Tile Democratic, Watchnian JIKLLEPONTE, PENN'A. lIIA V'Elgx, linvFos o ilk Paorytaros J P. IMITCBELL,Assocurs Minos, FRAY MORNING, MARIOHI3, RMS. 1122018.—52 per year wises paid in ad visee.7,so teben not paid In advance, and VW whew dot paid before the expiration el the year. Demooritio‘ Ticket FOR AUDITOR 0 HON. : . '4 of trayollo County NOB SURVIIYOR GENKILAL, WELLIN6TON IL ENT of Cot obis county. Now to Csn*tt sir fin. When the army of Northern under the Command of Gen.- Las, surrendered to the North, hu man -liberty received a blow from whistle it may never recover. 'The greater the distance which we look back open this • event, the more firmly will men become' convinced, that. those who boast of intelligence and of a love of freedom, permitted a brave and heroic band of men to be starved into surrender to the worst power which the hand of despotism has wielded in modern times. That little remnant of the glorious band who had for four years hurled back the• invading armies of the North, was the last obstacle be tween the usurping tymnts who had obtained possession or the govern ment of the United States and the "consummation of their unholy iturpo,- .:es. From that hour, liberty was struck down, not -only at the South, but all over the land, and misery and ruin have been the portion Of those who permitted this thing to be done. When in 1861, A - party obtained control of the Northerfttiates and of the federal government which had for years declared its rovolutionarY purposes, and carried them out wterev - er practicable, the Smith, al ways a bulwark of freedom, stood up manfully for the protection of her liberties. The union bad been—to. -them-4M - -outer line of defence , hui when this was car ried by the ,foe. they fell back to the inner and last citadel—their Rev oral States-- to defend them to the bitter end. Right here, two great blunders, at we believe, were com mitted by the people of the South And by the Democracy of the North, and as these, reiataken must yet be rectified ;f our liberties are saved. we propose briefly to point them Tho halition4any .w.a. c l e arly revolutionary party. They bad api upon' and defied the constitution and laws ; they had declared their adhe. roc!: to principles utterly at variance with our system of government, they had in every Northern State refused obedience to the fundamental law , they had made war upon the institu tions and people of other States, their very existence as a party was an open menace against the govern• went, and political life for them re .quired the destruction of the Union. The very moment they triumphed at the polls, the, millions who had op• posed them, 'North and South, ought to have met them breast to breast and compelled them to acknowledge the supremacy of taw, and to solemn. ty repudiate every "higher law" dog na which threatened our destruction. Whewthey refused to abipdon the unconstitutional ground they had ta ken, sad adopt the Critteaden Com promise as a guaranty or their good faith, they ought to have been com- pelled lay the Democracy orthe whole coca - 42%10 do it. The mistake ot the South was is forming a now constitu tion and a new fag, and it was a fa tal age. Tba machinery of State gov ernments might have been properly employed' to mope! obedience tolaw, and the South might have led the solid columr which would have uoi- t ted to put dow th e revolutionary m uiptre of the . .But mom 'ion opened a lib I at the feet of Northern men whicheied them with 'horror, Mid the 'apeetaele of a new flag =lt port )te bane, of -00 r 10 for. get the danger whi=aCe s ned on the other. band. The South in , her humiliation cm Nee the blunder now; bualltlidla betialdmilviela bleed wee hot, dN'ffidtdrhili, of the down right Mow the golld spike for free dom, without regard to the Ow of the Immtimgmadmiwhieit As . femeht. The ertfile'kelMr? PPloo racy wile n OPIUM" enrt 7 4 1 Viejo imam Jo the fial.deepetiam. whit& 'bald-tiorgevermsedt of tbe• Umpe: If we could sot pant the gulf which the impetnens indignation or our brethern had dug, and assist diem to achieve an independence Which would . lave us.dependent„ we could at least have refused to strike - a blew spend a dollar for their subjugation: Whatever mistake of policy they may have made they were unquestiona- - bly struggling for, the ntostr-saored rights of 'man, and freidd hive crowned their success by the estab lishment of a free government. ,By our assistance, the Mongrel party Ira enabled to crush the oppositilen of die, gou:thand-okinfila up a pow • pa ?e of maintaining the despot ism they have erected over us. The South struggled long and gallantly against the tyranny to which the North submitted without striking a blow. Mongrelism enslaved us by strategy, and we assisted to enslave the South by force. The result is, that we are all powerlesl, And forced to look upotithe rain of our beloved country without knowilpg where to turn for safety. E. BOYLI4' Butpumberinguillions, and with the blood in our veins which flowed in those of our ancestors, it is folly for any one to think that we will sink into the gowardly repose of slaves without a long and bloody struggle for -the liberty we love. There is work for us to do, and we must not shrink from its performance. We must - fill the duty which we neg— lected in 1861. -We must compel the revolutionists who are hurrying us to {uin to obey the constitution and the laws. Let every man gird himself for the struggle of the pres ent,year, and an overwhelming defeat awaits the enemy at the polls, which will secure to us the liberty we have lost, not because the Mongrels care for the people'. wishes, hut because they fear their &wet . . This, after all, is the great object for which we must labor in the com ing campaign. 'We must show our strength in such a way that our foe will' not dare to raise a hand against aband the toils .he has wrought ut us, will sink from sight like ropes of sand. did tyranny of the Spurious Con- it is enough not only to excite the indignation of just and liberal minded men against the spurious Congress to read in their proceedings day after day some new act of oppression in re lation to the South more infamous and arbitrary than its predecessors, but to prompt a prayer that Heaven by its own direct aet,or through some human agency would crush the trait tors and despots in the seats and halls they have dishonored, or otherwise bring to a speedy end their villianous career. To um it seems a remarkable and unnatural forbearance on the part of the American peo.pre. nurtured as they have been in the very lap of lib erty. that can tolerate for a single day the exercise of arbitrary power over any portion of the people of this republic by a body of usurpers who confessedly act outside the Constitu tion, and who having audaciously ar rogated to themselves all the r °were of the government, Executive, Judi cial and legislative, can at any time bring down the heavy hand of op preasion upon am people of soy Stale or section that may incur their dim• pleasure or excite their cupidity. • They are civaling the ten excluded Southern States now for two reasons, one political, the other mercenary.— fhe political reason is they want the electoral votes of those States, which they will obtain by the enfranchise ment of the negro and the disfran chisement of the white man, and the mercenary reason is, that by such a course of insult, inhatice and tyran ny, by the daily oppresesion incident to military government, by the wrongs, •ntrilues and petty annoyances of the Freedman's Bureau, they force an exodus oe this whites and obtain cheap possession of their property. Infa mous and inhuman as it must appear to every uncorrupted heart, fiendish and damnable's.' h iq in our estima , tion, there are but few Weary of the Mongrels of the rump Oongrans who are not directly'or indirectly specula ling in Southern property "real, per sonal and mixed" forged, to • sale and saiwifioe by their devilish legislation. The cruel blow struck at the South by theikeernalii gathered in ooselave at Wishicgtimialeltihrougli ail the ramifications 01 wide; manufbetunts and commerce hi' in sections of the mrcbtrycf Inn the effect is indirect, and is therefore - 146i influential on public action Aim it woutil be If dth erwlee. We see and • regret that•the oldness of Pennsylvania, (and of all other Northers 'tates) bear with' pkileeophimil com;,oelere•the *Toni: 1 440 bYOokteollioial action off.n the taw skier lititeatct - the lifestbfm* , - • Would it be so they were made to feel thesanre opprestion 1 - rind what is to4revent it, if thee authority usurped by Congress (or the body! that claims to, be Congress 4 is ac- quieeoed in ? Suppose that the eleo torsi vote of Pennsylvania should be considered by the - rump and by the OngieT-Negio Natiotial Committee essential the election of their pres idential candidate , and could only 'be obtained—by the enfranchisement of the negro and the disfranchisement of white °Wrens, -is .there anything to stop the usurpers, acting under the power they - have assumed outside the Constitution, from degrading this State to the condition of the ten Southern States which they now hXI in vassalage? Let us see. The Con stitution of Pennsylvania disfranchi sesnegroes. THADDZITS Sravrws has already declared it to be, and the Mongrel Congress may at any time pronoance4t \ anti-republican in form ; may' depose iterSonators and Repre sentatives ; declare it to be territory under Congressional control ; pass sumptuary lens putting the ballot iri the hands of the negro and taking it out of the bands of any number of white men whom they mast deem "disloyal," quarter a military Sa trap and four or five regiments of in fantry and artillery among us, and adopt and execute all other measures necessary to coerce us into the accep tance of their policy. This being all possible, and by no means improba ble, we hold it to be unwise, coward ly, unpatriotic and disgraceful io make no vigorous effort to relieve our sister' States from a bondage which may soon be our own unless the power that decrees it is stricken' down or dis' versed The oppres.ion .ifthe South by the Mongrel Courre-s is the more cruel, devilish and revolting, because en tirely undeserved. Since the sitrren• der of their armies they have not on ly been obedient in all-things, but they have been humble, doing cheer fully what the President or Congress, up to a certain time, required of (item showing no reluctance, but rather a strong desire to resume again their former federal relations. No body oT into, under similar circum stance, could have behaved better than the people of the South, "In the whole rebel army whip,' sun•en dered, (says Senate/I. Doolittle in his recent speech) I challenge any Sena tor to point me to a single instance in Which a rebel officer has violated his psrole , or to a single man of any po sition or prominence at the South, who, after taking the oath of elle guinea!, has violated his plighted faith." And yet this brave people, who fought us so valiantly as long 88 the' could stand up to fight, and whom a magnanimous government would honor and respect , this people who. after the war had terminated, showed so commendable a disposition to comply with every just and proper requirement of federal authorify, are held to-day by a spurious and malig nant Congress, in worse than ll:gyp tian bondage. And we submit.— Great God 1 what are we, and from whose loins did we spring? yr,s• We place at our mast head to day the names of the Democratic nomi !lees tor Auditor General and Survey or General- Two more honorable, upright, intelligent men could not have been chosen, had the convention which pla . ced them in nomination la bored fur months. Ma. Bort.x is a citizen of Fayette county, hair served several terms in the Legislature, and his honest, frank manners,his fearless straight-forward course, gained for him the heartiest approval from his political friends, and commanded the respeot and admiration even of his bitterest Opponents. He is a sterling Democrat and besides, one of the most popular young men in the western part of the State. Although not personally acquainted with Col. Itrrr, yet those who do know him, tell us that he is a gentleman of the strictest integrity, a whole-souled, genial, hon orable man. His reputation as a sol dier,ia one i that almott any one might . envy,„,and his political consistency, his straight-out,uncompromising Democ racy, will recommend him to the hearty support of every admirer of the great principles underlying our republican. fbrut , of govert. —The Legislature adjourned en Tuesday lag, until Monday evening .next. , Pity it hadn't adjourned un til Mow*limn is wiped out of bur grand old eouttnonweahh. _ -- -Tl►oawwde ul pion. pools on perishing from want In the North, witiisiour 'nosey is ainandetto And kaastra negroes and kip *env the Our Nominees The "Higher Lew." The great limit Of the people the present age is egotism., In reli gion and in :polities, the people, of this country especially, have- grown wiser in their owt conceit than those they,,prefess to follow. The "higher 't-isugalted-morethes Goal and roaches Jower than the iljeas of the most drunken politibian. Everyman claims the right es-erell as the ability; to fashjon from his ewn mind a sys tem of religion and a system of gov ernment. This is 'the result of the labors of the party which _rose upon the ruins of tire organizations which Democracy defeated early in" our country's history. -Mee , of' ability, who certainly know better, first prop agated the . ideas which led to such mischief, and the result is that with the triumph of tge party they led, all the evils which" were. foretold by our fathers as sure to follow a depart ure from the . principles ,they were guided by, have fallen upon us, or di rectly threaten us in the future. ' The infidelity and atheism of the present day and the political heresies which ,threaten our destruction go hand in hand. They emanate from the same source, are propagated by men who appear in the double capa city of teachers of religion and of politics, and, arc threatning with de• struotion the temporal and eternal happiness of' our people. This is no mere assertion, unsustained by fact. The doctrine of the "higher law" makes the internal premtings of ev ery man the sole guide in religious as in political faith. The same pre sumption which prompts a contempt for constitutions end laws of men, when they come in the way of this internal monitor, snatches with sac rilegious hand the attrilThtes of ',led. and makes the wisdom. of the crea ture to transcend that of the Creator. We have, both in religion and pol ities, guides which arc infallible, and no one who can read is at all excusa ble for allowing himself to be misled in either. The Bible, a volume pre pa4ed by God's own hand, furnishes always, the truth as pure as when it flowed from the tongues and pens of inspired 'men. .11. to read it as other books aro read. and study it as ether works are stud ied which we desire to understand, i and all the follies of modern infideli ty become so visible that no one of sense can fail to avoid them. , But if we borrow a few ideas from the bles sed volume, and then people a whole universe with the creations of our own fancy, we may expect soon to become fit victims of any designing! demagogue whom New England athe ists may send forth to sow the seeds of ruin and death. God compels no one to study His word. It is enough that He bas put it in the reach of all who are willing to learn of Him, and those who refuse , ' to *gamine its truths are left to their own specula tions and their own destruction. Though there is small comparison between religion and politics, they aro alike in this., That both have certain laws, which have been fixed, one by a Power infallible, the other by the long experience of the wise men of ages. The sweeping doctrine of the "higher law" strike at all the political institutions' of this country just as it does at the religion of the Bible. It alleges that no body was ever soyise as the people of this age, that no such spiritual apd moral , height was ever reached as that we now occupy, and all the principles our fathers establish 'or recognized are swept away for the establishment of something which is yet vaguely floating through the brain of some infidel Yankee. Nuw we have a guide for our political faith, which will lead us out of the difficulties which environ us if we will study and follow it. The constitution of the country contains ‘ll that is necessary to save us from the dangers which threaten us, if the people will abandon the foolis% idea that they are each capa ble of erecting a freo government which shall be perfect, and go to work at once and Studs the funda mental law our ancestors made. One indication we observe of late is that the tenstitution is being inquir ed iato and studied more than It ever has been sine* its adoption. If this continues, it will save us.— Let the people understand- their own system of government, and take Dotbtne at second hand, and we. -mai soon find ourselves in the enjoyment of the prosperity and happiness it was intended to secure. If the "high er law" party is defeated in polities, the infidelity. 111Dd atheism now so r a .rampant will Meet cheek, and final ly otter overthrow, fir they stand to othier, and one Inuit fell without "PRor•f"°?-1/1 41 km. . --z-Doomed, tq die—the Abolition TM Duties of the Hour. It can no longer be 'doubled, that the rights and liberties of the Amer ican people ere in intininest it, would be the ease, be trayal' o a wedding people, to so. luMwledge it, by at this time a pikinfdiitaty, and:lo warn the people of this fiat apprealrkg calatity, ie so obligation whiehlve cannot butdiu charge, even at the riak- A ar being charged na alarmists. The protection of property, the guarantee of liberty; „the assurance oLour riihtti,_and the security of life, are alike dependent upon the main tenance inviolate of the constitu tion, and the respect of, and obedi ence for the laws Made in pursuance thereof. Without these,- we are a community of out-laws, and our protielty, rights itod liberties' ace de cided upon, and determined by the passions and power' of the suooessful party. _lima Greets' the Court of last resort, sold the perpetuation of it., is the only question involved. We present no overdrawn picture when we say, thattill the safe gdat's to property and personal society, have already been removed by the impiotus , hand of radical despotism. , • The Executive of the nation has been stripped of all power, tha.great and exalted office has been robbed of its Constitutional prerogatives, and with tied hands, the Executive of the American people must silently submit to insult disgrace and deposition, without the power to tone an order, dismiss a-spy, or even warn the poo ple of coming. danger. The Judieia ry.of the conotgp menaced by the threats of delft/1100g ikelnuptOWled men and its decrees of eQuity and justice forestalled and threatened by wicked and partisan legislation. An illegal and . fragarnentary Congress assumes omnipotent control, and with frenzied haste, declares itself Execu tive, Judiei.l and Legislative. A despotism indeed and in truth. The Radical Senate of part of the United States, having been the hired and retained council against the Pres ident, by their own votes elect them selves Judges of u Court of impeach• merit and then have the brazen irizpu• donee and dastardly courage, to ask that the Presidrut submit to a trial before them who have already decided the question by repeated decisions voluntarily delivered. We submit these questions, to the calm judgment and good sense of a just (and patriotic people. Their property is in danger—their rights invaded —their- Jibe rties imperilled. To them belongs the decision-of these grave matters. To lizeir hands the destiny of the t.ation is now commit ted. kVill they become, slaves and surrender their rights and liberties into the keeping of a radical, illegal and treasonable Congress' s We wait tu sue,o. • _ —_=_-•-. The Opening of the Campaign The Democratic State Convention that net in Harrisburg, on the •14th opened the campaign for. 1868. The proceedings were harmonious, and every thing passed off in the most enthusiastic manner. The convention was called to order by llos W. A. W A LLACR, Chairman Slate Central Committee. Hos. Wm. M It DAL, of Schuylkill Co., was chosen temporary chairman, A committee' on permanent organization was then ap pointed, and lion. Wm. Hopkins, of Washington county, was reported presiJ Went, with the usual number of vice presidents and secretaries: The last of delegates were called, and the fallowing appointed a committee on Resolutions: Luke Kergan, John Camp bell, L. C. Cassidy, John K. Chadwick, Rufus II l.ongaker, It. Ii Sladk, Nelson Weisser, S F.. Ancona, Peter F. Collins, D. A Wells, W A. Peare: N. .t Elliott, John A. Gamble, Chas. Conner, D. W. Teiler, 11. G. Smith, Geo ,Nauman, It. L. Wick, W. S. Stenger, George A. Smith. John H, Orvis, T. M. Utley, Jas. Thomp son, Herman Krepps, John L. Dawson, It. 11. Kerr, Wm. D. Moore, E. P. Kuhn, J. W. Soberer, H. li , Foster, Gaylord Church. The following gentlemen from tlie con gressional dietricte .a numbered, were chosen Electors and Delegates to the gen eral Democratic Convention. ,At Lorp—aeor t F W Cu., of Alleghe ny. Wm V Mears ,of Phila. Pistriet,Rictors Ist District, Dr C B Kiammerly ; 2d Diaries, Chas M Woes. ring; 84.1 District, Chas Buck waiter; 4th District, Deo It. Derrill: sth District, H R Coggsball ; 11th District, Reuben Btahler; ,7th District, R B Monaghan; Btb District, David L Wenrish ; 9th Dis trict, B J hicarann ; 10th District, Wpi Shirk.; 'lltb Dinriot, no appointment; 12th Morita, John Blanding ; 18th Di*. trot, Thee Chatting.; 14th Distritit, Wa 1' Worthington; 15th Diarist, Wm Z aorgas ; 18th District,-Wm 'P &hell; 17th District, Cyrus L Perabiag; 18th Diarist, A C Nityas;-111thDistria,..W.94 A Galbraith ; '2oth Distilet,l It Packard 21st District, :cad C 010 4 1‘4: 22 41 111- trist, James H Hopkins; Distrls‘ B,Geblvrlts-v 24th Wilist, gamma W. son; 25th District, no itproliaimeat. DIUJIGAS/Up T olwasr►s 0011W110111. At Lamle-440.0 W Woodward, of Lowly.. Hon Asa Packer, of Pillla r dolphis. Hon Wa Woo, of flinailleld. Hon limo X He r, 14 Ywuter• Mork. .0010/1 —l4 affitrifi l ,_ • Mi llais' , SWoilln, ". Csoirdifi diotriot, Coto Wok 11414 y, Col d' +o ad dlogriet..ftenii tindooienn, lab 4*„ . Jeremiah gi c . gib ben ; Bth atittiot s 'Chas H Burley, B goes ; 6th district, B M Boyer, J g stiles; 7th. district, John H Brinten, ignition Ttyoha ; Bth, district, Heider Cly. mer, J Haginian i 9th district, Wm Pat ton, A J Steinman; 10thdistrintrirrati els W Hughes, David C.Jjammond; 11th distriett,,D W Hanna, H 8 Mott; 12th district, Jasper Li Stark , Ralph P Little; 18th dlstriok, Michael .81ylert, David Eyenbart; 14th district, Dr David B Crawford, den Wm H Miller; 16th dis trict, John A lifiekid, John Gibson; 166 'district, Gen W Brewskr, John R. Done. hue ; 17th district, Jamas •Burns; D r avian Clark ; 18th distritit, Geo A duck enhaek, William Brindle ; 19th district, Byron D Hamlin, Wag $ Beal, 20th dis trict, Win L Condit ; 21st district,' Joh n fr - Dirrrs4a;distriet, John A Strain, J B Guthr • 28d district, R,A Kerr, John T Bard, 24th district, A A Perman, David S Morris; 25th distri ct, on appointments. The Delegates were instructed to vote as n unit in the National Convention RIAOLUTIONII Lewis C : Casaiday, Esq., fl'om the Com mittee reported the followfwg Resolved.. That the happiness of the peo ple and the preservation of otw power as a republic depends upon the perpetuity of the Union and,the preservation, pith* Consults_ lion of each an ~all the fitahis in the enjoy. meld of their rights and fauctl +ne In the Union is essentsal to our progress, our pros perity, and the protection of. opr liberties, and Radical letielation Is the harrier there Resolved. That the Constitution of the United States Is the'stpieme law; It i.e bind. lag upon the people and upon every depart. went of the governmeet, and it is tLe high est duty of tneso in and out of official plan to yirld implicit obedience to all iri provi sions, until It it changed In the Manner pro •ided therein. That th'e recent attempts 01 the Legislative brew:Al. - of the government to usurp the owes of the Huseutive, and odes. troy the independence of the Judiciary, are deliberate attacks upon the plainest prove • sions of the Constitntlev,in utter violation of its evrtit, end tend to the overthrow of the government itsetf • Bemired, That the Radicals In Congress have wrung fro in the people enormous sums of money which they have squandered in reckless extravagance ; that their system 41 revenue is UI deviffied, incongruous and toe. guitable; that riditi ecomomy in entry branch of the public service, a decrease in the comber of ofileialso, reduction in the army and navy, and refor a in the collection of the revenue, are imperatively demanded. Only by this means can a reduction in the amount of tuition- now imposed on the in dustrial and manufacturing interests bo at Gaud, and the payment of our indebted unite mosured. &soli et'. That the Republican party is responsible to the country for the delay ie restoration of the Southern States to their just relations in the UlliOn, and for the governs:net of their people by military rule that the purpose of thugs measure. is to per. petuate Radical power through the votes of illiterate negroes &solved. That in enact tug the tenure of office law the Legislative and Repetitive breeetiew et the government, each for iUdll, had a right to judge of its sonstitutienality, sod that in thus exercising the right th, Executive was duircomplying with that rm. lion of his oath of office which required his to p .protect and defend the Constitu tion of the United Stater: and that it is the right of every branch of the government, and of every eitizent.to have qaestlons le. rolring the constitutionality of any law speedily adjudged by the Supreme Court of the United States, and the right of the peo ple to have meld decision. enforced. llesoh rhat the pending impeachieent of the President of the 'United Static! 11 gross and reckless abuse of partleam power, without justifiable cause, and intended for the ettainwidet ()Marty purposes at the amen lice of the molt rrital Interests of the count ry. Besotted. That return to a specie paYinK basis at the earliest practicable moment essential to to the interests of the people ■nd the prosperity of the nation. fte oi.•eu. That the national debt sboukt be paidlurtpidly as is consistent with the rearor to law upon which the severs! oan■ are bawd RICISOLYKD. That the five-twenty bond, and the legal tender notes are component part, of the ■ame financial system, and se al the government Is able to redeem the legal fenders in cola, the holders of these bon Is should be required to mei% c legs , tenders in payment. Ramoi,vian. That every species of property should beer its fair proportion of taxation. and that the exemption of government bond• therefrom is in equitable. RISOL•ED. Tuat we recognize with emo tions of the deepest gratitude the efforts o! the gallant volunteer soldiers who so freely took up anus to protect the Flag and yre serve the Union, and we denounce as unjust to them, the efforts of the Radicals to pre vent apsstoration of the Us ids until negro supremacy is established in certain Stater, and negro equality made the rule In all. ItasfLynn: That the naturalisation of foreign bore neatens places dune on the same fooling as times born in this country and it Is the duty of the government to see that all citizens, n4stratized and native, are porteeted In their rights of life, liberty, and protn•rty, *broad as well as at home, and that in the view of t e e Dernoeraey the flag of the country ongh d must be made to protect all our °Risme. The Convention then proceeded to bal lot for Auditor General and Murray° , 1 with the following result: First Ballot—COl. Davis, 62 ; Mr Boyle, 81; Mr. Nehemiah; Gee Knipe, Mr. Markley, 42 ; Mr. Zeigler, 8 ; Mr Kerr. 1. Third Ballot—Boyle, SS ; Markley,6l Charles E Boyle having received the welorit 'votes, was declared the no for Auditor-General, mid the nomination wee made unanimous. General Wellington IA Ent, of Coitus wu nominated on the 'mond ballot for Surveyor-General. Hon William A Wallace, was re-oleo led chairman of the Democratic State pummel port:Dillies, add the folliwing geetlemen from their roirtellve Sens torsi distriete were chosen members of that committee. &material Distriota :-Ist, Jobe P. Abuts; 2d, F ,Sproul Leisenring ; B d. Mlohaol Kul& H V *Otero ; 304 IltiffiChuoi, Jr. ; John Q Mild' 6th, Tubes; 7th, Nelson WOW , : D Nos ; 9114 D. 11. NW; 10th, John V Storm; 11th, Harrel Stabler; 12 th W Stardom' ; 111114:.jolui W BMW; 141 5,—; 16th, Tborma ; 16th, Lout/ liaalit 1 7 1 k Z.b.ri Cruel ; 18th; John 1F 1314440 r ,• 19th, Hoary Stabler; 20th , ;obi II Uhl; 21.1, David (Taldwoll, A 11 BOomall ; 22d, H J I) Woodruff; MK Wboure J ldaoalloagh ; 24 ditaJ N J lookelefol 26eak, J li Swell , , =or* D . 111 Doadhoo; 27 01 , Jai • ; 286, ---; 29114
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