II El ilaisocrOirlthisimai ==x l Y - "1 BBLLNFONTE, PA FRIDAY MORNING, .00T. 14, 1814. 112110.-42 per yair . when paid in Kid when not pidd Li adyanp‘abdilikiewhan sea path before the expiration of the year. C PRESIDENTIAL NOMIN A TIONS FOR PRESIDENT, OEO. MeOLEILLAPT, la JOE VICR PRESIDENT, GEO. H. PENDLETON, or onto ILBCTOIIB AT LAMS. Uri" J 01 1 ,1 0 ,., of Cambria. / Itt*AlD Tarr, of Philedelphia. InSTOICT 111.1C7911114,. Ist. Wsa l Laughlin. 13th : Paul Leidy, 24. R. 11; ,Reimbuld, 14th: n. Sweinfor4. 3d. 11: P. Dunn, 15th. John Ahl, 4th. T. McCullough, 15th. U. O. Smith, 4th. R. T. Hess, 17th. Thad. Baltklo 4th. P. 8. Oerhard, 15th. H. Montgomery, 711. G. P. ',spier. 19th. John sth. Mtebesal Saltier, 2OlO. J. M. Thompson, 9th. Patrick McEvoy. 21st. Bruiting Brown. T. - 11. Walker, 22,d. James, P. Rarr, 11,11. O. 8. Dirnmick, 21d. Wm. J. Roma', 12th. A. B. Dunning, ,‘ 24th. W. Montgomery. Thei Campaign For the. , glorious result which has crowned the efforts of the DemoeraCy in thiscounty, we are indebtedto theun tiring, persistent and brilliant efforts of a few noble atertealous spirits who bat— tle manfully for the great cause. Among those brave spirits, who fought the bat tle to the death, who.toppled with the im monster and crushed him in at-his indepias proportions, were o n Sr vie abd H. Y. Btitzer All honor be to these men. - -First, and foremost they breasted the storm, and against their hercUlean eprts the raid waves of fa naticism bursted is vain. , Oh, it was a- glorious fight—it was a glorious thine -to-sett-thocetwo-yottagmarts-.singlo-ltaw ded.and alone, contend with the mighty powers brought against them. But they fought nobly—they two, and thanks be to God, success has crowned their ef forts. Let the people remember them . and when the now of war and fanati icism that now ever whelms the country with woe and horror, shall have passed away ; and gweel. peace Once more re turns to reign, let it be remembered that this joyful result was attained, at least so far as Centre minty is concerned in a very great degree by the her culean labors and unitclfish patriotism of John H. Orvis and U. Y. Sauer. Deutoerete of Centro coefity, you owe these mona debt of gratitude. Let it never be said that you have failed to re- pay them. We believe this is, the only cam paign in which Mr. Stitzer has attempt ed to address the people of this county, and.the glorious triumph of the Democ racy is On very best evidence of the record in which he is held by the people. We oongratulate and compliment Mr. S. on Lis complete success and hope that he may .000tinuo as he has begun to be a tower of strength. and an °remnant to • the Democratic party '' Orrin is known throughout the /melt and , breadth of this State, and s aced itt wider limits as One of the most powerful, logical and.cloquent reasoners in tt_e Democratic ranks_ The tinter or this is tree to confess that he has nev er known or heard his equal AS as ear gad, sincere advocate of our principles in their purity. He is the first man in Cenloos county as a political speaker, and we doubt if thero 'are any in the State, who can surpass him. 11?-rnarin a thoroagh anl most effective canvass of this oonnty, and his powerful logic , and earnsst reasoning, drove home to the hearts of his hearers every truth ut teresi by hjd lips. lie in an earnest, elo einentand proud champion of Deritocra el, and aa such the Democracy will re master him. The chairman of the County commit tte, Major W. F. Reynolds, made sever al abln speeches also during the cam paign, and by his good Management of affairs belonging to his position, contri buted not a tittle to the grand result which has filled all democrats with joy. Mr. Alexander, owing to recent illness, did not take so active a part in the campaign as he has done heretofore. but nevertheless made several telling 'wonh et. trigs main, part of the canvassing wee done by tho two gentlemen to whom we have refered, and while. all are enti— tled to credit, they are in an eminent degree, worthy of all praise. --------- How are you Woolles The election which took phieeitt this county, on Tuesday last, squelched the wooly heads so completely that we Shall never , hear of them no more. Negro equality, misceg nation, and the other love r), planks of the Abolition platform ware• completely demolished by the honest whim men of Centre county. The vul garity, abuse and scurrility which the blackguards who run the shoddy ma- : chine in this county. heaped upon hon est men, had no other effect than to swell the Democratic majority from 844 to nearly one thousand!, hereafter this' abolition abortion, eating itielf.tho Un- ' ion party of Centre county will only be found in the history of the past. It was harried so deep on last Thosday that dune is no nourrection fcis,i.t.. The foundations of Republican Government pnblio intelligence and public virtue, have been fully vindicated here, and we, trust the same rindidetion extteded aver an oar State.. . • rzcza flood-byr Kurtry. George, we are swept° part forswear; even from one who in& riteeppide from the principles 'tit' his whole early lifii,and who has proved antra. to the doctrines inculcated by his wean! progenitor. 4n Slippier days, when Democracy_ rul ed 41.eeelitlYe Gcorge.was awadherent of those very principles; but later, when the storm of fanaticism overthrew the, foundations of• otta political system, George deserted his colors and flew into the artnweof Abeilitionism. Alas f to-day he sees his doom written npenlite wall and the finger of destiny, while pointing towards him,.at the same time writes the "Meru. Nene, Tercel, l ,l/Pinersin': of his career. Ah, George, did e you think when you cowed eternal hostility to the priciples which you epee professed to hold in rev erence, that so soon you would see them rise triumphantly above the shafts and darts htirled at thein by an ignorant ant bigoted despotism? Did you imagine that they wo_etito-soon become the hope of saltation - I.h the people ? Ah, no ;. else had you never deserted thk viand old flag of Democracy p up>oill the ty rag of Abolitionism. George, your past life has been a You, for the sake of present gain, tram- 1 pled under foot the. principles of your fathers, and to-day you sitelhem ripen to the ful) height of their majesty,while you, poor silly dolt, are groping about in, the darkness and deceit which yourown, unprincipled and sill y,coeniuct has made your rightul inheritance. Oh, George, in our heart we pity vOu, but while- w& pity, we condemn. You arc sunken— you are clown but the degradation you have brought upon your self. Do you not regret the Lamy days once spent within---the--pole- of- the-Democratic - II litor whereon you once offered sacrifices to the Goddess of liberty, but how unholy and impure, 0, George, is the one be fore which you DOW lay your sacrifices. Do you feel lik an honest mati, George Is not your conscience troubled? Have you no mighty dreams of blood and her , rorciTaThd not lY o ghostseof the Sleep ing slain come trooping across your startled vision ? All Goooge, it is a se rious thing to think of. We pity you, indeed we do. Thank God I for victory, even though it be only partly complete. - Thank God in that He has opened the eyes of the people and showed thc yawning preci— pice towards whose brink they have been carelessly, so lieedle.Aly rushing. George thank Him, ton, that your -doctrines have not prevailed, and that your prin ciples have not led the pcopl' astray.— God be praised that there is yet hope of salvation for this poor bleeding coun try. The Fate of Renegades Because ,Geo. Kurtz was not nomina— ted by the democracy for Register and Recorder some few year° age, he turned traitor td his party and to Vs' principles and now has bib reward—being the os - tensible editor of a little eight by ten Abo titian sheet in a county where' Abolition ists? exists only by the sufferance of the Democracy. Oh, George, you should have knotvn you were not able to play the role of John.W. Fdrtiey, and by su perior capacity in political management acquire a commanding position with fat contracts among your new allies. You are not a great man George, and your present position is neither enviable nor respectable. Repent and come back into dig folds of Democracy, and. in the distant future you may again acquire the standing you onca had- in this coun ty, that of a man pos.essing very ordina ry capacity but of respectable character. It reqUires more genious than you ever had to be successful in the treacherous and unprincipled coarse you have been leading for the last few years. This iyOu mast now see ; for even the treache ry of Cob Blair (although the reward was to have been a Brigadier General ship) is only repaid by an office which is a disgrace to any white man to, hold.— Blair has more ability than you, George, and yet he has been compelled to des , cend from the honorable and rc,ponsible position of Colonel, of a Pennsy lrania Regiment to be Provost Marshallo posi tion in all respects on a level with the slave catcher of the South. He forfeit ed his own self respect by l!is defection from Democracy or ho never would have condescended to 4act the .part of a blood hound for the Wastington Des potism. George when you and Blait' meet, consult together and see if yin both did not make donkeys of yourselves by your perfidy towards your former party friends. —The white man who trial to kiss a nigger wench and because she refused slapped her on the face was tot a 'cop - 4H . Tiread as the Press falsely asserted last week, but a republican and one who took an active part in their meeting. Come ' George if you Cell Any more such lies, we will give the names of your practio/C miscegnaticinists. if you and your po litictilftjeptis prefer to kiss black women to white tidies, you ought hot, after they resist "the soft impeachment" allege that" it was soniebOdy else - Shame on , you George. 'To Ipiostryt may Concern." ' All Americans of African descent are hereby 'ordered to observe the 4th day of March 1865, as a day of humiliatiop, in consequence of *a -total overthrow of shoddy, miscegenation, arbitrary ar mate, moo equality, and official corrupi don, in Pennsylvania on the Ilth day of October by the combined Cornea of truib, jostles and a liberty taster the cansuittod of General Inteliesoe. =I VItTORYI - . VitTOlnfl •-• • ' • • • • • , , • TH DriflOtRACY ilituilPHANTl OVER 500 GAIN AN CENTRE U ABOLITIONISM " SQUELCHED." We give below the returns froin ill — the townships and boroughs of this oottnty as far as heard from:- They show's dediosrit tio majority of over nifte Jaindirstl This is a glorious result. hollor to the jntelli gent and brace deinocrary of old' eentre. The purly efforts of such men as Wilson, Furst, Yocum, and the prayers to an "Anti- spicery Clod" by Hicks. were powerless against the onward march of justice, liberty and c vreet •political principles. The re demption of Centre county from the control of the dark powers is now complete. All hail to.glorionWCentrel Three cheers and a toyer for the Copperheads. But_ roll' on the,. The enemy is defeated, demoz:alized and routed. By a vigorous pursuit'we will bag them all in November. We can give McClellan fifteen hundred motaFity ! Demo crats, don't cease your eons. - Work, work, altd let the trembling myrmidons Of despotic sway know and feel your power when laboring on tfier cause of constitutional liberty. From sll parts of 1156 State the same good news is brought. Clearfield gives us 1,800 mujority, .F.lk 400, Clinton (300, Lycoming 1,000. t.Everyibing is lovely wheb" Brudder Hicks sings the sockdolver. Bellefonte bor bor 00 Boggs twp Benner . Burnside.. Curtin...... Ferguson.. }26 2 Half Moon 14 r SS 'Janie - 46 46 ..k122.64i1.---. - -_J--I¢-- - -7 - - Houton - 8 14 -- Marion 42 - 4 lilies 179 -..- Ptit ton 4 - 11 Puna 225 - . - Putter - , 219 - 26 Rush 9 - 23 Spring 12 12 Sf Snow Shoe 43 - 19 Taylor ............ ...,...- . 17 14 Union ' - 30 9 Walker 40 40 54 Worth 4 - 2 - V- 1.4. to the hour of going to prees, the in .dications are'that the State wilt give a large democratic majority. THE SHADOW OF COMING EVENTS A telegraphic despatch, to a gentleman of this city, stays the ...1;c of this morning, an nounces that at the election held in Nevada Territory, for the adoption of a _State Con• siltation, and also fur the choice of a dcle• gate to Congress, the Detuocratic ticket vras elected by some 1,200 nta . ;otity. A. C Bradford, Democrat, is the successful can- Au.late. This is clearly indicative of a sure Democratic triumph in California and Ore gon. Indeed, we have itiMmation, by very re- cent letters, that leaves no more doubt of those two States coming to swell the triumph' of Democracy, than we hay° of Now Jer. Rey or Pennsylvania. The despatch from Nevada is unquestionably reliable. ANOTHER REPUBLICAN PAPER FOR ' McCLELLAN. We can scarcely pick up an exchange withosit noticing some important accession to oar ranks from those of our opponents The Ann Arbor (Michigan) Journal, one of the ablest and most influential Republican papers in that State, has taken the names of Lincoln and Johnson from the head of its columns, and substituted the name of Geo. B. McClellan and Geo. H. Pendleton. In justification of its course, it uses the follow ing arguments, when we commend to the notice of every honest Republican : 'Public sentiment in favor of Gen. Idc- Cliati has been increasing in fordo very rap- I idly during the Itiit,ihirty days. A large ma joriljt - octbe people seem to be strongly im pressed with the necessity of abandoning the Abolition policy of Abraham Lincoln of falliug,hack upon the Constitution as it is. as the only bond of Union between the Stat es, and of electing a plan of military expe rience, wisdom and regard for the Constitu Lion ; s man who is ardently devotp4 to the Union, and. is capable of prosecuting the war successfully and determined to restore the Union as it was, * * * * * * Being well satisfied with the nomination of Glen. McClellan, and with the resolutions constituting the platform adopted by the Democratic National Convention, we shall ' give our support to that ticket, and flare ta ken frbrn the head of our oolumns the names of Abraham lAtiooln and Andrew Johnson, and substituted in their planes the namett - of George B. McClellan &Fut Geo. 11. Pendleton. We do this in the full and firm belief that it is impos,ibio to restore the Union and to es tablish peace throughout the United States under the emanifipationpoliey adopted and persisted in bythe present Administration ; and that it is neetissary to change riders, with a view to a change of the policy of the Government, that those most desirable and important objects may be attained, — . Kurt* said that Hon. Hit T. Alex ander was not an honest man. Nine hundreilloranjority 'of the people of this "tufty says that George tied. —.--Over tie Millions four hundred, thousand men have entered the army since the heginning'of the *Or. The impending draft will swell the number to THREE MILLIONS. Yet, with all_ these brave and gallant men, Mr. Lincoln's filed sal rerable bey has failed to accomplish' ed object for whiob the war wab boirls• El=:!II Dem. Maj. Rep. Maj. D.Gdins 00 28 40 23 7 00 92 39 80 ..e , 00 50 4 - 00 26 liEl 11114E1 3-12 648 Weoeds Not to lightly Closed. , A healing-plaster stook a malignant utter; etay ease ,''s t iti r itr , dii tie th,spaue,„. the virus will break' otCpri l adaollfue part o • the surface, unsettlee * odtletivi vital or• gui.. As with the humantldlly, tepi with the political. Nit shrateb or punotute (runs without, has caused the hideous wourfdi from whleir people-of these Siete! suf fer. RiMoue living, bad' atmosplierre, and dhoregard of organic lawe,'lned rendered the issue of the bogy unwholesome. IL was' question of time and 000ttaion, as to where thehitutraeled disease would show A change of political rulers is of urgent necessity:-.A' etoppiug of the insane med dling stiilt the slivery question is of prem• sing huportanctai The minium; of Puritan leaching—that the North ought to hate the South "—must be doWe array with. Bat if these were allaccomplished, one festeClug sore would. only be checked, to have others —perhaps worse macs- 7 Murat out, or strike in, In its, stead. To restore our public, society to" anything like its ancient happiness, there must be a moral, and a politic a)) reformation. It was often remarked, in the earlier history of the late Union, by our wisest statetimau, and by tile most affectionate alt foreign _observer., that such.s system could never exist except.' among an intelligent, and, above all, a tat- Wow people. The - generation in whose bands the fabric of tbe late thnomerumbleal and that sees the more fundamental organ-, ism of State Governments tumbling into dulos,loul.hecome corrupt in nutmeat mor ale, and alialltow in political understanding The material vettirh that, from every side, poured in on the community, mode the people extravagant and careleis in regard tolpeir institutions of government. 'Money became the Jupiter of their highest worship, and they found that, by neglecting alto gether political interests, they could make enough of money to enable them, as a corn. .t*ity r -4e-itmgir-trtthe-carrnpttomnsf'llrtstr arofessed a oliticans. That . an .iti of things which, of rigorous necessity, ex pelled from political life all that was most lofty, most pure, and most couitructive in the intellect of the sountry. The vile canker grew apace—unobserved, except by a few, who were laughed at for their pr2pheticfortimlinga. Itetrilek, • . riteis Into file vital organs p 7 the States.— It ramified beneath the surface. The infa mous Abolition fanaticism, nursed kilo po: littcal effect by such despicable grovellers as Weed and Seward, served as the pimple on the surface, towards which all the vicious humors of the body.politic made their way. Thither thrdnged 1111 the clergy who sought the dash, and not godlitte4s, in their minis trations. Thither throngetkoll the restless crowd of toes out of ocoupation, and alis jointottin the common sooiety—all the dis, orghnizers—all the common proylers and thieves, who lire on a people's weaknesses, or fooleries, or vied and aberrations—the hankrupy in . characterLthe eccentric tom tits, Lry W tiro-by-aring odd, because they Jive no chance of living by being good! These, altogether, nude up that most-4 ) -tdous c'ongloinetate, the " Repubilean party," with Seward as its slily figure-head, and Thurlow Weed as its foul suit filthy-0 ImM! licard it had none! For fifty-fire years—ever since the inn mortal Jere) son quitted the Presidential chair in Ititifi, the study and discusslon of our 6,llst.ilaltltial lIIW, • as understood and inculcated by Jefferson and hi f seliool, Las been ignored and neglected in the Northern States. These were the true, t e tradition al, the firing interpretations of t e Constitu tion of the United States, and ofLtre States. Tradition, from father to son, inia.kept alive here and there, at the North a faint glimmer of those teachings. 'But Yankee schooling, and l'ankre On", books and misinterpreta• bons hare been at work, industriously, to distort the truth. and to train amiss the pub. lie mind. frau:lry has succeeded against genius and against true science. The Jet fer4nlon interpretation of the Federal Con stitution alone prertmt etl tint disruption of the Union in 1801—twelve years after it was inaugbrat ed. This is it matter of acknowl edged history. It. is equally a historical fact that for the last half century, at the, North—in all the Sort hern States, this nom inally accepted, and only correct, Jefferso man interpretation of the Constitution, has been ignored. It was ignored under the Administration 'of Jefferson's successor, Madison—a "Southern man with Northern principles!" It was ignored under the well meaning Monroe—a good man, whose for tune it was to rule in an "era of general good feeling." There was some slight "re torting to first principles," under the sec ond Massachusetts Adams, in order to upset his insidious Yankee policy,. This subsided when, in 1828,`Gen. Jackson, as a Derunrat was elected President. His purposes were Rh patriotic—singularly disinterested—but, without Ms meaning or willing it, partisan ship took a new mart, under his tultninistra 4 Lion, as overriding patriotism. Martin Van Buren next locate° President, and, threttgh the malice of disappointed ambition, in not being re-elected, became the father of Free ' sollism, and the grandfather, and original patriarch of the Black 'Republican infamy I Since Nan Buren's time, polities, at the North, have gone from bad to worse. Thetis has been no generous reliance on the virtue of the people. There has been no general tippol,to them, onprinMp/e. Political cam paigi have been conddeted, generally,,by chirlatins, paid and huckstering buffoons, and the like. There has been nothing like what was kept up in the Southern Stated, where their ablest publio mon went before the