. . . . . ~r . . • . „ . •. •T -- -...C - - - - • - 2-.. _ %lA,- ''...- c' --- --' '. - ..4. , --,--- --- ,--- -- - 1 e '1" . .. 1 ' .** *L...4. ----'---- ----:::-' - • , \ \'l . ' , '''''''''''' ,‘ "' ..P' ".. .,' - ' . , 7... - -.: -:•- .- - ---' '. 4 ' 1 ',' , I "t. /? I ""' - . ' 74 • - , , '; ;I I - S . - ~ - /3 . ' - ." ' . • - 7 :, -,. ,-- -,,. ~ • `': , 1 : i , ,- , " 7 "' .* ' -, ,, ' ".:i .' '• - 7 .5 ' 1 / 4 4, \'\ '\ ", 1I / 1 . 9 . V". '' i : ~,:- ir'') ,:j .. ' . ' '. -' . ' ' -.. ' 4 4 . • . '. .., ', , ‘. , .-,..., ~, . ... ' "' 1 ' ' ' '; - ! t . :, - -;;- - '1, --- ''••. T... ,, e" . `"''''.* : -: '1 \ tiii : 1 ., ' ' /7 .- ..•.. 7 .% , T . A. - , - -C-=',--,....„.- : ilk • ,41' , . -;,....; ' 1 ,4 . ._ , ' '1 .4 n ,1 :27., ' .;•:- .:::;..:''.." - - :: - .:' , .,,:....1: .. ~,t . \ - - , .-,1-' -- . 7 ..? t. -.•-- '_•.:' •-•.,:. - ' ‘ s . - „.." - irdn '- - - • 1 . , 4 , ... . 7 , , i ''..r • ~ ~ , r / - ~ , , - •• f ~...„-..-,_... le Na___ ~• . . _ ~,.........•, ............,__..,„, v ~..,, ~... . . '6, rte : . ' --- . , - 7-0 - , --_4'' - ? ----' ..)-%.'•• ..- 4 - \ l ,: ' ••,, ' - • . . ... _ . . • . ..,,, .., ,- - ~.. _ _ ~ •• : i-:-., ,T .. ~/ •....R.,..... ----zrtv• , ... - *,- , t471^"- , ' ~. /.. - , i-,,,,,„ ',.. :17,, -- _ - --...- .. ' -, . • • ,::. - ;' • - , -.'- '-..... 4 ‹..n., ---i. . . 1'1 ",;; : i.'... 1' '.e. 44 :: .. ± . _•i . °, ' . ? ..f,5, 7, .:rr i .," -.., ' .!' ''ff':' , -., N , ,'.. . 4 ' -. ' .'. . . ' • u Ea ... - ' . , . ~ „. - 7 ,, ~ ~ -, , ,,,,,,,....f.,11 , e4:1•:t.,.-.. mifyi4,,, ,, $,- - _ , ~ . , , . , . ■ -1' VOL. 51. AMERICAN :y OLUNTEER rninniD xv'etir TiiurisaAr uonmxa dt JOHN 0. Mmon ■" , TEEIrIS : ; HoMCßiPTioif.-i-Two ‘,p»Utnfa unpaid VittiinHWo y >ar; and. Two Dollars andJ?ifty.'Cdii£s*,if ntft phlld within the year. Tbeeb tcrihs mllw ad bbrod to in every instance. No subsdrlpUtJh'dis continued until all arrearages aro paid fctfiota'dt 1 tbo option of tlie Editor. ... Adyertiskments—- Accompanied by the cash, and Opt exceeding one square, will bo inserted throe limes for $1.50, and twenty-five oonts for each additional insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion. Jqb-Printikg—Such as Hand-bills, Posting-bills fecqphlotd, Blunlcs, 'LfeHtto, Aoj, executed with . oftaraoy and at the shortest tiotico.•. ptirtW. M’CLELIAN, THE BRAVE _Oom'elye-wLo-would-bayo reformntiob; Turn out for.M’Clollnn r tho bravo,, ' Tho hero, the.prido of tho nation, Who our country from ruin can save.' fighting for freedom nnd « - And muoh.oy hia.soldiers'bclqyod,., Tho jealous still called nim a tory, And.sald ho he’noyr removed.' M'Clollqri pur coantry defended, v And wojl might hpV sons havo relief,' 'And the.turmoil and barnaj»e 4 bo ended, Had they loft hin\ Commundo‘r-ln-ohief. A.hero of high estimation, J , Long,, long, bravo M'Clellan haslbdbrf, Tie soon at the bead of the nation Shall In honor arid glory bo seen. Vor him vro will hold-a convention, . .And by thousands.be marching, along, ilojpioing iu nigger declension,. ,And unitoin loud cheering and song. The Btar Spangled Banner in splendor Q*er patriots proudly shall wave, While Republicans oalmiy To M'CloUan, tho honest and bravc* Thus gathered from, mountain and valleir. . Erom the hills and tho plains all around* 7py M'Clolldn our freemen.shall rally, ‘And the echoes of music rdsoilhd. with'all wild abol itton, , , .p That caused every battle we fought, That changed our country’s condition. Made debt and taxation for naught. [on long must our money bo squandered*? How long must tmr nation yot blood ? '6.Gods! Oh I how much I have-wondered ‘How long wo must suffer, indeed. - *Sco tho fortuneless, sad-hcartod mothers, Now m..iurnlng tho.losa of tlndr sons, Tho hoiiri-brokuu airoy and brothura, . Mulie Kud since tho war first begun* Rcpublioftiusik VKhlsh, And po.v'JO restored as it should bo; The traitors from office bo banished Now oppressing the bravo and tbo free. .6h, a ohangb ! Aay ft sobn bo effected Era tyrants ah u\ (loom us L’o slavWi If Lincoln bo olouted, 1 Tbou froudom will siulc to its grave -.j;- 1801—1851. X CONTRAST AVI) ITS CAMS. Abolitionists biiye'tlieitdilaaity to com .Wairi of tho iiririfimMO i.lifiiiiuUies ririilep which Mr, Lincolri iribn-'o 1 :vt the.hogiiiiiing lit the present, writ-, rind to p iint t-u victories won, lend territory eonlpioiTC,!, us pr.iot of his fac 'ully of organiViug arniies, arid rising them .with the least-waste arid the greiitVst' The.assertiriri that hohas skill lolly comluot- Vid tho war. is >s false as the. story that ho had any triniri to riieot in tbo bogining.of it. His hands, in April, 1861, for far from being, VeakerieS bV the Apathy of, the pooplo, were' weighed driwri -.bHr-tbe iirirterisity. of their qff ‘erings.; The tfriisure qnd tlie musiq of great CommoriwcaUhii'wero, freely “given . him— Vost foundrek, irirnacos, qnd] arriib'ries.Tield but to him stores/Af o'rdinririce big enough to Tght the world.,with. An unbroken naVy kanged the sea,, without a rebel gun to molest It or ri rebel flrig to invite a ohaso. State Vied with Suite in sendirig out A multitude nlco which the populous Worth jPourod never froth her frozen loihV The inventive 'geAihs-of a people distin guished above alt other, notions by their me chanical skill, was his... Officers perfectly JaUgttf.nt the AcaJeniy, and trained in the field for the Aft of wir, and' eAgerto try their bkiil on d largori thhatfevtft'an had ever yet 'openeA tb'tbenir, latAtliAif unspotted swords fttw teed.,'-? The'dtca'eteAf Avery 'city, .village ftlM! bright; with flags- ■ -All 'Ailk'e ahd'eWryArheiA l Wtfiod-in the Aprisfhr ' i" 1 .. . .w ,aprij..,ig. , . . to' thjs'.tha: fact'that ho nudibered At of peojde,perfectly, onil .ooulci count (out eight millions in ■■the States, all told,, ftnd.it fo'iist bo ftdraittAd tliAl he commenced this .war with kuhh 'A|pr6pohderonoo of all kihds of strength,' 1 Mr, SewArd’s' sixty' ddys, seem a ; .longitiMo for. if tp'.lAst., Bht nioro thftn this. As,life As July, 186]he rohhdiysSs’es , t'ed id message to. Congress, that there' was a ,deci ded majority for* the, Union in every' Southern State', "'with the oxception,ps)7t«pS, of South Carolina';" so that he really was beginning A , war upon h'minpHty'of eight millions, (sop- - rounded arid embarrassed,,by a loyal .majori ty.) with tho united power of twenty millions.. But beside this wonderful disparity of num ' Mrs, there wia another fact which mrido dar lyand coMtUote'suodess soem certain/’ The’ seocded StAtes were almost entirely without 1 mechanical hanoa.andmumtioniQf war.AVo have the; wofd!of'.l,ie(Jtr Mftucyi:that:there was not a ’• tingle’ percussion/rap. factory ;in ; .nil the • Booth,Xbe people Aere not tntihed to ;i the inedhataio arts,, add -the mdsketathAt they hftd dn hand were chiefly of old patterns and' hot regarded os deride Able. Nearly all their. . edits were heavy pieoes. pnly flt forfortsj and, hseless' Jh,, tlid ;f|etd: Their flayy;', If .they ;’ ’Wanted?one,; wAs, to be looked for, notrid'mg ht anther In their harbors, but timbers ■.Werestandlngurihowniatheirriativo woods. Their'volunteers werdad utididdipUnod As ours • h n d there-was a feeling a “firing oh the old-. : jhg";'which was' vastly hbaore weakening J&ttMiJSelieo Potbefa on (he ep« of eon tfliel in (he tprinf of 1801; 1 '" • ' 1 Throe yeaps Arid q.hqkfjliave rolled away. Of the, nests, wno.poured/put,at Mr.Linoolri’s first call, lew .remain. OfOiqae who have escaped. graves, on tho bnttlpifiAjds of the South, the majority,are maiqied bVfounds, or crippled by hopeles?Aic.knega. Tiifiir plu , ,ces have.been,filled and refilled-, .Arnrjr'iaf 'ternrmy has gone forth, officered with meb" of the highest skill, and equipped with a; uqparallojefi" in. the ; history of .Vnr. Tito millions of men have been must Acred into f.lio. service, and qrily God kpqyvsi hofr ■‘-Jhany’.qfjj'the'm have gasped .out tkoiri ■Jires on and in the hospital, and; life leftthat death; woUlsl'bq-koJcb^b /j h/6(ilthq. , ;, • Four iho'uflahd ’‘hiillto'njt 'of dollars hq-vp; been spent, and tile lipeiiiltng on in a ! progression which hnivcWnl brink, roptoy. come a vast mnqa 'bf. dq'pfqciateh paper,—; Gold qnd silver hay,e vanished from sight.—, Impoverished widows, jyljoi.rmisf,, with their own hands, get bread for at,,a : '-timowhen bread is at ite, 'highest, are to be found in multitudes over all tho length of .the Merchants fear to read the morning paper,' lost they shall find, th'q record,,,bf burned; ships, freighted with their fortiiriqS,'swept from the seas by the roving privateer.: Con-, 'siriptions come almost quarterly, and poor jhea.who can manago to buy’themselves but ofgoing, are beggared by the effort. Instead; of the‘oright, brave fellows who aiezed their.; arms in ’GI, and rushed to the defense of .the; capital,, tho streets swarm with negroes,: 'gathered hj) nriywhere and everywhere, kid-J bought'br ibtiibidated; into tho ranks. On overy.bftnd Wq see the evidences of coming want, add <Jf h depressed and hopeless spirit.- terribly iff odhtrast with tfiq days ot’6l. When Ve Jiqint to tliqse things which can 'bet be' wb,'deplore brilnmities . whioh ltfajldk to 'conceal-'—when Vo ask that, there shall beshovvh'tfa os soibe fruits of all this immense lavishing of life hod treasure,.; 'and ask to be told when it will efad, and what] it will bring forth at 'last—the cry of “ trai-. .tor” ia the, decent and satisfactory answer] which usbaffy J-reets the. impoverished tax-’ payer, the beggared wi'ddW,]aad tho helpless orphan. But. qovy and then, the obampiops of Mr. Lincoln doigh knottier reply. Look “at. what we have done, they say”--coolly ap propriating to themselves all the glories qfi military success. ] t “Loqk at .Vicksburg—at ‘Atlanta—at Tliohihond menaced,,and Uhar-i lestan under steady fire; see the Mississippi,; open, if not to comioeroe, at leqst to shot-1 proof gunboats; see. Earragiit in front of Mo-; tile; behold Early flying-down the Valley.; Tan word, inspect this map. This pale grayn ,lint shows you the area of the rebellion in -1861-—these shrunken patches of bjack show: you how. Mr. Lincoln has narrowedits lines.! The war has been ,n : grand suooeaS, and wei are oh the eve of afinhl rind completa sup-’ presaion. of the rebellion. Shall we give up J -our cause by shifting the conduct of the war ; Troth the master hand which has conducted it so wisely'thus far!'’ .. ~ (fl n .. > ThisTs a ftrr statement-bf, their answers; and arguments. But‘the reply is manifest.! Wo hqve won victories, it is true, captured 1 cities and occupied a vast area of territory,;; but what Hive those successes cost", and howj have fhoy been used.? Take the Abolition j map, if you choose, falsely ns it is contrived. ’ and deceptive ns is,the view it gives of nur.j actual conquests—but, grant it to be true, and foot up bow many lives and . how much '. irioriey it wftl'host to wipe hut those those, ugly reriiriirifrig spots', at the sumo wasteful! rate at whichhave .paid for whqt wei have paid for vNßfwo have! If ivo‘arc to go on, nnd .'oh, raising how, nrnqieq. to: supply th'e .plliyes Linoqlnjs monthly ; if the South is to be subjugated; by the mere physical process of piling dead J bodies on its fields, any reflecting man can: see that there are not bodies qifl'iugh .left in i the North for th’e ghastly .work, even ,if you ; take the women and the children. As for the j money required, to effectuate this policy, tlie ; , beggary of every household in the laud won’t ■ furnish it. . . .... ;.. .... . .., i Our trouble has hot been ink want of nmn-i hers or of skill arid bravery iimnng officers' and irien., Bat victories .nfive been, wool without profit, rind dis'h’sfers .precipitated; whore victories were, withijf- roapli, by the; wicked and stupid policy ,Pf Abrahain Lin ; 1 coin; A distinguished army officer, who has: done brilliant service, said not long ago, i ;** Our armies in' the South, under Lincoln’s | policy, only Hold, as much ground ns they nc-, tuaUy cover.” The.piajoritiea, in the South- i ern Stritcs, which Mr. Lincoln told os-in; 1861 were in favor of the Union, rife now to j A man in the ranks. . Victories, instead of BeingAsed ns a weans for opening the gate- the old Uhiqu to A.peopto .wearied; aria wofi out with wrif, rife taken 'idvantnge of to apfoad and fasten oh tbetn ri barbarous ! and doto's'fed Abolitiob. bpliqy n *hiqh rouses thn tbnt.nri \ye win territory, wo ; lose.hearts,.aria ‘is the work of Abolition is cifended Yuid glorified the hope of Union ■frifi'es b'hdjdiesj ' ~ ... • The Abolitionist's iriboiontly.spqnk of tho tfbinipli of our armies as party victories of rtfhrs-. h-bereaa the glory of winning them is shared by teris of thousands of brave and ’eriAb'rlnfe; PemborqtSj, while the shame of misting them; is all fir, fiiicdln’3, - ’Geh. MoGieljan, when he connbihued th'e -Army of the Potomac, practiced the policy Which lie now advocates', ite so'iightto riiake his sVioVVcWria 'fedcibbil tb tbo restoratiqb‘o‘f tllb Ijriinn, !>y sb’Awing ri'iir.’ridyersfii-ies th'it tile Union was all wo were fighting , fop. .He sough 1 to. win the hearts of all .the people of .the,South who still leaned kindly to the old Government, by guaranteeing them all their 'rights ris States, and tendering themi besides, tlVeif lust heritage as members of the, great Confederacy, This is the only policy that plfomisbs peace this side of the last-day. If ally irinri is oririods to kriovy .what. Mr. Lin obU’s poliby.WiUSm for'us in. the next four years, let him think, what it has lost for ueiri the four, that are past,—-Aye. r. jjggr the ; ihttsbulrg : Commercial haying stated that only about ten meq in Camp Rey nolds were lor M'Clellan. four soMiera-there stationed canvassed barracks No. 1; with the jblloiiHng,r,esdlt f for M’Oleilani'2B2'; forEin >pie,'4o:'Seven 1 .other soldiers', 4jl bf one Bunk, aignod n .card. saying'tHAl' fiftoen out of twenty five of their squad.4r‘o for.Ljttjo.Mao : that.two-thirds of theif barrob.ntr ateiajso tot hltb. ddd tbit the general sentiment ? Of the damp is the same. Bully for. the "bodld Sol dier boys." 1 : - As rdn dying soldist'dn the Hold of Antio ’taih ; WBB to 1 turn his jweury thoughts Heayertithe-grpting shout of A ribiild Aegfo .s ( bi^sH?|rpdp;su» oars. |]Eopk> iiig ■ ap ; 'Wr*etf ~dsdpS shocked the living and insulled tha dead,he found) Abrd; ham' Lincoln enjoying® vulgar melody in tlje midst of thatssoene' of'gloom and suffering. God help the natibil WtEedofr I "OUR COUNTRY—MAV -IT ; RISHT OR WRONG OCR COUNTRY.” J 1!IIIIII= . .. ..l .... :r MB ? ' c. ’ •" ' CARLISLE, PA, TiffiSA 1 ?, 6CTOBER 13,18^4. ■ ■ MB.WOLVS PLOT TO EIIiFBAKcIIISE ThdMaryland Democratic Convention inot last Vbeek with full delegations from every bounty in the State save two, forriinjly and unanimously ratified the nomination;Mc- Clellan and-Pendleton, chose a full electoral ticket for the November canvass, advised the ■Democratic’voters of Maryland to waive their objections to taking the illegal oaths required at the polls, and urged them to vindicate the freedom of the ballot-box at the State election oniOotOber 12th and 13th, and at tlfo presi dential election in November. Tpe .State Central Committee issued an ndrbss. Tl t,o! the voters of Maryland advising every'onq waive his objection to the il legality of.fhe oath, and, if ho folt justified in his conscience, .to '.Kike the .path and veto,” for the eafco V.ottho blessings of free govern ment and of ( By this ROtibn ftfa'Seven electoral votes of Maryland were, as, good as.cnst-fpr McClellan and Fendjeton Wtted sun arose. Beyond all controversy the, votes of the loyal. Union-loving Democratic., and conservative men of Maryland would have out-numbered the votes of Rej)ijbljcHtib,' - 'of office-hblcers, and of disunionists ,and left a mar gin.whiohL.no . plausible-frauds-/could . have overcome. •; | j* Mr. Lincoln has not dreamed that Jjhb, De mocrats of Maryland would lake the oath' and vote. Their friends in other States "fiji,v,e hardly hoped’ it,’aware as. they were of its odiousness, of . its, rejection in former elec tions, of . the peculiar offonsivetfes?, £((,. (he oath now to bo 'demanded, prescribed with insolent lawlessness by the Republican jpV jority.of- the Cbnstituional Convention, al though the path is itself a part of the'very constitution whose adoption or rejection the coming is to determine. But the action of these ‘Democrats was unaninjooa.— They saw that tlipir only hope df redeeming the nation from .the despotic heels wjiich have ground, Maryland, deepest In the dust, waa in the and to the ballot-box they.resolved, peacefully, quietly, and nobly, in their united strength, to appeal., Maryland’s seven votes, as we have said, wore' as good as' cast for; McClellan and Pon- >» v ■ ■ /’ Tim bnly'Demooratio press in Baltimore— . Poat-rO n- Friday published the : proceedings pf the convention, and the elec tbrol] jacket jtatje fput jn ,qpinina(ion was fipad of columns. The De ' moprats'pf Maryland were thus to be informed whom tmeote.for, in order to secure the seven ybtes ,of Maryland -ftf McClellan'ond Pendle- oomm'and of Ma ■ jor-fjeneral Wallace, the publication of the EoeniopFostvaa stopped., . ~ , of Maryland are how with out; anally .without the meansof ex ppessyfig t(igtripoK.tiSpl opmjbtia, .without the mijaqs ’of ditnisiiTg (p, voters political informa- without . the means of advocating ‘ the claims of Mr. Lincoln's opponents.,,, , Lives there one American frqeman whose whole, soul is not^fired with indignation af this Open; shameless,'palpable outstretching of the arm and looking of the fingers qf ty ranny? Will onq Republican journal in all tins' [and fefuse to ilohouoqo with, prompt, unsparing Vigor this ImhJ.Visii’ilo approach of Mr. Lincoln toward the,perpetuation of his rule by usurpation T po’ftio one may-say, surely there was d necessity Jfiir this suppression of thn only De- Mr. ( |iincbln wildttl;iVbt "i aye flared to permit it. We are i'nipni;eht_,brtirglu!ion!s from military or po liiic^’.i,,hoc^so:-ty.’ ’ We can reoogoize but ■mbSKprelno necessity, “>L'nipn and liberty, mie"ahd;i’neejfcrp.ble.'’ 'Eut-we will, be pa lieht'npd •rpCuo'tfie, facts of this suppressiop, amf the judgment of any honest ati'fi pafnotiip'inim, though, he be Mr. Lincoln’s mifet'nrdcnt supporter, if there be any .necessity which can account for it, ex cept-!', the necessity of Mr. Lincoln’s re-pleo; : , .... ■,.. .. j„ ■ ; The Evening Post was established as aanily Democratic newspaper, on tlxo 7th of June last.’.’amj has published about one hundred issues, ~ ItßjCotid'uct has beqn so.prudentthat pot one ocmi’pVaiut’jias lydged,'against it by,,the'very commandant oftho Middle'Department. Alter the Chi cago Convention, it placed the names of Mo- ClelTdn and Penalo.tpn at.tho hopd of its col umns, and,has since pdvacated with ability and witiljqut hffpnsi. But wifh but ticket in nomination, such advocacy would, haye been of no avail. The Democratic Convention, met. Its proceedings - we, bavp TheEvening 'Post publish ed the Bcmoorhtiqeleqtp rail ticket but ouce, and was tlieh iuppres’sqd. . Its issnoppf Friday, containing this tidtqt, contained: also, as every other paper at; the North (ids contained, an accent of the recent riot, at Cincinnati, where a Republican mob assaulted and fired upon several aitizeng, wo men nndfchildren, and inflicted soihp damage upon the office of the Enquire* A copy of this last, issue of the Post is before os. It contains-.tlio account of the mob, ahd'also the Gazette’s aocount’(nbt conflicting in the main facts, however.) The editor of the Evening Post thus Conformed, oven in the publication, of this ■ news, to (lie ,requirement 'of General.Wallpoe’a predecessors, viz':, that Jp.a.nayyr&flß' snClfshe<l, reueqtiq'g tih oa tim 'anjninistfiition, hotb Versions shquld be''give'6 ) and Sfho bulletin, joardg.'jrnnpubcpd -the'came heivs, BiWp.fj’,]to,dv , tVathfiil&. ..At -Kauad of spjaier’s, ■wh’kner.prflered by'General Wallace or some sulordiriata to dq'so, does not appear, took ppsessioß ,of these bulletin . boards,, earned tbelh to headquarters, whither, the proprietors of the Post t were soon summoned, and whence was s’ubaequentlv issued the following order, wjiipji. iGeneVal .Wallace has since positively refused to revoke; . ; EioWb.-ARB^.i3(^ps c lvrrpDi,E Drt-’T, 1 ■ . Baltimore, Soptomber SO.' J Editor Eveiiing Pdsle ■ As-the surest meant of preventing your of* ficehboing mnde the subject you will disoontinue'j’fhe publioafioo of-yoW-lpa- , ■'peV; IhdEventtidt’ist. . V L ; ■ By cpramnnd of . . rt-,-;,; JlajorGeneral wallape.; ■ Oliver Matthews, , -. • , 1 iCapt. and A. A. G. , (no Evening 'Post ofarict.either froia ijitftens or soldif.ry 3 . Ni) ; f ;.‘iWbratCly ,i nonp;i'' Noohe will-pretend ihat ; tbA' : 'buirdtin r of' snob a 'pieo'e. of news 1 wbnl’ l ekolt'e I< a Viet in 'Baltimore among; her 'citizens.. If thqre was any dangor, of a riot then it''mnM l Habb'b‘een c the sbldierg uh ;'jir '(jebAtSlL’WUjabe’s,(Oommand.' • In. that; , Genei’al Wallace’s, duty .? Of a cnnimander must’ he,b,o if be could, not kWp bis tripsin .control and 'bbe'afe'nt IR> ‘bis briers,,•, ;But tberb was. not 'tba Blightest 1 Sh'ndow I 'df:danger; Th'e tesVi fnbny of thpso-whose property would have been’destroyed by a riot Is quite' suffioient. ' Thqy.deolaw thM .tbetre was absolutel(y no 1 t *•'; 'J ,r- i.U' !BE i 'SI i; k f: MARYLAJID. danger. / Several of the. most prominent lojnl jcitizeriq of Baltimore assure us upon their liinor that there was absolutely none. ..Many qf the soldiers now in Baltimore bought apd rqnd tho /Vwt habitually in’prqiereqce to any other papoi'—fiut thp proof is abupdifht. j The ofdcr for. tlio, Bupprcssiqn of the Ppal implies,,p. falsehood,’a,n(J. is bold, shameless, outrageous’ (yronny, i( Wo assured that it was issued by the thq, President hipiself. It is tfift first-tiiovo. of Mr. Lincoln to’prevent, tho yotq of Slaryland,from being edv/t for McClellan arid Apqogllqtdp. T'lio.'Pl usfijb tnassaoro,. where hundreds of brnve Vul diefs were' fruitlessly slaughtered in liio at tempt to secure tho three votqa qf Florida ; the rotten-borough scheme by which “the mere orealhres of his will” wore to .got, tlio power of cast'hg (the wljolp .elcctoijnl yo(e -qf several of tlio ’rbtel states ; Mr. Ljpcoln’s veto of tho bill for 'reorganizing the states pi rebellion, pronoUnSliß'evdh by AVadp, and by Winter Davis cf Baltilhoro, •‘a'grava execu tive usurpation/’ “a docorrient unknown to the laws arid Constitution \df, States,” an act‘‘holding tho ’eTeqjonvl votes of the “rebel states at tho diolqtoof.his per sonal “ambition,” and ‘‘inaugurating . -givil war," an act of “plenary dlotiito'rirtl-pijwdr.” a outrage on the legislative author ity of the people,” tlio Bonding horne of’Kc publican, and the refusal of furloughs to Dom 'Ooratid soldibrs, by which tho elections in several states were, .'carried last fail ; tho same unscrupulous use of military authority fjyj Which the strongest Democratic, districts in Indiana arc now being filled with troops Sgrely neqdod in tho field-: thq assessment of and tho blackmailing of all who sell, supplies to tho government ; the per ‘ririjnptofy’exclusion' of Democratic newspapers’ prid documents from the armies of tho Union, ■(yAjile Republican documents and Republican newspapers, filled with, Unretracled blunders against MoOJollan and the Democratic party, are sent to the army from tho halls of ,the Capitol , itself, by tons ; those are, and .have been,. $hq. means by which Mr. Lincoln has has.beejtroiititrrying to sqcijno.liis rotentinn of executive- power for unotrier ,four. years. They ate fitly followed by the, outrage with which Mr. Lincoln has disclosed his plan for cheating McClellan and Pendletop of.Ahe seven electoral votes of Maryland. , ~TYe to level at this usurper, who defiles *viio ’ oliavr of 'Washington.— Tivo time for that has passed. We have; .simply to ask the supporters of Mr. Lipcolri if if (s theirjntqntion to permit hyn. tri proceed . in the aopomplishAaent of; his now clearly re vealed purpose. And our language shall give nooffeneo. It shall he .the language of ;thP9O,- qujip.orters of Klf. Lincoln whom we have already oithd, Hr. Wqdp and.Hr, 'Dgvis i- Wo ask if there is to ( bgjri free ballot,',in] the free, prpsq.nnd the jfree qpeeeh. andtbe free political died'upsiqg,-with out which the ballot-hex. cannot fib free f , “ If thp'flupp irtcra of the government fail to insist.dn.ttnH, become responsible for the Usurpations which they fail to rebuke, and are justly liable to the indignation of the, people whoso rights and security, committed; to tnoirXbeping, they sacrifice.”, ' “ Let tbein conbider the remedy Ibr these usurpations, and having found it, fearlessly execute it.”- , . As,for the Democratic,party, it has already considered of those irinttera and its,conclusion' is stated in the third resolution of tho Chica go platform. World. Lincoln Offers to Give McClellan the 'Highest Comnvand iirihe Army !!'! \ Lincoln Offers to Give McClellan the Best CivJi Position jn His Gift-!!! 'Lincoln Offers to Support McClellan for the Presidency in 1668 II! Every new fact that comes to litrht only heightens the contempt with whi.oh .every* { man in regams the J .'ipoor j corrief-groccry politician Y.h° noty de-f files the chair onoo adorned by Washington, i Instead of addressing himself earnestly to ihe great questions involved in tho struggle nowj socking to find a.RolMion ofi them *fhat would pacify hnd\Y-e'ui»ito the country, Lincoln employsTvhqtjlitcle, slirewd-j ness ho acquired in hii* younger djtyp by, swapping jack-knives mid .whiskey to.*p ! lanta : tion bauds along the Miifcf^'pp'i,in attempts ‘to.drive fiargainshy means of which ho hopes to secure a re-election. ■ . ‘ , That ho succeeded in buying, ; off -Fremont aopfb/tifpe., That he tried to bhy off Gen..McClellan lias now also como to'lightl That he failed will surprise no one but a shoddy contractor. ' ' r The fact is s 6 well established that success ful contradiction is out of the question, that the moelinabf the Cbicugo Conven tion Lincoln sent iJlair to-Gen. McClellan, with make him tempting of fers to induce him to doline a nomination for the Presidency. Lincoln offered : 1. y.o give McClellan any command in tho. army-that ho might see fit to njimo ; —or, 2. Any cml’offico in the gift of the Presi dent; —or, ,b .* ... - 3. To use Ul9 w,l[ple power and / 'influenco of the Goyernmont to make him President at the end of Lincoln's qyconfl tprm;j j.j j u Whdfc do,,auV t 3kepublican iriends think of tjnis? leaders-ftre trying to persuade that McClellqq is unfit fora jilgh ihftithry' cqminandy that (is, is,in sympathy the knd T that liis edevktirtn to the Pro* siaency.'ojf.jtfie :*llnlted States would be as bad as the accession of Jcffer|ou 'Davis to the same.ppaitipQ.i, If Lincoln shares these opin' dons, he must be the most toad-spotted, trai tor that ever breathed the breath of life, for in order to get Gen. McClellan out of the way, of his reflection, he has offered to use the whole ,power .of • his'; make President in 1868.— Lancaster /n -ielligence r, : , !. A Croel Joke.— AsPrcsidentLincoln was proceeding up Seventh street yesterday even ing, escorted-by fio met sqiiie distance.above the Northern Market, n squad of cavalry coming down the street. , . Perceiv ing. His Illustrious Highness, and recognizing his familiar features yho, cavalry men, rosb'in ,their stirrups and, gave three; hearty bheei;a: for "tittle, Mac." .The, commander.. pf the Faithful h'id.lood for, reflection iu lbis little incident.— CoPstitulional Union . , • SST Mr. Spwafd’s,“ little tfeH” won’t ring ey are gijio|[..to t%kc|Oqt tile clapper, • iJaIK ringing altogether; however,' for every spire in, the,land,will jingle, tneri'ilj; pt .the bnstiledt'' ! on, go'lfo war,’ yon ,caWnot fight always } anayrhen after oni both sides. orid- f(P v gain on either, yon .pease flghtingv tho iilentical queation as to terms of intercourse ie upon you/* So spoke humbug £bb IaNOOLN-at the oommenoementof hia administratSonV ’• =I Tax-Payers ! of Cumberland Coaaty ; ~ l*rom t]io New. York \Vorl<J f A BONK FOB ABOLITION .FABMERS TO GNAW. Stop a moment, honest Froesoiler, Tyo .want a season with you. Let. your plow stand in the furrow, breathe your horses, and put on y'oxir thinking-cap'. You believe in the Emancipation proclamation ? “ yes.”— don't want the President to back out of if? ~ ** tyo,” ,Tho war; then, must go on, so far as your Vote 'can influence if, till tHo' slaves are all freo. * Now,, honest friend, have you ever thought what this oxporlftonk of freeing all negroes is likefy to cost you? Are you. willing to youffarm for.half.its ‘your share in defraying expense 7 ‘ Why, .dear man, it is alre'ady mortgaged to nearly extent, and every year the . war is con- jthia- mortgage, auothor on the back ef ib. jGiye your nttchHion a mo* nient, and.we will make this as plain as th® fence that divides .yqUr farm from your neighbor's. Von tb.aat, of.'.cyprse; see that the public debt is a mortgage on-the. ‘projjer ,ty of the yvhole . cotintry, for this.. 'may“bp7fakon’bylaw -to pay.it. ’ll you Wopfl so would; pw.o half of. the debt; if you owned a ora thousandth part of thp’prop erty, yqh t ,wqhld owe a k thou sandth partef jtlio that is, your share of-tho debt, proportiop to your share bf tho , Nbw it so happens that it is easily got af vso.fh’at jf you will toll us tho value, of your farm we'will tell you what part of it is already morfgOjged jboythogovernment. Wo are not gbing to iiupOAO upon you by any statements which wejjqive; cooked qp to sckv.O' a pnrpose; the figures we from docurpehts prepared by llcpubllci]kn.offi cials and as for. the arithmetic, you aro'jpst as competent to verily our cnloulationaas wo are to make them. So good farther. Gri'pe dollar, give heed! M If ypu will call'on the methb'er for your district, or at ■an'y libbrspaper joffico in your cWh get an oppM’bbqity to examine a book prepared by Mr. Kenne dy, chief of- the census bureau, containing the ‘figbpeß of tho eighth cemsu's. to 1 008 hundred you I & table giving the assessed value bf. all fbkl estate in every state and territory of thq, JJuited States. You will observe by the foqtiiTg at the bottom of the qolumn that, all to $6,937,106,049., If you will thqjn talce apt and add .together the fig urb* lopr.esepU’pg the real esftifce.of,the slave states,, tlie.’amqunt will be” 52,387,904,357.— Subtracting'-, thfsr from’ the whole you will have left $4,505,171,602 as tho total assessed. .value of all tho land n i.qd buildings in the free-States and. the of t ..which, your farm and tho buildings and improve-- monts upon it are a part. * V i i- ‘ . Now in finding tho debt against : this property, wo will lead ydu on/gnjund whioh you must regard as —; Look up almost any file of bity newspaper for the mon.th of July last, and ; you will find in the financial column jib pfccial statement, of. the public as’it existed on the oth of’ July, purporting to be taken from the books of the Treasury Department, and signed by the acting secretary of the treasury. Accor- 1 ding ,to*tnis statement, the debt was at that date $1,'792,867,040. A few days previous to the publication ,of the Seoretnry made, b, se&irdm cial statement that the debt was then increa sing, at the rate of $2,500,000 a day. There have intervened, since the 6th of .July pp tej this 2oth day of September eigjjty-tju'e® days, t which, at that rate, would brrag im addition to the debt of $217,500,000 .whiqh added to the debt bf $217,500,000 wbiich added “to the amount on the sth of July, makes the t pres-- bat debt $2,010,367,040. ia, only the: funded or boqded dept, feavihg-oat hundreds of millions ofsoati,U*g debt.) There are the best reasons ,fpr supposing the debt to pe ihuch larger, bu,t vye take because £hey.-banndt expose 'us to any saspi cion of '■ t ’ t jjatii, rt ia easy to. detepq|ine! the ambunt.of mortgage which rests rfnj any purtippljyr fUrta fiy reason of If tr/Q'fariu be worth $9,000, it is mortgaged to'tho government for $4,000 ; if it is worth $4,500, it is mortgaged feij $2,000; and in, tho lik-o jwo’pqftiop for any larger or smaller; value. Nearly half of your farm is already gone; four years more of war would make tho mortgage,to the public k preditora./about; equal to its assessed Value, Aro you willing '■ to proscqu(o. the experiment of ( freeing the negroes at this cost.? By the time tno expe riment's completed, you will bo ns muon a slave ns tho negroes themselves. For in what does slavery consist, but in one man’s; laborijig.and another having a legal title tq the fruits of. his labor? Thd.slayo labors and the master pockets his earnings. - You labor, and your earnings all’ but a small sub sistence, will go Cf the Emancipation Are you sq en amored of thiO/prpflpcot that you wijl Vote for doubling the present heivy jnortgege which the government holds' farm 7 fyn-, dor this-thing* welf iq yopc owa : talk ’ it oVct yo’Jir nqignbors; and see if,thoir is any why of getting’ ij-lfi of tfie poncluslon that proper,tlouatb auare.pf the public debt ib a mortgage on your property; . • * | Thirty Thojsanil.Uolinrs Exacted of Gadoin ffobsc Clerks lo Re-Elcel Uoarst Abe. It wnsbntn day ortwo.sinco wfien wowere called upon to expose tjio system of black mail practiced by the Republicans,upon those who, have supplied, the.medical department (if the. army ■vrjlli dfhgs, and .medicines, Cit oular letters wore addressed to each of them, calling for a contribution to the fund foror ganizing and carrying the presidcntiul elec tion.” Who furnished'alist of these,hnmeat Was it General : Sattcrloe r tlie.afmy, purveyor in tjjijs city ? We ftppe not, for his own Sake; to- say nothing of the sick or wounded soldiers who; lor, every dollar.contributed under Mr. Raymond’s call, must suffpr in the quality or price of : ill future medicines. ' In Wash ington' itfs a thousand dollars to tho Black Kep.O.bli oan Sctionol. Oonomi.ttefl, ;eeoureet.ii, to Secfofqry T,ep6kqmcV|diq j. tha£ tlje contributor have a pass tp get .cotton oat of the confederacy, and that snob.a letter always procures, at the War Department, the neoes.' anry phptort fPr. pAtiom {a a! let ter from Mr. Raymond,- m like manner, ta.ae 'eureka modioipe ophtraot; veyor Salterleef: It looks lite.it y; . But this jhedi.pine. business is qnite eclips ed by the custom-house business of Braner. . ,We give' below a circular placed! on Erid,ay last, in the bands of every alert, in the tom-honse: ' ! OosTou-Hoosg, Nbw Tors! 5ept.,20 ? 1854. But; The ondersingned; hiyinjj’jiaen »u* •*-r ‘ .*t . j READ THIS*! (horized for the purpose, are prepared to re .ceive the assessment mode’hy the Union Com , miyo.es, andj,.will bo found at. the basement room formorjy v ot|pupiod by. the United States measurers, from 9 a. m. to 3 o’clock p. ir. this day, iuid to-morrow, j , JIARAIIOpS, IIICIIABD WINKOOP, v. tr .V~., v >.v . RATXS or ASSESBMENf. tfpoh salaries under §l,OOO. one por'eenl. Upon salaries of $l,OOO to $1,400 inclusive, two per cent. ~ , , . i . • ' Upon salaries of $2,00i) to SO.^OO'inelusive, fopr percent, a it Upon salaries from $2,500 ‘five per cent. - : , ; X. copy of this document was'handed to '■Stick 'feVeiJfap officer ns he left tlie 'ouditor’s . office, where lib received a check for his reg ular. monthly pay. After the circular Was thus placed in his. hand, the victim was ac companied by an agent of .the committee. to tlie cashier’s officers, who, like inspectors, _ weighers, measurers, andinighf walobmen, receive checks oh assistant treasq rer, were, in like manner,' tracked to the coun ter ot that official., - Escape for tho poor clerk from the clutches of Draper became inipossi blo,aml wife ami—little onosniust suffer at ,lipnie, tp re-elect "Honest Abb." Toour knowl edge, families depended on Mr. Draper’s .greenbacks were compelled to bor row- the means .necessary to bqy bread, hav . mg,tbqybecn, compelled to submit to this ex tortion in plain violatifip.pf law and decency. The compensation of cpst cm - bun re, ntfu;er 3 amounts to more than a tnil|iorj. pf .dollars'p „venr. The average rofe of assessment ip ..three ■per centum, and this will give thirty thousand dollars, extorted out of c.lprjfj,.who.only re ceive ...enopgh at best, to, kbep.'soiil prod body together.. What a commentary on Mr. Dra per’s pretended ~reforms ! Hoiy significant, too, (jiat thirty thousand dolln'rs is so near the sum Mr. Draper, himsglf received; in lit tle more than one year, as uuotioiiedr of prize vesela and cargoes. ‘ To be sure,'Secretary Welles, withdrew from Mr, Drapcr’snion til thin prize teat, when, naval officers protested against such biting, rppnoity; notwhithelan ding Mr. Draper’s cjaigi that throe per cept. was a fair and Ordinary,,eommisaioli; but “Honest Abo” quickly supplied other food to Simeon in gustom-houso pap. It was tjnd enpugli to deprive our noblp tars of the navy of,.any part of their hard-earned money, which might have been saved by em ploying, another.auctioneer; but the'last not surpasses the first,”. llonest.Abe 1" . • ’ * • m 7.#s Ton it ail Abolitionists are making deflpprato ef forts to carry’the coming election, ,’Money is b© l ?#. by-them yutli stoph as was jiovor .before witnesses, r It is ev.iddbfc.ftuat Simon Cameron has been very successful in raising material resources.—* Greenbacks, it is true/ara not worth very much, but they will stij} pay, for the gilded fetters with which a fanatical despotism is binding the limbs of its dupes and devotees, American mepi seem to be. willing to. wdar. a cllar which aa plainfy marks them as slaves as. ever did the iron band .that encircled the neck of a Saxon Serf. Freedom wears a sick* ly look, and bears a wan aspect even in this her chosen .and boasted home. enslavement now as eagerly as our forefat'n ers dared all for liberty. Pageants are gotten up regardless pf expense to amuse a gaping and unthinking multitude, and the crowd in thoughtfulness fchropr up their cap and shout at tho mention- of the name of a low bred and ignorant man, who utterly imbecile as ho is, would be a tyrant. Who pays'for all the cpsfc of the war, for all,the, pomp and pageantry withi whioh it is expected to carry the election for , M | ; for the, ,Youp wages, hard-worlfihg.’pcpr or tho l?Alf of the money out, of which you are defrauded in every article which you pur chase,, goes, to fill Rpck.eta ; of Shoddy con tractors and greedy .officials, who are compell ed to a pprfain Quantity of their illy gotten gainq to carry dn the politioaloampain; They can. efttfly-ajiqfd tpidn this. ; them.were mere,vagabonds and.half-starved political mendicants before abolitionism tiy umptyed-, Tl)ey are rich now. purse?, so, lean before; are now,.grown wonderfully plot.hprjo wth fc greenbacks stolen from the treasury, ~ These, fellows wear fine linen and fare sumptuously every day; their cheeky are puffed up..and, and their.pyes stand out with • fatness, while ■ the por in;io tuilsin vain to afford, kis family food nnddeoent covering., Yon, sir; who toil arduously from day to day.ore paying tor the enormous ex penditure .of this 'gigantic civil -war, for too pomp and pageantry of every procession that -tg.tlip, a.ound of musio which,chants tho ■ praise of the vulgog buffponwho sits in the halls of the White House at AV esioegt-on, cracking smutty jukes and telling übsene stories, while , ’I Low-browed bascheas. wr-fts porfomq to power," ■ Yon are paying for, totters wh w}\ ty.ranny is riveting on your limbs, and preparing for tholimbs ofyoMrputority, .jjfflounsi; amah hos.arjgbt to yoteto pmkp h/mself a slave if he ohoo'seS abandon his owil birthright as an American freemen; he. may sink him self to n level with the negro; but he has no right to bind his posterity.,in chains and sink them to degradation by hisaets.qf fejly., Tj\e people are now .paying ,(qr their tolly, butfho hurihon. resting, on them at present is but light when compared to what it will be if wp qre to have another term of Abolition war, of Abolition plunder; and Abolition jnis-rule.—- It is for the people to'shy, whptne’r'it shall continue. —Lancaster Inteiigencer. BIT” "I- declare that I have no purpose, di rectly or indirectly, to interfere with slavery in the Spates wherpjt .exists. I Relieve that I have, n'o constitutional power td do eo."— This was what Mr. Lincoln said in bis inaug ural., The Constitution lias not been enter; god, pitted, or amended, aincehe spoke those words; yet pp JhisiShdMiak 6l *. by a procla mation, to abolish slhvery in all thp Southern States, and ) is fchonsaala monthly, and- calling for, rnore„to make that proclamation. good. . Judged out of .hie own jnabiith.he hat done what he hadnooonstitu lidhal r power to do. anl is oarryipg'on tbit wnr not fordho maictenanoeofthe-Gonstita tion but to enforce the acta by he has attempted man to make Fcesla&t for another four yean! tii rttvfjr :,-i , > A6r liriroour will defeat Mo; ,Ouii&(. ?Aa:tti^, : s|aoBx>f ( do not hidj(j£te any such result, yre, mypiqip jute Aho* basstfieir hobes.opdn the waj|- Known fact that! EinooiW defeated- iiN two years ago. - When “Little Mao", was within eight .oftheateßplea. ofßiohmond. Lradpwr.topjtj. ftway fiffv-oirfit ffomrind cf hia best troopd. aiM t.qiUS; dfflfeaw his plan* ■foHhecayferd’ of tKotwil^paK'- 1 NO 18.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers