Most gtemocrat. A. J. GEBRITEION, • . • • Editor. THURSDAY,: . • President: 8. MoOLELLAN, OF NEW nun'. - For VicePresidenti - GEO. H. PENDLET.O4, • OF 0/320. For Congress : ; • CHARLES DE:Mt-SON, OF I.I7ZERNE COUNTY Representative, E. E. GUILD, Gibson. Commissioner, C. C. MILLS, Dimock. Coroner, D. A. LATHR,OP, Montrose. Auditor; I. E. BIRCHARD, Jessup. ar Lincoln papers are busy quoting items against McClellan from southern reb el sheets, and their Canadian sympathises ere. Poor authority, but the best, they can find. &if The Lincoln organs say we cannot make peace with union because Jeff Davis is opposed to-it I is Jeff their last hope and argument ? We expect to elect Me l Clellan, restore Peace and Union, in , spitl of Lincoln, Davis and the Devil. fge'The Montrose Republican charges that '.Geo. H. Pendleton boasts that he never voted a man or a dollar to the ar my, and swears that he never will. That sin nder Is wicked and wilful. The man who says thus of our nominee for Vice President may be quite ignorant, yet he knew he uttered a falsehood. The record of Congress proves the Republican editor to have stated a groundless lie. Read the McClellan " Writchwxwds for Patriots," on first page, and then the letter of acceptance on inside, and see how well they agree. His record is very clear, consistent, and right. Union men of all parties endorse it, and they will unite toelect him, in spite of the howl ing of sholition or other disunion dema gogues. iar The Lincoln men see'tbat shoddy is to be beaten . unless some Democrats can be hired to abandon McClellan. For this purpose they are trying to get ultra peace men to start a new candidate so as to help old Abe. If peacemen cant to elect Lincoln and secure four more years of drafts and taxes, shoddy will pay them well for tbeir.aid_ lint it— le a few men or editors who want to divide the Union, and therefore prefer Lincoln to McClellan, may threaten or try to get up a SO,called ... 4 peace" candidate, for Lincoln's benkr, but the people who really want PEACE and UNION will help us elect Little Mae, the People's Man. Mr 'That wise and candid old , journal the National Intelligencer, which has nev er acted with the Democracy, says ; " Our only hope of Union and peace, as also of a return to the normal sway of the laws within the loyal States, is therefore reposed in a chance of men in the admin istration of the Government, to be fol lowed by a change of policy in the- man agement of affairs, and, so thinking, we shall not hesitate to give our cordial sup port-to the nomination of General Mc- Gen. lifcClellan in 1862 On the 9th of May, 1862, the House of Representatives at, Washington, compos ed of a large majority of radicals, on bear ing of the battle of Williamsburg, passed the following resolutions unanimously: : Resolved, That it is with feelings of devout gratitude to Almighty God that the louse of Rep's from timeto time hear of the triumphs of the Union Army in the great struggle for the supremacy of the Constitution and integrity of the Union. Resolved, That we receive with pro found satisfaction intelligence of the re cent,victories achieved by the armies of the Potomac, associated from their local ities' with those of the Revolution, and that the sincere thanks of this House are hereby tendered to . .Major-General GEO. B. IIicCLELLAIsT, for the display of those high milittiry qualities which secure im portant results wjth but little sacrifice of human life. No. other General has ever -received such an approval from Congress. What - a Republican Journal Says. The Albany Statesman, a leading and influential Ilepublican paper,says : "In nominating General McClellan the Democrats place their very strongest man in the field—a man who will pall a larger army vote than any Democrat who could possibly be put in nomination. The abuse which IllcClellan met with in teeCcinven• -tion fronr Mr. Harris of hhurland, and other trahoravof the same stamp, cannot fail to blibeneficial to the nonnnee with the better portion of the American poeple4 "The Democrats having ;nominated Geo. McClellan, forces the Repnbricani .to do one of two things—withdraw M r K Lincoln from the canvass, or else see the: , Democrats 'carry the electiOnl37 an over whelnainiptajority. - As Mr. Lined) can not unite the perty,te mug be defeated." &Tub