people, and in long arguments, discussed • fundamental principles. ••- . Polities, at the North, for these reasons, and because, for nearly half a century, men of real merit, who will not barter, nor buy and sell, have shunned politics thus leek: ded 4 and Bare gone into 001111118700, industrial enterprises, In all phases, and professional avocations—for these reasons, polities have been . generally the portage of designing scoundrels, without ohmmeter, and of vain simpletons, who have learned, at a pries, that political advancement is but s' gibbet, on which, like sjaokeuld monkey on a pole, the higher the fool gotti ,up, the more he howshimself to be what he ill 1 4 Thai itipv is m the works of darkness liarknees 'of the intellect—/hots thinking Aonoi was a thing to' be bough Dezkneas . of the tout/ Thinking. met, roomy, gait4l; .y.,corruptle, coutd)ninj eiffier t henoi.:* : • 7 7` , ,;47 , ??, - A i` top • ; • - But we, wh;iiiirii;•';o dm Ay I 'We, iiito Lave pot stained our garinents in crime or iu diabonor We have got.a work to do It may be before tbeeleotionef November; of it !may be after it I It May be by Chewer irtillifis r liriiemay be by manly derds. IVY who'thean MK 'And after all hainvds, to maintain ourrightf as I 1 people on mar soil, we bays a work to do I ' , Notliing that is real lives but by, its,prist, Pripofples are a thing of Irat&ton. On this sell, attacked, indeed; but not yet abated, we have tpe principles of personal 'willies]. social sad religitius liberty I We °tight hot to stay hero; we ought not to leave faiiiilies here, after us, unless we leuve theta the inkeritance we have received from those wholutve gene before us!, They, to niggling and sufferitg, , lntuded down to 119 the trust. we prove recreant? flare 'you not heart for the struggle? , Then SPre this auspicious tinje—the last—when you can sell your greenfinch values for nearly fifty cents on the dollar—and go—whither, we ettritiot advise! If you resolve to stay and see it through, W hid you welcome. We, too, mean to see this fight out—tut it is not tobe ended by the Novembet election, nor this pear, for next ! Life is a trial, and a combat ! fret from toil, for the rlf;lit-hearted, is in the world herenfter. th,,r life twist be nun of rearftee.' Oh, friends! acquit your4elves like Men, true men, do not niche money,. or -Mee, tho aim of life: Awitke.froin this sleep of sensualism! Arc you like Asiatic.;? Do Americans degenerate from their European ancestors? Tile wound of this peopla is deep ! It gr.nder surgery thou poltties i.n`t levels pia. It needs afoundation of imunu what we urge ou them, courage—daring Frennan's Journal. Art Infamous Outrage On Saturday last tit; Democracy of Se4ln..Vilii.ll. cototty..-Pertuqhmnia, bold by far the burst meeting which over assem bled in that part of the State. They Met peaceably, and without urtns in their hands, not. dreatning of insult and outrage, but be fore they . dispersed they were •b,ught t i‘k Democrats muat.go arrned in this contest if they wish to be sate. i Ina juotice been done, not one of the miserable seoutsdi els wino acted so - brutal a port would have been sutrered to escape alive. Let Oro people learn a lesson frost tho following account of the outrage at Pottsville: .Mr. Strousc had just adjourned the meeting, and the Minimise erovid, which hod tilled the streets in the neigahorhoud for four bourn, began slowly to dispel.se.— ! There many ladies and alt 'Wren among ilia people, and Mr. Strouse had scarcely left the stand, when suddenly a party of twenty cavalrymen, with drawn Hobert', l'll4lled out of Aby street, and ftfla eked the people. Oho man was on horseback, and led the * others. They charged upon the LLIVia of the people, trampling some, cutting ..tid slashing others with (heir sabres. They all 'l longed to a camp on the outskirts of the town -Many women fainted, others sh riked.— The people lIIIIA suddenly beset. for a 171, "lent gave way. Lilt 1p154.111 as (114.1 fliftpri.te W:1 0 over they turned orbit! !lie sold.ers, an I I , van hurt.; , '. stoney VI I clubs at them *-- 'f be Memorial t S 0 , 1 re. , ,1t,•,1 in 'erred 1 Ilielll-eICO4, awl it fen-, fea. ing ati...el-.1 1, ..1 lo ought weapons wit% them Fir a mo ment it appeared IN if there 'would be a floret , mot in tho Ni met, bat /01 quack as 111Ofght the soldiers tinned into on alley, and; got away. Not one of them could be , Wood. . . "Mir citizens of Pottsville were wounded. some of them badly 1 ilia Wilt bent- of any of the ladies being-Intrt, though many - were frightened, and some fell and were bru , sci Ailiting dui wounded mon 'was it returned soldier, who bad just returned home; having served three years RIO seventeen days in the army Another was. an old ro.iti. Itoth DvitiOtrat a. The eavalry who con:trotted the bliting, ' , done; to it regiment of ono , year's melt, raised et Phambernburg They never been in any engagement with or even seen the rebels. At half-pn.t seven o'clock an indignm ton meeting Was called, and debit M. Crosland Esq., placed in the chair. After a brief nd dress from McAdam, Mr. Cook was. intro duced, and then Mr. Niue 111 were•doci- Jed iat • their denunciation of the outrage committed in the afternoon, and one halt of the Democrats who come to the night meeting, had arnie with them. whey were determined to protect themselves So attack was made, however, though there was some/tooling and atone-throwing (quickly bushed up though) front dark cor ners. ,The more moderato Itepubbeans de plored the day's. liolenee, and urged the commander of the cavalry to keep his men in camp. It was feared that riot might oc cur in the evening, and the Abolstionists were afi•ai , l of getting hurt. Weapons were plainly exhibited, and the Demerits.; AIIOW , .311 a termination that was unmistakable.— However, no outrage oceurred,t and :Mar tremendous cheers for the Damoora.:l c cen times, the meeting, at about ten o'clock ad journed. Ifd SAVZD Tile Brars.—Let Penneylva- . 'sans bear in grateful recollection, that, the recollection, that the gallant chieftain of the-DemoOracy; Gen. beorge 13. McClellan, by hie skill and prowess saved hie native Commonwealth from the devastating con sequences of "rebel" occupation, by his splendid endeavor memorable victory over Gen. Lee, upon the •bloody field of Antic tam; and that the victory at Gettysburg was largely due—according to the testimony of many soldiers—to the report then current, and doubtless purposely set afloat, tat their beloved - commander had been recalled and tree directing their movements. This re- Poit so inspirited our gallant men that they hurled .themselvett upon -and overwhelmed enemy. "We are again commanded by Lit tle Mac,"t passed from mouth to mouth, and the cry was equal to a reinforcement of fifty thousand• veterans. Thus was Pennsylva nia saved a second time. Will our people now bon their banks upon the noble-heart -eith chivalrous, unselfish and patriotic Igor' elation, stud Wean upon 'their country • military despotism, unrestrained by consti tutions, and ruling without law?. NEVES —NEVER- r fiBVIIR—"GOD IS JUST," and so are the 4.4lorientt 'people.—J•ohna torn Dowers& - - - Eat-PreeLiteal lilbnara b Mei for ibe biro of Antietam. • *OIIOI air OLD L A VOICE THAT WILL E_ ' Laaim ) posc o lgtrWilik .ko .4 lfl rdnowiug.a. PHliiitre Mere lar•iettlii "7,1. BUTTAL;, Sopt. 20 John Bell RotinJoh, Eig4DOrr :-1' haveyoure asking.permiaalon to publhila my lettere:beta I have such an aversion to ap pearing in the papers that I cannot ctn• sent; but if- you think it can do any good to the McClellan canoe to , show it to your. friends, or retol it at your mootipgs, yle,are at liberty to do no. ~ . Truly lours, 41.11aur., o. llerbet.n, Alignst I'l, 3861. John Bel/ Robinson, Esy.—Deiti . Sir Your kind favor of the nosh, came to bind on the GO inst., and now i have just received yours of the Bth, and while 1 fully and gratefully appreciate your kind detentions I Tie,•it at l3 about responding , t . o your inquiries, chiefly lasi:tutu 1 nut uswatling to write anything ' for'publicat ion, Vihile I take derPeat interest in the fate of my country, and look with pnintul apprehension to the future, yet I )rave re tire'd from public life, and can hardly ap pear again before the public; even by leiter without 1t vmgtoymotives impugned and misrepresented ; and therefore I have in variattly refused to attend any public meet ing, or write anythiug for pubhgttiun- I sineerelyAfeel that the counteY is on the verge or ruin, and utllone the policy which governs our fiat inna rutfairs con be ebtingq, ar nntst soon end in 1111:ritptcy and military tio.poti.on. !Whops th.e t .c -uter cannot now be averted, but the lattLr not,: but in toy opinion the "bey call oniy be elniut: e .l by it ebonge of ado:lntl/ration. FNei.,tbing seems to have 1.. 01 d on , to 1111110 MA exlt9 erilte the South, and iiiten sife its haired 111 the North, "0 as to render n inliO,Ailde; 1,111 eldi I MO not with out hope that a elt Inge of administration may change the heeling of the South towards us, and eventually , bring about a restored Union and an honui able peace; but 1 hare no faith in hit policy which proposes to exterminate the South, or bold it by toll.taly fiert;-- - To m iftit n . 11Trs --- trlovrlvy -force of arms, inereLy 4 would ie. uire a eland cat of mu nati on, and necefiaardy Convert our goorninent info a military oospotism. This is a result that no patriot eon content• plate without horror But I hare said more than I intended, ansl 4.00 will please to cull alder it prorate, and believe Me, 11t11%.1, etc., MiLLAftc u . .hALy . ,l 4 _ _ The Pendiir; Contest . The Louisville Aurnq., long one i,f this most prominent organs Of the Whig party in the conwry t but now vigorously support fug General McClellan, most clearly ,and eloquently eltoracterises the real istiire of s , t '4lr il.g Tbtte is. no — doubt. ratite act:sit y among the friends of the eon; croitti..o can didates, lint tint enough, We Want lout:, great deal torn C. Int: pr ,ent—todtiVlty is but apathy it, compel isou with What. 1,•3 might and ought to hire We should, with a wild. ringing spent, throw our whole strengei stud etlerg;so into the ttrug 6 de should go into it as McClellan cud Grant and Sheonan and 'looter go into the itoca of attic r• y eiisvits., is one of the trothlot' the country, and gestin ed to be in Its results, by fur We greatest and mightiest of Thellt all We hoar no roar of artillery, we see no smoke, no flash of sabre or gleam of bayonet, but we all feel in our souls that vast iige . ne!es'ure et work ain"Og no, which 'ih their influences will bless or (Mrs. , ore natiun. I,iriiiighout the present age sad the miar and far-elf arts. b ena ire two dAI a, fierce spirits of evil agaiitit witich we, the ccuset vistivea of the 6,llfltry, 141.111(.111/g in the van of tliii constr. vativo, oftie win lit, ore 11,3 W called on to me held,. with all the might that God has porn IN. One of (licit, Is ill • SiWthe-ti e;orit of fit , rebellion against the l•rion, ' unit the oilier the Nortlien spirit of raid:dm against the C Via avast crush iliims.tioth if, we would lie a lice people or if welwaieuld4us rortby to be called a nation. lint the fintahilation or the Southern rebell ion istibre 'iramenintelf 'manned to-our glorious altmles in the iteld, and our et.pocial businese as eousert nose citizens, at least until after Hie great el; etico, is to reFetio oat ioli•eilizig Constitution rime the destcr ato grip of Its mnrt,d roe art th e i oea t • i t rind to hen! the deep wounds of which is DOW fast dying We toted neeoniplish this tremendous work; or the fate of cur peat Herold le which haskilazeil him the 1110m11- irig etar upon the nations of the each, will ineeetablo be either despotioni ur annolly, warning off by its dal knees and terror Ilia millions whom it bus for almost a century allure its brightness and gtory. Then:to your work your work ! to your work! oh valiant coneerval Ives of the Union! For the 'lost fivo viecks, work for yourselseal work for your century I work - for the race of bum I Be prepared tor what' ever may confront you, let it come in what form or shape it will. Shrink tualeforeipe mutterings or the threats of power. Kuhr and feel that you ere men, free high-minded men, and, es such. respect yourselves and make all respect you. If need , be. take your lives in a , you east your ballots, and defy the worst that tie oursed tyranny- can do y oil. Swear before the Spirit of the Cuiveiso not to give up the fight until death douth or until you have ci ushed the Satanic Party, that fierce anhi tech of ruin, which has boon rending and proatrating the great pillar's of the Contiti tution sad thedaws, but is as impotent to rear them up as the earthquake to reepn struot the cities and temples it has shaken down. CHANGE OF BASE-READ AND RE- MOM In order that the people can see Irow far Abraham Lineoth has gone front his original love, we copy froth his inaugural of March 9th, 1861, as well as from his proposiliorg of July• sth, 1864. How any ono can read these Productions end entertain any confi dence in the man now at the head of affairs is more than we can conceive. Unities the people are blind:to their best intermit; they will place in his stead an individual pomad ing some ooneieteney, respecting the vital issues of the country. Vill the readers of Itho Wmtorotmn tint' th e attention of their 'radical friende lo...these ex tracts ? „ . Lincolte• inailourai Linear. to the Pebs March sth, 1861. ~ Comniissionerr, July I declare that I have 8, 1864. no purpose, DIRECT- Army i proposition which LY 'or INDIRECTLY, embraces the restora to interfere witilithe in- ?ton of peace, the lnteg 'Mutton of elevery in rtty of the whole Un tile Btates whereit es- ion, and the AISAND la. I believe' I have 0193911 NT OF SLAV- Nl LAWFUL RIGHT BHT, and comettby en T DO 80;arrd have authority that can eon Nq INCLIN4TIO:I , I trot the armies now at TO 40 80. * • * I * war with the United The RIGHT, Of each States, will be received State to order and eon- and considered by the trol its own domestic Hinioutive Government Institutions . according of the United States, to its Judgment EX- and win be met by lib- GLUSIvax, ts , ) t-' oaf termiCot , Nubstsd 4 SENTIAL to the li6l- ..4 sind,, oorrit k6r sl and of power imerhitga hag the beard the perfection end ZIT- o '**Otis thetemit f 10 4 .1 DULd.NGE Of our po- veal& eopthet litical fabric depend.. *aim.. ' 111.11IAILAK LINCOLN. 1 LB Luidts. Hon. Rowdy, Jo*WA Ilftstridoetottitt 4 -.; A tioetliing Lotter. The Mewing leiter is from Hen. verdy Jolanson, the aldeathienatorfrowe - gross: • Saratoga Springs, Sep 14de. Gairrnamaa-.-your Invilthloo to the Diept ing to be hold in WaSitirigton on- the 17th Instant, totality the nondtten of 3deClothst and Pendleton h but Just received. • It will be out off tny power to be with you, 1 , 1'13 , 104'y here for some day, longer being unaviudable. Opposed as i wee to the ori ginal election of Air. Lincoln to th• 'Wien he now occupies, from a conviction of ble being unequal to its duties, the manner Or which he luta met them, hoe brit minfithated mein that opinion. With more than two millions of soldiers played in his bands and act unlimited amonet of treasure; hie , pdliey and his milliner of tieing his power, instead of putting the rebellion down cud' bringing to our ranks the thousands of ' , Union Mal who wore then in each orate seceded States and who in ainue; , are believed to outinterber the rebels, here but ' , creed the double poi , prose of ueiting them against 1.111 Slid of divi ding the public opinion of the loyal .Stated. The effect, of course, is that notwithstanding the gnllant'deede.of out army and nevy.iind the mouifeet justice of our cause, the Union la even more effectually betoken now tln.o it was when his achniuistraiion commenced. IVhalever of honesty of purpose may bele:4 to hint, and lam willing to admit that be haw had, it, hie vaseillationohie potioy, now roniervative, now radical, his selocaidu of military oflicerS grondy incompetent,' him treatment of those who - were evidently com petent, his, yitldivg in this to ohat he has himself been Often heard to say as OXCLISF wtß • 'outside pressure': hiphaving not only ' not pit ti; ,, lted, but its for antic public know, uttrebuked the vandal excesses of military officers of his sp , •cial Selection, , shocking the sentiment, of the world, and diSgrll - lIS ill the view of rht istendom by the !burning of private dwellings, and 'depriving their often exclusively female oocupants of lionte unit means of livellholite-all demonstrate that ho is greenly .ineompe , tent to govern ti,e co u ntry in tide crisis of itx fate. , Min., can an honorable man believe that one who has an signally fulled for almost foul.entire JariLcau II re nu rui other four years Ire granted him l No one in congreas, certainly. Not twent mem- mighty task. lie has hoes trOiland foun,d wanting. • Let us have a change, none, .if. loyal, can be fur the w'or,se.i It 4s not that 16',0 wish to use his own classic - 11'10re lo_ silap heroes in the midst or a stream, but that when vice ore on a journey and safety_ de Y fiends on- making- rmrdothi con ei the ear liest moment, we should oast aside a spavin ed •ind thin helve. and secoure a sound and ectivr. one. . • 11.1 General M.- 0 1611m we are furniettect— lu the litatury of 1413 life, in the purity Lis character.his refinement, his attainments civil autl tary,"and, above all in his prr. f t •^t loyalty—etery ttasuratme• that utnt” Lid etee,utive puidanae, the war, no.' oxhauative of treasure and b1..0d, wtli be sems brought to a ttiumphant terminu timid this t'nion which "at all Lazard.' Lr jell iwyor Kgreo to surrender, will .be F'i ) 6 regarJ, your 0.1.41101, t e eryant JoirNsu:N .111 , %f TII3 SULDliftd Vora. —All our account from this army c grev in predict it R Leave majorify fo . :11celellail In the a, dicr vote, especially that cast in the Ar•• of the Potomac. Ofcouree this is upou I. aupposition that a fair canvass and vote wl • ba allowed. lu addition to the letters on this hum soldiers, some of which we bays put I.shed ; the following frow the retie:no Itlrpterr fornisl.os confirmatory evidence or the feeling in the arm} for "Little 31It0 WC have gratifying intelligence from the Army of the Potomac, indkating that lien. 1,:61,..!'an stilt posseseea the ctoff/race, lo N o and respect of the vetterans of tbat gal- Imo. army. A returned folunter of the y I:illy-seventh New York regiment, who has just arrived from the front, informs us that a vote for Preolent was taken in the Second (lloneook's)army corps recently, with the following result rer For Lincoln, Mcelellnu'e rna;lority, Al Cutup Distributing, _where there aro sacral thousand soldiers, a vote was also Lna a few days since. 13,,resulted itue , Nlcl • Lit 1160's majority Here is a total - army vote of 10,468.--0 winch McClellan has 14,111, or a majoi of9,tsB—aearly double the total vote 11la , Lincoln'received I This infUrmat:on is reliable. \We halo it frum a soi,i,er who beletrged to Hancook's Corps, and nho is a Republican. It proves what las all aloifg been said; that the eel diers are almost se a nun for McClellan and the Union, and will so v^te in November, A STRANC4 STORY --Tho truth of the passage that the Way of the transgressor is hard, wits never more clearly illustrated than in the case of W. W. drembeell, of Hudson, Michigan. He was a man of fami ly, possessed of wealth, education, influence and respected by all who knew him: lie was a banker, and the good name which he' bore in the community caused 'hundreds of Poor people to depoutt their savings bibs. Thus situated, with all the comforts that a min could wish for, he suddenly ab sconded, in. company with a confederate named Crowell. He took all the deposited money with him, was arrested and convic ted, but escaped from custody. Months passel land a short lime since, near Nepal ens, Ohio, forty miles south of Adrian, a man was poising through's piece of woods, and was attracted'by a stemohi- Whioh. be . found to prdceed from a decomposed human body. The flesh had been pinked and gnaw ed by wild beasts and birds, theihead was detatchod from the body, and lay some dis tanoe.from it, an arm torn a and partly eaten ; two bullet holes, were found .in the skull, and the cicithing, contents of ti e pockets, and other unmistakable evidences proved it to be the. body of W..W, 'Treed well, the Hudson banks. ; and subsequent de'velbpmente proved ktuit..he had been murdered - by OrOwell t bli pirtentfltSiniqui- IT, who her horses" at from the Pc too honest. tampered w; plop. En( ootbthg wrol befrdagelas , time Ito oottiojqr l'ou leers; • Rai:Waf ter:let U. people Ittel wtli glekr l&tots NV bat they don't, weal /e 46Pials to ass; lot ilea ) 4,••P. at vR matte. Vt.. P_• 0P 'hoorop;" .41r - Mr. Lbioolo . Novouribdt. Se .te LIM poorest ;deo* o Pgritatever bad . ' Hellas bust' rebus froni tho Blatant 10,505 .8,1556 7,10 9,0(? 1,316 V EMEI