pagratii4fitifloun r. ()RAY 1110113 K, EDITOR AND /!ROPTII4TOII BELLETIONTE,,TA. = two's. -49 Elei ieherAld in advance 13,30 i,hnn sot•pdA bo adrifne . e, and $B,OO when pot rad I?firts-the cirptratkni..of the yaw: DEMOCRATIC STATE & 00. TICKET AUDITOR a1a464.4 COLONEL W. -W.' aDAVIS. e SCR VEY 0/V &VER . AL, P. LIEUT. COL- ,t. ON. _ A.SWE : 4I7I , r, PREDERIaK KURTZ, fREARIMAR, J. DVNLOF SHUGERT. COMMISSIONER, JOSIIITA roma. , lIISYRNT 471 . 612 N Y, Y: BMW Amtron, JOHN B. THO,MAS "Dessau* not - Entitled to Vote" Under the above (motion the chair ruin of Che abolition standiattnomittee of this county is cironlatine a large eneularOV4ended fore postte on ettc- Lion day. The intention of this eirdwiar is, no polio. It is signed jo n omen, o lam inae of the riegro-suffrage State central committee, and is a production worthy of the man. Little John was objected to do the dirty work of the negro-suf frage party because he had no reputa tion, either as a lawyer, a statesman, or a citizen, to maintain, and, censequent- V-Ited-notlting-telose -in -reputation _ honor, and could therefore go down into the slime and filth of his party, and rake up and promulgate...ever his ofift4 eial signature, tip) excrescences of tali the little minds for which his party is' Who elm) could have been found' molt for the work as little John? Cer tainly there is not a lawyer in the State, of spy respectable legal attainments, we care not to which party be may be long, who would publish, over his own signature, such 'an argument as little john has published, to prove that men, udie have, by desertion, evaded military service, have loafeited their °rights as citizens, and are; therefore, not entitled wAte. I e cites - An act of ecmgreSti. end Lincoln's proclamation in support of his position, when every school-boy who has read the Constitution of the :Rate of Pennsylvauia, and that of the Coifed States, knows that. neither Con gress nor the Presiduut has rue; J:ght, either by . aet of Congress or by procla put4ott, to prescribe the qualifieatious of electors in the several States, The peo ple dr this State have done that in the thinatitution of the State, in these words: • "In isleclioas by CitkatlB, every while free man of the age et twenty-one years Laving resided be title slue ona year," and In the election diairidli-whiire be offers to vete teu dsys immedltstefy prepooding boob election, and within two yaarisissitl a state or county 14X, which shall have been assessed ut least lou_daye before_,the_Allneutou, algal enjoy the nidets of an elector/. The Colibt l itution of the United States ennininfiVo provisions which, even by implication, give the power to Congress or the President. to ,declare who than or \The shall not Le au elector of the sev eral States. This is a l question exclu sively for the States, and, the people of this Stater, having exercised this right which belongs to them, and having pre scribed who shall be in 'elector in the C,onstitution, the fundamental law, there nhottlit be-no etielp ignorant'as.-not to know that the law of Congress and the proclamatibn of the President declaring that deseiters tiltsll not vote, are uncon stitutional. The law of Coiagress and• the procla tnation to sa/piekji4leJolin refers in hi's little argnmelnt, was passOd and issued for the purpose of inducing deserters to report themselves, who had failed to report, or who -had deskrted 'frier to the passage of the law itifelf Suppose, then, that there was nothing in the State OonstitMon to'prbhibit Congrese, lioin t acting in the Toremises, and conce ding, for the sake of the argument, that the Constitution of the United States gives the power to Congress to legislate _upon. this s ollpet, whiat' *Arms not, would not the law be unconstitutional in another rekpect? The Constitution of the I.itiited State's provides in section 9 o`that no bill of attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed." This . . law is both a bill of . attainder and o an ex post -facto *fp kotitool4 it takes away one of ,the unalienable rights, of the citizen, and wouldlutliet upon him tv penalty for an aerial which was not a penalty when tke effects? was committed. It is, there fslo, a iiolitiou of both the Constitution 4.043 ,United Statesand the Constitu— tiosof.the- Stilts of Pennsylvania. ` , rho Legislature of this State at its but Bowies Wok before it A bill of tho t una character ,en. 4. ig Almost the tame introZucted - by a republican 1 10 48bser'itftt Negley, of Butler county; ' , .thetillt•wes, brought up is the House Oir laphisy, March 17th, 1885, upon Yitellttrea, the chairmen of the * littleer - elf Getters} Judicierp, the qepubliesiti lawyer of the Howe ici'vots tor s bill obornoter,li'oepni lei bow I can 4 0 . ”in city ilif with oI °Mee I have tu'itirrort the Cenetitution, * 4 Ditó Vol. 40, numb as I would like to punish these deep. tere disfranohising them t [ go not see how we con override the emphnito provie• ion of the Constitution- I believe flint our ,safety, is in adhering, to constitutional Mr. 'Brown is a lagyer who bao a:rep utation to Rustain, and he decides the law to be unconstitutional. - A. K. McChili', another Kepubßean leader in the House, opposed the bill as folloem : "I bad et; knowledge of this bill until it aim presented here this morning; rtly at. tention•hns peter been called to it; but I must say that,-notwitlistanding the earnest ness, with• which it,ls presitid by some of my Mende on this side of the House, it is a bill to which I 6annot give my esaction, and the passage of which I muscremist. If it is possible to make n bill clearly and unqualifiedly unconstitutional, this sill is so. It is indirect violation of the langtmgo an*the entire spirit of the Constitution. .Lih the majority of•tbns Ileum; to pence before putting upon the statute a law whi'ob the courts of this Stale, I care not how construed, must set aside, as an infraction of the organic law or the Commonwealth. Tho Constitution of the Slate defines the qualification of art elector. This bill pro- The bill wee defeated by nearly a unan imous vote. Here; then, is the opinion of two Re, pUblioan leaders in the Ronne of Repre ftentittiyes, who distinctly say that such a law is utmonstitutional., Nobody but little john comma would say otherwise. Aafer -wive Are _tioncepod..intlitiottli.Y.. we care nothing about Mr. Cessna or his circulars, for we ate satisfied that in this county more than one half of the deserters .are Republicans, and that if tile election boards should reject the votes of such we would be the cainers by it; but we are in favor of fair play and oppbsed to disfranchising any man whbm the Constitution of our State roc oknizes as, an elector, be ho Republican or Democrat. And we have this further to say, that if any election board refuses any votes upon the strength of the Cessna circular, on this ground, if such persons as are refused will come,here, we will see that such 44141 . 410 4 . 1 -hoards aretluly prosecuted and made to pay the full penalty of the law. --)--Deznocrats, remember next Tues day, and be out in all your strength. Down 'With NEWIO EQUALITY, for that is the issue. AN IMPORTANT DOCUMENT The Right of Suffrage. • We publish below a circular from the District Attorney of Columbia county, which we hope will receive the careful consideration of every elation officer and citizen in this county. Although not. addressed to therm it is just as ap plicable hero as in the district where it is circulated. We knownhat the at tempt will be made to prevent those persons who left their homes on account of the draft, from exercising the cicc. Lion franobiso, and it is for the benefit of the men who would thus deny filth neighbor the right of suffrage that we find place for the following. By it they can ece the penalties to be ineurcd, and they can rest assured.,that in Centre as in Columbia county, they will be en forced to the utmost extent of the law. To the Qfficers of Election and Cinzena of Co lumbia county : As District Attorney of this county, charged a's such with the duty of prosecu ting in Ds courts offenders against tire laws of the Commonwealth, I think it timely and Four els call your attention to a question con4rcring the right of voting at the ap proaching election ; to the end that the laws may be kept and the legal rights of electors maintained. . - The quatifion ' ilone of an elector (beside naturalization in case if foreign birth) arc few ip number, , and are plainly ee4 ferth in 'the Constitution of the State; and eo long Us that Constitution remains unchabged no power whatever can addloor subtract from them, They are recited in the gentral election laws, and these laws are thus nestle to present the only questions whioh Igo 1111-1041 as electozel_qualifloations of pebpfe. ' It has been alleged recently that non reporting persons under the United States drafts, and others who left their districts to avoid being drafted, are not entitled.to vote at State elections, dad that boards of elec tion should reject their t. volei. But electiort boards hive no right to reject the votes ,of such personsomd no power try or deter m% the . question whether they are in fault or slit under United fltates laws. The absurdity of stopping elections to try draft questions, As manifest at first blush ; and there is no law conferring each power on election officers, or vegetating its exerqlse. On the contrary, Were is most express law, , with penalties, 10 prevent any such depar turelfrom offioial'duty by them. By the iO2B section of the General Elea din/ Lent of 2d July, 1889, jt le provided, that "If ony inspector or Jude' of sir eleotlotr sholl,linopingly reject the Vote of any quid. stied alkitens, .* e * each of lips per sons so °trending shall, on convietion, bs pundelself In the manner prescribed In 1117tb section of- this set, (1. c by a ..e of not: leis tido sBollo* more than 'WO.) By the 07th section of the same law, it is prodded, that— rMitituo tit BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, _1866. =-._:-- _ "beery person qualified as ofaresaid, and who shall make dde proof (if required) of hi. , sitlonce and payment of fames as afore said, shall be admitted totote. in the township ward ortilstrict i in I, high he all 'reside.,' Acd by the Ilth,section of the santow; II an Inspector's ciellys , prescribed, wit' I is 'in part asfollows ; ;'*. * * * and a will !tot raid*a any. ticket or vote from a person 'other Than ' such'its Ishii] firmly believe to he, according tp the. provisions of the Constitution dnd laws, of this Commvi wealth, entitled 'ld o vole at such election, Without requiring such evidenoe ofthe right . ' to vote he is directed. by law.;,, nor nit/ 1 vexatiously delay or refuse to receive any vote from, any person who I shall believe to be enti tled fv vote as aforesaid," jr. It thus appears, thnt the foTe "of a person qualified under the State Constitution and lairs must he received, that its is an indictable offense, and that the Inspectors are expressly sworn not to reject such vote, nor even to vexatiously delay the idler in giving There is also smolt., provision of law 10 protect the voter from atmoyance, int imitle- UAL.. Qt _thinnvitiroln AinlATOP__llllllie.3ltE in I.e exercaae o la nut yo - Ily mention 110 of the Election Law above mentioned, it is provided; that— "If any person * * • shall use or prac tice any intimidation, threats, force or violence, with design to influence unduly or overawe any elector, or to prevent hint from voting, or to rewersin the freedom of choice, such person, on conttction. shall he fined jnAßisum not iiceeding SUR), and be imprisoned for anT time not lees than one nor more than twelve months." By this section a severe punishment can be inflicted on any person veliti!attempta.lo deter an elegtor from voting by threatening him with a prosecution or arrest, or using any other intimidation or any force with such object. The pretense that Congress has prohibi ted nou-reporting in& from Toting at State elections is not true in point of fact, and ouch prohibition could have no-effeet . if it mate enacted. Congress cannot determine who shall or shall not vote at a State eleo tion, simply because the question is wholly outside of its jutisdietion and berotid its powers. It has no .power in oonneotion with, or relating to Stiii;en - Xtrii - gifid , flit zonehip, exisePt the lower conferred upon it by the States to pass uniform laws of natu , natation for petitions born abroad. Tacit State fixes exclusively and conclusively, by its own Constitution, the qualifications of suffrage at elections within Its borders - 1 have thus called the atteutimof elec• lion officers and citizens to this subinct, as introductory; to the notice which I now give, that for any violations of the laws scout% the full and c9replete exercise of the right of suffrage tcpthe electors of this county, prosecutionirwill be promptly insti tuted and due punishment inflicted. Neither the rejection of legal votes liar intimidation of voters will be petnitted to go unpunish ed.i The laws are in force in Columbia county, and they iii 11 be executed. If. if. LITTLE, D'striet AttornerbrColtimbia county. Bloomsburg. September 27, 1865. General Hartranft- I The Republican Can• didate for Additor General. -4 - - With Major Geneal Ifartrauft, the iße publican candidate r Auditor General, we have - hearer. intima e personal terms for sixteen years pair:- . l.llnual (qsn his boyhood —and against his p rsonai olittrerletwitr his military record, we ace not one word to say. There is oneotri of Lig, however, that we cannot reconcile with the?acts of his .past life—and that is, fis 'isuperinteuchng the hanging of a wont —Mrs. Sorrell. Ills officiation in the capecity of chief hangman, a business which, dotterel S/1(712111/I very ap propriately says, b lungs to sheriffs and not . to soldiers, might n tba considered a wrong, were it not for the , ct that le thityase be publicly•decfared, 'ever his own signature, that he beherel (he tietnn innocent. flow a man with his high sense of duty and exalted rack in the army could so degrade himself as to assist in hanging ailioman for a crime of which he says he believed her innocent, we cannot imagine. Had this proposition been presented to him before Le beeame con taminated with the influeneea of the shoddy -partit 4nd its doctrine of negro equality, we are sure he would bare resented It with in drigni4grand would hireitudgMni s a_thausua commissions, did ho possess chain, rather than do what he believed to be wrong. But sush is thO result of his political affiliations, and we leave him to scab matters with his owp conscieno i e. Reader, is is man who will hang a womart, who lie Mitred to be innocent, a fit person.to7recetve your votes for a high . and responsible civil position? We,ask the question, from you must come the 'answer. —Restos Sentinel. .:1: _ Be Vigilant Democrats! Friends of the white race and opponents—of negro equallly, Nft VI GILANT I Do nor hit any one persuide you'to out off nay name from our ticket.. It is oomposett of good mid true men, who are all opposed to NEORQ.EQDALITY• UN VIGILANT, and see that no mai itideeeived. --The New Y_ork.6i t otate of a recent. date laid down toe Whole Nepublican plat form in the fplitiving signitioN 44 leaten° 0 - A r.Wb a colored people of the south • fareltised there will to eight knn 'Mired khotteande yawl - given for the Repub liken Union tioket,ne not ono bleak in a "hundred gould be coaretlitito vetiog the "Copperblea tioket."—Es. ~.a • RIGUTIS .6.ND FILIEXIRAL VirION." Debt; Debt Debt is death, living death, whereby a. man sells his body, if not his soul, to' his. creators. Debt is a ,mortgage on one's arm,:one's head; one's hands, one's feet, one's muscles, one's body,'one's life to the 'mortgages. Debt, thus, is slavery and a bufee, not only upon one's self, but 'if a national debt, upon one's posterity. A na tional' debt mortgages a hitherto free people to capital, masters and owners of a notion, Welre Nitwit:lten and bond women and children, And our children's children come'bond men and bond women. , Ercry potind of bread we eat, every pound ,of beef on bur , table,•overy garment upon olir bodien, everything two tough, taste or handle, nre bonded to ply the pr tercet on thin debt to capital. 'We walk for life 16 pay interoat to capital. These statements, are net overdrawn, or fanciful. They commend themselves to the understanding of every one of experience. ]low extremely sad nice be the reflection of the people of ti, Unitegtates, that the national indebtedness as now ascertained, is estimated ah $3,000,000,000, and that will be at least double that sum. And that the expenditures of the Government now exceed by far the receipts, That instead of lessoning the indebtedness, it Is accumu lating annually. That they, and thla7 children's children, for unborn•gentrations, while the govern ment exists, must undergo title living .lent tr.' -And -how eon-soling it- meal be to them to reflect thatthe d6minant party, the party of "retrenchment and reform," the party styling itself "Republican, Union," &0., is claiming that this "living death" is a natietal blued - um- end- -is- endeavoring. and will, if it have the power, to fasten it upon the people as a stroke of policy. If the vagaries of this dominant' party have thrown upon sic this “diving death," and we and our, posterity are doomed thus and we and our posterity ate doomed thu. to suffer, It eliould be borne by all equally, and not inflicted on the milliults while the thousands_ are favored and exempt. Does, it occur to the people that those who have been fortunate with this world's geode, and are' able to take of this national indebted ness—goveeninent. Dondssaltr' e enticely empt for the amount, from na local lunation? And further, does It occur to the people, that these bond holders are favored in the amount and manner of pay ment of interest paid them by the Govern ment on their investment T And further does it occur to the people that these bond holders are further favored with' their in vestment! They are allowed to make it the basis for baol.ing institutions driving out of existence all State end other insti tutions of this,charaeter, flooding the coun try with national orrrency, and upon which they are enabled to make large gains and profits. Does it occur to the people that this policy is driving from circulation the rec ognized money of the world, and giving us an inflated, unhealthy, unsteady currency, that is doomed like all of Its kind to failure, carrying down with it business and pros pect and causing want and ruin throughout the 'country I' Does it 0000 r to thopeoplo that this policy. with Its ingenions devices, is arraying in compact organivalism,. the capital of the country, in the hands of the few, to grind clown and oppress labor, and make slaves of the toiling mi)lions ? poet; it occur to the people that cnpitalli I torilartittening its insidious coils upon ; and will itionopiiiiie-Ains- products, the bone, and sinew of the country, direct its.etforts, swallow up its rewards, rule with on iron hand, sport in granducr amid laugh, with seem Eh the stupidity and squalid misery of its victims ? , Do We, think rightly and seriously ? And if we do, Flo we act accordingly ? Does it occur to the people that they have the pnw 7 erof control, and if by any want of action or understanding, they permit themselves to be bound hand and foot, body and soul now and forever, - that they alone are re sionsible? Now is the time to think, now is the time to act, and in their might and with all their pof i or, let the •ople rise, and 'with a united effort brand with eternakinfarny Ibis policy that favors the few end oppresses the many; this policy of the Vnion party, so called, that does violence to th at reat prinulphLotl government; "Itto greatest' OA to The greatosc i ritter.--..feneea Advertiser. —Tee Suliven county Republietiff-tono vention resolved that--c" The * Republican party was organised to secure and perpet uate the prineiples laid down in the Deoli ration of indeptralence,‘ and that its Mork is not done until equal politicalpriailowa ar, eztotuled to ALL Met+ There's negro suff rage in all its length and breadth. The same Convention mso:ved that the "resolu tions of the Union State Convention meet and deserve our hearty approbation." They a#b all in the same boat—heavily freighted with , Pteaident's signature has Ilea engraved, and over thy ee hundred imrdorie , are reported te.have been atanyi4f with it at the Whitt, Hove on Vf,ednee "Wove to emend" fity;eti'clting a liovernteent atipmlietrrpecho Ihoulatir blades 5t recipient of et!ullyp clemently. t re epeetfully .oall 'd dr vi Ore. ble fellow citizen, the olislrontit Howie Committee of *WI - aid ,Idesing, to this z eau for incletsing the 'internal ritiuoing the iidbifc deb4..-L:llA' wr~ha~Y'f~lJn ~- 4..... The Abolition' Legislature of 1864. In our last. we noticed the , eitraordinary liberality of the la . st Legislature In helping themselves to an additional pay of $BOO, for fifty one working days, or about eietren hundred dollars for fifty one Working days, while they refused to allowjtirorti two dot• rani per day. " We have Aitken another peep into the ap propriation bill of lag session, and fihd that they have been Inviah of the people's money, to others as well as theuiselves: In 1864, Mader Vetnoorittie Tula, we • fnd, ihti Rim judges of the Supreme' • Court,' flot fifteen thousand two tiondrzd dollars far theiji!ssalari. It 1860, An Abolition Loplature inetwaved their pay to 711EN'TY3IIREE THOUSAND DOLLARS, being an increase ovel t pemo• Grath: rule of SEVEN THOUSANS 4 6/611T HUNDRED DOLLARS. In good old Democratic times, the law judges of the several judicial districts of this State each reueived one ihousand sok hun dred dollars, and fifteen cents per milt, ,circulari for (raveling. In 180 an Aboli tion Legislature raised their pay to THREE THOUSAND DOLLARS and mileage, being se-of-one—fienel-joses-lussdrszt - . /aril to each Judge. By reference to the ii . p.proprlatlon bill of 1854, It appears that the law judges of AlleghenNcounty received, in the aggregate $4,400. The Abolition Legislature of 1806 voted them nineteevrehousand five hundred dollars, Difference in the expenses of the law judges of Allegheny county, in favor of Dflinoaralo-rose 7 ,944ma-thousand-oate -busarsd dollars. hi 1854 the appropriation for all the law judges ontside.of Philadolphia and Alleghe ny couuti es, was forty tl:Pee thousand dollars. In 1865, under Abolition rule it is eighty six thousand dollars. Differentia in - fluor of Domoorat to management and against. Aboli tion mismanagement forty (drat thousand dollars, or (mainly one half lees. To 1854 the appropriation for the oslaties of the Associate Judges of the several coon -Iles of liiis,Otibmonwealth, was $16,500. In 1861, under Abolition rasilagernent, $60,000 I Difference is furor of Democratic timer ,88,500 I Now every body kpowe tbat a Preadult • • • . 11l after in Dem- ooratic times as well as'Abolit ion times, ant always commanded men of ability and in tegrity. We lciok in rain to Abolition times fur any increase of legal ability, integrity or business capacity. The amuse Is 'simply a lavi!lt waste of the people's money. First they are liberal to theutselvee—then to the judiciary and every other department. Voters.l Tax Payers! With all deference we would ask, whether this Abolition party has not been long enough tried, and found wanting ? Voters, tax payers, is it not high time that piut awake to your true in terests, and displace your unfaithful, prodi gal servants, and return to Democratic principles and Democratic men as your agents. Surely the response will be, aye Then vote the whole Democraio ttokei, on Tuesday the 10th of October.—Greensbue s e Argun. MILITARY IbTNYFICANNCE. IN New int/kit,' —A Govemon. PITO A BAOILBONIL—The printing of the legislative decumente of New Jersey, brings to light a oorrespondence which refisols great credit on the intrepidity And firmness of Governor l i warrea. We give a part of this cottespondenceasewhere. It appears that, lasCauttlYell, Becretarjr`Brds- TON, having fortified himself with the sup eervient opinion of his man Friday, HOLT of the "Bureau of Military Justice," demand ed of Governor PAILKNIt the surrender, for military trial, of a person tinder indictment by a grand jury of ,New Jersey, for the crime of murder.. Stanton supported his 4 aoffililld by the example of the governors of other States (all Republican, of course,) who had yielded obedience to similar maw dates. Guverhor Parker told him, in re spectful hut firm ofildial lengukget, that he should do nothing of the kind; that the prisoner was in the legal custody of the sheriff, subject to the nation of the court, and that all concerned . must await and abide that. action. With Pitch governors as Mr. Parker in all the States, a summary end would be put to'militaryinterterenee with the regular couree . of justice in the State tribunals.—Ex. COMPLEX Itstsnowauti..--;si correspond ent of Liarpor's Nonliglii la involved is do mestic perplexities. lie writes: “ I got acquainted with a young widow, who lived with her step-diughter harths same house. if married' the widow!• m)' father, shortly atter, tell in -love with the step-daughter of ry wife and married her. My witd became the daughter-in-law and alas the mother-in-law of my own fagot.. My wife's siap.daughter is my etels.lnithet, and I am the step-father of my mother-in i law. My step-mother, who is the !step daughter of my wife, has a boy ; be is nat urally my step-brother, lii. Iscomme ins is the eon of my, ,wife's step-daughter, sq is my wife the panda:wp•p of the little boy, And I ern thergranasisiher slimy !IclsitrAltli" or. My wife 'has also a boy ; my slop rpothar ia stonseuttontly, the atep,.eisit , Of 024 , i?st„r, and, is, also hie . gandalother, jai ;muse he is the ohlia'cither ' step-sari (said nitather itUte brother:46'4a* pt my eiih, I fteeieiterlii hie got"his 41.01 7 410# Air a li e 4fre", 'Y. am the hidthee a r my civil dui . 'co' ia.llse ',ear '• r' my stip,iiiotiiir Vt• iiiii - 'tiottler l -pi:liir 6f:69:tithe', tiii:ioriresig • Oar 44 bet liifisozWini , ioiliiiiii griediiia* 10 411114 4 6, ha I alh 16 oW'r? Atiittilithift. ~!, -.t- -r---y No. 38: Tiesahl vai rli on th4i, War IMMI Reverend .Ifouryg Ward Heather opened the political eampalgn in the Staithur New. York, on last Sunday niglat,ly making* stump spenoh.trom his pulpit in, Plymouth ,Qhuroh rn favorAf the ;Republican o r di, dates. A good part of kis harangue wM devoted to the leading theory of. hie, 1,14. cal friends—negro suffrage. file elaimMl suffrage as a - right of the negro, although he might ask it even on other pipets.- was tor universal aldriage; apaltledd gi vote to every titan - that - lands' itt !Moroi: At the same time be believed that lite four millions Qf Aftleabs ' here could bo better fruited with the ballot than the, Irishmen and .foreigners that. swarth here from the old countries. Ile believed, too, that iu withholding the ballot from women we wore-not acting up lLe spirit of American free Instituti6no. She should havp every oivil right that helongs to the man. St)ooktng of negro sttffrege, spin, Mr. Beeeher bold : •• God abdicates, and is fele° to LW Writ:Antos; if there is peide before you nettle that _quention of right." He of the strong to protect the weak. One of three things must happen to the freedmeh —their masters must take care of them, or we mupt take care of them, or they must take care of thetnselvesr— The voice of the people, speaking as the vela", of OA, has decided Chat their old • masters shall take dare efAkein_nstienger • Ana 10 ia-coar-41- to give them all the rights of citiaeaship, that they may be able to take oar° of tiltZp• selves. The utterandes 4pe4Ar, ttqtl o the fanatical religious boditti of the Kortit, are the _watchwords of the mkt ;seder. of the Republitoan party. Rey only scent to be a little in advance of the mein body of that organization, beeposo the} , speak out don) boldly ; It is only a few days' since the New — York State Congregatienal AN:iodation adopted, among other rosoluticma,bne which declaims that all distinction of Molar race fa the epportlonuient of civil prielleges and political franchises should bo twopt. and that- the negro ought to be fully recog nized as the equal of the white man, both in his . right to vole and In regard to kit testimony before Ha Ctittrtal tro r resantionClome of than deal- Me. dedly more ohnsive in tone than illeatrre, have been abipted by tioesnal Couterenoes of the Methodist Church, and by other re ligious bodies. The Yankee perchers and their imitators are again on the war myth. If the white men of Pennsylvania would save themselvee from being degraded to a level with the negro, they must put tbeir 'feet down firmly at once. If the Republi can party triumphs in the coulee; election in this State, the triumph will be hailed as an endorsement of the doctrine of negro suffrage, for the very good reason that it Is covertly endorsed by the platform. Let every white man who has any pride of race about him , remember this when be goes to the polls to deposit-hie - vote...-Lancturtrr-Ar id/igniter, 26th ult. Etrescrito rein rixo Po, eroy," of the a Croce Democrat, .bas thel follo*lng Rene OM/corning a oouPle of his Abolition contemporaries. Ile - sari I, "The peels Ithd typo eti which the Fowdef Lao CimunowtoeciftA, a Republidan paper, is prisited, wax stolen from sprinting aloe at Columbia, Tennessee, by its present imer f the editor or the CiaamormocaltA. There Is e prospect of the "loyal", oonesostioniets coming to grief over it. A Republica printing °Ewe in Ibis oily bee lately receiv ed a lot of second-band type woo down putt/ when the owner was away. We ad mire a lighting rebel morelhan , a theiring patriot, and are nal afraid to say so. If Iliese, Southern printing office stealers could have stolen a few brains at the same lime t k would have; 7 d n better off 110111 re war is over. 0 f loyatt.t, irbat ableas Are You Ready? Lot each voter *be oposed NEOTtO, , . EQUALIV ads himself Oils question. atilt at once eep tb it that. he le properly qualified to vote in October. Cit(sena ! '41011,1, undai eatSinalkilie importance of this eianteal, for if yartranft and the abolition ticket, are . Wage loiiaide - fig - (UMW Whin - I et Inge , and making the NEOEO•yodi SO CIAL and POLITICAL EQUAL. OrivOize f York 11 VDU • Our friends autet remember thee therein no victory without a fight. .We Munt be at every dayAustween Ale and adnotiun day. het. not one rooment,be If Grew( Deephomat in the coutt_t,x fitridltte duty, vio toryfit oeriain. 0 11 f.PftforlAtuPi al. ie t vi fi no atone unturned , M w meet be miniUy diligent. Lekna . r , z . .ttiroperatie "voter be it Rollie early. ' • •,Thic 94040 ptansalf, osi Pt I R4TI I delmrerellbei i } ~ o jr of 7rfa. dent Johnsiitt. - *Atari tte l 'iteittititteß *ere W.1) 1 64110 *deo RIM ntrditilt &am i ne/RI% idiaittnk : tibeidirrali ifetddeti f itrthn 'ldeal& Nallt b aba k iidinitieidiaratittairplik 144 4011.6 Am losauditer4t csatittslibiollf hen pikity:".• f,,r1; ; :416, ital • mrt n , ;l 7 r;.grL I Pg . t • 120440**1 17 N. O 11- ; WOW Amu Ste I _I rem my elop,y °flour late veir pouted spi v eoria the Sonata of the ifnlitat Stadia. - Itetitatiolos hisUineation," -anima! fibbidlift Om- omen blow by otilletiodlog 'the olalm to asesiiiiik wilt witilAriiiilMOTasdatettusbliblea Lb% oppresoloh. • Tivilerener minters Smelt, being li-elekti Hon, willseat•Assee, .ef, f#l4o:. if Oggti r pledged. The letter le , stuteher mama• only for revAltlllem,. skeet vphieli Mit *c 101 b *retie soutroyersy. Its dans tiaisel,—n4W ;Obesely Teti , Ober Ouniernissee •i' het. from certain inerteers, giTimi2 l •Pc earrees t y hersyib i lels i peaclatlvf nee the ap -proaehilig ' ideation', boirfor 'Cowed/ ed. • the State Legislature, It 41.101 11 1 0 tait ,advantage also by mizinf iL rtJa question r ylusther, flist,,Comlitetlee of ibe United States wee formal. by Phi plople lee by the States, now ender is, Utsoratie 4el telssion by animated parilasne. IC id' .Lpatate when dieiuted thleor/seeett be deei _dad by undlepeted rests. < Aid) bon the lsputed fact Is:that theConstltution mas tuatke by:ihe pecip4e, but ae embodied into the eereral Matti itißeiret• Plitinfto It, Knit therefore-made by ti4tetts le their highest autboritatixe_capacity: _ They might, by the staple ' Luther?" end by' the same Procesuhrame l eenverted the confederacy Into • more league er ;rosin or vont iettatlilatiLly4ll44.P.r,,Rbrid ged pow are, or have arlyodiail tiss 6 payTe or their reepectr re:Sritel infti ode fteooll,VathAtitit' sovereignty ; or es they del, by a •mlueel., form, make them oneigcoplc, natiept, or /or. creignty Pim oputikiplOgegr ire).* .!!!" forotbers. The Con,' ituireiv•itr^ i! KALI& Stet cc - robabliaitakt_Luctr*OLAl._ y it )11;41 3 711k0 firerit Stales who were the parties to it—it re• mains only to itiribllit : ~thelikinslttoliiieta Is; and here it epealtettit itselL It eryjoe,. nixes a. government tate 'the .usttal• Jggialq tiva, executive, and judiaial depertmerile, invests it wrii, , oppelfled p,ogers, lesvicg . others to the parties to * lht;Conatitutlocri A makes the Government to Operate direetlY on the people,,plaies at its ooMmand the, needful physical Mani of exsonling its powers, and, butilly, prooWtoa Its' eettr"?"- soy, and That of the lawstnailo in gitionnos of it, over the constitutioti and lawiet the States, the 'potters of. the Government befits exorcised as in dtharitleettve anti hie governments, under .the control tif its oonstituents--the people and Legislatures of the States—end tuAli eft to the titan. titulary rights of Ma people lb 'Etrriltbei ; '— Such is the Constitution of the United.. Stales do fore and 4ijoeto, and the fame, whatever It ho,,Oat may be given to aan make it nothing moos nor less thatitihr tit actually is, or acaoHing or tativimmelaabt •talth your yfeeetit - krivaritrase, Muni that ark now to you. . • I MTh groat tritoodt and Niordial iskit*Oas. MADISON.. During the last four years the cloddy press and patriots (I) have prated so perm sistently and loudly &nit vluiatherteen , ..loyalty," which they defined u eousliting of an unqualified nrpotit of tlia tioneadoe cii lion, that it is untelehat Pufiliftg tp •op. what language like the regoVAOl5 =Una, whiah is no mare non /au than one of the resolutions of thq Lniartea runty negro, suffrage ouvention win. , , .121tOvedi. .I,ohniai. President of tht -i • it — iir ilWa,pr'initiai aisd hearty vappori so heir as as edhasemveir lb. pnnehties under which ha wal *dated, ag4, wttett he advonated and _pieshiliratolcis the Poor of tinfrilliettliesrlisitiei*P — t: - - • The fbolition . party • hare -et 'been 4 - diftlfon AWL their •protesslone love for the irti ifarmi t'eea s legiesessessr ahem against, Wildcat's primalerstie peer have tier *aura their duped, ?lots :rotor flow slum their; • heed, *soli .Thethilither_eter tats vaprnembuip•-alt.`otAlND Lion petty' IS Peinsittailsii in * sietroli few days eines et leuteeketerl is* P evehiesev pasty &pouts epos Ike rebel V wits WOOLDof the (harm fora wit& "r WOOLD ItthrDEft TIM areas, estuseit or TOW DiSOCIRACI maturanms." The abolitionists are oppose& to the Union ! • Mr. liltropmeleo ett e ankt 4bezose-- ; fling of the resolotion quoted &bore i 4 that I Andres Johnson 341.1 keep the i sist.hertr ,4. States opt of titi d sioa, fa' 2 4 1 kial*OttozilitY, retsoring yelon . (1: acloOlstratiort. ' o,tlssmM Pt Zero. are , ' ,4,o PPerheads' Pl >y Qteirb4rb iisfi xlitlon of t'to Woul, Ireot;yißt s Seth" of theta lell . os neon whit efetjrigietie'iMlS thek ro/thitsiol! imptAanoa of * Fait Mme, . I .......Z• 1 4k.! . a ti -I"' ,- . • We Nkuld pifekra,ti JlRprmis piste mind or .4% , ,;10 'ilifter piste , eo acknowjodscl st.l fr admitte4 `t act' dot t that 4s sigdod : co ,4 ! dre a #teri , ow triulieirfar the Derioiracie a t ig,iithieeleoby• u tt e p s oUiv,te ow:l4;ttiotes,''tisi Mir frmni,' kneelr oioNretriti/il ft . , olo/Vitif lint* lo ert lb eat* liiiNAPiii,ta Wilfafe 'that , m061044' piphil "'or ' irtiailiffite. &- rives itt t*, 4; Hal '6 4 ,ciriii I :4l