abandoidng Abraluun. The Union pepublientredre fia leaving old Abe,' andi:coniug pier to the true Union esmdidikte. - The Now lindon : Chronicle , a staunch old Conneoti'dut Republican organ, took doain old Abe's name after his Niagara letter ; it now runs up the McClellan dug. .SEPT. 15, 1864. The Suffolk Herald takes the same The T Westchester County (N. Y.) Mon. itoi.;: always Republican,' says: - truth is, the administratioworAbrabail „Lincoln is alameatable now goes for Mcgellap r - t ,; L, Ron. Joseph Bailey,Congtessman from the York District has,supportekoid itbei firmly in con g ress, but he now eutaloose and declares for McClellan. Many other cases, of journals and infla= ential citizens are reparted - astaking`the , same.course ; but ,not • one man is going over to old Abe. , Shoddy's days are counted. t Oar nominee for Vice President is a dbltingniihed lawyer of Cincinnati, and a . ' Denioarsit of tried integrity., He wasyborn in Cincinnati; in July, 1826. and is therefore' thirty-eight years of, age. Ho was a prbininerit member, of tbe Ohio State Senate dining the years of ,1854" '55, and 'was elected - to Congress iu 1858, from the Ist district; and has , been reOlee ted each term since. He occhpies a posi tion on the committee of ways mid means in the present Congress. Mr. Pendleton is a man of distinguished ability, and has proved himself on many critical occasions, to be made of just such material as the party needs in this dark hour of our country's, history. Mr. Pendleton ocenpd from the first, a prominent,position in the House. He was always placed on important commit tees, and discharged the duties pertaining to such positions with rare.ability and fi delity. He is a man of pleasing appear ance and a. fluent speaker. His popularity is proverbial among his political opponents as well as among those attached to his own party. His record during the war is as clean whip best friends could wish for. Though sympathizing with those who are for a Union Peace, he has always voted for bills to supply the army and navy, and for the support of the Government, but, ready. at any Moment to advocate pacific measures when they promised to result in the restoration of the Union.. Aside from his ability; Mr. Pendleton's personal pop ularity throughout the West will be a tower of strength in the canvas. His nom ination is eminently one fit - to be made. GEN. MCLELLAN'S ACCEPTANCE, lon-inur with profound satisfaction and enthusiasic applause Gen eral McClellan's letter, accepting his nomi nation by the Democratic party for Pre sident of the United States. The com mittee, headed by Governor Seymour, which was deputed by the Chicago Con vention to inform the general of its ac tion, met at the St. Nicholas Hotel Thurs day noon, proceeded to the general's resid ence, and their discharged their duty.— The general's reply to the committee was returned to there cbairmpn that evening. His letter is brief; but every sentence is compact with an earnest, high-toned, aid devout patriotism, characteristic of the man. Its explicit, square, unflinching enunciation of the principles which should guide the government in restoring Union, peace, and liberty to the nation, will com mand the admiration, as well as the assent, of every honest and loyal man. There is no place for any northern man to stand, except on MeCLELLAm's plat form, or on •the platforms of the abolition disunionists :of the Nottb, or the rebellious secessionists of the South. Not a syllable of its language is dubious, ambiguous, or doublefaced. It is open, clear, ringing, and stands four square to all the winds of treason, blow t hey from the. White House, or from Richmond. " The Union at all hazards :" These live words should strike the liars dumb who have defamed him and his party with the change of consenting to a disunion peace--the Union for which his gallant cotnrades have periled their 'lives,, and Whose-blood shall not. have been spilled in vain. No more effusion of blood if the rebels will, for, . " Unio nis tha one cona• ,lion of Peace. re oak no other." "Love and reverence for the Union, the Conatitution,the Lases, an el theFlog.'!utter.` ed in every .breatb, while the trators who " shrieked, Tear down thetlaunting lie" hoarsen their throats with calumny against him whose patriotism is of such sort as they never conceived. The Constitution and laws his " rule of duty;" to maintain the.supremaey,ef law over President, army, and people ;and to reassert the unity and power of the na tion among the nations of the earth, his avowed purpose ; a devout reliance upon the. AlnuOty 'for sovereign aid "to rater: ,Unron, and Peace to a suffering pee k . pk, ,to eetablish and, guard thiir liberties and right," the spirit which he brings to the sublime work.' - • . • The people b.svelemg, Waited for the ns tion7s-leader,—its 'dehverer.' They hear his voice to-day. r They ail, follow Aim to ' - - victory! -;-John Morgan; de noted guerrilla leader, Las defeated: un,d - Idlled in ;an engagementatilreenville ; l'enn. probably petting o$ 'Upon another 'raid and met Wide the earl part., .of his expedition. The Richmond papers eau :firm the nested his death, sigi'-itektiosi edge the defeat of hliforeee: Ron. Geo. H. Pendleton. Ofri :ler o "VW t neral lllealellaz • New YORK, Sept. 8, 104. Meier General George B. .11feekilan: . • Sig: Thwundersigned were iipptinted a committee by the National "%moored° Convention, which met at Chicago on the 29th of August, to advise yottof_your un animous nomination by that body as the imndidati - oftlie Deinecratic" party for President of tbe United States, and also to present, to,yoti a copy of the, proceed ings and resolutions of the'convention. i.2-It - gives us great -pleasure - to- perform this dutyi,und 'to act as t bw:represeu tatives of that convention whose delibera tions were 'Witnessed - by a viat-Misenibl age of citizens; ivhollitentled and "Watch ed its proceedings with intense interest.—' Be assured that those for , whom we speak iveidanimated with the mosteamest, voted, and prayerful desire for the salia= tion of the Anierican Union and the in.e servation'Of the Constitution of the Uni ted States, Ilia that the accOmplishinent Of these objeetti Was the'guiding and im pelling niOdie in - eiiery mind. ' And, we may be permitted to add that tlieir purpose to maintain - that Union is Manifested in their selection as their Can didate of one whose life has been devoted tOits cause ; while it is : their earnest hope and confident'belief that your election will restore to one country Union, peace, and eonailtational ' . We have the honor tnte; ' Yonr obedient servants, HORATIO SEYMOUR, (and others. Gen. McClellan's Letter of Acceptance. ()BINGE, New Jersey, Z• September 8, 1864. GEN-minim?: I have the honor to:ac knowledge the receipt of your letter in forming me of my nomination by the Democratic National Convention, recent ly assembled at Chicago, as their cand'- date for President of the United States. It is unnecessary forme to say to you that this nomination comes to me un sought. - lam happy to know that when the nomination was made the record of my public life was kept in-view. The effect of long and varied service in the army during war and peace has been to strengthen and make indelible in my mind and heart the love and reverence for the Union, Constitution, Laws, and Flag of our country, impressed upon me in ear ly youth. These feelings have thus far guided the course of my life, and must continue to do so to its end. The existence of more than one gov ernment over the region which once owned our flag is incompatible with the peace, the power, and the happiness of the people. . • The preservation of onr Union was the sole avowed object for which the,wat was commenced. It should have been .con ducted for that object only, and in actor= dance with those principles which I took occasion to declare when in active service. Thus conducted, the work of reconcili ation would have been easy, and we might have reaped the benefits of our ma ny victories on land and sea. The Union was originally formed by the exercise of a spirit of conciliation and compromise. To restore and preserve it, the same spirit must prevail in our coun cils, and in the hearts of the people. The re-establishment of the Union in all its integrity is, and must continue to be, the indispensable condition in any set tlement. So soon as it is clear, or even probable, that our present adversaries are ready for peace, upon the basis of the Un ion, we should exhaust all the resources of statesmanship practiced by civilized na tions, and taught by the traditions of the American people, consistent with the hon or and interests of the country, to secure such peace, re-establtsh the Union, and guarantee for the future the ,constitution al right of every state. The union is the one condition of peace—we - asbno more. Let me add what I doubt not was, al though ,unexpressed, the sentiment of the convention, as it is of the people they represent, that when any one state is wil ling to return to the Union, it should be received at once, with a full guarantee of all its constitutional rights. If a frank, earnest, and persistent effort to obtain these objects should fail, the re sponsibility for ulterior consequences will :all upon those who remain In arms a gainst the Union. But the Union must bepreserved at all hazards. I could not look in the face my gallant comrades of the army and navy, who have survived so-mdnybattles,- and tell them that - their labors and the sacrifice of so many of our slain and 'weifeded ' breth ren had been in vain r.that we bad 'aban doned that Union for which we have tin often periled our lives. A vast majority of our people, Whether in the army and navy or at home, would, as I would, hail with unbounded joy the permanent restorationof:peace on the ba sis of the Union under the Constitution, without the effusion of another drop of blood. But no peace can beliermanent .without Union. : • As to the other.subjects presented in the resolutions of the Convention, I need only-say that I should seek, in the Consti tution of the United States-and the laws framed in accordance therewith, the rule din) , duty, and the limitations of execu- • tive power ; endeavor to restore economy in public expenditure, re-establish the-su premacrof law, - and, by -the operation of a more vigorous nationality, resume our 'commanding position among the nations of the earth. -.':The omsdition of our finances, the de preciation of idle paper money, and the burdens thereby imposed ow ziaboriand capital, show the necesiity of a retunkb of citizens- and the rights of east's, an the binding authority of lavr °Vet PrOa dent, army, and people, 03, sahjecta not lent, vital importance, in waethan peace., Believing that the views here expr , - 'ed are these of the, convention and ple you represent, I accept the nomina tion. _ I realize the weight of the responsibili ty to be.bornc should_ the people ratify your choice. , -. f.. •• Conscious of my own weakness, I can giggle - eV fervently the guidance of-the Rulerof:oi naivete, and, relying on.his all powerful aid, do my. best to :; res,tore .suffering' Union. and peace to.a .sutig people, and to establish and gtiUrd; their liberties and iigh ts. . , I, ani, ge_ntlemen,veg rpipectfally,,, YOur"Oliedieot seevant, • . ' GEORGE B. VoCt.mie,ir,. Hon. 11-on*x ~si.Viktotras , and othera t Cominittee. ' , , . The Chicago Fllittform. Resolved, That in the• future, as in 'the pest; "We %4iit . adhere with unswerving' fidelity to the Union, under the Constitm , tion, as the only solie •Vgdation of ant strength, security and 'happiness'us a peo ple, and as Elie framework of the Govern ment, equally conducive to the welliirc and piliSperity of -all the States," roth Northern and Southern. Resolved That this Convention does explicitly deelate as the aeon of the American people, that after four years of failure to' restore the Union by the ex periment of war, during which, under the pretence of military necessity or the war power, higher than the Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, - and public liberty and private right alike trodden' down and the material prosperity of the country essen tially. impaired ; that justice, humanity, liberty, and the public welfare demand that immediate efforts be for the cessation of hostilities, with a view to the ultimate Convention of all the States or other peaceable means to the end that at the earliest practicable moment peace may he restored on the basis of they Federal Union of the States. •Resolved; That the direct interference of the military authority of the United States in the recent' elections held in Ken tucky, Maryland, Missouri and Delaware was a shameful violation of the Constitu tion, and a repetition of such acts in the approaching elections will be held as- re volutionary, and will be resisted with all the means and power under our control., Resolved, That the aim and object of the Democratio party is to preserve the Federal Union and the rights of the States unimpaired, and they hereby de clare that they consider the administrative usurpation of extraordinary and danger ous powers not granted by the Constitu tion, the subversion of civil by military law in the States not in insurrection, the arbitrary military arrest and imprison ment, trial and sentence of American citizens i 4 States where civil law exists hi full force, the suppression of freedom of speech and of the press, the denial of the right of asylum, the Opt% and avowed disregard of State rights, the employ ment of unusual test oaths and the inter ference with and denial of the right of the people to bear arms, as calculated to pre vent the restoration of the Union and the perpetuation of a Government deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed. - Resolved, That the shameful disregard by the Administration ofits duty in respect to our fellow citizens who now and long have been prisoners of war, and arenow in a suffering condition, deserves the severest reprobation on the score.alike of public policy and common humanity. Resolved, That the sympathy of the Democratic party is heartily and earnestly extended to the soldiery of our army, who are, and have been, in the field under the flag of our country, and in the event of our attaining power;•they will reeeiVe all care, protection, regard, and kindness that the brave soldiers of the Republic have so nobly earned. In addition to the above, the Democracy of Susquehanna county unanimously Resolved, That, ,as in the past, we are unequivocally attached to the maintennnee of the Constitution and the preservation of the Union, and that we most earnestly desire an early restoration of peace, har mony, and prow/rich. throughout our country ; and, believing, as we do,,that these endscwill "be best accomplished by the election of the , ticket recently seleCted at Chiclge, we pledge it our united 'and earnest support, and we respectfully intite all: irrespective of former party affiliations, to join us in a common - effort to save our Country from impending ruin. Resolved, That, we hail the nomination of Maj.;Gen. Gotion B. Mcfituttati - for the office ofPresident ofthelJnited States, with unfeigned pleasure, belitiving hiin to be not only fully competent 'and iverthy, but that he the first, choice of the' great majority of the Democratic party, and'of a large proportion 45f" those formerly con nected with-other- Pieties ; and that we will contribute our-utmost efforts towards his triumphant election. A• Resolved, That the defeat, by the Re publican majority in Congress, of the prop. osition.offered by Hon. Charles Denison, the Re p resentative of this district, in fever of a liberal - increase Of. the - soldiere,,pay, such - as shouldhe cominensurate_with the necessaryincreaso of , pay , to laborers in the peatefnl avocations of life, was unjtist ito , our fellow-citizens who have imperilled their lives:upon the battle-field at thelvalt "iif their country; spathat' it- is further .evidenie tending to ;prove the utter hyPirrily.Of the•clitim put forth by the •RePublictin loam; thatthey are.-exclu sively the "Soldiers' Felinity." • :' , MeCLELL AN MAss MEETING at Ittantro.oo;, LL Satur ay, , Sept.. at OHO oltlOCkt RON. C, W. CARRIGAN, OF PX11141:1 O ELPIIIIA, 11011. l ERNS r_VNISON OF LUZERNE C OUNTY,: I RON. 11 . 11111 IL JIM, allmiL Ll9l ESL Have accepted- invitations to addreful the meeting.- Other good speakers • will be present.' THE ITARFORD 'BRASS 'BAND, will enliven the occasion with Union music. LET LTHE PEOPLE RALLY • for McCLELLAN and LIBERTY: Everybody is invited• to attend: Obeying tbreelefe. Order!. A prominent Republican of - York coun ty, a professed Christian occupying an of ficial standing in a church, tore the Amer ican flag from his building air] trmilpled it under foot on Thursday, becaiise it had been put oat fiolu a portion of his premi: ses leased by a conservative gentleman in honor of the nomination of Gen, McClel lan, the,soldin; the statesman, "and the Christian pAriot. - The fanatic is only worthy of notice as illustrating the evil teachings of the radicals. He but Obeyed their passionate appeal to "Tear down the flaunting lie."—Portland Argus. The..tackdet , patriot.here described val ues the national . flag as Wendell Phillips values the Union—a thing to be,trampled under foot or landed to the skies, itmord ing as it does or does not serve :the uses of abolitioh. When General McClellan is elected, and the glorious emblem of the Union floats over the land and over the sea without a single star erased, we stir pose this precious patriot and his like will all join in reviving and singing the favor ite song of the Tribune, ".Tear down the flaunting lie," &o, An /*Mon War. • Thurlow Weed, Fight band man of'Sec retnry Seward, in 'a recent letter t.ty the Albany Evening Journal, is thus forced to confess that'the war, comineficed . for the restoration of the Wain, was soon per verted into of for abolition. Mir. R eed bays: " We have been involved for nearly four years in an abolition war. The influ ences that drove North Carolina and Ten nessee from the Union, extorted an eman cipation proclamation, practical and effec tive in giving union, strength' and deter mination to the rebellion —a proclamation to which the first slave has not owed his freedom, for it is only Operative where our armies go, and without it the armies would have gone faster and farther. -And let it be remembered that all the while these abolition demagogues and fanatics were aiding both rebellion and.Blavery."l— north united, and ftne from the inett bus of, abolitionism, would'hthiel' -crushed rebellion, and with it the cursed institu tion that struck at the south to divide the Union. If the South avert.' the punish ment dud to' the great national" Crime of rebellion they will owe their nsimpe to the insanity of abolitionkits.' It is "thus that antagonisms Work...together." 'Which Tells the Truth ? In his Auburn speech, a feW days'ago", Secretary Seward OulthAt 'tlio,et *mild be no draft, aid dig ,reacbed five thousand per:day, and were' ampy ent to keep up tbe,etrength of our armies and enable them' t,o:,ontintie active opera. tines. Secretary Stanton, on the othel band, tells altWbom it, May, concern; in 'a " war gazette," that "dra ft ing will lake place at once, beginning with those local ities which bairn been backward in furnish ing volunteers." - Nc4,"iirh'ii are we to be- Helm &viral& or Strititont:Bothfeturnot' be telling the truth. ' —A leading Igaila r chuseite Rephblican who has been travling for, two vreelts thrgugh the NOrthwest, and has railde 'several speectealor Old Abe,ttriived'iiile this evening,ideciarinethUtbalilielDeni acratip and - Republican - tnaitieli in 'the West wer e all 4ir and that ho would beelebted. Why,l7'saysi be, "the prairie,cbickeis Are all 'lunging for Little Mac." 116 asseried:thh i t'lni "was geiog .East to insist upon Oio o f Lincoln and the nomination o(some other `candidate.-Chicsio'bispatch. and all feel ing 14nnoln and all who? have ;been olosely.tdinticted with hint is.sulnteps,e,ic 04fedgor,tbet Isaac N. A s rnold, - resent..:ineruber s of Cangrewfrea. that„mty, ,11011, a devotia personal` fiiii4.44 the Preeident; ' has remt oomPelled f 9 rW 4 C.PIONO.PPiI#9* to withdraw ' fr om - the awry». ,• , -: ` ,l "nidiffilf~lintillidlrbir" - „ _Preserved." . 2 50 stud Geti.-Jackonn tilty !George B. RepWien ttid . George ll.',Pendleton ; and scv,sen:thiPlatforin adopted by the Demoeratfd NiitiOnal - Convention. Use every inefiiis consistent with- tbe honor anct.intediity otihe governmetit toinduce the insurgent- States' to return` to their allegiance to the Constitution and stay theriftirther effusion of blood--ettendto them thc c olirst i lir . a,uch.,of, peace,—assere item that-them. rightiaid -.domestic. in stitutions shall not be interfered with, but shitlMt'-'tt - eriititiloiisly • respectediniitif them to irieet`ifs;iti•poilventioril, for the purpose of: reconciling tirir difft;rdeetc, as did the fathers of the.:Repoblic in 1798, and give them-ell reasonable .guaranteisi. OStat sovereignty and individo4Mghla; tvtthin tlie"Union; but let it le‘ilistinctly, im4rstood;= - Sach is the sentiment of the Democratic Platform and: such the langu age of our standard bearers, Ildclellturaad Pendleton ; 4- I ,',rizu tTNION MUST AND Baia& ns PBESERVErri. ggrProvo4t 31ars41, General Fry tins decided that• melt irhe - paid commutation under the draft ofrXmc,4B6242tweltlrbTe to the draft which lakes - placwtitv Septem ber, to fill the liabilities of the sub-dis tricts under - tbe'callS' nude - up to the preseit time - , kid the cliittilt provpit shale are ordered' to , place m'tbe 'wheel for the draft the name of alt Such parties. —The Portsmouth (O.) , Times describes the feeling thrphgh the State and through out the !Titbit); when it says : ' E i ghavit recently traveled "through a largtilprtioit of Sciota county, ,, ,nad were surprised to witness the gratifylng change that is takiiii; place_ in almost evety local ity. There is numistaVable evidepee , of one-of the greateit revolutions in public) sentiment ever known. 4 .wnr e es of men' in every neighborhood, 4 who have heretotbre been the most in vetemte.oppotteuts and denonnccra,of the Democracy, now openly declare their in tention to oppose Lincoln and cast their support tbr the nominee of the Chicago Convention. The uti . zoyalprity,of, the present Administrdti r ou is hourly' indreas t ng. —An agent sent out by the authorities of Jersey City to recruit in the Rebels states, from Beaufort. writes to Major Cleveland that recruiting agents are far more numerous than able bodied blacks desirous of going into service. —There was a great meeting in New York on Thursday evening, to ratify the nominations' made by the Convention at Chicago. It was one of the largest ever held in New York city. •—.SN'e defy any shoddy to show that oar candidate for the Vice Presidency ever wrote or spoke for peace upon the basis of teisaration. Give-us the date and place, or; hush up your.demagogue assertions. —The Chicago Evening Journal, an Abolition sheet, says the registered Hotel arrivals at the Chicago Convention, from Saturday noon up to Tuesday. night, were 24,016. —The editor of a Western paper, is in closer. His printer boys having all gone to fight' the Indians, he enlisted half a dOzen of the best looking girls in town, and is now traidihg a corps of compositors not subject to the draft. Doyle Brown was arrested at Eleventh.and Filbert, Phila., Monday morning for Cheering in the open streets for Valandigham. He was held in $lOOO bail to keep the peace, by Alderman • Jones. r flat the Lincolniqs' mean.bitidi 6sii, man and Abe last dollar, is, that they All be the last to go to the front,and that they intend to atttaltho s last dollptfrothilie treasury: _ _ . -7 PPg8. 1 414 1 . 0 ./E 3 Presof.. l !iT•lo.z..l9rgftni recent'l'y indtt ged in the twde'reas hope that the stbanterrA fel ic, wi ti 'Governor Suptiont . and theiltAr..ll4l4&m!Xii the Chicago Convention on bottrd o would go to thjbottom of the lake. ' The next day two corms of that .paper went to the bot tom of the building in' quick= time and tumbled into pi. —For the first time in all. its ,history, the Louisville Journal hoists the, nominee of the Democrueyt The .old Wifig.and Union partyciflientuekyto solid fiii-Me- Clellan, and_Lincula has nosapporters.— The Bratni&te 'Union party,--mded at the polls lastlear by 'Lineolft ;bilyedetti„ will ytitsi solid McCiellaq ojuid the Lnion. Ogg/ Thp ggleation ,in.,VerAiont-for Con gressmen, 41i., resulted in a Republican ineeestOts:tritifill: imdbrity- is.said to be 20,000. , Two yam ago when Am gressmen‘were chosen, the majority 'was over 20,900., - MYS:TEBY.—"Mother," said a little fel low four years °le." if•a man is a mister, ain't a woman a mysteryili The greatest mystfry,lulle world to._us, is that any Itty.lauP BAeratui but Herrick 'Al!eclil)fieldr9Sledal. - • - .lt - lralres dyspepsia,: etrengthens._. werit : , stemaclar. saves your teeth from decaying saves one half the quantity of shortening, besidelit. tikes se little_of :the Saleratua to do its work. •Th• it—ltostaterclianissell . ~- Matt'''idaoture Of Woolen. , • ..• Goods. absier to immeniallitintries Thin we iota make up Wool Into cloth If tirdaeat hereafter, we have' to ertY P.: There ts the: wooruhen inguirein affer before neat sortdr."-Asztitt Verrone want thelritoods for the eoeteftWlliter. tre thought bgut s tctpotuy thear of this halo precut di sappOlutment:- - • Ao,ttle,tacftnAlste:welft/tdrt:thirscasonytorkAatt satbstaitorily as possible; and make additionsto oar machinery and Linares. so as to be able tb do elrtMithr bfferinfinotricf year.. :We shaft - ail natal ftiWrectlen and Watt cloth ha castanets &Magee 0.11. • - MAUI •1. ,STARt, • • 2 ',Bradford co: ticp.'ls, 186 L . • • , .• WPIX,4,-4.k4AT