fetlM gttquim. BEDFORD PA., FBIBAT, SEPT. 15, 1865. UNION STATE TICKET. ~ rOR AUDITOR GENERAL, Gen. JOHN F. HABTRANFT, Montgomery. TOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, col. JACOB M. CAMPBELL, of Cambria. UNION COUNTY NOMINATIONS. FOR TUB LEGISLATURE, Hon. D. B. ARHNTKOSO, of Bedford eo. Uen. MONKS A. RONS, of Mneret eo. DISTRICT ATTORNEY, J. T. KEAOY, Esq., of Bedford. ASSOCJATS JUDGE, t apt. ADAM WEAVER LING. Bloody Run. TREASURER, ( apt.; SIMON BHKEBHOOF, Bedford. COUSTT SURVEYOR, DAN lEE SAMS, Weet Providence. JURY COMMISSIONER, WILLIAM KIRK, St. (lair. COMMISSIONER, HENRY J. BKVNF.R. Cumberland Valley. rOOR DIRECTORS, JOHN S. MF.TRH K. Syr., M.Wood berry. I.EONARB RITNER, 2 yrs., Juniata. AUDITOR, JAMES ALLISON, Napier. CORONER. Capt. AMOS ROBINETT, Southampton SOLDIERS READ. We must say, that laying aside all political prejudices we are opposed to theprLctpleofal lowing men to vote, out of the State on any pretext whatever. We believe in the doctrines of our earliest statesmen: that a standing ar my is dangerous to a renubHc. AND FUR THER BELIEVE THAT GIVING SOL DIERS THE POWER TO VOTE ONLY DOUBLES THE DANGER.— Gazette Jan. 22, 1864. . *16,000. ISP" Tax-payers of Bedford county recol lect that the Democratic party has run the political machinery of Bedford county for the last ten years, and they have run it into debt to the tune of SIXTEEN THOU SAND DOLLARS. Thongh annual set tlements are made, and the result published, we, a few weeks ago, were tbe first to give you light upon the subject Pause before you cast your votes to continue such a party in power. ASSESS THE SOLDIERS ! ASSESS THE CIVILIANS I! See that the soldiers in tbe field and those at home are assessed at once. The election takes place on the 10th day of October and you cannot be ready for it at too early a moment See to it that every Union voter is properly assessed before it is too late! THE TWO TICKETS. Of course it will not be expected of us, in a single review of the candidates placed in nomination before the people, by both par ties, to enter into a minute analysis of tbe peculiarities of each individual, but only to make a general resume and toucli upon the salient characteristics of a few. In this broad and liberal sense, we naturally turn first to the action of the two great conven tions which recently met at our State Capi xol, for the purpose of putting in nomina tion candidates to be supported by the peo ple at the coming October Election. The men thus submitted to the ehoiee and judg ment of the people have become common property, and as we are at liberty to discuss the principles embodied in the respective platforms, so are we permitted to examine the character and scrutinize the merits of the different standard bearers selected for the contest. It wotdd seem that the pseu do-Democratic Convention instinctively fol lowed the example set by the Union men, and adopted as their choice, two persons who had served in the present war, and to exhibit their purblind, servile imitation qf their opponents, in a degree almost border ing on the ridiculous, selected men from the same counties, and one of them from the same Regiment. So far our enemies had succeeded in making out a prim a facie case. Bnt when the candid observer of the last four years' events, began to reflect upon the conduct of the men composing this organi zation during the entire period of the war, of the countenance given by them to seces sion, their declaration that coercion was un constitutional, their resistance to the draft, their denunciation of the war, and their wholesale abuse of the soldiers, the defend ers of their country, denominating them "hired Hessians," "cut throats," and other opprobrious epithets, we say when all this was seen, the hypocritical action of these demagogical charlatans vanished like gossa mer, and this ill-fated ideal creation fell still -1 'orn upon the country. Not only was the expedient of chosing soldiers of doubtful propriety, but the particular selection was in itself fataL Let us see. CoL Davis fashioned after his prototype Jeff. Davis, and whom many;f "nWiIM demmv racy of Berks and Schuyllall counties believe to be the arch-conspirator of the Rebellion, left tbe service because his insatiate ambi tion was not gratified by the War Depart ment, and ever since that time has been en gaged in the dissemination of Copperhead literature in the eastern part of our State, being the editor of a rank, foul-mouthed or gan which opposed the extension of the right of suffrage to the soldier and has nev er ceased to vilfify the government. On the other hand the Union party present the name of a true and tried veteran, Miy. Gen. JohnF. Hartranft, whose praises fill the mouth of the nation, and the splendor of whose deeds will shine brightly on the page of history. But it was not our intention to dwell upon the persons named above, but to draw a hasty sketch of a few of those named in connection with the county offices. The Democracy of our county, in their ea ger greed for the spoils, and impelled by the clamor of impatient office-seekers, held their nominating Convention previous to that of the Union party, and, as before intimated, they prooeed by instinct alone, they were un. able !n this instahce to pattern after us. They therefore very naturally failed to place sol diers upon their ticket, save two, neither of whom served a full year in the war, hat be stowed their favours to old hangers-on of the party, whose sole recommendation is their fe, the "loa- \and fishes." The Union men, true to thoir and their professions, very appropriate reoog nized the claims of our brave be jjpUby des ignating no less than six of tknJwDS worthy of their support at the ensuing election. And ' who are these men? First we have Hon. i D. B. Armstrong for the Legislature, who entered the service as a private and by his gallantry was promoted to a Lieutenancy. So badly were beaten in the last campaign, that their friends dared not i name them again, in that connection, but in their extremity undertook the hopeless ex periment of sending two ex-Know-Nothings to the Legislature. But they will fail again, notwithstanding all their "work of labor and of love." For District Attorney we have flung to the breeze the name of John T. Keagy, a gallant soldier, who was severely wounded at the battle of Fair Oaks. He deserves the support of every comrade in arms thro'- out the County. His competitor has filled the office for three years, with what success we leave for those acquainted with the facts to judge. If one speech in three years, the writing of half dozen colnms of doggerel for a fifth class newspaper, and unblushing hes itation in the trial of a great cause, are re commendations to popular favor, we com mend him to the generous sympathy of his blind adherents. Of Capt. Adam Weaver ling, we have already expressed our views in another article. If his opponent, lured by the prospect of advancement, is willing ' to sacrifice his manhood and his better feel ings, we are content. Against Captain Simon Dickerhoof, no word of detraction can be said. He served his country long and well, and never quailed beneath the murderous fire of treason's co horts. The gallant men of the noble 138 th, who for three long years followed, with him the lurid gleam of the flaming war path, and beheld many a brother mingle his patriot blood with the ensanguined field, will not forget, their old commander. But what shall we say of him who dreaded the con scription worse than a devouring angel, and who in deep tribulation concluded rather to suffer the relentless pangs of the hemor rhoids induced by a free use of a stomachic purgative known as aloes, than to en counter the leaden hail of the enemy. Poor man! he can never obtain a pension, for he was not wounded in the line of his duty. Space forbids us to canvass further this sub ject, but we may at no distant day advert to it again. "WHY PERSECUTEST THOU ME?" We had intended to leave the case of the Reeds to the judicial tribunals where it be-1 longs without another word of comment, but the course of the Gazette renders that im possible. The arrest of Mengel Reed for treason, and his probable trial before the U. S. District Court leaves the subject free from embarrassment on his account, at least. The Gazette vainly seeks to excite sympathy for the accused by raising the cry of perse cution. Mr. Cessna is persecuting him, for sooth ! Did Mr. Cessna advise the wretch ed young man to abandon his home, and desert his neighbors at the time their very hearthstones were threatened with invasion? Is Mr. Cessna to be blamed Wne bo, perverted and deluded by the teachings of Copperheads, committed the highest crime known to the laws of his country? On the contrary, had he heeded the warnings and listened to the patriotic counsels of Mr. Cessna, his situation to-day would be far different. But the Gazette says he went into the rebel army unwillingly. That is just what a jury of his countrymen will investigate and | determine. The truth is the Copperheads of this community were wild in their sympa thy for the rebel cause. They mourned at our victories, and exulted at rebel triumphs; they prophesied and prayed for the fina success of the enemies of the Union. This young man went into the Confederate army because his friends taught him to believe the cause was just, and he is less guilty than they. But he and they now seek by a mis erable falsehood to evade the consequences of his act Mr. Cessna needs no defense for his part in this matter. He is abundantly able to take care of himself. He simply represents the insulted majesty of the law. It is a mockery to say that either the general gov ernment or the commonwealth can be repre sented by the present District Attorney. He possesses neither the ability nor the dis position to discharge bis duty towards his country in the premises. It is notorious that he is now and has always been a rebel sympathizer, and his passions and prejudi ces alike influence him. Instead of joining in this ridiculous clamor about persecution, the friends of good order, of peace, of law, of Union, will thank Mr. Cessna for his con duct Instead of abusing him, they will do justice to the manly spirit which prompts him to the discharge of his duty to his ooun try in this case, without fear, fevor, or hope of reward. The Copperheads are rancorous against him because he possesses courage, ability and patriotism, qualities whieh they A FAIR OF DAVISES. The Democracy claim that Davis, their candidate for Auditor General, was in the Mexican war. So was the other Davis who is now awaiting trial for treason. True the Democratic candidate went forth and fought against rebellion for a while, but at the same time had a paper published at home opposing the war, and returned home him [ self to take charge of it before the close of the war and to oppose with all his power the causa for which he had been fighting. V, hat are the principles of the man who de nounces the cause in which he himself is fighting. Has be any principles? He is just the man to stand upon the platform of a party, whose name is indissolubly associ ated with treason, rebellion and civil war under whose ascendency rebellion was con ceived, matured, and ripened, by whose chiefs it was directed, by whose politicians it was excused, defended and declared tri. umphant, whose organs, orators and con ventions to-day uphold, defend and justify the false and pernicious theories from which rebellion sprung. Iffi- The soldiers are very anxious to get a peep at those Copperhead badges worn by the candidate for District Attorney and the editor of the Gazette. Give us a chance to put them on exibition, and oblige those whom you love so much. Don't keep the soldiers in suspense. Put 'em out t ■' i . i JEff. DAVIS is suffering with erysipelas and carbuncles on his leg. He is now per mitted to write to his wife TREASON. The Gazette mocks at the arrest of Men gel Reed for treason. The very thought of it seems to afford the editor infinite menv ment. Perhaps there is some other word in his vocabulary that will more fittingly define the deed. Perhaps the editor can invent some 'euphonism, some soft and candied phrase that will be more pleasing to the ears of his Copperhead readers. For our part, for want of a term that will more nearly describe this last act, this duplicate crime against state and nation, we shall call it treason, most foul, black and damnable. Taking all these circumstances together the annals of this war will be searched in vain for a deed of equal turpitude. There may be palliation for a Southern man ; for this individual there is no excuse. At the very time when his own state was invaded; in the hour of public gloom and dismay, when his neighbors awaited in dread the coming of the foe; when the rough riders of Jenk ins were within a days march of his town, he stole away and joined the enemy, and was caught with arms in his hands, stained perhaps with the blood of his fellow coun trymen, on the field of Gettysburg. This is the charge, and there is a cloud of witnesses to make it good, for within the lines of the enemy at McConnellsburg the young man made no concealment of his pur poses. Even the rebel General was shock ed at this manifestation of turpitude, and advised him and his comrade to go home. The latter never denied that he volunteered. This deed may be called merely a youth ful escapade, the "spree" of an inconsider ate, hot-headed youth. It exhibited a mal ice altogether too deliberate and cool to ad mit of that excuse. Besides, the times are too stern and* real to allow such fooling. While thousands, of our bravest youth gave up their lives for their country on the field of battle, it will not do to say that this young man joined the enemy merely for a frolic. To do so, would be to belittle them and the sacred cause for which they died. It would even belittle him; but we are not concerned about that The truth is, this young man simply redu ced to practice the traitorous teachings of his Copperhead friends. The poison they daily voided on the streets of Bedford pro duced its legitimate effects. We believe the charges against him are true, and if convic ted, we hope he will be punished in away that will make him a warning to perfidious traitors for all time to come. The case is not one for pardon. THE FOOT-PRINTS OF THE BARN BURNER. For the purpose of reminding our Copper head friends of the fact that men burned the barns of Union men in this county be cause they sustained the Government, we print the following notice, verbatim , which was prepared by the Copperheads of St. Clair and Napier, and stuck up on a tree near Jerry Gordon's barn to warn officers | uf the Government ugainmt doing their duty: Notice to all the inhabitants of this Commonwealth that the people will not submit to this Con script ana those that take it on themselves enroll may Look out as the People will en roll them with Cold Lead this war must be stopt and some other plan taken this Ad ministration must extend the Right of Suf frage to Every State and Man and then Ev ery Body will fight and not until then now the man that nas the Least Nigger and Wool in him will say the least about this Notice and will obey it the most Yours Tru ly and Sincerely It will be remembered that Jerry Gor don's barn was burned, and whilst thus burning this notice was pulled from a tree and read by the astonished inhabitants. Mr. Gordon had been appointed enrolling officer a few days previous and the Copper heads under the darkness of night sought to intimidate him by burning his barn. These fellows have changed since then. They demanded that "This (Lincoln's) ad ministration must extend the right of suf frage to every State and man and then EVE RY BODY WILL FIGHT." Now they ap pear to think that the right of suffrage should not be extended to every man. Re collect that the men who burned these barns are to a man Copperheads to-day! How can any soldier affiliate with such men? REPUDIATION OF THE NATIONAL DEBT, The first speaker who addressed the Cop perhead meeting on last Monday night a week ago,;declared that he was in favor of the repudiation of the national debt This is the true position of the Copperhead par ty. This fellow was slightly in advance of the rest of the speakers, but beyond ques tion he expressed the sentiments of the party. The Southern States will unques. tionably, oppose the payment of the public debt, and for the purpose of securing an alli ance with the dominant Southern-party, the Ooppovhoads will do anything. Yes, after they succeed they tviU not only repudiate the national debt BUT WILL REPEAL THE PEN SION LAWS AND ASSUME THE PAYMENT OF THE SOUTHERN DEBT. Pen sioners and bond-holders can you vote the I Copperhead ticket? DEMOCRATIC LEADERS. Much a# the Democracy may profess love for the soldiers, loyalty and devotion to the country, and a desire to accept the condi tion of things left by the rebellion, they are continually, by their action, giving the lie to their profession. They plead for Jeff. Davis, they call the trial and execution of assassins, murder, they demand that the states lately in rebellion shall be permitted to return to Congress and take part in the Government of the country in such way and manner as they shall choose. That rebels, traitors, murderers, and assassins shall be permitted to go free, or to be tried by a oourt and jury of their companions in crime. Nay they even cling to their old leaders, who blushed not, to the last hours of the rebellion, to plead its cause or justify its crime. Thus the Philadelphia Ledger says: "Vallandigh&m is engineering the Demo cratic party in Ohio. The leaders of the Ohio Democracy seem determined to kill the party, and they could not put the power into the hands of anv man who can so successful ly aocompliah that purpose as Vallaudiir ham. The rebuke he got at the last Gu bernatorial election ought to have been a lesson to the party and to him. The people who have just put down rebellion are not prepared to accept its known advocates as their future leaders." NO SUBJUGATION BUT SEP VRA TION. The Copperhead candidate for District Attorney, John Palmer, in a speech at St. Clairsville, on the occasion of a presentation of a flag by the Copperheads of Bedford Borough to the Barnburners of of St Clair township, on the 23d of April, 1864, gave utterance to the following sentiments which we dip from a report., by a reverend gentle man, in the Bedford INQUIRER under date of April 29, of the same year, and as the report was never contradicted, we give it as it then appeared : Among the many things said, he adverted to Long s secession speech in Congress, a few weeks ago. He said he endorsed the speech, and Mr. Long's position; and would also say, rather than to have the South sub jugated, he would go in for separation. Soldiers and war Democrats, can you vote for the man who was opposed to subjugation and in favor of separation ? We think not WHAT BECAME OF THE PRE MIUMS T There was a considerable amount of gold, silver and demand notes paid into the coun ty treasury during the first two years of the rebellion, and it was there,when there was a considerable premium on Ihetn. What was done with the premium ? We know it was sold. We find no account in th* treasurers report Why is it ? Let us have an ac count of its appropriation. When people are crying about taxes let us know where the money goes. BOUNTY CHECKS I The Commissioners pay sir per cent on these checks from the 16th f November, 1863, when does the interest stop? We have seen these checks paid vithout endors ing the amount of interest paid the payee upon the back of the draft, or noting the date of payment. How does the iTeasurer know to what date to compute the interest? The Copperheads have so long filled their pockets from the Treasury that it is time that we were looking after these things. Come let us know whether there ain't a nice swindle in this matter of interest? B®The Gazette appears to think it an awful thing that $24,000 bounty was given by Bedford county to raise soldiers to fill a quota while Middle Woodberry, South Woodberry, Colerain, and Broad Top each paid almost that amount. Yea, if we be lieve the editor's statement he paid the one twenty-fourth part of that sum to avoid the draft himself. Soldiers, what do you think of the party that raises an ado over the paltry fifty dollars bounty paid your fam iles while you were risking your lives? Shame! shame!! iSf We notice by the last Gazette that the Skedaddlers, Skulkers, Bounty Jump ers, Barnburners and Copperheads generally are going to hold a Mass Meeting at Schells burg on to-morrow. What a beautiful mess there will be in attendance. We wish some of our friends would send us a list of Ske daddlers on hand for publication. We will waffer m new hat that they cannot organize their meeting without drawing heavily upon the above classes. Mengel Reed, who was arrested immedi ately after his discharge, for treason, on the oath of a brother of Croupe, and carried to Pittsburgh, has returned io Bedford, hav ing been released. — Rolidaysburg Stand ard. Not exactly released, friend Traugb. He was returned here in cxsfc dy of the Deputy Marshal to give testimony in case of his brother. He was lodged in jail and the sheriff's receipt taken for him until the 21st inst., when he will have a preliminary hear ing at Pittsburgh. Soldiers remember that every man on the Copperhead ticket voted to disfran chise you. One, the candidate for District Attorney, sported a Copperhead badge. Can you vote for them ? Answer at the ballot box. ■'A..' 1 - ' 1L i L. I .. ...J. II ii . ii . REMEMBER, Soldiers, that every ballot cast against your right to vote was deposited by Democrats. And remember, also, that every ticket against the Amendment was printed in a Democratic printing-office. QUEER CONSISTENCY. The New York Evening Post of Sept. Ist thus sums up the inconsistencies of the Democratic Convention in New Jersey. The application can be made in the same words to the Democratic Platform adopted at Harrisburg. The New Jersey convention, to which we referred yesterday, passed some sixteen res olutions, in which they condemned the war, but praised the soldiers who carried it on ; condemned the administration, but approv ed the poliey of the President, who is the head of the administration ; denounced the increase of the national debt, and proposed to add several hundred millions to the amount of that debt; maintained the nation al honor and faith and advised the taxing of the national bonds; sorted the rights of the states alone to decide the question of suffrage, and yet tried to make that question an issue of general or federal politics. Truly the blindness, and infatuation of the men, who can swallow as gospel such a bundle of contradictions as Democratic platforms are made up of now a days, is past all hope of redemption, until a new, more intelligent and less credulous generation shall be reared up to take their places. INCREASE OF CRlME.—There never was a time in the history of this country when so many crimes were daily chronicled as at the present time. No one can read the dai ly papers without being shocked with the sad details there presented. Crime no longer conceals itself under the darkness of night, but stalks forth with bold front under, the blazing light of day.— Delaware County Republican. We are not in the least surprised, nor "shocked, ' and who should be ? when such eminent moralists as Mr. WALTER will pub lish justificatory articles of the highest crime in the decalogue. We allude to a cor respondence from this place on the Crouse murder. If moralists will publish justifica tions of crime, they certainly ought not to be "shocked ' when crime strides on. • J^. n , e ? r0 mass m eeting was recently held in Alabama. About 2,000 former slaves were present Gen. Fisk told them they should have justioe and fhirplay, but other wise they must "work out their own salva tion. IN the Alabama Legislature, a project to pension the surviving maimed soldiers of the State who served in the Confederate army will be submitted. OUR LEGISLATIVE TICKET. The Union men of Fulton county held their County Nominating Convention on Monday of last week, the 4th instant, and among other resolutions unanimously adop ted was the following: Resolved, That the course of our State Senator, Hon. George W. Householder, and our late Representatives, Messrs. Ross and Armstrong, meets our entire approval; and we herebv renominate for Members of As sembly Moses A. Ross, Esq., of Somerset and Lieut. David B. Armstrong, of Beiford, and waive, so far as Fulton county is con cerned, a Legislative Conference. The Union Convention of Bedford and Somerset counties having unanimously de clared in favor of the nomination of Messrs. Ross and Armstrong this action of the Con vention in Fulton county, renders the nomi nation of these gentlemen complete without the formality of holding a district conference. All that now remains to be done, is to pro cure a good turn-out of the Union men of the district at the polls, and we will return these faithful representatives to Harrisburg, with such an emphatic majority as will mark our approbation of their former services.— Somerset Herald and Whjg. REDUCTION OF THE STATE DEBT. Gov. Ourtin has issued a proclamation announcing the extinguishment of $745,811 26 of the debt of Pennsylvania. This is a heavier reduction than has ever before been made in a single year. It is most creditable to the administration, especially as it was made during a period when the expenses of the State were unusually heavy. On the Ist of December, 1864, the debt of Pennsyl vania $39,379,603; but the State held bonds of the Pennsylvania and Erie Railroad Com panies to the amount of $10,300,000, so that the actual debt was but $29,079,603. _ De duet from this the amount just extinguished and we have the present actual debt of the State only $28,333,792. It is probable that next year the reduction will be a full million, and the following years still more. — Berks oc Schuylkill Journal. __ PARTY NAMES IN THE SOUTH. A Richmond correspondent says that the old party names of "Whig" and' Demo crat' 1 are being revived in the South with very significant meaning. When a man says there that he is a Democrat he is at once understood to have been a traitor and still a secessionist at heart; when the name Whig is applied the person to whom it is applied is undt rstood to be a Unionist, who resisted secession. The Whig party of the South always was a Union party, while the Demo cratic leaders there plotted for thirty years to destroy the Union, and finally succeeded in plunging the country into a terrible war. The name should be buried with the great crimes it inaugurated.— Berks & Schuylkill Journal. r - Democratic Platforms, The so-called Democratic platforms abound with earnest professions of regard for "State rights" and denunciations of mil itary commissions. The practical meaning of the first of these declarations, as applied to the present position of national affairs, is that they wish the slave States to be permit ted to re-establish slavery under some new name, so that the negroes may be as much oppressed hereafter as before the war; and of" th% second, that they wish swindling con tractors, conspirators, and the wretches who condemned our unfortunate prisoners to the fatal tortures of Andersonvifle and Libby to escape unwhipt of justice. They heap con demnation ujwn the men who rescued the nation from traitorous attacks, and reserve an aoundance of sympathy for Secessionists who commenced "the war. They delight in prating of the Constitution as an instru ment that incidentally confers certain sacred privileges upon all its faithful citizens, and for the enforcement of a class that they think might shield Jefferson Davis or Wirz they make a loud outcry, but they are full of virtuous indignation against the men whose patriotic exertions saved the Consti tution as a whole for the benefit of a great people, and rescued the Government from a fearful and gigantic assault. HARD ON DEMOCRACY. —Harper's Week ly, which was one of the strongest defenders of democracy before the Rebellion, speaks thus harshly but truthfully of the corrupt thing. It says, "The national prestige of the Democratic name is gone. The name of Democracy is indissolubly associated with treason, rebellion, and civil war. Under Democratic ascendency the conspiracy was conceived and matured. Under a Demo cratic Administration it ripened. By Demo cratic chiefs it was directed. By Democratic politicians it was defended and excused. By a Democratic Convention it was declared triumphant. By Democratic organs and orators, as far as they dare, the theories from which the rebellion sprung are still justified. The Democratic party has forced its best men from its ranks. It has prostituted a noble name to the basest purpose. _ At some time that name may become again respec table, but for the present. American people have had quite enough of ' the Democracy.'' —Berks a-Schuylku! Journal. 0 mm SENATOR SHERMAN, of Ohio, made a speech last week, at Ravenna. As to the Democratic cry for the taxation of U. S. Bonds, the Senator (who is Chairman of the Senate's Finance Committee )said that such a tax cannot be laid upon the bonds by States and municipalities without reversing the often reaffirmed decisions of the Supreme Court, and affecting the Constitutional pow er of tne Government to borrow money on the credit of the United States. He regards the proviso in the loan laws exempting the bonas from State and municipal taxation, as no more than a notification to the holders'of their legal rights, and that no such tax could have been levied by States, even had the Siroviso not been inserted. In this opinion, ollow the decisions of the Supreme Court, and the reasoning of Chief Justice Marshall. —Berks & Schuylkill Journal. IT SHOULD not be forgotten that the Democracy of the North is now, as it has al ways been, the fast friend and faithful ally of Human Slavery. It would re-establish Slavery to-morrow ; if it could, and make it a national institution. Is the proof asked for? We cite the fact that not a single Democratic Convention in a Northern State has approved the Constitutional Amend ment abolishing Slavery, and we cite also the fact that the only three loyal States— Delaware, New Jersey and Kentucky— which have positively refused to ratify that Amendment, are governed by Democrats. Put the Northern Democracy and their Southern friends in possession of the Feder al Government, ana Slavery would be re established right off.— Johnstown Tribune. The Rights of Colored Men in Virginia. The Alexandria (Ya.) Journal says:—"ln the County Court of this county, recently, it was decided, in accordance with the Bth section of the of Bights, that colored men are entitled, in all capital or criminal prosecutions, to a trial by jury. The 6th section of the Bill of Rights gives to colored men the right to vote and reads as follows: "That all elections ought to be free, and that all men giving sufficient evidence of common interest with and attachment to the community have the right of suffrage, and cannot be taxed or deprived of their proper ty for public use without their own consent or that of their representatives so elected, nor bound by any law to which they have not in like manner assented for the public good. Oil. NEWS. The present amount of daily production )f the Venango Oil Region, we should esti mate at not less than 8,000 barrels. In May, 1862. the daily production was 5.717 barrels. At tjate present rate of striking good wells, another month or so will find a with a daily production of prooably not lew than 10,000 barrels.— Oil City Reguter. The rithole & Oil City railroad is prog reasing finely. Between four and five hun dred hands areengagad on it, and a consid erable distance is already finished and ready for the iron. The road will be finished from the United States well to the mouth oi Pithoie, a distance of six miles, in ninety days from its commencement. A new well was struck on Tarr Farm thif week. It is about three rods east of Clark & Summer's office. It is pumping from seventy-five to one hundred barrels and im proving. It is called the Palmer well. The well known as the Hickory well, adjoining the Palmer well, which has produced no oi for the last ten months, revived and is now pumping seventy-five barrels, and increas ing rapidly.— Titusvillc Herald. We learn that a good vein of oil was struck in Lyon. Shorb & Co's. well on Brush Run. This will prove cheerful news to those whe have secured oil sites on that stream and en courage others to commence boring imme diately.— Clarion Banner. Hilgers Petroleum Recorder has the fol lowing information in regard to new oil strikes: \ , On Wednesday last another one hundred and fifty barrel well was struck on Benne hoff run. This is the seventh flowing we I on the same run, all belonging to the Benne koff Run Petroleum Company of New York. The total product of all tnese wells exceeds eleven hundred barrels per day. The new well on the Egbert farm is now yielding from sixty to seventy barrels pei day, and improving. The new well on the Stowell farm, having been retubed, is now flowing about one hun dred barrels per day. A well has been struck on Sugar creek, o: the middle branch, two miles above Coop erstown, which yields twenty barrels per daj of the best lubricating oil, and is constantly increasing, this well is called the Colone Castle well, named after its principal owner is down five hundred and ninety feet, and be cause of the density of oil, and favorable lo cality for shipment of its product, entitles ii to be classed among the best wells in th< "Petroleum Valley?' A dispatch from the Shaffer farm state: that a well owned by the Renssalaer Oi Company of Troy, Situated on Hemlock run, near Bull run, commenced pumpinj with a good show of oil, and with favorabh indications of its terminating in a flowim well. Last Tuesday the Engineer Well No. 1 on the Rickets farm, Cherry Run, struck ; fine vein of oil and gas at a depth of fiv< hundred and fifty feet. FROM THE KANAWHA OIL REGION. On last Tuesday morning a strike wa. made on Burning Spring Run by Ruff A Harled, of Westmoreland county. Pa. Thi is a flowing well, and it is believed, will provi equal to the celebrated Lewellen well. Whei it commenced to flow, the yield of one hou; was estimated at fifty barrels. On Saturda; morning oil was also struck in a well oi French Creek and Newell's Run Mininj Company, and yields twenty barrels per day Mansfield & Co., of Steubenvill, hav struck a vein of oil. at their borings on Thir teen mile creek, Putnam county, West Vir ginia. This well continues to flow one hun dred barrels per day. Harney & Co., hav also been successful in striking a fine vein on Eighteen mile crook, name cpuntry. Measures are now on foot to establish ai oil exchange at Parkersburg. OFFICIAL FRAUDS. Ohio State Treasurer a Defaulter—He is Arrested, and his Office Declarei Vacant—Movements of the Europeai Capitalists. CINCINNATI, September 12. —G. Volne; Dorsey. Treasurer of the State, was arrestet last night at Columbus, on a warrant issuei by Governor Anderson, charged with bread of trust and embezzlement. Mr. Dorse; gave bail in the sum of $600,000. the: amount fixed by law. The warrant charge: him with ]oaniogsso,oooto a banking hous< at Columbus. The Governer has issued a prodamatioi declairing the office of Treasurer of the Stat< vacant. The delegation of European capita lists arrived here last night. A grand Dan quet is to be given this evening. FROM NORTH CAROLINA. NEW YORK, September 12. —ABeaufor (N. C.) letter ©f September 9, states tha not a single house can be had in Newbern and warns Northerners, who intended emi grating there to be prepared accordingly. The lack of mechanics, sawmills, and buil ding, materials, combined with the refusa of property holders who have been identifiec with the Rebellion to sell any of the thou sands of acres of timber land within sight oi Newbern, prevent any progress in building by enterprising persons; and itis proposed that mass metings be held at Newbern, Beau fort and Washington, todemand the enforce mentof the Confiscation act, if thisproscrip tive policy is not abandoned. A Chamber of Commerce is about beinf organized in Newbern. A Raleigh letter of September 8, says th< colored people will hold a State Conventior on the 29th of September, and have invitet ex-Secretary Chase, Horace Greeley, Benja min Butler, Henry Wilson, C. Summer, G Smith, Thaddeus Stevens, and others to bt present The Convention will consider th< propriety of asking for the elective franchiw which they enjoyed prior to 1830. The Great Indian Council. FORT SMITH, Arkansas, September 10.— The Indian Council was yesterday oocupiec in reading the stipulations to be imposed by the Government upon all treaties in th< Southwest. These stipulations propose a grand con federation of all the tribes into one, the ua tional territory of which shall be the present Indian Territory, and such other as the Government may decide upon. The tribe.- now in Kansas to be removed south. The southwestern tribes will be expected to compel the Indians of the plains to ob serve their treaties. The Indians now hert say they understand they were called to meet the late rebel tribes and renew friendly re lations with them, and not to make new treaties, which they say they are unwilling and unauthorized to do. The loyal tribes are now here, and the others are expected soon. FORT SMITH, September 11. —Replies were made to-day by the delegations present to the propositions presented to them on Saturday. All speak favorably of the poli cy of the Government, and appear anxious to renew friendly relations with it, and many of them promise their aid in bringing the hostile Indians of the plains to terms. A message arrived to-day from the coun cil in session at Armstrong's Academy, by the Cherokees and Choctaws, stating that their delegates will arrive on Friday. THE people of South Carolina are actively engaged in the adoption of preliminary meas ares to secure a full representation in the State Convention to assemble next month. The Union basis of reconstruction is the most popular. A CONVENTION of colored people is to as semble at Raliegh. N. C., to consider the con dition and prospects of the race under the new order of things. ROBERT E. LEE has consented to accept the Presidency of Washington College, which, next to William and Mary, is the oldest insti tution of learning in Virginia. DOMESTIC NEWS. The Pacific Railroad is completed 50 miles from Sacramento, making the entire distance constructed since January, 24 miles. Four thousand laborers are employed, and the num ber is being constantly increased. An immense coal field has been discovered at Redwood Falls, 20 miles from Fort Ridley. Minn. Gen. Grant has written a letter to Assistant Secretary Dana, deprecating the assaults be ing made on Gen. Hunter, and indorsing his West Virginia Campaign. A lady in Philadelphia was thrown violent ly backward out of a buggy, ana would doubt less have been killed, had not her waterfall protected her head from the concussion with the pavement. A beautiful and accomplished young lady, daughter of James McGregor, Esq., Presi dent of the State Bank in Boston, was pistol firing at a target in New-Hampton, when a pistol in the hands of a companion was acci dentally discharged, the bullet entering her brain. She exclaimed, "Oh. God!" and fell a corpse. A lady in Malta, HL, while npon a load of hay with a pitchfork in her hands, was thrown off, striking upon the tines of the fork in such away that one of them passed through her body, the end coming- out at her back. She was alive a week after the ac cident. A box was shipped from Fortress Monroe, August 2-5, to New-York. It was said to con tain tools, but was found, upon reaching New York, to contain a corpse. Large fields of cotton are growing in Cali fornia. The State offers a bounty of $3,000 for the first 100 acres of cotton —also $3,000 for the first 100 bales of 300 pounds each. Over SIOO,OOO is donated by the State for the encouragement of agriculture, in the raising of various products. The niinois State Agricultural Fair com menced at Chicago on the 4th inst. The New England Agricultural Fair opened at Concord, New Hampshire, on the sth. Wirz has furnished his counsel with docu mentary evidence to prove that in establish ing the dead line in the prison pen he acted in accordance with orders. At Winona, Wisconsin, Gen. Grant deliv ered what is supposed to be his longest speech on record, containing 53 words. Horace Greeley is to deliver the annual ad dress at the Minnessota State Fair, at Minne apolis, the last week in September. His sub ject will probably be "The Eradication of Weeds." The evidence against Wirz of Sergeant Bos ton Corbett, who shot Booth, will be rejected by the Court, on the ground that Corbett is a monomaniac on the subject of Rebel cruel ties. In Idaho Territory greenbacks are taken I for gold dust at par. I The records of the Andersonville prison, which were secured, have recently mysteri | onsly disappeared, and a quartermasters Clerk is now under arrest on suspicion of knowing what has become of them. At Wilson's Gulch, Idaho Territory, a nug get of gold was found which is valued at more than $2,000. Snow fell at the White Mountains last week. In Idaho Territory, near Pricklv Pear City, more or less gold is found in every stream, dry gulch and bar throughout the country. There are now in existence 1,457 oil com panies, with a total capital of $869,584,000. In 1860 the amount of beer sold in the Uni ted States was 8,000,000 barrels. In 1864 the quantity used had increased to 24,000,000 barrels, or nearly a barrels apiece for every body. In a Chicago Street car, a pale but pretty young woman gave up her seat to a one-legged soldier, who proved to be her husband, long mourned as dead. A young lady recently died in a few hours after witnessing a butcher killing a lamb. Gov. Henry, of Washington Territory, who was lost on the Brother Jonathan, was an in timate friend of President Lincoln and Mrs. Lincoln, who were married at his house. A California Sculptor has nearly completed a colossal statue of President Lincoln. It is nine feet in height, and stands on a pedestal ten feet in height. A lady and daughter, while driving in Mich igan, recently, were attacked by bees, and stung so severely that the daughter died. The horse also died in three or four hours. There are in the oil regions a class of meu called oil smellers, who for $lO indicate the place for boring. Gen. Swift, who died recently, was the first cadet ever appointed to West Point. He en tered the Academy it 1802. Col. Parker, Gen. Grant's Chief of staff, is a pure Seneca Indian, and grandson of the celebrated chief Red Jacket. In Connecticut, under the existing laws, no dog can have an existence, legally, unless he is regularly registered; and wears a collar with his proper number marked upon it. A lady in Massachusetts, while in a fit of mental derangement, shot dead her husband, daughter and herself. They have had a Blight frost in some por tions of Michigan. The receipts of internal revenue by the Treasury Department for August were $34,- 000,000. The receipts of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad will this year foot up to about $15,- 000,000, between $5,000,000 and $6,000 000 of which is clear profit. It is said that Gen. Butler is to be associa ted with the Attorney-General as a public prosecutor of Jeff. Davis. The vicinity of Lewiston, Maine, is infest ed with gipsies. The regular army is rapidly filling up with meu who have already served as volunteers. The National debt is $2,757,689,571, on which the yearly interest is $138,031,620. The debt has been increased only $295,000 since the 81st of July last. The hostility of Catholic priests to the or ganization of the Fenians is very marked, and the Papal influence at Rome has been and is still to be directed against this body. The next Convention of the Protestant E piscopal Church will meet in Philadelphia <>n the 4th of October. The meeting will be one of the most important in the history of the church. An effort will be made to introduce a new canon, intended to allow the clergy more liberal relations with those of other de nominations. The return of delegates from the Southern dioceses will be another and still more important feature. Frauds of army officers, perpetrated by forging descriptive lists, signatures to passes and other military papers, have just been de veloped in Baltimore.