His Administration would do more to restore the Union than any other power in Ohio could do, and therefore we pray that he may be defeated, Should a strong Union party” spring up in Ohio, the third State in the North mn politi. cal importince, it might find a faint res. ponse in some Southern State, and give us trouble. But as long es the Republicans hold pow- er they will tLink of conquest and domin- ion only, and we on the other hand, will come up in solid column for freedom and independence, which we will be certain to achieve with such assistance as we may now (after the refusal of the Washington Cabinet to confer) confidently expect, be- fore the Democrats of the North get in power again, and come whispering ia our ears, ¢ Union, reconstruction, Constitution, concession and guarantees.” Away with all such stuff! We want separation. Give us wen rather like Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner. They curse the old Un- ion and despise it, and so do we. And now We promise these gentlemen that. as they hate the Union and ¢‘the accursed Constita- tion,” let them keep down Vallandigham and his party in the North; then they shall never be troubled by us with such whining about the Constitution and Union. as they are sending up. Handcuffs for Freemen. A few days ago we saw in the streets o. this fair eity a sight calculated to fill every heart with horror. Walking between a file of soldiers, in one of the most crowded thoroughfares, were five white freemen, handcufied and strongly guarded by their military escort. Over the iron manacles that bound the wrists of several were thrown handkerchiefs ; and the down cast look and sorrowing eye of the conscripts told how deeply they felt the degradation they were compelled to suffer. These men had com- mitted no crime. Their names had been drawn from the fatal wheel; and, in the agony of doubt, whether they should remain with their loved ones in these sore times of want and trial, or eagerly march to fill . the ranks of the army in this “war for the Afri- can and hus race,” they had not promptly reported to the Provost Marshal's office, and were called deserters, This sight, we are informed, is no extraordinary one, Ft is-of frequent and almost hourly occurrence, — Oompelled to suffer the grossest indignities, thousands are daily tortured with the galling thought that in this land of freedom they must meet the fate of slaves. But, be pa- tient ! A few weeks more only must pass away, before the freemen of Pennsylvania will have an opportunity of smiting at the ballot-hox the miscreants who are now stri- ving to deprive them of their liberties. In going to polls, remember, freemen, that the Abolitonists of this proud city have forged handcuffs for white men,and given shoulder-straps to negroes !—Phila. Age. The Abolition Leaguers are evidently becoming very much alarmed at the prospect before them. They see that their notoriously unclean candidate for Govenor cannot secure the votes of the people ; that honest, conscientious men cannot support him ; and that his defeat cannot possibly be prevented without a resort to desperate and . yoprincipled means. They are therefore preparing themselves accordingly, and lying stump speeches, from unscapulous partizans, are fo be among the orders of the ay from now until the election. But all will not an- swer. Their present alarm is but the hgr- binger of the certain defeat that awaits them at the polls. The mass of the people know toa much of Cyrtin to be lied into his sup- port; they have the evidence of his own party friends that he is mortaly and politic- ally unclean ; whilst the private and public character of Judge Woodward is an assur- ance to them that he is worthy of their confidence and suffrages: s aA Republican paper says:— «The. great mass of the Democracy of Pennsylva nia are not copperheads. Of course not ; especially as we are on the eve of the elec- tion, and some of them may possibly ke honey-fugled into voting for Shoddy Ourtin. The election over, however, and they will all no doupt again degenerate into ‘‘cop- petheads in the estimation of this Abo- ition posay, Pool who ¥ ” Great Discoveries Made too late. They tell us of & gold, a silver, an iron, 4 brazen and a dark age, The present is the age of discovery. That of Columbus was a Calvin-Edsouized cipher in comparison with it. Let ug enumerate a little: 1. Greely discovered that the South was a bill of expense to the rest of the Union, the sooner it left the better, 2. The Abolitionists generally that the South was a poor house and supported by the North. 3. That the generality of the southern- ers could neither read, write, work or fight. 4. That we could neither kick the South into a fight aor out of the Union, 5. That nobedy bat Keitt, or at South Carolina would insurrect. 6. That the paupers would sooner secede from the town farm than the South attempt to leave the Union. 7. That we could quell the South ¢by driving an old black cow down there.” 8. That the slaves would nse just as soon as the white men left their homes to fight the North. (See N. Y. Tribune of 1860.) 9. That one Massachusetts regiment would whip the Scuth. 10. That three Massachusetts regiments could do it. 11. That 75,000 thrze months’ men would do it. 12. That 400,00 would do it. 13 That 700,000 men were more than enough to doit, so we must stop volunteer- ing. (See Henry Wilson.) 14. That 300,000 more three years men would finish the job, [See Lincoln's last, 15. That 300,000 nine month's men would finish it anyhow. 16. That the Maine New York, New Jer- sey and Ohio militia would do it, i 17. That 300,000 drafted men will do I most 18. .That arming negroes will do Jit 4nse, 19, "That the whole North, from 18 to 45, shall do it. 20. That ‘A. Lincoln” is the sole and fin- al judge whether the country is mvaded or in msurrection or not. 21. That when he says that it is the fact, he has the power tu hang, roast, broil, ban- ish or stew every person in the United States. [See Lincoln to Corning and oth- ers. 22. That if State Governors and Legisla- tures don’t suit him, the Provost Marshal “will keep them in order.” (See N. York Times.) 23. That by “touching a bell” Lincoln has more power than any one, aside from the Almighty, ever attempted to «xercise on earth, and that his pimpts have just as much. [See Sewardto Lord Lyons and Burn- side to the Judge.] 24. That it is the duty of white men to marry sooty wenches, [Sce Hider Tilton.) 25. That all men ovght to have nig- gers marry their daughters. [See Bishop Junkins, | 26. That love for male blacks consists in putting’ them where David pul Uriah. | See Port Hudson and Morris Island. | 27. That Hannibal was a nigger. No al- lusion to Hannibal Hamlin. (See Solicitor Whiting.) The corollary would seem to be that when we die we shall go to Jampblaci hea. ven.— Exchange. ee een, While George. W. Woodward, our Demo- eratic candidate, remains quietly at home, attending to the dutios assigned him by the people when they elected him Supreme Judge, and wheze he will remain until the people call him to fil! ano ther station, our provincial Governor deserts his Gubernator- ial chair and is wandering about the country forming political combinations, soliciting votes in person, and: judging from the tonc of his opponent, and trying to deceive the people by professions of patriotism, in order to carry out his own selfish ends. He claims to be the peculiar friend of the soldier and the foreigner, while 1t 18 well known that he refased rations to some of our brave vol- unteer militia, who went forth todefned our borders against the recent raid, and belong- ed to the proscriptive Know Nothing party and served as Seretary of Stato under the Know-Nothing administration of Governor Pollock. —ate et The Traveling Candidate.—Andrew G. Curtin has anounced to the public that he will travel through Pennsylvania during the present canvass, and beg the honest yeomanary of the State for their votes on the second tuesday of October. It could not be expected that man like the shoddy candidate for Govenor would have any feelings of delicacy in thus obtruding him- self upon the citizensof this Commonwealth ; but the people generally hoped that he wonld have shown shown some liitl regard for the dignity of the high position he now occupies, and been contet to remain quietly at home, awailing the verdict of the masses. Instead of doing so, he has deter- mined to abandon his duties at Harrisburg, and neglect the discharge of the important functions which his official position require him to perform. CurmINis now on the stump. The iuterests of this great State must all give way before his insatiate appe- tite tor office. Can the freemen of Pennsyl- vania cast their votes for a man who deserts his post when a hand is needed at the helm, and travels through the State to solicit the votes of those whom he has basely deceived and betrayed ?— Age QuEsTIONS for ANSWER.— What Democrat has labored to effect’ an original act of revolution, by destroying a sovereign State ? What Democrat has argued in favor of a dissolution of the Uniou ? What Democrat has thanked God for this war? . What Democrat has apologized for a violation of the Constitution ? What Democrat bas tried to shield viola- tors of the Constitution from deserved punishment ? What Democrat has said the Constitution is a convenant with hell ? What abolitionist has not approved of all these things, and in his heart answered these questions in affirmative, as his own conviction of policy ? Ber A grand democratic meeting was held in the brick school house, near Pine Grove Mills, Tuesday evening Sept., 10th. Hon' Wm. Burchfield was elected president and F. Krumrine, J. Neidich, J. Bottorf and J. Kogan, Vice president, The meeting was first addressed by A. A. Kerlin who entertained the audience an hour, Colo. Reuben Keller was then called upon and Spoke in a lively and interesting manner for overan hogr. The mepling wag one worthy of the occasion, nearly one fourth of the audience was republican but be it re- corded to their credit, The prest, then an- nounced that a meeting would be held at Gatesburg, Saturday, Sept: 19th. when the mesting adjourned, H, M. Sxtpsg, Sect, [Written for the Watchman. | Thoughts on the Crisis, No. a The Democratic party to-day is not the advocate of new doctrines, Its principles are as old as the history of the American Republic, which first gave thema “habitation and a nate.” though prior to the establish- ment of our preseiit system of government; wherever opposition to tyranny manifested itself the spirit of Democracy was striving for a foothold ;—wherever one man raised his voize 1 favor of freedom he was anima- ted by that spirit which has since been embodied in the Democratic platform, and made of us the greatest nation on the globe, °° If a certain set of principles make, their opposite will unmake ; if a certain party creates, its opposite will destroy, is as un- denible as thu great trath asserted by our sagacious president, “that it is easier to pay a large sum, than a larger sum.” That an adderence: to the principles first laid down by the great father of Democracy, Thomas Jefferson, has made of us a great nation, is evident to all who will examine history and satisfy; themselves of the ract that the Administration of the government has nearly always been in the hands’ of the Democracy. That its opposite will destroy us cannot but be manifest to all who have noted the rapid strides we have made in the last two years, towards the yawning gulf which has swallowed up so many republics. That the party now in power is the very opposite of Democracy,and the deathless foe of all that has been our glory aud our pride in the past, 1s fully shown, by the opposi- tion they have made to every measure desir- ed by the great men of past generations. for our welfare. The very same party, under other names, opposed Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson, the war of 1812 and. the the war with Mexico ; every war, until the fratracidal strife in which we have ever been engaged, has been met by them with the bitterest opposition ; and, in fact, they have resisted every measure of every administra- tion to whose record American citizens can point with pride.—Tne Republican party claim to have great respect for the memory of Henry Clay and for the principles he ad- vocated ; yet when the gallant san. of thet great man was bleeding out his life, in de- fence of our honor, and our flag, upon the bloody field of Buena Vista, Lincoln wag holding up the hands of those who would have the Mexicans welcome our soldiers ‘with bloody bands to hospitable graves.” Something over two years ago, the op- position rallied all their elements, and the Democratic party was ovezcome. We now find ourselves in a most fearful situation. — Every great interest of the country is in a process of rapid destruction, and while we gaze in horror upon the crumbling structure of our government, which we deemed im. pregnable, the mind naturally seeks the cause. Yet we are forbidden to rearch for the cause, or to expose. it when found, -- first destroy the effect, then seck the cause” —is the language of those in power. It is 8 new system with us; out it is an old trick of tyrants and usurpers, This **Mili- tary necessity,” which has committed such ravages upon our hberties, is the same mon- ster which has overturned all other Repub. lics that ever existed, and will as certainly destroy ours, unless we arrest its destroy- ing progress, at once and forever.— A milita- ry necessity existed in France when Napo- leon First wast First Consul, to.muzzle the press. and to gag the freedom of speech--he persuaded the French people to swell the ranks of his army and Jet the historians in- quire, why they had inaugurated Revolu- tion. When, through the best blood of Eu- rope,he had waded to a diadem and a crown too plainly both cause and effect were visi. ble ; but too late to destroy either. It is only savages who blindly fight, without knowing why and for what. Shall'a great christian nation imitate them? Shall we stand by until the whole energy of the na- tion, its bone and sinew are concentrated in an army to sweep away the last vestige of liberty, after, ‘military necessity” has bound us hand and foot, and the effect has destroyed us forever, while, through cow- ardly fear, we have neglected the cause ?— We do not propose, at present. to inquire for the cause; but only to assert our right, as American citizens, to inquire into the stewardship of our servants whenever we please,— We wish to have our fellow citi- zens realize what a fearful weapon this “military necessity’ is, in the hands of unscrupuious men for the subversion of lib- erty, In turnieg over the pages of history we are struck with the fact, that all repub- lics of all times, have been destroyed in the same manner. They haveall worked out their own destruction, and gone down to dust in blood, and shame, amid the horrors of civil war, but, worst of all, from their ashes have risen, the blackest despotisms that ever disgraced humanity, When ty- rants propose to subvert the liberties of a nation. they do not proclaim their purpose from the house-top. Their designs are dis- guised by the most specious representations by the most flattering promises,— Wher Napoleon III. was strengthening the armies of the Republic, and concentrating all her energies within his reach, his avowed pur- pose was the good of the people and the extension of liberty, Ie bade the people wait for the effect, and seek not the cause. “Military necessity” was the instrument he used, until his ends were attained, and then military POWER was the engine which over- awed the last murmur of dying liberty, the sword, the instrument with which Freedoms grave was was dug. And to-day while onr energies are wasted in destroying each oth- er. this man, who but a decade since was the vaunted champion of liberty, blots our sister Republic from the map of nations, and erects, in its stead, the first despolism ever reared upon our con- tinent. Is it possible that onr people cannot sce how rapidly we are following in the path of destruction ¥ Is it possible that the Amer- can people are so ignorant as ¢> believe that a Union of sovereign Stateg can be res! or malutained by blotting out the $ Yestoled ty of the respective States 7 Can oir Ji tiea be stolen from us before ou Vory eyes and that too, with all history open” before us, {0 warn 08 of our darige; 7 ver Gromwell overturiied the British Goyerm. ment, his progress Was not hal¢ so rapid JS Sasipations not half so glaring ag have 0 that of the party which now tis Se Tran Sersrtons ur civil courts have been overty Sovereignty of our States wiped ee ie their authority scorned and Spit upon, and worst of all, the last hope of America’ the last defence of liberty—the Constitution of the United Statas hag een not only set aside as Jinadequate to its own Reo ; but its most solemn compacts violated, jtg Plainest principles scorned and its fragments seattered to the four winds. Thig very hour our governmentis overturned and our only hope consists in wresting from the handg which have betrayed us the trust confided inthem, Still the Democratic partly advocate no new doctrne, still do they resort to the old tribunal of the ballot-box, and if inter- fered with in the sacred right of election the last right left us ; they yet advocats nothing new, but the stern ‘old doctrine that led their fathers through the smoke and courage of the revolution—Lissrry OB DEATH. ; The citizens of Pennsylvania are called upon, within the next mouth, to inaugurate & policy which shall result in the overthrow of the most dangerous party to which Dem- ocracy was ever opposed and place in the positions of Andrew G. Qurtin and Abra. ham Lincoln, MeN and statesmen, 'I'he question every citizen #5 called upon to an- swer, by his voteis, whether our State shall become a pillar in the temple of dos- potism, which is being so rapidly reared or whether she shall proclaim herself an im- movable rock, round which the friends of freedom may ally, in our own and sister States for the protection of the Union so fearfully threatened by the powers at Washington and at Richmond; and for the defence of the sovereignty of States. without which Uunion is but a name. Three years more of the administration against which Pennsylvania has struggled, and “military. necessity,’ will have accomplish ed its work, the effect will have blottad our republic from existence, while the caus ris- es to glory and a throne above the body of dead liberty. It is no child's play, in which we are engaged ; we are toying with the most dangerous instruments that ever destroyed a human government. and are progressing to destruction as certainly and as rapidly as any nation upon the face of the earth ever did. —WNo one who has noted the course of Abraham Lincoln, and those by whom he is surrounded, can doubt his purpose. From the very first hour, that the ‘higher law” —was proclaimed; up to the present moment of peril to our ‘institu- tions, his course has been a straight and unswerving as the path of sia across the summer sky.—end if allowed to follow it out, it will lead us to destruction and death as certainly as the sun sinks behind the evening clouds, Fellow citizens three years aj you elect- ed Andrew G. Curtin to the highest position. in the gift of our State, He has been the willing tool of those who have been seekin: to overturn our government, and has ha. our people to blindly fight for their own fot ters.—He stood in our count; -Reat, and ¢ boasted that his foot was upon the neck of: the Democrats, and he intended %o keep it there. The sweeping conscription in our Democratic county proclaims how well his word has been kept, If all do their guty. Democracy will: put its foot upon Ais neck, at the coming clection, and ring out “to the world the old Latin Motto © Sc semper fy- rannus, Howarp Pa., 4 PX Sept 14th 1863: § I ———— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. THE GRFAT American Tea Company, 61 VESEY STREET, N. Y, Since its organization, has ereated a new; era in the history of Wholesaling Teas in this Country. They have introduced their selections of THAS, and are selling them at not over Two Cents (.02 Cents) per pound above cost; Never deviating fromihe ONE PRICK asked. Another Euhaiy of the Company is that their Tea TASTER not only devotes his time to. the selection of their TEAS as to quality, value, and particular styles for particular localities of country, but he helps the Tea buyer to choose ous of their enormous stock such TEAS as are bess adapted to his particular wants, and not only this, but points out to him the best bargains. It is easy to see the ¢ncaleulable advantage pe Buyer has in this establishment over a} others. If he is no judge of Tea or the Market, if his time is valuable, he hae all the benefits of a well organized system of doing business, of ap im mense capital, of the judgment of a professional TEA TASTER, and the knowledge of superior sales -men. . This enables all Tea buyers—no matter if they are thousands of miles from this market—to pur- chase on as good terms here as the New York merchants. Parties ean order Teas and will be served by us as well as though they came themselves, heist sure to get original packages, true weights an tayes; and the Teas are warranted $6 represented. We iseue a price list of the Company's Teas, which will be sent to all who order it; ocompri- sing Hyson, Young Hyson, Im erial. Guo- - powder, Twankay and Skin. OOLONG, SOUCHIONG, ORANGE & HY- SON PEKOE, JAPAN TEA, of every description, eolored aug uncolored. This list has each kind of Tea divided into four classes, namely : CARGO, %igh CARGO, FINE, FINEST, that every one may understand description and the prices annexed, that the Com- pany are determined to undersell the whole Tea trade. % We guarantes to sell ALL our TEAS at top over TWO CENTS (.02 Cents) per pound above cost, believing this to be attractive to. the many who have heretofore been paying enormous profits - Great American Tea Company, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS, No 51 Vesey Btreet, New York. Sept. 18, 1863—3m. VV AICHES, JEWELRY, AND SIL VER WARE.— The undersigned would respectfully in- vite your attention to his well selected stock of Fine Gold and Silver Watches, Fine Gold Jewelry of every kind aud variety of styles—comprising all of the newest and most beautiful designs. Algo, SOLID SILVER WARE, 10 covr— and the best make of Silver Plated Wars Rasch article is warranted to be as rapresented. S. Watches and Jewelry 6arefully repaired, and satisfaction guavaptead. : JACOB HARLEY, Rsentsag to Stan, 4 Haviey) No. 632 MARKET Street, PHITAD A. Sept. 18, 1865—23m.