Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 17, 1866, Image 1

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    • six Ado,
slayurs ago thestars sad etrlpes
Were Bootleg proud 'and hee;
Without enemy In the land,
Or nail at the sea.
The Constitution era. our golds,
; It hang *Tr; the Wall;
; LIMB, liberty and pieties then
Were free to one and all.
Bill Pam ego, oar BMW was free
From draft andvar's slams ;
And in the plan* of national debts,
We eherhamd national charms.
Then the Union blenings same to is
In pines of (foto, dens,"
And Courses sent oat garden need,
In place or gidaHllo.l
SU years ago, we had no use ,
For "Provo Guards" and pipobe.
With big brass sagles'n their caps,
Parading through our townr,
A pollce sergeant with bin squad
Of half a doter men,
Won quite enough, by day or night
To quail a riot then.
Sir 7eere ego, the Pres& was free,
And men could speak their mind
Nor had (ho Corp..
'Been kicked clear out behind,
We hd ho saucy heroes then,
To erowd.in Senate Halls;
Nor did we ever read about
Amalgamation balls.
Fix years ago, a wench would wed
With '•Pomp" or "Bomb,'" freely,
But now she wants ►' Stevens." or
A "Sumacs." or a "(freely "
I , ,er o'er the•spirit of their dream •
Ma merle a weal ware,
The negro Is the master now,
The white man is the elate.
Sin yoarti ago, the nunny South
llad not been made • waste;
Nor bad the gag of Liberty
Beeetorn in angry halite. •
But Union, junten.and harmony,
Found refuge in 017 land ;
And the wane, fond ties of fellowship
United us a band.
Six years ago, a note on bank .
Wu Jost as good n gold
Nor did we hare to rut a stamp
On ererything we sold.
Eat now 'tie stamps on all we get,
Or els e, or sell, or buy ; •
They tax ui.n . ow because we live,
And stamtros when sus* y
Six years ago, the Democrats
iVere masters in the House,
And every person, North and South,
Was 111.1101 PA a mouse.
But now the Abolition crew
Ilaio undertook the job,
The negro is thole "hobby home,"
Their object Is to rob.
THE DEMOCRACY AND THE SOL
DIERS' VOTING AMENDNENT-FACTS
FROM THE RECORD.
In the Senate, March 81, 1864, the "Act
to regulate elections by soldiers in solual
service" was brought up and the first sec
tion passed. The second was as Allows:
Sac. 2, A poll shall be opened in each
company, composed in whole or in part of
Pennsylvania soldiers, at the quarters of
the Captain or other officer thereof, and all
electors belonging to such company who
shall be within one mile of such quarters
on the day oT election, and not presented by
order. of their commanders, Or proximity of
the enemy' from returning totheir compa
ny quarters, shall rote at such polld and at
no other place , (ofticOrs other bait thou
of a company, and t#her voters detached
and absent from their ioampaniet, may vote
at such other polls asinny be most conveni
ent for thfinl( and when there shall be ten
or more Lamers at meak pike°, who Abell be
unsettle to dttnod spy company poll as afore
said, the electors present may open a poll
at such place as they may select, and com
fy iu the poll book
Mr, Boardslee "trot ed to strike out rite
words norders of their airmittanclers or," so
that partisan officer. might not be able to
deprive soldiers of their votes. The a mond-
Meta ICY. rcicard ; yeas /6—ALL DIIIIIIIOSATS,
nays 16— ALL '•ltsruat.toAss," as follows;
Vans—Nlasura. Beardsloe, Bunker, Cly
mer. Donovan, Glair, 110 1 , k , m.. i tinl.Y•"."
bat ion,Latta,Mliherry,lionloto
linolh, Stork, Stein and Waliane.-16.
NAYS—Mesar. Chainposys,Connell,Dun
lap, Nlcming, Graham, Hoge, Householder,
Johnson. Lowry, Wrandless, Nichols, St.
Clair, Twill,ll, It ilson. Worthington and
Penuy,,Speaker--lb [Ridgway nolsoling ]
Mr. Lumbort on moored uo lumen in lieu
of I iloSe vorde—•"by the demands of milita
ry dory " This too, sta. rrjecira , yeoa 16
--A LL DEMOCRATS, nay. 11—A LL ••Ilttroo
Mr. Boehm thought the section gave (A
cme other than those of a company an op
portunity to vole at mole than 01113 place,
and tnuml to strike out that portion enclos
in ',rockily. Thi, tras also rejected by the
same “Ifenblieon" majority. and the motion
'as it stands was adopted. The succeeding
mellow to anal including the Dith were
adopted
The 17th HeCiltili provides for the Iron,
Ihrough "the nearest pool office or
by expo." of the poll hooks and tickets,
without I espeet to tiniest sending.
Nli Laniberion, seeing that the bunks and
ichaslp could be delayed and tampered with to
the home rote,tumml fur the mailing
mil Inkii4llll.llloll within three days The
atm./stem atm rejrci rd; yens 15--Al.l. Ilest
•,1 . 1111,1, hayirri "Til.l•l , lll,lCANia
The 18tk nest ion requires the rothimoin
ry of the county to deliver to the return
judger the soldiers returns as sent to him
by the tinny officers or the Secretary of the
Commonwealth.
Mr Litniberton moved to amend it au that
the pi tat honoiary shall he required to make
out n hill nail eorreet,liso of the said army
vat rt r, wish the ward, borough or township
in which they claim to reside. and to cause
the sates to be published by handbill and
publicly posted In miell'woril,borough,town
ship, to , before the meeting of the return
judges , the expenses to be pool by the
county The orneialmen I woe Needed by the
"flepublicien" majaray
The lfith motion was agreetto
The 80th motion requires the return jud
ges to include the army mimes In their
enumeration of votes.
".51r Wallace moved to tun end it so that
the judges shall have the right to hem alle
gation. of fraud nudely five electors of the
proper district under lath anti over them
stgenture• and to throw out the fraudulent
votes If the allegations libel' be proven.
TAt amendment Was Ivied ed yeaslo—ALL
boners; nays 17—mdetlisruntdcaus."
21st motion requires that, in else
tio or President mill Vice President, all
army mules received too late bj, the Sea
rotary of State to he transmitted to the re
turn judges of the orountles before their
meeting, shall be laid before the Gum, nor
who shall add them to the county returns.
Mr. Lamberton moved that instead the
Governr shall convene the return judges iu
special meetleg, to examine. snob returns,
And if correct dranunireopplement•ry re '
turn thereof. This, 'though only Intended
to guard 'salad mistakes and parttime
frauds. • was roiteted yeas 16....11.L. Dalian
assn; (Kinsey absent;) nays 17—ax.
Mr Lumberton then indeed that the At
torney General and Auditor General be au
thorized to act with the Governor. This
was carried by a vote of yeas 18; nays lb
- Connel and Householder voting
' .llyo with the Democrats. All the other
"Republicans" opposed the amendment
The 28d and,24th sootiests were adopted.
* 14th section extends the provisions
. of the election law, to the offioera authorls
:- ed to conduct the elections.
Mr. Wallace offered a substitute making
it an offence puniebeffile by from $lOO to
$5OO fine and from one month to one year's
mpeleohment, for any officer or person to
'l ) . -entori4t4 - -. li"j4ithjn4ti.
VOL. XI
influence or control the vote of any elector
by threats, promises, persuasion, gifts, or
any other manna Me Pest and reasonable
propositlon was rejected; yens 16-111.1. DE3I
- nsys 17—ALL "lIIIPL'III.II,
Mr. Wallace then offered a new section,
providing that if 'any person shall,ntiempt
to present the free difvulation or tickets,
ftew;spapere,ealooomeals, speeches, or ether
printed matter,-among the volunteer Belk
diety or drafted men oLtkp State, or sup
press or destroy the same, or, r ay fhb exer
cise of power authority, prevent said sol
diers from investigating the questions at is
sue m. snob elections, he or they so offend.
Ing shall be fined iti, tram one to five hun
dred dollars' and be imprisoned fur from
one Tenth to one year. This measure, de-
E
egna to enable the soldier to exarnme the to
sue. and to exercise the freeman'. preolleve of
free Menet, was rejeeied ; xeas 16—ALL OZN
OCILATII ; nays 17—ALL "IterunLl CAN.."
Mr. Wallace then moved, as a new sec-
lion, that all offences against the act shall
be made cogeleablo before , any court of
quarter sessions, the same as though the
offences wore committed within the county
In which the same may be tried. This
proposition eles.gned fo protect the soldier from
Me erspocion of !hose pt authority, was rv'es
led; yeas 16 ALL D ' iMOCHAT.; nay 16—A1.1.
nltertintionne." - (Donovan paired with
Lowry ) -
The 26tii, '2 7t h and 28th sections were
adr;pled.
• The 29th Deanne levies a poll tat of two
cents upon every„ soldier.
Mr. Lumberton said this section 'exempt
ed all real estate held by officers, and mov
ed to insert the words, "except upon real
estate above the value of ono thousand dol
len." Rejecter: . yeas-- tin t DR1101,6 tTS ;
nays—ALL "BSPOHLICANS
- :Am...y.
Mr. Lamberton also Moved that. all such
assessments shall be made al least ten days
before general elections, and that the asses
sore be required to post lisle of soldiers as•
seemed by persons at home in public places
within each elect ton district Rejected:
yeas 14—ALL Davocear•; nays 111—ALL Ito
tillt.losoll,
The 80111 section was stirpied, end the
hilllnwfsed to thir‘l rending On the final
passage the sons wax: yeas 18; nays 18.
Mr Clymer gore the following reasons
for hip vole against the bill as itwhole •
The Democrats of the 'loupe made anodisr
unavailing efforts to secure n good law, up
till the /...1111, when the bill war tinnily pee
ped. There were difference, in the bine ny
pne,ed by the two Bowie,. which were
tate,' by committees of conterenao on the
oh, nnol the complete bdl woo submitted
o the Governor for Iris signature on that
day, only one half 461, fore the final ad
dour anent, so that hr had no none, as he .4",
A fair and honest examination of lie roe
will disclose to ayery unprejudiced
ind Slott Senator Clymer rod hie Demo-
alio colleagues were the tree Aired of tile
'Notre In tine matter They voted for and
uleorored to neeuro the passage of every
resort seletilated to secure fis. c Vone soldier
MEM=
LUI2CItI , ILIT POLITICAL PA4:11801P IN POW
au ft is not their fault, however, tin
their labors were not ervirtied with sue
CCS..
EXIT me the record
In ihe fires place I believe i bat the
whole hill in 111100011111111i011M WE op beta
*hit eillpi ing to legalize by MI not br the Leg
irlaiiire that w h ich the Suprher ('nun of
Stole hoe decided our moldier', bare no
power to do. We roe doing It. air, before
amendments to the 'Constitution, natal
WILL Artnonitit TON F401.011(1.1 TO OTE n hOrf
been Inhnsitiell 'thr people Wo nra doing
it, nit, Feb re Me other branch of the Legisla
ture has passed a bill to enable those amend
men Is to be amendments to be sulanated to the
people.
nos, is my first reason My next eon
On ie dint even it it were uneenntitut tonal,
he !not in before lie. Shot by is sand party
rote 6VNItY 111 g "URI PROP 'SKI) lit TICK Drx
°CHAT! , lINRr TO PREVENT FRA UD.IIIAS 1161LN
bIItICKVS OVT t Therarore. I vole no."
Mr Lombrrton voteeettgalnet the hill he-
CILD, the • Remeltfinale mejortly ba.l voted
oloten runstrtenly nli amendment. calculated
to pr;iert the soldwee ut the rue'," of thi suf
lenge alum( to he guru them. A mendtheills
kayo been voted down punalang officers who
shall (groansr over their men and roerer them
into rotula as the fees ductal, I vote
against it because this unrekuteng rnojorrty
have refused to pond; those who prevent the
deer;
. 17516- ref( Wing...HOOKS. 1001,0 E NM,
I,IW. A\II TICKILTN No soldier-110 wan
can vole intelligently unless lie knows It;
principles nit ilia issues nl et Ake lii itt
can to 58
I Int opposed to making a mere bell°
'hine 'of 1110 soldier, as ibis Lill, ass
mended, proposes I em opposed to al
tyranny over the mind of innu—to thus
demoting dp the ch . ounele of intelligence "
At tlie speeial session of 164. the bill
gain came up and was considered on the
tuli and 211, p oaring, finally, at the morn
eig session on the 29J, before the result of th
leetton two i the Convltuironal amendment
ma* knbwo—the ballots not being counted
until the afternoon session on the !3d. Ae
before, the Democratic Senators introinced
many 'arnendigt,ents designed to gnarl the
rights of the soldiers and to make the elec
tions free and fair, but they were tellesoted
down by the ••Republican" majority. Upon
I these emendmeens the Democrat Sena
re voted ina body, and assented to tech
eeenons of the arvlnal Lll&4evre just and
proper. Pod three anuhilipents how added to
avow of the seetriih% * the but as pasted, M
ad would hoer been a law such a. dive
inns and ehreen soldier, should have, In
cad of the partisan, "patent safe" arrange
cat which was hatched out by the Abottnon
groaafroge me:Mits.—Patriot d• lrmon•
A BLUM DI MMMMM 1101.—A gentleman
from Albany, says the Utica Obstrver, who
Is somewhort envied for hisoosial culture
and chivalry, recently had occasion to,tehr
graph too soma lady friends in New York
ally as follows:—"Miss —goes down this
evening to complete her bridal troutleau."
The message was received at the general
office, whence it was forwarded over the
city line to an uptown office. +The gentle.
man, afterwards Galling on the ladies to
whom the telegraph was addressed, was
reoeivtd with en air of offended dignity
which only littlish candliommand, who in re
ply to his request for an explanation, de
manded why he had presumed to send them
Audi • despatch, which being procured,
read, to the horror of the geolleinan, this :
"Elise goes down thie mining to com
plete her dridal troaver
TRUTH FROM THE RECORD OF MM.
SHODDY AGAINST THE PRIVATE
SOLDIER I—CLYMER FOR THE SOL.
DIER. a.
The disunion proem zo hill of ties in re
_gard,•to the action of Democratic Senators
In 1864, before the Senate was organized
After its organization, viz , on the 36th of
March, 1864, Senstor Hopkins offered the
'following resolution (see Reeord,page 636 )•
That the Committee on Federal
Relations be instructed to bring in s joint
resolution initruoting our Senators and re
questing our Representatives in Congress to
vote for 01. law requiring the fayment of
non-aommissioned officer's. and privates in
the service of the United Steles in coin or
its equivalent.
Upon thin yefolulion Senator Cllmer, now
the Demoerai io iligate for' Governor,
spoke as follows (see Reebrd, page
I did nor know, sir, that the Senator from
Washington (Mr Hopkins), was about to
offer a resolution of, this kind ; had I lean
aware of the feet I might have been able.to
form a more oorreat judgement an to his
iLtentions in so doing
lE=
I presume he designed .10 perform ran act
of simple justice to (bone whlj, on the tented
field, are struggling for the maintenance of
this goveirument. Ile himself avows his
intention to place this meritorious clam of
out fellow citizen,, so far as relates to their
pay• upon a footing with those sleek, well
paid, well-fed, truly loyal and most discreet
gentlemen who, in this time of trial, are
idling Sunny hours in the courts of Europe
as our foreign ministers, while the
is enduring the pains, the trials sod the
dangers of a campaign Contempletathe
picture; the (montane clothed iii purple and
paid in golf]; the other clad in homespun
and paid In greenback' I The one surroun
ded by all the luxury which gold can buy ;
the other in their individual permute and in
their fannliee enduring all the want end
misery which paper money eves entail's. An
unprejudiced observer, sir, would not, it
items to me, be likely to attribute any sin
inter or improper Motive to olio who attempts
to equalize in sonic degree the condition of
these two chimes Sorely, sir, the dispar
ity between one hundred and sixty ddllnrs
a your—the wages of thp,, soldier—paid in
greenbacks—and the salaries of our foreign
ministers, ranging from seven to twenty ,
thousand a year, paid in gold, iv of such
magnitude that it should not he "disloyal"
to attempt to equalize it
Ell=3
Tell me, sir, a is strange, passing strange,
that those who profess so much lure fur lue
sold ier, who are eternally parading them
selves no the ••soldier's friends," who
would make the soldier believe that every
one outside the pale of their political com
munion is his enemy, whose whole stook in
trade is to yell that they arc "loyal,: and
to boost that they love soldier better
than wife or child, should hero In day re
gist a proposition so fair and yust By
your deeds you shall be tried Honeyed
welds or flattery cost nothing. To sustain
this tssolution and the enactment of ill pier
pose tube a law, might impose SOME, Shell
Itali 11 ional timation upon your "loyal" gen
tleman, and that would
„cont immething
You cannot afford that. Oh no! False
praise, laudation without stint—that you
can give, it is in your line ; but when the
soldier asks for the drains wheiewith Ib
supply his wife and little ones with the
bare necessaries of life—winch, owing to
the vicious system of bonnet inangurnieil
by Republican rulers, have been raised to
fabulous priers—you turn your backs upon
hitn and brand as "disloyal'l,every man
who dares to advocate hut Thai is
a species of disloyalty of each I, for one,
am neither ashamed nor afraid if it be
••dulµynl" to stand by, guard, protect and
defend ilia poor and bumble egtiinot the
rich and powerful, to be in favor ut the
moldier rather than that of the shoddy con
tractor, then I sun disloyal. It to a kind of
disloyalty of which you, gentleman on the
Republican side, will neve, be accused by
thotie who know you. Altera the oputill are,
there will your hearts he also.
I=l
Possibly, sir, the Senator from Washing
ton offered the resolution with an additiOn
al motive—that was, to relieve himself, and
those wino act with hint politically, from
lyre base and unfounded charge that we
were opposed to an increase of the pay of
the soldiers. When this Senate was unor
ganised, as we then believed, and as you
subsequently admitted by proceeding to
elect a Speaker, a resolution was offered on
'the opposite nide dim chamber, instruct
ing our Senators and requesting our Repre
sentatives in Cougi ens, to vote for a bill in
el easing the ply of the soldiers. We then
voted against it, as under similar otrcum-
Winces we would to-tiny We told you then
that by no vote of ours would we ever rec
ognise your high-handed act pf usurpation
We told you we would vote against any anti
every resolution, even should you offer one
asserting the divinity of nJod himself Wu
stood up for a prinoiplefondllollll.l bed
You offered the resolution, - • , d
others, for the purple. of making °lap-trap
onplinl against us amongst Iligtooldiers and
others You paraded our vote throughout
the Stale as n highcAblid and a kin, when
you knew in your hearisqliat every repre
sentation you made, as to our position, was
simply false. But the redolution of the
Senator from Washington has unearthed
you. , It has stirred up a fearful commotion
amongst the ranks of the faithful You
gnash your teeth In impotent rage, and are
swollen up with undischarged bile. You
rave and flume and sweat—all to no pur
pose, gentlemen. We Intend to expose your
duplicity, and we hire done it. Reno.
those tears. I advise you to 'over your in
tentions In some more 'Wilful Aar, or I
shall again draw aside the flimsy rail which
shields you from orlon contempt.
PAT TUB PRIIrAT'S NOLDIIII.
But, sir, whet will be the effect of the
resolutiou should Congress enact a law in
accordance with Its spirit I Will i‘not be
precisely what you, gentlemen, forced us to
vole against, when you altempted.ueurpa
lion I Thb soldier will be paid in loin or
its equivalent ; tbat
. it to say., his wages
will be increased by the Mariam between
gold and greenbacks. If gold at %s end
of any month is sixty per cent. above green
backs, the °Omen soldier will receive
twenty dollars and eighty coats, instead of
ISM
"STATE RICUSTS AND rznintAL trNION."
EOM
BELEEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY,,AUGUS'y 17, 1866
thirieen dollars, for 111. UlOllllll4 movies!
If you were honest in your propesisitim-its
inerense his pay, how. eau you object
When he entered the service, his pay was
thirteen dollars per month in gold, for then
gold wrs not above par. The resolution
simply peeped. to keep our plighted faith
with the most meritorious of all piddle' see,
'rude with him who ilnrcnds our homes
And firesides Tell me, gent i lemen,iglere
you honest or dishonest in your propos]
lion? You ehall not evade an answer by
calling ime disloyal The word hue no ter
rors for nie. Three years ago you pistil the
foreign 'nimbler and the private soldier in
gold Why lb day, do you. continue to pay
him is basking end revelling in the
Smiles otloyally, and retuee it to lion who,
amid the roar of cannon and Marmot bul
lets, ie battling in your defense? Anhwer
me If you dare. We will not be deterred
from innitiog the inquiry by 'threats or de
ntuneiatidfith We on this mile of the Cham
ber claim for ourselves its much interest in
and devotion to the government founded
Upon the Constitution as you claim to pos.
sees We din not impugn your motives ;
you shall not ours We are not to be ca
joled or intimidilled here or eleeediere
We arc your peers and M 11111.16 here nod
every place " We know our rights and will
maintain then? We will stand by the Con
Moulton and Colon of these States, and we
tell )ou, aye, we elmrge it upon you, that
you are the only, inert who would destroy
both.
Charge. are constantly made against us
of a want of fidelity to the government, of
sympathy with trutmon, null of aiding di^
rebellion 4 We defy .you to make them good
Thin matter had better ho underlined and
settled here and now It is true that we
are not the slaves of any ndministration.
You shall not set the blacks free and en
slave while men We know no government
which in not based on thetlenstigution, and
we will neither obey nor be fotior to any
other. Is my language sufliciently precise?
in it °leer I do not wish to ho misunder-
Moods( /ton not "loyora to any adminintrn
lion ; I am ever no to trite government,
founded upon Anil noting in accordance
with the Constitution, of which it in thy
mere creature rod enpollenit More Ilion
this you nor any living man can demand of
any one To do so in to !Unice yourselves
'nosier, and thos; of when, you make the
demand slitter We wish you to hilly uti
tlerstand that yon shall never earret•e Hay
such power over to, The history of the
past should leach you that the race to whieh
we belolig ...ky possibly be esterrninated,
but nn rr enslai gel
SensLior Clymer .0 enry oilier Dense
arm voted (or this I faohUlion, anti the Via
unton Senstetn, ruled to kill it by amending
it, and boning it ninjortly effected it, Amend
men!, end thus defentel the original prop-
GETTING lil,lll --Passing New Cumber
land, on 1110 . NOT111 COllllOl rend, on Friday
last, when within n few inn leg of Harrisburg
geenbente on limn pointed - out the
reauleftee en Grown Heat y, matte an nurse
lire place It louhs us 11 a 1111 S. Wlllllll IL few
weeks, been to painted And re-fitted, the
Honerni, Ito dontt net icipsting a ten from
his ft tends early m Cietober, and inflicting
prep/milli/11'i to n center there -- Exprrax
I% ken you tied lie occupant of house
re painting cud le-filling it, you cony set II
• own ns cetinin Hint he expects no atity
diet°. No elan eter was known to re-paint
and re-fit t house that lie al about to re
move met nit Crary has fou n t 0111 tint 11C
18 gOllll4 to remain lit Now Cunibeiland. and
lie in trying to give lime ii•stilence ito cheer
ful n look n , pasnddc. - flan IS ugitt It
that rusty old CAIIIIOII from ILupe n Ferry
adorns his grounds, we hope he will give
it a gaunt coat of whitewtoth Ile will hare
enough to make 111111 gloomy aftv the elec
tion, and he does 'Wit no brighten up line
1100E0 and ea surroundetga before the
clouds of October settle down upon hint -
WY 0011gr0 ,11, 1G0 111111 11011 110 In es 111 Mr nee
tho whet o Itinct•tone in plenty rind lint nu
lime in cheep IV° tulvine 111111 10 111) line
"wish" on thick, and to apply a as the pa
triotic negiu pia:toned to go to win --i'per
miscuitly " Doe d be colt sit merely to
whidewnnh the lionise, the pail fence and
the trophy of llorp4r a Ferry I,ty ti on
(ho tree, the shrubbery, the currant-blob
se and the slop bucket Doe L (tinge the
pig -pelt and be sere in let nice iii.quirrel
tnil" Er the bake-oven conic in fur new
artistic touches The General's own face
aught be traprosod by the twylication of
the brush, an It ',has 4mpletely changed
color einco the date of his letter so Sam
Maguire —Lancaster Infelltyenerr
Fscr4 TO 110 REM KNIIIKIIen.--Froelills of
peace and order remember that the recent
blo'ody rim in New Orleans was the, result
of radiool abuse of power ,
Remember that the New Orleans troubles
wore the legitimate fruits of radicalism
Remember that Thad Stevens' poltoy
a,revolutiouttry one, calculated to keep our
ceuntry in a constant state of I urMoil and
itOrneeine strife
11.1.4terrfhltr that the only enemies of M 1
Practical restoration are found in the ranks
of those who sail under the black republi
can banner.
Remember that the country can pot be-
Caine united an long no a spirit of smote tat
bate pervmles the North
Remember that no true friend of Ii in 001111
try Ortu oppose the duet riot, that re'vure the
Oompletn return of every State to tle alle
giance under the ronetttutiun
Remember that Stephen F Wilson is n t
War With every principle that nhuetd 1113111
ate a man representing national' dot:drmos.
Remember that Stephen F. Wilson 11-18,
by 'Moe and vote, f.tvured the extreme doe
trine, entmoiated by Stevens, and is pledged
to follost , the lead of that aroh-traitor.—Ly
nonslip dosett.
-A friend tells us the following wbleb
we oonsider a 'good 'an.. tieing In a me
ta:mules shop, the other any, an urohin
ounce in, his dress oosered with mud. Ills
father instantly obserringpis dirty plight,
said to-blut
William, ins soo,tiow oama fou to muddy
your dress so V
The boy slopped a moment, then looking
his faiber in the aye eery soberly, asked ;
'Father, whet am I made off'
, Dust, thelitble bays.'
•Well, father, If 1 am dust, how can I
help beipp muddy when it rains on r 00,1%
'William . ? go down Malys and got some
wood, start "
STOLEN PROPERTY IN FtRIVATE PAR
LORS
The New York Maur, relatea the caee
of. citizen of Indiana, to whom hie nephew
had for warded two French volon and some
beck., taken from the house of Col Bird, of
ttttt Rouge, during the war- The antes
were beautiful, but it became more and m o r e
painful to the Indult...l to look et them:
Saul he:
••I never wed !heel, my wife never
wanted then! , I felt like a thief every time
I looked nt ibell. :"
Ile sot to work to find out the owner nbd
through the ant of the Mesonio Society sue
needed To this offer to restore the rases,
Col Bird wrote the (Mowing reply
'•Yes he emitted the vases and the books.
It wan all that he had left—the only link he
had to bled the past and the present. Reed
them earefally , spare no expense "
Snob wall the tenor of hie leter And
then his thanks and letters of regard for
tae kindness and tenderness that prompted
such an Oct The Observer says •
ttlorru week the roses .wmt bloke were
packed, and are now on their way to Baton
Rouge "
In view of this circumstance, the trlmrrrrr
justly remarks.
"flow ninny louses in this four land o
oars have thin "wedge of gold" in them 9
Ilow many are furnished outright from the
plunder of tbo war' Some I know. If there
is nub one who'citn sleep easy under such n
load, ha deserves poy "
Tilts is well sant, as it is well known that
to many parlor. choice articles may ho
round that were abstracted front Southern
homes during the war • ellolee bookti,man
tel ointments, picture., in !lODIC ICIIPer,
rare historical paintings, hive been gent
North from mites in the (AT South, Ele
gant pri•ate residences were despoiled of
all that wit, dear as family mementoes
Even pianos and net, of China were hosed
up and sent elf an war trophies How the
cheek of the present possessor would mantle
with shame if the rightful owner .should
happen to ail nt lea in some house in this
Sime, and find that he was.serred front dish
es stolen from has closet t And looking
about the pallor oi sitting room,should 1113-
cl:tror orimments and painting. of great sal
ue that lad !Well abstracted from his house
Yet such a thing might happen in cm :sin
localdies in ibis State —6•ar/utnye
T1111.14:VIL IS mix Piet. —A faintly in ha.
(Wine, W kconein. have been missing Clove
wood for several weeks past On the return
of the Lend of the family a few dove some
the ease was staled. and Huntley flight
very pretty slick of fuel was left with 0111-
cFs on the wood pile. In the stick were
eight ounces of powder, fur safe keeping
Monday the stick was there, Tuesday the
slick was there, and the laugh was now get
ting on the matt who fixed tl Wednesday
morning the crick was gone, Wodneeday
forenoon an explosion was heard in a house
near, nod a kitchen window wan spared no
pones Olt going to rho spot a sight won
seen The stove had joined apiece confer
coca A kettle of pork and cabbage shot
up through the roof like an , errow. A dish
of apples that was stewing on the stove gave
the ceiling the appearance of the mop of
Colt fornin A cat sleeping under the stove
went through the nintlow as if after the
devil or doctor, and tuts not been seen or
beard of since. hut a enroll of burnt cot-hair
pervades that .hontie ',fly thoroughly .%
flat mot war Levied into to pan of dough, a
choir lost three lee : the wood box looks
sick, while the roof of . tlie house looks like
to 11111110t1 H.llO, dumpling The occupant of
the ruin., sit), I Such Jnndar serer
1,0111. 1111010. 01 1 pays n ligillenin . Ind "
l'ituvtalun --Don I syrup wi.lt your relit
e h o o 4 nob.., your can nllonl In give then
the log end ul ilie Dude
Ninrry young and ft cur cutosin ' oces re
quite il, often
If San ran gig good cling e+ rind edumglien
no, gii illy doilies
Say yeti 9 to e ver) In ' Thpl)
vile madaVy, but kelp /I good vi ock
of impudence on hand
lle eintrimble. Iliree.pmenx cent pieces
wetu• made on pin pose
It costs more to borrow than it dor. to
boy. 4 -
II it mom Hatters you, you eon kalkelate
he I:1 I.w, or you nre s fule
Keep both eyes open, but don't see mom
balf you not
If you itch for fame go into a graveyard
and screech yourself agasnst a turneatons.
- Two armies generally get along quietly
until engaged
Men of genius seldom part with that coo
atodity—und for the beet of tea..
A man may be mild to know thoroughly
only what be con correctly communicate to
others
' --One day recently a gentleman who
holds a responsible and lucrative position
in the government, concluded to change his
lodgings, and sent it waiter of the hotel,
where he had selected apartments, after his
baggage.
Meeting the welter an hour or two after-
wards, he said:
••Well, Joke, did you Wing my baggage?"
'•No, oar," loudly responded the sable
gentleman.
••Why--whot wits the reason?"
•'Lb iemnion in do odic° said you hairrit
paid your bill "
•'Not paid my bill—why that's singular;
Le knew me when lie kept the
House."
••Well, inebbe," replied John slightly
gora eh iug him heed, • mebbe flint wee the
rennin why he wouldn't gib me de bog
SIM
A great nanny fools strut iu a digni
fied way through life, and get ttredit for
wisdom ,they are fir from p lug. In
a recitation room of a law sottoOlkioT a thou.
sand miles from Chieago, one of the profes
sors. to test the ability of o student be was
examining, naked this question.
Mr,—, what do, you think should be
dono to a man who bed committed suicide!'
' The student wne purled ; he rubbed hie
head a momentoie it to brighten his ideas,
and then responded—
'Well, it is my opinion as a proteuienal
man, thnt.be ought to be made to support
the child !' •
—The eon or Henry H. GLUM, . of Mie•
aieeippi ran off two weeks-ago with hie fath
er', ecoond wife. The young "son of a gun"
barna been henrd.from since.
A.DRAD DOG--A LIVE MINISTER I
Low Pa'rson Brownlown—Preacher Brown.
low—Minister Brown low-Governoe Brown-
low of I . l.llllolMCC—calla President Johnson
• dead dog If so, Brownlee , heave
enough to attack hitc,wo would not rather
be in his place ill in to bear Ihu Ante of
Brownlow . , the reeking. cowotnily, red
mouthed, radical, lecheroue, liireachermis,
raiding, praying, blaspheming carved lava
of bell, now ali ting ns Governor of Tennes
see In all the 411.1818 of sinners, whelps.
hypocrites, dieeemblers, lunatics, black
guards, anti blood lowing byenne Of human
ity wn know aortae to maturated with hate
nail brimelotto as this lantern-jawed strue
titre'durnified in sarcasm with the lame o
can Who is Brawniest.? lie is a reckless
radical anveniurer lie is an ordained
minister of the gospel. lie is an
wile child of bell, let loose on speculation.
lie is a blasphemous old tyrant—a drunken
politician—a dishonest Governor—a bigger
traitor at heart than ever was John Brown,
Thad Stevens, or any other of that corps of
Union-haters lie is a minister without re
ligion A prtaisher without • convert A
Governor without brnins Ile has the
tongue of a bedlemite of hell—a heart with
out mercy—he is an adventurer without
biavery—a rascal without I liscrelion—A
libertine without taste and decency—a sin
ner without the testa show for heaven—a
man with the heart of a fiend—a brute by
instinct—a ruffian by nature—a blackguard
by profession—s hypocrite certain of hell
—a Anil, nasty, reeking sore on the politi
cal nines of corruption to which he belongs
—a stigma—a disgrace—an insult—a by
word and a reproach to tfie list of Garn
er. of American States. When be prays it
is to the devil When be singe it is the
drunken ravings of a fiend. When be en
&wee, it in to damn , Wl4n he loves it is
to destroy When he speaks it is to insult
When he interferes it is to blacken. When
he smiles it nn to hide some of the deep and
diabolical villarnitoillis tilaephemoutl soul
is ever plasning There is not a devil in
Pinto's dominions' tint is more of a true
clit'lviirinthere in not a ourang-outing in
the world but is more of a statesman—there
is tint a pismire on the prairie but is more
of a .vrerrior—there is not ti robber in ifris•
on but is more honest—there is isot, a beset
in the forest but is more lovable—there is
not a murderer in the land but Is more in
nocent—there is not a fish-woman in rill the
Billingsgate district but is less of a bhck
guard--there it not a lost soul in hell but
Is more of a intuit—there is not a name in
the bielory of traitors but in more patriotic,
there in not n. ;warty, sweaty, shiny load in
all the dungeons of the world but is sweet
er, purer and more attractive than Parson
Governor Tillickgitard Brownlow, the ran
ting, lunatic, radical whelp of the devil
now acting an Governor of Tennessee
Should Butler, Stanton'srld Brownlow reach
bell the same day we should have the devil
on earth at once, for either of the above
named excrescences are more fit to rob,
torture and destroy than all the satanic"
fiends if bell acting In onnelirila4m Oman
Demurral.
IVII PON AT 110311 , 1110id . H111K11111CHI
of Congress has girt , n the member from ibis
district a temporary respite front his nrilu
iris labors at Washington, he han taken
the opportunity to make a speech at Wells'
bore,in which be gives nit ontspoken en
dot Pradent of Negro Suffroge and the whole
unlit:ll disunion programa°e. We are in
formed that he is too tuning even for the
orrrnge Togs digest ion I f be writ ramie
over here nnd nelienrse we shall he greatly
obliged to it Sre,enits intently to make
this 1111.11 ml It negro vtaffrnge dint ract or die l
in the suienipt Ile Mtn kicked overbonral
nll prelenee of conver•nraviii. given the sol
diers the go by ill toting agoinst the BOllli
ty Bill got his eaten $2 51111 lit his pocket
omit now WAIIIIIII somebody to step oil the inil
of his Negro Suffrage coal (10 on STIX/IRN ;
get the nomination ; dray, the Nlulattu Con
servatives 11110 the emlirnee of the Illaok
/thaltenly ; when elcoilon day Dimes you
will hear it lee We hove tiled )nu Set -
ettin 1 . 011 have hesitated RI 110 1;0111,11c
You have rubbed your ronstunents as lot
as you dare You have been overpaid for
your labor and are entailed to onirbeicharge
You WI gel 11 Negro Suffrage won't do
Stettin te getting odious Jobs !rink in
the nostrils of the people Disunion is ab
horrent to them. You have encouroged
stealing—you have voted for jobs—you are
against llnton--you are (or Negro Suffrage
Sternal, you wont do --Clinton Demotrat
Fithithithe's lthamou —the ladies's hove
carried their end, at net, and pass e d th e
Freedmen's Bureau Bill over the veto Jam
President by a two-thirds vote It IS now
the ilw of the land and must be respected
until a ithntrary decision of the Courts can
be obtained Tlth Preoulmit pleads in vain
I against the establishment of •thillitary tri
bunals," in time of peace, in a country
where the ordinary course of judicial pro
ceedinge is uninterrupted Be *protests
against this new lax on the people already
overburdened by their etthituous debt
against conferring on commissioners the
power to confiscate properly for the benefit
of negroes ; and against class le,gielailon
which metals is at the nation's expense a
viigabotth nice "regardless of whether they
they pursueildi ..elence or labor,and
regardless also iirehWColll•l Hui tonal limits
ti-ne of the national authority in times of
peace and treputillitj."
Every Demderat in Cougres voted against
this iniquity—every Republican for It.
call upon the the taxpayers in Clinton coun•
ty to mark for what purpose their hard
earned money is used the desperate faction
in Congress are determined to build up in
the South a negro republic which shall
makepeure and lasting their hold Upon the
government. To do this they would bank
rupt the State and deluge the land 'gala lo
fraternal blood.---Ciliathe Demmat.
Tri Ribsgik LAMIIII 00 THE RADICALII.
The Tribitne and tin Evening Tostwitrlnklng
from no falsehood in their work of minis
tering to men's wont plssions, nys the
World, have the audaoity to talk about Op
armed negro guards of the Radical conven
tion in slew Orleans as "lambs" assailed by
the "w ' lees" of the federal larsogsand the
police. Yet here is n, telegram frowi'the
Tribune itself conceatting these "lambs"
Shortly after midnight a int eingwese
Ary rn itie Third Distrtet Ars al alliverseengers.
Tiny were arrested."
Were they, indeed 1 Pbor, daarVlbs!
NO. 32
WE ARE COMING I 0
Mt .. 11111, le' POll6llO,
We are coming, toold of ty - ranto!
From prairie and fpim glean, • ,
To brill i g hark eh ippy f aloe,
21 . die like fighting men ! 41%;
We are oltiminief rims the wheat lied/
Of the broad and gen'rous West,
To drive New Hogiand Union Hahne
TM the regions of the—tams/
— We are routing, not for vengeneri.
But to battle fur the Right,
And Co teach you ettutsng povritea
That we dare you to the fight '
We are oomtng for our banner
Prom which you Male eleven otaro
• And well bete it the Ntental,
• Or well have %WI other wary •
And no want the Cowartereres
A. it was In days of yore I
And every Stare re the Union
, Represented on that throe'
White MIT to governarrior ens,
As In the days of W ABM INOTON
Or you'll find the years of bloodshed
Have hardly yet begun'
We ere coming, people robbers
Enough to forme nation,
Of men for equal taxer
Or a general Repudiation ! "
And•if our wants you heed not, •
Well march once more to the ma
And send New England trattort
To the home where they ought to be'
—Ln roomer hroworrat
THIS THAT AND THE OTHER
—The Dentoersts of the 14th Ohio District
have n - untn•teil lion John U Young f•r Con-
ME
-Nearly $505,000 in gold de.t arrived at
St. Joseph. Ma .on the 28th, from Montane
—.Won!Lynn like in salormbe far Dirk •
ens• Household Words i" inquired n magazine
—tieneral Lee thinks he will bare three
hundred !andante at Worthington College next
—Queen Burma, of the Sandwich 'elands'
is corning to the United States, to be feted by
shoddy.
'lfouaehold words hare played the dickens
with too long enough," wes the feeling reply.
Agent left.
—The President, on the 20tb, nominated
llon ILenry Stanberry to he United States At
tome,' lleneraP
—The Treatlent hal; approted the Ciwil ap
proprentiun bill, including the Bounty Equali
nanseure
—General tirant • wilary as tienerd will
•mount to $25,000 • year—no much am the Pres
ident recenen,
—A [nullity among colored troop; on Folly
14and, S. C., occurred on the nth. It wan
racily nuppreneed
—The Indians on the pla;ns are coil to be
manning for war u r nn the frontier. Their force
is mid to be formidable.
—Mr. Dickens hos a special saloon car all
to himself as be travels about England to give
Itlr chanting rea4lngs
—A clean Ain, clean stomach, a clean back
alley and a clean conscience, hi the latent and
most aensible specific fur cholera.
—l - know every rock on the coast, cried an
Irish pity(.. A. that moment the Alp struck,
when be exclaimed, '•And that's one of them."
—The different° betweet Carlyle 's works
sad Beadle's Mess No
one are sententitotaidle " 1.16.‘ .
—At what houeslat Milks flake 'Elk*
pearenre in the Darden of tden t Rome Utak
during the night. Re Certainly ramie after
Eno.
—A law of Congress now authorize• the
bridging of the Mississippi river at Hannibal,
Aln , Keokuk, Tows, Prairie du Chien, and WI-
—With characteristic untruth ❑eary't grub
organ ailment that the President ham appointed
Col. McCmdlema'•culleelor of customs at Pitts.
burg."
----It in charged that in the late eralling
match between Ilnmill and Rally, tbit Ameri
can, Hamill, was beaten by bail play Quite
likely.
—About one-third of the Disunion Ramp
faction voted against the bill oniaalizing boon..
ties. while n o t a single Dennierot rated arrairfsf
the bill
—The military dittriet 01'1111110m and WI,
eonain ban been &bungled, to date from the SIL
nod all booke and impel, are to be foprarded
to Detroit.
—John Curodo end P. T Barnum que both
out for Congreen Johnny Dewoon and the
What-in it would auntie I.reirelpertable repro
nentatires.
----Write your name by kindneev, and love,
veil merry on the heart. of the people you come
in contact with, year by year, and you will
never be forgotten.
—There is another gnp In the Cabinet--
Mr, Harlan, Secretary of the Interior bee re
eigned—and lion. 0 II Browning, of Minnie,
appointed in his place.
—A German farmer living about eight miles
trout Minneapolis, died on the 28th from the
effect of he t. A man names Bryan also died
haustion educed by heat.
Ss Attoine -General Speed, in hiS letter to
Senator Dto little, makes the usertton that
”tiumowas when the brains were out the man
would die ^ It is Picky for Spend that times
have changed.'
—People who go wool-gathering sometimes
pt shorn, See Disunion howls about khe.msa:
Pere" of eoriventionists and nigger* who Mar
tod a revolution at New Orleans to make wool
ride oirlir hair.
—Jay Cooke, the government broker, re
turns as income of s626•ooo,lmiallY pays Five
at any rate. If the empire was established, and
patents of npbllity for sale, Jay would not Mite
touch more to wik for.
--When has "a
lady more 'War In her us
Wen than when Ake !nu a cataract le her ism
a creek on her back, a waterfall - 0101dr pc4f
and her sham high tied ? - When she has a no
tion (an ocean) in her head.
—Congreorman Hubbard, of Virginia, re
fused to except the two thousand dollars extra
pay voted by the Romp Home was members.
Ile voted for the extra pay because It was at
tached to the appropriation bill, bat be won't
aosipt the extras.
InaJorlty 1w Yealticky will reach
10,000. Both candidates were Denteensts, ,bat
Duvall; barlag been gitaki pen/tooted by the
shoddyites sad eottost theism dailaethe war,
toothed the popular sympathleo and na shawl
of his competitor.
—"Well, boy, what doer 13.a.1.r spell ?"•
• Boy—l dont know. -
What hare you got pa your bead?
Boy—(mtratoblng)—l gams it's a muskeeter
bile, for It Rohm like thiador I
—The Sonthorn gegen aro pohuaiss kb.
following gums in .bleb then: is were truth
than poetry- Tbeeenithient of Um hoes is very.
good :
"The four moonott broke la tb whole nevem
Becht with • 'Phi so 7ouirni7 owe knew,
Asa Jost in order the ww sloth rwheatuti
Beelsebub, Botts, Butierlinflhwen. std RIMY
llrownlow."
nu{ rw. sigel.2 K•.a4iitl/ei OCJIMNIM
Fllty ~1• bl~l~tf+~
STATE ELECTION LAWS SHALL
VOTE.--NO VOTER IS ONNIUALLEJED
THROUGH FAILURE TO REPOWT AS
A sount; O. CONSCRIPT TO A
PROVOST WARIFHAL.
Lists of deserters and non-reporting
drafted men er being pellitnikull Ott Abets
printing office in this city under ins...ll6l)one
frog{ thiSiste °Solids. These lists, it Is
maid, will overage about owe hundred And
fifty to esdh regiment—thus aggregating
from thirty IQ thlfty-B.a thousand name/.
They are to be sent, with 000011 of the now
definta. est et lttAi,
ileserfertinednon tepitlot droned to
ell the election officers or the biete,wilh or
der. to refuse the *Mew of altliebole names
appear upon the lials.. Covert thireats and
inducemenls, is circumstances maj require.
will probably aecompeey tbe lies
The Disuninnirta seem determined to mks
what little they cad oat of the Awe act,
ma withstainding they know full well that
th'e'late derision of the Supreme Court renders
the Slate art,nntii and void. Gov Curtin gore
as a reason for his delay in signing the
state net flint the decision of the Animism°
Court in the Franklin onenty ease: if...redo--
ref agarnst Me election officer, ' multi sport the
State art The Court Inuring mi decided—
that an election officer or !boned of offioug
cannot be made • tribunal for the trial of
deserters—the Stole net becomes n mere
ntgloy. of no forte or effect. except as a
bugbear The Court also decided that Cori."
green has not only no authority to empower
election allMenun - to -slisillmniehise wank MGR
for offenoes against the Federal llembruntent..
:The Court
. het usilsoising 4 40 4 nathisbut
j 47 0)
the evident' *id . it igiiiiiiiMiliiiil
sentence sp
~, lojsks4; grounds
for disfra . itll s iiSsierit, re and
non reporting rafted inenrlthilerefore,other
wine legally mystified, can vote in Fentioyl•
room on tile ...cud Tuesday of October and
the electron officer or individua/ who shall at
tempt to prevent them mill be foible to henry
prineshmarni I Let this be dietincily under
stood all over the State.
This scheme now perfecting in certainly
the Bernier resort ofto„ Geary D mouton
irts, knowing, as they Uo, that no deserter
or drafted man, who was formerly a .• Re•
publican," can, by any possibility be en
pected to vote for Geary or any other candi
date of his party, since that party bee
passed those• act• of political outlawry
aglinst him. It has been well Judged, by
the Geary fiction, that ' Sepubllian"
non-reporting drifted men will help to keep
0111 of office i bone who anjoetly and unlaw•
fully attempted to deprive them of their'
rights under the Coast undone of tile S I .W
mid of the ITnion "Maim the effort . whieb
is about to be tnitttl'ie'dete4 men from vo
ting, by sending out these formidable lien:
Gut none but ignorant end timid persons
will talte any 1100011111 of the threats of Die
unioniete Some of them may be induced'
to vote for pearl, under prontlie of rho
Geary Joliffelins that they will hot be these.'
after moler'ed or disfranahised, bni,the 11.,
dividuol who shall give op hie right of
choice merely to retain the right to vote,
(which in his ignorance, be may think be
hoe lost,)•is neither a free man nor a man
in any . It le th 'he hoped that the
number who can be so intimidated sad liunt
butted, iu very small.
The Democratic party have defended the
membership of all political parties Orem the
attempted unlawful deprivation elf political
rights, it is therefore no more than fair t h at
those men, irrespective of pgrty, ahOuld aid
the Democracy In upholding the State and
Federal Constitutions, through - AA. by
which their rights ore esenintd. If family_
ties, disapproval of the negro aspect of the,
war, or other eircumalnottes and ingoeufla,,
beyond their control, p IEI them from
glgliinr o W,Mt fele of bet yekr the Upton
lbejmay now repel; IttoLseilete i v;othtg.
oeihe Maw , .1 4 . m kpa 'se, : r4%."
east for Mester Clymer Ailieiti4 . Fellirtgr •
blow for the restoretitto of tile.yolots
ac
cording to the 'wise policy of Preildent
Johneon. whilst every' vole cut for JOE_
W, Geary well be a rms. for constituthituiT'
freedom and the Federal Union Let lids
fact be Rept constantly in view, and lei ev
ery one, gratified Under the State electiob
laws demand and secure his vete There
is no law nor power to prevent—ereept
brute force If that shell be attempted,
meet it no bent you 'ean.—Patrtot 4. Union.
CURIOUS BUT TRUE
Suppose that a Democrat had, Ana year,
ago. at any public plane In thin town, says'
the Bloomsburg Democrat and Star, decared
that the Southern Sit•tes nimuld never be
permitted to none Into the Dillon What
would have been rye result? Why, all the
the Plate would Lave
dialely Set op a bowl elmilar tq, the 'follow
“He's a traitor,” o's a copperhead"
"Arrest him," ••Kill Mm," "Bring • rope,'
Au , fio This asfertlon ban and Is Made
übw-a deyd by such stew as old Thad. Ste
vens with the prelates'. Impunity. When the
war first brdce out men in this pleas insis
ted en es to stink owl • flag ; ayes took
hold of us and attempted to stoke no bur.
rah for the Union ; mess, too, th e y won,
wheats day hang their fees ' to hide- their
guilty donuts/mimes au *haute. They sow
dioceses where I,b'ey stand.; where SitTallif
& Co, hod led them. They soo tbreUgit •
the same glassee they %wed to wear that
they are the reel aieuntouistg, eggAisst_igue_
Demonrstie party cum a hater hit ham
the Due and only Union party. There ace,
but two parties; the Deingootle me the .
Abolition party. The4lbolitiott party ere
the Disunion party, by their own teaohinge.
They ore doing all in cielr power to pre
reel a Union of Stales. They have ode- •
needed dins In? in InnPittg the South Out of
the Union, the very think they brought oil
the war for, hreetouloh • wi4 • tiiw•disiati."
soniste In tbii South. 'Tide abelition,
ger-loving party hirmilfambeiod thefirdilys,
Wife,' a piely:iteepi 'ho
themselves with'ie tmgro,'llebbere She Whollid
equal toahe Whin, mar,^hht thee belliUllh ,
t hemeelvelosa *Web siiih plea* Yea NW*"
oh a asolai and pithiest equality with tits
white tem.-it is high thee Ohs ipeopiewof
white skis take letartatter is hold. allei •
hurl the abelitiowJeseaka *Ow
Bentwiiv Ilitliiti*Lr,—tboildiar'd'table"
of the Kluoltarbidlter moody airsdaleed die •
following.
Pullmans a Moab*, 'AM *AP
leas, asaii expelled hetet mina at dewily" ,
yoiusg ladies .p teadit nos by eitsa:
Nelms from kat Whigs% - Mien* sweat •
and of ireedplas erneaaalisa, asaildbe wee
soquottoo.• TimOolloviag noollingeftlima
between two Issdie t v
gone, do you lbsthwe that iteftimisdow -
girls up to tindrituosut • -
•Corialudy. apY kW r Mira emi OM I
tab, 114 As.' „:.• . 14 - •te.
'How?. ••• - • . . • „ • • 1.7 •
!WO. 1. ;01 1 4 , tart WA* 4PWAIMINIO
IrsondosT-it• AIR Jeer WON 146411‘14,1.:
beard a mobs WA, araptt*Aoll.loop ,
bup t 16444 tliangv„ r atkiw
.flunowi • likok i Vi 6 PMOlW!
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'lrina& and ant parkillv! v i e !
down 1 same