=C====liM Pi*stk intdagentu• NVOI*DAY, SEPT. ` e, 1865 " Thir imintingpreases shalt be free_ thliverr person• who tendertaltes to extenthe the - Pro ceedings of the legislature, or any. ; branch of government; tend no law shall eveibe to restrain the righ t thereat The free *admit nication of tho ugh t and opinions is one of the invaluable righ of;_ and every citizen may fr eely speak, Write arid print on any sub ject ; being responsible for the abase of that , liberty. In prosecutions for the publication of papers investigating the official conduct of CCM, or Merlin preb .capacities, or where the matter published is proper for public informa tion, the truth thereof may be given In evi dence." • . DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET FOR AUDITOR GENERAL - COI: •W. W. IL DAVIS, of Boat County. FOB SURVEYOR GENEE4I, Col. JOHN P. LINTON, of Cambria Co. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET ASSEMBLY. Capt. DANIEL HERR, Columbia, Lieut. J. S. ROATH, East Donegal, Lieut. GEORGE P. DEICHLER, City, Lt. C. A. LICHTENT Fr A FLER, Warwick DISTRICT ATTORNEY COL F. S. PYFER, COTINTT TREASURER. Capt. J. MILLER RAUB, Providence COUNTY COMMISSIONER. JOHN HESS, Conestoga. PRISON INSPECTORS. Private JAMES HENRY, Columbia, WM. CARPENTER, Lancaster Twp DIRECTORS OF THE POOR. Lieut. LEWIS ZEO.HER, City, GEORGE G. BRUSH, Manor, GEORGE H. PICKEL, Bert, (I.year.) COUNTY SURVEYOR JOHN B. ERB, Warwick. AUDITOR. J. W. SHAEFFER, West Donegal Meeting of the Democratic State Central , Committee. DEMOCRATIC STATE CENTRAL COM. ROOMS, I PRILA.DELPHLA, Sept. 19, 1865. J A meeting of the Democratic State Cen tral Committee will he held at the St. Charles Hotel, Pittsburg, on SATCRD.&Y, the 3Gth day of September, 1865, at 2 P. H. Punctual attendande is requested. W3l. A. WALLACE, Chairman State Central Committee To the People of Pennsylvania DEMOCRATIC S PH TATE CENTRAL lA, CO3l. ROOMS, ILADELPH S ept. 19, 196 a. You are upon the eve of a most important election. 136th -political organizations have an nounced their platforms, and presented their candidates for your suffrages. The Democratic party distinctly affirms its support of the policy of reconstruction adopted by President Johnson, and an nounces its opposition to negro suffrage and negro equality, Upon these, the real issues of the canvass, the Republican platform is ambiguous, its candidates are mute, its central authority is silent. We believe that it is your right to know their sentiments, and that they who seek your support should be frank in the ex pression of their opinions. Can you sustain the President by voting for those who refuse to endorse his policy? Will you hazard the superiority of your race by voting for those who are unwilling to proclaim their belief in the inferiority of the negro ? DEMOCRATS OF PENNSYLVANIA! Press home upon your antagonists the vital issues of the campaign. Through the press and on the rostrum, in the field and in the workshop, demand that they shall answer. Are you for or against President John son's policy of reconstruction? Are you for or against negro suffrage and negro equality? By order of the Democratic State Central Committee. WILLIAM A. WALLACE, Our County Ticket Our county ticket is composed of ex cellent men and true. The claims of the citizen soldiery have been fully re cognized. Eight of the candidates have served their country faithfully on the tented field. For the Assembly we have Captain Daniel Herr, Lieut. Jacob S. Roath, Lieut. George P. Deichler and Lieut. Charles H. Lichtenthaler. Captain Herr was connected for about eighteen months with the cavalry ser vice. He assisted in organizing and making the same the efficient body which it was during the last two years of the war. 11l health compelled him to leave the service. Lieut. Roath joined the late Col. Welsh's regiment, the 45th, as a private, and rose step by step to the position he occupied when the war closed. He was a brave, gallant, intelligent and effi cient officer, and enjoys the respect and esteem of all who know him. Lieut. Deichler served from the begin ning to the end of the war, and ,like Lieut. Roath, rose from the ranks, having en listed as a private. He was an officer in the 69th P. V., and was a member of Gen. Smith's staff. During the war he was wounded three times. At the at tack on Fort Steadman in March last be was so severely wounded that his life was desPaired of until a few weeks ago. He is still suffering from this wound. No young man from this city made himself a better reputation as a brave and intrepid soldier. He is one of the few survivors of the famous Irish Bri gade. Lieut. Lichtenthaler was a brave and efficient cavalry officer, and partic ipated in numerous engagements and skirmishes. He is one of the affable and gentlemanly hosts of the Litiz Springs Hotel, with which he has been connected for over a year past. He is a young gentleman of education, and would make a most excellent legislator. Our candidate for District Attorney, the brave and gallant Pyfer, is well and favorably known all over the country. He first served in the three months service, then raised a company for the - 77th, and was afterwards, for meritori ous conduct, promoted to the Lieutenant Colonelcy of that regiment. At the battle of Chickamauga he was taken prisoner, and was confined in Libby Prison, at Richmond, for eight months. He was compelled to leave the service last spring on account of broken and shattered health. The candidate for County Treasurer is Capt. J. Miller Raub, late of the 122 d Regiment, P. V. He participated in the battle of Chancellorville, and made him self a lasting reputation for gallantry and bravery in that terrific battle. He is a gentleman of intelligence and ex cellent business qualifications, just such an one as should hold the keys of the County Treasury. One of the candidates for Prison In spector, is Private James Henry, of Co lumbia, who we understand served his country all through the late war. We have not the pleasure of his acquain tance, and are unable to state to what regiment - he belonged. Lieut. Lewis Zecher heads the list for Directors of the Poor. He enlisted as a private in the 79th, was made Sergeant Major, and afterwards promoted to the Quartermastership of the Regiment, which responsible position he held all through the war. He stood high among , his brother officers and comrades, and is a young man well fitted to fill any posi tion in which he may be placed. The other candidates on the ticket are all well-known, intelligent and highly respected. citizens, and it would be an honor and credit to the county if they wereehosen to fill the positions for which they have -been nominated. We may take occasion to refer to them individu ally hereafter. But If w 0 Weekß Remain. Dernocrats i ef-Lancaster countyrbßt two short weeks remain in Which to Prepare for tbOximiiigpalitical'eat4est. Are you working with • tat aealwhiah becomes men who, .now arid feel that great interests are at stake 'he ent is no ualariportaitt sting*. ~lj_pan' the result of the'faiit coming "eleo#ibii in Pennsylvania much,depends. A Demo cratic triumph in this State will sound the death knell Of radicalism through out the nation. The Keystone State is just now the pivot:upon which popular sentiment will_ turn. The eyes of, the _ whole countryare fixed upon_ us. Every where all true conservative men are earnestly praying and hoping fOr an old fashioned democratic triumph in Penn sylvania. Shall it be achieved? It Is for the working men of the Party to say. The victory we desire is within our grasp. Proper energy and activity will ensure it to us beyond a peradventure. We cannot be defeated in the present contest,except by our ownapathy. A full Democratic vote is sure to secure us a majority of thousands. Go to work then to get out the vote! See to it that not a man whowillvote the white man's ticket is left at home ! Work, as be conies men who desire the triumph of the right should work, and a glorious victory will assuredly crown your ef forts. Yankee Preachers Again on the War Rev. Henry Ward Beecher opened the political campaign in the State of New York, on last Sunday night, by making a stump speech from his pulpit in Plymouth Church in favor of the Republican candidates. A good part of his harangue was devoted to the lead ing theOry of his political friends, negro suffrage. He claimed suffrage as a right of the negro, although he might ask it even on other grounds. He was for uni- versal suffrage, and would give a vote to every man that lands on our shores. At the same time, he believed that . the four millions of Africans now here could be better trusted with the ballot than the Irishmen and foreigners that swarm here from the old countries. He be lieved, too, that in withholding thebal- lot from women we are not acting up to the spirit of American free institutions. She should have every civil right that belongs to the man. Speaking of negro suffrage, again, Mr. Beecher said: "God abdicates, and is false to his attributes, if there is peace before you settle, that question of right." He continued to speak of the duty on the part of the strong to protect the weak. One of three things must hap pen to the freedmen—their masters must take care of them, or we must take care of them, or they must take care of themselves. The voice of the people, speaking as the voice of God, has decided that their old masters shall take care of them no longer; and it is our duty to give them all the rights of citizenship, that they may be able to take care of themselves. The utterances of Beecher, and of the fangical religious bodies of the North, are the watchwords of the real leaders of the Republican party. They only seem to be a little in advance of the main body of that organization, because they speak out more boldly. It is only a few days since the New York State Congregational Association n adopted, among other resolutions, one which de clares that all distinction of color or race in the apportionment of civil privi leges and political franchises should be swept away, and that the negro ought to be fully recognized as the equal of the white man, both in his right to vote and in regard to his testimony before the Courts. Chairman Similar resolutions, some of them de cidedly more offensive in tone than the above, have been adopted by several Conferences of the Methodist Church, and by other religious bodies. The Yankee preachers, and their imitators, are again on the war path. If the white men of Pennsylvania would save them selves from being degraded to a level with the negro, they mustput their feet down firmly at once. If the Republican party triumphs in the coming election in this State, the triumph will be hailed as an endorsement of the doctrine of negro suffrage, for the very good reason that it is covertly endorsed by the plat form. Let every white man who has any pride of race about him remember this when he goes to the polls to deposit his vote. " Straws Show," do The Chicago Tribune, the leading Republican paper of the West—says that " Andrew Johnson's Mississippi policy, if carried out, will disgrace the Republican party morally and over throw it politically." It also speaks most contemptuously of " the Tennessee Democrat now in the Presidential chair." The above sentiments are identical with those entertained by Stevens, Sumner, 'Wilson, Chase, Greeley, and all the °the"' leading spirits of the Abo lition or Republican party; and yet, in some of their State Conventions recent ly held, they endeavor to draw the wool over the eyes of their deluded followers by damning President Jlohnson with faint praise, and what is still more sur prising, many of these poor, ignorant souls delight in being gulled. They will get their eyes opened when too late to recede from the brink of ruin towards which they are being rapidly driven by their unprincipled and traitorous lead ers. Not a Word About Frauds One astounding and very noticeable thing in these days is the entire silence of the Republican press upon the sub ject of the enormous frauds that have been constantly occurring in the differ ent departments of the Government. An exchange says the immense frauds that have been perpetrated in the sev eral departments of the Government by employees have astounded the tax payers, but have bad no visible effect upon the radicals. Scarcely have we heard a word from them on the sub ject. Their journals have been silent, not having sufficient honesty to con demn what they know is wrong. We hear of no courts-martial being ordered to try Government defaulters, but we certainly would hear of the speedy or ganization of one if some misguided soldier should run away with an offi cer's horse, or a small portion of the funds taken from the paymaster's chest. When a quartermaster, a revenue col; lector, or any other employee of con siderable prominence in the party, ab sconds, leaving the Government his creditor to a fabulous amount, mum is the word. Rather than expose the de linquent, the Abolitionists tax the peo ple an amount sufficient to meet the amount abstracted from the United States Treasury. The great object had in view by radicalism will not permit questions of ft aud, peculation, taxation, finance, or civil liberty to interfere with its speedy accomplishment. It is too vital to the welfare of the party, and, therefore, those things must be kept secret and not divulged on any account. Attend to the Assessment. _Remember that Friday is the last day when any voter can be legally assessed. The time is short, and the probabilities are that up to this hour there are num bers who have neglected to attend to this essential matter. We again urge our friends to see to it that every:Demo crat is duly assessed before Frida,y night. John Cessna's Address. That windy and wordy little reneode, John Cessna, Chairman of the Republi kita4t, Clip,,ral 'Co lola* hingthtlyritten ittnd forrl t h diks ohlmost iiiie • blejength... If iti seen in full . * fore t Ahe ilectioniby ,TOple'dit the ru st districts It muirbe ilicubited in iiiinphliV form. It -will take up twice or three times the number of columns devoted to reading matter by the country newspapers, and can not possibly be - crowded in - by most of them before the electik. Even the Harrisburg TilegsaA, the organ of the party at the State Caidtal, is fain to content'itself with publishing extracts not amounting to more than one-third of this voluminous document. We won der whether its author has the vanity to suppose that many people will ever be found with patience enough to wade through the • almost interminable amount of twaddle he has written ? If he has he will be much mistaken. Most of the newspapers of the Republican party will content themselves with publishing a few of the more scurrilous portions of this pretentious address, and the greater part of it will never be seen by the people. We are glad that we can assure all concerned that they will lose nothing by failing to see a full copy of this docu ment. It is not in any way remarkable for ability. On the question of restor ing the seceded States to the Union, it is in full sympathy with the radicals, being but a repetition of the absurd dog mas announced by Thaddeus Steven in his Lancaster speech. Unless he had deserted the Republican State platform, which he helped to make, Mr. Cessna could not take any other position than one of direct and positive hostility to the reconstruction policy of President Johnson. Following that platform he naturally falls into a labored defense of all the absurd theories of Thad. Stevens. On the negrosuffragequestion the lit- tie trimmer has not a single honest word to say. The doctrine having been covertly endorsed by the State Conven tion, he, as Chairman of the Republi can State Central Committee, did not dare to repudiate it, nor does he, either by word or implication. This is most significant, and should not be lost sight of. The above points are all that demand notice from us. All the balance of this wordy document is made up of false statements, and of such scurrilous abuse of the Democratic party as is to be ex pected from a:low-bred, vulgar fellow of John Cessna's antecedents and charac ter. It is one of the most undignified public documents ever put forth, and will be regarded as an unworthy pro duction by all decent men in the party of which John Cessna is at once a neophyte and a would-be leader. How Long Will Pennsylvania Consent to be a Dependency of New England? Beyond doubt Pennsylvania is a great State; big enough and intelligent enough to have an opinion and a pub lic policy of her own. Yet she has been, for a number of years past, but a mere political dependency of New England, a hanger-on to the dirty skirts of Yankee fanaticism. A set of unprinci pled political sharpers have bandaged the eyes of poor, old, patient, Dutch Pennsylvania; laid burthens upon her willing back, and led her about as a sort of pack-horse for the peddling of ' Yankee political wares, which are as shameful a cheat as were the wooden nutmegs of Connecticut manufacture. Under such treatment Pennsylvania has been as patient and as uncomplain ing as ever was any beast of burthen. She has seemed completely to have lost all spirit, every vestige of au indepen dent will; and to be perfectly satisfied' to be made a dependency of Yankee land ; a mere beast of burthen for her newly found Yankee masters. How much longer does Pennsylvania intend to be content to remain a mere dependency upon New England? Is it not high time that there was an end of this Yankee rule? The Republican party of this State has never had any vitality except that derived from its connection with the radical fanatics of New England. It has been but a sort of wriggling tail end to the political monster whose head and heart have been enclosed within the rocky barriers of original Yankee land. Its triumphs have not been the triumph of Pennsyl vania ideas or Pennsylvania policy ; but the triumph of Yankee ideas and Yan kee politicians, of the Sumners' and S,Vilsons' of Massachusetts. With itthe masses of Pennsylvania have never really been in sympathy. They have been misled and wheedled into voting for a party which has degraded and dis graced the State. It is high time there was an end of this Yankee Republican party and of all its misdoings in Penn sylvania. We believe the people of this State will throw off the degrading yoke at the coming election. If they do not, they will show that they are destitute of proper self-respect and of all State pride. WHEN General Slocum heard of his nomination by the Democrats of New York as their candidate for Secretary of State, he promptly resigned his position in the army. Brigadier General Hartrauft, the Re publican nominee for Auditor General in this State, has not resigned. He is still drawing his pay at the rate of 53,600 per annum, while he is stump ing the State against the restoration policy of the President, and in favor of negro equality. Will the people make a note of this? It shows the difference between the De mocratic idea of duty and the Republi can idea of the same thing. The Pioneer State Massachusetts has been the pioneer State in the Abolition movement from the commencement of the agitation. She is Still recognized as the leader of the column. Henry Ward Beecher's paper, the Independent, thus compli ments her on her position : "Massachusetts, as usual, leads the column. She not only preaches, but practices. While other States are de bating whether they shall give their colored fellow-citizens the right of suf frage, and yet others are doing all they can to shun this right, she admits them without remark to positions and honor. Two MEN OF COLOR sat in the State Re publican Convention at Worcester last week—a lawyer and a minister. The minister was made one of the Vice Pres idents. Let Connecticut not foolishly resist the incoming sentiment, but en dorse it heartily, by repealing her un brotherly law, and New York get ahead of Massachusetts by putting Frederick Douglas on her State ticket, on his way to the seat in Congress that he shall yet occupy. Then she will be worthy of her motto, "Excelsior," and surpass her Eastern rival in thesegood works." The difference between the Indepen dent and the Abolitionists of Pennsyl vania is rather nominal than real. The editor of that journalspeaksoutplainly, while here the issue is only shirked. It is not repudiated. The State platform has not one word to say against it, neither has John Cessna in his inter minable address. The radicals of Mas sachusetts and of Pennsylvania are brothers. A triumph of the Republican party:of this State in the coming elec tion would be justly claimed as a tri umph of the most radical ideas of that revolutionary organization. Every vote .cast for Hartranft and Campbell will be counted as a vote in favor of negro suf •frage and negro equality. Let every voter remember this whett be goes to the polls. The New, York Republican State Woven 41on Declares in Favor of Negro Sur raW. Itiani.Repttblicans to-this State still ainy that Weir party - le pledged te the adious tinctrine of negro suffrage. They have tire audaelty to-do so, notiiith atandh4 the „fact that the theory:has ,been endorsed by a majority of the State Conventions recently held by their party, while it has not been repudiated by:a single one. They persist in the lie to shield their party from odium in spite of the fact that negro ,suffrag , e is openly advocated by a large majority of Re publican newspapers, and not condemn ed by any of them. Had anything been wanting to give the lie to the words of all who deny thatthe Republican party is unequivocally committed 4i the odious doctrine, That want has been supplied by the action of the Republi can State - Convention of New York. It has pronounced itself as opposed to re ceiving the revolted States back into the Union except upon condition of there granting the right of suffrage to the negroes. Resolution 5 contains the negro hid den in the fence, and with all the wool possible shaved off Resolved, That while we regard the national sovereignty over all the sub jects committed to it by the Constitu tion of the United States as having been confirmed and established by the recent war, we regard the several States in the Union as having jurisdiction over all local and domestic affairs, expressly re served to them by the same constitu tional authority ; and that whenever it 'shall be deemed compatible with the public safety to restore to the States lately in rebellion the renewed exercise of those rights, we trust it will be done in the faith and on the basis that they will be exercised in a spirit of equal and impartial justice, and with a view to the elevation and perpetuation of the full rights of citizenship of all their people, inasmuch as these are principles which constitute the basis of our Republican institutions. This is tolerable straddling; but the attempt to carry water on both should ers, to look one way and walk another, to talk this and mean that, all at once, can't succeed. It isn't in human nature. The resolution might have been divided into several parts, and read thus: Resolved, That the States have con trol over all matters not committed to the Federal Government by the Consti tubon, but resolved that we won't give it to them. Resolvtd, That the States lately in rebellion shall have their rights restored whenever we please, if they will agree to vote the Republican ticket. Resolved, That we are in favor of ele sating the negro to the full rights of citizenship, and that we hope the right to vote will be considered by our long haired radicals as a right of citizenship, but that our short-haired conservatives will inwardly chuckle. to remember that the Supreme Court has decided negroes not to be citizens. Any one of these would have been in telligible and clear, but to juggle with langu'ige and mix them all up into one mess is worthy of the party "founded on great moral ideas." CAI3INET OFFICERS used to attend to the administration of the affairs of their respective Departments, and the ablest of them generally found this as much as they could do. But Parson Harlan, of lowa, the present Secretary of the Interior, is so very much abler than any of his predecessors, that, in addition to the discharge of the duties of his office, he can find time to interfere in the State elections. From the Washington cor- . respondence of the Baltimore Sun, under date of the 19th inst., we learn that— " At a meeting of the Pennsylvanians last evening, to arrange to go hOine at the• ensuing election, a letter was read from Secretary Harlan, stating that all desiring to vote would be granted leave of absence. It is also stated that trans portation at reduced rates would be fur nished." "All desiring to vote " means, as a matter of course, all desiring to vote the Abolition ticket. As President Johnson is supposed to be desirous of narrowing instead of widening whatever breach there may be between him and the Democracy of the North, it might be well for any of our prominent Pennsyl vania Democrats who may have access to his person, to inquire of him how far Secretary Harlan's impudent inter ference in our pending election has his sanction. It would do no harm to ex tend the inquiry so far as to ascertain, if that be possible, whether "transporta tion at reduced rates" means transpor tation at-governnient expense, as this is a matter of some importance to tax payers. Superiority of Southern Negroes We have heard much of the tendency of slavery to degrade the negro, and have been told constantly of the eleva tion to come with freedom. All this seems, however, to have been suddenly exploded. It appears to be now uni versally admitted by the abolitionists themselves that the negro slaves of the South are infinitely superior in every respect to free negroes of the North. John Sampson the negro Editor of the Cincinnati Colored Citizen, ;who pos sesses the useful faculty of combining business with pleasure, has lately been advertising his business and collecting subscriptions for his paper in North Carolina at the same time. At a meet-• ing held a short time since he said:— " The colored people of the South. were infinitely superior in good inten tions and general politeness and courtes, to those of the North, and as an illustra • tion he gave the audience an anecdote of two school exhibitions he attended , one in Mississippi and one in Indiana . He visited, in his canvassing tour fo: r subscriptions to his paper, both of these States, and being requested to attend it Mississippi a colored school, he was de - lighted to observe the respect and atten - tion that he met with from the scholars , and the " yes sir" and " no sir" of thei r replies to questions. He asked one o f the boys what he wanted to be when h. 5 became a man, and his answer was in • stantaneous : I intend to be a lawyer , sir." Another asked the same ques tion, preferred to be a "doctor ;" whil another replied, under the influence o f extraordinary ambition, " he wanted I') be the President of the United States.' In Indiana it was a different feeling tha t moved the urchins, and their answers,. although betraying more practicable no tions, yet showed a less elevated state of thought, and in their manner of reply, (invariably omitting the "sir,") denoted! inferiority of intellect and condition." How completely that gives the lie to. all the assertions of the life-long aboli tionists. The question now to be de cided is this. Is the superiority of th e Southern negroes the result of slaver.,r, and the inferiority of_ the free negroes of the North the legitimate result of a freedom for which they are unfitted ? Will some philanthropist of the negro loving school please explain? WE ABE DISPOSED TO BELIEVE that the Earthquake which-startled the good people'of this city and neighborhood om Sunday last, was no earthquake at all, but only the howl set up by the Stevens abolitionists (headed by the whole pack of Bloodhounds of Zion) when they read the following telegram from Washing ton: " Capt. E. J. Scranton, United States colored volunteers, has been dismissed the service for miscegenation and max rying a disreputable colored woman in Gen. Gilmoie's department." If a buck nigger is "a Haan and a brother," we would like to know wheth er a nigger wench is not a woman and a sister? And if she is, we would like to know whether the Stevensmenhaven't a right to raise a young earthquake (or rival it by a howl of rage) when one of their brothers is dismissed the service for marrying the "sister?" -Why Wm He Hot Promoted. - :_:,l l Pe have recently obtained possession hf record highly honoring our candi date lir Auditor General, Colonel H. Davis. It apio . 3trilthat a =ember of the friends of Colonel Davis presented his name to the Wiu Depwt.: went _for promotion, and accompanied their recinumendation of the bravesol dier with an array of testimony as to his capacity' and conduct as an officer, of which any man might be proud. The application was in vain, - however, for waa not ' Colonel Davis a Democrat? His long, faithful and efficient service, his blood shed in the cause, and maimed body, all were counted as naught, while such men as Schenck, Banks, &c., were raised to the " stars." N'imporfe ! The Democracy of Pennsylvania now present him to the people for promotion —and to the people we present some of the testimonials that accompanied the fruitless application in his behalf to the War Department. Read ! SILAS CASEY, Brigadier General of Volunteers, says: "Colonel W. W. H. Davis, 104th Regi ment Pennsylvania Volunteers, was under my command for about nine months, dur ing a major part of which period he was in command of a brigade, which he brought to a state of discipline and efficiency. In command of his regiment on the 31st of May, MA at the battle of ' Seven Pinto' he with his men behaved in the most gallant manner." T. SEYMOUR, Brigadier General of Volunteers, says: " Colonel Davis served with credit during the Mexican war; he was one of the first to step forward in this. As Colonel he has constantly commanded a brigade, and in Some of the hardest fought actions of the war. He has everywhere not only acquit ted himself with credit, but has acquired the name of a thoroughly capable and effici ent brigade commander, and theconfidence of all with whom he has served." J. N. PALMER, Brigadier-General of Volunteers, says "I have served in the same division with. Col. Davis anclknow him to bean attentive, intelligent and zealous commander. His regiment was one of the best drilled and best disciplined voltanteer regiments in the ' Army of the Potomac.'" 'ALFRED H. TERRY, Brigadier Gener al commanding, says, under date of No vember 29, 1863: " Colonel Davis has commanded a brigade almost without interruption since the au tumn of 1861. He commanded a brigade of my division during the movement on- James Island in July last, and during a. considerable portion of the operations on this (Morris) Island. He has rendered very efficient and valuable services and proved himself a most capable and faithful officer." S. C. HUNT, Brigadier General of Vol unteers, says: " I take pleasure in bearing witness from my own personal observation to the steady endurance and gallantry which were dis played by his regiment under his example and guidance during the Peninsular cam paign, and especially at the battle of the "Seven Pines." Col. Davis' regiment was drawn up in the advance of Casey's divis ion, and sustained the first shock of the overwhelming rebel force." JOHN PECK, Major General, says: "Colonel W. W. H. Davis, 104th Regi ment Pennsylvania Volunteers, served with his regiment for some months in my divi sion on the Peninsula. He is a brave and accomplished soldier." ORRIS S. FERRY, Brigadier General, says, (May 12. 1863): " Colonel Davis received a military edu cation ; served with credit in the line and on the staff in the Mexican war; raised a company, afterwards a regiment and a six gun battery at the beginning of the present war; organized the brigade now command ed by him in November, 1861, and has been in command of the same ever since, with the exception of a few months. He has been twice wounded in action, and every where has deported himself as a brave skillful, energetic commander." R. SAXTON, Brigadier General Volun teers, writes January 7th, 1864: "It gives me pleasure.to hear witness to the fidelity and efficiency of Col. Davis as an officer. He served for several months under my command in the capacity of Brig adier General to my entire satisfaction. E. D. KEYES, Major General, writes : "Col. Davis served in the Fourth corps, under my command, a considerable time on the Peninsula. I had ample opportunity to observe his conduct, which at all times was that - of a brave, energetic and attentive officer. Moreover, Col. Davis is a gentle man of high character and intelligence." Major-General Q. A. GILLMORE, under date of November 26, 1863, expressed offici ally his high appreciation of the zeal, intel ligence and efficiency which had marked the conduct and service of Col. Davis du ring the operations against the defenses of Charleston; and subsequently, on the 26th of February, 1894' , made an official recom mendation of Colonel Davis for promotion to the Brevet of Brigadier General, "for meritorious service and conspicuous execu tive ability." Upon the back of a copy of this official paper, under date of April 30, 1864, the same distinguished officer made the following endorsement : " Colonel W. W. H. Davis, 101 th Penn sylvania volunteers, is an officer of rare executive and administrative ability as a commander, and in every way merits the promotion which I have asked for him.— His conduct during the time he has served under my command as a brigade and post commander, has been uniformly commen datory." Q. A. GILLMORE, Major General. President Johnson Swears! The New York Anti-Slavery Standard of Saturday last, in its leading article, headed " White Reconstruction ?" re ports President JOHNSON as having said : _ " This is a white man's country, and by God, while I am President it shall be a white man's Government." And then exclaims, " It is in such words— inhuman and atheistic words—that Andrew Johnson, within a few days, has announced his convictions and policy. They were spoken to Governor Fletcher of Missouri. * * * * * * The announcement of his purpose is but the reaching of the point whither he has been tending since the first fatal steps of his administration—the North Caro- ling proclamation." That President Johnson should have the hardihood to assert that this is a white man's country is shocking, in deed, to the nerves of the radicals ; but, for him to have sworn a solemn oath, that while he is President this shall be a white man's Government is, in their estimation, unmitigated Copperhead ism, if not downright treason. No wonder the Anti-Slavery Standard is sorely exercised. We apprehend the radicalg will find Andrew Johnson a most impracticable character. Relying upon the muses for support he will not heed their howling, but will pursue the even tenor of his way. Meantime it is the duty of every conservative voter in this State to do his best to set the seal of condemnation upon the radical plat form of the Republican party. ONE SINGLE ISSUE is before the North ern people for their judgment and de cision in the fall elections. That issue is simple, clear and unmistakable. Shall President Johnson's policy and plan for the immediate restoration of the Union succeed or not? It is the question of Union or practical Disunion. The Dem ocratic party say Union ; the Radicals -in the opposition—old foes with new faces—say Disunion. The pivot of all our politics is this. Otherquestions are important, but this is chief. President Johnson and the Democratic party de sire to restore the old order of things— the Union, local self-government, and the authority of civil law at once. The Radicals wish to perpetuate social dis order and military domination, for the sake of wreaking their passions and their hate upon the Southern people, and for the sake of accomplishing a so cial revolution which shall put into their hands permanently the political power, Hopeless of retaining by the votes of white men the power which they have abused, they desire to dis franchise Southern whites and enfran chise Southern blacks, and to become themselves the negroes' new masters. THOSE having relatives buried in the South, whom they wish to have brought home, should remember that all appli cations for transportAtion to and from Virginia, for the removal of the dead bodies, of Pennsylvania soldiers for bur ial within this State, should be address ed to Col. Charles F. Gregg, Chief of Transportation, Harrisburg, Pa. !tie Prospect Our exchanges from all parts of the Sbge bring us most cheering news of their-prospects in the coming election. Everywhere the Peincieratic-party is alive to .its, duty, and ready and eager for the coming contest. ', .Take the fol lowing item from a Schiiirlkill paper as a sample. The Advocate says; During the past few weeks we had an opportunity of conversing freely with Democrats from all portions of the coun ty, who were in attendance atcourt, and we are gratified to learn that our breth ren in the country are fully inspired with zeal, vigilance and industry, which are necessary to secure success at the polls. We heard it frequently remark ed that Old Democratic Schuylkill never looked better 11:y the good old cause— that all the townships give signs of im provement on the vote of last fall—that our strong holds: are vieing with each other in the good fight—that the most timid of our friends have-grown bold— and that the idle have become untiring, and the sleepy have grown vigilant.— Right gallantly have the Democracy began the work—right gallantly will they prosecute it to a successful issue. The same tone of energy and confident resolve prevails throughout the State. In the meantime our enemies are de spondent, and full of well-grounded fears. Their ranks are broken andtheir hosts dispirited. Nothing but our own neglect to do our whole duty can pre vent our triumphing gloriously. Let every Democrat do his work faithfully and all will be well. The Soldiers at Rome—Their Influence. During the past summer nearly a mil lion men have'returned to their homes from the army. They are the most pa triotic men in the community. The soldier, wherever you see him, is the one man in twenty .who was ready to give his life for his country, and.went out to do it. He is the one who laid aside all his ordinary pursuits, while the others thought about it; and his patriotic sacrifices and endeavors, his trials, his triumphs, have only made him ove the country still more, and he comes home a more earnest patriot than he was when he went. These men care but little for the quib bles of the politicians or the terrible wordy wrath of the radicals. Nigger suffrage does not vex their souls. They were willing that Sambo should have a chance to be shot, and will, perhaps, not stand in the way of his securing an equivalent privilege. But there is one point on which they are positive, and that is the support of the Administra tion. They went for Old Abe through and through, and now they go with equal completeness for Andy Johnson as the whole-hearted representative man of the people. His blunt directness, his obvious purpose to be just to all, his resolute adherence to the spirit of the constitution against all the clamor and quibble of the political cliques—all these take hold of the soldiers' heart as did the similar characteristics of his great predecessor, and they all go home Joh nson men to the core. There is thus spread over every part of the North an immense unbought, unpaid, spontaneous influence in sup port of the President. The soldiers affect greatly the communities in which they live, especially in the rural dis tricts. They have been out and seen the world and the war, and they become the centres of little circles that uncon sciously ado! t their views. Their in fluence on the result of our elections will be obvious ; and the politicians al ready forsee this, and bid wisely for it in the nomination of military men for all offices. But the influence of the sol dier will go further than this. It will originate such a full and hearty support of the President as will carry his re construction policy through without jar or jolt. It will put the radical party out of existence—and thus the soldiers who saved the country will be a main influence in his settlement. —New York Herald. An Incident at the White House. 'Special Despatch to The Press.) WASHINGTON, Sept. 24, 1865. On Thursday last, an unusual and quite romantic incident occurred at the White House among the squad of par don-seekers there. The suppliants were waiting around as your correspondent D. D. described a few days ago, and among others were two persons, a close ly-veiled young lady and a gentleman somewhat bronzed, (a rebel soldier once, quite likely,) with a heavy beard and a careful dress. They had not paid any attention to each other during the hour or two they had been so near, and would not have done so for all coming time had it not been for the usher. He came with a document, and in a sharp tone called out the name superscribed on its envelope. It was a prominent one once in Georgia, and was familiar to most of the ears upon which its tones fell. The k• gentleman, with an air of pleasure, stepped forward to take it, when the lady, with a little scream, pressed forward and clasped him tightly in her arms. He at first seemed sur prised by such an unwonted proceeding, but when she several times excitedly asked " Don'tyou know Jessie ?" "You can't have forgotten me in such a short time," and removed the veil to show a fresh, piquant, pretty face. Recogni tion was instant, and with the one word "-sister," he was quite as demon strative as she had been before. " Why, Jessie, what are you doing here?" he asked, "I am here for father; he is very sick," she said, with a little elision of the "r," and a sob. "But he wants to die, if he has to die, a citizen of the Union again." The young man seemed affected, but in the new found joy of meeting a sister long logt, the cloud that time did hot darken his heart. A few moments after she also received the grant of her appli cation. It seems that the young man went out eagerly in the war as major of a Con federate regiment. He has taken prison er in a skirmish justafter Bull Run, and spent two years in a Northern prison. Returning to service, the cause of the " Confederacy" needed all the men for support it -could obtain and he was forced to stay in the ranks. Letters he had - sent home failed to reach, and he, despairing of finding his family after the march of Sherman over the State, came North to see after a friend. This good work done he returned to Washington to look after his pardon. All this time his family gave him up as dead, and, saving his sister, who met him so strangely, think so yet 9 The End of the Colchester Case. The N. Y. Herald publishes the de cision of Judge Hall in the Colchester case with the following comments : It will be seen that, as we predicted, Judge Hall sustains the verdict of the jury against Colchester, and upon the very grounds foreshadowed in the Herald. If Colchester's lawyers had taken our advice they would have saved their client the additional expense of this appeal. The learned judge regards spiritualism in a very practical light.— He asks why Colchester did not enrich himself, if he possessed such super natural powers, instead of pandering to the credulity of the public by juggling seances. He calls attention to the fact that, with all their boasted knowledge, the spiritualists did not and could not discover the assassins of President Lin coln. Finally, he is astonished, as we were, that none of the spirits interfered to help Colchester during his trial, when a single manifestation in the court room would have brought him off triumph antly and established the reality of spiritualism beyond a doubt. Judge Hall's opinion is very readable, and we commend it to the public generally and our friend ex-Judge Edmonds in par ticular. Spiritualism is now jugglery by solemn judicial decision. THE Wisconsin Democrats have just met in convention, and, like the Dem ocrats of New York and other states, in dorse President Johnson's plan for an immediate restoration of the Union. The Wisconsin Republicans, like their fellows throughout the North, oppose President Johnson's plan, ajid want to keep the South from the Union till she has agreed to do several things which we have no right to force her to agree to, and which all look to partisan policy and not to political justice—in other words, to a perpetuation of the Republi can misrule in Congress. THE Union county Republican Con vention declared that "the abrovktion of all special laws against, men orany race or color should be guaranteed by constitutional provision."' "Nickels." An exchange paper imticingoo fact that during the months of'-May, July and August, 5,500,000 one cent pieoea were coined at the United States MIDI' in Philadelphia,',Saya .where are they? We answer, last becoming a nuisance. and more intolerable to be borne th;in the ten andtwenty-five cent notes. They-are now - rolled -in paper bundles of 25 and 50. and' dealt out in change in market, and by small dealers generally. When they were really de sirable as change they were hoarded away, when the mint labored to the ex tent of its ability, coining five to six millions per month to supply the de mand in circulation, which, so long as they commanded'a premium, and an inferior currency supplied their place, was very much like the effort to fill a bottomless tub. The paper currency is now more nearly on a par with specie, - and the depreciated small coins are of less valuelhan thepaper, consequently, in accordance with an invariable rule in a contest between two currencies of un equal value, that which is cheapest will circulate to the almost entire 'exclusion of that which is dearer. As cent pieces are more numerous than ever before, we suppose in a little while as paper and specie more nearly come together, we shall feel their nuisance more than ever Cholera in Italy A Naples letter says: "The news rom the small town of San Severo is quite lamentable. The last bulletin mentions 122 cases of cholera and 54 ' deaths. All the wealthy families have fled with one exception, and this latter has lost three members out of five. The state of prostration of the unfortu nate population is indescribable. The syndic and the government authorities, who are displaying an admirable firm ness and devotedness, are asking for medical assistance and aid from the oth er towns. To give an idea of the state of the poorer classes of this locality I have but to mention that the syndic has just ordered to be sent away 3,000 pigs, who were living in thehomesof the low er classes pell-mellwith the inhabitants. Naples is acting very generously in these painful circumstances; on all sides subscriptions are being opened. Doc tors have left to the number of 20 and 35 emigreslfrom Venice and Rome and have offered. themselves as attendants and been accepted. Turin is sending ice, and Naples lemons by thousands. This ut burst of public charity merits the reatest eulogiunis. Getting Seared Every Republican exchange we pick up, speaks despondingly of the approach ing election. The Harrisburg Tele graph, proposes to sink negro suffrage, and in its issue of the 21st, says "'Whatever differences of opinion may exist among the individual mem bers of the party on the question of col ored suffrage, they must be reserved, and not allowed to interfere with the greater issue of universal freedom, which is at stake. Our opinions on the sub- ject of the enfranchisement of the negro are well known. We believe that- jus tice, sound policy, and the guarantees of the Declaration, alike demand that the ballot should be the symbol of free dom, and co-extensive with it; but in the present imperilled condition of the country, we think there are other ques tions more pressing than that." The "other questions more pressing" are simply—the spoils! The Philadelphia Bulletin complains that "there is very little interest evinced in the conduct of the present cam paign." Just wait until election night, and the Democracy will give you prin cipal and intere - st both.—Pittsburg Post. A. Man Gored to Death by an Elk From the Ottawa (Ill.) .1 3 1aindealer Sept. 26.] It becomes our duty to record a most lamentable occurrence at Judge Caton's park, Dear this city, on Saturday last. Three`men from Ottawa—Marvin W. Dimock and a brother on a visit from Connecticut, and Mr. Edward Drew, at whose house the former two were stop ping, took a walk to the north bluff, and arriving at the north end of Judge Caton's park, concluded to enter and look at the deer, elk, etc. They climbed the fence, and approaching a group, in the centre of which stood two large elk, looked at them some minutes, then started toward the fence to climb out As they walked away, however, the elk followed them, and when still some dis tance from the fence, the larger of the two made demonstrations as if to attack the party. Mr. Drew, and Mr. D. of Connecticut, took refuge in a tree, while Marvin Dimock remained on the ground. The elk made a pass at him, but he dodged around the tree several times avoiding him until he fell. Mr. Drew, and the other Dimock then came out of the tree to his rescue. They fought the elk some minutes, when Mr. D. of Connecticut, seemed to faint away, and Mr. Drew, for safety lifted him again into the tree. The other Mr. D., who still lay on the ground, up to • this untouched, also seemed from fright or excitement to have lost his conscious ness, and Mr. Drew maintained his struggle with the elk alone, until the latter, seeing Mr. Dimock on the ground, made a furious plunge at him, dealing him frightful blows on the body. Mr. Drew then started for help, the other elk which had thus far merely played the spectator, following him and making frequentattempts to strike him as he hurried along. He reached the house of Judge Dickey, who, seizing some pitchforks and other implements, hurried to the rescue. They found the elk, standing over Mr. Dimock, and had a fearful fight before they drove him away. Mr. D. of Connecticut, was then brought down out of the tree (again fully recovered from his fainting fit); and Marvin D. taken up, placed in a buggy, and brought to town. He was still conscious at times, and though badly, it was thought not fatally injur ed, until placed on a bed, when he sank away immediately, and in ten minutes was a corpse. He was one of our oldest citizens, and highly respected by all who knew him. His wife was on a visit East at the time, and of course the melancholy news must be to her a crushing blow. The Money Stolen by the St. Albans Raiders The New York Herald says A correspondent at St. Albans, Ver mont, ina communication which he has sent ne t - contradicts a report which has been generally circulated, to the effect that the banks of that place have had refunded to them by the Canadian au thorities all the money stolen from tnem on the 19th of last October by the rebel raide'rs. He says that the total amount stolen was over two hundred and ten thousand dollars, and that of this only ninety thousand dollars have been re turned by the Canadians. It is said that Secretary Seward has made a demand on the British government for the resti tution of the remainder, on the ground that before the raid took place some of the Canadian officials were hware that it was contemplated, and Unit they w aisted the scoundrels in making their escape, and threw all possibl obstacles in the way of their arrest and punish ment. Our correspondent complains of the bad faith generally of the Canadian government in the matter.. A MAN who has been cultivating tea, as an experiment, since 1860, writes to the Savannah Herald that most of his plants grow finely, that his tea is of good quality, and the plants will do quite as well in Georgia, as in their native country. The plants require no culture after the third year. If well taken care of, by that time they will be large enough to commence the manu facture of tea from them. The yield to the acre is from three to four hundred pounds, and the plants produce good crops for eighteen or twenty years. The growth of tea is not affected by dry or wet weather, or by storms, and insects will not molest the plants. Agricultural Fairs The New York Tribune says : The recurrence of so many profitable fairs throughout the country is a sign of the returning health and usefulness of peace. In half a dozen fairs the receipts have averaged not less than $lO 000 or Illinois muchand in New York and much more. The start given to manu facture promises much benefit to both East and West, as we note establish ment of wool factories in Illinois, and large wool sales, amounting to 2,000,000 pounds, in Boston. We welcome the reappearance of Horse Fairs' they do good to the owner and to the horse, when they are not mere races. If some thing be done for-the humbler brute— the mule, for instancer---it might lead to a wider science and amore common hu manity in the treatment of animals. • —.A. man, mimed Tones, who was the rebel Assistant Secretary of War, has beep . arrested alid placed in the Old CapitOl. prairlutdupw; ?.fiOCEF... DINGS OF, ~pzatoc.R#T:lo._ Cpurrry CoNvEtvriox.—inCtlie absence of R. R. Tshtaly, Esq.; Chairman of the County Committee, A. J, Steinman, Esq., Secretary of the County Committee, called the. CA:mi vention to order. General Wm. Patton, of Columbia, was chosen President. On taking the chair he said : Gentlemen of the amvention : I thankyou forth° partiality you have shown in choosing me to preside over the deliberations of this Convention. We meet under more favors- ble auspices than we have for four years. When we last met a reign of terror pre vailed. Democratic citizens were immured in prisons without warrant or form of law. Now peace prevails; our gallant soldiers are at home, where they can exercise the right of suffrage untrammeled. We have, too, a President whose policy of reconstruc tion we can fully endorse. On that im portant subject he is with us and we are with him. [Applause.] You are met here to-day to put in nomination a county ticket to be voted for at the coming election. I know your work will be well and wisely done, and„l hope you will willingly recog nize the claims of our citizen soldiery. They deserve and should receive honor and en couragement. Ge'ntlemen, again thanking you for the honor conferred upon me, I pro nounce this Convention ready to proceed to business. The following named gentlemen were then chosen VICE PRESIDENTS. Edward McElroy, Marietta. C. J. Nourse, Columbia. Col. H. M. Brenneman, Elizabetht'n. R. P. Spencer, Strasburg Boro. H. Galen, Mantic. David Grove, Donegal. John M. Weller, West Hempfield. - Win. Dungan, Eden. John L. Lightner, Leacock. Chas. Lafferty, Paradise. H. S. Kerns, Salisbury. Geo. Duchman, East Earl. The following named gentlemen were chosen SECRETARIES. • H. G. Smith, Esq., City. B. F. Martin, Lampeter. J. H. Hegener, Jr., City. Edwin Garret, Bart. The list of Townships and Wards was ailed and the following delegates found to be in attendance, with proper credentials LIST OF DELEGATES. Bart—Josiah Byers, Edwin Garrett, John 1. Taggart, George S. Boone, John D. Laverty. Brecknock—J.:G.Bowman, Henry Rupp, David I‘lcColm, Michael Witmer, H. E. Shirai). Cairmirvon—Wm. Yohn, L. H Bean, David Run, Martin Ringwalt, George Ax. Clay—Wm. F. Moyer, John Demmy, Joseph Kline, Samuel'Enek, Curtis Miller. Conestoga—S. S. Welsh, John AI John lles.; Colerain—Uriah Swisher, Jeremiah P Swisher, Benjamin F. Ferguson. Columbia—North Ward—Jos. M. Watts, George Young, Jr., Peter S. McTague, John K. Eberlein, t J. C. Bucher. —Gen. William Patton, Charles J. bourse, Jacob F. Shroder, Benjamin Herr, Geo. Tile. Donegal West—Christian autz, Chris tian :Haar, Matthias Shenk, Philip Old _ . . weiler, Joseph C. Brinser. Donegal East—William Sailor, T. J. Albright, Lieut. J. S. Roath, David Grove, George Keudig. Dru more—John Hastings, Sam. B. Moore. Wm. J. McPherson, Wm. McCombs, Alex. Linton. - - Elizabeth—Joseph S. Keener, Benjamin Breitigam, T. Masterson. Elizabethtown Bor.—H. Tyler Shultz, Col. H. M. Breneman, 11. A. Wade, John Shaeffer, William H. Wagoner. Ephrata—D. Rhine Hertz, P. Martin Heitler, Martin S. Keller, Dr. J. M. Groff, Emanuel Mohler. -- - _ Earl—Wm. LT. Custer, David Besore, A. G. Smoker, John C. Martin, W. Detrich. Earl East—George Duchman, Isaac W Stauffer, Jacob Bixler, Wm. Newpher, E Sutton Hammond. Eden—Wm. Dungan, William Kunkle Isaac Montgomery, Dr. D. Hess, Andrew Fulton—J. H. Clendenin, W. F. Jenkins, Wm. H. McCardel, Joseph Smedly, Jr., Washington Whitaker. Heniptield East.—Col. David Ringwal t Simon Minnich, Henry Hoffman, Jacob Foltz, Abraham Sheirich. Hempfield West—Levi Rhoads, John M. Weller, Ephraim Boys, Joseph Hoover, John Y. Musser. City—N. W. Ward—Col. F. S. Pyfer, Dr. Samuel Parker, A. J. Steinman, H. G. Smith, Geo. W. Brown. " —N. E. Ward—SanmelH. Reynolds, A. Z. Ringwalt, John Rose, H. B. Swarr, Jacob It. Everts. " —S. W. Ward—Wm. Wilson, Henry Long, Hugh Corcoran, Henry Schaum, Philip Fitzpatrick. " —S. E. Ward—J. H. Hegener, Jr., Davis Hitch, Jr. Hugh Dougherty, James B. Wilhelm, Sam'l Shroad. Lancaster Twp.—P. E. Lightner, A. E. Carpenter, Benjamin Huber, Henry Wil helm, Samuel Potts. Leacock Upper—John Sigle, Dr. Isaac C. Weidler, Daniel A. Beck. Leacoek—John L. Lightner, Joel H. Sharp, John Royer, Jr., Phares M. Eaby, Isaac L. Dunlap. Lampeter East—Christian Erb, John Harsh, Marshall Lucans, J. L. Martin, J. B. Martin. -• Little Britain—Wm. Have, Jr., James S. Patterson, John P. Hays, Edward C. Swift, E. M. Zell. . - Marietta —E. F. McElroy, John Crull. F. K. Curran, Jos. Clinton, Lewis Leader. Martic—W. N. Gibson, H. Galen, F. Moss, A. Walton, Sr., R. Soulsby. Manor—Frederick R. Leonard, George G. Brush, Abraham Peters, Frederick Sener. - - - Manbeim Bor.—Nathan Worley, Benja min Donavan, A. J. Eby,'NA. L. Krum, Henry D. Miller. Manheim twp.—Benjamin Workman, Ed ward Kauffman, John Hoffman. Mount Joy Bor.—A. B. Culp, L. M. Hoff man, Albert Gast, John B. Shelly, Henry Shaffner. _ - - . Mount Joy twp.—Abraham Sheaffer, Sam. Masterson, Jac. Hiestand, Jonathan Nichols, Jacob S. Baker. Paradise—Amos Rockey, George Yonder smith, Peter Niedich, George L. Eckert, Charles Laverty. Penn—James McMullen, Em'). Keener, Hiram H. Hull, Jacob Eberly, W. W. Bus- Ser. - • Providence—Abrm. Dennis, David Har lan, Benjamin Huber, Christian Breneman, Albert N. Rutter. Raphb—Michael Ober, Samuel Baker, Michael Baker, Joseph Detweiler, Moses Ober. Salisbury—H. S. Kerns, Thomas W. Henderson, Daniel Ault, Dr. John Wallace, John Mason. Strasburg—Barnett Reynolds, Samuel H. Wiker, Franklin Clark, Philip Miller, Jacob Spindler. Sedsbury—Malon Fox, J. D. Harrar, George Rigg. Strasburg Bor.—James Clark, Samuel P. Bower, R. P. Spencer, B. B. Gonder, Wm. Black. Warwick—Wm. Kemper, Wash. Kryder, Sam. E. Keller, tirias Schaeffer, Christian Mohn. On motion of Hon. Nathan Worley, the Convention then proceeded to nominate candidates for Legislature, Hon. Nathan Worley was named, but promptly declined, stating that while he - sas always ready to serve in any position where he might be placed by the Democra cy of Lancaster county, he thought he could now best serve them by declining. He had no doubt others would readily be found whose nomination would add strength to the party and increase our vote in the county. The following named gentlemen were then put in nomination as candidates for the Legislature: IMET2I2 Lieut. Y. S. Roatb, East Donegal; Capt Daniel Herr, Columbia; Lieut. George P. Deichler, City; Milton B. Seldomridge, Leacock; Lieut. Charles H. Lichtenthaler, Litiz; George G. Brush, Manor. On motion, Col. F. S. Pyfer was nomina ted for District Attofney by acclamation. COUNTY TR.tA,STJREB Captain J, Miller Raub, of Providence, was nominated for County Treasurer by acelAmation COUNTY COMMISSIONER. The following names were put in nomina lion for the office of County Commissioner : John Hess, of Conestoga ; Samuel Pat terson, City. The following gentlemen were then nom inated for PRISON INSPECTORS James Henry, Columbia; William Car penter, City. The following gentlemen were nominated for _ . DIRECTORS OF THE POOR Lieut. Lewis Zecher, City ; George G. Brush, Manor; John L. Martin, E. Lam peter. • • The following names were then put in nomination for the office of COUNTY SURVEYOR. John B. Erb, Warwick; Wm. N. Gibson, Martin. AUDITOR. J. W. Shaffer, of West Donegal, was nom inated for Auditor by acclamation. Milton B. Seldomridge and George G. Brush having, declined to be candidates for the Legislature, on motion, Lieut. J. S. Routh, Capt. Dardel Herr, Lieut. George P. Deiehler and Lieut. Charles' A. Liehteri— lhaler were nominated by maw:natio.