oiPlyntrast enuicra A. J. GERRITSON, Editor. DIONTIIOSE, TUESDAY, AUG. 6, 1867. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET JUDGE OF SUPREME, COURT, HOt GEORGE SHARSWOOD, rnt LAnnrenu. Comity Committee. . - The Democratio County Committee willl meet at Boon's Hotel, in Montrose, on Monday, Aug. 12th, at two o'clock, P. Members :—Wm. Donlin, O.L. Carpen ter, C. Donley, J4mes Hewitt, 0. S. Bee be, Edward Burke, E. Oram, B. Ayres, M. K. Tingley, A. B. Griffis, C. B. Jack son, T. G. Williams, J. Smiley, I. Reck how, 0. Trowbridge, A. Carpenter, J. M. Myers, Richard Martin, 0. 11. Perry, John Smith, A. J. Titus, Jonathan Ross; G. W. Tiffany, D. Brewster, Otis Ross, 0. W. Tennant, J. Hayden, J. M. Till man, J. Logan, Matthew Hays, W.. B. Handrick, Gaylord Curtis, L. S. Aldrich. D. BRE WSTER, Chairman. " Election" in Tennessee. • ,The Radicals have carried Tennessee. Brownlow, famed for his billingsgate and blackguardism, has been re-elected Gov ernor,,, not by ti majority of the popular vote, - but by a combination of negrocs and squatters who were permitted to de cide the contest, while thousands of free white citizens were refused registration and kept from voting. Brownlow is a good type of progressive radicalism. Al though not born in New England, he is to-day a true exemplar of her ideas, and belongs to the same school in 4hicli Sum ner, Stevens and Williams were tutored. In 1854, when be was a pro-slavery fan atic, he thus spoke : "Fellow-citizens, I beard the particu lars of your burning that negro the other day, and think you served him exactly right; and I came along this morning by the smoking remains of one of those breatVing holes of bell, and I think you served him right, too.. Whenever you get to burning negr6es or dram:shops, count me one; you." In 1866, when he became a member of the Radical party, he said " he would ra ther go to bell With a loyal negro tliuu to Heaven with a white rebel." This is the man the Radicals have again made Gov ernor of Tennessee. He was the candi date of the same organization that wants to place Judge Williams upon the Su preme Bench of Pennsylvania. Can a par ty' be trusted that is willing to recognize as its leader such a degraded and infa mous creature as Parson Brownlow ? Absurd and Criminal," The Pittsburgh Clac;iicle, a Radical daily paper, is unable to submit to all the vile utterances of its party. It quotes from the address of F. Jordan, chairman of the State committee, the following shameless sentence: "The Democratic party, with Judge Sharswood for its leader, and with Free Trade, State Rights and Secession on its banner, is again marshaling its hosts, and now summoning us to the field of politi cal combat on these same issues." Disgusted - with such infamous false lamas That forth by its own friends, the Chronicle says : "It is insulting to the intelligence of the people of Pennsylvania to say that in this judicial contest the Democratic par ty has secession inscribed on its banner. We warmly support Judge Williams in this contest, but we will not even by si lence lend_our endorsement to so utterly a shameful and unwarrantetLa charge as the one above quoted. It, is sign of bad party demoralization when such means are adopted to achieve success. kis ut terly wrong and utterly unnecessary.— Such things recoil against the men who practice them, and cloud even an honest cause with suspicion. It is both absurd and criminal to say that the right of se cession will be an issue in the approach ing election. The Republican party can go into a canvass upon its own merits and upon actual issues, without compromising itself by these shabby devices, and, we trust no respectable journal in the party will lend itself to such,a style of warfare. It is a veritable Mexican business." " Foreign" News. A. Radical daily has the following news Item under the head of "foreign news:" "The - Register of births and deaths at New Orleat4 was yesterday removed by Governor Vlanders. Stephen A. Tarre, a coluted veteraoif.lBl2, was appointed in kis place.". • Although the classification may be a printer's error,. yetit is_ not •fo far from truth. Under the theories and legislation of, the Radicals, the former State of Lou. iaiana is now`" conquered 'territory." is, therefore, a foreign _province,' and news from there may' be eleseed with feii= Op news. gar President Johnson, in his late ve to message, declared that the - Conetitti tion is the supreme law oral° litid,North and South. If that be true, answers Thad Stevens, " then all we ,Lave done here is rani: usurpation." This is the rd al point of the controversy. 2gr Radical journals of Ohio aro appre hending the loss of that State to Radi calism and the gain of Democratic mem bers of the Legislature in sufficent num bers to give the Democrats a major,ity,on joint ballot. We hope their apprehensions are well founded, and that they will surely be realized. An Open Avowal. The extra session of the Rump Con gress was appropriately wound up by a series of serenades got, up expressly to al low leading radica , s to let off a little su perfluous gas. Old Thad was first seren aded, but, being too feeble to speak, his special pet and toady clerk, McPherson, spoke for him. Colfax got off a rambling speech, full of high sounding platitudes. Both these speeches were extremely ad vanCed in their theories ; they were not quite so clear and .explicit as was that of Senator-Yates. In reply to the serena ders be said : "The Republican patty has declared that equal suffrage shall exist in the Dis trict of Columbia and the Southern States. Now they must do for the North as they have dodo for the South, and impose suf frage upon evey State. Thus it is that Republicans must accept the situation." That is what we call putting the mat ter' in plain English. No one can fail to understand such language, and no conser vative Republican can have the'slightest excuse for mistaking the intentions of the leaders of the Republican party. They are fully resolved to force negro suffrage and negro equality upon all the States, Penn's included. The only way this can be prevented is by defeating them at the ballot-box. The issue is directly involved in the present campaign. A Good One. The Democratic State Convention of lowa, at its recent session, passed among others the following resolution : "Resolved, That the maintenance invio late of the rights , of the States, and espe cially the right of each State to order and control its own domestic institutions ac cording to its judgment, exclusively, is es sential to that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance of our polit ical fabric depends." Immediately upon the promulgation of the platform, the above resolution was vi olently attacked by the Radical press. It was characterized as embodying the very cacmooo of clooooeqon, alsv