C ror - . . WHEN THIS OLO HAT WAS New; ■o cot./. O. /MMUS, germs this bat was Mode, , . • . _ gins ileorge woe elo the throne oar Fathers all were rebel. then • • And fuui t with Washiestog • , Tbe Tortolwed ,fur old Xing George The Revolettloa, through • o ' And bragged shut their iyelty, gre this old haralLe When this oldieas he* TIl tons of AM time crowd Iterlied We ei* of "Boys 10;" dad bellowed It alowl The Onrenirodet. opt. blathers made For them wonktilebet do ; • And they here tarn he bulwark* down . Since this 6141 Wit ,d ji_thiel ON hat wile ne* There was no No greenbacks took the Plum of kuld, Nu millianare had yet pihrfur fteree-Thirtioa 'vent On witch no tax wan•dlue rho rerh man fairly . paid his tax 'nod this old bit was ire*: • When this old. hat was ne* ifieetione thetk worn free, AtOeDvary wan was thoug;httq'Eace A right to likerty ; Arrests worn made hy Or lase, Trials were 'eßedy tyh this old little bell, Whewthliolti hat Was amt.. When Ole old boa was new This land was In itS , Mlocegenan:was untaught In all thrs hippy ciliate; ; AAA whitp folks tiled •vaithought.asgood As -mph& Cdf Sun; But things h ate tnitliy changed about , Since this old hat VII 4 110 i. *hen this old het was new The year white man was free, And eery year: n bran new bait rttalti tlatulle on his knee: lint now. 11. r every child ho has, taxed till all 111 blue, BM (tango I tell yea were not go When this old hat twat :mt.. ritlten thin old lint trail now 11.1,1 dollar, did could nitywitene ho found. Bid non )on dit/F, itot kin' l joa-wito l'ule.s rtkii fon; ' But thlng? f 101 l you were nut no Blinn thin old hot watt new. ADDILESI Of the Dentocratio State Ceara! Com- MGM TV the people of reonaylronio •—ln Ancor ,hmce with its tune hot/cited animal rti‘toto, the Democratic party tennit-nas its princi ples and I,roOnis - its tainlidnips for your potlrages, or those principles nod can lulates it l's'our purpose now to spook. Tlinnks tif Almighty God; tht patriotism xf Llis people and the prowess el our cis ten soldiery, tinoterrilile Wail hat for fom „sears has devatitated our country and re.. .peittedly laid waste Mir own fair valleys has ended. The Confederate Government, its nriiiiett end its animating duet, Inc. seces sion, lie prostrate at the reef of the people 61' the Union: The tramp of nrmed wen and the crash of battle are nu longer beimd nod the recuperative energies of _the people will speedily till the - air with tune sound of the busy arts 4 of peace. TV tieldief his place tojlte citizen,iVe eiii:tk!tal.der gives way to the statesman. The power of force Is succeeded by-the power of reason, ji; t lee lint( law.' The soldier's duty of intones iiiOng obedience to the orders of a snipe /ler is supplanted by the more rational but lint less imperative obligation' of obedience to law. SUPREMACT OF TIIK LAW. , " Whether wo lle citizen or soldier, officer br Statesman, ruler or ruled, this obligation tests with equal weight riport e'stli and all of us. The doctrine of iniplieit and 1111- Iptalified obedience to the Conetiiution and laws of our country, is now, and in all time joist has been, n prominen't tenet in the faith of the Democracy of Pennaylvania, and they have invariably been found dettoffne lug by voles end opposing by act those Ilkitorous principles which seek to weaken (braiding force of the Constitution, at ; to pt to nullify the plainhst provisions thereof, or actuate those who Mato subvert it by three of arms.. Tie Fetterafeunst itu ?ion had power enough, had mandates teen observed in the spirit in which they were framed, and the warnings of the Democratise party been heeded, .to' have pre served us from the war Dirndl& wbieh we have jest past, and to have staved the na- San from ,the atuphndous saerificea of trie blood of her slat!glitired sons, the 'Waste of her national power sari prestige, and the fearful load of debt and taxation that now encumbers her. Wh i n the nation wee pre- Cipitated into war, MA:died° to the plainest provisions of that Constitution would WOG protected the most precious privilege's of a tree people, and preserved th Ate patriotic, people of the country, NOS the eerm •and subetaoce of the natiohal bill ofilghts; and now ittat •• arms are silent and ibnjawr " sums their away," to strict obserianee of its obligtltidds,in° 11 the States, and fealty to their official oaths by those in power, are file indices whip point the way to harmo- Mous unity,permanent peace and a speedy resumption of our career of prosperity and .Progress. The' arttra . ry and uncontrolled will of the temporary incumhisid. of place Ought not to be the rule of our I;6(m:fluent, and we hold "that: the Conatittiliete ester Waled by our (revolutionary) ratters Is en filled to our unqualktfed respect slid obe dience, the oath to support it is `b inding re ligiously, morally and legally, stein times, under all eirounustatioes, an /in every part of the country, upon all public officers, frourthe,iighest to the loWest, as well as upon private oltize,ns." • The Demoensey of Pennsylvania are for the supternadi / of the • TRIM GOVIIIINIONIr. The great central etjoots round which Ere grouped the mateials,and for which was Constructed the simple and horn:Malone rah dhinery of our system of government, are "the blessings of liberty for ourselves and Our posterity." TitbY Who' framed it dent ed no goveramOnt to administer theories, or to protect imaginary rights from imaginary dainties, bUi. itebtstveSthit practical men, deeply Imbued with Ai, spirit of liberty, and fresh from'ther bloody civil struggle of the Revolution; thhY kit* frbm bitter ex *lien*e the valub'of thane' bletssiogs, and 'in the light of that expeirienee they framed legoierament of tart,' and' not of arbitrary potter, gevernmerd to' guard their civil, . -- . . I . MI ... . . .. / . . / • - • ( II •• I ) e ' 1 t ~. . . • . • . e . . . . . . . • ••, . . . . . . . Vol.lo, liberties, auf not to overthrow her fundarnentaPprinciples of free government guarantied to us by the words 'of the Constitution, distineily reserved, and to* - eh forever held as inviolable, habeas corpus, lrbny jury, the subotdinatioti of the ni ill tary to the iivii authority, free speech and a free mai,. form the very esitence of our institutions; and wen they 'Who administer the goiornment fail to-pi•odot ustin the ex ercise of these rights il•lien they whd have carried on a gigantic liar in the naive of the Constitutinn, not only'fnil to maintain its fundamental pat:tiptoe, bet are'L'liu ally guillY of their violation, is it not our duty to turn them from the seats of power they so shamefully misuse, mill to require at their handl reparatiOn for pie many wrongs unnecessarily inflicted ? "'From the day that Runnymede had Its name link ed with human freedom to-this hour every man of Anglo-Ftxxon• Mood Las lifted his head mere proudly when he heard thogront text' of manhood repented. A'os freeman glad! he token or imprisoned or thipatemod of fir;o4pnewo or lthertiee, Or outlawed or halllehrol, or is an tier hurl, or inlared unfree hil_tht le pal _lalynteni of jtia_peers or hatlll Aar of the land. Dearer than ity . rinsties, dett;or than forms of government, dearer than the Inborn sentiment of loyalty to the the English heart, has always been the right of trial by jury. For two hundred years it has been more than his crown was worth for an English K ing to drny right to an English subject-Us. Yet these principles, inwronght with the vitdls df oilr system, baptized by the blood of patriots •doring siv hundred and fifty years. and wrenched from the hand of tyranny for our benefit, we hare basely yielded to the' tin : rpfeationed control of those in power. And during the past four years, again and wain hove freemen, American freemen, freemen of Pennsylvania, been "taken and impris sued, dispo'sessed of their free tenements mid liberties," and "enflamed and banish cd,"'an,rnlturt and injured," without "the legal judgement of their peers," and con trary to "the low of the land." And thin too within our own reennonwenith, at a time sqtm no hostile drentebeat was hoard and noVinod soldier lifted his hand against the government within all our bore ets —ExPhrtm.ye At this boar, when military necesSiiy een nn longer be made the-pretext of tiMir con tionnnee. when the authority of the Federal finvernment is admitted and rec , gniied in .all the lend, these abuses still exist. The courts created by lnif are in abeyance, and tribunals ulthnown to the Constitution and laws.ustwo their poker over life, liberty and properly. The great writ of freedom 'that assures every individual the protection of civil authority ill fettered by the hand of tfrbitrary power, and the citizen is odenied the right of trial by o jury of his peat's:" The Democratic party of l'ennsylrankaibeliere that the hour has come in which; murders by military commissions should . Cease ; ibe right of trial by twelve edict. ,impartial ' sworn citizens, should be restored, and the privilege of the writ of habeas rorpfus be tree as the air., TOE TtlfIlITS OF TIM llT.Trali Aside iron/ these great cardinal doctrines the suprentooy of the law and the 'it/viola bility Gybe fundamental principhis of free government, there is no subject more close ly allied with the preservation of Mir form of government and the protcetion of our liberties, Ufa° teat or the relation of the States to the Federal Government. Both we're created fpr the benefit, of the peo ple, and within the spheres of port li er graded or reserved to each, esdh is sit preme. l, The obligation of t h e citizen to the Fed eral Government within the seep of the powers elated to it is binding and impera- 1 tivo, and no one can . n1510140' him Aron( his 1 duty thereto. So, also, the power of the v i t 4 States over those matters not, pip r saly g'rafirtir to' the Federal Governinell o