_ • . in.seAiiaintia ' zealot A. um*. lIVALIStIgn c BEAVER, . ATTIALOTS 'AT LAW. AluitirOmitaars'A. IlintIGEM , Ti. ATTORNEY AT LAN. - • * .IrEW4c!erie, .91,11" ifq d ou{t~ i onee,r lib : tbo Tr"Pneh' C 11! TOBAcCO, CIOMPAV OTION§. T "W. It. WHITE, , . • .paNT J 8 T rinvanolh, " Wets Moprefesalenfil rwvieee to the cititens pf Pinegr2ve and • JAREN IL RANKIN, - ATTORNEY AT LAW. • saLLEruxne, m 444. °aloe on•ttte Diamond, one tlo?r weeo•of the Poet-office, ' W.II',ALAN A. WALLACE, • ATTOIiNtY AT I. I AW. • CLE.t . III , IPIL,p, PENN . A. t Win , lith Bellefonte profegatenally ichie n ape daily retained in connection with resident coon mil. ---09.141# dr. CORSE, 7 ;w ITTOiIiErS . AT LAW. LOCK RAVES, PEV,I.A. Wlll'irraethm to tbo several courta of Centre and Clinton rouutler. Alt business entrusted to their care Mill be promptly attended tu. 14114118 i. John Di Wingate Dentist, (Ace in -the Ma sonic Dia At home, except perhaps the fret two weeks of each month. HARRY' Y. SIMMER. ATTORNEY ,1T j..11V • BUIRIreS OFFICE, • BrI,LEFONTR PA Mai be consulted in Engltdh or lierman. March 1864,—tf. El= JOHN U. OHVIS ATTOIIXEYS AT LAW. Office—Rom - No. 4, up taire,Reynolds's Iron Front, directly opposito the 14 ate/some whet.. ow Mein streets Jfll. J. ILIITCUFLL, 411YeICIAN st 31it0EON. KIM/ TIONTr, 1 . 1. WEreLtteltil to prdtessionlil calls as hetet... at. itcipautfully °Wet.. his sorri, 0.1 to Aatl-tlso OffiLe at liken didravo .!toot. A. 0. Ft UST, ATTORNEY AT LAW =I tYlll prAcil,c iu the se, oral Courts of Centro and Clifit,a Couutics. Alt local Imsitir , 0n• trurted to his r 010 hill teerlyn prompt ritlopll , 4l. outs---Ou the Notth-Nriot corer of tho Dt omnnd. •Hli. Z. W. THOMAS. PHY3•ICIAN AND SLAW Jiol4 I=l3 It ;Tactfully ujcri htt Men i.n.,ltu his frienelt and the public. 0 1W QS/ Mill Arect, opposite llntiutiii Relent to Dc... J. tt. ltrofjoy, e. ThuuTtou, 'l'. t'. Tnutuai. 11.1NIEINII: 1101:SE UZZA WM. F. REYNOLIO6 CO., BXLI.EZONte, PINYA lidls of Ey , linnet - 11mi :Coles dimountel.— Collsotions made mid pi moods promptly !omit ted. lutoro4 paid oti sposeiel depomi, fle.- ‘herarin the Eastern cakes on hand for sale. IlepasilgPoreired.' Ikrk:CELLANEbUs J EWELRY ESTABI,IBIMLNT. G. W. PATTON, Propreeto , r. Having purehnsed tho extensive Jowelry El tabilahlfifUlt OT IV. J. Stoin, and largely ineteas ed the Stook, the Proprietor will keep constant ly on hand, a splendid aasortinetil, of , . AM-ERICA'S WATCHES,.. TE NT LEVER.. ENGLISH . LE VER. CYL END A R ESC..IP E.VEXT W‘A T C E 5 . VIOLIN BOWS,- GOLD AND SILVER THIMBLES, _BPECT.ICLE.9, 'Sc. ' which will be sold cheaper than at any other eetablishment in Cent/al Pennsylvania. Watches, clocks'and Jewelry repaired, and illt work warranted. Jazi. 29, 1894-Iy. IMTORTANT TO it LL I ! • • —SINCE ZIIN Fr RE W . W. kcCLELL.AND hu removed his large and splendid atoek of RZWADT-lIILAAII CLOTHING, eND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, to the ARMORY BUILDING, on the rth• east cornea-of the Diewe'Yo, where-b. wi Ibe happy to see hie old friends and customers. •atook le %Reprised in part of :OLOTHB; °AMMER SS, VESTINOS, TRIHHINOS COLZAILS,',HECK-TIES, HAT'S AND CAPS, and In fla64ltyary article worn by well-drossod , gentlemen. CLOTHING MADE TO ORDER, - on the shortest notice and'upon the most reason able term, and' pattataction guaranteed. "1311ve him a call - ' ; Sen. 29, 186*4yr AVE{ ST: CARPM WARE-HOUSE. 1 13 2 4$E pk hit* doors . beloT • Moth, south side,' Pht!hiders. The subscriber has just received J. for: &ries Ike* AI win 10 6 5 4 0 gook of 2uglish and Maalox CARMITNGS, oasbrsoing elf the new styleo of the bast adios .14Wbo4qes. review to tato lob) advsnae for aA, 'nod wWhenold stlowrivises. • rtN Velvets,l!.rnssels, Threellrenavitino and ♦ebel4iia Carpe . . , • N stock•of OIL , CLOTHS, DiUORETI3,. QM Parabbh wbo ars aboutArtdabhll, gib conno ted ft make an examination of thcabove i lo r di b c i llom m i l lo ti making their aoleodoir,-* Mr • be held out aranot f to Ploalk g s , • 108:BLAOEWOOD, -1 March 18, '6l SU /131111111 t. .11.1. a Ai ~., . . , )I'7* . ...,, . ,7 "- -" S 1 r • '.. . . airs .-.. • : , • - -.. ,- 4.0,41.!:..4::;.„ -4- • . . ~..1., • . n , .f 6. : ;. •- i , r ' ,•:"N il ~ - . 1 `..1 . 1 !4 1 A " 1 1 11 7 f , O ili 1 ,t i . 1, t.. 4 • ...... a I \,.... .1 ' . ......--......, ) . v.— i .•. . , , , . ..., el .:', .. . m.O -',l . r •-'•• - ....., :: : ::_'::'... ~...,..,:,. .:.1 - 4;-.. , -•7 - 4 , /, - -., ' .: , :-41. •• , , J, .1.. ,; - zi .,. 1. I CM I,IALTI :N1 P AND.EIL I PRESEUVH YOUR HEALTH, MU= ewre 4 toin minisrt • AND LIVID RAPPY AND CONTENTED, 8110i1D rOteIIASIS 'Torn'trcluoßs • AT VHF! IWHOLES:U.I: WINE it...V.11 LIQUOR STORE, • ON DINUOI• STREET directly opposite the old' Temperance Hotel. AllB/11Et4liff SAIIY Iit &Co. Notwithstanding, the enormous raves impo sed upon all articles in his line of beAnoit, he still ceritinues to sell the parent articles at the very lowest figures.. Eery diseription of, DS-REIGN & DOMESTIC LIQUORS, wholenale and retail, at tlus lowest cash prices, which are warranted to be the beet qualities ee l_ cording to their fespectivs, prime. Ills stock --- eel:mists impart of ' OLtrffifit, - - . • • MONolioAlizrA;' 'WHEAT, CORN, NECTAR, and ethers whiskies, at Iron 2 cents to $2,00 • per gallon. Also, ALL BIND'S OF BRANDIES,. from 75 eta., to sB,oo' per gallon. Ro Gins pure, from 75 cts,;tu $2,60 per gallon. PORT, 3LADTRIE3 WIERRY, 111.ACKBIRRT and other winos--tho best articles—at as ron- CRAM PMINr, TWACKBERRY, cIINGER, AND CARAWAY lIKANDIEN, PURE J AMA.CA AND NEW ENGLAND RUM CORDIALS OF ALL KINDS, - E=l all o which will be warranted to be as repraseu te.l,• bold at prices Ouredizigly low. • • All the liquors offered ter little at this ortabll, bittern hate been purchased at the Uuitell Stales f'unt.•ut 'lease, and consequently moot to pets and good. 1 4 9" l'hy,,icions and ,rthers.. are respectfully requegtod to glee ht.: liquert a trial. •If lle has the only artich, of PUBL:1.08.11' WINR.JUICI: IN TOWN 2` , .1962. tr. TIIE WONDER OR 'TILE AGE! VFII ASTONIALII.I, ATTIIE AND CIIE.IPNESS NEXT & rarrimars WHOLESALg WINE AND LIQUOR SPORE. RINIIOP HIRES r, , pwprietnri of thy ostabli,lnnent Lake pleasure ha informing the p\ dine that the hule ',Hat:rally on it4t4dw P. 11.44 -of choice, fureii,'n and domestic lisittere, Puck as Old .Vitar, Old Rye, Alunoollgabt, And Irish Whiskey, than ar Blade-berry, Cherry, Ginger, • And er,mmon BraltdASj Part, ..Vaderia, thlerry, ' And Listqn Wines, Seuteh, And unhand Gin,; England Jantaca Rum. CORDIALS Peppermint, Anniseed and Nose. The attention a practicing phyviciana ti call ad toour clock of I'CRE LIQUORS, suitable for ruopiCad purposi,. ItOUlee jugs and Dornijons constantly on had. We have ONLY PURENECTAR WHISKEY luTown, All liOors were bought when liquors wore low, and we sell them uocurdingly. AY liquors are warranted to Confider that we ean.please enetoniera wo respectful y solicit a alums of publio patronage Liquors. will be sold by the quart, barrel or tierce. r{e have a largo lot of DOTTLED LIQUORS • of the finest grades on band, Ppril 1 5t,1883, 171, AEIIII 0 N 6' E M P:? R I,U M II . MAIN TESL?, BELLEFONTE, P. W. W. MONTGOMERY, Prop.;- 11am received a large invoice of CLOTHS - G3BBl-31-411.8, • VESTINGS, io tgp o to., et c. Which will ho manufactured LATEST STYLES, and In a vintner that cannot fail to pi'ove satin factory. A large assortment of t.ltg TS' YUAN/CHING CI eIODS, Consisting of Collars, Neck Tice, - Suspenders, Hosiery, llankarchlefs, ote., Exactly suited' to this locality and intended for ibo • Ms shelves iiiesent a greater variety of -plain and fancy goods than can be found elsewhere in Central Pennsylvania. Call and see that, Montgomery is the nilin that can make . Clothes In the fashion, strong and cheap; All that has ever triad bins yet, Say that be really onset pp beat. 3ke.Tneth N EW BAKEIIYI MATTHIAS RCaIIfUCK, Would respectfully inform the people,of tante and vicinity, that he has opened a new add a*PLETE BAKERY, In the old Temporanoe Hotel, on BISHOP street where he will keep militantly m Wed eL kinds BREAD, „. POUND-CMOS, 510414 ANDVNOED CMCES, OBACIJULS.. wbieh will•imalratAAUP HA*. Tory 1 , Fasiliat grin Mil illiellotr Othitellealo rot theft ballot A 04141416 ij'uk t op IMO always iret - puieliOtelliesiebnad Apt. Wins they peed theca: • ileptilAnWls EMI I= I=l SIIMMER TRADE, RUSKS, CANDIES 6.c. BELLEFONTE', PA.; 'FRIDAY, JUN-Fa- 3, 1864.-- Vie *lto e. HURRYING ON Hurrying nn h) the midst of exetement, Pushing' extravagent objects through t Few or pa knew nr peuse ever to question— EVer tniAt•wheo we're htirryinctoi_ ]ferrying on ovor bleosinge.-itnheaP; Charing aome jdy,ll4 the butterfly, gone,, W 4 0 ht the good of our wonderful frenzy.? Whar*fhts ion of our ing,on Y . We have been horryhtg on from nor eradles --. What but Ito ohadoive have tvet for the yak? We ore Mill hurrying on es erpeetant— What obeli MO yet by our hurry et loot? Graves are so Citric that we cannot well misi them, Going with only the Oahe., wu obeli aver?- Where shall be, then, nll we're hurrying utter? What shall son bolo .with uor hurry when • there? antrylnglin In thelruirtrortheittrnntamT Conjorud alone in the 'fir‘ er of haste, Hurrying on with extrariagnnt projects, Little we 1.6 - rk of, iressurek we winite; Little we know of the diamond moments. All to ho withered and garnered in store,, 111:ileng our worthy or worthless possessions, in the hoot where doll hurry no wore. Treasure - if that lie all around us In plenty We never heed au we are hurryinrou, Anil When in heaven our coffers uro empty. Wo shall first know how they're lust and are gone; Then we obeli know how our spirita have wasted, The sot! fur ile cord growing haricot us ague, While we are hurrying out of Its elitue. God works but slowly—but slowly, my brothers, Not hurrying onward in passion and strife— Works with love only, and only for others, Nut fur himself in the green fields of life; Let us sit down, and be calm and be thought= .ful, Lifting our hearts to eternity's brink— Let . cease living alone lur the present, Let us cease hurrying—whaLdu yuu think? ..-vGiveste.ton Mercury. Saw Oithaass, Out. 23. W:Ditellautruo, __ _ C am_ _ - _~_ THE PRESENT JUDGED. , BY-THE PAST tire'Cold that if we capture Rierimond, the rebellion bs at an end. ye arc also told that if we fail in the campaign, the Colon is finally dissolled, and the independence of the South will be recognized . as an, estab lished fact by all nations, ourselves inclu‘ (led. T.1106.41..w119 ioj.cYcia eltlacr be disappointed if dents shall put. their opinions to tits Lost.— The lie of . the rebel lion does Hot depend upon ilia successful defence of Maim/m(1 by the rebels, nor to the dissolution of the Union a necessary re sult of Grunt's defeat. The war, as now carried on, It a war between peoplesand not between armies.—: It is a war of institutions and ide to. and not a war of mere it ehiticalit es or individ nal interests, like the moot frequent wars of Europe. The right to thrones, the tortutte• of royal families, the boundary titled of na tions are questions often decided by single battles. The subjection of a people work never so accomplished. A cotemporary cites the sfo-called con-, quest Of Eng Lind by William of Normandy as a proof that nations sometimes submit to superior numbers. The defeat of Harold at Hastings was not a conquest nor did it re sult in a subjugation of the English people. NO such question trim in controversy. In the present sense oftbe expression,' William never conqinired England. The word con queror, as t hen nriplied;diricot jugs t ion. It was simply Is conflict over the right to the throne. It was barely a per sonal issue. The local institutions of the country were not to be changed by qui re sult, and the English people themselves were supremely indifferent to the, termina tion of the conflict. -lap)) , cape, they were . . to thau own laws, and Klfig William at his aerettation'tuok the Homo oath to execute and defend the laws of the Kingdom that had been taken by Harold. The history of England redords many at- Worpts at conquest, but every attempt was a failure. No part of the 'kingdom was ever conquered. No portion of the people in rebellion ewer submitted uncondilionall upon being being beaten . in battle. ;Vie primentiolitical atructbre Of the empire is a mom eto patchwork afflecal girfereign ties, 41 traiing the umeenquemahle tenac ity Itith?alticit the people hfire adhered to their immemorial riglits,in face of defeat in war.' The Sakai\ , ditritel - ebtfriner Colt, but compromised with him, alter a contest of eight hundred yearn. TV this day, Wales, aa.fo its local power, is deemed au independent principality. Alfred, after centprids of *sr, failed to conquer tile Donee,- but compromised•with them. The Isle el' Man has resisted sitbjugation from the earliest ages, and to-day has its inde pendent parlutment. Ireland was never brought - into subjugation to the jiritish government by arms, but by its being told, formed % legislative union with the English government. The slime is true as to Scot land. Even in the, county of Kent, some old Breton laws still prevail—monuments' oT the unconquerable will of her population. The British crown itself is a bundle of em blems signifying, not victory over races In battle, but dominion by conciliation. and oomprondese. There is everything to learn from history like this. It d'ught to teach us not to-con tend with populations and sooial institu tions, but with the enemies. of the old gov ernment only. We may and must preserve the past;, butAore than thi is a task too -great * for, our amerce; thoug li t hey number milliteiti of the 'bravest men the, • continent • can produee.—Afifiasukce ;Vows. ~- • • , "kosai egg'4l;reitte4spsisutt a.build• lug, will be dastbedjoipieees..but leave for. ever its foul mark, in proof that it once existed. Thns it is with 11 1 11.. • Ltneolia and hie Cabinet, who ha :_re opposed their rot,- tines' to thh-fabricrof tlii-pteensmone, and theirtiat taid4tood se - eof the And their .o , hope of perpetuating their is In st . 44 stains they will' leave upeit thefair strusture„Or; liberty. Mr. Lincoln remarks that • kfatierjr- rnII - “write Ae boys 71 , fil realFi t iPelLitSaittel: hapyttatl jolt lege pelitrtr 1 40 16 1 4lidt on *it kilmwtos writtos &Pim blAkit•ritguiCeae€44Bkett and wiehetemeee spEeienst,- OJAI], if La* mg edienid uermedesi , fete , derkpeee tehb flail Wink terrteer 040 per '3404.. hex** be seitingia etttoWd!titie bespattered- apelthre • IS ABOLITIONISM SINFUL MINE !ROUT ON GOD. Count Teed, times it has been asserted that. slavery is n tin—even the sum of oil vilitan lea. • Bo often has this been repeated that nitiltitudes, Without thinking. have accep ted it as the truth. am glad that of late people n.e being forced by thq ••inextrable .logic of events," to re&msitier tbiir condo m-FL ' Now; the question is, "Is not Alm- Iltigniern a—ain nyainit- Clod, as well Os? curve to men.? • What is sin 1 Tvaniression of thelnwa of nod. These laws are embraced In the Ten Commandments. Tito' first law is, "Thou shalt iovn the Lord 'thr Ond with all lily heart and son!, and strength, and mind. ghedienee TO this. is nianifented by a finni 'bje acceptance of tho revealed will of the Tow-giver, as the ,right. • -Above this will Abolitionism set itself . . It says. "My Ood most Ir 3 antislavery, my will must; be right. If GO and His Bible don't conform thereto, j Sputit and trample both."—Hence I lin:- la not 'in asserijilsoleiii living an abolitionild idle does not in whole or in portrittlect tie Bible. • The second Law, in subsistence i., "Thou shaft not make nn idol, nor bow down and worship one." The besot d Istactiles made golden ZoTrithil hewed before it, saying that "thin be thy God oh Israel." Infidel French Revoliitiontsts placed in their tem ples for worship, the image of a prostitute, dignified as the goddess of Reason. Ir re mained for infidel Abolitionism to surmount the dome or . the Capitol in Washington, with the iitilMe of a negro wench, as the I • • rtrinlkri tt "bo'w owu a nd worship; swear there by; wh dares to.make mention of any other God during my administration, shall be cast in Fort Lafayette," or Alcatraz, or brtnishad beyond my realms. The third Law is, "Thou shalt not lake the name of the Lord thy God in vain." Ab olitionism haanutde this the age of profane oaths. • ft swears to support the Constitu tion—and turns round and deellareb that it is treason to prate about it. The Constitu tion guarantees , the Possession of all their property, to sin veil oldors ; Abo liti on i sin calls upon God•to witness its devotion to said Constitution, and immediately pro claims .slave holders outlaws worthy of death, and accordingly - toes to tour der them. Is there an unpurjttrcd Aboli tion official living ? Not'satisflud with sin ning itself, it. compels other,' to forswear themselves, until an oath (which is an ow ful ttoletnnityf low come to be considered by multitudes es the veriest farce. , The fotirlii Law is: -"Remember the Soh .nth day to keep it holy," ect:, - yet the “tiovernment convenes his cabinet on, Sabbath to consider'ot stale affairs"'iiiii u the flevernment's better half makes epien did turnoutS in 'narringes drawn by eigin Forses, to the • - riderfirtitrofi fouls and sh gwil the thooghtful. But it is as %CIL perhaps b e tter., to spend the Sabbath thus the o to listen to falsehood and blasplic'tiry frooPhe alter of and see Om Mtn which words of lore Jul,' good Will teen were wont to ho uttered by am bassadors of the Prince of Peace, monerterl into a rrrruitittg I:llfice, by thoac who have "stolen the Ikery of Heaven t senre the der'll in " The fifth law k. lily father And mother," etc., In Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri, Abolitiouitun has forced Nunn to Inks up arms nod go forth to shoot down their own fathers, and lieu throat daughters into loathsome prisons for daring to express sympathy for their suffering parents. And it k preps' ing to do the 3111114 thillg The sixth Law is. "Thou shalt not kill." Abolitionism has murdered at least half a million American citizens. And when if reatembereil that the law is spiritual—that he who watt . / another dead, on..tfdtes hia brother wit ItoW4t-vattse,---suMlates-it, 1 _lta.z,.._ turd nothing in attribing that I behove th ' there is not nowliving, in all thus It • ad land, an Abolitionist who is not a nu , erer before (lad—l mean in heart. F , in his eye.who looks looks upon the eart, I be lieve the hatcher of Frederi aburg and. tho ~ assassin of New Oilcans. eno tutors guil- I ty than the sanetimon . es Xynocrite, whn in t o name of Jesus counsels war murder, death and desolat' .11; and goes into raptur e+ when lie lie. that cities have been sack ed and wo. • and children turned - out into the - cold {feltings — of — the pitiless world" to die. - • th‘severtill is, "Thou,shalt net c:ifitatit nfieltery." We read that such is the state of literals in - Washington, that men end women openly glory in ,their shame, and unblush ingly conintiLuaeloauness. Even the poor sehool havo cause to remember Weir- ..gallant Abolition defen ders!" Lust wits Frat Med ; the, pour victim besought; her cries and - entreaties wore Ul2. availing—and Abolitijnistn Should "thank God another city is taken -Thank God, for sneh heroes;' The eight Lewis." "Tliqu shalt not steal." I rend to-day an eattnnullinVisbaition steel annually $81)51,000,000. Jewelry, planes, furnittfre, carpels, etc.. adorn the persons and henna of Mtllly 4 1bolitiouists, who hover paid for atom. Books, with the names of the miners from whom they have been stolen, emu till the libraiee of Aboli tiosproachere. 1111 e ninth Levu is, "Thou shalt not boar false witnedh against thy neighher." This requires 'absolute truthfulness. Abolition was born of lies, and lying is its vital breath. In its hands, the telegraph, the prose, and even the pulpit, groan with false hood. In San Praneistto and Sacramento, telegrams haver, been-tread on the Sabbath froth the pulpits, when the readers knew that they were prostituting 'their offiee and position to,. the dissemination - of Ilea vlly snob summating woritlansabeen brought to look open us as apeople in the same light that at. Paul did upotepeirtain ancidatialand lora. Said he :—"The Cretana are all bars." ; The tenth law is, "Thou Shalt nob covet.' says, , "Tbinearthie the Bona's, and we ormithrsaints : therefore-the earth belongs tenon Yonder. are Ane vineynrds and cultivated , - fields: True:- we nailh. • planted novehltivated , them, but.7.We reknit. them and minitrenderill havelbenulif lOW them, we hare - tcrtsztorminstettreir owners:" The thing roquired,is done; ,BilerAbreak lag of gne et 000 laws Noßene, ea, ly, tut all :of them, hay. been ibrehon Ay: A.bolitionista, Xherefore he testmruns ;air read that Akelltionhrni Is min againstdtod.— if to show that it is a curse to men , kind. Bat enough- for onus , You may hear from me sple rr r , ----A•aoteuiPorary *ark gtortal , evatroiitk on seem to think this is thirctiine - - tebtal.• 'vessolcof intosoodifesotr,L.--r alittiadtheadtVc.' -L, NMI . • . • , :. HOW :POLICY DEMOCRATS AIO ASO. A BOSTON CAROUSAL OVER THE LITIONISTS. r WAR. , • . , Several days ago, while Ow •anuica mace Last week-we attempted to show that the engnfied in a thimly and desperate struggle adoption of a • •polidy'! ,for the purpose a aJr ital party assembled lmitotrfon river lux. securinethd votes of Weak kneed^ clump- tunes and nines and rare deffeacies. to eel bles, wonid tentlta Weaken Its, instead of °brute an anniversary.. In the chair . wits giving n's strength.. Atnting the reasons . -Wm. Loyd Garrison. fle..rgo Thorops.m , assigned bas this: 'that such a course must the English Abolitionitif who, thirty tvra be more or leaseleeeptione, arid the expo-I ago prayed for the deurnetron of Ant Mon, sure of Mich doceptlrin by the Abolitionists was an honored guest. and Tilton, Phillips, would rule us. We met with a telling ex- Mrs. Mott and Susan B. Aetimny were ample of this. kinef - last week. The Fitts- mingled tip ili the company, till blacks and burg Dispatch of last Friility exposes the whites all interspersed. •It Was emphatic following extract from what it mills a “lead_ ally a miscegenation meeting. it was rho leg topperbetid writer :'' theory of stualgamittiou reduced to social “The best plan iA t4ecogitise this fact, reality at least. and strike boldly for popular' farm' with It seems to hate been: a very pleasant ~. the Weapons which are readiest fur our use. meeting They had gathered together in A declaration for peace i . , ..,b... c . o r s honor of the tniniversury of the nstabliah sitecestifnl campaign or in the midst of it, ment of an Abolition society in this country. and it was fit mu! approprinni that the gay would bring, for example, nothing but de _ assemblage , should 'take. pbnce amid the rialonnbout our ears. Thu century is de moralized, and We must make the best of it. ilitintlora of hostile cannon and lice blood of political success is Whatever is available t wounded - and dying fellow-citizens. It tune i ; - van -. -. Hot , ..,.. e . a. tlim --, Awinr , , , , r , -, nra - right-sbasdnassehm-enewnenteftritimphiltet should holirtheir.fiend-lilo orgies and' -re power intone' hands we can Ao•nothing but rhafe-arotrr weakttrss7" . ______. icioeuvor the—hexces and_death they haul Now, we it not know who is Use &tailor of succeeded in prod acing. miter party than thnie Abolitionists this sentiment, nor do we care.' We !milt could not rejoice nt smelt a time; any tin auhave independence ebough to contents er party vt onid tent more lake lamenting auy expression we dislike, wilitou3 wilinlal! over the wanton blood-shed of also war But to ascertain who made it. The (O,IOIIIIPM this one party can triumph audexult in the expressed in this extract is unprincipled carnage it hits caused. It was to bring and very wrung. What. his the only his' IlbUla this terrible and melitneliell, strife hide party in the laud gut no pi inciples? that they labored so persistently far thirty —nothing but a truckling to 'popular laver' years and gave to the demoniacal nark er- in search of an , "available" candidate I— ,ery 'energy 'of their lives: They had advo- We prolosragitinst giving such a baldpolikv . 4 ,..r i , iu publie addressee, hi IheylliPit 1 (nil In no eishool - mom : 1 r for it in seditious publications, by grostitutiftg the Sunday School arid eillteitlenal lustre =Want lEs °fill WWI. "they have spat t ed nothing.to gain their eudsi and have even' defied religion in a cry for an Anti Slavery Bible and an Anti-Slavery (Tod, in order that ill IS 'dreadful civil conflict might he brought about. The agonised wailing of wounded and dying soldiers and of the* bereaved and ' brpkendietirted relatives are to their ears btu. ill tatishing strains of tel. utrinhant music that Cella theta their wicket' victory has be en . wen. Bow the friends attic two hundred thou sand dead and crippled soldiers will tear this igealow• -rnsultatina.-it' annithing more ttiorMes„gity with understand. They are more patient fIIBLI they could:be expected to be, or, In tho midst of greater intereets have overlooked this Wicked little Boston' dinner party. party hes always been a party of positile affirmative principles. It never subsisted un mere temporary issues. It had its birth with the mdebrated and sacred Kentucky and Virginia 'lLeslutions : those liberty foster ing resolutions have been incorporated into every Presidential platform, front that upon which Thomas Jefferson was elected to that upon which the candidates of Mit were de reefed. In clinging tu the nohje principles laid dawn in those resolutions cud the re mainder of 'tli a Cincinnati Nutlet in, the Deniucratic . party beecnue man/uncut, historic, honorable.; let us dare to yield those successful principles, now, fur the sake of a temporary "policy," and us sum as the st u ffines we will meet With STdeser ved and an ignominious defeat. It will uht do to pin our honored party ounce to-the mats of enprinctipled policy shriekers. The name of democracy represents grout minCiples; and it was in accordance wit those principles that our lure happy 4.11)1111- try prospered and grew great. 'Die people saw the good intentions of our principles ald the good results of currying them out, and they rallied in irresistable, masses to their suppor , , it was by long and close Itounectiou with such principles HIM the "fiatnelirdpikieracy became the watehtioid, of lionor. of anosetse.--Thoise mile label an At:principled, r ruuklin , policy with the suulliabdemocritcy, are guilty of a haso and infamans forgery. If its n are determined to pursue such an unprincipled course`, we protest most earnestly against them steeling tour bonored . party name. If they arc determined-1.0 sail their s4tggisb, sinking ct aft under false colos, w a do n wish to lake passage. If we declare fir a ".vigorous p SCCUr riot of the war,'-' the abolitit leaders will accuse us of practicing i mere clap trap deception, and 'their ad followeri will believe it. They pu the democratic party down as opposed the otar,..wh'ellier they really aro ur no As far ue tve nod, they pet is down correctly, and e believu such to be the, case with tit onest masses of the Demu.. cultic par . Why, then, would any one have u put on the red garments of wnr ° Such dress does not fit it principle-gov er d Drmocrat. Du notattempt to force in lot qv J. Ilcauntifif only to those , srlio arc more or less tinged with Abolitionism. The greet Him of the abolitionists is to show that thedcumetney are opposed to thp war; if we attempt to deny it, they can prove it againnt the • reliable Inatome of our party; but if via acknowledge it like honegt n u e tak. lb •wi -Out They give u,s credit with being opposed to the war, let us so far acknowledge the correctness of their - book . keeping, and , it will. be the most valuable as well as the !nom honorable credit; nit - *RS eter set down in our terror. But if we foolishly deny it, and they ar raign no for trial before that great political Tribunal—the ppeaple, type verdict Will una voidably be given against us. Let us bold ly declare_our ohl-fushioned Democratic principles. and if wti can sneceed at all, it wilt be In that 'way ; irwe are defeated, it will he on disgrace toils; but for the sake of the s•acredwombriee of the past and hop7s artheinturoz - let - ris -- nut ' disgracefully gn down (as we surely' will if we attempt it) in an effort to decistve. Let nut our one dlogrrteeftll. 'ANS epitaph be: Starved to death for vat. of nourishing principles while 011 a fruitleid.chase after a visionary policy.-Washinglonerftrninrr„. Umps.--.D.k. fate ;sou who demand that the " wur powey.;! is freater slum. Lhe Con stitution:l64,re Lu save .thie llOieu? No. Do those who delnuod tout the Federal Uoverhateut slosll destroy Spite institutions mein to give it ? Nu. . • Do those who. museustio that ditty do not. Went , the Constitution as it. is, intend to ease it 1 Do those who propose to exterminate the Southern people, want a union with them ? No. Can they drive,: a tinnuttutity at whrta folis from their.hObaes, aid pares l out their. land to ilegTO* l asp then make A.Ualon ? No • PO those Polilio4apetho mow control then 4 i f ormrstMorth asd whit opposed lisee4esission o , Teat*. sant ske Atlas>. bask ?. 4No. . Vo Aeon / 'yttey opposer Florida.. Louisiana, }want, beets any Southern Stsces,unlese Wen to °ppm, *eh hoed/hate tkrve r —nos-to Asti asealititlePhlLYtille• OPROMM, yft aonfodersoy S ,No I.: They aro now, AaNixt BsWorsm.---A !cones-. quntiipplimacingtliedeatti uf Oen. Sedig. :stokyalajaiwio • abet i tigrough. L. head w,b go . 4upesUisqing Qui Ackallatiltgiat ieme biSr+-10". •MlVlRlPo42 , 44P , alattl'aiillailig at 1 / 1 4 Limei biql 11 0 , utcuudionsliduirplikaatier put ballot. In Akt.diseelloaeofilek siumed the canqouoscto-Iducct.444loftsc.;olll. sed . • kick ww.elsrAy. with soetittaatAtis.a lag.twi±Amd.tbe opaisibcoubirialeiarrnassolar. "WO 4ten.';so4wildV'sketr, osult his 040444 15 tbia,ydiwme.' v 1411141/. atior the bill akruckibbupsatt ikuobload pu iv Pose fgemsbitt; oiltrlik *JAN bo dead, bi lliavtalkoiikis Alisis4aCiiint. • io - asitP l l ll o llll- 11"we at tutmnifigubteW and not to DQ pinksti Vpifi gransaise pr , 1 !i MEI WHAT ARgNE COMING TO This is the mournful • uuesti.. asked by nearly every working man in.. largo towns and cities uja.Satueday t, when com pelled by' the calls :or and necessity, impute iris - arm thertuttitHenerfs kut basket - and sal -e out . ta, throw himself upon t he ten d ..ercies.of the butcher, gro cer and hunks r. lie knows that he must eat—that wife and little one must have food an aiment—and that to he enabled to provi for them, the necessary • funds to , y the wherewithal must be lit his eeelres pocket. Autliben the moment sous question arisen —how in the world •is Le guhig to make the small stipend he has CAI-. (mired for his week's hard toil, hold imt long enough to till hie basket ? lie goes to Lumber and find that meat, enongll,ltir tyro , decent meals for himself and -2 44i11y costs one day's labor ; - a pound of tea dittrrrtand titan butter, And small• et ententel °flattish ails' third day's earnings. hn that a head of cabbage, that a few years ago would have cost him but three cents, now fetches tea cent shinplaeter in the market: that in fact almost everything has tripled its fer ule). value; and if the idea occurs to him to treat Ida little nlek-nacks in the tilLipe Lf" winter preserved fruit, lie is horror stistek when Le almonds their price, anti conclude.] his" is go time to Iniurieva to fact • • the basket Is half filled, his puree resembles that historic one which wits truMett -on by the elephant. and he .ean only draw a long breath and sigh, "What are we canting WV' Nett—lie remembers t hal Noel or wood must be bought—that has only doubled in price ; thal_dry„goods_are rmeded-_--kheY have only imaikaanaimmailarawitAi thing, except labor, ime doubled. trebled, and iu twiny cases quadrupled, and tlastaly sat intimater he can *et in answer to' hie mournful inquiry as to the "motive why," is that ••it is owing to the wart" to shout for the wer—to screech for the party power t hrill# brought the War about; in fact to eudoroo everything that is demo by the Administration to inert-nee thd pries of the neeetimries of lite, anti lessen the presrpect of labor by depreciating thd 'Currency.— Well may the poor man 'lnquire- "whnt • are we coming to?"• and his tutsiverL , can be found by consulting the market quotations. Till Foliage Mattutiv Ereont.—L-Tfe leave it Or the Statham • Government to do-1 ny, if it dare. That the chrvetlrr Itirellustriu arli o fetbri CO ted ti is. at radon a Ito; nits a paid agent of its chief Secretor!! of State.— leatiwlille, whethet; it wait SO or nut 140 . 0 not'matter so trufeli. It . would require at export rainiq tb diatinguish between Gm i comparative guilt which attaches to one wlie suborns a falsehood. 4 ,V0 mitt is belt* lieut.- mil than Mr. Seward on all ' MAI tug which 1 concern the Southern Cotifedeisci,... t glance at the fictitious report would have satisfied him as to its nature,' rtirtlier„lt..l purports 'to Rave both informoo'l r an agent to the Notthent • Coveftutie u . . so. , irtrould . have conic into Mr. ,Scearits,. bends first`of all, and it would Lave, been goy . int to bays sent,it to the cartrs if. yo ek,,,,tatf had not NV% 'it . ...µplit it up- peered% Tbe San; 'byl.ltit qtrount,ltanco ' akin° . hp 4 , ti.1.11113 '. O " I ,lllawfi k.t. tc.A9 a forgery.; and that he fill:10011j ;IVO& I;i°, Itrilisla 0 irk/irate ° - • . • Ate ina4P` eitiiiiqt . .,14iiikoji ',ti'rwat, be .1,1 it wide - bill* ' At , ' ' intuld wish! tall. men ti e iiit(lrthrtlikilia7 4. yeitti whlet .. ~1 baton: , - If . ...r ;rpsureil, ' Mr, ••• plieltkin isligiti • er than anitlep.iL" tealing but MO% toll the history irdw milatingritck Mrc-'9O-' ThltAttert &gad* k upottikwartrith umads, ktvwfihre, pMNtiekigLioiclebtip eiwiddslisoblt•itilevo nietkiiijast oli*l o','ll.lM'ar'? ihddibtaid • thei eh* ell& disdain* !Wit Mb "eIPOUSIMF ini ,*. "'4ko4 thirty yea r, -r"--„,,,41,041 writtomompoit . . - _ ..., -wear , .. ~ . .....,„ "The Vallandlgiltins i Veakle tfteVist itiAiji awal Aar counterpolgellindiftwsielitaiiii it oT olorton."•-, c . • ' ~2....-..,- _ .. 4 .• ` The abuse furl' . s • . 3 ru, iii k ini sum ha s - u long heettillapewed 'tolutasilostw -- - is is this : t The • Arysliess/ightpgi ism met, that des,ihelligttfo—whd :iiii - at one half ofikste oer r.s s pikagil l'ClV't peehrldiAy ititiif . 1 Mb. ILape duiLTAClltia-"lt=rxtee Nott s Hancock. A - 4:0110,541114 the :fineries-a patriots adhered to .144776. They we the -137 : 141 t 1 :4 10 ,4 4 .pitikiiici "s n= 4. [ while - their _ tratrl)tt t Akto 1 r:tish Torre 0 c1111 1 .'9 . ;rite" P r siteoahwypOpa eid y it to that ennwefbollolll l. Ilkye4. - " - ' , " - • .h ° '• The partotsk•ovine , obelitmoNnist the only *rile...elite/1041y: iatiHnoloollollll l 4lo. guy.erunseat,- was 10,4060ttswela ok• 4n raw , erputi. , This is slop listuoirtstioills of 1863.• 'Vim Toity,di set ri ne alAifilti flie ; governtOtOedld 'fiet-ieSit utsifil the sent of th e re01,'... prernetl, lint they rolitorld si etre-, vim the berme' en* the optesidno• hold *cos 0 A obj. ci:44. no l'oviwg a cur Ise beileve,in the.saluelhing. Tliti 1!A1r . 101.... Wiligs of .1.776 . taTtitetl . a iciltintury chiou 'between the litotes'. They wore' Ili taror of no oilier Union. The is *bit/ Fitton [lid lientuernts are for tolday, The Traits' of 1776 were nut :tor sr Ittalliatier iillegle OW, fur a atoetued nue,Larrl so strudthalijortelier 180, slips the War 'Abohtionlats. The nt iilo.l Torietitf 1776 eluiined that:the King had the ri gor to snapet4' the writ of 1,4 r bean r ,, pur, prwolohEraintial low user all -the tiountiy, arrest and throw into prison, or*enipoPt Vito ti distant, Tatirk , itorfb&ly • Ito f war . At, withafit- ' any, kostymeepselpot, t own will. The ,Tholltion Tories of ms;9ll -- itinwrite - , - a deoff i Ile 'PI cittwof lit the .eferelfra of 1410 same stentrastiadeta- The Arreeriturn - patriots et 1770 peetestetik eptitret, I:teni ; au *le the Asneripan Popo eres of frill. Theltriiiiilt 'links 4 1775 Icenfine.l the King its' ettddavortriglo exiiite sit tlessw.stio istautrectiotr ezpong attorney.° sieve. 1:49 4bulittun I;ortes treierectsy aro in firt-Zir of t_lic lame lIICOMI7O. The r i strioti of-171µi peatestedaritioal it in the peelire.:7" tion of 1.: dependence. Ttier detnilattaftd ill as a high -crime pgainat tuanklud. So 40 tho Vallandigharn Detnourate u 7 184 The Toting 0f,177f1 batted ilfiotojtties .Sinee Vrtatn.lx,n /tlr..,tarta-i , . it --...... MI 10,24. 44i. IMMO No v ezz - Pia 7' Thor , are the -, rold NA* ()emir. lit bud - bitiniorehapift ' 's.,ll(Aleit‘r, Lord Nsrrtb4 while tborirbilsitaitbrub Llrlark crats- aro, air( diatipka Ria44190.51k0- Ctn. Enquirer, • Tim Haulm - TTTA - T' TT'S( Oilltinya-lnkteir the ilinueo that pent built ! 'here lento o,ild that lay In the Mils. eh" Tom built! , ' " ' • •Chasms the Rat t kat Cribbed OM Gold that lay in the 'lnas.: that l'ont i build.. Abe Lvtlne:Cad. that winked at ;he Rat that ai ibtib.l theG fiatuhlthe natufa that Tout built. ' l i ongin the hey that worries ttsarat -that, winked ,at the Itat that cribbed the tiicid that my the'llottee'thatTom buUt. At : Old Colfax with the trample:U/Ipm tiled to toes tins naughty, Lens that,worriesknbe. the winking Cat, that sly], NhirpeKl to the Rat 'td" drib thli s &Id 'that itiy'dis House tho, Tole built/ • . .4 fr Anna'n'tbetnattiuit all fedora, ,who pram; _Rol. with the et untpled ;Ilona to, t Ri s tJtiq naughty;ratighry Long, that wctrrtee 'Abe' the winking' Clat.r. theta. , slyly whispered: to' the Rat to crib the tildld llutt lay itt,.ther house tbat Tont hunt.; 'PAC - VI °Via O'Gre . ett i y,`' au fatterea put( torn, would •Itima acatMaiden it'll forlorn, *ha urger K. with Abeterenerdatil horn iit. , toss • , • ~p• worriee, Abe', the wteklita tha witioper4 t 0 the Rat to crib Gold 'Mut lay fallin Mate that, Tote bulls. ,• ,;• Beeolter's the! Parton, ell ,gbaron shorn who will comecoetrabantl'..all tatter.. • ed and lora, InisOpinate Idnidetl all forlorn, who wire Kok will the totuntyru• who worries Abe, t 6 wjo 19 4 at, tbu slyly whtspored to tha„Rat tWelSit dui dolir that lay iu the Iloas that hum built. . - Deutuaracy *Ate Vtiok. 4tatttilitt,-/Tetw the Morn awl 'Oaken the Pf t reen alt abitiTelt and-shorit..-wha'lPbaraleh'all hirldtfaNniav NA , and don.) .dud, punier nnerieteent• illt - Mghluttc for telth ,1 crtireitleti horn, aftiNaill,*•,. bold out spoken Long erlioirolticts 'Abu, 140 wiukiug elgt-. l o l 9i4 l 4ifibitirichtichwar nffilY the Rat Llto that crit!bell ihi,4B1 W 0-tglft in tile tirrhao'llisa:Thni fitnit.—tadak NWT llry. K yrtalc,pft Vils4 *Ntßigfilitt Andertinp, s. brotter , oP Zonartie Andeiban, tit 'Lenoir Fie" aiea,otcitbries IstotorsonAihrittil.f., l ig (10h1110.‘ of (HI in. i re aantlitatiell by i t/49 "WI COnyentlim nl Cojuniim as Pres 1, till eteMiPperiveritelt" ' clines toehscept the tiottiii, wit rfillllettal#4b, tits COMUOhUiS whrtS: q, *a Ido „ o , 4,„ee.ept 1101111P2Bilatata or trio`roangra---ellitt•VT tncrtOtil the feelings and convietioriti of my nomllllo 3 /ors, or 71priSti.noi i not my wish or ito.rctiort•to deketm or sireV , ',lner , ' twit% t hat Laza otlisiasarlerlly appoatttl a tilta -ototai inuMWo 4.4 PA*, Factw,.,4 ll l9_tir,, eonient'to stirocisioAnutttetstu 1111,,, 4409. thildter Mot " - or ' tteoseeptista"...f 1.r44&1 • , t , '/11•1 Vitir 1. 7 §44.00 1 ter ti ea r.c. , test* S Oa n tat' fiiittgehr ) — cy Nearstiklltfittlioa, la *hit Mil El
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers