The Democratic Watchman, BELLEFONTE, PENN' A P.-6RAY MEHii. linrron-4 Prtninitzron 101IN.P. MITCILSI,L, AstocIATE °lron FRIDAY MORNII 4 II3, - JURE 5, 1863 TERMS.-12 per year wbaa paid In ail ranee, 3,60 w hell not paid In advance, and $3,00 when not paid berire the expiration et the year Democratic State 11:liket NOR. AUDITOR ORNICRAL, HON. CHARLES E. BOYLE of Fayette County. TOIL SLi ii.VFYOIt. nEXIIR r„ 'GEM W.E.I.LINqTON H. ENT, of I:ohupbia 'Connt7 Dremocretia County Committee The Demotritic Cohety Cohimittee of Centre County will meet in Bellefonte on FRIDAY, J E 19th, 130, at 2 o'clock P. M. A getvral attoodamoo of the members 14 ruqueatod, a businesA uf Importance. will be laid before tbem The following are the II 1MP...11 (.1l the mem hers of the Standing uppo Intact by the la.t county, convention Joreph Wi ; E, Johnson—Boggs ; 11 aidhadar —Burnfildo . David. Brickley— , John Krepr —Fergnaon ; 11. li Duak--Orogg ; Fred. it:lts—Haines Win Prergi ;:77 l44 . lrlonn ; Frank l rokrn--Tlarrir, , Michael l'aFkor Howard; Jacob inc. - Huston ; I'. S Lingle— Liberty , J. ,t; l'rane—M of Jun . Y. 8. Merl' , —NI ties Dr. John H. Bush—Patton , 1), A Mu:4Eor Penn D. K. liaise—Potter : Jon. W limas—Rush , Jas. Raddirg—•Snow Shoo John Sweeny--Spring; Jw•ob Snyarr- Taylor; Jacob Kepler—Ph ilipabunz ii re Jarob Pottsunve—Unionville • T. M 11411 ile rg Ja - Mel Wb itelaan If oft r•I Borough Inilii II ORVLS. lk. Chairman We Don't Want Then' A maa who. indists' an ffnalif3ing the glorious name of democrat with the • adjective "war," is simply no democrat at at. We . wint, nothing to do with them, and shall treat all siieh an trio meanest Lind of l i llongreln in disguise. Because a man teas in the late war, in whatever capacity it might have been, is no reason why he might not be a perfectly sound and reliable dem ocrat now , and all we would a•L of any man would be that, whatever mistakes and follies he might have comm;yed in the past., he stood rieht nos. Butane who talks about cop perheads and draws a line between the firmest and best men of cur party and himself,would do us far less injury in the ranks of the enemy, sod we pro pose to treatthern as something which is neither "fish nor flesh," something which is not to be trusted at our camp fires, and as oven who can only be counted on to fire a shot over the head of the foe and a dozen into our own bosoms, A true denrcrut must be in truth what GEARY meanly pretended to be when ho wished us t.l) nominate him for governor, "without affix or fix." If the party name which satis fied Jr.rrenssow and MAnixoN and JACKSON and all the host of great men who made it glorious and which it glorified, will not satisfy a man now be is unfit to belong to the party Which bears it. in any capacity what ever. Let them go wherever they please ; we want notkwtg to do with them, and the quicker we are rid of them the better. They complain of us that we are in thlerantrand will not lot them alone. This is not true. We are most happy to nuntber in our ranks all who are willing to unite frith us, ayd at this very moment we have thousands of the very best men who took part in the war who arc perfectly satisfied with the simple name " dedlocrat, and who show by their acte Witt they are democrats in principle•' Such men we are proud to affidiate with It is only those who hate our name and seek another, and who make continu al war upon our ablest leatrers whom we refer to, and it wt can drive them into the damp of the foil it will be all the better for the party. ------If Bucher SuFoolm's scullion or shirt tail cleaner, who publishes the Rartirman's Jourture, nod spends the balance of his tune lying round alleys with tan colored, wenches wants a personal notice from as, lit him "pomp bis:,anpi patience," natil we 'come down to ibe strata of filth to which be beloogiorhoti his together with that, o 'his now-1'144 master, the "speotaaled attorney." and dm* eneak"thhif companions, till receive due attention. Puritanism - The Puritanism which induced the early settlers of Massachusetts to pro secute even to the death all who dif fered- from them- in religion, 'opin ion, is in this age greatly changed fn all but fanatical intolerance. The fanaticism which in olden time exhib ited itself only in affairs of religion, and burnt innocent men and women only foe the service of God, has now reacked to nearly all the affairs of life, and if the puritan ism of the pres ent day possessed the powerr it? would roast all who differed from it in poli tics.or who hold opinions on any sub ject adverse to bile interests of New gia nd. Modern,: piiritau ism nothing more nor lose than a combi nation of selfislind'es,, meatiness, bigo• try, and-frinatioistntr and as long -as power" remains in the hands of its minions we eau count ednfidently up on its heft- wielded only for selfish, mean and base purpises. 'fitere' can be nothing esprit:tea from the degen erate off-ring of the niettnest body of Men who were ever driven into ex ile by the people of. a land they had cursed, but the low meanness in which alone they are entitled to pre eminence, and the unmitigated sel fishness iu which alone they all' per fectly original In the seventeenth century it was fiAnd to he very convenient in New England to ,pretend thci utmost rev erence for the Deity an to-pass arid paamute the most sanguinary laws in God's name. 1850. a•-d up until now it_has been, thought more profitable to he'extreunty loose in all religious matters, and either to have no 'God at all,mr else An construct one to Suit thernseli es. in both of these case..., the New Englander 1145 gone into the Procramme without any mental re, creation, and the. nasal twang, loos' feces and vinegai ) aspect which sat so it II two hundred years ago anti bteugl‘t much - gainlo ye godlie purl tan, has been laid aside for the most -perfect looseness in i .roligion, o pen de : fiance of the laws of God and man, an aping of the mranneaq'end customs which were once despised and pro hibited by stringent laws, arid, in fact, New - Xnglaniers - hare:- become as free and easy as any people in the world. Their ancestors made money.. by pretending extreme strictness in the tturNhip of 'arid, and those of the present generation profit equally by actually serving the Adversary. Both were actuated by the same motive, and neither cared a pin for God or man outside of their own territory. Their long practice of the arts of du plicity awl fraud has its rewart in the immense wealth which they pos sess, and which was never produced from the bleak and barren hills of their ovr9 country., They have im poverished others that they might thrive, unj the power once exerted against Indians, witches and quakers is now united to rob from the South the West and the 'Middle States what the tkreh, the sword and the tax gathererhave spared. Ai l.: the rert of the poeple of ChM- great country going to con tinue to support the miserable party which is wholly controlled by New England men and ideas ? Are the agricultural and mineral interests of the great states of the Union to be sacrificed that these thieves by birth and education may prosper ? Are the most (productive regions to be turned into. deserts that New England may bloom as the rose ? Let the people consider well upon these sub jects, ami.nett her ancient nor modern puritanism will avail tb enslave us longer. Grunt's Record. The enthusiasm with which the nomination of a RANT was expected to bo received didn't take place in these parts. The peolle of Centre county have'tou many crippled men at home, and too many slaughtered kinsmen sleeping in the blood-saturated soil of Virginia, reminding, them continu ally of the bloody and murderous cam paign of the gen eral who "never ma neuvered," to get enthusiastic when he is presented to them as a candidate for president. There is, scarcely A -family circle in this county which has not one or the other of these memen toes, and they will testify the fact that they remember their murdered dead when they come to vote in next fall's election. The General who lost one isteuired andoventeen thousand men in one short campaign, by useless and fruitless viselike , upon impregnable positions pits himself upon his rec ord. The people have terrible reason to know his record witAttut reading it, and they will act upon such knowl edge at the polls.' h raid tkst mett4rs oft the rump Congress alit again busy pie• paring otter articles of impeachment against the President. Doafh of Hon. Jamey fluAanan 3ANIPIS BUCIVANAN dietPab 1i res s , f idonee pear Lancaster, at t past eight 67elock• on Titestlail:, , rniirg Ahfrilndinsiyin-1, 97 Ai yea of h i*- age. iJis ilhiess fpg,e6viiil .weeks+ was well kat:tiro all61011.11„e idiantry, and nearly all Were'prtitthr r ed to hear at nny time tif his deatli. .. Mr. Buchanan's career is so well known to thee people, k rat . 0 o not deem it neee'ssary irrOttetlrienlJed biographical sklte.h. 410 NV 4 horn in Franklin Ounty, Chia State, in 1791, graduated at Dickinson college, Carlisle, studied law under 'Jaws licirultvs, of Lancaster, and was ad• mitted to practice in 1812. He was elected• to the Izipislature when 23 years of age, and f:roin that time un til his return from tais-Presideney in . 1861, he has spent most of his time in public life. In 1832, he was ap pointed Minister to Russia, and two years after took his seat in the United States Senate, which he' held until appointed Secretary of btate by Pres ident PoLK in 1845. In 1853 ho was Minister to England, and three years afterwards was elected' President of the Ilnited States. to all the po itions held by him fin displayed great ability, and his worst enemy will not dare to deny to him the fame of a great man. Ile nas elected President in an evil time, and though he did all that mortal could de to avert the catastrophe into which the country was plunged by the election of a sectional President, he was unabled to do so, andlias con sequently been denounced most- bit terly by the very men who hurried us ime, the difficulty whi c h he ',trove to prevent. - But his fame ii secure in history For nearly half century he wa, the compeer of the greatest men our country has produced, most of whom were spared the pain, which he was compelled to suffer. of seeing the country they had long labored for, deluged with blood,- Frushed with taxes and groanin'g under military despotism. His name is interwoven with many of the createst and best measures ever devi,ed, many of which erltad the , 40.10ng -as men point with pride to the season of glorious prosperity our country enjoyed before Abolition fli natmisin destroyed it, the name of lams BUCHANAN mint CONLHIUC to be held in reverence by all sensible I men. Exit Stsalon STANTON has at last sneaked• out of the war office like a whipped cur, snarling back his impatient hate and maliciousness as he went. General Scitormi.o has been oonfirmed as his succeseor by the Senate, and thus, after an expense of millions of dollars, we are at length rid of the man who; clung to a (?resident who wanted to be rid of him, with more pertinacity than the "old man of the pea - did to. Sinbrad the sailor The Radical platform, made at Chicago, dares to charge Jounsow with responsibilkty for the reckless extra vngance going on at W.ash ington. Yet in &Anon's case, it was the action of the rump Congress which cost the country millions of dollars, when the remedy Johnson proposed would not have cost as-many cents. But the incubus is at last removed, which in the last Svc years nas cost the country more money, blood and tears than any other one cause. Stan ton prolonged the war, ho is rempon sii,le for the death of those whO died in Southern prisons, and for many thousands of those who fell in battle: He goes to private life loaded with infamy, covered with the curses of all good men, and with the responsibili ty for thousands of murders upon his guilty soul. —Beast 131, - nwa and TIIAD &IC- I:NMI are both threatened with ex coMmunication by the N. Y. Times, for what it calls their "schemes of repudiation. - Those schemes are the only good ones which these two wolthies were ever suspecaed of being favorable to. Thus it is, the me meet a man gets a single idea in his head in favot of the people against the bend-aristocracy, or any • other good idea, he can ne longer be a leader of Hongrelism.. Ho must be wholly corrupt, and dare not blue , der on to a good thing---evin by mis take, as Burtwit. and' STIVENB have done. --Wherever negro voting is es tablished, it becomes, necessary to strongly guard tau polls to prevent thifit from giving way to . their savage instincts and murdering eich other. is now eoulldendressetted dist lion. 45:rx,!.90 . P.0,18 will Te °else his Song expebted 'and long do. mended' trialat the possible moment. Caught in their Oiin Trap. The dovelopoments which have been made- by, the attempt of the Mongrels to show •that the Radical Senators who -voted—for JOILNSON'S_ acquittal wore influenced by improp er motives, have been 4 anything but satisfactory to them. "'All sorts ofl villainies—bribery,fraud,theft,treati!- cry, and abuse of woman—have in deed been exposed I bat only the im peachers and their friends have been shown to be guilty. Not one'of those who moodily JotuttioN and the Con stitution, nor ally of their friends, have beer: connected in any way with anything dishonorable, mean or un gentlemanly Beast MITIAtIV. has bottled himself up as 'completely as ho did at Bermuda Hundred, and all the howling crew of disunion radicals have been fairly eaught in their own trap. The prevent predicament of the impeachers reminds us of the monkey in the 'story, which being very troublesome to its master and continually seeking to discover what ever he de,ired to keep closely, once dug with its paws in the garden where it had observed him hiding something and. soon unearthed' A steel-trap, at the expense of a pair of broken aims. The trap had been hidden for the very purpose it accomplished, tind' a severe, thOughwirectual, lesson was thus 'taught the meddlesome monkey. The impeacher, imagining that something worth finding was being covered up by the Prebident. and his friends went vigorously to- work to bring it to ljght, and now they stood howling in agony, in .the trap which their own folly led them into. They are completely exposed in the eyes of the whole people, and no 111110 who will vote to keep them in power can ever aftetwards fitirly lay any elaimg to honesty. Heretofore the ugline.•s of Mongrelista and the to tal lack of rinciple in its leaders have been partially hidden from their sup porters, Now the whole thing stands out iu its naked delorthity. and, no honest man can support them. Gone over to Chue I The Philadal&s._Sitadsk Mer cury, a paper that has heretofore made ireat ado about itA open Democ racy, half come out flat-footed for JIJDOE CHASE, a lift long opponent of Democratic measures and Demo cratic men,-for president, and asser that the "nomination-of either Pen dleton, or MeClellan,...or Hancock, or Seymour, or Hendricks, would entail inevitable defeat." If the editor of the Mercury wouldeget out among the Democratic masses he would soon learn that CHASE if nominated by the politiell tricks of political tricksters as"the candidate of the Demooracy, would,stand no more chanco of an election than THAD STINEWS soul does of salvation. In this county he :would not get flue votes, and in the whole central part of the State he would not poll live thousand. As to the defeat of Pxspt.cron, or a Demo crat like him, it don't lay in the pow er of boudholsleni and those who can be bought by them, to accomplish it, and our friend of the Mercury may as well make up his mind to this fact now. The people, the' laboring, tax paying poeple, intend to name the candidate this time, in spite of poli- , tians, and they will name no one who cannot stand upon Pannuctoree plat form of •equal taxation, or whose Democracy has a, shadow of doubt about it. If the Mercury wishes to try the strength of. Judge OUSE, let it rely exclusively_ upon his friends for sup port, and in less than three weeks it will he leaner of patronage than Jon's turkey was of flesh• Stevens and Forney give it up According to 'the assertions of the leading Radicals, "hey are not going to be able to carry more than three states in the presidential elec tion, at the'ohiside. One of them— the one who stands highest and whose word is law with all who are loyttl" —puts it at two and another who oc cupies a position equally high with hie party claims three. THAI STEV ors said some time ago. "If the President is not convicted. the. Radi cal candidate, will carry but two 'north ern states—Massachusetts and Ver moat." The two papers of Folmar "both daily" alleged that "should the Renate of the United States fail to convict ANDRITI JOHNSON on the accusations of the Mum. not in elec toral vote, with the exception of the vote of West Virginia; .illisatturi and Tennessee will be given for General Chula` next November. The Senate having failed to con- Oft Johnson, there is not a ghost of a chance for the Radical candidates, according to the testimony of these great lights of Mongrelism. Glorious News frortgregop. Just as we Ito to press wit hear from the Pacific the ththadt, af`the. first On of the campaign. The first mornber of the' forty-first Congress has been eleoted -and be is ,a Demo crat. The election which took place in Oregon has resulted in a complete triumph for the Democracy, they car rying every county in the State but one. The'enthusiasm which() 11AVT ' nomination was to arouse didn't, reach the Pacific, and the first elec tion which has taken place since the impeachment trial shows what the people think of it. From Ocean to Ocean they are fully aroused pt last, and are ',riving in solid column to put down the usurpers who have so Thug drab - 1(1(1'ns of our money , and our blood. The following dispatches will fully explain the completeness of the victory in Oregon. BkN Fitasciiitio, Juno B.—The electioh in Oregon. dine let, resulted in 111 Demo cratic triumph. The Democratic Con: greasman tats elected by one thousand majority ‘ll the county tickets are Democratic except Marion. which gives s a Itepuldicati majority of three hundred. Pot ilanil City givei twenty-one hundred Democratic majority. The legislative and county OniCertl ere nearly all Demo- WAslll\l.lllN, JULIC, 3.-3chatur Doo little tiny towing receized a dispatch front Et.-Senator Nesmith. of Oregon, staying that that. State land been carried by the Denfocrater on Monday ;bud, by a vet). handsome majority, with a major ity in both branches of the Legislature. Grant's Speech. General GRANT has at last said something, and after so long a silence and thegrave dmeanor he has ever ob served, when we look upon the re port of his speech we are strongly re minded of what is said in the Bible of the animal rode by BALAAM, and the ass opened his mouth and striae." The kind of gravity for which (frant isTahiods is prdeisely that which char acterizes a jackass, and the speech he has lately made shows that he pos sesses other qualities in common with that ;mush 3./Airosi *plural. But lie give thi speech below in full, so all may read it and rib one will fail to make a correct estimate of the pow ers of a man who could do no better upon such an occasion than a school boy at his first publjp exhibition, Ozari.nitas Being entirely ■naccustoer ad to public speaking, and without any de sire to cultivcte that power, ilaughterd it is impossible for me to find appropriate lan guage to thank you for.this demonstration, All that I can say is, that to whatever pod thin I may be called by your will, I shall endeavor to discharge its duties with Adel ity and honesty of purpose. Of my recti• lade in the performance of public duties ycu will have to )edge for yourselves by my record before you. --The monthly expenses which we pay to keep up a standing army is over ten millions of Dollars, or more then one hundred and turnly millions a year. This money in worse than thrown away, We'are in a state of perfect peace, titid the al my in onlry used to keep the South under the heel of Mongrels "Ind niggers, and prevent her from paying a propor tion of the taxes. ' This is only one of the many leaks which threaten Ub with financial ruin. —lt is intimated that the radi cals in Congrecis, seeing that there in no longer any hope for them, are de termined to so damage the country that the democracy will not be able to MVO it when they get into power. We!l, we can't raise the dead, but will undertake anything short of that. The rump Congress keeps pil ing up expenses day after tray with• oat attempting to devise any "means of raising revenue. We aro now over forty millions of dollars behind for the liniment year, according to radical testimony. How long can we go on at the present rite ? —The Vongrola are)beginning to. Ire afraid of IBtrruti. 'hey say that he is doingall he can todefeat Gamer because the latter damaged his mili tary fame by the "bottling up" pro f:43BJ . —•---l'ho party which deliberately {mode over the government of the finest country in the world to negroea, traveling gamblers 'and escaped con victs, is not exactly the party foe the people of this republic. —ls the white than tc a rule,or the black ? are we to have a rePublid or a despotism? shall mon;relism ruin us or shall we destroy it? .These jtre the questions the November election must answer. Mr. STANIIZERY has been renomi noted by the Provident as Attorney General, which position he resigned to become one of the counsel in the late impeachment trial. 4.0 New Publidations. Tnx taan.WE Love--']hie able Mag: g aline, edited by Gen. D. D. !fill, and published at Charlotte, 2 , C C., is otv of tho very best in the United States, Der; ilill himself writes ike well as he fotght, which braving all that cati mild of one tvhoso military fame its world-wide, The June number is ono of the best we have received, being filled with able Rh a racy articles, *bleb are calculated ho do good whereier they aro read as well an to do great credit to the editor of the Magazine Since Ilia war, there bus .been on effort on the parrof the South ern people,to edit and sustain their aa literary works, and thus escape the itt Ouence of the ,pernioious stuff with which nearly all the Wrthern presses .term.' the Land We /Love is Southern, it takes a broad and comprkensive leW of the whole country, and all its artielei are . in that spirit which has ninny. acterized the Southern people, and out tile existence of which the Union can ne~cr be sustained. It ought to 111(01 many readers in the North,..and ne „„ derstand that it is steadily iticrea , lp!, nn circulation in every Northern Stan. Conee'sallAue's Iloon.—lt seeing PII perdition:a for um to any nap hing in com mendation of this 'well knots n montlik Not a lady in the land but either liar it wittily or longs to turn Over it. mac, It ha. so long been in the lead of 311 the periodicals of its character. that e‘er one is familiar with it. It is only , eeeaary for IN to nay that the .111114'111mi ber, which is now before us, fully an. tains the splendid reputation it lola al ready We_notiee that the leaauas on dittoing, iihich were publiahe I aoral. hum ago, are being republished, will gi-ro it additional interest to ipeee who aro inhere-lied in that betinti'l !Jet ARTIWR . II HONIr. NIA(II7INE --Is•ry one knows T. ti trthur and Viigto Townsend, an writers Whose works ar e sought after the world over. They the editora of this Magazine, which It perhaps Raying enough. It is s ,ugly necessary for us to add that it "'Tome Magazino," ought to be, for on der their editorial charge, how could it he otherwise' They arc now publislitol % aeries of temperance sketches from the pen of the author of "Ten Nights in a Bar Room," whom -all know as T 8, krthur Ifirnseif. This ought to _increase thactroulation_of Cho magazitio amongst the friends of the temperance cause The June number is on our table, andis for sale.at our bookstores. 17.1V1/4 for :Ilion has been received It in fun of light literature of the sensational kind, and seldom contain. anything of weight, or anything whirl) will imintrt much information to as rev ders But an editor of such a magazine to make it successful, must consult the wiles of those to whom he designs to sell it, and the taster of a great number of the Amercan people seem to require literature of this character Ballots', Magazine is cheop,%eing only $1 25 per annum, and BO for as we have observed, it never contains anything likely to do any harm to those is ho rend it If the people must read something of We kind, we would recomtrien.l it to thern,as the best and cheapest of the kind Tug Lane's Fat ' , in —Thin magazine is well eotiticel to the name it bears, and what in equally important, the ladies are its friend as well. Its plates are ele gant, and all its contents are iirepared with an evident design to make it in truth what its name would lead us to expect. The Dumber now before arm . June,lB6B, is full of good things, and the only wonder to us is hew so much can he done of so low a price. Thar Eascia's MAOIZIMII —This periob cal: for the price, cannot be excelled in the world. Its fashion platen are good and alway reliable ; its engravings are perfect, and all of its tales, sketches, poetry Ac., are prepared with care and with an idea to make it•d suitable com panion for any member of any family We recommend this magazine to all whose means do not admit of their shbacribing for a higher priced one. NEW VaitcritSententEi. EXIICUTORB HALAL ". In pursuance of in, order of the orphan's court ofccentre pounty there will. be exposed tootle on WEDNEBDAY'TIIII 24th DAY OP JUNB 18113, at this Court }Jones, in the borough of Bellefonte, the following property, viz A lot of ground, situated on the Bellefonte and Lewistown turnpike, said berotres, fro ,- tine My feet on wild ad, and extending back one hundred and eighty feet, on which are erected, a TWO AND.ONE HALF STORY HOURS, • stable and other odt. banding,. TERoB.—One ballet the purchase mon ey to be mold at the eonllmeatlon of the ado, and the balance In one year thereafter, to be secured - by bond and mortgage on the priming. GEO. LIVINOSTON. Ss. Sarah Dixon, dee'd la--22 It A . IIDITOR'EI NOTICE The undersigned, 011 Auditor CP pointed by the Court of Common pleas of Centre county, to wake distribution of the money. In the hands of D. Z. Kline Iligh fiberigof said *runty arising funs the sale of the property of Joseph Bobinsoa will meet the parties interested at his office la the Borough of Bellefonte en Wedneedy;• Juoe the 24:11 1868, at 2 o'clock P. 11. for the purpose of attending to the duties of his appolnutent, .at which time and place fill persons claiming said tubd,or any part there• of May attend if they sem proper. A. B. 111INDBREION 13.23•8 t - • Auditor
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