e-' jarred to the people, is equally ale r, d the duty to the citizen thereto is equally imperative and binding. Upon the one , . ad, in their attempt to interfere with the Were granted to the Federal. Government 1 by the,people, all ordinances of secession were nit Oily dold, add the intdrrect hen being sti i imicesetthe States resume their place in the Union • ait4l, the peualitiee incurred fillllflion the indtirlduals engaged in the 1 rebellion. L So too, upon the other hand it Fe Litif right of each State to determine' for , itself the qualifications of its electors with. out interference by other States or by the Federal Government. Such is the doctrine of the Democracy, end and -appears to be /be policy of the President, and yet, sec tional prejudice, the love of gain; increas ing wrath and deeply masked jolitioal pur ,poses, seriously obstruct the Stamm of re donstrubtion and reconciliation; end they who shouldbis foremost in attemptirig to I restore the harmonious unity of the nation are loudest in denunciation and most seal- Ohs in mralrit of a oonquered foe. As bet- Ween the federal - GoverntoDitt and the States in which the people haveheetiin're- bollion against its'enthorlty, till/only issub ditring'ilds..witr was how should bh thh red- Mention of that. auttioritY.. The trsd i or no hotline soldiery presses the soil of one of them' Ow: In' 'rib 'one of them le there might of objection now to the assessment and reflection of the Federal taxes, to the meatier of federnleodntots houses, Genres and Pi:410110es, or tollie'phabeftil tittnidt'se munAtions of war and troops. The wOhder ful exhibitioner A devastated couhtry, of defrated'artnibe, of a huinillated'peopleana of emancipated' Disveh, Might tili be sufficient Maroon the sympathies null engage the purest davotion of ,the Chlibliair atta• the BELLEFONTE, PA.y FRIDAY, SEPTEMBHR 22, 1861 Btatermen ; but - unconcerned at via condi tion of the white people of the Stites, de sirous, only to perpetuate their polililnl power, regardless' of the vital iiitei•eide of , six millions of their own race, dna of the invortanee of their reluihilitation in the.' Ur ton, No !milers of Ike Republican party as cyrinition precedent to their restoration l}tatti the release of tbyreign of a military authority over rk conquered and submissive people, demand Mr the negro shall, placeirlipon a political eghality with the white man andthey Attilet upon the USG of the, arm oc..,the Federal Government to °heat it, andlice moving for an amend- Aleut of he Federal Constitution ,to perpet uate it. Such it practical Interference would be a Palpable inflection of the Constitution, a gross and unauthorized increase.of central power, and a wanton orerthrow,of, The rights of the States. This dOotrine 'gives to the citizens of Massachusetts the tight to aid ia prescribing the qualification and color of the voter id Yeah Carolina, and in practieC tti the black m in the coa ti of of Lilo great States of • Louisiana, Mis atLl SotithCarolina„ aud_will send six black nten to the Senate of the Uhited Rates. This is all its breadth and with a full nederstanding of its results, is the doctrine of the Republican party of Pennslvonie, Ike 4th resolution adopted by the Rep-Ishii d.ssi State Cthirention, held at Harrisburg, on Mc 17th of August, 1845, -distinctly so gager's. It is as foßowe t Nrecierd, That, linvi'rig conquered the rebellions Steles, they' should ho held in subjurrolion, and the treatment they ere to receive, awl the lava which nre to govern LUAU, should tie _refered to tic law-melting power or she station, to which they legiti mately belong. With this dßctrine WO take distitt:ct isstie. The States of the South title in the Palen, and the people thereof, keep( tlidie oti whom the penalties for rebellion fah are en titled to nil their political Vrivilege . s, and we affirm that these States ere entitled to all ilic; reserved rights Of the States under the Federal Constitution, and within the sphere of these reserved rights, ° They,. and tey nlc'de have the power to make and tinatake the bars that are to govern them. s " AMMO EQUALITY AND NFAIRCI SUFI - RUM. Negro equality and negro suffrage are the longer n mythical issue, but are part of the. vital, practical realities of the present Lour. They are demanded by the black Man ; they are advocated by whitbinen high in powca In the National Government, atm al; ell titer. TII IT they are endorsetT and sanc tioned by a large majority of the neptabli etm party of the North, includit4 (Voile who govern and control that party Pennsyl vania. Let us examine some of the evi dences upon which *c found thjs chaff. The State of Maine, New Hampshire; Vermont, Rhode !gland, and VinssachViette, by constitutional provision, gilie the black man the unrestlicted right of fia' iage, Thele States are all under Republican Con trol, and their politicians lead the van in th'ii crusade they hope Is to result in the degradation of the White race to'the lerel of the black The Senate of am United Slates, on the 31st of March, 1864 (are Congressional Mae, R.,1361), had before it a bill for thdCon struetion of the territory of Montana. Mr. Wilkinsou,,moved to strike from the second line of the fifth section defined the qualification. of Yol'ers) the word, "white mole inhabitant," add insert the words "mire oiiizen of l'i'e United Slates," &0., *MA was agreed to as follows: YEAS 11108SrS. Brown, Chandler, Clark. CoHamer, Couness, Dixon, Feseeudon Foot, Foster, Grimes, Hale, Harlan, Harris, HoW• ard, Howe, Nloigan, Morrill, Pomeroy, Sumner, Wade, Wilkinson, Wilson. 22. NAYS Messrs. Buckslew, Carlilo A towels Davis, Harding, Henderson, Johnscd:tans, Nesmith, Powell,'Biddle, BanlsbOil Sbor man, Ten Eyck, Trumbull, Van Willey. 17. Those eta thus voted to place the bleak man on au equality with the white in one or the riobett territories of the Union, will readily be recognised as the leaders of the Republican party in thr y Senate. This subject came dit' In the House of Reprepen,tatives on the 10t.h . April, 18.64 # (Congressional Globe, p. 446), the motion pending' being the appeit'inient. of a Com. mittee of Conference on the dikaireement! between the Senate and House on striking out the word "white.",. Mr. Webster moved "that said committee be instructed to agree to no report that authorises any other' than free White male citizens to vote." On the question of the adoption of these instrutione the following named Republican Congress men from Pennsylvania voted net!: Messrs. Broombri Kelley, bilyertf, O'Neill, , I Sterees, Thayer, Atli Willitims. No Peadyvanis Republican' ate The . Republican' State Convention of Maine, lately is cession: itithe Bth Weight!. lion declares in favor of n'eiro stilintgis, as: follows: "Titat the emanolpation proinarna_ lion of President Lincoln, the enlistment o f over 100,000 colored Weis, the. good faith of the colored nos amid treason, anafr their helot pidti like *hike, and plaited in the most dangerous places, has pledged the na tional honor that these people shall tare in fact, as well as name, conferred on them all the political rights of freedota, end' people of the United States will rodeetd this pledge." The Republican Conventions of the States of lowa and Vermont have emphatically en de-rsed the deal - rifles ofmegro equality and here sulfrego;'and pladed their ettudidntee squarely upon that -2 g "VESTA ZIOUTS linlli - IT. Winipt Davis , &hlasto ,We,steed the roles tethe eollortni People: it is onlothera, not nitellirtscP, that . counts a( th^ ballot-boi—it is the right intention, and 11 , 4 philosophic judgment. Oat casts the rote, ' nor. Henry Ward Beecher, h the bide peyident of recent date; Bays: • lVe are Pleading earnestly wffh the Slate to abolisll the distinction of Caste by uni vetted suffrage. He lee that this will lei,- itably,lead, not to the end the present Cloc brnor of Louisiana declares—the surrender dr that cauntry to the black man,—but the equality of black with (he white; the elevation of the taw.° to the yorernorship, (hqatnalorrldie, filphip, by )he aide his 'Owe kindred; the 651iieratiUrt of all muff 4of distinciion rind eeparaeion between wet', and Neu. These are roprWientative inen of ,he lie puliliean party, and they have wielded a poWarful ingnenee in its ranks. Iri Mir own Slate 'number of Republican connty conventions Wee fully endorsed this doctrine.. Crawford county, at her oonven eta bold fa Meadville, iune.27, 1861, re solved that: • Loyally to the government should be the only test of the right of autfrage—t hese who 1 1 -4TeLleuitho9_llteurio Unisui 9.11.1 ...field of battle, whether white or 4/tz k. are certainly worthy 41 4 0 tt to fl;efoct it through the ballot-dcx—it Is usowortliy the age In 1!;Itioh vie _live to diprive men of voting who atotain the - government by their treasure and blood. The Republican County Conventions of Northampton: Union and Allegtinny have also broadly endorsed these doctrines. The question of the right of thp riegro to social equality was before the Legislature of Pennsylvania at its last session. On lie Bth dao)f Feb., 1881, the bill to prevent any passengir railway company from ex cluding colored people front their oars car;,e up in the Senate, and finally passed that body. Seventeen Republicans "(all who Voted) voted for the bill, and fourteen Deniocrats against it. It was sent to the Rouse for concurrence ; and on 23,1 March, 18115, it came up in the Howie on a motions to discharge the J eommigee. Forty six Republicans voted 104-tied twenty light pemberats l'ided nay. (See Log. Bee., pages 210 and 7 . 12.) Noirly all the prominent Republican newspapers of the State haver-al/to avaied themselves favorable I o,ntigro suffrage and n'egro equality, and yet, strange to say, the Remblioan State Convention failed to meet the issue, and seek to conceal their true Sentiments beneath the ambiguous wording of a resolution. Their third resoltitiOp de• clares that the Southern people "cannot safely be entrusted h the political rights which they forfeited by their treason, until they have proven their acceptance of the resat!. ( t r the war by incorporating them in consllt,''tiotial provisions, and securing to all ram within their borders their inanition.- hie right to life, liberty; and the pursuit of , happiness.' Who so blind as not to see that. this. may or may not ba a deelaralloi: in favor of ne gro suffrage Can any man doubt what this means when he remembers that Thad deous Stevens, the radioal leeder of the last National House of RopreseetgAives, watt a prominent member of Costiention ? Can any man doubt wh onry C. Johnson, the President of That oonvention, meant and expressed when he declarekt .. .he passa of this two-faced resolution, if he remem bers ers that Mr. Johnson received his e'reilentials from that very convention in Crawford county which declared that "loyalty should be the only test to the right of suffrage r Pennsylvanians, the serious importance of the issue involfed, to a hist regarif fcrf your intelligthsee, d'eMentled a manly docile retied of opinion upon. this subject; but the leaders of the Republican party know your detestation of their degrading doe— trines, and they soeirto obtain by double dealing your support to eentirmente they dare not avow. The problem of tEi' capacity of man, the white man, for self government is being solved in the history of the American Ra— pid:die, and in the face of the recent exhi— bition of the physical and mental qualities of the Caneaslairtwes, - itr view ofthe mighty power of the nation as displayed in the heroism, endurance and indomitable energy of the white soldier of our armies, and in the stupendous sacrifice of the kabbil,and Measure of the people, the Demoorao# of enusylvania unhesitatingly announce their' belief in its auocesiftil result. ~W e will ndk acknowledge the inoapaoity of our own race to govern itself, nor surrender the des— tiny of the country into the ikands of ne— groat, &epee ourselves disd'enteff—giiiir— dianahip, nor give up to them tip political privileges which we inherited fielin our fathers." Whether the hlood of the Anglo— Saxon, the Celt or t.hk Teuton flows in orii veins, there are but few among us who do not feel it tingle with a thrill of just shame when is pronounced to bh only the equal of the negro of Dahoiney or of Congo., c e ll pitiudto4; Whit ma t t', i t 'exists s end ;the statesman who desireqtho.peaoe, , the finiiibterie and the prosperity of both' races etkrinot ignore it. Give the• black man ecoal political righte and you mieltiply the points of contrast between the rvtisr,. and the 'weaker and inferior must place to the strongei, bud' strperia. 7'he law roust recognize his eqeatitY or his in— feriority there iti tth Odari ground. W, believe Intlie supirlOhy of our race. Wei are iinwlllihe to degfidecdtitselvki id , social or politleallY. s',,, ~.t .Igl AZTI{XXISIXIXT. .11 The DinoOcratiorirty hare ever hacksaw oils for the pre' serration olthb mikional orcti . atathie hour dotait;ua' 000ilbstii is VAILON." the expenditure of the pubtferunmey and-'a prompt revision of riutr ettoibrous and inquis itorial system of taxation ; a just regard for an already burthened people demands that a horde of yederal office-holders, ;wises ! sore and tax-collectors be dispensed with, and the machinery of the State Governments Reed, i 4 •IThe retention by the c'erltii•rel Government of berm numbers of offihra of the army,- whilst the private sol dier is discharged and sent to his home, also irbposes additional and unnecessary burdens upon the, people. , Gott : the people expect these fefierms to Comp whilst •ibei • ktipu who defeated tile abuses remain iu•power v. The Democracy of Pennsylvania have no reply to make toidentenoistipei or invective. They refer roith pride to , their record during the past four years. Lilco the hiertorio pea rl') of the . Scriptiires, Whith engaged in the repuic df the. Walls that protected• their Holy City, they have with one hand en gaged in earnest toil in protecting and pre serving the Constitution and laws of their, country, whilst the other grasped the sword that aided in destroying those who violently assailed thent. Amid the blandishmeMs, cf inwer, L tb;_knecutions of of,fi,elaltraw •and the eorrtifit tend reeiries s use of th'er.imb lio money, Ittei have been over sold in GIP expression &their opinions, and have un swervingly maintained theli• 'principles and their integriljr. limin g that, they have once elected tbcii tioket, twine oarrjo the Stale on the; Home vote, and at the last election Polled over 276,00 votes for the candidate. of their choice. •Suub 4 body of men, tried, determined, and organised, a unit in support of tttlt glorious principles, must ever be a pote r i• in the State, and will be feared by Ndcuouiies, and respected by alt • (MIL fItiIIDABL) DHAUF:IIB For Auditor General, Colonel W. W. H. 'Davis, of Rucks county, beads the ticket. Colonel Davis is a seund, i •pisotical man, well qualified for the position; and of ; that stern integrity of character so much needed in this day of official prostitution and de• . i generacy. As a soldier, his recortksta di equal to that. of I tiebest and purest. W e n the war broke out, be raised a cornrow d served for n term of three M'etithe. 41 . ho eiplration / hf that term of service he raised tirregitnent—the 104th Pennsylvania—and as colonel of that regiment went through the war. Ito was in many of the most, se vere battles; was wounded severely at the desperate affair dt Selen flake, before Rich mond, grid logt a Land in the neighborhood ofChni:letitr4, South Carolina. Maimed as he was, Colonel Davis remained in the field until the three years for which his regiment was raised had expired, when, as the war was then virtually at an end, he returned to private life. Such is the record of the Lobes& nptn and breve soldier Who heads the State ticket of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania. The nominee for Surveyor General is Lieut. Col. John P. Linton, of Cambria, county. Like Col. Davis, this aentlean is an honest, intelligent, upright cifizeitell4 it breve soldier, He was chosen Major of the 5.4 th iegitneni, P. V.; In 1861, and ,lieut. Col. of thO lame regiment', in February, 1868. Ile was constantly_ in'ihe field, and , bears upon, his, person numerofis scars as 'thstjw•Onials of his gallantry. Cot. Linton bad the honor of leading the 54th in the battles of Newmarket and Piedmont. And most bravely and gallantly he led his re giment on those disastrous fields. In both these battles he was severely wounded, but .although for a time coapelletelto go home for treatment, he scarcely remained long enough from his post to fully recover—so wedded was ho to his regiment, his duty and the terioue-^werk required of him. This gentleman is well worthy of the nomination he has received, and of the suffrages of chi or his native gtate. As ouOSlandard has Inscribed upon IL the true principles of the Democratic paity / and its chosen bearers are brave,hereitt rail, the Democracy of the State tu'uld,ana will rally to its support With' s. Real and determithetiofi that will prove irresistible. ofTennsylvanla - t - tlmturnes are be fore you, fraug4,with the, greatest conse quences to youiseivos, your country, and your race. Welgththill your action, and"de oide as *Trite frorpeti should. By order oetite Democratic litate Central Combilttee. • WILLIAM A. WALL/relt, September 8, 3864.5. daso VOTING.—The people''who lend mselves to the new Massachusetts dog ma, that the negroes of the South most hove the right of soling as the only means of, . t oont i rollino , the, white people, of the South, have either Darer thought, or` they hare agreed , to these results: 2: That States mama longer to hare the right to make their o r laws. and regulate their torn rolOotystk. 'Olt' the 'party in power at. Mashing ion may force the States in nt:t4torlty to change their constitutions. 8. if the negro,. it the Eioall:Z‘t have the right. to veto, thee ichiese be' bliglble Co . office. khreo Slates tliej..erlii here ths mo far[ty tad will elect a majority of Wanks to, gkei r li k i l idwori w —/hoy will thus sioi. ifs ors is cpw ir rww—w* 1,484. &Waal Ilaws of. CoMisess...."o4, will him* Wit* '-• sger the laws of atarrhtigo—stbd otjoersom. 'par .441 the ?Ora.. Of their courts, im4pieopht , froia altar plates will be sttbleot to thew. ANA Dlr. Clisse bee said. • • lIIE No. 36; ntEmom. -- - 11Y THOVAA Dr•IN • The eperrmv lt on ,the wild-rme hash, And the oriole singe in the pia-oak tree; The est bird call , Apt T beer ffie thrtaoh, bee The erieket'e chirp, and the benefit of the e The thistle-down Wily chide 16(14/late, The streams ran feet witheht a Odin But, whet to that L Ills ? I was 4 freeman born and htbd; But wild te_a freeman here to , ,lay T. • The rights we had are dying or dead, Our freedom is carried away. What care I now lier thq,hindstr bees, Down of thistle, or Minket". trees, Or'streatue ih frolic play T TN" WM a ennlUr ; but what le It now T - The-mere domain bf the men ie power: Woe ration him with an honest brow, I,f this the repnblip's evil hour. Faint and Wreak is the spirit of men ; The voice ia stronger the:llitre or pen ; Law is weak, and Judges cower. The 110108 of our rathrin are turned to Tile Union they gavel WI we could not &lend; The citizen's soul is bought and sold, Trnth haslover. and honor IT friend': Who bonds t 'the rabble may rise in grace, Who eriug s nda fangs may gain a place Whoa will dishonor end! 0, fur the spisit, that marked our sires, jf jt eiguar & w it% to ad, 0, for the height revolutiouury flres„ Whose ligtit sawed tyrants n. knatt's 6ray V, fur the people that used to hi! 0, for a people thnt would be free, As In the olden day ! 