gattraota THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1864 "The printing presses shall be free to every person who undertakes to examine the pro ceedings of the legislature, or any branch of government; and no law shall ever be made to - restrain the right thereof. The free commu nication of thought and opinions is one of the invaluable rights of men; and every citizen may freely speak, write and print on any sub ject; being responsible for the abuse of that liberty. In prosecutions for the publication of papers investigating the official conduct of offi cers, or men in public capacities, or where the matter published is proper for public infctrma tion, the truth thereof may be given in evi dence."—C6Mfitution of Pennsylvania. FOR PRESIDENT MAJOR GENERA GEORGE B. M'CLELLiN, OF NEW JERSEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT : GEORGE H. PENDLETON, OF OHIO ELECTOR 9 AT LAILGE.7 Romarr L. JoincErrow, of Carabrla. RICHARD vAtrx, of Philadelphia. DISTRICT ELECTORS. \ Ist Wm. Loughlin, 13th. Paul Leidy, 2d. E. R. Helmbold, 14th. Rob't Swineford, 3d. Ew'd P. Dunn, 15th. John Ahl, 4th. T. M'Cullough, 16th. George A. Smith, \ 6th. Edward T. Hess, 17th. Thaddeus Banks, 6th. PhllipS. Gerhard, 18th. H. Montgomery, - 7th. Geo. G. Lepier, 19th. John Di. Irvine, Bth. Michael Seltzer, 20th. J. M. Thompson, 9th. Patrick M'Evoy, r2lst. Rasselas Brown, 19th. T. H. Walker, • 23rd. Jas. P. Barr, 11th. 0. S. Dimming, 23rd. Win. J. Kountz 12th. A. B. Dunning, 24 th. W. Montgomery. County Committee Meeting The Deinocratic County Committee will meet in this city at the Rooms of the Demo cratic Association, on Monday next, Octo ber 24th, at 11 o'clock, A. M. A full at tendance is desired. • R. R. TSHUDY, Chairman. A. J. STET, Sec'y. Victory A glorious victory has been achieved in the gallant State of Pennsylvania, over combinations of fraud, Government pa tronage, and the most lavish expenditure of money. The cause of THE UNION AT ALL HAZARDS has triumphed. The battle has been the South Mountain of the'campaign, which will be followed in November by another Antietam for the linion and the Constitution. The result assures the State for McClel ~lan and Pendleton, and justifies our expec tation of triumphant success in the national election in November. It is recommended to the various Demo cratic and Union organizations in the city of New York to illuminate their respective headquarters, and to assemble thereat on Monday evening, the 17th inst., in honor of the auspicious result in the Keystone State ; that national salutes be fired in the public squares ; and that the city of New York, true to the cause of the Union and the Con stiiution, under their chosen leader, McClel lan, send congratulations to our brothers in Pennsylvania on their hard-earned and tri umphant success. _ _ _ AUGUST BELMONT, Chairman of Democratic National Come Lincoln and a Negro Traitor In our issue of Monday we alluded to the fact that President LINCOLN had opened his door to FRED. DOUGLAS, a negro residing in the State of New York, while a crowd of White Men were wait ing outside and vainly seeking admit tance. The. President's conduct in this matter would have been bad enough if the negro to whom he extended his courtesy had been the most meritori ous man of his color in the United States. But when we remember that DOUGLAS had for years figured as an ex treme Abolition orator—that he had de nounced WASIIINGTON, JEFFERSON, JACKSON,I'CLAY and TAYLOR as mons ters in hulian form, because they held slaves in their lifetime—that he had cursed the Constitution and prayed for the destruction of the Union, because slaves were held under and within them —and that he had conspired with old John Brown and other ruffians and traitors to upset the Constitutional Gov ernment of the United States and• es tablish-- a " Provisional Government " in its stead, the initial movement of which intended revolution was the cap ture of the United States Armory at Harper's Ferry—when we remember these facts, all of which were we! known to President laxem,x, how much mole galling becomes the insult which he offered to the whole white population of the country, when he opened his doors to this impudent and traitorous negro, while white men stood outside! For the life of us we cannot under stand how any white man can vote for LINCOLN, after this striking display of his preference for the negro. Still less can we understand how any man who pretends to be for the Union can vote for him, when he reflects that the ne gro thus openly admitted to an audience with Mr. LINCOLN, was one of a gang of Northern Abolitionists who conspired to overturn the Government of the United States by force of arms; who did actually take up arms at the time and place agreed upon, and seized an Am'ory belonging to the Government, and killed a soldier who wore the uni form of the United•Statess. The popular impression at the North is that old Brown and his gang made an attack on Virginia, and nothing more. This is an error. The papers found in his house after his capture, showed that he set out to overturn the Government of the United States. His first active step was the seizure of the property of the United States at Har per's Ferry. The seizure of that Armory was as direct an act of war against the United States as the bombardment of Fort Sumter. The Yankees who made Brown's murderous pikes had as much treason in their hearts as the Virginians who cast cannon at the Tredegar 'Works in Richmond. FRED. DOUGLAS was one of the scoundrels who hatched that treason able plot and had those'murderous pikes manufactured. He fled to England when old Brown was captured, and re- mained there until about the date of LINCOLN'S inadguration as President, when he thought it safe to return. And this traitorous negro, who joined old John Brown in "levying war against the United States,"--eapturinga United States Armory and killing a United States soldier—is the identical " Mr. DOUGLAS" whom LIN cous invited 'to "wall: in," whilst White Men were left standing in the hall and on the staii;ly of the Executive Mansion of the United States! Who dares to call ABRAHAM LIN COLN a ,patriot in the face of these un deniable facts? Does patriotism con sist in the extension of courtesies to a nigger who has treason in his heart as black as the wool on his head? The Hon. THADDEUS STEVENS, with all his affection for the African race, could hardly be induced to state it as his legal opinion that it is patriotic, and not treasonable, for a negro to " levy war against the United States." 'Union Republicans of Lancaster coun ty; this is the man you are asked to vote for—ABRAHAM LINCOLN, who opens his door to a nigger who com mitted treason against the United States and ran away to England to escape being hanged along with, his-bolder associate, old John Brown. You have a right to vote for him if you choose ; but if you do, it will forever thereafter become you to remain silent when pa triotism is spoken of. " gm : . In 1.50 Senator Hale presented two petitions from New England, " praying that some means be devised for the dissolution of the American Union." These petitions received three votes in the United States Senate, John P. Hale, Salmon P. Chase and William H. Seward. These gentleme4 are all SOPPorters of AbTahrtin Lincoln! October Days in the Mountains. • liThe mountain scener. of Pennsyl vania, while not so grand as that in some of the more Northern States, is sufficient to satisfy the most fastidious taste. Just now our mountains are crowned in all the glories of Nature's most gorgious livery. .In tbis latitude summer dies in surpassing -splendor. The mountains, which lift their fir-clad heads to the sky, are decked with varie gated colors, glaring in strong contrast, which remind one of the manner in which you may see different tents dis posed upon some sampler, wrought in worsted by the fair fingers of those who were blooming maidens before most of the mothers of the present generation were born. The back ground is the deep green of thickly disposed pines, which stand up in the rich glossy green of a new cloak of leaves, put on to brave the rude storms of coming winter ; while here and there, as if inlaid by the pencil of some cunning artist, is seen the deep crimson of the maple, and the golden hue of the chesnut and the hickory.— The whole forest seems to have decked itself out in rich robes, as if determined to die, if die its beauties must for a season, in one delightful revel. At no season are our hills, our valleys, and our mountains more beautiful than— "ln the red and hazy October, Ere the woods stand 111111. Ullll brown, While into the lap of the South land The flowers are blowhig, down.- Day after day comes on w in all the blue sky above you not a single cloud is to be seen ; when not even a fleecy speck of' light vapor intercepts for a moment the golden sunshine that glimmers through the trembling haze which rests like a purple veil over the valleys below you, not shutting out the view, but roun4g off all irregularities, and lending add l itional enchantment to the scene. Ev,iry sound conies up from the fields and farm houses below with surprising distinctness through the bright clear air. You can hear the rustle of each falling leaf, as it settles itself cozily down to cover the dark brown earth; while patter, patter, as they drop from hickories many yards distant, coines the ,distinct sound of falling chips industriously cut from the nuts by the nimble squirrel in his busy endeavor to reach the delicious kernel within. The shrill scream of the rest less Jay is startlingly thud in the woods, while you can hear afar off the musical pipe of the Quail in the stubble, calling to her brood. If you go down into the narrow but fertile valleys below, you will find much to delight The farmer works leisurely now, Th e gol den maize is carefully gathered in tit intervals. The orchards are fobbed of their fruity treasures. The old-fash ioned cider mill creaks after a rickety fashion, as sonic trusty and slow ploy ing horse leisurely treads his limited round. Children shout :is they go forth merrily on long nutting strolls, or re turn laden with what is to 111,111 de licious treasure, to be hidden away in safe places. The streams, now that the frost has precipitated every impurity to the bottom, are wonderfully clear, ;old the fish, so shy all summer, lie suuniug themselves in sehools, as if they knew the crafty anglers occupation NV:IS !'one, and felt sure the chilliness of the water would prevent the dragging of any de stroying net. The cattle graze with placid content upon the sueculent after math, undisturbed by annoyimi . inseets, which, grown feeble, drop thickly into the thousands of nets spread I.r them by the busy spiders. .Autumn is really one of the most delicious seasons of the American year; and in our latitude, the dread of quickly el/Mille Whiter, which must soon drive us to makes us enjoy it all the more. W hether out in the mountains, or in the richer and more expanded valleys of this State, the outdoor world is very beauti ful in these brighi October tlacs.:Alas' that the time is so near When chill November's surly blasts will lay fields and forrests bare. 11 Vandalism It appears from the following offieial report of General Sheridan that the war is no longer to 1 a contest between armed men in the tlehl, but a oar after the manner of the Goths aml Vandals, upon old men, women and children—a war upon property ; a war of devasta tian; a war banned by all the civilized people of the globe, and justified only by the code of scalping Indians and Cannibal negroes. The example was set by the rebels in the wanton destruc tion of Chambersburg in retaliation for similar atrocities perpetrated on some of their towns ; and now we have vastly improved on it by the order of Lieut. General Grant himself. Read tlie re port of General Sheridan : WOODSTOCK, VA., 9 P. Al., ltat. 7, 1'4;4. Lieutenant General (b : l Imvt , the honor to report my command at this point to-night. I commenced moving bark from Port Republic, Mt. Crawford, Bridgewater, and Harrisonburg yesterda:% morning. The grain and forage in all pc iw' thine points had previously been destroyed. In moving back to this point the whole c,unt Cy, from Blue Ridge to the North Mountain, ha, been made untenable fur a rebel arnty. I hare , destroyed over tiro thousand barns filled with wheat, hay, and fw , ming over seventy inillsfilled with fl.g, r 'al cheat: had driven in front of the army over It Mr herds of stock, and have killed and issued to the troops not less than three Oa aisand sheep. This destruction embraces the Lura rally and Little Fort Talley, as 2/Tii , M the inain Valley. A large number of horses have been obtained, a proper estimate of which I cannot now make." Suppose the varying fortunes of war should again see a rebel army ill Penn sylvania, what mad• we expert" Our readers can answer the question for themselves. Savage Warfare The following is a specimen of Gen. Grant's and Mr. Lincoln's orders, and shows their method of conducting war in the latter half of the nineteenth century. It is Grant's order to I eueral Sheridan : Headquarters, cfc-- Ekt ail the tlantageyou can to the railroad and (trot.. carry off stock of all descriptions and Negroes, to prevent further planting. I r the war is to last another year, let the Shenandoah Valley remain a barren \ • This is the way Lincoln, Stanton Co. labor to restore the 1. - nion. In re storing it they would make one half of it a "barren Waste" and exterminate one-half of its inhabitants. The usages of civilized nations are all disregarded and violated, and the practices of In dians and African savages are substi tuted for thent, , Shame upon a (;overn ment which thus disgraces the civiliza tion of the age. Double shame upon the men who do this under the false pretence of re-uniting the people and restoring the Union. They and all men know that this kind of warfare, if per sisted in, can only result in extermina tion, devastation and ruin to the whole country. But this brutal order is not only an evidence of barbarity but a confession of weakness, It is a confession that ini this fourth year of the war, our Govern ment is not able to hold the country bordering upon the Potomac! That after all our boasted " conquests"—after all the assurances that the rebellion was "on its last legs "—after the public de claration of Grant himself that the ene my have got to the end of their resources in men and have " robbed the cradle and the grave" to fill up the ranks of their armies—that after all this we are not able to hold possession of a section of territory almost within sight of Wash ington and within a stone's throw of the border of Pennsylvania! Shameful admission, as well as shameful warfare! Shameful because it is a confession of falsehood and deception in the Govern ment, as well as of a savage ferocity excelling that of the Indians upon our borders. Facts for Honest Republicans. We suppose there are some thousands of plain, honest flepublie.ans LUIDCSIS ter county; who would not vote fur Mr. LPTCOLN if they weresatistied that he Would extend Courtesies to a negro which he would deny to a white man. These honest Republicans clo not believe that it is right to hold slaves, and they sup port Mr. LixcoLN bee: Anse they: under stand him to hold anti-slavery opinions. But they are whitt'• men, with pure white blood in then : veins, and though they may pity the poor negro, and wish him well, very few of them would like to eat with hint, still fewer like to sleep with him under any circumstances, and none at all prefer his company to that of a man of their own color, when left to their own free choice. Now if these holiest Republicans who, whiLst they pity the negro, still prefer the companionship of men of their own color, could be satisfied that Mi. I.lN coLx• preferred a negro's iimpally to a white man's, and that he would do fur a negro what he would trot do for a white man, vice are persuaded that he would never get their votes. The diffi culty is to get the to believe it, for it is one of those unnatural things which seem too monstrous for belief, though true as holy writ. FRED. DOUGLA: 4 , liegro residing in the State of :Nei% York, with whose name the puittlie have for many years been familiar, has published au aecount of a visit Ilt• iced(' to Mr. litNroLN at the White liouse in the city of Wash ington'. It seems to have been a part of his purpose, in malting this - visit, to test the shicerity of the President's pro fession of regard for the negro. lle wished to find out for himself whether the President really did think a, negro as good as a white !can, or whether he was only pretending to think so in order to fool the Abolitionists into the support of his administration. His experiment • had a : satisfactory result, and he came away entirely convinced that •in Mr. LINCOLN'\ estimation a negro was as good as a xvilite man, and perhaps Letter. bouGh.cs states that when lie entered the White Howe, he found the wide hall and stairway leading to the Presi dent's room crowded with white men, many of whom had been waiting there for hours, tintl some or whom would have given hundreds of dollars for im mediate admission to the President, se that they might transact the business that had taken them to 'Washington and ret Urn to their homes in distant parts of the Con ntry. Not a few of them, he says, wore the u4form of the United Ntates Army and had the marks: of commissioned officers on their shoul ders, This impudent neurtto, st- he himself exultingly tells us; pushed up through the i•rowd. and handed his card to the • NehileSerValit in attend:lm , , who carried it to the President. The erowil of white men looped al earl other in surprise when they sate the negro' , eard carried in to the President, and their surprise was changed to astonishment and mor tification when, a minute tiller, the ser vant returned :lel sail, "teulL _IL% Dorigh ,, ." FRED relates, with evident enjoyment, the rei ark. lie heard tall front the lips of setl•nt I White men among that waiting erowd as he passed into the President's room : " There! I knew the d--d nigger would get in first." FrtEn. then proeee& to tell his de lightterrietitt, ,net I.lte public whnt kind of a rcorpli.,ll was,•xtvffiled to him when he got inside. Ile says 1 Ir. I,ExcoLN received him and naiad him as olic gentleman reprices and treats :mother." This is the statement ui :in impudent Lut intellia . ent tilt , special pet or the Aholitionkt , uI v( \V York and New England, ;mil it is true. What do the honest Heptililieans of Lancaster county think of it" \\lna have the Lure-blooded hit, men :Wove to _nt to sky .about The crowd of white men that stood in the hall and stairway leading to the President's room, no doubt had among it some of the most respeetable men in t he eountry. There were soldiers in it, some of \\tom, perhaps, had lost an arm or a hip, in the service .1 their country. They had wailed there G u n rout's: some of them had been there day after day, and per haps week after week, vainly seeking an interview with Mr. LPschit.x ; but the moment a negro presented his card, Le was admitted. These are sober facts. They are start ling facts. ..-I,=nd to every tight-minded White they must be mortifying factS. Honest Itepublican voters of Laneas ter county, we appeal to you as White Men who must naturally feel some pride in the pure 'i'ateasian blood that flows in your veins, aril we ask you how you can, consistently with your self-respect, vote for a man who lets a crowd of respecta ble - White Men stand out while Ile in vites a Negli9 in ? 'Fhat crowd of White Men were friends of Mr. LINC"LN. The fact that they were there proves them to have his friends. Now if a large number of your friends were waiting at your door to :41![• yUll, would you keep them out :mil let in an impudent negro who had elbowed his way throuli them? We are sure you would not, and we are equally sui . e your Flood would boil with indignation if you were to see it done by any other White Man. How then is it possible for you to vote for Mr. LIN- CuLN, Who Las ill so (•onspicuothi a man ner given a Negro the preference over White Men" Another Draft Impending ir re-eieek•d; there win be :mother (bail iovernor Seymour stated, in a speech delivered at Reading . , Pa., last week, that the Administration had al leady intimated as much to him. The draft, too, will probably be for ow mil lion. Governor Seymour does not state the number, only that " it will be Ihr b rgcid Otir that has yet been made." The reasons for this are obvious. The army was filled up in 18tr2 by three years men, whose time will begin to expire next spring.. The men Who were draft ed this sear under 50u,000 have but one year to serve. Their terms of service will also lie out next year. With .Mr. Lincoln in office, there is no possibility of peace. The South cannot make peace with hint, for his demands are utterly inadmissable. He will offer them no thing before which utter ruin and anni hilation are not a thousand times pre ferable. With his re-election, therefore, there is no hope, not the Slightest. Every .num who votes for Mr. Lincoln votes openly and knowingly for more drafts, for burdening towns, counties, and cities with more taxes, and for an unending war upon the Southern States. =ESE Last year the Abolition majority in Lancaster county was 5,691. This year Stevens' majority is only 4,o46—show ing a Democratic gain of 1,645. Thus has this arch Disunionist and unprinci pled demagogue been condemned at home, by his neighbors and acquain tances; and the day will come, if he lives a few years longer, when a large majority of his constituents will curse him to his face as being the principal instigator and author of our National woes: He has for many long years been sowing the wind, and he will yet reap the whirlwind of popular indignation, or we are very much mistaken. He has been weighed in the balance and found wanting, and his downard career has already commenced. Vox populi, vox Doi. Stevens Condemned ANDIDATE9 Abolit lonists in Itonuin. D e mocrats. in CAPITALS migress. Thaddeus ......... 111. mil 31. NORTH Assembly. F.salas lii llinglelt H. W. Shenl - Day Wood Charles Denues WILLIAM S. DAVIS • Fle:Nnv 13. DCII..U• ABEAM SHANK WILLIAM 1.. CUSTER Associate . Lair Judge. A. L. Haves DAVID G.:ESHLEMAN (bu,dl/ °mini Lesion,. .1. B. Shuman WILLIAM CARPENTER Directors of the Poor. Jacob Rohrer •I'. S. Woods CHEIsTIAN H. CHARLES JoIIN HESS Prison Disprctors. H. Rauch 4'. Lefevre iIEORGE W. BOY ER PENJAMIN WORKMAN Auditor. David S. Clarke REAM The Abolition Vice President Mr. Johnson, the Tennessee candidate for the Vice Presidency on the ticket with Lincoln, was once thought an ex tretnist on the question ofseeessionism. In the latter days of the United Repub lic, he harmonized in speech, vote and resolve with Davis, Toombs and other southern leaders, so closely, as to he thought thoroughly identified with them in all their designs. At length he saw the gradual forma lion of a human pyramid. This exhi bition attracted his ambition to attempt clinic cur. White men he thought too feeble to support him in his ascent, and forgetting former professions, selected stalwart negroes as his supporters. His tastes have vastly changed or his old preferences were skillfully concealed. He was six years a southern man—in proof read the following series of reso lutions, when he was Senator Rt,o/vot, That the select committee of thirteen Is• instructed to inquire into the ex pediency of establishing, by constitutional • 1. A line running thxough the territory of the - United States, making an equitable and just division or said territory, south of which line slavery shall Ito recognized and proteetod as property, by ample tutu ftlll constitutional guarantees, and north of whirls lila, it shall be prollibiled. The repeal of all arts Congress in Ve gan' to the restoration of all fugitives front tabor, and an explieit deelaration in the Constitution, that it is the duty or State fin itself to return fugitives slaves %viten tletnanded by the proper authority, or pay double their rash value out 1,1 the treasury of the State, An :intendment to the 'onstitution, de- elarini . , that slavery shall exist in navy yards, arsenals, Sc.,. ia• net, its it limy Igo admitted er prehiliitetl I,y the States in whiell sing] 1111\-y 111;ly silllMotl. ER= . . shit w r y - in the District of etduntbitt, so long as it shall exist in tilt , Stale OE . 111.ryltttl, nor iron then, without the consent of the hill:Wit:llU , , compensation •,t Wll - shall Ito( touch the reprt,eitta ti,ku of three-tifthsoftlte,laves,nur the inter_ St;t, trade, coa,twi,e ur G. These provi,iqus to 1., twainendalole, like that \\•ltieh relates to the equality Stale,: in the Senatc. The Way the Current Sets It is apparent to every One that the ,•urrent 1,1 public feeling sets strongly in favor of the Democracy, Lincoln is losing daily, and the Democracy are gaining everywhere. This is the plain fact. From all sections we hear of large, accessions to the standard of McClellan; their number is counted by hundreds; while scores of newspapers hitherto supporting Lincoln, are doing efficient service in the cause of Peace and Union. And the "common own," the honest voters who make no noise in the world, arc rallying by thousands to our aid. And it is a significant fact that the changes are all in this direction ; not a man hitherto with us•is found now with our opponents, except an occa sional one who hats been openly bought up. This great fact is full of encourage ment to the friends of the Union. It should amPwill incite thtem to renewed and still more energetic efffirts in sup port of this cause ; for it gives hope of a success which will ensure the preser vation of all that is dear to the patriot's heart—of all that is left of the fruits of our industry and the legacy of our If athers. "Onee More to the Breach!" We have met the enemy, and defeat ed him in one of the hardest political battles ever lought in Pennsylvania, but the campaign is not yet over. We have captured his out works, but the citadel is yet to lie stormed. His legions have' been driven back with heavy loss, de-' moralized and disheartened ; but he will make one more desperate rally on the Bth of November, and is already (dosing up Lis broken ranks and marshaling his forces for the thlal struggle. What, then, is the duty of our Democratie friends? Is it to rest upon our laurels so nobly WWI on Tuesday last, and de pend upon chance or the prestige then gained fur success in the future: By no means. Such a course on our part, would ensure defeat in - November. We must reorganize' NV it bout delay—put our battalions in lull lighting trim again-- work, work, 'veil: as we never worked before during the balance of the cam paign, and tlien, and only then, have we any right to claim success in the Presidential battle. That a glorious vic tory is in store for us if we do our duty like men, is just as certain as that the sun will rise to-morrow morning; but it is equally sure that the fruits of the victory of Tuesday last would all be lost if we failed, by supineness and in di ilitrence, to improve the advantages we possess. We, therefore, urge upon our Democratic friends throughout the county to close up the ranks at once, and prepare, without a moment's de lay, for the dread encounter which is to deride the destiny of the country for all time to come. Remember, that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty, and he who would be free must show himself worthy to enjoy a freeman's rights. Strike once more, Hien, for (toil and Liberty, and assist in redeeming beloved country from the tyranny un der which it has been groaning for the last three or four veers. • Think of It Did you ever hear of a smutty joke by General McClellan? Did you ever hear any one say that when on the battle field, surrounded by the dead and dying, he called for a ribald song? Mr. Lincoln called on Marshal Lamon to sing Pic ayune Butler, and General McClellan, who always sympathizes with the sol diers, said no ! Did you ever know any sentence or remark ascribed to McClel lan that might not come from the great est student in the land? Compare the qualifications of the two men. Compare their conduct. Compare their senti ments on the conduct of war and the restoration of the Union ! Forney Muddled; or, 1856 and 1864 Com pared. The despatch which Forney sent over the wires at the October election in 1856 was one of-the most distinct, plain and business-like paragraphs that ever ema nated from his fruitful pen. His despatch on the present occasion is muddy, indistinct, and unintelligible. He alleges that he has possession of all the strongholds, and yet he says he means to march upon works that cer tainly, for that reason, have no exist ence, OFFICIAL VOTE OF LANCASTER COUNTY-OCTOBER 11th, 1864. 4'321 1791 -139 173 1 1331 '4381170 1:k31 439 175,1531 439 175'1Tli 178\ 151111731 178 154111331 118 154 103 179 154 103 31177'112 1160 154i101 114 2'76 70 IC2. U 4 1,277 II 1 2'.77 114279 111,278 70116 , 1 - 01162 701162 70j11,1 1 113 '..1 ;1111- 88 3Cci -,116 t8.8!292 ; , •41 294 GI 141 63 112 6:3 1-11 188, 241 131612701 245 13111270 245 13121268 s ,245 1313,270; 397 144012161 :317 144712161 :197 1449'2161 397 14441216' 1 Sll 2613 1129 219 R 4 ,311 ' 61142 ! 4, 3111 'h1312, lilil 1 , 161112 19 177 132 11+1 15-1 101 4%1177 ktl 4.11 17 1.321 11 , 1 15- 1 1111 118111/Mll , 4391176,11121 1419 1771132 1181113 102 11,,111,11 1 104 38 1 17011 12' 11 61 /1104 114'291 1142911 7011471 701147 114 ! 2,1 701147 Who are Disunlontsts ? The Abolition leaders no longer at tempt to conceal their determination to effect the dissolution of the Union and to prevent its reconstruction or restora tion under the Constitution. GREELEY, in the New York Tribune, referring to the two hundred thousand martyrs who have sacrificed their lives for the Union and the Constitution of our fathers, used the following accursed sentiment: Standing on their graves, we swear, with uncovered heads, that, the restored Union shall not be as it was, but as it should be." ThiS is in 011i5011 with the key-note soundud hy 'PHA DDEUS STEvENs, Chair man of the Committee of Ways and Means, when he said on the floor of ( ow.rre— " This tall: td restoring, the Union as it was, tinticr the lonstitut ion as it is, is one of Ilic altstirtlities which I base heard re peated till I pace become about sick of it. This l'hicii luf ter sl utll, With Illy Volltielll, be rcsturcil undo the Constitution as it is." While standing on the graves, says the Louisville Jouritcd, of ,McPherson, and Kearney, and Lyon, and Jackson, and McKee, and Bacon, and Cotton, and Campbell, and Davidson, and Evans, and Fiirman, and Milward, and Netter, and others, who have given up their lives to their country, the blasphe mous radical who was for dividing the rnion in Ix6l, when the rebellion broke out, now swears with uncovered head that thy restored [ - Ilion shall not bC it ruts, bof as if shard,' bp=t hut is, as the Abolitionists would have it. FLeemen of America, will you allow this traitor to propose :my such oath to you? You lun•e but one way to make your answer known, and that is through the ballot box on thesth of November next. Then, in the might anti majesty of an insulted people, let us swear that the ['llion shall be preserved and the Constitution main tained, and that the heritage of liberty transmitted front our sires shall be handed down to our children's chil dren unsullied and unimpaired. Taxes ! Taxes ! Taxes are enormous. Every man finds he pays twice as much this year as last on his house and lot. Afen who own tenements and let them, find that it takes about all the rent to pay taxes, re palN and insurance. The Internal ll.evenue tax is another hole in every man's pocket. The extol tire pee rrnt. of this fit.r, levied last winter is to be collected in January—the col lection having been postponed tarot ofOr the' (ler•tie,le War is indeed a costly luxury for tax payers. The ordinary daily expenses of the war are Three Millions per day. Every soldier raised now costs One Thousand Dollars, hard cash. Every considerable battle costs an extra Mil lion of dollars. War annihilates property. lis expen ses are so muell gone forever! Money expended in building canals, or railroads or other public improvements, (tomes back in the shape of tolls, dividends, rise of real estate, Sc., tAc. But not so in a war, and especially in such a war as Lincoln would make this, not a war for the Union, but for blotting out State rights and freeing negroes. Just the Man Burnside says of Alet:lellan : " For years we have lived in the same family, and I know him as well as ally human being on the face of the earth, and I KNow THAT NO :SIORE HONEST, coNsciENTiors MAN EN AN GEN. MCCLELLAN." That is just the kind of a man the people want for President. They are tired, sick and disgusted with the " smutty joker" who now holds that office; they are indignant atthe knavery and corruption, the robbery and swin dling which he and his supporters have introduced and practiced upon such an enormous scale. They want an holiest loan, and they know 4. len. to he such a man. Ile is the man for theql—the man they want—the man they are bound to have for their chief servant. Let honest men think of this and rally to the aid of the great party of honest, patriotic and disinterested men who are laboring for Peace, the Union, the salvation of the country. The Gunboat General :Shortly after McClellan's heroic con duct in the seven days' fighting before Richmond, the following• was dispatch ed to him I.y the President: ASIIINUTON, July 2, 1864. fcr . jew Gen,' re 1 ( ;el,rgo R. I :1111 satiNtied that yourself, officers and men have lone the best you could. All accoUnts say hettcr lUrli!ill4 Wai never done. Ten thousand thanks fu ymt. A. LINCOLN. Immediately after the battle and vic tory at Antietam, General McClellan received the following despatch : WASH mrroN,.Sept..ls, 1862. Your despatch of to-day is received. God yt,u tool Le with you. A. LINCOLN. .\ I ajm. (;,•zwral (:C., - ) rge B. A1((1 11a In August last the elder Blair Was dispatched to New York to see McClel lan and offer him a high command in the army. Yes, he is a gunboat General, iron clad, armed to the teeth with Paixhan gulls, with a hardy crew aboard, a gal lant command and the Union flag afloat! Let privateers, blockade runners, and pirates of the black flag look out when the gunboat McClellan comes along, Sales for Taxes We have enough of these now. But how will it be when Lincoln's " four years more" -of war are over and all war debts tripled or quadrupled ? In county, town and school district, the advertisement " Sales for Taxes," will abound. The little farms and cozy homesteads, in which men barely sup port themselves and families, will be brought to the hammer. The condition of things which large public debts and heavy taxation have brought about in the old world, will, by Lincolnism, he reproduced here ; and you will have two distinct classes of society,—the landed and pampered few, and the landless, homeless and suffering many ! 4Eir Private letters are beginning to arrive from Democratic soldiers in the army, giving the details of the various methods taken to disfranchise those who desired to vote the Democratic ticket, and also partiCularizing cases where soldiers of other States were per mitted to vote in large numbers as Penn sylvanians for the shoddy candidates. This matter should be looked into at once, and set right. 106 176 318 :106 175 348 106 173 31S 106 175 348 193 89 181 193 80 111 103 tts IS-1 ltk3 89 184 127 131 133 135 124 12 111 1,1 11 1:.1 f 2; 1,17 1110'1.31 11011,1 The Value of the Onion The killowing extract from a speech made (lov. Seymour, of New York, at St. Paul, in August, will illus trate the value of the American Union and the meddling fanaticism of those who have been for years the South, and thus bringing about a state of feeling which has endangered the continuance of that I.Tnion : There is an instintive ditFcrenee be tweeu the twit parties. The Democratic ! party is a let-alone party ; the Itepuh- I divan party is a meddling party. [Deaf ening cheers.] It is a great deal easier to denounee other people for their sins titan to reform ourselves ; it is a great deal easier to obtain politieal power by inflaming the passions itnd prejudices of our neighbors, by denouneing men a thousand miles aWay, that> it is to gain influence by governing our walk in life by the principles of Justice, or the die • tates of a sound patriotism. [Cheers.] Is it not too true that the reverse Of [ilk has been hurtful to the morals of our people, and hurtful to tile pulpit, of which I speak with all reverence, and to the holy doctrines which should issue from the sacred desk 7 [Cheers.] Is it not too true, my Republican friends, that a rifle for Kansas, or a curse or the South, has weighed more in the politi cal scale than private virtues or public service? reatwavering.] \V hence comes slavery ? We have Seen who prolonged it; now, my friends do you I ever stop to inquire who uplioltlsit': It is sustained by the firm of " Weaver, Wearer Planter," and two Of the partnerti live up North. [Cheers„and I laughter.] Eve> y one knows that but for the loom of New England and Old England, it could not live a day. The loudest denunciations against slavery are made hy men with cotton shirts on their backs. The most fervent pulpit exhortations against slavery come from melt who wrap themselves for repose at night in cotton sheets; who lay their heads on coi;o11 pillows, and gri to sleep thanking ( god tnat they are better than the men "down South." [Laughter.] I was called upon some year; ago, while Governor of New York, by a de putation of Quakers from (treat Britain, to lay before the a testimony " against slavery. As they wished, glistened to them. We afterwards fell into a eon- versation, and the question arose why the people or Europe were sit oppressed anti burdened so heavily by taxation. AVe attributed it to the difibrefice in their language—t he great zonnherof na tionalties, divided hy imaginary lines-- the petty jealousies tool ,tri r, s, and con sequent necessity for maintaining large standing armies. NVe then spoke of the blest condition of Etirope if all these rival Ilovernment , could he moulded into one, speaking a cominon language, having common sympathies, with no custom-houses to annoy, tun' no stand ing armie, to threaten, and my Quaker friends warmed with enthusiasm at the glorious picture. and expressed the ear nest wish that such a day might dawn, for with it would conic Elie true " Said 1. When all till:, Las been nail:V(4l, should rise up in England, :tint Sa:V that all this genial fello‘vship among the nations, this communitv of interest and of language, shall he h'St 11 , Yed 111111'S , serfdom he ahrogated in 1(t- , sin and polygnito* W hat wo r ld you say regardingstich a matt "Say?" said the Quakers, "wo would su. that he deserved the anathemas of all good men, as a traitor to the ',kart ittter(. , .ts or ntankind, for douhting that t:od, in his ovit way, and in his ~wit good time, would Ivorl: out a remedy (or all these wrongs." " \oNv," said I, "my friemls, \viten we 1111'w this picture of Ettropc it NVits ilia ill filmy. I described the I 11%):111 land lidi eNicutle I . l'olll iho .At lautlt to the l'aeitle- from the (;rent Lakes to the Gulf ,)I ( thous:u td miles over dais land, and . no custom houses shall stop you- travel to its farthest limits, awl you shall see 1111 standing armies—you shall hear a coin mon language, and slit!! feel a eommon sympathy. Then you shall ktioNv it is to live upon a great, [woad eon tinent, I where there is brotherhood unalloyed by your hatreds and mitipathies. Why, therefore, do you come here to teach tt the language of strife I Long :ii l 1 loud appl:nts... States Sure for Mellellan The some rate (if gain that k exhibit ed by the result in Pennsylvania and Ohio, will in November rescue by a large niajurity, soldiers voles ineluded— CONN FA"PIC UT, NEW NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY, PENNYLVANIA The people of the border States—Rei t/ware, :Maryland, Kentucky, and Mis souri, are four to one for McClellan.— There is hope of Rhode Island, and we see no reason why we should not early Illinois and perhaps ot her sort hwestern States. McClellan has great States and a large portion of the armies at his look. The people have their dearest rights and interests at stake. They have a noble chief as their leader. lioth him and the cause demand that, like Bluch er at Waterloo, the last man and the last horse shall he sent into the contest. What May be Expected The draft was postponed in Philadel phia, and the people encouraged to be lieve there would be none. 'phis was before Tuesday's election. Hut no sooner is the election over than the Administration puts the screws on. Thus we find the following in Friday's Philadelphia Lcdg,/: `• The l O ordered fir Phititt/elphi”.-- t inlets; were received yesterday by the Pro vost \bo•shal of the Sl4,lllii I)ktrwt t‘, at 12 u'rlork, llu• (Iran in se cure the deficiencies in such w a rds as hues• failed to fill the illicit This is a fair sample of what way he expected if Mr. Lincoln is re-elected. The people will be beguiled by fair pro fessions, until after the election, When, should this Administration be sustain ed, the hand of power will be laid more heavily than ever upon the people, and a merciless conscription will sweep over the laud. Let every man who values his liberty and life, and the life of his son, take ranting before it is too lete. The Monroe Doctrine A Washington letter contains the an nexed paragraph : " Private advises received by the etov eminent here are to the effect that Maximilian's empire is now firmly established, and that the last battle has been fought. There is now no organized force of Mexicans in the field in any part of the great empire of Mexico. The war has now degenerated into a series of guerilla fights which it is supposed the hrm, but temperate and conciliatory policy of the new Emperor will speedily subdue. It is no secret that, as soon as the election is over, no matter what the result, Mr. Seward will immediately receive a minister from Maximilian." The Monroe Doctrine has already been repudiated by Mr. LINCOLN'S Adminis tration, the continuance of which would witness Its total abandonment. 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While lien Hocked and Gagged b) Negro A mendacious Shoddy organ, mitori- Soldiers. MIS alike for its adjustable conscience Johie,t„tyith, i s „„ ent h ry „ towit in and arithmetical inaccuracy, says tile t is thus out Of soldiers haVOlolll4' since been convinced compliment to lhe present military gov thin "th• - • ulnr•ra(ic troth rs II•111141, ITIII,I* the State, A ndrew.lohnson,who had thcg (hr powci, 11, yr‘irl , Ihcm h, ! ,,, r is, it nutty b e rel.llolllbered, a candidate th, (hr for the "nice of V ice-Presi.len t. John-' Alt! would they"'\\'h" gives ire,.- sonvillc is a very small village, but some dont to the negr oe s and colonizes and of the iniquities perpetrated therein are supports them at ( Mvernment expense greater than those whi c h obtain anl on confiscated estates, while the at the 'national capital. ;Nlr. John wives and children and fathers and Flanagan, a prominent [Mon citizen mothers of our soldiers are sutrering of . h ns riuw written two for want or the pay and pension due l e tt ers to t h e m ili tar y go v e rn o r, protest them ? Who tint the Federal uni- ing against the abuses w h ich prevail - at form on the neg - rous told raised that place. His first appeal was unno their pay to the standard of our tired; his last has just been published ; - white soldiers? Who sent our brave it also b e passed by i n silence be. soldiers to the front to fall in the deadly th e intlit„ry ! - *"v"an"e. lint l et us set , fray, and retained this negro troops in how our " paternal government" ell holiday tri nas at corps d' the people of Tennessee tip to " gave the negroes a right to crowd white ti, beauties tniseegenat ion and negro men and women out of the omnibuses and street cars of the Federal Capital? James ford, unfortunately 1 white \V ho an' trying the Sallie thing in our num had the temerity, after being by Northern cities? \\•l,, granted the use rr, . gr . o belonging t „ t h e i;“ h of the Presidential ground Mr two Ile- gourds infantry, put in gr" and l in' while line with tither workmen I also unfortu- Sunday school ,•hildren of \\•ashington 'late ly whit e ~ to ,av to his eononand city therefrom? \Vito added negroes to ; mg ()nicer, is it :WOW greenbacks their Shoddy procession at Pittsburg, to-dav ? This query was not unnatural, "I"I set up a 1. " 1. ge ("' a "'"g"", whirls insoninclt as Lord had received no coin \v"s \v" ll `, 4 -"I 1 "egr""si show, ""'• pensation Mr his labor sine,. beginning soldiers wheat they come hack Haut in- work „ poi the Ist otter pne•yious may. groes are to be their fellow-workmen, lint the „m eet . i t , „„ ttuttatill, ,ii,,,,,, y „ r i ng ' and that their wages will be brought constructive treason in this, inonedi down to the negro standard? Who gave ately ordered the limui,itive and hope orders Lhal negro troops should be " m i nus lord h i h e o Placed "I , an eguarltY with while s" 1- for five hours." And he forthwith un diers, and that the labors of camp and 1 iterwent this pleasing ceremony, and in entrenchments should be co . 111 ' 11 Y was thus honored until relieved I hrough \Vho voted in Congress to t h e i„ tere ,..,i„„ o r the brigade wagt „,_ give negrocs the right to vote in the utttstei. .i s (.'oat'ss,v,.„ stat„nietit. newly organized territories? Who are (;,, or „.„ si n . rwoo d, who has ex ' , er t en _ doing all they can now to make voters ctr l in his own 1 ,,, r ,„„ the of negroes, in order that they may get new method of muilling interrogatories votes enough among the contrabands and eimalizing society, testifies that he to enable them to h eat th e Democrats hasseen anotherwhiteworkman, minted and continue their power and plunder- King, i y i ng i n t h e street , o f J„1 0t5 ,,,,_ ini , s? Who have caused the slaughter ville, and also at Corral No. I , at the of thousands of o u r gallant soldiers by same place, bucked and gagged" and sending them on slave hunts .' Who g.ttartieti negro soldiers. has prostituted the "eat' f or th e L-nion" Franklin I Jarvis, a disci targell soldier into a negro crusade? And tinally,who ( h ay i ng th„ haul of a c l r •: u s kit „ ilaS deClarell lie the Union shall not hin g e lahorhw at .)ohnsonville, after be restored until slavery is destroyed b e i ng ‘' bucked ;Ind 'gagged," on the and all the migrites of the South are n i g ht of the nth iit• July, had the pleas made ftet , to roam in vagralic.v "yer the nruor witiwssing the operation perform land ? eel upon two white soldiers, of the First I)id the" Dettmeratic leaders" do tiles:: Kansas battery. 'Di these last the Ile things? Most emphatically NOI All -ro executioners remarked that " the these lilitek and white equality sea- w hi t „ f o lk s i„ t y t . had us 'Hit t er l ong sures have • been petted and carried out ti c u n n e h , and now w o are going to pal by his Imperial Rottenness—Abraham, ‘• i t to t the King oiShoddy and his pursy A not 1„. 1 . f ront eh„ N or th, men of Congress, of the Cabinet and the one Kelly, being "bucked and gagged" Lords of Contracts. 7'/u!,/ have endea- at about the same ion•, was entertained cored to " degrade our soldiers 111 ' 10 w by the sight of the operation as applied he level, of the negro," and not the to a 0 ,1 t u t , nient h ero f t h e Fi rst Deutoeraticleaders," w h o h a y, always engineers, and by witnessing the tying been found endeavoring to elevate :mil improve the laboring claSlzes. Mul to attention- by negro soldiers. form a national character for our people Put such eharming fidelity to the \Odell should noble, dignified and amenities of life is not all that charttc intelliiient. The soldiers need not be terlieS the mica the " paternal govern told bay , ' ment" in the little tow ti of Johnsonville. endeavored to reduce the negro L ir e 111„1.,,withou ttit,, slice ..F level, ill the light of the measures "l • variet One( fardner, who, it. iseharged the dominant party for past four liv Mr. Flanagan robbed the I loveni : years. Jul them . judge the two parties meld in every way, being madea "boss ' with that light liek;re them and vote over 1, workm e n, indulged his thievish necordingly.--/'stein( mid propensities for some time, until his _ - peculation-i tiecanie so outrageous that r. 1 )' Flanagan was compelled to lodge thief ire the jail a. Nashville. His long - immunity from punishment it is, perhaps, not difficult to accomit fin. In open ho a Wilitenlall) supped and lodged wills a in•gro wench', told in the exuberance, perhaps, of paternal love, dandled her saltlemrsprintioill Ills knees. .\t the stone lime he was" Ilegre,,s, whom h e eallil.ll. ilk Wire.' Still :archer I want y of the miscege nation ant horn ies at .lolinsonville. Ott Sunday, .1 ti ly _i--according to scorn With the military covernor 1 lie negro guards wore order ed by the military agents of the Ad ministration ~hitilitless in accordance with Ihe proinlJings of that " higher law " ignores not, only the sol emn compacts of emistitntionAgovern mem , beet dent:mils `sue anti-slavery I iui," to drive white Christians to la bor nl t Iti• point. of the bayonet. In t his growing Abolition l•tupia or Johnsonville, who, awl loyal whit , citizens, in durance for civil or Military " are bully driven hi work on the public highways and upon other public improvements, by negro soldiers, cotton:lll,l,d by a negro, sergeant, limier whose absolute i•iint rid these white people are. IVe have briefly enumerated it fell', and iltlt a few, of the outrages perpe trated „porn the persons of loyal white men at the thriving town which bears the mune of the \lee-presidential run dilate of the miscegenation party. It is l hardly worth while, perhaps, to add that the letters of the outspoken Alr. D'Flanag.an addressed to nothern triends I have nut only been opened during their passage through the waits, lint have , heen suppressed. Besides this,an agent one John llorehen, has been detailed to watch .)lr. " vorrespond ence," as the spy called it, with the Notlh. We mention these matters that the honest men of all parties may see what is in store for the nation if the present Administration is continued in power. No comment upon them is neeessary i hey speak for themselves. We would, however, adnainkh may 15•ISI/I1 who may entertain the project of seeking for employment in Tennes see at present, that, unless he has a " weakness " for the " buck and gag," or unless his complexion is of the color of a cavalry saddle, het had better st ee r clear of Andy Johnson's dominions, or, at least, of that portion of them which rejoices in the military governor's pa tronymie.—N. ll'or/d. The Voice of Our Lir log - , tilatesnieo Ex-Prk-.l.lent hi., I Llr I, Lt i I Ih \ 1,111 :I, ill , 1:1 , t fl' Iho !••••-.1401 . ,11 . 1. , 11 , .1 . 111.' 11 , 111(11 . :11,11` 11011. iteVerdy .JOIIIISI,II sny, : is in iuu hand., if \IIIII t" Vililor pr.1)0,•(i101 111 Divine 1,111 /I , llll`V (i 1,1 . I , lll' I , llllll'y ;I V 1 1•1111'y 1 .21 ,1 111 11 1 1 ill its riisults 1)1:111 :111\ Wi• c• 1111 1.11,1 )1i•- 1 1111i1 1 . 1•11111 , 1 , ill 111 1•111 . 1,1' , ;111 1 1 11 1 11111111,1 I . oli \ i• - 11111 1 11 ii• :11111 114, Nl'l l l l . - 11011. 11111( 1 i-1 111)11 it, 1111 1 1 :1.1 . 11l 1 iit pa triot and an alilo -.J:111'1'411:111, 1 , 11yS: "• iitiolaroil in Li.. "r ,%1 , 11 . .Mr. : 1 Call see and Iling ill his pol itvz and \var. - Hon. \l'iullnull rai , cs a \yarn ing. vni""•vi , o l, 114 saYR • I 1,11111,1 1.1.111.1 1111' ..011\ 111.1 I'i , •l4,l , m • ne , t apprehension, that, irtiwv,li.•y Nvhich has Leon allopleil :11111 pursued by l'resident I.i alldu: n 111 hi, advis(..rs thrmitrh out tho 11S1 11,) wars, Shall 110 pursued hair years iniire, We shall IS irretrievalily 111 , 141111»1111. , ti II 1 5..1' 11i,- .AIII la , tly, in Oils conneetion, we quote the words of that tried friend of Henry Clay and Daniel NVolpster, Hon, Coom1”:, of Ky., as follows: " lit my deliberate judgment, if .Nlr. Lin coln is re-elected, Ws shall have a military despotism fas[uned upon us and Mil" 1161- , 11'011, kitha standing army of free ncgro janissarU,. Ponder these s.oliann words liefore re cordin;z your vote fur the candidate of Win. Lloyd Garrison, and Wendell Phillips, and others id omne y(71118, who have longand unblushingly proclaimed their hostility to the Union of our fore fathers. Old the a Rebel Itve . eulting °nicer Emersofl Etheridge, ,Republican clerk of the last 1-louse of Representives, de serted Lincoln when Lincoln deserted tlte Union. In Mr. Etheredge's recent speech in Philadelphia, he says : In my State he will have no vote. And why? Just because Abraham Lin coln has used the army and navy' of this country for two years and a half to keep us out of the Union, and disfranchised sixty or seventy thousand citizens. I, to night, arraign Abraham Lincoln as the commissary, the best recruiting officer, the best friend that rebeldom ever had. He has stifled more Union sentiment, since the beginning of the r, than any fifty 111(.11. in Richmond. Some of the more independent, Re puldicall papers are beginning to speak out againSt the great wrong committed by President Lincoln in keeping 50,000 soldiers in Soul prisons when they might he exchanged. Thu ;Springfield, .11,1.iff/Wiectit protests against it ill the following vigorous language : " We might recover our white soldiers now in rebel hands by the proposed ex change, and yet hold a large balance as hostages for the colored soldiers while their status is in controversy. lf, under these circumstances, the leaving of thirty-five thousand white men to suffer and die at the rate of one hundred per day, is not practically, in the eyes of both God and man—murder, ?mower, ]MURDER, MURDER, what is it?" This is from a Republican paper. How can any friend of the soldier sup port an Administration and a candidate thus denounced by its own party papers for inhumanity to soldier..? One good effect already apparent from the result of the election, is the cour tesy with which Democrats are now treated by the Abolition party. It is in marked contrast with their conduct du ring the last three years and a half. They will be still more respectful to their Democratic neighbors after the November election, unless all the signs of the times are grievously at fault: • g Ift t 1 t 7, - 17.11 7- , • " • : 1 1 5 ?' ; Our Soldiers in Prison The Effect. F."El.5t • 72 1 5 r , ~~=i -~~` _. MOM :I , 1131 C The Kind of "Life-Long Democrats" l'etted bS the Administrationists. The Detroit I',' , n. tells a good story of a "life-lulu Democrat," which is illustrative of the sort of men the Ad ministration use and pets Limier that desi:onition and upon whom it charges some of the prevailing frauds and pecu lation. it is a true story, we copy: (me °rift, strolling, shoddy stunipers of this state - t ddemy (s t u n , to grief the other ,I ; , p tho coontr- school houses up in the pineries of St. Clair county. lie was axing exceedingly it rathful ahem the hateful t'opp,•rheads, and declared that though he had heel a " life-long Democrat, he could not support the party any longer, mid should vote for Litteolti and Johnson." At this junettire a gentleman interrupted him %\ ith ":\ Ir. •, I happen to know you. )'roti 'Ail, lately pardoned out of the State Prison hy ~.ti erltor Bbiir, upon the oxpress stipulation that you would give von , i n nu t .ne.• to the Reputtlican ticket." The gentleman . , oratory "simmered" down. If Wi• were to use Mr. Lincoln's el oquent language, wu should say that ho 'turned his tail,' but not having a great Taney to the country style of our worthy President, his narrative suddenly closed, and no more was heard of our "life-long Dentoerat.'' kZ — Some needy and perhaps seedy Shoddyite advertises to all liars, drunk ards and scoundrels generally, to fur nish him with inventions to prove the cowardice and treason of Gen. McClel lan, in order that lie may make a book of them. Suppose, in addition to his labors in that direction, he now proceed to advertise for information about those " other articles for private family use " furnished for the white house bylt Cum*, and charged in a bill of twenty-three litondriq (WWI for china I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers