Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 24, 1864, Image 2

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ialsdvan
W. GNAT MUM, -..-.:.-11111ttor.
BELLAFONTR, PA.
MORNING,'FRIDAY JUNE 4d, leN
Or Terling.—After the 4th of
July tliesidiesriptiots prim of the WATCIMAN .
al NNW': 82,00 when• paid be ad
yes-MI, $11,56 when 'not paid within thus
soothe, and 11500 when not paid before the
asplcatios of the year. Twill ;hat time sob-
Iptions will be remired at, old rates, The
Lt.:lnt price of paper, and of all other material
printing ogles; 'Mien ti is step
MIT
Aw'Motiorly
The -
The' war news. of the week
, tneeytespente. It shims conclude - 0
said long since, that Orant in point 'of
skill, f. not to be compared to Lee. In 041
movement that has been made since the nom
mencement of the Present camping — it he has
been oat generaled. For him it has been no
tlriog het •cartinuetts defeat, from the day he
erOnsed the Raplilitn, and et no time keit be
ioffered more terrrely than during the plot
wick. After crossiak the bwareps and getting
to the south side of James river be bee found
the very same ebsticlisin his-way to Porideondi
ll st rcpt him from entering the efty from the
North. It hie been one continuous fight from
the time be reached his presewt position, and up
to this writing, we *hire news'of nothing bat
repulses. exedpt a single success of Burnside',
*who captured fur guise and four hundred
ir:soners, but was unable to keep the
goes. Batter's nigger* have done nothing,
and Petersburg is still in the bands of the Con
foilerstea. A heavy battle was fought noel. that
place on Friday.lan in which the Federate were
repulsed with a reported loss of eight thouseml.
The Aye says Gin. Grant still remains in front
_ALL& tcralturz.__Pli_EAtarth , Y_ths whOit Federal
line was entered to advance. The enemy offer
ed a strenunus opposition, as ob Friday. Ilan
cock andiVright made a little progress, but a
Confedrrete battery OD the north bank of Lb;
Appomattox, which threw shells aeroas'the river
made nearly all the ground they took untenable.
Aneusitles did not ailvitxtre at all. Warren, en
the reuthem flank; found very !litre oppoettten,
sail advanecd menus. gran Colds for about h d i u s2
a mile. There was a lull untill noon. A see
attack was then made. Ifeneeek and Burnside'
charged the enemy s works in their front. They
were mot by a furious cannonade, and after a
brief, inflectual struggle, fell back and gave el;
the atteus;lt. A: six in the arming, Warren
mule an Aber !Aram.° *crime the grain field,
but COW Ng..suddenly upon rifle-pits and an chat
tie, found his progress choked. The losses of
the Federal army during the day were quite
bears. Warne reports a 1088 of two thousand ;
ilancOck forty•two Pundred. The others have
not reported. S nue changes have taken plate
In Graare eiliznierinit — within the last few dayi.
butler ban been virtually relieved from elan
mend. Them are rumors in circulation of a dc
feet of nen.dliinter. The olisenee of authentic
Intelliirence front his command, enures them.
kineridea-has mot been beard from for sinnestieve,
At last IloeelOthill he was endeavoring to alike
Isis w.y into the Shenandoah Valley, and get to
W inehoster.
What Does it Signify ?
Some time din ;lig the Revolutionary
war a j3ritiah officer was sent undor Nag
of truce to the ea op of Geo• Marion,
which was some place in the Cypress
swamps of South 'Carolina, to arrange
matters of importance to both 'parties—
When the bondage wail renioved•from
Lis eyes, he was surprised to find "a lit-
PEITT47IM7MII7IIIIII:I7Mi
bare homespun, ta.cover bismakednese."
Haying arranged the it , itteas for which
he visited the camp of the "rebel." he
'took his hat and was prepariag to leave,
when Marion invited him to remain for
dinner. The officer was still more sur-
prised at this, as he saw no sign of any
thi4 whatever that looked like dinner;
but Mirion called hit. "nigger" (it was
no sin thrn to hare one) and told him to
prepare the repast, whereupon the
"nave," with a pine stick, hauled forth
from the ashes of a smouldering fire, a
few ifie - erptrtatneq,,and placed them on
some barli,,whieh Eervcd as a table.—
This was the dinner, the "rebel's" 1124-
for was invited to partake of—the beat
that those who were then fighting for lib
erty vrcla able to enjoy. After grime
oonvbrcation the Britain remarked, that
—There is not a Democrat within the
as the f.‘re WilM so herd, the pay mutt
be large, to watch Marion replied "not
borders of our State but is rejoiced to
1
Itvow that the Hon. C. L. V s e"
-antfr lig
ous_
a cent." The officer returned to Charles
"
ton, told ins friends that he had seen an ham—without leave or license
the old tyrant at Washingteh, has re-
American General, "withowi pay, almost tune d to his hanaey and friends in
without clothes, living on roots said .He asked no favors of the me
drinking weter,all for the sake ofUt.erty;" • nirchial crew neither did he make prom-,
and tuner rested until he threw up his
ises of submission t to their odious, infa
commission and retired from the service .
mons edicts, bat returned to the ,
bosom
This is the substance of an incident
of his family, detkrminted to erdoy the
which occurred during the war our fa
_ privileges guaranteed him by' the Von,
there Fade against the tyranny of nog- reittaiee of the yfeited States, - and se.
land, and in defence of their rights,
cared to him by the Constitution of
was brought to (Sur recollection by read
-11
Ohio. There he will remain, and this
ing the following paragraph, unblisbed
administraliots , dams-not attompt-to
with, exultation in the Abolition jour icrest hit; by military power. Abraham
as proof of the poverty of the peo- Linecrin knows this, Willian H. Seward
plc in some sections of the Routh. knelt's this, and every mix in their And
o". pair of rebel shoes taken by one of Crook's
party known it. rho , fame too dart
beets d
ars thus described: The. moles and dy
without commit
keels of the 'bees ire of wood, and appear to he was arreste dnative,
have been sawed out by machinery. Thez
perairbieb are of very heavy, stiff,' and b y tea without trial, and banished without
tanned leather, arq nailed upon the wooden authority of law, and that to attempt,
'AO with latte tails and welts. I again, thin to drag him freer ins
!Admitting that the above b true and ' home and friends, would be the cattle at
that 'the people of she Son are dessi- such an uprising as Abolitionism Las .
tote of the luxiries and manit of the ne- never dreantetcol Where 'is tie Dem
ceseartetrof life, dais it, esthete journals. cerat i n prsoturylianis tbak would not
*eta have it, protretket they are unable I stand by the noble Democracy of 6 .4llitio
to hold out much longer in defence of and Illinois in protecting bins its
theft liberty, their homes sod their prop rights? Where 'is the Democrat in the
erty? They, are as couseious of being in North that would' not ily'to bin rescue?
the rip/a rd tram Marion when he Alma In returning to his home, without the
on awe potatoes fa the swamp. TheY nci t eant, or Abraham Liocolnor anybody
am as firm' in the bellefof the righteous- &Am, of order to amt ban i
was "of their SAWN se were the tollowers.of gbeventmodleitbta die hinits-nf the
Washington, when the Wool; from their 8, bore the emetiej „„ of th e van h e
bradesd - bat, -tracked the 'snow oboe wittaitora- men et va s medes iatie . '
Valley Forge or reddened the-ice on the 1 0 b ra y**. tataa m ma a rt , Jim t h em b e
basks of thlaltiwwire. Did they give what they nutY; Re linsbannletthit lion
sip because ditittitntOn stared thelNie io its den t ar4ll. thrown the elessOwthe
the face or becivio sofforing.and Want fees of his persecu tors , a.a..... ond tite/..*M
woo their 4 X1040t , f&D. to accept the Wme,
*sm . liberty yas o*d shrloo-wolecnow_hoing,_ Yillowdit
oginstricbliind4-7-101 - • haw!
Iwith the people of the Soak it is a real
ity, for they - , have drank at jhe fount, a
sweet literate': cfklph they)taiptatisi
deeply—a klesaing I"ilictit they llavelklt.,'
!aid which lidt-_,.._tb , A*lrtelkir
ten. iirilltheithllol,artriaYe hilted:
in the sunshine of libeity l and enjoyed
the )31essings that have- flown', from it,
gad before obstacles, that those who
never tasted of it4sweetness, surmounted
tooebtain ? Thq "reedls" of '76 endured
hard' lops and made...sacrjfices which
have no parallel- in history. .Without
resources_of any kind but the fixed de
termination of the few patriots that in,
habited the different colonies, to bo free,,"
they carried on a war for eaght - Years, - *
til they wrung from the greatest military
power of the age, the 'freitom they
longed for. They diced upon potatoes
and yater, and wore "threadbare home-,
spun," and received their pay in the re
cognition of the rights for which they
-battled. And the "rebels" of '64 will
be able, with their
. wooden Alai, their
of parched corn Arid water,. to carry.
war in defence of their families
for years .and • years to
ourderoui and dentin
conjared it up is
Lood, and like
North is
for-
EILLI
otereeting i■
_what we
CM
and fires ,
come, until tl
ting fanaticism t
strangled in its own
George 111, the Despot of
not-spelled- -to-tee ognise -the
which they now battle.
A Compliment to White Soldiers. (7)
The ot;lored troop; fought with desperation
nod were the last to give way.. After the am
munition hod become exhausted it is stated that
of the negro troops h , •erded - tfie ROlMUlli
tke train cc it was being destroyed, tilling their
poekots and bosoms with cartridges, 'Others
gatheied the ammunition from the cast off•ae
cmiticinents of the white troops. and thus were
colbliol to keep up the fight until they reached
Mem-his.
It is stated that one truly or 1.500 infantry,
which was cut ntl and opposed to have been
• .
repeated assaults of the robot cavalry. and ar
rived at Collier.'lle woo after the main eol
uuln.—/larrubstry relegraph.
Such arc the reports sent byt "loyal"
Telegraph operators and armycomes
po ents. and circulated through the
• of the, rikeeganationist here in
Itti r t Orli]; in crier to ineretro 'the ad-
.
r non of the deluded followers of Ab
olitionism for "American citizens of Afri
can descent." Nothing that will glorify
the niggers and degrade white men, is too
preposterous for these infamous liars to
attempt to cram down the throats of the
peeple. Nothing that will ioaist them
in educating, the masses to believe in ne
gro superior ity is too absurd for them to.
give the public as "reliable statements."
Tiro hundreclaiegroes defending and pro
tecting Sixteen hundred *bite soldiers
who had arms in their hands - and ammu
nition in their cartridge boxes ! Do you
want anything plainer than that, white
men of the North, to tell you that this ad
ministration contact.. the Negro better
than your sonl - 1? Do you want anything
to tell you plainer, that., Abralam Lin
coln and his "loyal" followers, look up
on the negro troops with Mort favor,
than upon the white ones? Do you
want anything plainer to tell you, that,
these howling "loyalists" consider the
men you have sent into this war as cow
ards, when compared with the black
ones they have stolen from the planta.-
tions - oT the South? For what rea-on
but to eat reproach upon white men
late such covert insinuations against I#ollr
children, against Imo , friends ? Sixteen
hundred of them, armed and equipped,
seek the protection of two hundred ne
groes. Eight white men not equal to
nigger? So the Abolition papers
tall u., and would have you believe.—
And this is the. thanks, white men of
the North, that your - brothers and sons
who are now imperiling their lives, in
this worse than wicked war, are receiv
ing from those who induced them to en
ter the army. This is the ,cnlit the
followers of Abraham Lincoi l and • An
drew Johnson metes ouLto you for offq
ing upon the bloody altars of Abolition
fanaticism, those who were near and dear
to von? Is it not sweet thus to be re
warded far your "patriotism?"
~•--Hon. ho. Wr: wad tht
noble Mendez* bearer of the ocAboy
'bf this htlate tliwininthe last chin:
paign, is no* "proiliinently. talked of
the mama* tle-44/Ithago CeiventYou.
e are ciiitain no maticoalrrie pliioed
upon the ticket who would receive a mote
enthusiastic support front the Democ
racy of thiS county than Judge Wood
yard. There is' no mail ,in whom the
people -of th a ez ion hive mare confi
dence and would - rather- kW:gin (dove
ting to the highest ' , off:o3 within their
power than him. ;Trail the tunny able
and dijisingiiished gentlemen that- are
,token of as candidates, there is none
that we would rather see receive the
nomination than Glair. Woodwind. Able
and accomplished as a jurist, versed as
he is ill/Constitutional law, possessed of
the indomitable will and energy which
have ever characterized his unsullied pe'r
senal and political integrity, livid withal
'a firm upholder of the principles of Jef•
fersonian Democrany, he would bo the
very man to guide out 'Ship of State
through the shoals which surround it
through the imbecility of a, wicked and
corrupt administration. If the delegates
to the Convention would do a good thing
for their country and for the Democratic
party, let them nominate 'Judge Wood
-Wan:tits the candidate for thr4it..sidi,ter
them a trial by jury. and has, In:
-The great ` `no party" party has erwaid.discharged them without attempting
got • f mixed up considerably of late vo produce any eharges against them.
in
t this tude. ,We have mow four'
4 /16 has m U l te d the mouth and the
press i n a more ar drat) , manner thou any
separate and inet kind of Abolition- despot in Europe.
lots in this county, nd the Good Lord I 5. Ile has nrolongedi the war for the par
:OPe of collect tog a great army to aid' find
only knows how ma • ifferent kinds mutt him to ro election as Preeideut by the
are outside of it. 80-rides t • ''Reds" or point of the bayonet„ '
straightouts, Who stand by Frem.. an d i 6 Ile has sent armies to Florida and I.ou-
Minna for the purpose of organizing new
the Bed Republicana of the Wert, states fvrdhe purpose of voting for him for
the "Blackv,"or shoddyitegovito still ad- nest President —.and by so doing, Orem;
herd to Linoo'n, '''''loyalty,"o)nd the thou .d men have 100 their lives.
a l i n
lions of eie
n the i .
eni blic
ma on i h e y to s
neyoy
o colonize e
have the lines" or doubtful ones, who ple
look gloomy over the prospects of a di- for the white .oldie he are shin thout
-.
vided pat ty and the "Greens" or ver- sands in the army.
8. Ile has organized an a .r of negroes
dant nigger worshipers, who are terribly and forced _from the plant as, where
troubled le4 the great Demtoeratie party they could have raised food tor the and
map swallow •the Cleveland platform), hare supported their families who are .w
and fix on the "Pathfinder" as its can- starving hasewi anneaf'd
dictate for the Presidency! The last gance and corru ption te Th a l: e l o d f u conduct of lt r ;rte .
named individuals can rest easy as to war which wilt sooneror later, overthrow our
their fears, for did the Democratic party g overnment.
111 , he wan
elected
attempt to gulp down Fremont dnd his himself agains t
the election
h declared
a e
President
platform, it would certainly be choked for the vecond-tertn. Re has violated thin
to death with ''"wool," thus removing Pledge. and now nays it WAS 01 a joke.
11. Bitter suddenfy raised from the
.com
the great obstruction that lies in the 'mon walks of life to the highest honor in
way of the "Joker." I the gift of ills nation, be became vain and
pitlied_up, and k eps a corps of soldiers as a
body guard, which no other President over
..id
12.1 e bps a net of fanatics and phoddy
contract orn, and all kinds of spe . culatere. for
his advisers, and they flatter him. which
pleases his vanity, and makes him think he
is the greatest man in the world. Ile will
soon wake up and And all these things a
joke. and honest Abe will go down to pot.
teiity as a
_great joker, and nothing more .
—lf niggers make Ib9 good soldiers
as the Abolition reporters would have us
believe, why' in the name of all thats
good, don't the "governtnenr quit
drafting white men, and take all the
blacks? There is any amount of theth
here in Bellefonte that' could be spared,
and although we have no desire to see
the poor fellows dragged into a war,
which they did nothing to bring about,
yet it would save,,the lives of so many
white men, • and as Abolitionists say,
that all who die on the battlefields in
this contest go straight to Heaven, it
would be such a good chance to get the
"cause" of our troubles illippettoff to
that "bettercountry," where neither nig
gers, slavery, Abolitionism or war is
linoWn.
people had That was not much ; but it
was all. Now, which of these prucesees
does Mr. Sumner propose to take the people
of America through 1 Does Aot the dial
low demagogue know that the problem of
liberty, in this country, was worked oat by
the Revolution. and its foundations : were
laid deep in the Constitution. where they
would have remained in safety forever, if
such wretches se - himself had lip ver been
born. The process which the people of this
country have to go through, is to wprk
themselves back to where we wore anchercd'
before we were dragged from our geMartu•
tional moorings by Abolitk,uista a :-
fronism• rot 4%vsvorripm, is the grtrln
C...mtltulionriT. liberty. Secessionisnit
re-adopted the Constitution in its puriti4
precisely as it was understood by those who
made it. Abolitionism is bard at work to
destroy it. Who show the Most respect for
the Cmitetiftition, the Seceseinnists who ere
seeking to preserve its spirit by re-adopting
its form, or toe Abulitionista, who denounce
its spirit, and declare it shall not be pre
served? There is not a Secessionist in the
whole South who entertains the dower* of
the Constitution that ftiunner Rod his friends
entertain for it. Jeff Davis, in his last
speech in the united States Senate, declared
that with the Constitution die South was
imtlvficd—they, had always loved it ; lint it
Was because the Constitution watt not obeyed
bj the North that they were going to leave
us. The cause, thetefore, of all our misery
is perfetply simple, and the remedy is elm
• ple. Sumner tries in vain to hide it in a mass
. of senseleis"Verbiage about etruggles for
—.Eggs are ten dollars a dosen doiin' in liberty in France and England. There was
iiipt Cestra Prom. nothing in either case like ours. They had
The MI that would pay that price not liturgy. and they sought for it through
for thew, would be as big a fool as the rious opposing channels :I we had liberty ,
and we threw it away, at the bid of a mob
editor who think, Lis readers. are of ignorant and fiery fanatics, than wheat
'green enough to believe such a lie. r the world never saw wretches mere gre.re-
Iletaand iodine& Jim not AEA's. and.
not prepared to die I Traitors alike to their
country and humanity ! Despised by every
patriot, and abhorred by every Christian!
Ores' owey iw tesebtag the art Wises, let
their own science be ret urned M Minn again.
If it be lawful to love one's counts". it
would seem to be . just to hate those who
have destroyed it.—Old Guard:
manner in which this infamous, accursed
war is carried on, let them read the ac
count of the 'burning 9 . fiAliTantiria, in
Louisiana. it is a . Tsfiresip.' In the
history of this crusade that would bring
the blush of shame to the cheek of a
Sepoy, yet we have men here in the
North who gloat over such atrocities,
and professing Chriatians who pray tHat
such scenes may be re-enacted. If there
is vengeanin in Heaven it cannot fail to
fall upon the people of the North, who
furnish every means within their power
to perpetrate such fiendish outrages?
6-4 r,
—We publish on the outside of the
WATCHMAN, to-day, the Lincolnalit
form of 11869,,and the Lincoln platform
of 1864, as a - matter of reference. Ca,
any of the "loyal" fulioiieis - of Lincoln
and Jo)infon tell us why it is, that id
1860, the} , declared that no power out
side of the State wherein "slavery" ex
isted:. have the right, tointerfere with
it, and in 1864 they assert it to be !.he
great object of their party to overthrow
it by proclamations, emancipation, or in
lvliatever ixsamter it can be dorie?
..T . ,tx . " —This is the cry of all the ab
olition p ayers. "Tax us"--tax everything"
, ---'.tax hign",--lay on the taxes." More
limey is warmed—skier millless a day are
. . sut used np—the Government owes /our
tlohsaod millions of dollars, and prob•bly
more if all just claims are considered--"tax
us, tax us,' —it requires the highest possible
taxes to pay the interest on the debt.
The men who squelched out the Pease-Cm
giims---Vrho looked upon "blood letting" se
wholesome—who dencingem the word -peace
as wiebelf,-who deny that the eolith have
any rights, and claim that northeret Omits,
"altitlf destroy their State instittnicemr--vrto
denounce every body as a traitor who dares
to Say that inch a war will ruin the whole
country, who rikioloo ininobs awl the des
truction of liberty—who Mien upon the
'spoils of war, and roll In luxuries and strut
In diamopds, ripe the country is Wool
iniimpoverished, and the Donee of a million
elate men are strewn oven the UM—these
men now cry "tax na".-"tax ervet7tbing: .
-.. "the higher the taxes the better " —o•we Honnows or vas Damrr.r.-We leant' hum
want more money"....wringit out of the diffeteutparts of the coUntithat toed
, Rookie ,-Orualt oill.she EkrAeßarika. otroPD-tOoMilli. -Awn. -thlr taItaIMICAL-0 ,
lour capital lAto Me matulatrow afwar,.grap tecgarw-tbsecription. One geodes= ' ttlle
it all. Destroy the South, break up their was apPOtUtid to ( Willi Abo Da t iD ell " lb°
oysters oflobor,arrmataer *heir bows, drive "DisfOrlomdoet" Mu Do WO :4 7,100 M. by
them out of ealaubuti; sad- limb, to actoeut-,, am heart maw etudiaa berms Vied,.
ta t hi s ,
tint l itit l4l4"l"( but above all . to
witaea er deli w= i t g ir t p h4s trel i b v iZte l :ra c e "deat p lt
TO* Pm Old Abe that a ll this may .b. ..pon. warrants," reafguadhliewminiulon,.sa'
ilbeestfer• : aaalbaet__OrmTAKlrolibitc IA WU* b 14141 fir ouoh . boll?ooth"^ - Chf.k
Bcpw6Weatt *hi (iiiint.) biMic --- -
... ....
vett •
= ' • :,.. - Mops! Orli**. ~ •
' The packed cos n , Jolt, 610/ga
td AbitteeDs es;geonti 'Tag gein :10W0T 41
e most 1411114: gat 11 ~pariudege Ol
potter titsktetkd
,i,4, t. -ccantry,-._Th
were thirielturei 014 ' •iitseeirioir ''l
upon the vitals of FIL L while - the anima
-1 guived ty_raariit Warthingtgn holds her
.
pinged - I; the earth by bayonets, add the
rtiimination was eceeseary es a means uf pro-
Curing furthersubsiglanee from the reeking
carcases of her children' . This Jo the ugly',
reason 111, Old, Minis Lindoln should le re'.
elected._ Ile le ttie keeper or. the bleed
hounds who have bunted Liberty to the
death. Tho following reasons why he
should not be elected, are glven.by a gotem
porary: , , . ,
1. He lies violated his pledge to the peri
pie. In
_July, /861. Congress pissed a reit
°lotion, which was adopted by him, iu these
words: "That this war is not waged in any
spirit of oppression, or for any purpose of
conquest or subjugation. or.for the purpose
of overt Itrowinf or interfering with the rights
or establielied Institutions bf the slates, but
to defend and maintain the supremacy of
the eonst Istrtlett.' ''' ' ' - ' 4
2. lle hue violated ,Ite , Constitution-which
he took a sulerqn Gatti to eupporton. stays
without number. illistemuncipation procla
mations which heats. iseued be himself ac•
knowledged be lied nimpowee to do. ''•
1 8. Ile has suspended the habeas COIIIIIIt' in
et stes Inhere there was no necessity for it.
Ile has caused to be arrested Mid imprisoned
eitisens-for.stsfroes/"g-. i .;” e.mlid apinlo .
ati to the sato of the odministrst ion- without I
—Mr. Sumnii tells us that "the people
of America must work out their liberty, just
as the people of Frandll and England solved
the problem of Nationality." This, like
most that comes from Mr. Sumner, is high
sounding, but senseless. In Ilhe first place,
whatever liberty the people o England and
of France obtained, was worked out through
two directly opposite channels. In England,
the popular enfranchisement, such as it wall.
came through the barons, who ecritcraered
the kings, and wrenched despotic power
froni their groat). lint in Franco it was
precisely the reverse. There it was royalty
which tore despotism from tie hands of the
no place- in the North have we
heard of any demonstrations in aproval of
Lincoln's renomination, seep at Indianspo-
As, where a fyw Governmenthbonidir-streps
Omni United States guns, and burned a few
pouude of public powder. Even there, the
vetoes took no part in the proceedings, and
but few even knew what the guow were fired
for. The instinct of the people forbid them
from making dempgwtpti&rie of joy, at an
event netgil ofeviloinet. lathe' WA' it°
drums. lOW the bells, hang_soutbue crape on
evry dogr 4 .med prey Almighty Cfoel co avert
the crowning miefertune of Blit direction.
• Such 4 Oandithite4
. ••, .., .
. .. •-•
i rlie re-noptinttion of Lincoln 11-
, Z el 1116 b
,' , A , - i seg.
ot 'At 7 7 ... 11 , 4 , . ) .. i _ pro ,
hi • _ : •,' • . •• p WWI ~ , t.. 141 pialtion_ 141
h . '.. ,•• a , OM i• A -----Iyinom
so me-herviir without elth i• wise ettat*e
herution of the pent or sagacious of the
fut ure.Through his mismanagement and
imbecility during, three: ,years of bloody
,civil war,Ahaleseittroes of ihe country have
been wasted, thousands of lives Wive been
imelely sacrificed and millions of crew/lire
squish B red , squ lesjiihi the prospect of panda
anciss
toted union, as ter ahhumane Aire
eight can gol , ne; distant - bee as at the be
ginning. Ile has lent 'himself to the
schemes or the bold bad Men around him,
it, whose hands he is a mere tool to carry
out their Wicked designs. Ife - bas promita
tedthe war front the high and noble object
for which it. WBl cl3l,Melleed to the Idlest
and most ignoble Partisan- PurPost"' BY
hinseeshness and partisan policy, I:as
ei,
cbilltkrihe ardor and eol haslet= of the izei
ple which at the hrst so nobly respoteledlo
the Galin of patriotism. and in consequence
is now compelled to the decimsted ranks
dt the *tiny by mane of a nor iWs con
scription. Ile line trampled upon the Con
stitution which he was sworn so preserve,
protect and defend." He has 1163/tied the
personal liberty of the citizen by his arbj
trary arrests and unwarranted and unlaw
ful searches and seizures. Ile ban attemp
ted to stifle the • voice of nn antagonistic
public sentiment by the suppression of free
speech and a free press. Ile bits suspended
the privileges of the writ of habeus corpse,
and denied to eitizens the right of trial by
'neye--.-Ile--intee -arrested • --n -isms - witirowe
warrant or process of law, tried them for
pretended offences befell* military qommier
wieners, aud afficted punishments upon them
linknowniii our Constitutau and Laws.
In short, in the language of Gen. 'Fremont,
"the ordinary rights secured wider the Con
s'titution and the laws of the country have'heen
violated, and extraordinary powers haVe been
usurped - y the Execulire.
Such is the puldie r cord of the men who
Sad acoond time.preatuted to the" American
people for their suffrages for the first office
in their gift. Unless the spirit of '76 is
totally extinct in the hearts of a majority of
the people, he will be most ingforiously de
feated.
—Andrew . .lOhnson, four years ago was
a Breckenridge Democrat.—Jle Ise since
slipped about from one position to, aniather.
and out of one office into another, until now
he finds himself on the ticket with -Old Abe
for Vie. Preaidenk 3On illoAbolitionisis
have the intpuslenoe to cola - 1m Itlittnnervis,
Andy's reereanoy to prlnciplespoys. There
re I thrums Me him. who hare ft/ree
k . be Demorttey since it was divided anti
defea in 1800, Mho hare even /linty' been
getting t t at'of the °Mee front the oppo
sition.• sholitionittla go down, as
they will this fa , hese very fellows Will
be the first to dear he sinking eltip.—
Duller is another of the . Ine clan, so it
Forney, and Dix, and Dlckin dolt. Todd
Comecon. &r. Of flee conditint balloted
tot at Baltimore for Vice President. . ere
Democrats. and 2 only, original (Troth
iota to the Democracy. This shows that office
is what these fellows without priNeiplesiwant
when they fors tke a party with Orinciptits.
—ft is a pert and frequently Used
expression by theopposition. thiF the Dem
ocrats oppose the administration beqaume
they want the offices. That argument. if it
may be called such, is easily disposed of,
by pointing out that %murals ale now
obtain officet mere readily than the aboli
tionists themselves. They need only yo over.
An office is then a sure thing, from Vice
President down, if they have it to give.
That so - very few do go over, shows that it
is not the desire for office that prompts the
Democracy in its opposition to the most cor
rupt, despotic and incompetent administra
tion the country ever saw_ On the reverse
tens of thousands have and are now daily
coming back, who lest the Democratic party
through honest but mistaken views.—Leda
non Advertiser.
—Two flings Amerioau Masons will ,
do well to remember :
endorsed all the arbitrary arrests, the abro
gation of the liberty of the press, freedom Of
speech and of person, and the interference
of the military with free elections, as
unswerving fidelity to the Constitnion and
principles of American liberty."
2. It indorsed the corruption of the most
important of aur elections, by Mr. Lincoln's
ens-tenth rotten-borough system, in admit
ting the delegates without a constituency
from nor centres of military occupation along
the - southern coact,
Did Rine ox MOROAN.—The Oincionmi
Enquirer of Saturday is responsible for the
followhip , -• •
It is reported that loth &organ. at
hied ht a forte e'stimated at from 800
strong, reached a pain on the Lex
ington turnpike within six miles ofCoving
ton, at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon, when
he sajuddenly brought up standing by a
patriotic toll gate keeper, who rettised 19 re
ceive Confederate scrip in payment for toll.
The army, therefore bad to turn back 'and
Covington is safe."
KILT LOST.—SO,OOO REWARD—Lost Mar
Fort DM-ling, "the key ho Richmond."
which as was announced byttlie Republican
papers. was entrusted to the keeping of • t lie
subscriber. It is attpposed to have been
taken by a fellow named Beauregard. who
riot/filly misstated. battered, and thrashed
the subscriber, causing him to skedaddle in
such huge that he dropped_ the. key. The
above reward w{ll be paid in. Lincoln
skins to any one who will restore it.
Bits. Bumsti.,
—The Washington Chroraith says that
the cotton orojiof tire &Toth in 1860 ; was
6.188,071 bales, and it suppose& that
*eat bulk of it still remains there., There
halt also been sense Willitions. but supped
Awe are wwwronly ktakkOtkil of Ipelta t ...all
told.kals worth ssooperbale at presantpriees.
or triewli five-hundred minims of dollars!
If ibe vex were to'end to day the South
would bu omnpt►rwhely rich Dui where would
the north bet
--It is said.that although General Fre
mont has drawn his pay .tis Major General
for the.last two yam, lushes carefully ded
icated every duelec.of jt for the benefit of
the soldiers in Gm geld, not ishuoiting to eat
the bread of a Governing= Which it. was
not elliowed. to serve.
... -.AL NOT/06
A Ostrtures. enroll of irptwoui l Debility.
1 44,
incomPttliiirY. Premature Dew it .lioubliful
Jitter, actuated by s deelreitr, lit ether*,
will. be happy to Aweigh to f a iig. i nr.
efebarge), the reelpe aid directions lag
the simple remedy used in ►is ether! , els
wieblax to ,prtille Tit ha expetilebee, and poe
tess ei Varifialls &wordy, will *Mee the semit,
by retethi sthill,(esterplly ewelpd), by addteeslisg.
. •
JOHN B. ODDRIi. •
No. 60 tisesati Wadi am 'York
May 27th. 44. Sta.
At:
Our* to the itoiMenee by the iriihiserl-
Ver. restating eartwit,
'Oseitre eoOty ens -er iiihit'oollllrof
•Isionoorrahris Bison gelds it lentil ille ileseeti
siopeseitolieetioet itireelsan $l.
The ismer* rtimietilt to ease lionmag prose
In n:SW:Ts sad teetapiolossYvitlik
. IatiM WEINAIL
tem.
=
EW AINVI*FtsI
- •
• ! 1 . :
' -8 I
P •
TIN, BIINfT nithit 4 BrOt P U'ifitiCßANT ,
BISHOP BiIIZETT-8E11.L1H014.,
Takes this method of laforsojttrall the people
af Centro coahty, and whoetht.....alke. 'Pura to
read, that his stook of
TIN; SUM IRON AND COPPRRWARE,
not to be surpassed by - in,.i Isr t ,r l., rani
Peuusylvaula. and that hla arti,
oleo, such as • ~,
ituerrrs, ti
BWLSAS, •
dAilk3,4
of the best qualit.Y, the best , make. sod for
sale cheaper than at Ler establishment pi, the
kind in the State..
'll has splehdid lot et
tIOVES OF' ALI. RlFfidt
•
'and deOriptiths, which will bh sold at exceed
ingly low MVO. t • !
SPOUTING, ROOFING,
and other work, done on' the shortest notice and
mold reasonable term
FarrnersAiteelianies: ilirtheibte. and every
body elite are taritai to s examine his
stock.
Ikt. b.—Repairing of all kinds neatly end ex
peditiously done, and on the most reasonable
term•.
lins.24. 11i... a_ La_
IV ATCNNS, CLOCKS AND JEWELNY
xi* ir.drdiustbevir.
V. ISBELL, Pacoratalttia
Would most respectfully inform the public
that be has opened hie place of b'bsiness 'in tho
mike of the late Ilea. Thomas. Burnside, 'one
door East of the Central Pre. building, Belle
fonte, where ha will be barmy to wait upon all
who may desire his services intheabove bran:ell
en of the gads. Particular attention will be
given to all manner of repairing, at fair prices
and on short notice.
Ile ilia's° agent for the following Fire and
Life Insurance Companies:
Etna Fire Insurance Co. 'Hartford, Conn.
Girard do do du Philadelphia,
Wyoming do. . do . do Wilkesbarre. Pa.
Girard Life do do Philadelphia.
Conneetkut Moths' Life Insurance Company.
bre 24, 14—tf.
HAW LEY'S
_
noliortab -
DEiIVAL CILIIIILZEI
FOR CLEANSING, WHITENING AND PRESIRTING
_.FILB_T_EETLI-
This at Delo Is prepared with the grutqat care
upon scientific principles. and worepwieci ttaldto
contain anything in the slightest degree Injulloua
to tbo teeth or peps. Sowell our moat eminent
Dental - Surgeons have given their unction to,
and cheerfully recommend it as a preparation
of supertur qualities, for Cleaning, Whitening
and Preeefflog (he Teeth. It cleans them
readily, tendering them beantifully white end
trlyrwitheut the slightest injury to the En-
It is healing to the gums where they are
and core. It is also /A excellent d is
decayed -teeth, which are ottAn
live. It gives a rich ,aud
loath, cleanoitig it thor
. Ititightftti fragrance to
ulterati
infector for'
exceedingly el
creamy taste to ti
oughly, and imparting
the Ittestfi.
PREPARED ONLY R . N.!
. AA W L Y & C
N. W. Corner leth and Lombard Sts., Phu
MID SOLD SY ALL lIIIVOGIIITS
i• PRICE 25 CENTS,
SESTIMONIALS
The following opinion of Dr. Mate, as to the
high esteem in which he• holds the Dental
Cream must ho sufficient evidence of its value;
to quote other testimonials in detail le needlees,
contenting ourselves by ■imply givittg the
names eqd addresses, of persons who, speak of
its evcellency for the teeth.
PIIILADeLVIIIA, April 15. 1854.
. .
Haring earefullo examined A. Hawley's
' Solidified Dental cream," I hereby cheerfully
recommend it to the public generally. It is an
"excellent preparation for cleansing and pre
serving the teeth, and can be uded illy all per
• . .
ties are perfeeily harmless. Besides preserying
the teeth. it promotes a healthy aetion to the
gum', and imperts a pleasantness; to the breath.
Dr. W. It. WHITE. 1203 Arch St.
E. Vanderslice. Surgeon - Dentist. 425 Arch St.
T. Ingrain. 51 D. Maio. 491 • N Fourth St..
J Birkey, 254 ft Sixth St.
C • A Kingsbury, Dentist. 1119. Walnut St.. •
8 Diilmghanp D D 8, 734 Areh St.
F M Dixon. 827 Arch St. ,
Eilw'd Toirnsend. Den,tist , 526 Entirth St
L 11 Dorptiley, Dentist. 807 N 'Tenth St.
M L Long; Dentist, 669 N Slith St.
MAN1100D: HOW LOST, 110 W RESTOR
RD.—Just publishod,'a new ed
ition vof Dr. CULVERWELL'S CELEBRA
TED ESSAY on the radical curs (without mad
ins) of Spdrmatorrhces. of Sensl4l# Weak
ness, Involuntary Seminal LAN/Car Linpotency.
Mental and Physical incapacity, Impiditneiski
to Marriage, etc.; also Consumption, Epilepsy
and Fits, induced by self-indulgence or sexual
extracagatu e.
EMiiMUMAN
The celebrated author in this admirable es
say clearly demonstrates, from a thirty . , years
successful practice, that that the alarming eon
'..irequences Of *elf-abuse mayi be radically cured
without the dangerous use of internal medi
cine or the application of the knife—pointing
out a mode of cure, at once simple, certain and
effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no
matter what his condition may be, may cure
himself cheaply, privately and radically.
'AR" Thu Lecture should be in the hands of
every youth andlivery man in the land.
SNAP-under seal, in a plain-envelope, to any
address. past-paid, on receipt of six cents, or
two post stamps.. Address to the publishers.
CHAB. J. C. KLINB d. CO.
127 Bowery, New York, P. 0. Box 4581%
jef7-114-Iy.
maul. at. S. iIITIM.3I'S
MILLINER,
Next door to the Poet office. Use just opened a
line assortment of the latest styles of
SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS.
Which she is prepared to make up and , ta:int in
the latest fashions and at •
LOW PRIVES.
SONNETS A:.ID FIST?'
Meray's on hand and trimed - ittigt elf notice
BLEACHING
..
Dons in the most aomplote manner known to the
trade
Apdlippi PM-4W
218IIINta IcACKVIs
GUNS. PISTOL
PIN& COI7.RSY~
AND BPORT . ING APPAILATUEPUENNBALY
Rods, • ariak •
Lines; - . ' fiet;,.
,
- roils,
Vskete) Gloves. '
Baia, . ' . Aloe,
' I Assis i railiqp,
Corkscrews, Dog. Collars go.,
eesatantly on hand and fOr sale--Wboleseln and
&tall at—
/On KIIIDERS.
, Spartamasar Depot.
N. R. nor, 2nd 4 Walnut
-- --•••••-- ---,---->Ptritia
EMI
E . TRAY.
Came to the residence of the iroh
aeritair, on Marsh Creek, in Doe t tonttch_tp;
'About the hit a ; Mlll ay, a RED R CA LX,
swiped to &bunt adz ulna . 1014 L The
away la • • • ect • forwar4spirirePrtT•
•••740a, i "
144 1 :. • •It • t °Kom
444 W **Aka
siViNDI#4I4IW
g BOOKS,
.itir irairtire t 1 4
c,tALSTOX4t
• •I •.. r •
Epos Bargent's groat Iflrrel,_goeigerning wisidh
there bee begging", and suet:baton, per
begs, then shout rimy other took issued for
yekta: thh Wgerhordiettry filets with
whieti the suliriie has !swinge lierinaihtea bare
been throWn into * Riot atiti story SO startlingly
bold, and yet so truthful, ski tender kid so gen•
tie , that ovolll Who bilging it' most be for
Linseed with Sin' kggitig interest. It ,s sell
ing like wildfire Keil 51.50.
IrETTLES, ite
Embiselng hie united new-noveh - eWns he
enueufuL" one of- the but Actions of the see.
tob. Price g 1.50. . .
Wu he ihecessful. Saint Ledger.
' UndUourrent.s. „In the Trupielt
r iII4DIIST 11411 AfrOlitlZ..
ItENANIS LIFE O JESUS
A translition of M. Ernest Renso's remarks,
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meet and rensation are au: *eat concerning its
subject and author that already thousands of
• ofilm_coatly_ French
to ,'. It has been extravagantly ,praised. and
extravagantly...censured; but its most severe
critics do not depy the .wonderfni power, brill
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. the book. Price $1.60.
IV.
OR. CUMMINQ'S WORKS
Embraiing hia new work. "The (rent
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The great Tribulation. The great Preparation.
The great Coneudfutation.
LIMIT ON BrIADOWED P%TU3.
By T. 8, Arthur/ Tim popularity and Inter
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A. S. ROES EXCELLENT NOVELS.
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A long look Ahead.
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ja 17-'64- ly
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The. Star and the Cl md. Time :.ad' Tato.
TITS ART OF *CONVERSATION
•With directions fol. Self-Culture. A book
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Teaching the art of conversing with .ease an t i
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TALES FROM TUE OPERAS
A fascinating Ilttle volurneof Novelatteabased
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A Rand-Book' for Ladier and Gentlemen i
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■T YD! AUGUSTA EYAW
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VERDANT GREEN.
Zbe pnpnlar t rollinlitng, bthnotont story or
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with nearly WM doia illkokrallona, • WI
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Pries V 26.
These books ate void bole.
basso, ;044dd be iariraUy 806, brutadt be
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arming Lew novel "Marian
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