3 The Sparrow nits on the will rose husk, ,And the oriels sings in the pin oak biro; • The cat id d calls. and T hear the thrush, Tho cricket's chirp, and lite haat of tha bee, The thistle flown lazily skirts , the plain; Tim ot Ramo run foot without a Amid-- Fur they at least, aro rm.' THIS, 11HAT AND THE OTHER —Judah P. BON min IA In England. —There aro 38 cigar factorioa In Connocti cut. , New Jersey editor committed suicide last week. —On Friday tho Internal Roreano reeeinte were $2,143,147. —Pennsylvania gave the world $44,000,000 of petroleums last 'LL--A lady in Oregon. Mo., has been arrested fur beating her husband to death. —Two women have been chosen toile Mu nicipal Council in Aline, France. . --The decadenee of waterfalls will cause a great falling off of hair.—Bowon. —Professor Agfa.,lt li erepirbere molt kindly received in his tour throuirli Drosii, --L-The Atlantic , Tellegraph - Vornpany have ordered a now cabS. -0 Wednesday lost ten prisoners escape.' from the Bt. Louis prison. _ , —The While ifouso et IYashington is being thoroughly renovated. —A national convention of esrpentere l}to be held at Detroit in September, 1866. —Hospitals fe; deceased cattle are to be established in London. —There is a report Mitrn Rurratt was arrested at Vicksburg on ugat Reth. —Genera) lifade was at 1% ilesingten, N. C., on Septeutbetlth. —:::Gen. Fremont intends to make hie per manent residence in Misscnvi. Fitz Henry Warren has bean ap pointed Minister to Cfautisnala. —lndiana has furnished 193,937 men 014 war, and Wisconsin 98,000. —General Orierann.ia to have a auliordin ate ecannian . .l i 6 Alabama. —There are now over one hundred uncle ployed generals to the service. —There areal) less than nine candidates for Mayor in liashrlpe. Tennessee. —One hondrekand fifty. negroec in Wash ington are daily fed by the Government. —A planing mill and noveral ilwellingi were burned at Worcester, Mass; on Friday ; 84e000 ---A boy fell from lne sixSh !nor of a Cin cinnati warnhouao to the giound La only brol • lie leg. —Over 400 Wiled or the Itueeian Amerieno talwaph hare ban conetruetetl on the Pm coast. --A company of American capitaliata has obtained from ignximitirds the right to actuante t various telcruph lime in idgaloo. Democratic County Convention* througkeut the State manifest an untraual_degree of harmony their proceeding,. —A man in Williamsburg, N. Y.,. rid him self of a scolding wifo by placing ber in au in- Bane asylum. —On August 30 the steamer Reindeer ex- Veiled on the Mississippi, near New Orleans.— Nerr persons were killed and 30 w 'Pea'reday last a t ' rithi on the Erie rail road ran off tk l o traek near NarroWsburg, New York, and killed one man. Tllth Pennsylvania regiment, now at Naahi will leave for Pittsburg .. next Friday, where they will be paid and umitored out of lief vice. r 11" , PM *We St: tribllebaleal:s . hr lbaribatte. Sider ttaltlig railrulal, bar and rbe.et trop, aagtlial at 43,•grAe, employ: lag 2,435 hielde. —The governtuont allowed FOotti to turn to Nashville:on condition that be would keep stilll, Why not give Wits, his estate on the awry toints, 'and so peivtiot isbourolty in'thOpa- Per toerbele rail th e Ami t otic Gbimmi. , eia4.l- Nirticer.. , -As die Steps Suffrage closest:Wl fieliialthui• X. Y. Trams/ lobos for modiste sgitothet task, oisd dedsroi bt Whoa of cootrout,lototo: Woo piqkti6 l 6l4-0, mott4 titteiv'eo4qn'ti t i`igolt± : it than ,firretiamoitt Sbtsig Cillostssi• werroontatives itomiseoplovirlto rotor Wio t. gro4ilisoks ? - —,-Tito itioluotio4 NZ/ening . to Ow loopitmssooto is ilistlitty . ,•? oktic it to really phoOttiot to hot._ to lii tt 4' . ety 'aoy twos the city,' to : th aw ho r ite dolAing diaddof "OM of ors kind or Wears Build t U n g ' Will'AuOild4. l .l , 004 art cleared for mato, • . • If thwye sear wasei time la thaNIFAM:Of Thin country when tlio elef4Tags enlightearti reasnon,•wrid prontit motion • the men who i?%rn their htrad Vylbo gyro t: of the h!ow, shn?hltwyggfir - hUn p t•- litiotifOr she ate/OLIO - and petal/Sit-fon their dearest rights, that iliac le n o te. t' have .ts large and powerful ohm in„thistl country—tweaking througt! ,thus parry c • - gano-- . who claim thAt, bi..eare ttioy have loaned their money to , Idie government, tr. , its nigissity, they ihnitddditerefore heirig titeltiit Warden', 'el lea dipentes. An d shout ibteter 'remain it prfOyeged cress. . r ' Let tvtoolLotteLhtLwitrrifrap 011 of And , "privilegod clasys- "reign supreme. Late English n e ntrowntwry us the cordling inteillgepac that. there et .• now ha that convey one million or crmrpeti 15r . Rg era, end a half a million mote t on the e . oiotranst verge of pitcperinin. Tab elaimes to bathe richest pountra on !he f re of the earth. Tito while there roli in wen.lik Brij okleptior, while thin enormous amount of pitmrsiant exists. Like mutes Proditcti. Otte effects, end Cu our 'Awe be it said, we have n pney '•in tun Country advocating and defending. wir the power of the pen and fires I, line net same measares that hero drought rs:tt 110 desolation Out 411 e cities hippy awl C611,1f1 41 peasantry of •England. We pall, on Ide far- • tor, , men to sroilse from tacit I F ltiaryy, . and ren.ewbv.: that "die - price of liteity is oternal 2122111 l'airiek ., Henry, in one of his matchless orations, referred to the clinking of t!,a , chains . ' that:wre,,so hold the lhatts patriots of his day ; and with the thy:flies eloquence with which he la+ s‘! rarely gifted, exclahne4 I,itort:, or gee k f 7 - A ire 01 1 1 1 " /K-4 " .°144i g i. ‘" (4- the ntheteenth century, in the taro of open day, the chains are being forget —if , not already forged—that are to bind thz - labor, the sweat, and 'the toil of talatl slot body, of this generation, eqd or grovat ions yet to come. They nre.te tie qPri .• ,way in hopeless povertyVheneath 1111 churtot wheels LA a "privibged eliss**,in this coati tri—a` ohm. Czemptell by 60 VON-. of Ankepeau / 4 0114 /Uri //WI Jlenro4e,i 1$(.8 iron: bearing their jnst Lutdr s a( the y taxatiotineeisatry to surf tilt the erulit of —Oil (hoard. the Government. Tad men of work and labor, look et these things—relleet upon_them --amt PC: ..c, ingq. the farmers, trechanici and - ing men of the country have yet the pow. r to ayert impending evils, by, lek tl nit! 1... Calmat(' moans. lint there is no time to be • , . lost. If the mottled power of (he collittry oxen gets Ito heels Aaiun your noel.', en trenched aS is is beltlitil`liegislative enact ments passoi r l by nntnitifbit and itierrenat representatives of the people, then it sit( be too late. Now is the time to act—to act ti . ramptly rind efficien . tly- . —if you snuhl save youraelves and your ohitlren, and your children's children from the direful fate of thettnillion and a half of the reopen of England.—Payton Empire. JUSTIOM THE JEWS. To the Editors of 111 IFFeslisky Post : —Ths close of the ear, while it.hatf prwelifullY bushed the clash of arms, Nut by, no closed the bitter *ld vituperative attacks against a portion of the citizen of the Cr i• ted States. When circumstances in Norio:- her lasfwarranteil me in porlreyiug in tre :. ble colors the glaring injustjge 4 heapel WRS hopes that hOre 1")611 IT ce 011111:1;14: ' t t 1 oceeation. Up to Urn period it rag Only occasion/11l that persons in 1;0 place countenanced what the plainci ictates of common sense rebuked ; but avyr, a at. a time when every true Amerlevii,ibouldeaim to (biter rindjeelings, we fool men in exalted spherec who delight to do us nj net ice. • .; To en inlo •• r t• g o ne i• •; joutnel like yours it cannot be h !egret, that within • the last month three widely-circulating Republican papers-0e Baltimore Amerietrn, the Philo -delphitt 19,gee, and the Chicago Republican-, ' have sounded the keynote of vituperation " and shameful attack against the Jews. But as if, ezdeutire endorsement was wanting, Governor Drownlow mounts/Lis Rosinante , grows chlvilrle, bruWishes his (by no means 'lusty) bases of abuse and elands.~ and malts an essay field of bigoirj ; Lo ping, like Rout Dollars, / to bring _down lasso of York , so/41,03 deeprodants by his foul neatniglitly IOWB. Rut thank God 1 7 , • while the Governor may k4O! how to 1104;., with rebels, he has by no means 'unheAted . all the tantalises-160 delight to tilt a irktie. , Is abuse; crime or railroad accidAtts . epidemic 1 because from every State of the Union o q tidings of fearful Kenai aina9Qtnat, 1 ,1, 1 941 r .and rispine+hm/ 'from Wail street have homed great swintl lore, as a means of nentrellsing the moot and torror---old prejudices - must 40, resavnisbed, and thrown upon the tu l arkt , Is new Nes? Wherein this tostevl 'I do , riot deny that individual dew, Lave been guilty of things that are disgraoeful 7 -niti, !winnow What then! ' I am willing , t(i-eoneede, that a great man?!, Jortare theta in th e ranks Of ileatticeey - and opposed CO the mpaennee of 111:Wo.. , ,iiitnilo l , and disile I . I.l fher - 04. f. 1 016:* who oitu.simsy them this. 6allanable Ameri can. right! I freiptenni,:yial? ~ 1144, 't a b: 4 people, recognizing merit 1 14 A - ,. ( 47,m , ".. tate ground is whisk tholrlat cakiverrape • are to i bare oarratti,e p agek., JO* a*, . diadaittnpon. aky Rl.fempt II toirtdooe not . rommemilo emey itiverieen tyt4einkt Btair -95. before the Is*. , ' ' * - ' 113;4:;it 4n.Y. onaiTli'MAo6r the• . roleotipsh: . 4( aim iTstit . upw. Le ; •tg e !e! ) PIO" in l llß°.. - Ni 4Jew.;tie , * , (WE, loan jai) 1 0 ,, .0$ (Jill) 41,114 11 , 9 Ortitiderla;;ritaie! Mit QIN 4u . ,:titAlq, „ most ue or octave! is it nliqoli §fhAn Trfiiil64X. iksdnikyt, .e...l , ,Thb.o4ll64lo44oAkryliWlVifi betniosa Witiwititi: 1 00 • b 4, beeu,4eiudeik biluilkiailing the OldilAt c - • 11 " - " fl NI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers