i# bur daZt4 MQRDAY 15101151E0= - ,-:::::OCTS 1861 ------ I orushi - lIMon State Ticket. ••• -- • 103 GOTABNOB: • opei ANDRIEW WEEItTIN, of Centre. TOE =DU 01 TIM lITTPIONS 00t 3T DANIEL AGNEW, of Deaver. V• 10. Comfy Ticket. kr ?maid Mee 4 06 NNW Om& *OSU win= A. easabre. 1. :OHM P. GLASS. U. VI. 11. Hpkll4*. Wi U. v. VIOL J. 1314211511. lir EMU'. lOU E. BTZWART: l'er Oka 44/ disru. WI. &RIBBON. Par Cbsedi Thimirtr. DAVID ADM. Itextrdsr. ABDIZCI. 111601111111 L Per itsgbisn MX. J.IIII3IARDSOIL Tar Osumi Ormasiorin CIZOSCIII MALCOM 'V DintiOn. al Or low. JOHN t. MVO. Southern /libels and their Northern Friends. In the fee4- t ef such open and frank de elsratians as the following from the Au gust% (Os.) Constitutionalist, it is impossi ble for any loyal man, who has sense enough to know what he is doing, to sup - port' the 'candidates of the Copperhead Demoersoi. We quote: "We have alive held that the only way • to build up a peace party among the Yan kees, and to set at liberty the furious epee anion of the Anti-Republicans, was by ewe. wilful war on Lincoln'sarmies in the field. We still have great expectations from the peace men of the North and the explosive wrath of the opposition masses, but we • Were never more fully convinced than now of the taunted importance of thick, fast sad heavy blows from the Confederate ar- soles, in order to give vitality, system and or/Wittiest to the peace men, and to un loose the fierce impulses of the enthrelled • and terrorised people. Mr. Vallandigham himself, as we have heard, most eni'phatl- I tally declared that the success of Southern awns alone could give strength end 'con sistency to lhe peace movement." • ~. • • • • • • "If Johnston stalling can defeat Rose • anis and Burnside, Charleston still hold ing out, or if Lee, with his recruited army, ern detest Meade, with all the aid of his new cenitoripte, demoralised and disaffect ed se they are represented, then we may expect the .meet favorable results in the Ohtielectiou and Lincoln Congress. But Wits - something of the kind is mom pßiLied speedily, then a long farewell to the pence party—Vallandlgham will be de .feated and Wood and his party paralysed • or overawed in Congress, and peace post poned indefinitely wilt:out foreign aid." There is proof beyond controversy that the rebels of the Routh recognize the "Do - neoersoy" of the North as their friends and allies, end that, consequently, they are as much the enemies of the Government as the rebels are themselves—that they are en gaged in a 4,outmon eause—that they are mutually siding each other—that the late desperate efforts of Ler. and Besot) to win victoria over Mean: and Roar.caans were made mere with the hope and intent of wobbling their copperhead friends in the Forth to carry their elections, than from aniAmmeiiiste benefit they would hope to _ derive from them. In fact, the Copperhead Democracy is now their only hope; and so long as that party, led by cowardly but cunning traitors, can menage to keep up a bold front in the North, so long will the • rebels of the South fight-on, and no longer. The Rebels and Copperheads are one party. Their fortunes rise and fall to. • getter. If one triumphs, so will the other. If either is crushed, the other perishes with it. 11 the armies of the Union best those of the Confederacy, down goes the Copper. head party, never le rise again; and should the voters of the Union beat the Copper - heeds et the polls, down goes the Rebellion. 80 let every loyal eotir feel that in depos iting his ballot he is serving his country quite as effectively, as if he were struggling against its enemies amid the rear and smoke aid perils of battle—and perhaps more so. See, democrats, into what a position your leaders have brought your party t Testi mony upon testimony shows you that the only hope the • rebels have is in the sno ws of the candidates your leaders have set up. They have no other hope. Nei _titer Napoleon nor the British aristocraoy, are base enough femme out openly in their favon however much theytmay desire their success There la indeed no people on earth no brCao so to give them aid and comfort in their abominable enterprise, except your party leadaisr Thanks to God and to the people of the free States, your candidates cannot .scusised; , but what are we to think of the mad.otho does ill/pa he con to give them Mow I—who by his vote„ gives as much encouragement WWII, poor, degraded, party. ridden couture can - give to the enemies of his country ? Bead what thin_Georgis ed: itor rays; gee 14 anxiety for the success of what be calls the "puce party"—what -you call the detnocmitia party, and what the friends of the Union call the copper head party,—and then vote for its Gant dates if you an. Beer in mind the% VALLonnalux aztd- Woraease belong to the same party—that the convention which nominated the latter endorsed the former, although his beam muss well known then as it is now, Be aisUred that if you can succeed in electing lectonirolD you will contribute as largely td emouregement of the rebels as if yen luidnoted for and elected VAinainizo lux himself. Your success will greatly Protract the war, add fearfully to the mournful roll of the slain, and it may be lest the country defeated and dishonored atthe feet of victorious traitors. If your petty fealty demands all this at your hands, you are bound to give up to a mein party name year country, its heroic de. fenders and its glorious flag, and consign year own names to everlasting contempt, then vote for Weinman andLowans. The Rebel army 11l shout with joy at your *team, while the army of the Union wl3l are; aud your part of the spoils will be satildsmy so proferuid, that yo nr posterity 1011 trykard toforget that Ina s wen as you ever Ilied. • You may delude youreelme.with the no ties Gist in voting whit. -Yon call • the itAsitutoratte ticket" you ire . following in . • ihe jcsite,Gps of our Where; tat you we Ole** Ti.., mium • • _,71 ms7..to th : 0 40. 1 !:,t, 0411- : 41 F' t " YoltVfl*"4o4ll.*t:SoC'tint *NI F " • - you do—not one of them. Tour dement!e fears contended wad fought for Liberty, not Slavery. Ofourdemoarstio fathers were true to 'the Craton; you are not. They ied rebellion wherever it raised Its head; you are the men whom the rebels "only recognize as their friends. Jack son would hove hanged the arch-rebel of South Carolina "as high ea Haman; , but 'on, pbor wretches, would go on your knees to rebedp smeared with the blood of your murdered countrymen, and humbly sue for peace! Shame I ' Bishop Ifopkins is not Pleased. Bishop HOPLIIIII, of Vermont, has ad• dressed to Bishop Porren of Pennsylvania a long and bitter letter, in reply to the in dignant protest of the last named prelate, together with a lohg list of clergymen of the same Church, against the former's 'Bi ble view of Blaverj , ," in which he justified American slavery on Scripture grounds, and which has been largely circulated by the copperhead politicians of this State as an electioneering document. To show the temper of the Bishop's letter, we quote a 'lngle sentence—the first one after &brief introduction: • "Now my right Reverend brother, am sorry to be obliged to charge - you, not only with a gum insult against your, asnior, but lath the more scrim offence of a (also ao- caution." Speaking of Ids original publication, which the copperhead politicians are oir cadating, he says : "The whole object of my letter was to prove, from as Bible, that in the ,relation of master and slave there was necessarily no sin whatever. The sin, V thzra were any, lay in the treatment of the slave, and not in the relation itself." Here is an extract from his former publication : • • "The slavery of the negro ram as man Wined in the Southern States appears to me I fully authorised both in the Old and the New Testament, which, as the written word of God, afford the only infallible standard of moral rights and obligations." A good document for rebel apologists, sure enough, and they evinced their usual sagacity in taking 4t into their service; for if they could get the people to receive, at the hand of a bishop, such "Bible views of slavery" as these, they would have little trouble in getting them to justify the rebels in all they have done in support of the "di vine institution." (The reply is also pub lished in the copperhead papers as an elec tioneering document )fro 'how how strongly Bishop H0P11.13111.111 "joined to his idol," we subjoin the following paragraph from his angry letter to Bishop 'Pori= : "I wish you, therefore, to be advertised that I shall publish, within a few months, if a gracious Providence should spare my life and faculties, a fall demonstration of the truth wherein I stand.' And I shall prove in that book, by the moat unques *hatable authorities, that AMC. and stave holders were In the Church from the begin ning; that slavery was held to be consist ent with Christian principle by the Fathers and coruielle, and by all Protestant divines and commentatore, up to the very close kr 'the last centary,ind that this foot was universal among :ail Churches and seats throughout the C'hiistian world. I shall conterefiltist our Ch R m*ntainir the prltaitlite rule oI" abjures ill noveltb* very Constitution toitol.l only -safe and endoxingrule,. ocolaa aas_.ivt l ß lll worypirsita Das IP 4000101,1 0 ", _ r ostilizL arias". Istssubuot.. l o o , 4t4 bilmalumr. - • NO3II arra sztaurr. was. MEEMI ALEX. GORDON, 3111. ItiIOOND OMIT' • : • irrrrnams.l%,