44 tattier;':.braivant," LANCASTER CITY, A'A. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1872 GRANT AND WILSON presidential Electors. AT LAIWE. Adolph E. Boris, John 3.1. Thompson, W. D. Porten. DISTRICTS. Joseph A Bonham,. Jahn Passmore, Marcus A. Davis, J. C. Colegrove, O. Morrison Coates, Jesse Merrill, Henry Bumm, henry I)riudy, Theo. M. Wilson, Robert Bell, John X. Broomall, Joseph M. Thompson, Frsheis Shroder, Isaac Frazer, Mark 11. Richards, Geo. W. Andrews, Edward 11. Green, He try Lloyd, D. K. Shoemaker, John J. clilleHple, Dental R. Miller, dames Patterson, Leander M. Milton, John W. Wallace, The adore Strong, Chas. C. Boyd. OUR PL The Republican party of the united States. Iliembled in National Convention in the city of rhiladelphia, on the sth and Uth days of June. 1572, again declares its faith. appeals to its his tory, and announces its position upou the ques tions before the country : 1. During eleven years of supremacy it has ac cepted with grand courage the solemn duties et the time, It suppressed a gigantic rebellion, entail (voided tour millions of sitie , cs, lliscreetl the tepee otizenship of all.and est atilt-died universal eunritge Exhibiting tutparalleied maguantutity, it, ennuiuuly punished na Mad fur puottcal offenses, end warmly welcomed all wti proved loy a!' by obeying, tin laws and dealing justly ottli their iwigLhorti. Ii has steadily tlec,•ea.ied, with a brut hand, the re- SUltaut disordeie 01 a tear, it Initiated a wise and Miniane policy t.eva. , l tit t liultJt,s. Th. Pacific Railroad end silo; .it• vast i' 'n i pro-d.s ha vi been generously itio‘d and successfulty conducted, the public lauds Ireety gtve., to actual eettlers, tiu m,ltration protected and eCo;111,;(.(1, and a Intl lie kaowledgment oft he uaturii,lze,l citizen's rights se oared from littropctio pove.:s. A uniforni natlena currency has been provide-I, recntiailoti frownee down, the national ere di: eii a. cot tinder the :ova extraordinary burdens, and net: bends negetiateo at lower rates. 'I he recites have been careful,: collected and honestly applied anima! ;arm reductions of the rates of taxation, the public dela has been reduced during Genera! Cfraut's Ce at the rate of a hundred millioite a year ; great tluancial crises have been avoebel, and i,cace tut' plenty prevail throughout taint. Menacing for eign didlculties have heed is , „cefully and non°, itbly composed, and the liono,•a.i I power of the itteloi kept in high respect throughout the world. Teo glorious record of the past is the party's best pledg, for the future. We believe that the people will 1M trust the Governmeut to any parts or einultinatiot .of men composed clued) , of those who have resisted every step of this bent:Metal peelress. Y. Complete liberty and exact equality iii the enjoyment of all civil, poiitical and t üb' c rignits should be established alit effecticilly m untunicd hroughout the Union, by efficient a , d 67 eopriate State and Federal legisintom. Me her the last nor its administration 'should admit 01 any Illscrlm respect of citizens hy reasue of race, creed, color, or previous condition of servitede. 11. The recent amead melds the National Con *Motion should be cordially sustaltied because they are right, not inertly tolerated becacae they ar c law, and should be carried out according to their spirit by appropriate legtsie TlOll, that eu(oreemen' of which can safely be entrusted only to the party that secured those amendments. 4. The national goiter:intent should sCek to main tain honorable pea to with. all nations, protecting it, Citizens everywhere, and sympathizing with all people who grit* , for greater I.iiti:Ny. 0. Any cyst ty tf the cn under which the flUbOrditiate oosidoris of the I toverntnent are considered rewards for mere piety zeal is teintllN demoralizing ; and we therefote a reform tit the system by lasss yyhich Shall titan i.-11 the evils id patronage, and make honesty, etncieney and fideli ty the essential qualiticattons for palate positions, without practically erecting a life tenure of alike. 6. We are opposed to further grants of the pub lic lands to corporate - tits and iinnionotles, and de mand that the national Contain be set apart for free homes for the people. T. The annual revenue, after paving: current ex penditures, pensions and the interest tic the public debt, should furnish a we:Mend e balance for the re duction of the principal ; 11,51.1 the revenue, except lgo much as may be derived front a tax upon totem s() and liquors, be raised by duties upon import a ttons, the duties of which should be so adjusted as to aid in securing remunerative waves to labor, and promote the industry, growth and paomerity of the Wnole Country. We hold In undying honor the soldiers and sailors whose tutor saved the Union. Their pen /lions are a sae.: .1 debt of the cation ; and Mr widows and orphans of tho.s, who died for thei• teUlltr: AM entitled to the care of a generous am' Went people. We toyer such additional legisla will extend thy bounty of the goveriamew to al our conifers and Milers who were honorabt‘ discharged, and who, in the time of duty, becanit disabled, without regard to the length of service oi the cause of such discharge. 9. The doctrine of tlreat Britain and other Euro peon Powers.concerni nfr allegiance-"once a subjee always a subject"—having at last through the of forte of the Republican oarty, been abandoned and the American idea of the ledivelital's right t( transfer allegiance having been accepted by Eu ropean nations, It Is the /17Ity of our government t/ guard with jealous care the rtgids of adopted citi gene against the assumption of urination/eel claimr by their former governments. And we urge con tinual careful encouragement and protection 01 voluntary immigration. 10. The franking privilege might to be abolished. and the way prepared fur a speedy It:dm:him in the rates of postage. 11. Among the questions which press for atten tion is that which concerns the relations of capita' and labor, and the Republican party recognizes the duty of so shaping legislation as to secure full pro tection and the amplest field frr capital. and far labor, the creator of Capital, the largest oppor tunities and a lust share of met lial pronts of these two great servant, of cwilization. 19. We hold that Conirre , =.l and the President have only fnitllisd an fttive duty In thei measures for the suppressil uof v,olent and trea sonable organizations in certair lately rebellious regions, and for the protection of the ballot box and therefore they are entitled to the thanks of the nation. 13. We denounce repoillatien of the pohne debt In any form or disguise us a national crime. We witness with pride the reduction of the principal n tlle debt and of the rates of interest upon the bal ance, and confidently expect that oar excellent na Mould currency will be perfected by a speedy re sumption of specie payment. 14. The Republican party Is mindful of its onli rations to the loyal women of America for the', pole devotion to the cause of freedom. Their ad mission to wider fields of usefulnesa is viewed will satisfaction, and the honest demands of any cia , e ofeltizens for additional rights should be treated with respectful consideration. 16. We heartily approve the action of Congreer In extending amnesty to those lately in rel - dhoti and rejoice In the growth of peace and fraternal feeling throughout the land. 16. The Republican party prorw.e to respect the rights reserved by the people to themselves m carefully as the powers delegated by •lient to the state and to the Federal Government. it disap proves of the resort to unconstitutional for the purpose of removing evils, be triimlerettee with rights not surrendered by the people to either the State or National Government. 17. It is the duty of the General Government ti adopt such measures as may tend to eneourage and restore American commerce and 18. We believe that the modest patriotism, tit earnest pnrpose, the sound judgment, the practice' Windom, the incorruptible integrity and the illus trious services of Ulysses S. Grant have commend ed him to the hearts of the American people, and With him at our head we *tart to-day upon a new march to victory. THEIR PLATFORM. I. All the political rights and franchises which ;mye been acquired through our late bloody con vulsion should and must be guaranteed, maintain ed, and respected, evermore. 11. All the political rights and franchises which have been lost through that convulsion should and must be promptly restored and re-established, so that there shall be henceforth no proscribed class, and no disfranchised caste within the limits of our Union, whose long estranged people shall reunite antffaterolze upon the broad baele of Universal amnesty with Impartial Suffrage. 111. That, subject to our solemn constitutional obligation to maintain the equal rights of all citi zens, our policy should aim at local self-govern ment, and not at centralization; that the civil authority should be supreme over the military; that the writ of habeas corpus should be jealously upheld as the safeguard of personal freedom ; that the individual citizen should enjoy the largest liberty consistent with public order; and that there should be no Federal subversion of the internal polity of his several States and munici palities, but that each shall be left free to enforce the rights and promote the well-being of its inhabitants by such means as the judgment of its Own people shall prescribe. IV. There shall be a real anti not merely a simi- Isted Reform in the Civil Service of the Republic ; to which end it is indispenalble twat the chief dispenser of its vast °Metal patronage shall be shielded from the main temptation to use his power selfishly by a rule Inexorably forbidding and pre eloilit4 his re-election. V. That the raising of Revenue, whether by biota' or otherwise, shall be recognized and treated She People's Immediate business, to be shaped and directed by them through their Representatives in Congress, whose action thereon the President Must neither overrule by his veto, attempt to dic tate, nor presume to punish, by bestowing odlee only on those who agree with him, or withdrawing *row it those who do not. VI That the Public Lands must be sacredly reserved for occupation and acquisition by cultiva te", sod not recklessly squandered on the pro jectors of railroads for which our people hive no present need, and the premature construction of Mich is annually plunging us deeper and deeper into abysses of foreign debt. VII. That the achievement of these grand pur of universal benlacence is exifreted and r i trat at the hands of all who approve them, Irrespective of past affiliations. VIII. That the public faith must at all hazards Si maintained, and the national Credit preserved. IR That the patriotic devotedness and estimable Ilervians of our fellow citizens who, as soldiers and ssllsn, upheld the flag and maintained the unity of the Hapublic shall ever be gratefully remembered mid biniarably rimultnd. AT FO RM. rEN!s. Four more work!ng days, mul then e end. The great liattle of I1;72 w ill have been fouglit and won. We con thleutly expect that our next number will record another triumph of llepub licanism. If all our friend,4 exercise their privilege of voting, there can be no doubt of the result. From trst to last, Luther Abraham has been for Grant. We do not con skier him faultless, nor his administra tion perfect. But in peace as in war, ho has been a success. The results of his ten years' work speak for tom selves. We know the tree by its fruits. In a Republican success we have the guaranty of stability and progress. The party has been tried as none of its predecessors were, and its record has been a series of victories on the side of right. What is offered 113 in exchange for this certainty P A political weather hock for President, alai at his back the men who triel to destroy the nation, and falling in that are now attempting t ) grasp power under a mask so thin Cult all can see through it. The question to be settled on Tues diy is simply this—Shall this nation b governed by its friends and defend ers, or by its enemies and would-be assassins? We have no doubt of the a iswer, and leave the matter with our twitters, only urging upon each and all the duty of voting right. TWO PLITIORNS. In the opposite column aie two plat forms, the Republican and the Mon grel—the latter being Mr. Greeley's own version of the "principles" of the hybrid concern. It is worth while to contrast then►. The one clinches its declaration of great principles by ex pressing Its determination to enforce them; the other pretends to hold sim ilar doctrines, but Is careful by subse quent provisions to make them of no effect. The one grasps the grand results of the war; the other lets them slip from its hold. The one declares the unity of the nation; the other disguises the heresy of States' Rights under the mask of "loyal self-gvvern went." The one recognizes the growing sentiment in favor of enfranchising woman ; the other ignores it. The one demands protection for home industry ; the other dodges the question, but prom i-les the Free-traders "no Executive interference." If there were no other argument on either side but these two platforms, their contrast would be sufficient for a Republican victory. Flnish the Work. It Is to be hoped that, during the few days which yet retnain , before the electim, oar frirds every here will be governed in - theiracthin by the enemy's view of the situation rather than their own. For ourselves, we thoroughly believe that the people, notwithstanding the quietude which prevails, are taking vigilant care of their interests, and that the verdict of the October States will be still more emphatically repeated on the fifth of November. Still, however, the coali tionists profess themselves sanguine of success, affirming that, in a number of S'tates which have heretofore been counted as certain for Grant, the pros pects of Greeley are constantly bright ening. Whether this be true or false is not the question. The point of in terest to Republicans is that the Con federate managers are everywhere active and alert, and that they mean to keep up the fight to the bitter end, relying largely for success on their be . 44 that Republicans consider the fight to he over, and that therefore the vic tory can he snatched from them una wares. But the fight IS not over, and the necessity for persevering, untiring effort is as great as at any previous stage of the campaign. For it should not be forgotten that the oltject is not Amply the re-election of President Grant, but also the final disbandment of the opposition. Giving it Up. It is quite evident that the Pitts burgh Post has not only concluded that not Greeley but Grant is to be the President of the United States for the next four years to come, but also that large numbers of the Democracy of Pennsylvania, in Allegheny county and out of it, have definitively made up their minds to assist in making the predestined defeat of the Confederate candidate decisive and annihilating. This, unquestionably, is the true cause of the reprehensible charges which it continues to make with regard to those members of its party who propose to vote their honest preferences and opin ions, instead of suffering themselves to be governed by a despotism as anti- Democratic as the Post tries to make it absolute. Turn Out. We wish to impress upon our Re publican friends not to absent them selves from the polls on Tuesday next, under the impression that the Repub licans will carry the State without their assistance. We have no doubt that we shall carry the State by a very large majority if our friends will do their full duty; but there must be a full vote polled. Should a general dis position prevail not to go to the elec tion, under the impression quoted, it might result disastrously. Let every Republican make up his mind to go and• vote, and see that his neighbor does likewise. If our friends will do this, victory will he assured. SUBSCRIBE for Father Abraham— only $1.50 a year. Club rates still lower. "The Humanitarian Side." It having been persistently ttsFerted in Washington despatches that the President had, in view of certain re ports of outrages committed by the Indians, determined upon a change in his policy of dealing with the red men, Mr. (leo. 11. Stuart, Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Board of Indian Coinniissioners, ad dressed a note on the sial;ject to the President, to which he received the following reply: EXECUTIVE MANSION, Washington, Oct. 26, IS72—George 11. Stuart, Esq My Dear Sir: Your favor of the 21th instant, saying that a change in the Indian policy of the administration is reported to be contemplated, is just re ceived. Such a thing has not been thought of. If the pa sent policy toward the Indiana can be improved in any way, I will always be ready to receive sugges tions on the subject. But. if any change is made it must be on the side ot' the civilization and Christianization of the Indian. I do not believe our Creator ever placed different races of men on this earth with the view of having the stronger exert a!1 his energies in ex ! terminating the weaker. If any chance takes place in the Indian policy of the government while I hold my present otliee, it shall be on the humanita: ian side of the question. Very truly yours, The friends of Christian civilization. whatever their partisan preferences may be, will rejoice at the enunciation of these noble sentiments by the Chiet Executive of the nation. The policy inaugurated by this atiministrtien in dealing with the Indian! has met the approbation of the good in. it of all parties, who will be cheertd with this manly expression of the determina tion of the President that if any change Is made it must be on the bide of the civilization and Christianiza tion of the Indian--that he does not believe our Creator placed different races of men on this earth with the view of having the stronger exert all his energies in , exterminating the weaker, and that If any change takes place in the policy of the government while he holds his present office, it shall be upon the humanitarian bide of the question. Noble sentiments these to come from the great warrior of the nation. Worthy utterances from him who closed the greatest civil war of modern times with the declaration, "Let us have peace," and whose entire foreign and domestic policy has since been one of pence and good will. Tho Sunday The war in Chleag( the observance of the law still goes on furl strange feature of the i r t Chits —a red-) journ ng the -Out riliico quirin the saloons to Sabba h. It not only but de lands its rigid says, i answer to the half of the beer garde is as much the natio the Irish as beer is of the Germans, and if it must be drank it should be taken quietly at home, and not as the result of an open traffic on the Christian Sabbath. If the whisky bar is to be closed, eo should the beer liar. The temperance people and the advocates of a quiet, orderly Sabbath seem to be of the same mind, for they are holding mass meetings all over the city, pledging their support to Mayor Aledill in his determination to enforce the law. The churches and ministe►s are fully aroused. The advocates of Sunday liquor traffic, on the other hand, are holding great meetings, and resolving, by all that is wordy, to struggle to the death for the mainte nance of what they call their "rights." As a specimen of the "literature" de veloped by the war take the follow ing, which appear as flaming head lines over the report in the Times: "In Battle Array—The Legions of Vice and Virtue in Full Fighting Trim—An Uproarious Demonstra tion of Guzzlers at Turner. Hall—As Disreputable a Mob of Brawlers as ever Broke the City's Peace—l ullawmatory Harangues, and a Series of Seditious Resolutions—A Grand Gathering of Temperance Workers at Unity Church —A Similar Successful Assemblage in the South division—Lesser Items from the Whisky War—The Sinkers in Council," etc. Vote for Congressmen. Below we give the total official vote for Congressmen in the several districts In this State. The official majority in the State Is 46,752, which is erroneously Het down by some of the papers at 50,- 776. In the sixth and twenty-thiri districts there were two Democratic candidates, and taking the plurality in those districts would give the latter figures. The same method of counting applied to Governor, ‘soul , l make Hartranft's majority in this county 9,710 Instead of 4,476, which was really his actual majority of all the votes cast, 4,710 being his plurality : Leiatticts. Repts!)pcarkv. .nixrats. 8846 1023 1;253 9128 15429 101580 13801 14743 19040 Vi . 13946 16174 VII 14011 8819 VIII 7183 19854 IX 14501 8596 X 14419 11049 XI 10500 111870 XII 11551 16811 XIII 13074 12241 XIV 17646 111488 XV 13582 1158153 XVI 14883 13061 XVII 11442 12011 XVIII 17041 14678 XIX 1774 Y 18936 xx 98704 18731 XXI 13970 13989 ' XXII 17948 15933 XXIII* 17131 11380 XXII/ 14195 13109 BM Republican meJorlty .... 40753 `Two Doisioeratle candidates. 411101. The South. It I:- L ned by the New York papers, ot 4 he basis of actual inviti gatiun, ti the increase in the MEI CM pre tine DOI ever the i (ittati PH r! IRO dem plem ing presl 'he fact that the indus. .tes are gradu ally beingsr•. .tblished upon a firm and solid basis. chat this is the case is further statistics of the last ce , 11 departments of ind en( en for in OUt of velope 1110TP to l',- S CHANT !WIWI Of th valile South 1860, to 1,03n,219 In 1870. Facts such as these are -urely a sufficient answer to the best' I partisan cry of Republi can oppress on and robbery. Indeed, the moreansible and farseeing Jour nals of tht section are beginning to resent sum -- ' what warmly the foolish palaver of the Greeleyites concerning the suffering and poverty of their peo ple. Tl,lo l v'icke;burg Times, moreover, deciares,it to be a noticeable fact that y i. there is reater amount of prosperity in local!' es where there are plenty of Northe . /Lpeople, and where political and other, opinions are tolerated, than in any .21tier places, and says that. generally speaking, "there is no cause of complrint except by croakers and repiners. All of which is respect fully ree#nmended to the careful con. sideratioLot_those singular "reco.n -ciliationistB" who continue to Insist that they policy of . the Republican party ha' spread ruin and desolation throughip that quarter. level wi fa other parts in point of popu lation aid prosperity, these papers affirm tlcil in consequence of the Gov ernor's neglect of his duties, and the failure of the State authorities to en force the law, those promising regions have become notorious as places where murder is a common thing and crimes of every description go unpunished ; and that, as a result of this unenviable reputation, intending immigrantsshun that partiof the State as they would a pestilenc l e. It is intimated that the honest citizens of that quarter, with out respirt of politics, will almost to a man voo against the unfaithful ser vant whose scheming and self-seeking course has brought such dishonor and evil upon his State. Yet this is the person Whiim law-abiding Democrats throughout the country are asked to elevate to the second highest place in the nation. Take it for all in all there never has been a Stato election more fruitful in good results, achieved at such serious hazards, as the October election in In diana has been. Among the best of these are: 1. We have elected our entire State ticket, with the possible exception of the candidate fur Governor, who is defeated, if at all, by the most unblushing frauds, which it will be the duty of the Legisla ture to rebuke by unseating Mr. Hen dricks, if the certificate is over awarded to him. 2. We have gained four Congressmen, viz. : Williams and Orth, Members•at• large : Hunter in the Sixth District, and Cason in the Fourth. 3. We have defeated Dan Voorhees in particular, and saved American politics from the disgrace of fostering one of the worst cases of political prostitution ever known. And this has been ac complished in the face of a Democratic majority of 1,425 two years ago. 4. We have made a most sweeping triumph in the Legislature, overturning the Democratic thajority of eight, and replacing it with a Republican majority of at least. fifteen on joint ballot.. 5. We have thereby secured the re election of Oliver P. Morton to the United States Senate, one of the ablest and also one of the best abused statesmen in the country. 6. We have also by the same triumph secured a fair redistricting of the State for future Congressional elections, and prevent►d the foisting of a debt of $20,- 000.0u0 up"n the State by the holders of the Wabash canal bonds. We ;.• We. ye, iu addition to these and various nor benefits, convinced the country, in spite of the lies of the Greeley press ri , that the West is not fooled by the llusory promises of Cincinnati and Bit timore, but on the contrary stands as firm as ever for liberty and right. In other words, that it will go for Grant as heartily as it did four years ago. IZ9IBII 311431 311481 Subscribe for Father Abraham-81.50 per yeah in advance. Auctive activity has been made. tales actually de- The Tail. The Mt' tag at the tail of Horace Indiana. A paper of grat!infiutqwe in the li , rman communities of the South wust, the Texas retie Pre.r, deals vory frankly with Mr. Sernitor Schurz. Somebody having argued, it would seem, that his compatriots should be proud of him, and therefore take Mr. Senitrz as their. political ,"guide, the Freie Pre.t:sediscourses:as.follows: the di trtrrent ,r during the I from twenty rer the whole is, In almost it Is stated, trger and the ,han for many is also an un tdiness to pay "Proud of Schurz ? No, that we are not. In our eyes Schurz is a professional politician—nothing more. What has been his career ? Does he know the school of trial rthrough'!'which most adopted citizens hero have to pass ? No. Living in comfortable circumstances, he could quietly sit down and study the laws of the land and the7lauguage of its inhabitants. Free from care for daily bread, he could labor for himself. Tie did so in Michigan, in Wisconsin, in Mis souri. With cool sagacity he took ad vantage of all favorable circumstances to work _upward until he succeeded. Should we be at all proud of him because he possesses talents or because he is a United States Senator ? seludes a large gricultural im ry; a gratify ly of growing . "We have nothing to - do with the man, hut, with the politician, Curl Schurz, and before him we cannot fall down and wor ship. We are too Republican in spirit thu to believe in authority." answer' -to the question what Schurz has done for the Germans, the Freie Presse:says .1 hat, when he first went to Missouri, Germans tilltd near ly all the town and county offices, and they :flll,7.them;:no longer. "For the elevation of the German element, it is verily not enough to elaborate and de liver speeches." Asa:politician Schurz owes'w hatever he is on hay :bl'en . :to the Republican party. It sent: him amba-sailor to Spain,7where; he I ,did,:not display a trace of the diplomatic faculty; it se cured for him it general's commission, though about inilitary matters he knows no more than a crow knows about Sunday ; it elected him to the Senate of the nation because:he seemed to he the most radical of the radicals. This, rays the Fresse, was; more than a sufficient reward fochis services,and he was still ander:obligations to our party. But, according to the I',Tir Presse, Schurz has a peculiar way of express ing his thanks. The first instalment of his gratitude he paid by Nelping to place Frank Blair in the United States Senate. The second instalment he paid by flinging violent accusations and invectives against Grant and his administration, bemuse he could not always have his own way. At present igaged in trying to overthrow sy to which he owes all that he is the third instalment of the 's debt. according to the same authori ,res consistencyps'as remark ids gratitude. Thus, in his rc ;echesblie has fla,tly contracted be foimerlisard or wrot e As sagivice reformer, he preaches 41 which are glaringly incon with his own well-known prac ::onnection with the patronage .overnment. About the traffic , with the French he had no thing to say until he saw an opportu nity of using the affair as a means of attaining an object. The Republican party ho used to prosper his own ca re r, but having taken up the notion that it could no longer nourish his boundless ambition, he thrust it away. "Schurz's admirers may think all this very tine and 'smart,' "says the Presse; "we cannot help seeing therein all the symptoms which indicate absence of political principle." "No, we are not proud of Schurz." wn that seven wing industries; Tiod from 1860 the anti-war R; only three my !idling (pff, f farms iti the from 704,867 in This is the latest way in which the Teibune illustrates its conception of the duties and obligations of impartial journalism. Referring to the recent abstraction from the Court House of York county, in this State, of a num ber of vouchers and other documents, to prevent them from being used in evidence against certain county offi cials whom it was proposed to indict for malfeasance, that paper deliber ately attempts to create the impression that the theft was the work of Repub licans, and that the corrupt officials in whose interest the crime was com mitted were members of the same party; whereas the facts of the case are, that the local government of York county has for years been completely under the control of the Democracy ; that the criminals whom it was sought to bring to justice were Democrats; and that the theft of the documents was made at the instigation of and per petrated by members of that organi zation. That the honest people of the county have been baffled in their at tempt to punish the rogues who have plundered them is owing to the ras cality cf the Tribune's new friends; a fact of which that paper was fully aware when it printed the misleading paragraph in question. And yet it 'printed it. A singular mistake has occurred in the printing of the act to provide for the Constitutional Convention. In the General Laws, which are issued in ad vance of the Pamphlet Laws, the day named for the asssetnbling of the con vention is "the third Tuesday of No vember," but the original bill names "the second Tuesday of November," and this is the date recited in the pro clamation of the Governor. The error in the printing of the act as it appears in the General Laws, has led news paper editors astray, and caused it to be generally believed that the conven tion would assemble on the 19th proximo, whereas it will meet on the 12th. SUNICRIBE for Father Abraham, Not Prowl of tic!mr7. Honest Organ ! The Convention. OUR CAMPAIGN NOTES. All the crows have ..;ono South. There WaR no market for their "meat" in this State. As the horso disease is spreading, so rapidly, particular cam should h. taken of the asinine bipeds who edit 'Abend journals. Peter Cooper hhs addressed a letter to the Citizens' A ssoeiatisn, of New York, warmly commending President Grant's administration. The Warren Pa.. Ledger says the "Democrats are their own worst ene mies," because some uf them don't want to vote for Greeley. "Abstention" is the successor of "fraud" in the Democratic vocabulary. It was "abstention' , that laid them out in Pennsylvania and Ohio. One or the Confederate candidates in Missouri is Charles Stiph. In medical student slant-, he will be a first-class po litical "still" after the rith prox. The Tribune has information to the effect that the Liberals of Ohio "are alert." That's what General Meade said of the rebels after Gettysburg. "The last ditch is still open to us, and we can make it a bloody chasm," re marks the Richmond Enquirer. Are you going to follow Georgia's example? The Cincinnati Enquirer, by innuen do, advises its rebel friends in the South to witliold their custom from the business nun of New York who advocate the re eleci ion of Gen. Grant. The Lafayette Courier says : "I. D. Defroes, who has been the head of the Liberal movement in Indiana, goes back on the sage of Chappa qua. He has turned his attention to a patent for propelling camel boats.'' Only 4108 votes were east for Colonel Wilson. Democratic candidate for Con gress in the Wheeling, W. Va., district, as far In - heard from on Thursday. He had no opposition, but the people evi dently looked upon the election as a farce. The L uisvitle Cow-ler-Journal has this : "A Grant organ says : 'Let us have stable government.' By all means. But then, 4011 know, we don't want jackasses kept in Ms government stable.” There is no dann,er of any of the Greelcyites being quartered there, Mr. Tlw Joueual is eng,ag,ed in discountin,‘, coming political discomfi ture in k-titocAy. It says : "In our own Stith. ibuic is dangt r th.at. this same rep rehom-inle negligence will materially cnt down the majority that ought to be given to the Greeley and Brown electoral ticket." Tho Chiea; : to Maii , ;:i:‘s : "Henry Clay was the Legit Pc, , siil qit, save, 'tertian-, one, we ever had." This is the ifail'a view of it, and of course it has a right to its opinion ; but there ere those who be lieve Gen. Scott's administration was equally successful, as also that of. Daniel Pratt, peanut merchant. Cone rlsstnan D. C. Giddi ig is eliated with having made a speech, at 'Cosset:, Texas, the following threat : That if they (meaning the Democrats) could and did not get shut of 'Radical rule, there were posts, oak limbs, &c., and enough to do it—pointing to the limbs above. This statement was uproariously cheered by the Greeleyites. The straight out Democracy of Illinois 4, Itate tfle case in this day : Greeley s nds 'no meke show of being elected Pre ent, in November. than he does of beco big Emperor of Prance. This must be ap parent to every thinking and reasonable Democrat from the Atlantic to the Pa cific. It is such a palpable truth that we do not think it worth while to argue the point further. In view of the dying condition of Greeleyisth, the Louisville Commercial has invented a balm composed of one part "triumph in the air," two parts "bloody chasm," one part "reconcilia tion," ninety-six parts "confidence," the whole to be dissolved in the "tidal wave," to he well shaken before taken. Our opinion is that the case of Greeleyism is hopeless ; salt can not save it. Mr. Greeley's paper now mentions boastfully, and as a triumph of right over wrong, that New York State gave Seymour 10,000 majority in 1868, and Hoffman 33,0116 in 1870. Do any of Mr. Greeley's supporters or subscribers re member what he said of these majorities at the time ? Was there anything about "fraud," "villainous, stupendous fraud," mentioned cn those occasions',' The Boston Post says : "Georgia has a hale and hearty ciCzen who has been struck by thirty-two minie balls, one mortar shell, one shrapnel, one three inch conical, struck by lightning, bitten by a rattlesnake and chased by a mad dog." Alas, poor fellow I After passing through all these tribulations, he finally met au ignominious fate—he choked to death on a mess of crow pottage. At the November election the Repre sentatives in the Illinois Legislature will be chosen by the new system of cumula tive voting ; that is, the voter is entitled to one vote for each Representative to which the municipal division in which he lives is entitled, or au aggregate vote equaling the whole number of Represen tatives. These votes the elector may give to one candidate or divide to suit his own notion. In 1812, the "Soreleaded" Republi cans chose Dewitt Clinton, of New York, as a candidate for President, to defeat James Madison, the regular nominee. Sixty years afterward, the same thing is attempted again—the "Sore-headed" Re publicans nominate another New Yorker (H. G.) to defeat Ulysses S. Grant, the regular candidate. Clinton was extin guished by the popular vote—Greeley will be. The New York Tribune has the fol lowing : "Commend us to a Pennsyl vania ring for the neatness and dispatch with which any thieving jab is executed. Such an organisation in York, Penn sylvania, stole the county voucherti whlch might implicate them." The fact that York county is strongly Democratic, and has been controlled by that party for years, is not taken into account by Mr. Greeley's young man.' Don't gore your own ox. The Harrisburg Telegraph says : WP of the Keystone, State had such poor luck with our only President (James Bu chanan), and cnly Vice President (George M. Pallas), that we are modest about presenting other candidates. But we have same vanity in believing that Abra ham Lincoln was a great-grandson of Pennsylvania, of 112rks county at that. And wo take more pride in the fact that General Ulysses S. Grant is the son of two native Pennsylvanians—Jesse R. Grant, of Westmoreland, and Hannah Simpson, of Montgomery county. So, if not a son, our President is certainly a grandson of Pennsylvania, and is entitled to all the benefits of that relation. A rousing majority for Grant and Wilson will be honorable alike to the Old Key stone and to her descendant. Let Grant and Wilson have our full loyal vote. A calculation made by the Harrisburg Pch`i•io(, tlo Central Democratic organ, shows that in forty counties of the State the vote fell off 3 . 2,01 t) from IStiS. In the remaining twenty t:ix it was increased over that of From this fact our contemporary ar,.;ae9 that Greeley can carry the State in November, that is, if the full Democratic vote can he secured for him. It forqets that it was Greeley that kept these Democrats from voting for Mr. Ilackalew. The candor which we always aim to practice does nut permit us to say that, as things now look, Mr. Greeley's chances aro better than those of tieneral Grant, or even equal to Grant's. We have, therefore, suitably discriminating the meaning of words, forborne to speak of probabilities in our heading, trying to be truthful and exact by selecting the titter term, possibilities. It is still pos sible that Mr. Greeley may be elected, though not probable.—N. World. The last new political party has just come to light, and it has been launched in Massachusetts, of course, Miss A. H. C. Phelps is the Captain, and the candi dates are John C. Fremont, Mr Presi dent, and John G. Whittler for Vice President. The main idea of the organi zation is "Woman's Homestead Land and Labor Reform." There is really more sense in this movement than in the Greeley sham. But no man who parts his hair in the middle can be elected President of the United States. As one evidence of the spirit of Georgia Greeley ism, Republicans forward a copy of the law reorganizing, the militia, which Governor Smith has been carrying out (luring the past summer. This provides briefly for mustering in such companies as may offer, but, r( quires the Governor to first arm those which reptestnt the militia organization in existence on January Ist, l bl. As all such organi zations went into the rebel :.ervico as they stood, this Ares( at, law is but re equipping Georgia's 1111.1 hist:Owe:A ibr the Con federate army. According to the "Liberal" Confeder ate journals the I )etemi. racy are a venal set, ready to Sell 11U 1119UIVii to the high est bidder, v. Iwther L 1 publican or Lib eral. Th.?, Republican victories so far this year are accounted tbr by the asser tion that the D;m:•erats sold themselves out at so nineh a head. The Liberals are virtuous anti noni nrchasable ; with the Democrats it \Vas m•ly a question of price. We hepe the Democrats appreci ate the value set (;n their principks by 1111 it Liberal allies. Doe of the funniest incidents of the canvass is reported from Chicago. Gov ernor Koerner was announced in that city for a speech iu German. Among his hearers was a ward Greeley club, not a single member of which understood a word of that noble lauguaee. After listening two hours and a half without much cclitleatiun, their president called out to the Governor to "talk English." The rupiest was net heeded, and the ag grieved freemen have got even with the unobliging Gustave by holding an indig nation meeting and solemnly resolving to "scratch" him. The Lafayetto Journal thinks there is great danger that Indiana may be car ried for Greeley through the apathy and over-contidence of Republicans, "not be cause the Democrats are in a majority in the State, but because Republicans are careless and will stay away from the polls. Two U blic.cn sta at-home. votes in each couicipy would ce to gkv , the State to Greeley. how c ily it may happen that two Pepublicans in a county may say to themselves that their vote will not make much difference—that the State is safe for Grant any way, and stay at home !" Rypublicans of Pennsylvania, this applies to you as well as to those of Indiana. General Joseph Law, candidate for the Vice Presidency ou the Breckiuridge ticket in 1800, has written a letter in favor of Mr. Greeley. "The re-election of Grant," ho says, "would prove a calamity to the country," for various reasons which he has neither time nor space to give. "On the other hand, the election of Greeley would do more to re store to the States their essential rights, to bring about a good feeling," etc, etc. Greeley's adhesion to the secession or States' rights doctrines is the first and principal point of sympathy between the secessionists and States' rights men of whom Lane was the rabid leader and ex ponent in 1860. "A retreat in good order," "position where the reserves may be brought up," "steady the column and push sternly ahead," "make of this reverse an incen tive to harder work," "a great and serious danger to free institutions," " in a manner it implies the failure of uni versal suffrage," "the Liberal cause is by no means desperate," Greeley will only de cline as the sun and moon decline, "the old Democratic guard more zealous than ever," "a Bull Run defeat of the Liberal militia by the Grantite regulars to be re trieved by future training and organiza tion," "thousands of Democrats did not vote at the State elections," "chorus of war bugles," Zte., are the tunes that op position journalists are now whistling in the Pennsylvania burying ground, as the twilight of October gathers fast toward the dark night of November. The New York Commercial Adver tiser prints a letter from that veteran publicist, Thurlow Weed, in which he tells what he knows about Horace Gree ley's secession, war and diplomatic record. 'The evidence upon which Mr. Greeley is shown to have been largely responsible for the rebellion, and its terrible waste of life and treasure, has been drawn from the editorial columns of the Tribune. It is conclusive. Mr. Weed proves, by Greeley's own utterances, that the Lib eral candidate for the Presidency exerted a powerful influence in aid of secession— that he precipitated the disaster of Bull Run—that he repeatedly encouraged the enemy—that, iu short, Greeley's record during the gloomiest years of our national history was a record of cowardice and dishonesty. Mr. Weed's letter gives the facts, and they cannot be controverted. The Milwaukee News has bit, at the eleventh hour, upon a brilliant plan of reconciling its Democratic brethren to their Greeley diet. It conjures them after this fashion : "Let us vote and labor for Horace Greeley as if Andrew Jack son or Stephen A. Douglas was our can didate, and we cannot be defeated." This sort of philosophy is similar to that which buoyed up Mr. Richard Swiveller through so many hardships and pOra tions. The way in which that genial but dissolute philosopher was wont to convert a forlorn mutton bone and a two penny mug of beer by the stern logic of hypothesis into a half dozen courses of fish, flesh and fowl, and so many of wine from warm Oporto and the blue Moselle, has elicited the admiration of all readers since Mr. Swiveller was first introduced to the public. And it requires precisely the same kind of philosophy—only, per haps, more of it—to convert the Greeley fowl into byttothecal Douglas and Jack son, so Sear to the Democratic palate.