“ t iithe, CIRCULATION OYER 4000 S. H. IZAU('H, tt EinTons & THOS. B. COCHILAH, LANCASTER, PA FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1563. "I shall hare no polity/ of lay oa•n to e»- force against the mill of the people."—G RA NT. Near=WrlONS. NATIONAL TICKET. " MATCH 'EM." president: Lien. ULYSSES S. GRANT, OF THE trNITED STATES Vine Preatdent: SCHUYLER GOLF XX, OF INDIANA. ' STATE TICKET. Areditor General: Oen. JNO. F. HARTRANFT, OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY Stornpyor Gerwral : Oen. JACOB M. CAMPBELL, OF CA.NIVRIA. COUNTY TERMS OF FATHER ABRAHAM. Invariable, in. Advance Owe oopy to one address $ .73 rive copies 3.30 lbw t. '. 6.30 Fifteen t. 5.30 resproty if 10.00 And 50 rents for ervry addition& subscriber over tweeter/. 03rOne eopy extes to the gott , r up of a Club of Tu,,re is or wore. Address, RAUCH & COCHRAN, Editors and Publishers, Lancaster, Pa Reading. Our Reading branch office is at No. 606 Court Street, opposite the Court House, where subscriptions will be re ceived for FATHER ABRAHAM. Forty One Hundred! We put No. 5 of FATUEP ABP.ABA3I to press this week with a list of Four Thousand One Hundred paid subscribers. No similar enterprise ever before met with such gratifying success. And the cry continues, daily, from all parts of the country. "We are coming, FATHER ABRABA3I," and ready for a hundred thoUsand more ! To CORRESPONDENTS.—We are al most overwhelmed with "Pennsylvania Deitsch." Some of the productions are very good, but owing to our limited amount of space, but few of them can be reached at all. It was our original de sign to furnish about one column each week of this kind of matter, but the com munications now on hand would more than fill the entire paper. All are laid by for more thorough examination, and some may be reached by and by. A DEMOCRATIC B.t.Dois.—We woulilstugest as an appropriate camp:ll4l badgo for the oip perhads of this state—a el,lre , ! pct.—Lcrii :as ter Expre.,.e. We object. A coffee pot, under exist ing circumstances, might be appropriate as a badge for the more respectable class of copper heads, such as newly imported wild Irishmen and unreconstructed Sour Krout Gorrillas, but for the real, genuine, native copperhead, the only badge that can be recognized as appropriate is the whiskey bottle. THE large amount of space occupied by special matter on our fourth page to day, compelled us to defer publishing a beautiful likeness of ex-Gov. Curtin. First class likenesses of Gov. Geary, Gen. Cameron and other representative men of the great Republican party have been secured, and will shortly appear. The Coppf , rhead Standqrd flea Per. The D:mocratic Presidential candidate anout to be nominated will be the leader of the entire party of rele4.3 who lately attempted to destroy the Arneriean Gov ernment, in order to build upon its rains an a7)sol;I:e despotism and perfect system of hanian slavery in every State. and ter riton-; he will be the candidate, and re ceive the earnest and undivided support of the barbarians of Andersouville, and of the butchers of Fort Pillow ; of as.,,as sins, hotel burners and importers of small pox ; of all the organized gang of thieves, pickpockets. burglars and shoulder hit ters throughout the country ; of perjurers, forgers, whiskey rings and bribed offi cials ; of gamblers, lottery brokers and gift swindlers ; of the inmates of low groggeries, dens of prostitution, jails and penitentiaries ; of ignorant Irishmen made " better citizens " by means of forged naturalization papers; of profes sional beggars and Italian organ grinders ; of bounty jumpers and draft skedaddlers to Canada ; of wife-whippers, robbers of hen roosts and newspaper stealers; of Klu-Kluxers, Heidelberg numb-skills. walking beer tubs and whiskey jugs; of Limburger gluttons, chuckleheads, swell heads and venomous copperheads. The Five Points, New York—the devils, great central recruiting station—is a fit locality for the holding of the convention of such a party of the ungodly! Organize Now Republicans of Pennsylvania! Re member that we were beaten in 1867 be cause our organization was neglected un til the eleventh hour of the campaign, whilst the enemy were constantly at work, and thoroughly organized. We have in Pennsylvania a clear Republican majority of twenty-five thousand, but, to secure it we must poll our entire vote, and this can only be done by being thoroughly organized, and by constant work in every village and hamlet. Grant and Colfai clubs should be or. ganized at once. The intelligent young men of the party must take the matter in hand, and canvass every ward, borough and township. We must ascertain our strength ip every district. Wholesxne Repultican reading matter should he placed within the reach of every voter in the State, and thus every doubtful man may jbe secured; and a glorious victory be, made certaiu.. Again we skty, organize EMI WiWil A friend who came from tho West on Tuesday last called at the office of FATHER ABRAHAM and related a most infamously disgraceful scene witnessed by himself on the train between Pitts burg and Lancaster. A number of drunken delegates to the Five Points Democratic Convention were aboard, hailing from Kentucky, Ohio and Indi *liana, and a few from Mississippi. They had with them a full blooded citizen s of African descent, who was ):ean enough, not only to suck bad whiskey out of the same bottle with these filthy copper heads, but he also permitted them to em brace. and hug him in the most affection ate manner, in the presence of respect able passengers, and in broad daylight ! Of course the " nigger" was drunk also, which fact may furnish some sort of an excuse for the lasting disgrace which he has brought upon his race by such social familiarity with copperheads ! Grant's Silence. The Copperhead press abuse Grant be cause he says so little. We agree with the Harrisburg Telegraph that, in this age of endless talk and no work, for which so many of our public men are remark able, we consider Grant's silence refresh ing. The great trouble in our politics is, that our public men talk too much and do too little. Had the impeachment trial ti)t been delayed for weeks by the Nia gra of speech with which the Senate way drenched, the country would not have witnessed the spectacle of the mountain of words laboring and bringing forth the mouse of acquittal. We have been af flicted with one President given to limy speeches, or rather speaking the > axe speech over many times; let us have a President who knows how to hold, hi, tongue properly. Darkies " Cheating" Democrats A copperhead the other day com plained of certain alleged election fraud committed by negro voters down South. Now that is decidedly interesting—cop perheads whining about being cheated i, poor. " i,gnorant, uneducated plantation. niggi , rs If it is really true, that the Southern darkies have succeeded in cheating re lar copperhead politicians, the question as to their fitness to handle the ballot with credit to themselves and benefit to the country may be, regarded as settled. The colored troops fought bravely," and the colored voters vote nobly! - FAT T-1 t 4 1,1 Z. A iurrlJt Caroii tire Del Iv( iiior, fn Nei( The f,ilowing ire the (lelogite,i from South Carolina to the C,pperhea+l Su timl:ll which itlectl lu Nev 174,rk to morrow FiA: THE STATZ AT , j , ;„ : „e ~„.11,) a . L. F. ,Ilut, JAN. I iv-- Geneial Watt!: James I 'ampl , oll. li.'•,; J.. 1. A. lion. C. M. Yunnan, .7. I'. C art)ll. It) '1111..; FIEST CONGRESSIONAL DI , TRICT. C , lliThei W. S. MRIIIES, ILA:. J. L. Mal:Linz, Getloral J. B. Kershaw; Hon. E. Di r. 'lrv:: THE SE , AiND CON“I.E , sIONAL DISTRICT. CiAlos Tracy, 11o!.. C. 11. zi:iinr.lton, 1:. 1',11.-.tt, Jr., Esq., Joln, Haokei. fcc„. 111 E. THIRD CoNGIIIIssit+NAI. I I John S. l'roston, 4,0110: al 31. W. 6ary, (;,.n .1-al M. L. Bonham, Hon. A. I'. Frelerick. F , C: THE FOCItTa CONGEEssioNAr. I! n. ArmirtraJ hurt, Hon. W. D. Simpson. Let us make a note of some of these MEI Wade Hampton (ex-rebel general), James Chesnut (a seceeding United States Senator and member of the rebel Congress), Judge Aldrich (last year re moved by General Canby from his judge ship for open hostility to the Govern ment), ex-Governor John L. Manning rebel commissioner front South Carolina in 1861, and member of the State Con vention that declared South Carolina out of the Union), M. L. Bonham (one of the seceeding members of the XXXVth Congress, representative iu the rebel Congress, rebel Governor of South Car olina, and one of the rebel commission ers to Buchanan who demanded that the General Government should not attempt to hold Fort Sumter), and Robert Barn well Rhett, the Calhoun of the rebellion —the first man who in the United States Congress, of which he was both a Rep sentative and Senator, openly advocated the dissolution of the Union. Keep record and remembrance of these developments, Republicans ! They will be as effective on the rebel Democracy in peace as Grant's shot and shell were upon the, rebel Democracy in arms. Copperhead Argutpeti t. As a specimen of Copperhead argu ment since the ilomlnatiou of Grant for President, we gimpy theffollowing from a neighboring Copperhead sheet : Some time ago. General Grant stwer.ed to church, passr the hour of service in drunken slee ). and when the eongre:ra tion were dismissed, attempted to walk out of a gothic window. Reaching his residence at last, he fell insensible on the door steps." Probably, when he penned this, the editor had been smelling of his favorite " red eye," and was in that hap py condition when all surrounding ob jects took the shape of his own fancies, or, to use an old comparison, like the squaw when she saw the whole regiment drunk. We have selected our champions who are to lead us, and have given utterance to the principles which govern us in the present political contest. Our leaders are tried men. Our principles are those of Truth and .Justice. Nothing remains but for the party, united in all its power and vigor. to sweep the country with suLth a vote as shall show what the peo ple think of loyalty and liberty, as rep resented by Grant and Colfax. Organize, then, without delay, and success is cer tain. Governor Andrew, of Massachusetts, three days before his death said : The tendency of the hour is towards Grant. And that is best. It is not the ideal good. It is bad for the country that he should leave his present post—bad for him, the soldier, to try to endure the hard fate that awaits him in civil life. But it is the apparently best good the country can have. And Grant is so 0u..1 7;0n , :.: a man that I believe he is bound to be i;1 the right, i,. time main, any- lienr7. , Clay Dean, a Copoerhead speaker (some say orator), well known to the - Young, Men's Democratic As sociatioo. o Lancaster," recently deliv ered a , peeyh in lowa, in the course 6f which he is reported to have said that one a[me.l coot one le , oeci so:titers, thrust u, o t e r our no.o?s as obieds charity, are ti,` f. , ) the yollows.'' Boys in make a nuto of this. • • Cfmserva ti re" Solaie The proper definition of a "conserva ti k one who never did hurt , and don't want to hurt anybody. No wondel the "Conservative Soldiers' and Saiio Convention of Lancaster county, held in this city last week, was a miserable failure ! The boys who fought under Grant intend also voting for 1"o~~L Letzrler.4. True. Choice La)1,971017‘' Hissis:!lippi, All Right F0 . .7