Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, April 22, 1864, Image 1

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11
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apRitKON DENTIST.
PJU'4
MAIMS, .
AXTOREINTS AT I,AW.
_ • innAlbrowns,
J. D. sumo:Arr. -.
ATTO,RNET AT LAII,'.- -
axaciroi 4 nt, reaa'a.
Mos it Court.lceuley urie!ithe Treasurer.
G. L. TOVELL,
DILALIR IX
TOBACCO, CIGARS AND NOTIONS.
IAWIITC/WX, PIM3'A
W. W. WHITE,
. DENTIST. -
etetutote, vetoes.
DION Itts profeautonal sorriest to the chigoes
of Phehreaverand
, JAMEII.II, RANKIN,
ATTOUNEY AT LAW.
B LLLL ONTS,
Omoo on the Diamond, one door west of the
Post-ogee.
`I4IIILIAIN A. WALLACE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW. •
CLEARFIRLD, 1.16701 . -
-.
win viAt.ltelktento profeesionaEY when
epo
etally retained in connection with resident coun
sel. • •
(IRVIN At COMM/
ATTORICEp3 AT LAW.
PENN'At
• Will practice In the sceiint courts, of Centro
counties. All business entrusted to
thetreurcrwill be promptly attandeil to.
DR. WINGATE, •
DtWTIST.
John D. Wingate Dentist, tees in the Ma
aonio Ri I. At }wino, except perhaps the tint
two weeks of each month.
HARRY Y. STITZER,
4 ATTORNEY AT LAW
fininuve* Orrjez,
BE LUC WONTE Fs
Marsh 18K—lf.
JOUX 11. OlaIL C. T. ALPMAPIDEII
)ORVIS & ALEXANDER.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
AELLMeoxps, r•.
01floo--Room No. top stairs, Itoynobiles Iron
'Front, diteotly appimitetho Markman islinlarsin
Main shack,
J. lr.
PHYSICIAN k SURGEON.
DEI.I.V.YOVTZ. Pt! \
Will attend to prefealliinecalls as lecielefure.
Ha respectfully-offers hireservieei to In friends
and the public. Oleo at his residence on Alle
gheny street. ,
A. 0. FURST,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
=I
Will praetici in tho seteral Courts of rendre
and Clinton Counties. All legal business en
trusted to hie care will remits. prompt !Mention.
0111.3.--On tho ,North-mist corner of the Di
amond.
DR. Z. W. THOMAS.
PHYSICIAN AND SUHHEON
VILXMArIiU. PEMOA
Respeotrelly otters his services to his friends
and the public. 01lieu on Mill street, oppoeite
the Nathand
)(Cr.ne to Du. J. M. McCoy, N. Thompson. T
C. Th....
BA NIL ING HOWSE
WY. F. REYNOLDS S. CO
LLKPONTE, PK \ •I•hl
Ilille u! iixehenget and Notes dine...tinted.—
Collections made and koreetla promptly retail
ted. Internet paid on npecini deposit,. Ex
change in the Eastern cities constantly on hand
for sale. Deposits received.
MISCELLANEOUS
- -
.JEWELRY I ESTABLISIIMENT.
a
H. W. PATTON, Proprietor.
Haring purchased the, extensive Jewelry Es
tablishment of W. J.iStein, and largely increas
ed the Stook, lho Proprietor will keep cenetant
ly on bend, a splendid assortment of
i^ •
A!NrERIC4N IVATCIIES,
PATENT LEVER,
ENGLISff LEVER.
CYLEND-1 R tiSC'APEMIIINT
WATCHES.
WATCH CHAINS OF ALL; KINDS,
VIOLIN BOWS,
,110.611 AND SILVER THIMBLES,
SPECTACLES,'
da., de., dc.
•
which will be soldtheaper than - at any other
eetablishment In Central Pennsytrania.
Watotieniclocks and jewelry repaired, and all
work warranted.
an. Inj
I MPORTANT TO-ALL!!!
-SINCE' THE FIRE
W..,-W. McCLELLAND
had removed his largo and splendid stook of
• fp . .T11.11111.431,',L.11, 013E4 .TCII : 1
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS,
I* the ARMORY - BIJILDINO, on the• north
east corner of the DIAMOND, 40 be will be
happy to see his ofd friends and customers. Ilia
stock Is comprised in part of
CLOTHS, CASSINBRES, .
VESTINGS, TS ft - WINGS
. 40LLARS, NECK-TIES, •
HA TS AND CAPS,
ilad In fact, every srtlele worn by well-dreseed
gentlemen.
01.0 THING MADE TO 08DR8
on the shOrtest notios and upon the most reason.
able terms, and satisfaction guaranteed. Give
him a call. Jan. 29, 1864-Iy.
B' exp raoa 5T BL
utz.krown,
PETER MaMAHON, Paormicroa.
Would respeetital ►aform the citizens of Be -
font. and vicinity that he has opened up a oho
- -ALLIGrUXNSATSMII,
♦ few doors below Helfer', Stare, where ite I
prepared to sell at the ,
I ===
BOOTS, SHOES, GAIT/1E8,60
illily lit, 1663 —ly.
e 7Ol PaINTEII6 Neatly ezeented a this
‘ ,0111•46 • r•
p
,
1.,
Vol. 9i
MISCELLANEOUS.
• HALT! LISTEN) STOP AND READ! ,
TN THAT 'roma, ,
_PRESERVE YOUR - HEALTH,
BATE TOUR HONEY
AND LIVE HAPPY AND 00NTENTED,
eIHOOD PURCHASE TOUR, LIQUORS
AT THE WHOLESALE
WINE AND LIQUOR sroitie,.
ON MERE STREET
dimetly_spposite the- old Temperance Hotel.
A. 11141,1731., Agent.
Notwithstanding the enormous dimes impo
sed upon all articles in his line of business, he
still continues to sell the purest articles at the
Very lowest figures. Bitty' diecriptlon Of,
FOREIGN DOMESTIC LIQUORS,
wholesale and retail, at the lowest cash prices,
which areNrarranted to ho the hOst qualities ac
eording to their respective prices. His stock
consists in part of
OLD Itfß, . ,
SIONONOAIIELA,
IRISH,
WITEAT,
CORN,
NECTAR,
and others whiskies, at frog 31.4- cents to $2,00
per gallon. Also.
ALL KINDSOF nnAsvurEft,
front 75 eta., to iO,OO per gallon. Holland Gins
'ore; from 75 ete.„, to 112,60 per gallon.
PORT, MADRRIE, CHERRY, BLACKBERRY
and other wines—the best articles- 7 ,rd as ma
..o is illiwegtey._
•
CHAMP/GINN, BLACKiIdtRY (UNGER,
AND VARAWAY,ImANDris, - - PURE '
JAMACA ANDIEIT ENO LAND RUM
CORDIALS OF ALL KINDS,
all a which willbe warranted to he na represen
ted, and sold at prices exceedingly low.
kil the Imams offered for sale at this exhibits-
Anent have lieeri - mirrehmed M the United
States Custom House, and consequently must he
pure and good.
Physicians and others are respectfully
requested th give his liquors a trial. -1114 . Ile
has the only article of
PURE PORT WINE JUICE IN TOWN.
May. 28, Itl2. tf.
1111
THE WONDER OF THE ACE!
EVERY nopr A/MAIMED
At THE PURENESS AND CHEAPNESS
rj&i,
NErr at ETTILLIPaI
W1101.414A LE
H'IN.E A Y Nr,' OR STORE.
BISHOP STREET; lIELLEFORTE PA,
The proln•ietors ortiiie establishment take
pleasure in inforwing the public that they have
constantly on hand a supply of choice foreign
and domestic liquors, such as
Ohl r, .
Ohl Bye%
Mon tttttt yak
And Irish ;
Cognac,
Ithsekberry,
['berry, '
Wu ger,
-but ronimull Brandies;
Maderia,
(Vierry,
Awl Lisl.w 117sies,
AS'colch,
And Ilolland
;Vero Eh /trued Rnm,
Jamaca Rum.
CO R DIALS Priwermint, Anniseed and
=
The attention of practicing physicians la call
ed to our stock of
, PURE LIQUORS,
suitable fur "mepical purposes. Bottles jugs
and Deudjons constantly on had.
We hn e
ONLY PURE NECTAR WHISKEY
In Town.
All liquors were bought when liquors were
low, and we sell them accordingly.
All liquors are warranted,'• give satisfac
tion.
Confident thaLwe can please customers we
respeetfally solicit a share of public patronage
L n iquery will be Buhl by the quart, barrel or
tierce. we have a large lot of
BOTTLEDLIQUORE
of the fineAt grades on hand.
Ppril
F A 111 o'l.l 8' EMPORIUM
4 I
MAIN STRIPY, BKLIASONTR, PA
W. W. MONTGOMERY, Prop.,
Ilse received a large invoice of
CLOTHS'
CA4pIIdERS, • "
YESTIga S,
etc., etc.
Watch will be manufactoredin the
LATEST STYLES,
and in a manner thaaoannot fail to provp
utia
factnry.
A large assortment of
GENT& FURNISHING °SODS,
Consisting of
Collars, Neck Ties,
Suspenders, Hosiery,
Hanktirchiers, etc.,
Exactly suited to this locality and intended for
shelves present a greater varit 4,94 b X gain
and fancy goods than can be found e in
Central Pennsylvania. _
Call and see that,
Montgomery is the man that can make
Clothes in the fashion, strong and Obeitp4
All th,at has ever tried him yet,
Say that he really can't be beat.
2ueJn6th
NEW BAKERY!
MATTIIIAR scuraitrear ,
Would respectfully infirm the people of Belle
fonte and vicinity, that he has opened • new
and
COMPLETE BAKERY,
the old Temperance Hotel, on BISHOP street
where be will keep constantly oil hand all kinds
of
BREAD,'
POUND-CAKES,
MAR AND OMB'S CAX:IO3,"
cliActlas,
whiefr•he wfl eeU at 4 reeranabla and agOltii
tory pries
reasUlei Wit tad ttla th.r adranbli e g
their baking data IA thin os !Meli a
dingy. vie pm, irktotimatis a .
Jtdt*bed nig 40 6 1 1 4 4 15. &Pt
BUMMER TRADE,
RUSKS,
CAN1)1013
ac.,
BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1864-
' •?HILADELPUIIL
RditLOW'S INDICK) BLiIEI
•Dealete &nil Contemners of the above CeZebra-
Sod Waek Mee, will phase take notice, that the
Labeb arealterted to_rtati
INDIQO BLUE,-
EDI=
ALFRED WILTBERGER'S
nnua erbium,
No. SU North Second StrNt•PIIILADNL'A
The'qualßy of die Blue will be the• *awe is
every respect. -
It is warranted to color more water than,
twice the acme quantity of Indigo and go to
much furttler titan any other Wasb N lnue in' the
market. It dissolves perfectly older and dean
not settle on the olqtbs as most of the otkeis
mace do. Ono Box dissolved iq a hatfyint of
water, will makbps giniut a Liquid Bitteras any
that is made, at the third the cost.
4s it ie retailediet the same..iatee as the Imf
tations.and_ltiferioi. articled, 'housekeepers will
end it very much to theiradvantage to ask for
that pat pp at Wttentionn's.
1;1a...A1l blue pot up after thlsAab with ,]far
low's rume /ivy ON litrifotiom.
Tie Nerrimloel dow cot vonfre n Stoop,
jefiyaror Side by"Btorekoopel generally,
IFeleleth 1861-Btn.
ARCH ST. CARPET WARE-HOUSE
No. UV ARCH et. two doors below
Tho subscriber ban just resolved for Spring
Trak.? a well selected - stock of English 'and
American
CARI'ETINGS,
embracing all the now etyles of the best makes
—bought previous to tbeinte adtgueetor cash,
and will be sold at kilo prim..
Velvets, Rrussels, Three•plya, Ingrains end
VenetaiTi Carpetings,—with a large
Stock of
1 011. CI t OTItB, DRUG MATTINGS,
FIRM
Persons w - ho are about, famishing, are reques
ted to make an examination df the above goods
previous to making their selections, as such
Inducements will beheld out as cannot • fail to
please.
JCS. BLACKWOOD,
March 13, '6l-3tmak 1132 ARCH St. Phil's.
LAAr z ,
•L
FOC Rill t ARCII BTB.
PIII L A DIUP TA.'
ABA OPKNINO POR 8SR151(1 1864,
100 pea. $l. Franey STLIFtfi. 50 pee, India
Silks, $l. 100 " (loot' Black Silk. ,
200 " ordered Plain Silks.
4-4 Lyons Black
` Silk VELVLIT.
Black $6, 5, .„ 3,, 2, 1 per yard.
Baron Silks; $O, 5 4, ; 2. 1 per yard.
Moire Antiques. all cOI4II.
Mognlfleient tirenadineo,
agnitle6nt tagAndles.
Richest Chlntsem and Prenles.
Spring SHAWLS. New Household STAPLE
100011 S.
N. 11. (knead assortment of Men's Wear!
March 11, 1864.-3 m.
NII LT.'S ER Y AND STRAW GI 00 DS
• IN EVERY VARIETY,
of the ha'.( iouportnriktip, and of the pewee Mid.
moot faehTrotable otyles.
OCR
-
OUR STRAW EPAR TNE T
will comprisn'everit variety of Bonnets ' Hats
and Trimmings to be found in that lino,—
of the latest and must approved shapes and
Soliciting an early Call, I remain
Yours Respectfully,
li. WARD
No. 102, 105 h 107 North Second Ste., PHIL'A.
March 18th, 1864-41. '
tiUNS, P . :TOLS FISHING TACKLE,
FINE CUT. , REY,
AND SPORTING APPARATUS GENERALY
Rod's, Books,
Lines, Nets,
Reels, Foils,
Baskets, Moses.
Bait,
Masks, Billies,
Corkscrews, Dog Collars be.,
constantly on band and torsale--Wholesalo and
Retail at—
JOIN KRIDERS.
Sportsmen!! Depot,
I"7"tur. 2104 Walnut:
4. 4
March 11 '6.1-6m
HENRY HARPER,
Np. 520, ARCH Bt.,
PHILADELPHIA
MANUFACTURER J• DEALER IN
WATCHES,
FINE JkIWEI,RIr,
SOLID SILVER-WARE AND
AO'S ER'S Superior PLATED WA RE
tie; All 114*de of eILVEE WARE, made on
the promisee. WA TCH Repairing sartfully
done.
April lit, 1864-3ili,
1864 ! 1 PHILADELPHIA
J PAPER HANUINUS. .4681
Foursia. & SOURED,
111.1.NUFACTURERS Or
WALL PAPERS
AND WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS,
Coa. 4th., • M STREETS,
PHILADBLPHIA.
N. B. A Ana stook of Linea 'Shades «wean
elm ow hand,
February, 11, 1864-4 m.
EKON A. FEWITAN4
birpoarint arIVAIOISILLLE Dxena a Ix
BRANDI*, WINES, GINE3,_.
WHEAT, RYE' END BOUSBQN Twain;
AO. 506 NORTH !MITA
PHILADELPHIA, PENN'A
apt. 1881. i • ;:.
Ie n TOTIOS.
i_l . 1I wire, Mn. L. a *eh, hiving
*Wield esnactor proveeetion, left may bed awl
Ava; the yublleere hereby eediedipet. to in*
' ay sweet in I willing ar.gehas our
byler.
let '64—be . ' li.t. BrritlKl
.. .
(t m l / 4 1ctill ,
L
1 1 1 li
tir l it,. L .kt. L istt
lON
EMI
AN AWFUL fiEBUKE TO THE CLERGY.
Under the head of .1114 Fallb •and an
Apostate Church," thenrrus • Presbyterian
deals some terrible blOws absLo•hend of the
bloody infidel ministers Of the United Eltstes
who have lin:malty turned- eur eliurObes into
dens qf thieves. It says:
- We fondly thought that, poised npon ilte
truth, animated by the grime, and- obliged
by the commands of her grorioua the
Church would have proved..-11 bulwark
apiarist the rushibg tide of WI. We thought
she would bean oasis igAffe desert, where
weary travelers naled refresh themselves;
we thought she would be 'an island 'in the
stormy sea, vhbre the shipwrecked mavin
era might,ildil Betel - and shelter. We did
not atria to hear miler solenni,Assemblies
thrrinee of human anger, iiittoh_less of sh
unt° malice. We believed that in the hour
of civil commotion when States were sunder
ed; and armies met in the shock of battle
she would lift tip holy hands without wrath
and doubting, and implore her Master to
drop from heaven the olive branch of peace,
that she would'otherher eons and dough
(era about her aod,say to them, "My chil
dren, love one another," that she•would lay
one hand upon Eplirtiim.and the other upon
Manasseh, and bless them both. Wo need
not say how sadly we have been disappoint
ed. In spite of her boasted conversion
and fidelity toprinciple this once venerat
ed body, at one bound, broke every bond of
truth and charity, in effect renounced her
allegiance to tier great Head, and. allied
herself with hitt arab enemy. She has turn
ta—tilTd-e-Trom her Mailer's work, an,
through her highest courts, and through
hundreds of her pulpits, is engaged in pro
pagating political ideas and in sounding
the dread tocsin of war. Her ancient schools
of the prophets—where linger, the memories
and repose the, ashes piths illustrious
dead have been perverted to GM advo
cacy (AA cote: war, and of a gOdless and
inhuman Abolitionism. Her ,most widely
circulated newspaper, that used to bowl
so frantically whenever an Episcopalian
was appointed to a chaplaincy in the army
or navy, is now the whinning slave of the
.eoular power that lords it over God's heri
tage, and is rejected iu disgust by Christain
and even loyal men, on the- gr. ed
_hat it-ift
no longer a religious paper. Her oldest
Quarterly Review now receives its inspire-,
then front disappointed military - commanders
who failing success in the field, have become
"the communicating intelligence' of absurd
politics and impracticable campaigns. Her
clergy in many instances vie with each other
not in fidelity to God and the souls of
but in devotion to party and in seal for t
carnage of battle.
Amid this furious bable of politics and
war' we look - In - vain Tor the - Magna Charts'
of the Annunciation, 'Glory to God In the
highest: On earth, peace, good ' will to
men." It is appalling to see the Church of
God spue from her mouth the . Gospel of
peace, and bawl herself hoarse in stimulating
the ferocious passions of men, and in can
onising the red-handed fiend of the battle
field I Where is her former Indust of Abol
itionism, now that else is Causing her own
children to pass through the fire to Moloch
and is gloating over the prospect of servile
insurrection ? What shall we ray of the
distinguished clergymen who so loudly ap
plauded Mr. Tan Dyke's sermon on that
subject, and who now lift up their hands
and roll their eyes in pious horror at the sin
of slavery? Shall we say its the world
says of them, that they have either been
practicing a gross deception all their lives,
or are now basely yielding to unmanly fear.
Shall we adopt the huntilitaing charge so
freely made, that as e'body, the clergy of
this-country have been less- reliable, -more
unwilling to sacrifice their positions to prin
ciple, more shuffling and cowardly and
blood-thirsty, than any other ohms of men
in it ? Shall we repeat the sneer, that rath-
Aiihen give up their 'places and salaries,
Twill preach ,hid pray under the dicta
tion of a turbulent faction in their churches
or the bitter taunt of the soldier, who on
being reproved by one of them for swearing
replied, "I will not be rebuked by you sir I
I have exposed my life Tor three years in
this war, and but for the preachers there
would have been no war I" We desire to
bring no railing accusations. neither to
judge any man, but by *their frnite ye shall
know them, and alb frujt of all their labors
is that they, the church, and religion itself
are brought into contempt among men. The
Lord Jesus seems to have averted His face,
and the spirit of grace to have departed
from the scene of attire and fanaticism, and
bound in the toils of the devil, and exposed
to the hootinga of the world, nothing M left
to us but a "Dead Faith and an Apostate
Church."
HUMILIATION OF NEW YORK
No State has to drink deeper of the cup
of humiliation than the once proud Empire
State, New York. Ere the• administration
was fully aware that fraud and force with
out limit, must be used to perpetuate its
rule, the independent democracy selected
Horatio Seymour, - and confiding in his fair
promises, placed him in the exeiattive chair
of the State, for the express purpose of up
holding its sovereignty, 'and preserving its
honer
This daring defiance was promptly met by
the Washington usurpation. An unjust en
rollment, under an unoonstitylionnl law,
was forthwith made, and though the favor of
delay was given everywhere else, the 'con
scription wag entered upon with relentless
rigor in thwoity of New York. It was done
too, at the moment when in superservieesble
zeal Governer Seymour had hurried the or
ganised militia of the city away to save the
State of Pennsylvania from invasion, nonce
quent:upon the blundering of the Washing
ton administration No conceivable circum
stance was wanting to add atrocity to the
injury, or sting to the insult. How did
Governor Seymour meet the crisis for which
he had been chosen, and which had thus been
thrust upon him ins way which placed Jus
tice on his side? Iheriited I Peeling mighty
in word, but weak in resolution, be did not
rally his people tow defense of their rights,
but he wrote to the President. President
offered to abide by a decision Of the Supreme
Court as to the constitutionality of tittl' - law.
There was a ray of light which seemed to bk .
dioate a hole through which the Governor
might himself escape, although it would leave
his - State in thetraiL—'Hold seilVestro... .
"and the first ease of conscription Chan go
before the courts on hOtas ectvpitC."ln a
twinkling, 'ltabvtio emlnia . 61111 1 411 ‘ 1 '"
said Old Abe. The ligist_iiso Out off and,
tits bolo closed. &recur p al a. fiat fiat
wel He is deader than any 'otlintntair out
itideof Douglas grave. •
Tka
reaistedtoe, except matatroosil rwisooot.
iea
.dpr or orgonisdtion by the avid, loves of
liberty—an eiLrt soon arnahed-vOthe tyrants
have enteral Intl theznjoygodiof their con
quest.—Not Venetia or -.crawl, is -so over
-run with goiernmekh titles and informers.
We learn frororid, that federal, police
men are thic in theatreet than the, lice
of Egypt„ e tenfbl4 More ravenous. It
giver:/grimy examples- of their conduot,
enoughto "stir a fever In the blood of eke,"
triovided It was not curdled and caked by
the coagithitirtg rennet of Chase's green
backs. We subjoin a specimen or two:
A colored men arriving In the oily, on his
way to California; left his „Ounllyi in a hotel
and went out tomutke the purchases neces
sary for the journey. Ile was forcibly seized
and mustered into the service; the 'crimp'
got the premium for a recruit, and the negro
went before a tile of ,bayonets to Riker's
I#oo4 - lizafror9 thence to the rent otwnr,
but was'dischargeii after a few months to find
his family,-with whom he had held no com
munication, and which be Lad not done at
Last accounts. _
A man made destitute by the war, went,
for the sake of the $3OO bounty,to a re
cruiting station to enlist. Fill; name was
taken, the oath administerer, slid then in
his very presence the money was banded to
a man who enlisted him, who pocketed $l6O,
and handled him the balance. lie protested
against it but in vain. The guard leveled
bayonets, he handed the moiety of the
money to big Wife, and went to Itiker's Is
land.
Sohthern men and other sojourners are
tWhadowed,"'arresCed and black -- mulled at
every tarn, and the great State of New York
is utterly powerless to defend' even thcright
of ho spitality, whickplor benighted Turke
would not ,sac.ntlee even — tiriLiteime
bidding of Russia and Austria.,
Citizens are dhily taken aside, and told tY
choose between Fort. Lafayette and bleeding
a few hundred dolltrii, and they if able to
afford it, prefer the latter.
Finally, the World confesses that law is
utterly powerless to prevent these outrages.
It has no advice for the negroes and stran
gers; cilium should, when arrested, demand
to be carried at once to one of the v•trioutt
genuine police headquarters. They may in
deed secure a large share of the, plunder to
the chiefs of the department ; but it does not
seem to preserve justice. But it is not 1 1
principally money which the chief tyrants
anbmission Ake— hewing to
the ducal cap of Austria which Om ler, cen
turies ago, set up iu Altorf. It' is the
.habit of 'obedience that is sought -to'be es
tablished. • yu tovv.- 4 . - 14
Let New York expunge the proud ..ExcelO l
aipr" from her motto. She has no upward
course now ! New York is the State moot
thoroughly subjugated to the new order of
into, ane her humiliation is ...oeittplete.
Tpsitatiti Sentinel,
DEMOCRACY OF OTHER YEARS.
"Reaotoed, That the pemocratic party
will faithfully abide 16 , and hphold the
principled; laid down iu the Virginia and
Kentucky hesolutions of 1798, and in the
report of Mr. Madison to the Virginia Leg
islature in 1789, that it adopts those princi
ples as constituting one of the main founda
tions of its political creed, and is resolved to
carry them out in their obvioui meantlig and
import."
The above resolution is the fourth ono
incorflorated into the Democratic National
platform in Cincinnati, 1856. Then its at
all former State and National Democratic
Conventions, the Kentucky and Virginia
Resolutions were declared to ho a main
foundation of Democratic faith. 8o long
as we adhered to those principles faithfully,
the couutry was safe. The only hope on
God's earth for the country now, is an im
mediate and uucondiiional return,,,to those
principles, in their obvious meaning and im
port F • or long years the Democracy pledg
ed:themselves to faithfully "carry those
principles out." Had they done so this
horrible Abolition war would never
have desecrated a singhrState by, armed in-
Let us see what those principles were, wo
oft resolved to marry out in their • obvious
meaning and ,import." The first of the
Kentucky Resolutions or9B,draltod by Thos
Jefferson, reads as follows.
..First, That the several Sigiu comprising
the United Ntaitati of America arri",oe united
on the principle of unlimited submission 'to
the General Government, but ths.by coin
pact, under the style aid titleof.a Gonstit9-
tion for the United States, and of amend
ments ,thereto they constitute a General
G reernment for special purposes, and .dele
gate to that Government certain definite
powers, reserving each State for itself the
residuary MONS. of rightto their own govern
ment ; and that whenever the—flaneral
Government assumes undelegnted powers,
its acts are unatheritiye, of no force, and
being void, can derive' no validity ['tom
merojedicial interpretation, that to this cont
pact each Stale acceded as rt Slate, and is an
! integral porta; and its c9 -State forming, as to
itself,the other party; that this Government,
ed by this ountidet, was nut made the exclu
sive or ttnaljudge of the extent of the pow
ers delegated to itself, since that irould have
made its diacrition7 - and siertho Constitu
tion, the measures of its porkers, but that,
a t e in all other mums of compact between par
ties having nocommon judge, each party has
an equal right to judge for itself as well
of infractions as of the mode and measures
of redress."
This is • one of the Resolutions the
Democratic party "faithfully" resolved.
time and again to "uphold." Have they
done sot No.
Raul the resolution of the Cincinnati
Convention again : "Reeofeed, That the
Democratic party faithfully abide by and
upheld-the pringiplee laid down in the Ken.
tuck; and-Virginia Resolutions of 1798,"
&o. IS there manhood enough left in the
party, qp„the Fourth of July next, at Chien
gq, to relitErm these great prinoiples of
Democracy and then faithfully ibide by
them? We trust incited there is, but if
there be not, then, that Conventimehad
ter never meet.
Let that Convention declare the
idea of the Rentucky and Virginia ltesolu-'
tions, to be "a main foundation of the Dom- 1
ooratio creed" and resolve by the etern,al,
Hie or die, sinkir ajlllinittliey will *btu by
and .uphold their,'" Ito the people will rally
as one man in the support of tine nomblees
of that convention.
Adopt any othimplatforto, or any. drivel
ing substilide, add the days of the Demo
• tbr.partrete- numbered—that—iseigoessir
our l Let there be no dodging of these
• rinotples then. They owe It to the letsittt ,
to redeem the mitred pledges
of • er'sind better yolto ateiatedie the Re
•publio, by
• tded i tlis lo g g s k riveyele bowel
Litwrites to t , • • Mist,
tgotion gate is 't ..t. • •
twothht, let -them Intry josh -
Py letore they sdroorit,,- 'Qpp r
Ws, • _ ,
Mil
No. 16._
THIS, THAT MNO THE,OTHER.
' —The amonnt of treasure Shipped from
Nevada Territory qinting the yekr rim , Wes
$11,042,468,4*.
—lt is paid 10 be a fundamental prin
ciple of the Loyal Leaguers never logo with
in a league of the, enemy.
Las been beard lately from
General Untler's•do campaign. Pearl are
entertained that it has miscarried.
• —The Adminietration requires, a great
dent ef ewenring from the people, and pro
voke!' a vast dent that it doetfnt reytire.-
It is, stated that an overwhelming ma
jority of The l r tepubliesn members of both
branches of Congress dre opposed toihe re
election of Lincoln.
AholltiptliSts - don't want the
country as it was. "They desk% a new na
tion. And so They go in fur miscegena
tion. -.
—Greely owe said,-'Clod • Mess Abra
haul Linaolq; but we cannot repeit the.
-hangs of LIS tune, because it would ho such
awful mosping.
exchange says---2.Lincallams re
ceived the endorsment of the 'Plug
of Baltimore." That is right, for be is an
ugly plug himself.
—An American, minted Slater, has Ink
en a contract to demolish the walls of the
cltyroh rceently burned,Ln . Chili, for the iinint
of $B2OO
—A wretch named 4 tierin, has intro
duced into the Ohio Legislature a toll to pun
istleriosof for contributoig money to the ron
andighomjund! Could vileness llailwgnfry
go — Turt er?
—fn nn tohlrese before the iVorking
men's Assoeiation.at Wanhington,.llr. Lin
ooln stated that he was in favor of nuseege
nation, of equality of color, black and
white.
—lt is said that the confederate guer
rillas have killed nud carried off more than
50,0110 hogs on the Kansas border. Thin
upsets ,the old proverb of the pen being
mightier than the sword.
—Viiiktburg is turned into a gambling
shop. The shoddyltes and hangers on to
the army make that a bandits rendezvous.
Gambling and 'debauchery are this almost
universal °oculist hum_
—There wee a sad scene hi the Boston
Police Court' oh Tuesday. Twenty-three
women were broinghtin at one time and pla
ced in the dock, Most of them charged asith
ibeing common drunkards.
_wcrltill Ainllls itemises Lincoln of
t“papetually changing his`mind," If there
is say hope tat ho has wit enough to
change it for a better one, for the Lord's
sake let him keep on changing till he 111.11k13/1
it. out.
—.\ cotemporary says: "The Republi
cans seem to have forgotten that there is a
God of Justice." Thernre worshippers of
Odin, the god of bloodshed, bombats, and
c- uelty. Like Attila, they aro intoxicated
with slaughter.
—The people of Vermont are still, as
Mr. Lincoln would call it, ronnieg the tem
perance machine. Is not this disloyal to the
negro ? What right have , these friends of
the Administration to distract' public atten
tion in those times of great danger
%-..---The farce of an election bss'been
gonsprough with in Maryland. Baltimore
as pro-slavery acity as Richmond, polled
only forty odd votes against unconditional
unoomponsated emancipation. The negroes
of Maryland will be freed, no doubt, but et
the fearful coat of the:civil liberty of the
people.
—Mr. Greeley, of the Tribune, has gota
-neW mistress-44s Cegenaticm, a colored wo
man, who has, it is said, also bestowed her
charms Upon Raymond, of the Tits .t; and
Park Godwin, of the Evening Pool. In fact
Greeley don't seed, to care if the whole Re ,
publican party has her, including ©M — Ate
himself. ~What an awful state of, society !
—Lincoln has lately falle.ove with
"the sweet German accent." assign.
ment of Sigel too oonituand,- and the ap
pointment of a German postmaster at Cin
cinnati, arc only sops to appesee the Ger
man opposition in the West, to Lincoln's
ro-eleetion. Perhaps, fiy-andAy, "the rich
Iriak brogue" will be tickled with a little at
tention. Colonel Mulligan may get a Briga
d Igrabip. _
OETTiNG SCAllED.—Tite disciples et Abra
ltm I are getting terribly frightened at the
followers of the Pathfinder, Fremont' They
try to throw the blame upon the 'copper
heads."•b, it is only a plot of the 'copper
heads,' say they. This is whistling to keep
their courage up. But it wilt not armver.
Thousands and tent of thousands' of those
who voted for Lincoln con never-do so again
only those who are fattening upon the
reasure of a ruhied people; and that
other class, who think not for themselves,
but follow. the beck and bidding of others.
-- The Life, apeachen, Proclamations,
Acts and Services of President Lincoln, is
thd title of a new work kV larded by T. B.
Peterson Brett ore. Ph dadelPh in. It con
tains a full history of his Life, his oarecr as
a Lawyer and Politician, his Scsvices in
Congresn, with his Speeches, Message",
Proclamations, Aots and Services, no Prod:
dent, of the United States up to the present
time, with his l'ortrait. Onu large volume,
price tiftwents. Copies will he omit pont
paid to any addressee receipt of price. Price
to canvassers, $8,50 a dozen, or $25 a hun
dred, sent on receipt of the money per first
expresi.
• A Paris paper says i '7l he fioverti
merit of the United States .isjust know the
wonder and horror of mantud. ' Ah; sir,
do not think that you are ooritatnpbaiug
Government of the United Stater Forth°
moment it has ceased to exist. It Is under
a black cloud. Africa has been rolled uPen
it. It is crushed by an latelersble borbarisit.
Itirtnite glorious name is debased into the
service of murder and plunder! A tribe of
monsters, of white•blick men, are - the Rents
of power. Talk not if tile Goverrunont of the
United &Wee until it is redetued from this
bloody slough of African o barbarbtro.--- , OW
Guard.
• ---Old Alm's amount with'. the linked
&Mos may be thins stated:
A. Lincoln to United Slates, debtor.
To 560,000 white men killed:
To 160,Q00maimed tbi• life.
Tmloo,ooo
-1241524'.050 eitilyienk 1 . -
To o depstammanu, :ruined couptry.
To loss of national !
_ ,
To destructron of $ 2 .000 Tivo 000 of p rop-
atrif.
Tothle.QC4o(,) fed ebtf
ritesb o oso44o4ol .% ,, •
t9JaitlC_O
- 0150 Mink Sod eititisellit theki
; fling motion next November.
•
Alp
Mr b
iusuchiu 'v sioun i amermetr i ll
white worbisqpatkionnandr..Morth"
, Tuni 'State. lie climes iabdring white
men wifh nygrotd. litildklis u Wi t
aimsount
'amnia's from New York, at bad waited
kPeit the Serikeltikir, - iiiiierdripitbetr
remarks is, we Veliture to Sky; Ito enoleat
specimen of innate iniptidenseithat ever tell
from the lips of 'festal num.: ht us 14401111
this preakenatiecanneta‘slittletneeneeiletelp.—
Ile says
"The MOll notabre featerd:ottbe
In your city, Imot 11611111 WM if fie the hanging of
• woe isorfrt preph p other'weiMotir IltrOkk
It iatould ittivint Be so. t- • -• -t
--imaging profundity 11:bir•kad4914.tuf,i.
that seehoultillut eat one khother, e
ngr
ning would base been , eiinallyt:Mtrie
salUnble. Who knolls but . we; Milt*, War
turn cannibals f Mr. lineeln did a* iliniff
bestow upon t 4 hit patesent sehnenitiess.—. •
But the not imble part of the.ithoose eutpres- .
Mon is that Mr, Lincoln dames the white
laboring classes with negroes! Yle pro:
seeds :
I=
"The ltron'gest bend.bt httineat rycnttlall•
outside of the fateily relatltm, eheuld be setti
uniting. all wortaeg people ofcli Cottioom, clowned
and tindride.", -
In tide Grief sentence .114 hove theaw
Wert rine Or "t'rtlseebeiatloYf'Ap inuttgattinv
010191113 , tiO'notenetiff, it %inn be nail
tedi fitttlev,ee, flint it Is -proricictl.ttr-tutite
only -Mr seething intople. of .011 nations."—
This is ilia oat sOrut, aid the ultjent of
effert -LS In
destroy the naturut order of society, ami
what ito to be of by pelsOning tha Dour-
Illtft with negro equality. The front lds**.
ced school of• Abolitionists now take the
position that our eitisens of Irish birth Awe
• • os' gra , wood t 6 L they could
be vastly, imProced by intermixture with
the negro. "Tho wurkfig people" to Whom ,
Mr. Lincoln refers, ere, of course, the
frith, for it was upon-then) the responsibil
ity of the riot was thrown. In +.O MIMI
words, therefore, he tells then) that they
should be •united" with the ntigroes I in
deed, 11)8 expression corers all "working
people," carefully excluding the shoddy
contraetori, the shiuples•er bt otters snit
Ml the high and and low officials pf.tlta Abo
lition courts wph its helpers retainers,
fuglemen, fools and flunkeys.
'rho bold utterance of
,such an introit to
the manhood of white men of this country,
is one of the alarmingaipas of till times.—
• Magu.tlng ductrlue of a lgemativo
does not now excite the ab Abo
lition did when it was first broindsel.
Li - neulit insults the working dowses by lel
lug them to herd with negroes and lim.ten
ors, and vile pamphlets are issued, in
whick even the ordinary instincts of deceit- '
cy aye ohooketi by a beastliness of which
tome was not guilty even in her worst days
flicentions delmueltery. Thu these things
.xcite no proof, Wet they find any apolo
,lst, that the Oda W'sor
"A mousier of inch frightful mien,
That, to be hated, needs but to In omen."
o a proof of a degeneracy in our age which
s sufficient to startle every friend of °Jolli
et:on and Christianity. It is, altotekijil
e t egree, and indkades th e existehoe
f that oondition of a people which Inward- _
.ly precedes their downfall. With the fall
if virtue falls every noble and manly quail- .-
y—patrlotiam," honor, and Integrity. It
ould seem now that no inkult could he
coped upon the people which it was theught
air stolidity would net_ bgar—no outrage, •
hick would even urge a majority to the bal-•
of-box to unseat the men who qq.yr perform; .
miss before high heaven with Impunity,
,Thot it is tho _direst_ t e of Aboli
tionism to reduce the ills 6 offing diiined—
of the country to negro equality and idol
amation, is what we have always directly
.hargetl. We did not expect, however, to
nd Mr. Lincoln come out atid'openly advo
ate this monstrous doctrine, ettpucially it
ace of Ilia well-known desire' for re-elect.
ion. It appears quite evident, from this
peech, that 11r. Lipeoln does not count
.inch upon the ballot-box to secure -id suit
'CßE. lie can hardly expect any white
oring man to endorse the idea that lie •
iught to fraternize with negroes, Hot on
going terms with the Chinese, and Told to
is watmeat eibbrace the most greasy Ea
.uintax, or the .brutish, Hottentots !t Igo
surely can expect to be elected rieSi
• ent at the balki-box, after such an avowal
.e o re the great masses of this country.—
Ife\must be making other calculations, dust
ound his hoped of success upon some new
nvention of Fieward's or the devil e. Or; ---
not;then we must overestimate the char
cter of the people, and conclude that 'they
re prepared to accept the new doctrine pf
eoesC, to mingle 'hate blqod anti
he bl f their elliptren with that of the
oty Afr and-thuwilre . w,
,}h4meeiees --
to be bondriten nut hendwoutea of the Abe-
lition oligarchy, and to be ruled by them
with more rigor than Pharaoh, even in alt
the bardness of hie heart, ettr infra/red op
en the eoh-e ewt daughers of Abraham.--
pay
ON WITH THE DANCE.
The Nett York New ..Na lion, Fremont or
gan, is responsible for the folloWints hiza,
to the jubilant Shoddies who, fial Of
money and whiskey, mold no senrupte or
holding 'high revelry" over the shallot,
graves of departed heroes, and naming iu
the mazy circles of the voluplous waltz
to the dreamy music of the violin, while
the air is full ,of groans of_ anguitth,L._la
suing from bleeding hearts, whose
bands, fathers, and brothers hstvefilletirt
battle:
"On with the dance, the people will pa y'
the piper. We recqllect gum there wag'
movie and festivity
.also when Uen. Lea l •
marched up the Sh eon mleali, leaving lire and
delastat inn to the homes of the poor soldiers '
while their oflioets werejealionnly celebrating -• '
she nuptails of a young contrasts, 'ho• son of •
some political magnate. , Last week tint ,
White Rause was the scone of 'gaiety..4M_
week it wy she Itappahnnook. Wherb *lll
the nest fir Iss-iseld 1 (Cod point than Mon - • ,
not be on the North of the Potomac by the i ..
light of tbe incendiary brunt's of ill ishrt",* • .
cavalry.
"We In not hoer of the rote% givintiledhs ' '
in their camps, Yet ,men Rho have forgot.. I
ten your country and your, duty for pleat ,
sure and ambition. do you not fear to , dance
upWn the•pats/ where otheeet',dend' vitriole;
your comrade tie harried ? bo• ye- tioldleari •
that the sound of yonr dancing Amapa Lim .
joyous Riming of-your *Nike mousio met,
disturb their lest slumbers ; and clat 'their; `' •
mit rissreatehades may rise up in • thii.inidel of: f'
your impious revelry to rapromildp.64 o :witis: .•
your nnseetaly pithily heft!" sk \ ootrstrx • ,
, clet hod-in no:Miming.
• "Iluialint riemegoolimind ho thlie thiltsill:" -1 ,
braten WM the sic, and, sanded .it . shoider : •
through your hearts? Is It ,rho csoet,of,,
your revelry ? No ; thp 'did Cove& 'hoot
she direction of Itiehmand. 'ft dismal' 'hi ' "
plaintive yoke of
- our Irrigated -eh - -,' t nitortnering in theirirjeonta aptdiini a
ew ... A -
b i
ungs+ I lint *bat Or that' strike otpdcaik et .
i t ore
on wish the. Muses 1 Whhi 'again' ilia ' t ".•1
voluptuous vertex. lofrateinif 'alit Mew '
' with vourammi braced about 'heftier* Rbilit •-":
who bare come fromWaship
u t
your rertitryl'i ' Olf milt" Ili .
inullia. 4 04 NC 004ioldhglier di
a l %iii.el.4/4..toth
, rtf sfit .ftith_xtrtilijmktri4l
, th e birtibt daft*
I isgainto* N ringov..t, : 77 7 : 4 0 ,..1.17177. r i Alliin
tkoctßiikesseettiowl irrim73 , r
118111 !. a .tAt.4, 4 . t i t MP, N. *- 1 . 4 5i4 ell.
m. it 6 Web 6,r t a lee* tu ,
lo liiiiiiitildp . , lilid'lrilli'l
Nati
i l itilettialif 7girtittliftigr"