;~,. ~ t IrotTo* . A 2IitOPICIIIII6 DC :101 . 1..L N PA nuokrstOlitttio, Aueustili, 1865 THUM-42 per yikir when paid in advance $2,30 when not paid In advance, and $3,00 when not •patd bafore the expiration of the fear Democratic State Convection. At tho last formal .asatlng of tbs Demo cratic State Central Committee, it was re solvinithattim tat s _CnnreaLtion should be called to utect,. ' ,Harrisburg op Wednbsday, the-2101 3 de .' June-ierst, but-haring slnetb 7_0: 2 , learned front a majority of the Commliege, and bean advised by many other. leading Democrats of the State, that a pdbiponement to a later'day would, on many- aocounte, he 'aeceptabln„, and is generally desfrerf t I.Jaegn hr. give notfod that the nent, IlentaferaTee Fiats gpayeation of Pennsylvania will con rstre.at the Hall of the House et Repreirm *ree f Iti-41, litit.x_of_l3l DAY, the 24th dpy cc one o'clook P. AL the N v ext.teuniy Conveetlede The near approach of the period at which the annual nominations are made for this county, renders it proper and expedient to call the attention of,deum crate to-the internal organisation of our party, and the various ways of selecting candidates, There is always ntiire of 'As complaint on the part of the friends of disappointed aspirants, that r.ominating conventions are improperly and unfairly conducted. Many -elindid meq believe that some better and More honest m taiji • b<xld be adopted for indicati _ the. tint-lerts'-4*---thtf ipf* tm mi l f rtes for the vari offices. If the system of mein • g conventions is in itself vicio rif liable to more abuse, . corru • and fraud than other nodes o acting eandidateit, it; ought • to be abolished, and something else substitu ted in its stead. This subject ought to Ise ; thoroughly. canvass,ed, that it may be well u'uderstood and the people .enabled to 4ct upon it in a proper and intelligent manner. , What, then is the object or use of party organizations at all? Is it merely for AO purposelsrcontroliug the offices within the gift of the people Ofnecuring to one set of individuals in preference to another the places of public trust in order that they may enjoy the emoluments and spoils of office? A par ty orgeskzed tr no higher purpose than this, woad -deserve the adherence and support of tie I,ntelligent and honest man and could only be kept together by the 'cohesive power of public plunder." The only legitimate purpose of a party, is to support in a more efficient and organ ized manner soma great principle of gov ernmental policy; than could not be done by individual efforts alone, Possession of the'olees follows as an incident to the success oTthe party, but should never he made its corttrolic e g idea. A party organization in order to be successful and permanent must be founded upon some correct and enduring principle. No •se verity of discipline can presene a prtft from disintegration in the absence of a vivifying principle. Poi the sake of office demagogues will seize _hold of rfihe prejudices of the people and raby l even a majority iu support of some absurd or wicked Scheme. Their success can how ever only be temporary, and tlja-fiigani- Ration falls to pieces be canie • of its own intrinsic weakness. -Bitch was the fat( of the Anti-Mason and the Know-Noth ing parti z ev, and such will bethp jl ' theprileent dominant Abolition party. -At other times- the people have rallied around a great man, and in support of him and his peculiar opinions, as'did i the Whigs with Henry Clay. In such cases the party dies with the man whose rep utation gave it existence. The dem wet ic party differs from all these. It was founded upon' "Ate' principles itoderlying the governmeht 'ltself; and as long as thq government endures unchanged in character the Democratic party will exist as a controling power in the land. De feats cannot destroy it, nor treachery put its existence in jeopardy. Its first struggle in 1798 was a defeat, and it has often bees betrayed by men whom it had elevated to high positions, but it snrVived all, and is now as stkiig as ever. It is the correctness of our principles, and not our - party discipline that has preserved bur organization from the fate of all others fn this country. But organ ization and discipline is necessary to a party's success ; and the question no is', is our present' form of organization the best that can be devised? In order for any party to succeed, its members must all unite in the support of the same candidates. Those eandi dateensuat be selected in some way. Is a nominating convention the hest „avail able manner of making such selections? Many years ago beibre parties because thoioughly organised, every man who aspired to an office annoueced himself as a candidate and obtained whatever support he oould. We had then es ma ny taindidates at the election as we have now befdye the convention.. A man was seldom elected by a snajotity of the votes of his district. If be had - a plurality over each .sic of his competitors, that was sufficient. Evory candidate repre sented himself, and no one the, and whoevet voted.-for him supported the indict mal t and not asy patty which lie was the representative. is ice in its very nature wad dim organisation. There could be no unity of asion among those entertaining aim ilar ;make sentiments. „ There are but two ways or nominating ea.udirlirtoirlknoirb ttr our party—the one by, cow:entice* the other by primary elections known the "Qytwford Coun ty *Win:" We propose next week to inveellote Ohtialstive merit. neth, two modew.Ars&iBwin Ng eweiwnsitt Olklekts prefers:at- - - M=== t:L~s] . , . If the legislation 'nf flie pastfhtityears by Abolition fanaMes i. la not sufficiepit to open the eyes of-theilretil toiling tax-' paying masses, willepw not What will. Scarcely an not that they:have passed— scarcely a Jaw that they have made, but has been in direct conflict frith the inter ests &Ole labeling classes. It seems that they have taken . especial pains to legislate the rich richer and 'the poor 'Peorer—to protect the ffealthv 'by tariffs and exemption from taxes, while they have saddled a public debt af r thousands of millions of dellsm upOithe backs of frirse who are not blessed with so much of this wiirld's goods. The_ `loves-n -mont Bonds," into which has guile near- Vali the surplus eapitirloofl; the country —or the wealth that wasl c ,, retofore TI:8- -sebseti as " money at inters " serves to , illustrite in one particula . It is well known that it laborer bas seldom mon ' eV to invest in stocks or securities of any kind : Ths little he is . enabletl,to save' 77'77 -7 i 9 • rpm: -for his wife and little ones. He puts h is thousand dollars intethat ; 'while shoddy the individual that Counts his greenbacks by the hundreds of thousands, puts his into "Government Ponds," which prom ise to pay an interest of seven per cent. By act of Congress-these bonds are ex empt front taxation. His thousands of dollars invested in these are not while thelittF6 the laborer ha• . t in a home itf9lWhere is the j ice in this? Vits'not frelnoney the wealthy an equal right to part of .the debt of our count2;--tvith the toil and savings of the h • fisted laborer? Mast our poor . and men of moderate circumstan ces pay the, enormous debt onur coun try and an exorbitant interest to the rich who o it? g AUGUST pair, at C. L. WARD, Chairman ;has enacted laws 10 make this distinction and - now hasile impudence to turn round and pretend to be the friend °fate labor ing classes—the "poor man's party." Out upon such hypocrisy! Where is the man that' makes his living by the sweat of his brow=the farmer the me chanic or the daylabortir—that canclieg to it and give it support? Where is the A.niurican that is dog-enough to enslave biumlf for the benefit of the rich ? If there is soviet him vote the Abolition ticket. It is the ticket of shoddy, the man aho hia . made lis thousands spec nlaCting the - blood of the country and is now exempt from taxation because be is rich. Such are the effects of Abo lition legislation. Thepeople of this country should not deceive themselves. Ncgro suffrage as proposed 1.3, 1 . New England Abolitionism means - rkofite than the simple fact of eon fering the right to vote upon the ebony fraternity. It means to place them with you on the jury, beside you at the talde, along with you in bed—to make them your father-in-law, you? hi other-in-law. your son-in-lair, your undo, your aunt. your neice, yoUr nephew—your equal in everything and' your superior ic patri otism, blackness and scent. It dou'i mean to stop when you have marched up to the polls besidra Lig thick coneo and deposited yohr '154.110t, but you must take him to your home. !lave your wife wait upon Vitt, let hint kiss your sister, stay with your daughter—marry her if, he wants to, and raise any amount often colored" grand children. Negro suffrage is but a Means of enforcing the detesta ble doctrine of miscegenation. 'ln it is covered up all the lilderiusness of amal gamation. It is loaded with the tinted . relism laid cairies with it the putridity tatiwill blot from earth the white race of thip l eontinent. Where is the man that has any respect for himself —for his family or his country, that can favor such an infamous doctrine? Yet, there Is a party—a party, that controls the legislation of the country—a party that sprung from the with burning— quaker hanging—blue ligti pitritaris of Nevi England, that is now seeking to implant it in public mind..„ Where it is stronsdhough to have no fear of de feat—in uch states as Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and lowa, it is made a plank in their political plat form. Here in Pennsylvania, where I heir hope of carrying the State has almost died out, it is only hinted at—vaguely approached in order to feel, and not startle the public And. The negro suffrage plank id their platform in this state, will be covered up with a verbosi ty that will render ikeapable Of a dozen different constructions, yet it will never theless mean "negro suffrage" —and amalgamation with all their horrid re sult... And if the white men of the State are in fay . er of these, they will vote the, abolition ticket at the next election. "CANT Slpi rr."—ln a letter of Ex- President Buchanan's, which we pub lished a couple of weeks since, he speaks of Abraham Lincoln, as "our kind hear ted and distinguished president." If Mr. Buchanan had been torn from his home and immured in a filthy, vermin infected hostile, if he had been forced t the dry bread fit bacon and slop ailed bean broth,, . —breath throuA the giated window of hio noisom prison house --sleep on the bare Hoot amid the filth accumulated by drunken soldieg, ne greles and otheri---roblwil of the savings 1 of years of toil, and turned Out eyenti3- ally without knowing the cause of us arrest, or without explanation es to why the outrage was committed, as was our self and hundreds of others, "by order of A. Lincoln," perhaps he' would have spoken .of that individual , in another way. " Distinguished; be ne doubt waa --..distinguished for his imbecility, his finatioisza, his tyranny and usurpation, kett.wa -to being "kind beaded," wo,• ebbs with our falklv Prz.sool!res cant t axsaly see it:. Mote than it Seems - • • Mdy Johnson ",ProvitiantiallfProsident It was' thlitly a et aingslar elm*. gavot lhifki lean ele 1.4 to Millie by As party,of finalise ehoidd venture to do an set of justice, or in the administration of Isle dice eLotild recognise constitutional law in sdperior to the doinands of party politiss, and the unusualness of the occur rence May well be plead as an excuse for the extraragant praise which Democrats be stowed upon Andrew Johnson when be de clared that he could not, without violation of hie oath, interpose Executive authority for the extension of the elective franchise Jo negroes at lbe South. 114 Democrats shOuld sremembor that Presidilit Johnson bias done tie o th er akt during his adminis tration that merits their approval, or which relieves Ills atiministratiop front the charges which were so 'justly made against- that of his predecessor. In everything-else he hall - ha - same inoltnatlonitruiturpn tipn of power, qgd has not hipored himself ,bytn disavowal - Of TWO arbitrary and odicW ads of his 'subordinates. With all, defer ence to. top good intentions of the Mason Commutes, which has announced its belief that President Johnson "is the right man providentially placed in the right, position to extricate the country from the imminent perils width now- surround it, and to roll _back the tide abuses h threaten to which weracgueathed to us by our oth ers," we must, in view of the et ' mg re semblance which President neon's ad iniuistrittiott bears tp that Mr. Lincoln in the'inatter of the ege se of arletrary and unwarratated pow s, continue our belitri that nothing 46(1, or just, or lawful, can come out e , Nozarelb of Republicanism. Noah the history of the President Ns .• y Johnson of •Tennessee," nor as Pre .ldent by "providential" interposition, will 'twat-tent the conclusion that he is or intends to be, In any respect, more observant of the rights of the people, or of his constitutional ob.igstions than was his predecessor. The vim( of habeas corpus suspended, it Was sup posed, by President Lincoln only as a, ne cessity during 'the war, was applied for by a woman who had been'doometlio death by a court baring no organization under the law, and President Johnson, months after the war had terminated, - again declared it suspended for the express purpose of put ting tbe applicant to death t, it bout the in -sertetetteee-hrw-ehurgeet- by their he with her protection. The mditary tribunals, which _Mr, Lincoln only tolerated, President Johnson orgenizedi Newspapers were suppressed by Mr, Lin coln under the plea that it was necessary to the success of_the Federal arms, but Presi dent Johnson suppresses them without the shadow of an excuse, unless an exposure of the tyranny and corruption pf his adminis. troika, be one. A blasphemous brute in Tennessee prn clni of the people at [Ent State, who detest him, and the Pt es ident makes haste to enfoicc the orders of Brownian with ha} onets. And so we might COIIIIIIIIO the catalogue of his nt bit rery nets, ia no respect less odious than the like mea sures of his predecessor And et the Ma eon Democratic ComMittee asks us to sup• port his administration as providentially appointed, and the state Committee of lowa calls upon us to meet in conicution to en dorse hie reionstruation policy, of winch, disfranchisement ly Tennessee. enforced by bayonets, is a part. We beg to be excused. —.Duhuge Herald. Matrimony Made Easy—Sharp Practice by a Youth of Sixteen. numerons advertising swindles that have been so often exposed, do not seem.tas have the slightest effect in putting. pairilile on their guard againet such practice.. The Ladies, it appears, are most fitt(ceptible of beitig,doved by theme 111111.006i5, particularly when the sinhject of unsfrimony is involved. A sldewd lad octorttioon years of ago was ested atAtepost-ofhee this morning by Detectiyairest„un information received by (GI-elf:tor Folk from n manasamed 11. F. Geh e4t, of lloatmgdon comity. T'a . who eddressed a later to Inspector Valk, stoutly,. that be hell. been sWitittled 'out of tour dollars by andisering au advertisement in some remote country paper signed "R. 0 N,." which advertisement stated that on the receipt of four dollars a recipe would be forwarded Which would enable thd party to manufacture, at n merely nominal expense. 'an article known as ••Merrill'it Washing Powder." The green Mr. tiehrett of course received no equivalent for his greenbacks, and he sought the nid of the pollee to bring the swindler to justice. The following is a copy of the adverthement which was spe cially intended for female consumption : If you want to see Abe likeness of your fu ture bushonfl or wife, enclose 25 cents to 11. 0. N , boa 112, Brookrin, New York, The boy, who gave his name as Raymond O'Neil, was in the act of taking out four letters in answer to the above when he was nabbed by the officer and taken before Jus tice Cornwell, who, upon examining the ler applicable to the ease, found that he ead no power to bold him, and young 0% Neil, if that be his name, which is very doubtful, was discharged from custody. The following is a copy of one of these letters, _written by a widow of thirty,eight, enclo- Ong the necessary stamps and a lock of her auburn hair: ROCHE/MI P 1.4 1865. 11. 0. IC.• flia--; have read your advertise ment. YQII eon send me the photograph of my future husband, as lam PM anxious to know who the fortunate man is to be. I enclose, twenty-five cents, expecting you will send the picture by return mail. I send lock of hair; age thirty-eight; Ida ii-Ded; eyes dark brown or Ilksel; height four Feet ten inches. Don't disappoint me. - Very respectfully, The above is signed by the writer, who gives her full name and address, which we omit to publish out of respect to the feelings of the infatunted:woman's family and rata tivea.—N. Y. Herald. TIIIG ACQUITTAL or, MISS ITAIIRIS.—The "trial of, lilies Jiarrie for the killing of A. J. Burronghs fertninated last week, having oc cupied twelve days. The room was densely cr9wded with spectators, including many Temen, ling before the court was formally opened. The jury retired, and in about ten minutes returned with a verdict of not guilty. The announcement wasreceiyed with loud applause, and some of the women cried with joy. Handkerchiefs were waved and hats thrown up. A large number of the specta tors rushed towards Miss Harris to congrat ulate her on her acquittal, but she had fain ted, and was carried oat of the court root in the arms of Mr. Bradley, her counsel.. STANTON, BUTLEN AND HOLT are all apes tales of secession. Thee. three men were busy ipatruments in lashing the Southall - mind Co fury against the abolition proolivi dee of tho North. They united in deriding the idea of coercion by the Federal Govern ment, ad in adulation alike of the princi ples mul the loaders VC the extreme South ern party. Converted to the support of the Union by the arguments of place and power they hare sine. vied with eaoh•other in the ferootous unscrupulousness with which they sib compromised the good name of the Republic in the r own batsmen and to the service of their own passions.— World., A BROAD bachelor sea captain who wu remarking the other day that be wasted • good ohTef ofilmtri Iran AntesPUY informed by • yousglady present , that, she pad no objeotdoa to he h is first a 1544." He insk the hiq--thict the lady. Apostate ilemw=h The Daily &a is a pupil' claiming to be Demiotirslio, published in lb* city of , Butialo, Sit sr quoting fro. tbugfew TorelTsii , vtilq sentence in the Chicitga platform which' de, dared the attempt to IWO the Union by - war eays "in this connootion. we wish to call attention tram fact that this deuce in the Chicago plat form wee placed there by the efforts of a class of men who, by their own confession, alibi er remained away from the polio or voted for Mr. Lincoln, Whatpver of infaruy attaches to the declaration thal the effort to restore the Union by war had, sifter en experiment of four years, proved 'a feiltu e,' Is to be obilrged touts account of the hirelings of the mhoinisliation r ho procured the interpolation of this phraeri." 'Mendacious falsehood! Shameless ea lumnistion of the Chicago Demoaratio Con vention :- That resolution-was put in the plette - fm because it was the Senile of the - Coriventhoo ; if there were any who dieing led frtiriTLlliiiir nuMber was so small that' they did not venture to make the least show of- their- disagreement, The deslaration that the ateempt to save the Union by war was a failure eras the belief of every intel ligent De. • .raL in thaCConventieni And it is still e belief of every intelligent Demo cr in ,tne United Slaty.. The war has i 01 _only destroyed-..the Uniori,--Put it has- Ilestoyerl the whole .y.teit 6t government established by our fatherh. It has forced the Austrian system into the place of the voluntary or free system that constituted the Union. Show us a man who dares to fall himself a Detectorat (except the editor oftho - Buffalo'Cbariei,) who baliefes , that the war has restored the Union f Bring the shalloW-pated thing before ue, and -let us look at him ! Sir, do 7ou call this a union of free, sovereign, and co equal States, where one-half is -held like W. vassal under the point of the bayonet of the other half I Tell us, oh, maudling dolt, is this bloody, stliiiii godless piece of despotic machinery a Union of Soverilyn States 7 Is thie accursed system of provost-marshals, of military govenors, of provisional governor, of sus pended habeas corpus, of military trials, of arbitrary arrests - , the Union that was estah lished by our fatheir ? Hatt it not resem bbince t-i that Union? Is it any more like our old Union than the relations between Russia and l'olond, or between Austria and Hungary are like our old Union? Tell us. trotrbteolli :ad, thou Pharr dirring — ttr - en - tr thyself a Democrat, -what part orthus sys tem, which the war hue prodoced, belonged to the old Union? . Point us to even one feature of the old Union in this bloated and aboininable despotism ! No, you cannot. Then the war has tiorites bred the Union. This was tine when the Democracy, in its General CourentiotCut Chitiego, declared it. It is true now ; it will be true eternal ly. The war is ended, but the Union isnot restored. Those delicate and beatitifttl, and rejiprgoal relations between co equal States which constitutedthe Union, are not restor ed. That 41~lehti 111 System of free govern ment is ii,',ro3 ed. Whether it can be heel hack again is a pt oblem of the future. Conjurations, military trials, and all the other Abhorred severity now to operation, will never No the work. They may -Retie dos a and faster) upon the whole country the Austrian system oT consolidated power, but they can never restore the Union. ~.The work of restoration is that of iostioer cot ,- inlintion, and kindness. UnioirS" necessa rily voluntary. , Indeed lb aro but two ,kinds of government i to world—the one ...o„tere y.- -of for,-, the other uPeotisent. Curs was the governinont , Will. The war has made it one of . The force syltem, taking the t in. = u r , r I , i n ti o l;l i t e l yi a o n g g d o e v , e p r o n t i i n ,, e n n i t is I on, e,, rt he h. And on this detested spot the war has land• 1 ed us The man who calls this monsters i biiiii a the war, this brutal, rowdy despot ism, the lbaon, must be a fool or knave. We have no softer name for him. During every month of the war we were rushing precisely in an opposite direction from rtoon. -Wo were breaking up Untyn. be cause wh were iksfroying consent and carnal,. hailing force. 0, this eras the most fatal kind of disunion ! It wits not Seeeasilln, it was dit? in .. oon. The one left the,principle of union alive—the other kills it. Now that the war is over, the Union is so far from being saved, that we are quarreling among ourselvea.about the best means of "recon structing" it. Did' not the Chicago Conten tion say well that the war bad failed to restore the Union? livery hour the war lasted rendered reconstruction more diffi cult. If a thousandth pert of the justioe and k indness which rt-eorirtruetton will require, had been employed by the Reputo Henn party when it conic into poser, there net er would have been any secession except of South Carolina, and she might have been brought back without the shedding of. a Crop of blood. Dot no; such a happy conclusion was not desired by the party in power. The lamented Senator Douglas thendered at the Abolition eonspiratots of the Senate, "You WANT WAR." They got it. And 0, sTiatue! . bow many Democrats, apostatising from every principle of Demo cracy, helped them to what they wanted! Had the Democracy let the Abolitionists fight their own battle, there could have been no war, and the Union would really have been preserved. The same spirit of com promise and fraternity which established the Union is the first place, - and saved it in Several severe liials, would have. saved it this time ' Apos tate Democrats have been the right hailtiotif Abolitionism. And now some of these apostates accuse the tree - Democrats, who refused to be bincoinized, of being "hirelings of his administration!" Who, in God's name, but the "War Demo crat," was the "hireling of the administra tion?" Who else has been the tool of abolition ? If these apostates will now come back to the principleis. of Democracy, which they so ingloriously deserted, we have been willing to be silent About their great crime. But how should we treat this assertion which accuses the great body of Democrats, in the Chicago Convention of being "hirelings of the administration I" More than twoAhirds of the - delegafes of that Convention were Pease Democrats. There was a compromise between the ma jority and the minority on the platform and the modulate—the majority accepting what they understood as a peace platform, and yielded to the minority the candidate, on the mistaken idea of availability. The com proase turned out an unfortunate one, as be carried, certainly, one and probably two, less States than either of' the Governor Sey mours would have Parried. The whole truth is, that the tinority played a trick upon' the majority by assuring think that Gen. McClellan wit; td accept the nomina tion on the platform of the party. They knew better, and it was no-part. of their plan that he should accept the platform., Be repudiated' that part which was most vital to theenajority of the Convention. So we were forced into the campaign with the platform looking one way and the candidate the other, with an obliquity of vision,which was, as we have somewhere eke said, mere than a match for the face of Butler, sur named "the beast." It was an awful ig nre for alreat politcal party to cut before the wormer The whole responsihility of this great shame was with those • wito:were the supporters of the abolition war. They were the supportbrs of Lincoln's administration, for the tear wasihia administration ; and if anybody were his "birstling , !" tipsy were in this "War Democracy. We repeat, that it has not - been our Pelie7:: etee the end of the war, to rerolitilbese apostelittrof their great sins; but the 'ockatidtibn If ant silence is that they shall Asigeo.Ut!tafaelves sufficiently to-be still aboht i tb i iWist. /IVO. olgiy, wbbn an ,editor di ahout Via. "Infamy" of that iiihrtiott,o t tk the'c e ttioa c h plagorni which refinated4 l l o * m i t ST I P"' sestiossti of the 'faucets :6)464 of. the &aviation,.etas ti bun , to rebuke the insolent NI hood. Better Abet Mieh tq gr 7 learn something of the principles of be lacy. or give up trying to edit Demon 'newspaper. Bettor tliarthoie wlie are the mere tools of=olition„revolullon, or the pulling p new-borti despot ism, should learn Vetter morale. 4i :better manners than to immato the brave and Moor ruptible men, who have stood tip like a forest of oaks against the bloody storm of being ' , hirelings" of an administration which they have opposed with a plunk and virtue that render them the only ,worthy descendents of' our revolutionary fathers rsmaining in Our country. There are a few linpdrs, nailed Datitocrates,Thicirare edited either by men who never 'knew what De mocracy was, or who arc, ipootates from it and they are symple the -organs of ignor *nee, di/content, and slander. They are the "Arrelings." lf there is “iujamy" anywhere if is fa thisTr heads. --Thep 'are 'l'intripoliv: tiona" in the Demooratioarty. Who" Awn 'Shaine, nrY -to Demoopoy, - but to their country. The AbolitionMta. are pro fessional revolutionists, professional &sun jonists. We - know where they are. There In no cheat about it. but thhie stealthy Demaertitis, who are Going the slop-work of Abolitionism in the name of Democracy, what are they I If they had lived iu the time of the Son of Matrytheir-muire--Worild have been Judas. Their name is apostate now.—Old Guard. 7-- The Votes of the Soldiers The bayton journal having said 'that the Democrats Want tho, votes of the soldiers, affd to eecure them hAmorisy and falsehood have no depth'S to, which they win not de scend, the lempii.e replies as follow,' : • " We do not, feel much concern about the 'otes of the soldiets, now that they are at hotne, and can with the men that bavo been so infamoully misrepresented to them, and may read papers that many of their superior Officers wore so base 'as to dOny them *coati to. They have sense en ough to deteitiaine, in a shoit time, who have been itself friends, and with whom their interests thight to.,,be confided in the future. When they oome to understand that abolitionism protracted 'their term of service, and caused their sufferings in the prison pens of the South, and that now their success is to be used, ratit.r to _v a t negro iherrequel at the ballot-box than (flan M restore the Southern States to their former position in the Union . ; when they come to see that (BO' Lai() Lunn bearing the beat and burthen of the contest at stxteen dolor. a mon* whilst the patriotic stay at-home gentlemen, who--bave been so .vigorously patting them on the back, have been count ing their gains by thousands and tens of thousands, and are investing their surlily profits in non-tax paying government whilst the labor of the country.' all these returned soldiers mos' is taxed to pay.the enonno by an unueoessarily pr all those things a come to he tiedc as they AO() -fit • .which ontribute, eta • debt incurred pr acted war; when a• a great ninny more tl • ood and cotnprehended, ,o• dl be,'wo will have nothing • fear fearer the vote' of the seaters. ives of the common soldiers in this • have been sacrificed with a heartless nees and prodigality as WOO as it was un necessary. The butchery at Fredericksburg is an illustration of the sacrifices that .were made to appease the clamor of the coviardly stay-at-home patriots for the more vigorous protiecution of the war. Virginia to-day holds the hones of no less than fifty thou sand bravo private soldiers, whose lives were ratilessly sacrificed to the importunity of abolition and newspaper politicians, who were constantly exerting a control over the operations of our armies in the field. Thu slaughter of some sixteen hundred brave men, by the explosion of the Sultana, who, atter surviving , the thousand dangers and hardships of the battle-field, had to fall victims to the groveling, heartless avaripe of some speculating abolition quartermaster, is motioned for. We boar of no military commissien to try the murderers of these amnia:lda of tiara:nice—they were but pri vate tioltHera It is the responsibtlit,y of the party in power for the immense and revolting sacri fice of life and means that resulted from their fatally mistaken policy grid the con trolling influence of abolitionists that now rise% like the ghost of Itatiquo at the ban— quet of Macbeth, "with a (million) mortal murders on its crown to push them from their seats." It is this which makes them anxions about the "votes of tUe soldiers," and which prompts the continued falsification of the conduct and purposes of the Democr atic party. Time will prove all things. firesenvirticv.—The Black Republican journals occupy 'their time in gathering dirt, and then eating it, When Andrew Jobdeon was inaugurated he was aUsort." o "lowbred politician," a "natonal dis grace," in tne language 'of the 'v ery men who elected him. "Since then.says a cotemporary' "they have nearly all united in taking back what they saith i pand now solemnly protest they never sail it. A few days ago all the leading Black Republican journals of the country united in pretest against Stanton's, Star Chamber' trial, and went the full length of "Copperbeadisin" in denouncing the Secretary as a tyrant. Meal time has arrived, and they 'are now . as earnestly applying ellen:metres to swal lowing their own words as before they, were telling the (rut)]. The New York Tunes makes a Mont humble apology for having been betrayed into telling the truth, and promises never again to be found guil— ty of a like offence. The fawning uubservi envy of the Black Republican press is the severest satire upon the party in power. A sop from either of the departments is iufficient at any time to quite the consoien of an Abolition editor, and lie swallows his virtue and plunder together--Banner o f LLiberty.. s WHAT DOES .17 MEAlo—There is a very generally inquiry what is meant by sending regiments of solders into our State to gar rison our cities and towns. .Some eight or nine legimonts of Hancock's corps have been sent North, a part of which have come into Pennsylvania. One, is to be stationed at Philadelphia, and another at Harrisburg. Why is this 1 It is sai&bey are to do pro vost duly ; but what duty of this kind is there far them to do, unless the executive and judicial power is to be taken from the hands of our Govenor and courts t Are we to have the millitary rule, with its millitary commissions and other engines of tyranny continued I If they are sent here to keep the people in subjection, they are too taw; but as there is im •eceesit for this, they are too many. They are just numerous enough to annoy -the people: We day to Secretary Stanton, take away your soldiers, re is nothing for them to do in Penneyl. Tanis.— Wag Chester Jefferamian. Why don't the loyal-leeguers consecrate the Dry Tortugas,. or Rome other barren waste, "as ,a Botan y Bay, for the reception of all *hp engage in "disloyal practical." ,Let us biro the thing understood—perms . noisily located ; so that when the heavy 'baba of the "government" is leg 'Upon one If our fellow-creatures, be itntl•bits-triends, naLßavo was ides. of ills resting place. As - fegroie standth .we minuet tell ',bother wp olliticaud. is C ' , penitentiary fort, or • nipoesilry Ibuiltfley eg island of •ean 4g Boomed* Austria, :OA all oth utiates - * IOC th* people In this tifeiti og - 41 1,;; 0 1 - a , thie boas of the .breie ‘ i. fnkiitd lotoViiry have e goverp. =EMZ2MI -" r tite Union-Les\t aa— us 11- tr&are dying. e. . The ancient •wrltercitak very patty fable of the swan, willed), It via said In its expiring momontavonld trecotarades, tdctll antNitniag down the riser, 'Would slag foxy stt"iouslY.thga vaabliag Itself into the land of spirits. Ciciaro'nempares the excel lent discourse which Uranus made in the Roman Senate •a few days before his death to,, the melodious singing of a dying swan. Socrates said that" good men ought to im itate swans, who, perceiving by a secret divination what advantage there as in death; die singing and with joy. Leaving 'out of mind all ideas of virtue, we way 6f a trot* say thus hath dried the Union Leagiie. It has sung Itself away I Haring by its prin— oiplee brought npon the country • civil wir ; halm labored_ diligently to prevent ake4o - which might have averted It; and hav ing tr,ltoied_lii. the 'daughter_ of Its_ enuntxy.- men,' it has 'by a natural instinct, come to see what atitaninges there are in detitb, bus most melodiously warbled itself like ,the dying snail into the land of dead geese! Farwell lepton Longue 1 Never more shall they inset music set to words like "John Brown's Soul!' mingle with the dying agonies of thy countrymen. Never -shall thy , hero by the influence of tby song inspired, call for "Jim.along do Atitietam'i bloody field, Never More shall the key of the Befalls turn at thy bid ing ;•nor the drunken mcb execute what malice and political necessity dictates to be done. Farewell, liberty destroying? .peace turbing, , despot breeding, blood enjoying, sa6obin League, Knights alba Greenback Circle, Farewell I Palawan ! I .14sy soul march Where John Brown's soul iiPrmar eh ing, and may no singing however sweet, ever awaken,thee to curse thy counirj again. —NoriAwn4rland Denwerat. Wno Canics..-L-Some of Cite Abolition pap ers are just now busy_ in publishing and commenting upon' opinions and expressions of democrats, during the last four years, concering Old Abe. Do they suppose that any democrat cares the lesst for anythis he may, in time Teat, have said about - coln "'We know that we have use,' severe language in speaking abo!j cola, r verything We - have ifs, was true, and everyit,i him he deserved was neither a but combine , elements' tyraai aid about him _ lase caned was entitled tom —Me fit nor a good man, but a himself all the essential a cruel, perjured and bloody was, perhaps, the greatest ' and dissembler that ever no led a rone, exercised usurped power n tyr annized over a once free pto e. Demo. gogues and' political sycophants may pre tend to be shocked at such language; but all the infernal lying they can do will not alter the truth, though darkness should so obscure it that no, man living could sae and appreciate it. All t he , attempts, since hts death, to make a demigod out of him, are just like so much gtolasses spread out to catch deluded thee Men of good sense will be able to penetrate the shallow hypoc ricy of partizan sycophants who would be ready to attempt to make an angel out of the devil if he had any Oleos and patronage to bestow. If the portfin power had no of fices and patronage to bestow, Mr. Lin coln would yiarcelyhave had a baker's dor: en of eulogizers in all this great Isna;.but. as-it is, every pimp who was looking for ward to he supported by the governmentr eousidered it a duty incumbent on himself on himself, to join the crazy crowed of eu ogi zero. —filehnagrove WIIEST SIIALL we pave Pence ?—The Philadelphia Press, in attempting to justify the continuance of millitary rule, argues that the government has to make peace with the rebels individually, and that, so long as a single person who has been en gaged in the rebellion remains unpardoned or.unpuniehed, peace eaupot be proclaimed We suppose, therefore, that the whole peo pie of the United States must be deprived of their usual liberty and rights and mar tial law must prevail from the St. Lawrence to the Rio Grande. because there may be in some of the swamps of Florida or the cane brakes of Louisiana a solitary rebel who has net yet reported to the Provost Marshal and taken the oath of allegiance. If this doctrine is acted upon by thezov erntoent we need not hope to entire peace restored during the next ten years. Pro vost m ar shal. will continue to make ar rests and military commissions will contin ue to convict the citizens of northern States for alleged infractions of millitary law, because somewhere in the South thererq s mains an unpin doned rebel. To whattgf surd- conclusions the advocates and apol ogists of arbitrary power are driven.—Ex. ?if travois Co Cure. —I len ry Winter DAVIS. the ablest Republican member of the last Congress, speaking.of the present military trials in Washington, remarked : '"lt is not a Court at all, but an unlawful oolnbination nf tresapausere, usurping the functions of a Court, guilty of a crime, and not exercising any authority. • * * a• * * a • A military commission of officers 100 worth l/iss for field service, ordered to try, and organized'. o convict," M=l= - Ci lIERIFFiI BALE --- Ai CLRARFIELD,rA., •n Saturday Avg 26, '65. fly virtue of a writ of Levari Facie., issued out of the court of com mon pleas of Clearfield county, tested at Clear field the 24th day of June, A. D. 1885, the undersigned, sheriff of the said county of Clearfield, will expose at public solo, at the court-house, in the borough of Clearfield, on Saturday, the 20th day of August, A. D. 1885, at 2 o'clock, p„ in, the following described net or piece of land, to wit: A. certain tract of dare MD/sited In Ruth towithip, Centre coup ty, and Morris township Clearfield oonolit, Pennsyfrania, bounded and described aa fol lows, to wit s Beginning at a pjno, corner of the John flue to and Francis Johnston tracts, thence by Ste p Pen Kingston tract, south, two hundred .41 thirty-eight finches to a atone corner, on the ciuth side of the Big illoshannon creek, and along said Kingston tract, east, one hundred awl sixty-eight perches to a poet; thence north along the said Kingston Una two hunched Mir thirty-eight perches to the line of said Johnston pact, and along the division line of said John iton and Kingston tracts west, to the pine tor, bar aforesaid, oontaining two hundred and thir ty-five acres: Seised, taken in ezeriatiosy to be sold as the property of Aaron Isearged the heirs and administratris of Thomas A. Sny der, deceased. TIMMS or SALJ 'Tell per Gent. of the per ehaee money in Wind when the property la knooked off, and theitemainder on the acknowl 6drPenti 44, 41 of the deed. Jnj ! SrE JACOB A. FAUST, Sherit BOG GS dc inliks • IV 0 0 LES ALE -GROCERS, DEALERS TN' COUNTRY plummet No. 109 Arch Street, Betweettroet andaeoond Inc L. sown,' w,m. T. ciac. j PHILADDLPfIIA. Orders from the ocmatt7 promptly Attended to , joly2Bll. AphIMISTRO TOILS 116STIOIL .4 - Letts= ef adedolstores on eke es tate 'et W..11h2440, deesaes late out Huston tolanehtp, Centre county, Pk. Uttar bean granted so the sebseribelo all' pimps indebted 'to Bald edtate are baby riatlkokte make see-. Mete payesolik mad those heelek• alahes es eat the same, to pal* them trig/ authektir tor isettlldoelic- • 11401#1 • - 44seSnisomtbr.: 3.d 31, &A. LEgl 4 4h, NQ EII"' :TERII. DIGTICIRD. The following enealtsita have been examined and passed by me, and remain filed of record ir. this ogle, for inspection of heirs, lega tees; ereditors, and ell others in any way Hass.- ested, and will be, preemile& to the orplien f court of Centro county, to be held actiallefonte, for , ft il owsucc and centirmaGen, on Wedneiday i the 30th of Augitat, A. D. 1465. 1. The final account. of Bun Crotser,acting executor of the last will And testament of Jo seph Croteer, sr., late pf Potter township, dee'd. 2. The account of Henry lierlaeher, admin. Istrator of estate of gilsabeth lierlaeher, late of Miles township, declasea, 3. The account of Unita Mistretta', ministrator of Le. of Thomu Vaughn, late of-. Taylor township, deceived: • • 4. The account of Adam Dear, admlnistrati•'r of. &0., of George Pm*, hit* of thes township, demised. -6_ The acrn o .6 of. uar dlan of Mari Rebecca Groh, Minor child of Aim Eliza 15'4014-W4- ot - Ctintie- eon ran d o 1 6. The aceocat of Williatti •Tinqttr, adarinie. UAW of &c. of Obrietophen M„_ non • toinehip, /soil - agar. . T. The acenont of Join Brecht, adminietrcior of In of George Brecht, Woof Perm township, deceased. 8. The final adoounts of John R. Bible anl Samna! Royer, adosinistrafors of in. of Jaoob Des'ham, Woof -.Potter townsittprdeeinnted. • 9. The account of A. 8. einnnermon, sdmin fstrator of Jtc. of Slits Raid?, damned, lat e of Manion township. 10. The account of Jeremiah Unities, admin istrator of in. of Joint Amu; deceased, lets + Miles township. 11. The account of Hen. Samuel Linn, trus tee appointed by the orphan's court of Conn*. county for the sal* of the real estate of Mar Mess, deceased, late of Centre owluty. - 12. The emsount of George Mayor., Hien of George Daniel Kline, minor fin . ' RablIOCI• Kline, deceased. late of Wel ' °unship, (er filed by John 8. Ifoy, admi rotor of in. of the said George Iloydr.., d.) 13. The account of George'llov, jr., deceased, executor (by his ad nistrator, John 8: Iloy) of kc. of Goorge • sr.,,dereared, late of Miles township. 141 Th. r diem o account of Samuel H. Storer, goat. diargaret Smith, (formerly Margarc; .) minor child of Catharine Storer, deed, of Centre county. 15. The account of Samuel H. Storer, emir !aritnhg a I rln a Storer , " c Ane t o , ll'aTeayOf minor C n Centre id county of 18. The account of John Rooth, on. of the executors If &e. of Cianwlicwex...agt_vf,_ g iwwneigra - 17. The accoant of R. F. trown,administra tor of Le. of J. I. brown, decemed„ Igo_ of nis township. „, t . 18. The accoantlsf John Musser and John I. Musser, administrators of &e. of Mary A. Mus• sor, deceased, late of Gregg township. 19. The account of Ira Fisher, tulteinistratar of In. of Margaret Finton, deceased, late of Centre snooty. 20. The account of C. Derr, administrator of &c. of A. S. Ilfeyegt,dec'd, late of Bellefonte 21. The distribuffon account of James P. Co burn, executor of La. ofdcatharitte Huston, decamped, late of Potter township, / 22. The account of Francis Alexander, guar dian of &e. of Franklin Rhone, 'or:Centro co. 23. The account of John T.Vohighton, admin istrator of kc. of Cornellys W. Harrold, late of the borough of Bellefonte, deceased. , 24. The serpount of William P. Fisher. execa• tor of &a. of Henry Nub, late of tioiou ship, deceased. 2i. The account or Samse rnaernood ant bins Hicklen, Administrators of Ate, of Isaac Hicklen, late of Unionville, deed. li!"retly tr. Lin- 26. The account of if. A. Foresman and. D B. Bumganincr,'Administrators of &c., of .Toe Barogardner, dee'4.l. Into of Liberty township. Li. -The account of John Ross. 14pAulatrator of kc. of Elizabeth Koch, Into Ntter tuwa hip, decd. • _ 28. The aaerount of Solomon Koch and Ihivid Ross, administrators or &a. of John Koch, lota of Potter township, deed. july2Btc. A" ORPHAN'S (01.litT SALE. By % irtne of en order of the Orphan's Court of Centre county there will be exposed to sale, at the house of James Furey, in Howard, SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, !RIO,. at 2 o'clock p. m., the following dearibed vain, able real estate, vis : • All that pioro or parcel of land situate in Howard townshlp, said county, adjoining lands of David Schenck and Mrs. Maki° on the oast, Samuel Leathers on the Booth, Jacob Baker oil tbo west, and Job W. Packer on the ninth, con taining ORYX:iTEICII ACRES, MORE OR,LF.EIS. Also all that lot or parcel of land situate in !toward township aforesaid( adjoining a lot of W. F. Fodor on tae south, Sensual Loathers on the east, Goo. Brown on the north, and the great road leading to Marsh Creek - on the west, contain* about • D.I.X ACRES, MORE, OR LESS. Also all that lot of land situate in said town ship of llooard, adjoining a lot of William F Packer on the north, lands of Samuel Latthc , 3 end John White on the east, made of W. F Packer on the south, and the great road apt, said on the west, containing SEVEN ACRES, MORE OR LESS. TERMS OF SALE.—One bait the purchstc, whitey to be-paid in' hand on thi tontlrrriatlut, of the sale, and the residue to one year thereat or, to be secured by bond and usOrtgage ou the premises. 3NO. P. PAOKEtt, JOHN HUOLIS, • july2l,'B6- 1 5t.. Adoet. of T. Ilughte EXABIINATJ,O,NS OF TEACIIERS. • The i teachers of Centre county err hereby notified that examinationoloy the /iamb for the current yuar, Fill be held at tbefullue • log times and placee,' , to "eminence at I/ e. m each day: Benner, Augnat 14, at Rook; Patton,l.l,6„ a' Willidle's; Half Moon, la, at Walkeriville Taylor add Worth, 17, at Port Matilda; Stieb4 18, it Phillipsburg; Haitian, 19, at 3r c , Union, el, at Unionville; Saoweboe. and Pura side, 23, at Aekey's; Dogma; 26, at bireehir Curtin and Howard, 26, at Ilowardvjlle ; • " arty, 28, at Itagleville; Marlon, 29, afJaol..,Ja villa; Walker, 80, at Ilubienburg; Spring, 21 at Phcenie Jaarris, September 2,14p01:- burg ; Potter, 4, at Centre Hill; Gregg, 5, at Spring Mills; Penn, 8, at Millheim Hitistee, at Aareigiebarg; Mlles, 8, at Reberaturg; Per : gneon, 28, at Pine Greve Mille. Since the necessity which led to the holdir' of ninny spatial examinations, and the oulmii 'ion of some to the pcufeseionwho were scarcely competent, now no longer exists . , Isf1 ,1 ""u will present themselves in the (harlots In who , ' they intend to teach, for private immeation• aoa incompetent tembers will no longer be tolerstei THOMAS XpLAIIAN," County S'operinteadent. • _trdalsburg, July 28,65-21.- pRIPATR FIA.LB BF BEAL IiSTATH. ' The undersigned offer, at plate , r;0 two treats of land, each containing about I u:- hundred aorta, situated on the the .I , :rle P ..' fourteen Wale* hoer Wier! ate and well k nowt to the public.. Ila the Old Itatilesnako T•vela *tan& . There ore between terenty.fira r,. eighty serge 'of cleaned land on the prernif.• with two expellent young orchards, and m l• elegantiikter. The balance eAthe. land to o .L. thilberodYrith oak, pine and 'dheanot. A 'l. , ' ili and large frame h se-well adapted for a he' , l is also on. the p►*mine, and. altogether ti,. property is a nips wahwble and desirable on- For further potion*, laqnlre of Martin Stoll . of Bellefonte, or a. BillctJt LUCAS, , June 28. • of fienjoasic ____ A UDITOR'S NOTION. The undersigned, ear laudito? .: .. n oXted ley the Os hanfs Court Metre twin to make distrib II of *I IV lb** Ne rn sin:r - yar abe,bsods of A 2l i i IlasionagAttgrinTstrast.r 01 the estate of Joh n 4pag, 'deed, Vaud aotnne..l those legally entitled Meseta. will piped t C• duties of bit appoint:Plant ott• Thusitlity, 0041 day of August, 1 8 6 N bis Otos /Ix Daps' '"", se 2 o'clock p . no, eta. toad 'vitro all p. 11,.., , interested miry etDot if they so phytes, ' - . • .- NV N hi. RII.K.NWAII.I), 'UV Illy '611•414.• , ~.. • • , • 4e.din.,.. ml?; A t inYWEET 1103111ARII, Manuta, Jiu ktriod (or ash. wlaoladirl. sod Inml• Iffsupol Limburg Apps p. • DENTrikr NEWSY- mammy AI , X TIM WA:LOMAX ontLer.. El J. P. GEPHEART. Reg. & Roe ME
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers