gannoter gmelligmca. THURSDAY; NOVEMBER 3, 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 informa tion, the truth thereof may be given in evi dence."—antsfitution of Pennsylvania. FOR PRESIDENT: MAJOR GENERAL GEORGE B. M'CLELLAN, OF NEW JERSEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT GEORGE 11. PENDLETON, OF OHIO. ''e4 ~.e4ERT L. JOHNSTON, Of Cambria, RICHARD VA cx, of Philadelphia.. lusTn zI -r m.r.Croits. ist)l: H Vzn. Loughlin, f 13t b. Paul Leidy, /241. 1. It. elm hold, I Ith. Itob't Swinefortl, , gd. Iw'd P. 11unn, PAIL John Ahl, ith T. M'Cullougli, 11;th. George A. SIMI h, 511 . Edward T. Iles, ,17111. Thaddeus Banks, GI i. PlillipS.lierhard, , ll,l.ll. 11. Nlmitgoluery, 1 1 h. 0/. G. lathe, • luth, .lohn M. Irvine, 111. I‘lichnel Seltzer, .2111..1 M. Thompson, 1 111. Patrick .1'1.11,,y ~ 'list. Itm-sela.. Brown, ....ili. T. H. Walker. ..!.....01..hes. I'. Barr, 11111. iI.S. I onlinick, Yin t. Wm. .f. ii“l'Llite.. r.:111..1. It. 1)111111illg, :All]. NV. MOlilW,MerY OFR PLATFORM: The Union—The Pnbl ie Li berly —Priv at I. Itiula* Fret. I:1ec•l ions---A Free Yress.--rrcc• Spec•ilc by Jury—The It or .1.31 . to our Soldier, ,11.41,....•, ,, It 1.•iII% !!,r 1.11;011, 1/ I‘l I 111• 1.11:y Ir:1,11. P. cr 01611 , 11 .• 1.., r„ ~ ~; ~ ~ I. , '• • It. 'fil:tl I •i ..1111 t•• .1 • 1111 i.. \ li ii: I I l!i Go ll} IVorh! iiit 1•1-1 . ',:,,11. 1,--Limn :I \%1.1.1: IMIEMI lIIMB Ira Ili \\ 'I 1 1,:k1 t1::0 %\ t• ::Icl 1-1, it , ill lit, f.r4.-,•lit, all Ilisi \vt• 11,01,• t•i i l• 11,11 ilititt itit•ti it, -1•4 , 11-hit•I'nt h,ll 1'In• v: n~;~~i:~~~i ~~r~~~•: ~.. f:u:ui i~.~~ ~~~~~~~ ;. \lt•l' 1111i-1 ],t. de111:11141 1 1):I1 -11:111 ,1“111•. :11 . 1• til:lt it Iciw• 011 .1,, it \yin prcvent hurt•:troll, \Vc o:; pl• , 1 - ,. g• t(, utt-rly thy i.ptilar /21•.. at lxvillle. 'Yu 1,10-1 (Ic.irahlo Achy Nvit It the unuty ztr, \v z,al - ‘viili Tinin ii.l in tin , ,11,rt time titat NV,,rk n= cnu never worked and vigilant. t" it 11)::1 iit)i a ,inglu undue :Itlvailtng'e is gain,i 1.. v Iliv ciwniik, ui the 1,, , ,p1(.. 11111-I \\":111'1101. art 1.11:1! (16111`, ;tll , l l''tli'VCW!lly. It 'l'4l NVL,F%, t-erv:ttive :,w1 lot there ht• no cc,- sation nl pqr; country no: - hour 1”, l‘v,;11 “f ne:.t tiny, 1131 , 1 it !.:1',111 , 1 Vi(•1(11'y nlll , l. I.e 01:1' . .- I,et eVery 1,, curl:, ;31311 31;31 Cod , pue,l the rp4iii! All?nd to the Polk: ww:1(1 ni r upon I>ent;;(.rnts 1111 . ;;Lit: - .11;;;11 1 emint . \ - the Itir;selutt. ;;;' to the 1;(11;;:. 1)1;1. ;;pl;;;lient,, elrittTitied the:;. - are 1 ,- ;;111 . 1;tre . t. ill tile kite election, will in:lke Ihe loot despevale nial:e up fm•il in tL enII one. They will he to tO 01- Coiripii , ll tIOi 11—uit. ( . .ullti'lUct their ViL.;ilance 1111,1 rest, will Ile lie,•(...,:try. Let tli,•r, Lc a stroll , ' I.t—t citi/A•11, or 0111 the poll. za int early hell l. oti the Iliorning, lit-iiite , s ii ...hall he to , ee that the tion is fairly :in(' emplueted. I,et men temniti there until the t thi.llll,e active iirm. It( eternal I'i_ilanec i= the pried of liherty.' oic la Rispeaieil The (0: la repeat, a lie maiiiiinettire(l(alt (r: the vv - bole (.1(0.11 by a (iirty flitle 1,111;1h:1101 IN (.ailed the The eharge miaie h\ it itiraile,t siailie here tier ((1 her at (.111, to he fahe, a& a n•LractiDil Mad, Mr. Stellv.vr never hat a word conversation.with the rebel lencral Jenkins. The whole story wits a 14:refaced lie, and proven to he such. We are sure the E.,7».e.g will make the necessary eorrection in this matter at once. • TIIC article in the Die -1(11(4, wzl,-, copied intootherpapers, some of which never corrected the lie put forth. Perhaps the Elpre never saw the retraction made by the paper which started the story. We did, and we call upon the Rrprcss to make the amende honorable. We hope it will be done im mediately, as simple justice demands it should. Ohio Comr,resnien Notwithstanding the blowing of the Abolitionists, we carry six Democratic Congressmen in Ohio on the home vote. Firnik beats Stevenson ; Noble beats Buckland Follet beats Delano ; Rice beats Ashley, and Le Blonde is elected . in the Mercer and Auglaze District, over Moses B. Walker. Of these the follow ing will be elected notwithstanding the " Noldier votA."—Finek, Le litiud, Follett and Rice. On the home vote the Ohio Delegation stands 13 Abolition, to G Denmeratic ; and on the whole vote, will stand - 15 to 4. The Abolition majority on the State ticket will not exceed 15,000 —a Democratic gain of 40,000. Good for Ohio! Try it again in Noyernlnr,—Day too Empire. The EleetiOn Mast be Free The very first condition, the one es sential prerequisite of a popular elec tion, is that it shall be entirely free and completely without the taint of fraud. If it be not free, it is but a mere mock ery; if it be not destitute of fraudi it is necessarily so vitiated as to be in no sense entitled to be regarded as - such an expression of public sentiment as is binding. Force used at the ballot-box renders an election but the veriest farce, while fraud vitiates the whole transac tion. In this country we choose our rulers, from the highest to the lowest, by ballot. The intention of the framers of the Government was, that the elec tions should always be entirely free. It is on the presumption of their being so, that our Government, state and Na tional, have hitherto been conducted. Until within the last three years no al legation was err,- made that any elec tion was controlled by force, while if frauds were practiced, they were of such limited and partial extent as to have al most entirely escaped notice. Latterly things have changed—changed wonder fully, and changed for the worse. Now both force and fraud are used to control elections. In Ten ne, , zee we have Andrew Johrl son, Mr. Lincoln's military Governor, and ,hi= associate on the Abolition ticket Gn iee President, openly deelaringhis mtemhm so to use the military power :,1 his emninalid as to prevent any re -ult of an election there to he held other than just such as he may choose 1' dictate. And, when a number of the tuna respectable and prominent loyal men or that ;- 4 tate make their appeal to 'Sr. Lineoln. a- President, they are Inu fed r r mu his presence with insults mdy add to the outrageous (•har ae:. r of the injury intlieted. =MEM I. i- innit Ilk reception of thus!tent lenien, front lii. speech to the I.:lrty who serenaded hint after the ea rlie-t uc\e 44 . the Maryland election :drive(' in AVa , lting.ton, and from vari olt, others of hi- :lets, that AM.:Mani I Meotil, in Ids mad infatuation, is re solr.4l to f•,,,Htintie liin,sell in loner, may he the wish or iiio states. lie is determined so to nutilipulate the artn.) - vo , ,e, and wo to control sovereign States the hayonet, of foreign soldiery, as to I aide to exhibit an api)arerit ma jority or the electoral vote. That he will receive an honest rrit4- j,,rity or the electoral votes of the loyal alleffipt to , •ontrol the coining election forcc in ,cnie State,z, :Ind by fraud in \+,. :iblindant rea::()It 111'11 , 11C frnni \\ lint \\l• illic-tion of thii Muir is a !mist unun~•itom, one. SLupposii .Abrallat Lincoln iiticnipt, to usurp po‘ver hy ontrollinti: 1111 coming election by force hy franll, or hy emnbineil, Ill" rciilly the me. ercut, line slant, ion...lion of tile To it seems to :Minh of :in easy misui.r. 7\ I. Lill,lllll 'Vile only lie lit‘v- autl leg ly eleeliii. lilt is so Ciiticted, I is ti l "IY "r ov , TY man to obey and rt•-•ppet hint in all that he does within the proper I, ol^tittlti , .ll:l.l limits Of his autleddiy. Ifhei.., not elected, lie i- not It aly or 111\yrullY not onl . \ - idan hound to ohey Ii lii, but it i.th,•hi•tleiell duty ever - good eitizi.•ll attempt he linty maid• Io tHiirp uulattfully the poi\ ers it• ttiil. tinder ,tielt lie but a nii , crahlt , usurper, to 1,111.1 ahem I . l."lll]totter WMIIII he the l•ry ditty the vitizen owed lo his rouutt.t. N,. e , al--ideration of per-dual nodrend of danger, no temporising poliey •diould he-all•tweil for a single lin, mew to pr; vent the sill ft, visitation of popular venti,eattee upon the head of any 111:111 tthn coup] -o hip forget - what was due to tia• nation and to it•-•eitizen,. lie wonll ile , erve to lie hunted ilottn , and hon g to the fir-t lanipp•-1 or tree ivithin reach. There is a point heyond whielt eilitnot safely go, and that point trill havt• been reached Nvhenever it i- inanife-t that any man, he 10i VhraLuut I,ineoln or another, deliber ately :Ind with design, ha, stieeeeded in dtdeatina: the \i - 111 of this people ii eontrolliii•2: the election liy force. or a cnniiilintion of both. Then ferlataraltee will have euzu-ed to be a virtue, and the duty of the people will he plainly marked out. II they do not intend to hecome abject slaves, they will be necessttrily oldiged to assert their riuhts at (met:, and to assert them Revolution will then have be come a neeessity, anti lib e rty will im peratively demand that it he inaugu rated. The ht,t and inoi , t sacred ri,rhts of the eitizen, will have to be bravely defended or most basely surrendered. It is not hard to believe that the people will adopt that course which honor will imperatively demand they should. Let not Mr. Lincoln mid his sattelites be deceived by the apparent apathy of the nurses. They demand that the coming election shall Le - entirely free, and they will refuse to he appeased if it be not so. \ Itralutin Lincoln is wise, he will he warned in tittle. l'atit;ht Stlillilig a Ballot Box An Abolition election °nicer was caught stuffing the ballot box at Jute of the polls in this county on the day of the recent election. The Demo cjratic in , pector detected him in the very act of cramming the tickets in, :,01,1 charged him with it. The scoun drel denied of Bourse ; but when the vote, were counted out it was discover ed that there were more tickets in the box than there were names on the tal ly 'Japers. This proved that the charge tattle during the day was true; and the matter was tinally arranged by au agree ment allowing the Democratic inspec tor to destroy enough oP the Abolition tickets to make the count agree with the tally paper. It tint law is not en forced in ail its rigor in this ease there is no use in having laws to protect the freedom of elections. It lies been sug gested that the (gaud Jury, if a large majority of them were Republicans, would ignore a bill j Of indictment. We du nut think so. We should much dislike to believe that twenty-four men could be got together anywhere in Pennsylvania, anlimg whom a major ity could be found to wilfully disregard their solemn oaths for the purpose of shielding a political friend from pun ishment so richly deserved. We insist upon it that the scoundrel shall be prosecuted. Let us see whether a bill cannot be found, and the criminal pun ished as he deserves to he. ge - ,; -- T he Democratic majority in Penn sylvahia on Tuesday, the 11th of Octo ber, on the Congressional vote, is 1,958, and the average Democratic majority cast on the county tickets, including the Congressional vote, is 9,863 ! The mag nificent victory, achieved in the face of the most unscrupulous and determined opposition ever before arrayed against them, has covered the Democracy of Pennsylvania with glory. The Aboli tionists never dreamed of such a crush ing defeat. The Democrats scarcely per mitted themselves to hope for such a heart-cheering result. But ru E PEOPLE outraged and insulted by Mi'. Lincoln's destructive negro policy, rose in their strength, and won this great triumph of truth tml justice over fraud and despot ism. Be of good sheer, freemen ! On Tuesday next, the ,Old Keystone will give 30,000 majority for McCLELLAN, PENPX=I;OI I and the'UNION I Plain Thonglits for Plain Men It is truly amazing how any sensible man can pursuade himself. that the election Lincoln is the surest `and shortest road now tit;•-peace: He rstandiirbefore the nation otfa war plat formchtly, and:to vote for him is to vote for war—to the extent, if need be, of a: full extermination of the South: That is his policy openly acknowledged be fore angels and men. Tile South must bend or break ; he will hear of no mid dle course ; the only alternatives with him are absolute submission or abso lute ruin. This is his policy . band to all the horrofs of this policy every' luau commits himself, who votes to have him continued in otliee. How can any one deceive himself so far as to imagine, that in doing so he is seeking the wel fare of his eountry,otr serving the cause of religion, humanity and peace? The deluslon lies in supposing, that the mere show of a resolute determina tion on ertir side to carry forward the war in this unt•ompromising Way will be enough of itself to bring the South to terms. We are to let the t-' , outhern peo ple see that we meat[ to crush them, if need be, in good earnest; and then, we may hope, they will save us the horri ble necessity of doing so by Hinging themselves in dispiir at 'wt. feet. They are already tired of the war, we are told; they know their cans. , to he desperate, and they are only teed' ling out now be cause they hope fit'.a political diversion in their favor ! hrough the divided coun sels of the North. Let it appear, by the election ni Alr. Lincoln that hi,. policy is to Ittl•vail. and that the war is to go on, if nece,ary to the Hite* end, and then the spirit of their tireatti Ditty be expected tee uneierim a change. They will lee ready to throw down their arms and sutlor peat,. Such is lice presumption--te mere im agination at the hest—on the strength of which initltitude ,, are willing to make the fearful venture el.: committing the enuntry at this time to all that is appall ing in the possibilities of Mr. Lincoln's war policy. 'Hwy might shrink froth facing directly the alternative of what Incest come itt the wily or misery and sorrow l i that polb•y sbotild not work as they expected: but ihey cure so taken up with the other vlei of the ease, that this is not allowed to emtaue any part of their attention. They me determin ed to iadieVi` that lice Smith will soot' yield, if only there Itt , nu siti of yield ing on our part : and ~,tfiey heqt pronii,. But whal thi,? the presence (,1:t witle- , pread tiispositic.n in Ihe Smith. whirls 11.Nvevcr, they ;:t ~n,•t • Ilnl l :p••:iin t o) I") of nc ) th , ' H11,111t•lot yt,ll Lin)} it I,l' 14 t • :0 V:1111;1;2;0 it, an in the Deituierntie i•littliirm, fir the pur pose of hrinelllei the Nytir to It pit:wend close. \\lieu (Ve t;111:ur 11,1,, it is l'i!turteti 111.11 Ziukt s„„,i, ,I,I.„), „ish aliti that rm,lll to hope that :In overiiiri• iiiokine \\ uril it on our sit ll_ Nvonlii meet :111y i , iriot, l i avor. 1101 if To lie liii for from the spirit of the r , outh in re spon,e to a kind and friendly overture from the North, it is liar‘l to understand Lost attythitif hotter is to he expected front Ii Itn., , ry, kellig . erent demand, such zts is pre , ented iu ine policy of Linnoln. anN - reilecting mind, tiicraseis. perfect Iv Either Ilse :- ., outhern mind is ready, in desperation or itS 0,11110,4 l'Nlila:Hh . (1 , ;111 , l, 1)1;:jVi , it up and ( . 0111C I t again itc,o the h o ,oi tt of the Federal l'nion, or it is not. If the first supposition he true, as it is as.- , utned to he hy tlio. 7 ("‘i!to tell us that ii w ill note !; 2 tt vigorou. prosecu tion of the tt;iir to force thin=.-to this result, all can that a pea,, , policy brolfght to hear upon the (•:(-4. , nntst Wttric. far Inure auspiciously :Ind surely toward the -twit end. .Ind wilt', in the name of all charity and humanity, should a Cltristian peopi- not resort io a peace policy rather than to the poli..y of \vat . ? :\ lake hntcetcrthe po , itiou, that il:P• South Innut yet exhausted ti.ne wider the tieees-iity of yielding. :It elle, hi the iire,sure \vat . ; au tl what \ye think then the Wi,flollCi i th.so t lu lirl•2111 td . hringin' r our -,IITO \VS t“ tin end in lilt thl• (we tHeit:-iire provi , eatimt ti) :mother, tetyl continually uo inore anti wore the privet- of the vvil it welts (o sttkitte? And is it ipst Hear that the the olive branch of pt'a , 'C . , ;nil suLslitutin_ the langttit, hrotherly persuasion for the wratfiftil tones of vi‘iletwe and inter, Ayoub' carry - with it a far heiter chalice at least of heilig ermviled iii tile end with tritimphatit ,tteeess. In either view the case, the pituc:i policy i< the ((lily one that holds out any rational hope for us in the future. The war policy, asset forth in Lincoln's proclamation "to all whom it may con cern," offers no or prospect of deliverance II:it I I there 1(0 any preparation in the mind H.ath, (as we helieve there i, if only it 011111,1 he properly approached,l to come to terms with the North, this policy Inns( work. most effectually to destroy it; while it is just as sure to inflame into tenfold animosity and strength what ever of spirit there - may he there already for going on with the rebellion. Let none deceive themselves, then, in voting fm . Lincoln and war, hy think ing that the War in bilk Way kill soon COMO to an end, ia• shin of the lt-i«lith. To lean on any such expectation, is. 1w:01 , 111:pines, and ;lolly. The war still never end hy th!, hafl tion polies , unle-s it Igo through the general overthrow of the nation. The Torchlight Procession in Philailel On last :-icturday night the Demorracy of Philadelphia had a general torchlight procession and illumination in honor of the victory fairly and honorably achieved ley us in the recent election. The affair was in all respects thc largest and most successful demonstration of the kind ever witnessed in Philadelphia. But the intolerant and tyrannical spirit of Abolitionism was displayed in all its brutality and bitterness. Various as saults were made on the procession at different points along the route. The Democracy bore it until forbearance ceased to he a virtue, and then they effectually cleaned out the holes and hiding places which t hei r opponents had chosen as 'laces of resort. The rooms of the League were somewhat injured, and other places from which stones and filth were thrown were riddled. No thing buta complete failure of the police to do their duty could have rendered such retaliation proper and necessary. The police of Philadelphia winked at and secretly encouraged the assaults upon the procession. In vain were they appealed to for protection against the outrages perpetrated. They refused to do their duty. One old man, an innocent and unof fending citizen in the procession, was killed by being struck on the head by some missile thrown into the procession from a building along the route. In the various collisions a number of other persbns were severely wounded. Times have wonderfully degenerated when a political procession cannot pass peace ably along the streets of our cities and towns. The people are learning some lessons from experience, and, among others, this: that if the authorities will not protect them in their rights and privileges, they must then use for their own defence the means which God anti Nature live given them. Poor Peniisylrania. The_ burdens of 'his miserable war Tress with peculiar' severity upon poor tax-ridden Pennsylvania.. Not only has she promptly responded to every call of the President for men, net only does she contribute her full share to the treasury of the United States, not only has she suffered inore from rebel incur sions than any other Northern State, but she is now compelled to raise and maintain a standing army for her own defence, and pay it herself. The situation of Pennsylvania, with in striking distance of the rebel armies of Virginia, is a sufficient misfortune for her people. It cruel enough that our soil is an n 14 -1y invaded by the enemy, our fields. ;roddeu down and ravaged, our citizenH plundered and our towns subjected to) contributions and destroyed by fire,`` - Mile the people of New England are : reposing in safety hundreds of miles from the scene of war. Itut it is still harder that we must raise, equip and support an army of protection at our own expense. If the United States are one people, if they are one Nati ! m as our opponents insist, or a Union as the Democracy contend, why shoGhl not the inhabi tants of Maine and (llalifornia contribute to the defences of Pennsylvania . : Our (;overnur demanded thus notch of the Administration at 'Washington, and-but for thy subserviency of an Abolition legislature, whose idea of loyalty is servility, wordil have secured it. Rut now, while Luzern, and Erie are pay !lig for the protetion of Franklin, Adams and York fq.'unties, New Damp shire and Miehiganivoldly leave Penn sylvania to protect fiersell. We are raising a standing army of 1."),oull teen to defend Pennsylvania, in a war wIlh•li is the common rause of all the States. The annual cost of an army in the field is computed to average, for pay of others and privates, subsistence, equipments, arms, supplies and am munition, sl,ono pe4 man. Al this rate our State army wilVeost fifteen millions of dollars per annum. 'Ellis is a gloomy prospect for the tax pavers our good old 0)1111110m\ ealth. For ten years past we haVe struggled earnestly and successfully to reduce our State debt about live millions of dollars, and now this reduction will he wiped I ,,otit ill four montlisffli Not only will the deb[ be restored toli , .r . s old figures, but it will go on inereastg fearfully n l in : definitely. This extra burden is itn- xvhich maintains the doctrine that in (nue puldic war, the State that it(Il It IS ONVII VXpell,4, %ming (tit vs There i, no 1,m,14 . 1. room 1,, ,let,lll 'that the peo1 ) )1 , are ;Wont 11, 111,e rate :Hill alih.—limliett Phi Itichniond A'itritNsitr it, .1 efll oraan, reeiininiends this cutirse, 01111 it is hy SIX itehel ;itvernors, lilt Inct in cninicil, and by a seventh, in a letter on suliject. Thi , Smith voittnin, ,InN Nvliwil “r .ql( , -, kali aro lit to Thi- 1110;1 , 1M- Would , ecure them 500,0u1 , urily cannot deny that negroe, trill light, and the rebel , are beginning to agree with them. lint will they tit4ht for their nul , ter,? I tory prose that v, nlway. Clone to, e\ en without being liherated: but it' freed and rewarded with Intul, a , the rehel , propo , e, they will undoubt edly defend the ,rail of their nativit and The ,piti , tering of shtyos into tio• rebel amid& will not only di , - pel another Abolition de:it...ion, but the 1 ., 11:," of ,111 3 ,11yiti, 4 nt xrne. (1 when the rebel , have at least ice thot, the ntunber at their eont- But will It. rel , ll 111:1 , ter , aerili ~ - .1111.1 , 11 11 , ;()In•l'iy eourse the}' : for iii l Lincoln's maniCes -1,, \Omni it titai;- colleern," litcy :11't . 111/Und 111 lose their slaves if the\. re turn 1,, 1110 Ilic/11, :111 , 11111(liT the 1,.11 , -y of the Aholition the remain der of their property will he conti , cated. It is their interest to sai•ritiee part of their property to , iive the rest, and it , their passions sug-2...e5t the same cour , e, they will doul,tless adopt it. lint if the -Inve..s are taken into the amies, who will till the soil? Any one who has travelled t . .\\ - 0 miles river Penn s\-ivania ground Nvithin a mouth eau furni-11 the answer from \\That he has seen antom2 ourselve. , , the \viimen, old mon and ehildren, white ;tint black. these um:Lined regret's are mustered into the rebel armies, and the hordhes ari , poured upon your plains, Farmer , of l'ons - Ivania, rentemher the hurne , l and hho.l: - ( , 11e,1 Valley of the :411enaniloali -4-4 , - - The War Sneaks 'Thore is IS) aunt Of 111e11 in all this country who ought to he so thoroughly despised by good soldiers as the ?rm. The 4, creatures are the mean est cowards alive. They cry out for war, but do not go. They thirst for blood, but shudder t-4, the idea of spill ing one drop of the; own. They want the rebels exiertnint'tted . , hut won't help to exterminate them: They are opposed to compromising with traitors," but afraid to tight them. s They are great friends of the solditg, hut never out to help him on the tlti,d of hank.. They support the government " by stealing from it. They prove their loyalty to it I t s- lrAwling fur it. They believe that every citizen owes it serviee—therefore they give it their breath, hut demand that all others shallvive it their bodies. They hold that it is our solemn duty to carry on the ' , varas long as there is a HISS 111111,;1* //Vit . riSly ISA ill gOillg, hculse!~os, but in damning everybody else who don't go. They believe all Democrats to be Cop perheads, and all Copperheads to be traitors; and they would like to see all of them drafted and put in the army, because the worst trjitors always make the best soldiers! These are the viel;.!s and the charac teristics of the WM' .4! rrd."—the meanest, the most contemptible, the most hypo critical, the most malignant and the most cowardly creature alive; a crea ture for whom every brave and manly soldier must feel the utmost contempt. It is hardly necessary to add what is well known to all, that the tenr sio.uks are unanimous and (:tnthusiastie in their support of LiNcoLN Not Enough Yet! In explaining Why Cleneral GRANT failed in his last great movementlo cap ture Richmond, the. New York 71111 , x (Mr. Lincoln's spec4ll organ in the me tropolis) of October lst gives the prom inence of double leads to the following: The operations on the north side of the James are of so obvious a character, and are so fully detailed in the letter of the Times' correspondent with that ar my, as to need no furiher interpretation. The obvious moral`of the late move is only a confirmation of what Was the act ual truth before it twos made. Grant needs reinforcements, and with these to an adequate extent the capture of Rich mond is a foregone conclusion. - WILLI - Am SWINTON. If General GRANT wants reinforce ments now after the recent heavy draft, how much more will he want them when one third of his present army leaves for home, al; they will do be fore the coming spring ; for the term of service of at least that number will have expired by that time. That there Will be more drafts if Mr. LINCOLN is re elected cannot be gainsaid, for his pol- Iv forbids 411 llone tf peace. , The South About to Arm the Negro.' It seems to be pretty well established by the tone of recent articles in leading Southern papers that the rebels have at. length resolved to arm three hundred thousand negroes. •If they do so, they will be able to make their black troops much more serviceable to them than ours ever have been to us. No man and no party in the youth ever dreams of such a disgusting thing as making th& negro the equal of the white man. They are universally regarded as a separate and distinct race, to be used and em ployed in properly subordi nat e positions in society. The man in moderate cir cumstances, works in his field side by side with the negro he owns, but the idea that he thereby degrades himself to the equal of the representative of an inferior race by his side never enters his head. He is a white than, and by virtue of his birth necessarily superior. This may sound harshly to Abolition ears, but it is nevertheless the Southern view of the matter. If the rebels arm. a portion of their negroes, the men taken to swell their ranks will he selected with great care. They will not he the refuse of the race, such as Afassachusetts and other States have gathered up to save the cowardly carcases of Abolitionists from the dan gers of the war they have 'preached and precipitated upon the country. They will be the hest and most trusty slaves of the South; such as can be relied upon with eontidence ; those who sym pathize with their toasters and are de voted to their interests ; and of such there are multitudes. The promise of freedom, and a home of fifty acres of land in the made to these men, will lie the strongest possible , incentive to exertion which could he of - tiered to them. lint even if no such ofFer were made, even if they were to be thrust into the ranks with arm, in their 7 hands, the South (otthl so control these auxiliaries as to make them vastly more efficient than any negro troops we have pal iu the field can ever possibly he. They would nut form them into sepa rate regiments, lint would fight them in white regiments, putting a white malt side by side with a negro, or a white company side by side with a ldack one. Thus they would he constantly under the immediate personal control of the whites, to an extent that negroes in our employ never can he. The - would he little used for offen sive operation , , but almost exclusively for defense. The war has taught US hy painful and most bloody experiencethat to ae ' offi l dish wh at we I .l.° l )se , we nest eUllstantly take the position of the attacking party. It is within the means of the South to makethe negnws. they employ Li tremendous military ob stacle in the way of our advance. If the negro will fight at all, be will light hest breastworks, side by side with his master, and under his imme diate supervision . . If the black possesses one - Murt It of the lighting qualities at tributed to him liy Abolition newspa pers, have reason t" dr ead Hew move of the relic's. If our two hundred thousand negro soldiers are of any great value, the three hundred thousand to he equipped by the South will he it match for double their number in our hands. The patty acting on the defense, if pro tected by earthworks, ' whieli negroes will build rapidly and skillfully under proper supervision, will haVellWre than the advantage of tints makitig one inart in defense the equal of two in attack. If the rehels should conclude to arm a portion or their 11.411,.. , •:, and should ch.,e to encourage them to exertion by the oll s er or freedom and a home in a 1;11111 congenial to them, they will thus sot hefore them the highest possible in ducement to •exertiOn. The negro in the South knows that if he North in search of freedom, he i , only exchanging an inhospitable climate for a 1110 re (•002'elliA one. 111. knows, too, that if he comes here he will he thrust into the rank:3 and he will prefer to fight for freedom and a home in the South rather than to ahandon all his former associ;itions and the climate which suits hint. It is possible the relict's arm three hundred thousand negrous. If they do, they Will be worth more to them than twice that number can possilily be to us. They will he a tremendous power of defence in their hands., not will pre,ent, a huge harrier in the way of any advance attempted hy our :armies. They will never he the equal , of our brave white troops, but they will lie infinitely superior to the we have enlisted. .th Honest Itepublican Ilisgustetl It is really strange to us (Ind so many men \vlio seem to be sensible on ordi nay topic , , should continue to exhibit such complete \vant of conutton sense in political ❑tatter,, as to endorse the mad follies or the Abolition party. (Me by 0110, however, they are trotting their eye-. opt.dt, and those who have turned front the error or their trays already are to be numbered hy In:toy thousamk. .Amos Briggs, Esq., who is expected to Ise one of the speakers at Fulton Hall this evening, resigned his seat in the l'onlinon Council or l'hiladelphitt by sending the following: letter whiell will abuntl.•uttly explain itself. To ihc .11, in!) , of th, Counoi! rrj /hr ('NJ Phi'- r,driphirt : : Feeling that I can 110 1011 g , r( 11 11SCielltiOUSlytilipp0rItilUpolicy of the National Administration touch ing- the .luestion of slavery, I deem it my duty to resign illy membership in your body. In order that what I have Just written may not he misconstrued, allow 10v :OH 01:11. I 11111 willing that the while the country shall hi• placed at the disposal of tile President for national defence, but not a cent for emancipation, except it be in the line of military necessity. The letter of the President, " iii whom if ui•ry coiic(in, - in which he intimates that lie will not consider any proposi tion which embraces the restoration of peace except upon "the abandonment of slavery," I assuredly 110 not endorse. I am now, as I have always been, op posed to slavery, and ant an ardent friend of emancipation, lint hold to the opinion that the consummation of the latter should be left to the teachings of Christianity and the onward march of civilization, and not be made the pretext for the continuance of the war, involv ing as it will the further sacrifice of the lives of our fellow-citizens—to say noth ing of the tremendous national debt, which is daily augmenting, and other kindred burdens which the people will have to been•. However desirable emancipation may be, when effected in a proper way, we should not, for one hour, jeopardize the lives of our fellow-citizens on that ac count alone. Entertaining these views and believing them to be at variance with those held by a majority of my constituents, I cease heneeforth to be a member of your body. With considerations of high regard, I remain Your, truly, AMOS BRI(f; October 24th, 1864. A Word to Poor Men It is very easy for men to cry, War! War! Blood! Blood! who have" exemp tion papers " in their pockets, or have made money enough out of the govern ment to buy substitutes ; and expect to make many times more by the contin uance of the war. But to poor men, with dependent families, with want and poverty staring them in the face, the prospect of a draft is not so small a mat ter. But what matters it to these Helper Abolitionists, if poor men are sacrificed. Henry J, Raymond in his speech said there are plenty more in Europe who are ready to take their places. The Lie out Somewhere In the Express of last evening the fol kaving account is given of the Aboli tion murder and outrage on the great Democratic - torch-light procession in Philadelphia on Saturday evening. The italics in the article are our own : • A serious disturbance took place in Phila delphia on Saturday evening, while a Demo cratic procession was passing Union l-eague Hall and the Soldiers' Campaign 1 leadtjuar ters. The asBault ira4 made by in the procession, much 1/ mod,' o-f , y .o; the Sourkrout-guerilla, <L,Noulteil vale! delegation in Manor street on the 4th of October. The outrage was resented, and of course several persons were injured—un fortunately as mostly happens in such cases, the victim of the mob being an innocent man, named James Campbell, 115 years o f 'age, who was killed by a blow received b<L hind the ear. The police, aided hy the efforts of order-loving citizens, finally suc ceeded in , inching the disturbance. The disgraceful affair was the legitimate "result of the teachings of the copperhead ,press and speakers—the echo of rebel threats— Mat in certain contingency the streets of ,air northern cities shall flow with blood! On the other hand Forney's Pre.,., of yesterday, which makes a desperate effort to get its party friends out of the ugly dilemma, gives the following as the cause of the murder and outrage: " Put every v: ell grown man ;It all .on- Cerlled ill the prOCeedill Saillrll,ly niche will Mush to hear that this ~ , ntemptible though thmi distitrhance arose out of the .marrels hoy,, the vagrants of the streets.. • The fling in (_-;eist's precious morceau at the citizens of the S. \V. \\lard is characteristic of the man nul the dam nable cause he is paid for advocating. The citizens of that ward. however, know how to appreciate his line attacks —they always resent the same by giv ing largely increased Dimmer:lC,. ma jorities. He is a pretty n•llow to talk about "the disgraceful anitir being "the legitimate result of the teaching- , of the copperhead press and speakers," when three years ago thee- was not man who more warmly tlppr.vetl the nmbhine•iif Denoocrati, printin!_!: presscs and the destruction of the prop•rty of Democrats. —But the truth or the matter a, to who were the originator, ui the murder and outrage ill Philadelphia is the „I'j( Of ye- , terli:lV. Wt. ve it- truthful :Itl candid th, all'air entire, Cali j ui L , I . ‘o . themselvp,; =1=!1! MEE Thl, , - props,iMl :1:.11:2, “Lhor ,troetS ill thi< city. Zl!!‘i 10Si , t1. Noy,ti Plw (Thill I 5 t, 1 ,1 hut no it, "lily I Jemocr:C,, rri,lll Thirt,, , llll to sixth. b\ - a 1111,11Ta11 . Z, rhun wt•r,p,,t, ;I t ~v.,ry n)(l2:li,tilki 1,1111 1 , , 1 1 11111,1fi , 1 1 ,111 , 1 111 •trt,t, with 04111i1 , 11L.:11111 , • , 1 ,, ,1:11111:it 1 , 1111 , 111,_1, 1,, !1!14 . 11 .- -t (,) hi. ,•1•u in lii,l•:trly , t 1 Utz. - Till!,"lrel,' at OW it; hut, (rout the (~,tiit:ppri,.st I~rn~lvnilc"zty , •.l Ga• Gnr ih t mj,zht .AI It lin], tiftl•r 111711' to nine,• p:1,1 1.1,1,11.0 Ilan .AI ihl ...111.111111.,111.111 11 1,11... ,N.llll 110()i , .:111.111./\VI., 11.111. , ..11111.1..111..11..11 Th.ll -1..1,, 1111.1 11111 ,L StI1111.1.: V.01,1111"11NS 11 .1111 nl t h. icinlluwn "I lII , ' 11 " 11 - it Ilno c,f1h.,.•-trlz..i: \du. w:, 111..11,1d and .\ lb.-1114,1 . 11,ft tilt 111. 0101111 111 111:11111:1111 111.• a•-• nlrnl l; 111 the 111•atlaii.i.dl11 .•i,••2..ai11i 11111'1. . 1.1.1111111111.11, and .11 11.1: Lb, nicti ill lit. , th,,v ;Ind alt.l I,lh.lat 111" .1 14111.1'1111.• 111111111.1' , 1111611,11,i 111111111111•1•1....1M11,11111.i.•. 1..111- 1101' NVII , I ill:1111 , 11,1111d 111.111,....i....,111111 .111u1i•1'1ur uwu 1.1,11 . V1111.111, 11 1111111 Nk itil 11. 1:11'11 .1111, 1.11 \V1.1.11 lull 111.11..1.1111.11 11.11,151111,k :LI III.• hi/1,11.111111.i lfa• yll 11.1 :111 111.111 11111.111. 11. %\111 1 .1.!ilt. 1.111 1-.1• a .11 , - 11111.1111.,, 111.1..• 11. !tilt [11... a virt H.-. 111 1111 1.0,112:11.. -.11111-111-I t1.1.....\\ \,111.1..,, ./V(.11 , •1 1.1.11,1•111,11, :111.1 ~1-1 thmighl 11)1• slwl tlllll 111, 1 . 111111. .111. Tht• 11.111.. r raft - NV. 1, 11111 , 11.1-.1/ . 111111 .1 . 1111 , 111.11 1 . :1111111/I.IIW 111:.1.111•o ul tho th, ,horn did not th.• t the cononnm, nal! it I puildn 11t,nti...- dr min , t:t i. a -at , Jail In the t•cllar, itn,ol si:tiroust•<l, Tulin:; down to it front 11, t. Thi• nir , t floor has !lair large plate .ziass \vindoxls. The sooond floor is 11 ,, l'att•ti in ' Oh full 1..1P-1111 , 6i painting, (0 . Lincoln nn , l .tid11,)11. Whi . ll tho procession Vieg - an to pass the building, 111 e rioters \\ ere thiel:. ivas as a renilt•zvotts, anti the Hell!' side of the 110111 . \v" policemen acne to 1,1- h.' 114:I1I l".11""d• Th t ' "I.Y lira "i. CPS,iOII 1,10 greeted mcilh Hn , anti !ht• first iv:, rcrc tO,l with '4l. - rrsof . -4 , )114, ;11141 11111111. t•I•V 1.1,101 . V.;,. .trio-:, and aunt Thi• thri•in' St.llt, and 1 . 11111 t,11111 . 1- I,IISSOS tilled ttith liltlr ghl anti :al the ladies who rode in the fele. the Fintrth or Fifth Wards eathelht•in sttlts Nvere reeeii et! is itliont pro', ohing retaliation. Ilut the.. \vords wl.re- treated with volley , of atnu•s anal ate!.. ibrotc is at the nlOll, :Ill:! thee turned on thi•ir assail ants, ,11 ,- )V, 111 , 11111110 lin, b1111 , 11111Z.111 kept thl'lll The pulior, \‘,114, L,rt I , 11102: as their Abolition friends Ivere canto to reinforce then ! whe t , dereate i l, and nett appeared 111,,11 thi• ~ rl't.il!!,t. 11 0. 111'iShed their Hilly; anti three., vleJ ;ill sorts of things. Thier did not arrest a sin el•. The passed on. t \Vard ill'ieratiother witrelt ed and ivert. griieted a nth st.ines and mud. Tratisparanee, were broi,ett, The rioters liecallie more :it'd more demonstra tive. They . had Si.)l, “111111,L;.i11 , 111 is the building, and I, rouizlit ' , ill v. hen nee,l - The 111 . \ , 1' .11(1 nly,iatdod ‘,11 , q1 inns mnamli , :it a '5,, \vits arrested. So thiluzsi•oillinited until the fcCiellan ()hi I. thin' 1•;1111, :t14,11,;. it was \Vith Vtdll..\ It a left tttrn, mind, tt ith a litiraii, rush ed IM the 111 e, w,•rc the .A 11(111111 i 111 S 1 N: 111,1 1/ 1,11,1 111 , 11 , ;1 , 1 , 1p , 11-1111•11 11, the eelhll'.l,lllll h tine .hq,s ,11/11 ill' . .•11j . pf.i . ll•.•Hy ' II It, :it 1 . - ( '1 .. 1.1 .. .i. Th. H ., .•••-•.1.. , , ill., V./ Ga . lho 11,11!,•111, i:tl rut ir)tion. bat reinfnreements ri.:k,rs tad 1:4:iiev n1011 (.:111It• Ilp. 01l anti ft eslt synul, trite I li , ;112l11 The lilrvoulh , TkVellth, rc , lll'loolllll Wards p;lS , ecl. Still I, ;11 . 1,-1 , 111:11Ir s . T 11.• V. ,)1. " , 111, i worse; litlii , 11111 , Were Ill!,\V . 11 MIT 01 the Sec.c,ll.l \VIIIEIOIV , , noel the Fifteenth Ward hail partly passed lie Nvlwri a rush Nvw, nut& athl We lit(. hp ' 111 , • \yard hatted and for a 111c/11,111 1,11 their as , ;;lilants. There they %yore. and riders wix,rd up; hard t tell vchn 'Arco I.l'olll ill :111.1 114,W11 :111t1 :Lem, the - 11'1 , 1, 111" I . 11 . - It .,•1101 Warlinl•IIIOCI'ary111:1, ,. .1 11 , 11, tank (heir (01 , 110S:111.1 t1,111.1 , ”1,114 . i,-.1,,,,1,,, 111 , 2111 In pieces and hill'it tl uu In .:11j, The police got frightened; tripd ht Lr,ot away ; some tired pistol~ and -prung rattles and called for help. The I ii•llll),l'a,'y rushed in, and poured volleys irr oVerythil.4 Ibex :It lle I , lllidin2. .1 gain Shore police and A holitionist,-; rolled Motet the Step, into cellar. Th,• \yin (lC-ltl'S \Ver.. smashed :out the 1111'-7 1 ' h , 1 11 1 ,5 in front of the building knocked to pieces__ I,incoln anti Johnsonvier(. pepp e r e d . ant from their ;ippeliranee the nest Ilay, looked as if they had had , 2114,11:2'11 of I:. voreino s t among the I leniocrats Svas n 7,011a1e tyhu threw stone after scone dutch the cellar snaps; and far back in the cellar iis-lf "(MI be seen policemen and rir,t , r, frP.4ht,holl out of their wits, crouching behind ht,n,•lto and tables. For lifftrm minutes hatti , continued. Nothing could resist the-tot - relit. A large oval spare on the payolnont and street in front of the building teas empty. Over it the missiles \yore poured into the ;building, and on it lay at least a d,./..1; wounded corn. The rioters, police , and ail were cleared oil . the ground Inv the 1/erm.c raey; the lights in the building were put out by some one, and the proces•-•ion moved - on. This was the end of the 11.4. There was no more molestation. The line moved for ward unbroken. What was left of the police tried to nail up broken doors and patch broken windows, but not an Aboli tionist was seen from the Fifteenth Ward to the end of the Inn! ; the Democratic columns moved forward unbroken. One man was killed and seventeen are known to have been wounded. The 11111r dered man was a Democrat, and was killed bY a stone thrown from the north side of the street, At least ton policemen were hurt. Nothing can equal the indignation against the police. Many Republicans say that the monuoir hi which, they allowed the Aboli ion rioters to do as they pleased was shame ful. Mayor Henry should read his men a lesson for Sal urd4. night's work. If he does not he is unworthy to be Mayor or Philadelphia. Yesterday morning thous ands visited the battle-field. The Common wealth Building was most sorrowful to be hold. The two lamps in front. looked as if they had been on a drunk for a week. They were bent and twisted most fantastically. The front of the building was hacked and marked by the missiles. The doors and window sashes were kept froni falling down by boards nalrd across them. The cellar was gnu ed. 'this Central Police Station was a huge hospital. The next tint' A boll tien and policemen try to break up Dentoeratie proeession we trust they will ealculsie i. , fon•hand the 00,1 of the under taking. These were not, by any means, all the outrage. A bottle of vitriol was throWilat t•ftll , _. Inr:ZE , transparencies carried by Third Ward delegation. The vitriol was thrown liCar the League I louse. Two men wore severely burnt b ; ok it. Several horses in the cavalcades were cut with knives. The Twenty-fourth Ward delegation had bricks thrown at it by some jail birds ot the Republican party, at Thirty-sixth and Mar ket. Two soldiers in the line were wounded. Geist's Opinion of General McClellan Ile calls him the •• Liberator of Western Vir,;ini a." and is •• proud to claim Gen. ttelletian as a Son of the old keystone Stateot True and Loyal Pennsylvanian. From the Daily Express of J taly 15, ISW.] /;EN. I; no. it we 10 1101 1111.1C11 !Ili , ZakCil, will Io the great military leader n l ivlt tho war of 1 lil Will doveloP. A, tho Liherator of IVestern his 11iar:•11 has thin: tar leen it series of the inost sucoesks, inarl:ed Nvith a surpris inal- small loss of life ennipared with the infporlanOo of the result:: he'll:lN attailm.l. I lo has 1 , 1110.1 :11111 Ili` tit' tills brought the remnant of collllllalltt no the illtereStilltl: condition of prison,.•r, of war, extrc•niolN penitent, ;Intl dot,rilkin,(l never again tit take up ag:till,t the p. 111.1.111 (ion. :\ lo(lellan has ituplagoll this earn aftt.r hi. olvn fit,hion, using his ovcn jtOl..;.111 , 111,:illil 31..• nwailing deutilt4l ordors from )le,a-go.:trt,rs. I h• 11,, his siultiticant (.on,•lw•ion to ono ol his hit, oflit•ia[ tioS pitt•lio,--" hop,' flee ;e•Ncotl-1,-f '111 . ,1f 1,11 0v.c1 . (11.",,,, - 111 \vas as_ signed ti eerntin slico the ;oh 4;l' crushing out this Itutt rebellion, anti Ito claimed the privilege to thtint_t, it in hi, aevil \\':ty. Now !;v-: rt,ult lq•rori. his ,lipt , ri.o - officer, ft.r .tpprt,:ll. It is hoodloss to told that it toil! L t , appl,tvod nutst hoortil, t tint! t !alms evcry luV i . koteriottn, t ttiv. \ Vi.tt will tsotal ttttatt-ttt pluntittrititz titt• Nana \\ Ita valley a ktt 111 . (Jillpt 11`11 , •:11 frt.lll it kIVVI' Clll. only lima 1111\1" 1.ip.,1 101,111, ht. \VW Lt >lnn in betllveoll tho I ago. tI ;t•11. in Hl,- Ill,por cal 11-y. 1 , ,t•l:11:Z1.1 ZHU). Whikk sulphur ~prin_~ :111,1 iho W0,11.1'11 tIIt 11., Olt` ;, ,trajt, and jikply ycry „in to 1i64111, ft/i . , 111110, s:tip pill tit :,11•(.11:11#1)1., Ity :rid]] \\ . :1,111111,11. .1114 . ~. .1:1!trY i. 'Z'T:111.1 . 111111 I lon. 1..\ -, 11:111,1 ( 'l,ll:lll—petatliitylyaltd LlTatttitti --I tttltatt,,• wtt \\taut tile loyal HI i /tt, t ;ti[ lilt' t - t , ttitt. Itt•littytql thin Ht•ttit rttutoltt, Ntt [lto traitorout. (I . ll'.i , Lt'd in It 11:1111 , ti' I Ilt• cotton tttall . tttlttrat•y at , t•yttryvt littitt• ttatit.iat.4 . . No ht ‘ vt• the :tittv tt - lt itt ttt•tte tltatttral. Ha tot.tl Itittuttitalizt• their va t alit.title. 1 l'atly t 'lll t T t' t i t 'urtl tilt' ,an'Ytrill chtto. it•rit t tttry it tttat rote - 1111w rttltelt: ill Hitt sat =OMB V. Ihat diViSi011,11:1.11 IlaV01,111:11 thank , . :Old NV, in lilt' putiiitlll rt)l' arpr.Val of hi. vielmies \VOSIIiIILI:It)11, :IS \\ - 4 , 114,v itlin in 111. , up 't„ Al.•1•Ionztil tln th ;IpprOV:11 4,1 :\14.114.11:in i.i ur4 yet thirt\ - -live lieen Irnru in ic on I, )lililnry with the i • ith 1%.111. \ I,iell - 1•:11:4111, Tilt` lliiity hilil,•1!,:111‘1 111 i7a . Z;111:111I :111d1110ri -I,Pri.r- f . ..: 1.111 , •1 ill irt•Vott'd First his :it the (1,1 Ih.y,.,ti•Sept, , hll,4,r "qh, I'l7. 11, ;t whi,•ll was ,1,111,,•,I 10 , 11i:lyl•li ill lli, ilI .11d Lilo ~ .11I111:111, 1 4 , 111r:111y Sapp,•l• , , .Aline r. .111 , 1 l ' ‘ , 11: , .11 ,, 1••• • ill Ally. th.• or xv,ir h,. retiutilw,l lllill''. - ' , llil 1 he ,:11/1./11..111111 mull 1 , 111'1111: lei. ;11110 Ile 11111'inilluell thr .t . t:t•t•t•i•ttt• hilt, till' artily, :Ind 11 . :111 , - !.t ... ti :iti:1141,41;1111;11111i1.1 \lllll'll h:ts.iule .'', 1111 . :t tt•NI.-111111k Cttr :,•I • 1. 1)1/r -111. ii.. - nuullot' !all 1;-:t1 itt• It it.: I 't,t• I),lttWar,, • ti ::I•• t ttilrilt, • , t ,•- •'it'4l , "l tilt:, 11: iii . o~\lmdiliull tur litt• I•Xitittrtt 11. 11 ..1 I i Ver. Tile 111•0 111 \\ 11, 1.011•1'111 in :he Stair 1;1'11. Pel•"lrer P. Nlnith, 11.1111 1`11:.1:11.2:1.'ll W.W.II', ill siirvi•ying Hal rivors and harkors of that Slate. In IsO3 111 \vas nr~llmJ In the I'aritioloaa, in runuu:uul of tile Nvostorn division survoy .E• I litilruail rialto. lo returned ll''- Essi ell 11111 y I,llllloelell 1 Ile rai•1111• ' , 111•Vl•y, was i`ll!2::l,4l'd nisi in ...•.•1 . 1•1".1'1•\ ice I,llle \\ . l`,l IleNI Vllll' 111 1',•,•1'.011 a 1.4/111111i, , i,,11 111 tile 1. - 11,1 1. , •,1111,11 \ • .111,1 \\'ll,lll,lll,lllleil ,1 Ile ( . 11111111i,111111 11 10111 Nll.lll to the in 'llllll2a 1111(1 in _North report oil tho iisz,ini zatimi Ettronimi Armies :Ind the I niera -1 ions ot'llio \Var . ' -it yolunio, rosii It olliisolisereations iu the 141 . 1•11.11V1•1111a1111•11 Lis rtpulatiuuas soioniiiii• 1 , 111,11 I,Sitil,ll ill the al'lllyl.ol/..1.411110 1.'1'1,i.11111 :111,1 111 . this Illinois coin rid lliilrunJ, \\inch ',oat lie holil for yoays, \t - as iitioreil and :IV- V"i 111 .' i'l1"i111'lley 111 ill,' i Ili° 11.1111 ivhieli wiisalso len- Stniorinionilont. \\Then our ilnitiesiii• Mot 'Milan's sorvivos :Al 1 ul l e. ! t• 11111,1 hilt, 1'...1111,1ti1111, I, l.Vel'llel' 01111.111 a 11,,,ire /11 1 / 1 11 While 1111. 1•X1.011,1V11 rnii 1;11,1 lape ui 1111' C•11•111111111•111I1111 111 . 111•1 al I 1111 . 1 . 1"11111'.g Wll, Irelllg 11111,11,,1, hr 11,, " 1 .11•1,11 1111(1 111.1.11/1.•,1 1111 1,111111,1/111 cd . 1110 60 , 1.'1. (111 Alit Ilill ile 111.1•iVI'll a 1 , 111111 . 1""1,111 11, 1 - 11 . .11/1' . 1;11111•1'111 in tho :•-•••taios army, anti now Ili, ilio I lop:trillion! M . ( \Ninon comprises :11l of tlio Shin, or !Minas, Indiana:111:1 that part Virginia lying 'milli Ile .lianaNyliii river. anil \vest iii' with s 4) ania hi, \v:••••1 of a lino 1 . 1,111 Ille 110111'1V/rill -1.11"I \Vt. urt , prollii lu luitu r;en. Ivi'l,llan as s.or I:oyst.rw Stale- -a I rw. and lkya! In :1 f,•Nv days lie the first it icisinn ”f the assiu:11•11 hint, \vll, , ri hi• kill nn ~lnuLt Lo p1a,•,1 in a I),,sitimi Nvllo.ro Li. sniu•ri4,r hluilitarN- a I flit ios Will he still 111 , 11 . 1 . (iu.nellllsld. Order or Gm error so3mooi Co iiiiii iii•ioner% Appointed to go to Wash ington—The Baltimore Outrage to be lavestigoted—The Biglit% of Nevi York ud N,%\ York Solilier.a to In Maim. i i urd. .\ 1,1: \ NV, Wit11)1•1 . :',11. the 6,11r0w 111•11111111=1 :,•iv,11041 tininii4•l Net . ' 1111. NeW York at toLtitither with vertain other citizens tit this ,tali, not in titn inilitar naval seri. itie )r the f i nite,' States, have keen in arrest I, the milintry tie iri:4, OW 1 . 1111(41 Stal , ,, and no reason lin:* suet; acre-i llal .111'4 ti) :11111 Lein ;utxiuus 'learn the knit of siti•h arr,t 111th the grolinels therefor, In the end that tin inittieeat persen.: may lie imprison thiranil speedy trial , th a t Ina - hi' 11111 in 1110 of the id: this Slal4 , I:iir a ,,,, 1 , 1i11.,2;t0 iIS tints: Ilan I, of Now York, do herohy appoint ,rots, Anntsa. l'arker, NVilliain Anon. nil I NVilhain ikelly, commissioners for and of the :iiitato of New York, and aiiiiiorize diroot you and one), pi,cl.oll Lr, ihr city of suelt rnuuni=sinner then' into 111. flirts ;111,1 Vil - Vl/111SIanrr,; • , 11 , 11 :irrosts awl alleged enlist, 4 re..!, i 1 , 0 lake .curh rirlirw in tb, "jilt 1 i and iilwriifyB of if, rot nnil 11 , a' in-stn , may be done, and that all trnyiN In prernnl sri lrlirr.s lrow 1/ a Shi I the ~ -,'rice ra' the ( - rifled State, n', na, or lo dcfraral them or to fofree ih,ar action a coling, or In detain or alter the rot Cs ,a,yily cy s t by 1/unnt, in pursuant , of the Ntalc, may he exposed alai pun and that you report your proceedings to me with all convenient speed. o.`iglll`ll HORATIO SE Y3lO1 - T 3 I). \V I I.LIA ms, Jr., Private Secretary. How THEY LOVE TILE NEGRO.—The official report from New Orleans says that p'n thousand freed negroes have starved to death in the past two years. It is one of the peculiar beauties of Abo lition philanthropy that enables slaves to exchange the comforts of servitude for the miseries of freedom. All the Abo litionists desire is to get free negroes to work the plantations of the. South when they come into the possession of Gov ernment favorites under the confiscation law. ill iolli ==e=l From the Nqwnrk Journal qf Saintda;% The Alleged Feands. on Soldiers Votes. The military commission in session at ilaltimon , yesterday continued the inYesti gotten of the alleged Democratic frauds up on the soldier's vote. Mr. Donahue, ono, of the prisoners, Was brought into court, and having no counsel, he defended his own ease objecting., in - the first place, to the jurisdie t ion of the Court, which objection was over ruled. Mr. Donahue pleaded guilty of his having ,igned certain blankswith the name of C. S. Arthur, Captain and Aid-de-Camp, and no others, and as it did not appear that he was :in officer of the State of _New York or of the United States, he contended that no crime had been committed. The evidence in the case is altogether c.,- pure, and is in many respects contradictory. The whole examination is On its face a Pay tkall anair, which could not staind the test of a fair jury trial, and for this reason it has been committed to a military commission t:, work np. In submitting the ease to the Court., the .Judge Advocate exhibited his partisan prejudices in the grossest manner, anti expressed hisconviction that Doitalme's ('rime no, rus the extreme penalty of death. The emir( room was then cleared, mul the Commissieu , eeeded to deliberate upon the caso. lf c: , nrsc their decision cannot be known until after it has been passed upon by the President. "Cho nt,ll - only about :tti hull, in ,untie, Lt tt th ,ishnt, wht, the dt,orK were ree:pcned :onl the court adjourned, , i.lit`lllolll 411 . t•t,111.1,,,111 I, l . this Tozont Ferry TT; rns out Ti) lie nil,. in it , ' 111,i1 ma- Terial Imiy.v, :mil he it Ileaiv vi)ll% it•tt.d of t:l lxeluio.i L: the :10.1,1,!V1150r111,,,vh,,i,i ho Atitson Irk ‘viis thti lii• ill 11,0 Ft rry . , ;11TcS1 i;enentl Varrcl, or Notv imp] catc,l hy Ft.rry, 111, 111witz ••• ~~lirii ~l~•n"rit nl' I'orn-'n -aat~•ni~•~ii. I:Ira,: the ,ol • 1.•)•1 . 1• . \•„ l • t 5 111:1111( . .i in lilt' NI•V, Y4ork [his 111111.11 j, ( 4 11111', ill :111 . in 1.1.-;l11,1 I ha \ : 111V tIC ho h•114.1' lky Vorry, 1101' ha t• an 1:1101V11 , 1 . , z, inrclrm[i,lll iili.111: / he/4/ o/iiy t•0111,1111114,- N. lain Nv114,0 1:• have Nynot. thu 1•". t(d)r•i• 11: " You may ilepeild MI :111 tltinl4 ; 111,r4 \Vill :1 1 1 :lie ' de ' : " 1. fliHe-h.ntle: ' ' he \ 111111 1111 V0111' 1, 1,11 , 12 , 1. 1 11:1\ ti ,t:11 1`11:111Al ',lt PI. :11:1: tIIO 4/141:4‘,1 111111 tie: 111/I\ll :11111 lilt Hp till4ll 1:41 . 1111.•rti :1114: 1 4 1:11,11 , . :111(1 ilil 11 .:11 d: '4 14,11 l 1111111. It kill r , V 1• 1. Inrl.l gat I h rui!t Tl'l I lc V1)111*S. .. llt ,v;,to 1) 3. •• 1 h.tvo Y"ti Ine le tie. I 11:kve 11.1 :t , 111 . 11 l II I< tt, NVII , II 1 11,1t1 t11,1:1 ciolliti gel \ ttto, tVil4.:l I 11:111 The :11,11111.•I' in tt 111,11 1111 V, i , ll , lllt•tt,l it 11, , , I alit 1:,,*4•1•11or 111 , 11, 111311 1., I3fl 0 (1111 11. .1. tl1111:Z 0 , 111.0 , 1%1CW 1111, , 1 , , 4 ,11,. 1111 , '1 . 111.1, NV:I - - 11,4 a fill,. ""' i•ard, Th 4, N.,v Htlik,-1i0.11 ,1 , :11111 huv 1 1 N. 1,1 1 ,...,1 111 , 111 1 1,1,111111 ft, I \Vith tin , Timm., Ito jti(l , 2*-4 1,11111,,, 111 1 1 111111,, 111,' 1.1 1 1, \\ 1111 ,1 /1/11 4. ! • linnt,hl Ith '" 1 • 1111 1 P 1•1,11, 14•111 ,,, •1',111,•Ill111 Sta,l l Io• ,IIV,III, a l'1 , 11(•111,11, ,1111.1 1102,1 1,;,11,4a, it W 1111, . ,. 5 it 1111 , 1 111 11 ,1 1 . 1 •111, 511111', 1111i1 pr./ \ 111:1,11,,I, 1 11 • 111, , .11 Iho 1 1 ,111,,1, ./1 1 , i 1 111" ,- 1 1 . 1 ,1-• - 1 1 , 111•:1, 1 \ 11,1S(,1, 4 /1 . 1a1111 , 0 1 1•11111: V, ll llll 111, Ott traitstltt 111,1 1111 1, 1 • : 1111110, t»11 1 1; 1 11 t, 11, :Wit 1, 11. 1 . 1 ,1 ',1t1 1 ,1 I}l ll fll In n1.11,111,1:4. N.. Hr./AM NVilll n gleam intelligeooo will rico a 1111 , 111.•111 . ti 1'1'041,110, 11,1110,ii,,,,•,1 nlllll. 11V ,s'lli.•11 Lin.,ll. :oioniols his if 1 - 111.1.0ry o. I 1 111o..::,:i.. v1114g,. it Iwltr , 11W11 1 . ,1,v1,111111. Art. not th.. I leolocrati:• agoot, as .such in Ihe raioi.,? I. ii likely that 1{1:1,1; Itt-poldi..nosoldiott, ‘tool.l entrust Owl:- , titTrage, Illero. \Own so ma o ny agotsor their o \vit party groat Itaiolt' 11155 thoo di.l:ll..,ea.gcnt,oht:tin of ilto,o I,ilicolit votes, for Nvlti,h, it i5:t11..! , - oil, they , il l l5l it Melt ( 4111 •r 11 ? Thttq havo if" facilities robbing the a, N 1 r. volt: :Hid Ills. e. 11111, it i, the y 11,11 the 11111111, ,111.111 111/4.11 Iii•!.111111:11110, 11r Wilf/11aVi . 111 . 11 , 11.,1 iu 11t1.411 . 11;,!,. In v'ie'w' of 111,11,1 11:1N, 1111!litil Of those rig lims~~l' this 11.•11i,11 Lincoln is: the oolt. oile who ha, ho Inettos pmetiving 1111.1 v. llll 1111 " In:u•liee it 11'1111 1111.1' 41141,11 , M. WO fill 11111 dm, hi 1.1)1.:, that 111,• , 11“11':1.1Elir eriq,nal~ Ii in 1111• eilioliog brain of " Confession, - paraded \vitt: so howl: .•irounistaliee, is 1 „ 415111 \l'lll resort. Alon 1111),111.1.11 hired 1.1 slander, Io pnislln, L. , 1:11. ill 11.- dad: c . :111 they not he hired to conft.,, alit.? 'Hie .I:linini,tration 51111111 \yell:11111rd to pay a l'esl' 1111111111. d 111 , 111.11111 11 , 111111 . .. 4,4,1p1. 111 f. exposuro 11f 1111,1”. 111111 titoir di,rni,sat 11l light. But ,vliiit her Ilse clairg-, In true in - 1,L1,-, the State cn , lr provides especially for thi• trial anal punisluni - nt of sileh offence., :old iL is for the Slates and State tribunals to pro tui•t tla• purity 4, 1m.. , •1 1, •tiV1 . 11':1111 . 11i,l• in their re.pectivii Inuits. What our "L t•• i;overnment has now in consider is the that I he Federal has taken for , i ble the ' ballot, id' New York; has ph10(.11 the agent, the Stale merest, and la, prohibited I exercise of their Cuiii•iions in ihm• i•:11111,. iintragii.,,f di intll,lliSl• tin the central p \ver. Wi, di, niil know what aid ion iioverniir Seymour midi take to protect Ihu sanctuary, upon wile,- inviolability all that is dear lo frounion h.- 11 ,-. 1 PIS at this crisis; lint wii !lop , that thi , clinuu to Vetit•nd usurpation will aNvalia-ii the people ft - oil thi - ur long Thi• : 1:1,t !/,. ' , grill, /I'H,n r,l II ;111 lh, .11,4 'lll,o, ( - 01 11,,• eto,, with Ihr 1,/ettliOn of ~, 1 1,s/11111.,e., hrt/lot, whete the!, emi, 'nit! ttc.l,,,y -illy the I.,vidtte. .lust as IMlt'scoelc-atal-lattistiirii t s a groat Norili \ve,iifern of half a traitor, iirmeil p i •,._ 1 . 111•11, anal vpus tIll• For Ilit• !did - ion or military force and election fratiiiiii Lc Nyhjiiii in I ill . 11H " i :aid frauds was made tho IMi• inLmanis iiorrtlia the soldier,. vote of tlai Army of Me l'otimiae. VChile the lieV: i i i mrs hatching, frailds I . ol , zerif, \‘'‘ , l I' open to lint•oln's a,onts, mad! :%b.( . 1,1- 111 Lallots seat ihroagli tla• mails. And Lini.//111 1,1, n, 1111• r.x1.4•11t. charge, :11 , i ii ran he proved, tlmt lo.t ter; (runt Demor.rats hors to soldior,... in li. army containing Vlrl lellan elorturul tick/1.. Inive 1,i.1•11 tak..nr,rtt. Lineoln tii•kr.ts put in. We charge, and it eat] he proved, that numbers of the envelopes of soldiers voting for McClellan have been seized in the mails and withhold front the persons ter: *nom Setif or 'lef'lellan ballots taken out and Lincoln ballots } - ,nt in. One of t :tn. Grant's own staff °cheers sent borne a AleClellan vote in au envelope, which Lincoln's agcntsopened on its way and substituted therein a Lin coln vote, ;eing Itonic unexpectedly, he opened the envelope and discovered the fraud. WO oil nielve.s have been in Ii wined by let ters, and by messengers from the camps, or numbers of proxies sent on by soldiers who asked to intrust them to our charge, and to have them cast for General McClellan. Met one qi these soldiers' voles in's ever retrial it. Of course they have been seized by Lincoln's agents. Lincoln ballots will I put in the place of McClellan ballots, and the soldiers will be cheated of their votes. Mr. Lincoln thus made sure of the post of- Me. But that, of course, was reckoned upon. The votes sent through the mails we have counted for lost ever since Mr. Lincoln and his secretaries begartviolatingthe mails and taking private dispatches front the tel egraph wires. The office of the New York State Agent hi Washington has been opened, although the agents aro still in prison. A dispatch from Albany says that Governor Seymour will demand the instau release of th'e State Agents and the return:of the soldiers' bal lots. The parties who have seized:the Pal lets will ho ladietetl,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers