ENE= OF TUE .101friE104 2 J tRILIBNAL.I .4.'11 7 5 par vinare, payable in advance— Tan at on if net paid in advance, 1 terms will be strictly' e ;hered to hereafter. . TO CLUBS: opies to oneaddr ,,, . advancej::...'. Et, 00 Vire'" LS 00 tiS 001 r`', 2rt r, s u n bacci.. tfons, mastiwitirlably be paid in advance. JorcsAL will be furnished to earrierp and others (I(I per 100 copies ?. cash. oil . r el e r ! , vaten and School Teachers will be furnished l :the Jonas.A.t. at $1 50 in advance, or .$1 75 if paid . itain the year--over 0118 11111 rates. • Italics . of .A.drertiiiickgi . • in-3 lines, incinding date, one insertion, 15 cts.; and 1,1 gent insertions ta eta. ChM square of 7 lines, and (34 3 for I or?. insertiona4l : 3 ineettions $1 25; insertions, • - 25 cents per. scinure'. Larger rroportioil t • . • VONT/13. TIIIIR6. MK. • TWELCE; •$2 00 •$3 50 - $5 00i euory wail 0ver3,.... 4 00 1, on . 0 0 .:-.so,;:quari., or 141ines, 600 . 10:00 '•10 00 •! 21.. a 00 '. 14 . 00 - .20 00 " as es " °O la 00 -24 00 4 , • .10rce column 1 1 0 0 8 4 01 ' • g . 5 00 3 or- Luger space as - per agreement.' or Nine w!rds are coanted'as a line us advertising - tors' Notices and Diswilutions, 9 and 3 ti 50.. . Ai:ministration Notices and-Dissolutions 6 times, $3. ' - - PHILADELPHIA. - -nEIIIOVE D.—D. •••FOCHT 6 rocers And Commirwloo Alerchnnta; have • re .v,d their phiee,'of butdrimi to Nops. 143 nasa l T 4 s , No+da 3d street,' Phiindirdphia, (the. r. re ! formerly occupied by John Brock, Sous k Co .) whore . they would be plettNed. to tee their. old - • Julyl.s. . . . wENDEILOTIC T./I.YI. OR 451:: BROWN .AETTSTS . AND - ..PHOTOGRAPHERS,' - doe. 912 laud 01.4 Cheau;tat Mireet, • --• rECELADELI!E;Lik. . 1) . 3 _ 131.'44. • • . 53-ly -- -.-- I c... maker and Jeweller; No. 1S ci ',. North SECOND Street, corner of (Zuni , ' %. ry, PHILADELPIIIA. An wortment 11 - ATOMS,' JEWELRY, SILVER and -PLATED ItARE • - cen:e-tantly• on - hand., pnitable for 'HOLIDAY e?,F.SENTS. rir Repairing of 11'atches and Jewelry .. c .r ydy attended to. . - Wee lr. '64.51-10m- . • DANIEL M.. *.K.A.RC.IIIER, - • . . . . - (itylfablntt Wate Rooms and Vanufacto6• 3 - 236 SOUTH . SECOND STREET,. • • . • - N. fl. --Pen=Ons going to the City will Lind it to their s irantnge to call and examine the stock. : lI.M. K.- Ve i A 11q15.: Elnl7ll. B. PKA B. lIC li LET :WM. G. 'II.A.RGIS 85 Co.. . • 11A;StF . AcEiliEt,..S OF Tarni.beet tindipcnicretti" ?taint'', Glass and iturnitigund Lubricating Oils, . . ''Bruzatirinta nj,i ia, - rO. Vitt SOUTH SHCOI4D ST., TELILADELTIIIA sept.lG,.. • •• -. 37.6ni . • J. STEWART DEPIff 253 S. S._tc - ond Spruce, • •PIIILADELPIIIA, • - . For con.tantly - on hand a lame asacirtmeni of- CAR FS. MAT'fINOS: - DRUGGETS. OIL CLOTHS. WlN ik,w sii ADES. RUGS, MATS., PIANO. MELODEON TABLE COVERS. &c o to- which • lu.s would in wagon. of Lhuue who-may desire anything:in auc.' ;,. SepL IG; .. . . . . . . . . . %.,..26: , ::•:_4ig:i_1( IR , , .: ~ i , ' .: ~. BF.ps% FEATHERS; 3IATTRASSES, :BLANKETS, TED tiVU — S. I Ste., &e.. . • ' . - • .. • l'i , " i I.A.:KEIV:i CELEBRATED SPRING BED.- 1 -- .ry article in the Beddiner line at the lowest market AMOS lIILLBORNE, Philadelphia: 3-1 -am 4C5 J; T:„PELAGROINI, N 0.37 50,41 h Second liderc . c.t.iiove Chent • nut, PLIJILADELPIRJA. • . CARPETLNGS I CARPETINGSI I flaring received by late arrivals. all the newest and J.; .4 attractive styles or Carpetings. I am• prepared to ,ttil at the lowest Trices„wholesale and reit/11,10bn soies'Englisli Tiniest*. Brussels ;'Lovell t Hart lord Three-ply, and -Extra Super Ingrain Carpets. elin a large aSQortment of medium and low - •priced '4_,7p•tilitts.• Window Shades.. Oil J. T. DELACROIX. No; South Second Street, be ..en Chest nut and -Market, - ' • - .haunt la. • • .kit-itin HATHAWAY,-- • & LEACH STEARNS : Lll7 .Arch st., •Philad4:, DEALERS 114 * -• : Engines,- Machlefry, and: Railroad f;inn plicS:and Agents for the Mate of l!a-. *chinions , Tools. Manufactured by the Arcs; • Fork *tennis Engine • • • Woikg.. • July S. . • , .27-3 M • -• OR COMFORT, 00 - NVENLENCE, ECON OMY-A:ND DURABILITY,` USE NOMSON'S LONDON KITCHENER EVTIOPEAN PANGE THE liE.s'r RANGE EVER' INVENTED SOLIIIST Ac. , THONSOrk, N0.:209 N:Secorol'Sr.; PhilidelphiO, • . lion Founders - and niacin rOrs of ' StOTex..ilenters.Tinned and En- „ 'Wares, &c., &c. AnpA lit, %IS. • . • 31-Gm • P.ANIK:S,.ThININIOI-ZE C 0.:.; su,cetvoit to A.-11. DAVIS CO., 3forinfacturers,of Suitable for . . ei,o4.Locks,li. R. .'racks & Depots, m - .1183 , , and Live sock. A.so all the va. deseriptiotis . .- of , ornittart S. Per tble IR I n t f o rna inters and Pineal 15th S.• a>sd Pena kftvenue,..Phlla. • • : - 1 • TT fVf; Sre - tvcsa, ”°"'". • 'C • L . . ,'alas. LADIES. - FANCY: FURS.! . . -c, ' JOIIN FARRTRA'S • • „. . • • • t f ' • - PUR MANUFACTORY, • ..• • 1 2 ' IVO. 7JB ahove-.7th, - PIIILADA„. '• . I have now in store Of my'ownim r. Tortation and Manufacture ,tme of the, LAW:h.:ST and moot irlections of IF+.4.llitli3'r FURS, for LAI/I ES , CIIILDREN!S•WP.AR. in the • City; Also, a fine tt ,,,, natent of Gent's Fut- G10ve..4 and I sm enahledlo dtsprise goods at very reaseina -,-;rlres, and I would there: re solicit a call from my f-• , t of selmylkilr I.:01MT. and vicinity. • • Ur - Remember the. Name.; Number. and Street ! • . JOHN FAREIIIiA, • . Arrh Street, above 7th. south side, PII ILADA. • • rri have nu Partner, nor connection with any other ••e . • . Sept..l.3. f;:!‘s. 1100 P ; 4 .KIRTS. 62S •• - I - 1 - 0' 11 3 .1K I N -S.' • • • "O WN MAKE" OF HOOP SKIRTS, trt.tien up expressly to meet the wants of firit class • They emhreci; a complete assortment of all :TIM - 7 and desirable' Etyles ' • sizes and length. for-,Ladles: 11., 5, 4nd Children, and : are superior ,to all others '1 , 4 tint of .ymmetry, finish and -dal - ability be -•-:-.:;•lth-le of the thu , st tempered English Steel b) rings finished covering, and having all the meialic immovably severed. by improved machinery. tt.ctia their shape-and elasticit) to the last,-and Et't'a:r4nted to give entire satisfaction. constantly in receipt of Tull lines of good,Enst-, Mali- SKIRTS. at very low prices. Shins niatleto altered and repaired. WHOLESALE AND RE . M N unku . rollr AN' I) SALE:SI:OOIf, NO. 4 4`i Arch Striet;tothoic Sixth; Philada. • : ONE 1 2 .13.10 E ONLY. • • - I,l Zust ' . —133-4 m• . . •(:)I_l.N . !<3l' • GLASSE Oil Paintings; Engravings,. Pie tore 's, and: Portrait IFrames., : ..Photograph Frame's. - Witt-, • , • dow eoritiees, Pier TA- • iles,,llarble Slabs dc- •: • Brae: Wets. 'JAMES S. EARLE &-' SONS; fIG theAnnt St., Philadelphia, Illanufattur - ers, tinporters ant. I4altis_ in' took.: .• - lug. ; • • a , A large and elegantassortment: of ShliffrOßS'of . cc :7 rharaeter always in stock. • • •Particular attention • 'm In the maunfactnre of Pictione Frames. in continual changes And novelties ave•be••• nuroduced. Etuimatus for Looking Gitinaer %•aished on application. by mail or Tieradnally: . Roger., iht ro pm, and 'War and ]Humorous tab-' •`,7°- pe.rtieulars in Circulari , ) ' • atticle ed Itle,,re.. EA13.1.11:.it SONS.' manufaC T ran be packed to liirwarci to AI/i. part of the cunt'. .perft.c.t Farety.- Grillety of Paint rigs open rcr, to cialtors. [June 24..(t5-I.s.dni E. . 4.41 A S. toTelifEet..... 'E. T.-T. liciAqa. A, 1 -•••--,• • ' • For the convenience of our. ,patrons and others at a distance; 110,f.,1 • • --.. . we Imre • present a diagram of . . - •,' self-meapamment, by • which •a: .......,......71, .good.,rit wilt 1,.. gearent led, , by /, . r :._„ = „iy,,,, , xethillig the sizes ..111 the outer , ,...,5• dmiguated in the accompanying • l',. r . figure • • . 1 4 f, • i -,, - EXPLANATION • i N.. q , ' ' .-- MIt.I.SrItIP., 'r e in co'. '".7 - • 1 f , .. 1! • . - L;'l , !ith 6.4„,./taik • , - - front' 1 tO 2. 1' ',,t tr- , . • alai from 2 to :;. ' • = ._ . ~' - s • • Len,fh of-S. frPre, , (wink arm i it it • . • Crooked,) from 41u I. , - .—A , Brea..? . 1 1ramtreronnfl.tbp . molt prominent :part_ u! . . the 6‘..G. --,T . wai • • Wei4t _ ground MeasUre. the ..i st. - : .• ' • .- - ' e .'State whether the person is I . - • i • • , - . ...eret or atooping.. . • • . . ' \ i ' - , • • The rtuit meastirg at , l - or Coat „' 't , --- 0--A” • • ... - 3fetuictre 111.-side sesta, and out -1'.%,,, ! wrabip-botic, andatunnd the waist 1111.1 hip. rAstrt.r. or Styrrelktfi tiENT we' IsfAit: Ater Or . Cour. .. ( •'(.vtv To.):E. tr.TURNEn; tr:carr svnsrAcccoar. .. - Clll,lo4.*'ll . oii EX ilic. CO.. - jut St I. Ciii.niii eft., Philadelphia..: PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING BY BENJAMIN BANNAN, POTTSVILLE,. SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA. VOL. XLL T. s. & Er. OHATFEE. WHOLESALE. DEALER 'IN HOSIERY, GLOVES, TRIMMINGS Eon . GOODS, &G., No. 511 Market Street, Philadelpkia. uTOOliftU OF ALLEN, 14acce mmmmm to v , YARNALL & OGDEN, - .No - . 472 Norih':id Mireet, • - Philada., wholesale- deniers In: COAL OILS.- ALCOLIOL; BENZINE, NABTLIA:: TURPEM‘ TINE. &c , &c. Ilave constnntiv on band DOWNER'S SPINDLE or light MACIIINERt OIL, HEAVY MA, CIIINERY OIL.' These are pure, unmixed Pnrafflite . -Lntiriantors,:fr , .e from nll trace 1.4. acid, „arid 'are war •ranted not to "GC.lt . . • • . rirThe trade !supplied on reaionable terms. Sept. ft, .65. • ' 36-3 m . • BEST . WHITE LEAD! BEST ZINO!: • • Pure Liberty , Mend • ' • • . . Unsurpassed . for W,utruum, PINE GLOSS,' Dramittap,' • Poram.:4. and EI'I , ..NziF.S.S of Sy LLFACE. • PURE LIBERTY LE,kl)—Warranted - to cover more surface for same weight than any other Lend. 75 - o it and 417t1 'rill .hare iin•nther ! PURE .LfBEItTY 'ZINC; selected ZINC. • ground to ,Refined - Linaeed Oil, unequalod. in quality. always the lamer ; Pure Liberty Zinc, WAILILAZiTED to do more and better work at a given coat than any 'Other. . Ire - Get 11 . 4 e best ! • • . llannfaetured at PENNSW,VANIA.PAINT . & COL OR WORKS. OrderauxetaterlpromptlV. fty . •. .• •• • .• • • • ZIEGLER & .• whole3pale l'oiot rit/.olosa Dectlera: 71v - Sttire & OM* N0..-137•North• THI R D Street, PHILADELPHIA.. . • March 11, -, C6. •.. . ' A SAFE. STEAM BOILER, . _ The subscriber is prepared to receive- orders for the. "HARRISON STEAM BOILER," in sizes to suit lair-. chasers. The attention 'of manufacturers and others is polled to this new Steam. Oeneratori as combininir es: sential . ailvantatce in absolute safety (mot destructive explosion:first cost. and 'durability. economy of luel, facility of cleaning. and 'transportation; - -Sic., &c.. not possessed by any boiler.now in ace; • • These boilers may be faen.in daily Operation ; drlvin . 7, the extensive works of Messrs... Wm, Sellers k, co., Sixtechth street andifarnilton 'street ort.S;_ll7. Cat tell's 'Factory,. Sprnee street, Schuylkill, ancTat Garsed's Tee- moot Mill, Faankford. • • . 1 •• JOSEPH HARRISON, Jr, 1/11Nixhiuglou Building,. • 274 S.. TH_llll. StREET . , • .Se r t. 24, ;.;4.-29-tfi • - PIIILADE . I2fII4.' ' • AGENTS WANTED FOR THE SECRET SERVICE, THE FIELD, THE DUNGEON, AND THE ESCAPE, BY ALBERT IL 14111.31ARDSON, , .. .. . The mist. interestirm and .eXcitimi.. book ever .puh, .11iFilied. embracintOlr. Hichardt•on's tinparalleh d expe rience for four years; triirelinic' oin - it:L:lt the - SOnth in ' - the Rieretftservire of. t li.- — Tribune" - at the .outlireah of the %var. with our armies and'Cliiets,- both .E tst and West. during the first two years' cif the Rebelltim :. his thrill in . capture; his confinement 'for twenty ',months iti seven iilfierent - reberprisons i'' his escape; and el. mosciniractilihv• journey by night of heart:- 101 intjis, It will abound itCstin ing events, and contain more of the facit,,.iticident and 'romance cif the - war than any other work published ..- . .... .. .. . • G14:,1:1.1:17 •- •• , ninny books will :yet be wrltteii enTicerning this 11 ar,.in addition to the manralreatly in print : lint hibt one of 'thein will alve within a .sitnilar s compass. a clearer, fuller, reliable account. entirely' from kJ- Kona] - ohserimtiOn, of the • indult, pur.p , we.. tendencies and instrumentalities of the SlaveholdeW Rebellion than does the titipreteiiding narrative of Mr; Riehablson.” "..- . ' Teaclierv,ladies, energetie.yo • ung 'men. and "especial= ly retbriull nild • &allied orkers . and:solillere. in mint 9f ulltable euiplo3nieni., will ileait.•pepulinly .adapt ed to their condluon. •. We have tigents..elearing per uiouth: whin we will prove "to any duutitleg iippli cent.. Send foecti:eulars:. • AdilreAs •-1 .. • .70.:ES. 11116§.- • & • • • N. E, corner 5.11,711-und MlNifit St reMs, ' • Sept, 16. !...55.-t In" . ' .pbitadelpbiu, Pa.". Oirirtinim? COURT SALE.—Pursnant to tin order of the Orphans , Court Of the Vitality' of lu the Cotithamtwealth of Pennfylthnitt, the subscriber.' Athntnittratoi• of the estate of GEt triCiE - A:I3ItOWN,'" late, of . theThiwnship of' Mifflin'. :n . the co my Of C,Olutnbta; 4eceuk!d, will Cxttt:tse . t9 sale . by . SOtnrilay, the 14th tiny of Ortoiker next; AC`_' o'clock in the afternoon, at'llie tirennscs, the- Boiongh of Mahanny City,. in the . Cob niyof Schnyl the undivided 'one-half part Of all'. thattertaitia hit of ground. Situate in Miilumny C i ty iifokesaid;- being lot .unnied No. 2 in Block NO. 21 Soi the plan of - said city. cOntrdning*iii front on Centre;stiect and 'depth '125 tent :to Water street., bounded • nortilWardly; by..Centre. street.: east -wig-illy by lot No;3, weet'warilly by, and find h wardly :by Wale) , • street. wk.lr a Sine-and-a-haif story (nde house and frame staNe 'erected thereon. late the est4,te of said ticce Vi - ms - and - conditions made* known at theltute and - place of. sale by • . • MT: EL CREASY, AdrainistiatOr..... By_orderof-IheOrphans'Court,. - - ' • .A. I)olitistv‘N,'ClCrk : •• rotteriiie, sent. s. ' . pIIA IN b (:!4/Clt't SALE.t „tx) N.-- 7 au order of the Orphone Court of the, O.unty of 'Schuylkill, hi the Coininindreoltii of Pennsylvania, the subscriber. Admit:lb:matte. of the estate of. JACOB lade of flie'-rownsbip ol.NOrth . Man lieniviuthe County of Schuylkill, :deceased, .will posa.to sale by public vendue'on .• ~ ' • ffpliilidilky, Uhl!, I 4th day at October next, at o'clock: in the afternoon, at the publre-lidase of 2Sottion Butz, in -the bir,,tigh of•Sehuylkill -.nevem in 1 tie County of. Schuylkill aforcfaid; -All that CerA lain tint of loud situate in ; the said Township of icorth. Mtinheirn,.lxiundeci by lands of Daniel • atoll Scales Peter Itchier and others. contaiutug one acre and 1.r3 perches, with the appurtenances. consisting • two-story:lmine-divel ling house. barn, etc.- - • Alio all that certain; tract of land situate in North Idaitheim ToWneliip -.llfitresaid. hotinded . by Itinda.of 'Daniel Eiler, Nathan 11. Butz, Henry -Eller and:others, containing one acre and 71 perches.t late the estate .of said deceased. . l'errng and conditions matlt i emowii the time and place - .sitle by .., . • . By ..* . • • NVAI. A. ZlMMERMAN,',Administrator. - Order a the Crpharis• Court, • . • Pottsville, September IS; Mr,. • . . 88-4 t . _ • CIRIPH.4. - NS. , .COURT SATAFlPtirsnant to n order of the Organs' Court or .the County of Schuylkill. in the Counionwealth of Pennsylvania, the tlbseriber,-,Gtuartliau of the minor - childreli of George Reif Lie of the Toirti.hip of - New Castle, in the County of. Schuylkill, deccaied, will expose to sale: by public yendini on : . , , , • . . _. . .. .. ... .. Saturday, 30th ' day ot setttmber. neNt, • - . . at too •clitcic in the forenoon, nt t tie pretnines, the inter est of the said tninors.in a . pieee or pared of grotnid: situate in the'toatn of Now Castle, is,ew CaM.le Ton- Chip: Schuylkill County; .containing in front nrceentre . 'Street Iso leaf, and extending -hack ' ISit feet, with the appurtettancen. , consisting of a Franke Sture,A. Bosse and Dwelling, comprising' tuts Nos, it,-10 it::: and U. in the inigival plan. • . . . . . •Also; the interest of said . Minors In all that certain , lot,'nititatein Mohawk street.' in the town of New Can; tie afaientiid. InAng.lut No. 57,..nnd the adjoining tate half Iot.NP: lit, in the 'original plan of said town 1 . eith. • the appurtenances, consisting of two Frantic' Dwelling . Ilounen., . .. , . .. , ~ . . • Also. The interest of YAM minors .in the tindividT;rl five-tenth. p,irt of two •lots in the town of New Castle aforesaid. lidlown as the : Miller estate. late the.estate•o. Henry Miller deceased. with tbe:apittitteminceii,. con sistin,e• of three Frame Dwelling. ilonse late The estate of said deCuasA. - TermS and conditithis made known at ihedime. and place of sale tiy:1011.81 SiIAItPLESS; Guardian: By order of the Orphans' Court:. . ' -, Pdtte.vil!e. Auttust 30. 1865. .o.ept. 0,'65. n6-4t O"PgiAnis. , l3o CRT SA li f .E.—Pursuant to . an order of the Orphans' Court 01 . the County-a t Schuylkill.. he subscribers. Adrninistrato of the tate - of Daniel Aloyeri.late of the townehip of West ßrunswick. Brunswick. in the County of Schuylkill, deceased, will expose to sale by public veudue on •'. ' • . . . Saturday, the 214 day Of October . next, • at 2-o'clock in the aPernoon,- at the prentisee, , in the township of West Brunswick aforesaid t . ' No. 1. All that certain Larne-or tract of land, sitente• in the ttiwnship of We-t Brinswick,'in the County of Schholkiti, bounded by - itindt , ofiate - Pcteciteim..tlenl, Other land late or D:t el Ntnyor,.dereased. Isaac Moyer. .Nlos.-er and Gideon F. Ebling. - containing 146 aeres.and perehes,• with the iinprovements. - coasist-- big-id a story - lte2Threlliret: house. one". story stone dwelling and Swiss barn. About Su • acres of. the hum are in a good state ofCtiltictition—the remain. der is Ximbcr land.: Pine Creek - runs itircanth the tract, also .rho Centre Turnpike. and 4 . road letttling from this -turnpike to Auburn. There are two epplo orchardson the farm. .One-third of the . putchak. money to-remain :l lien on the premises, the Interest of which is annitallv -to-he paid to the widow of-said decedent, Ilfe - ptincipiii to the heirs at her death...• : . -:• . . • - • The.prnperty is gold enbJect to the following reserva tions :• The owner otadjeininetruct No. 2. to _hare - the free ore atid privjlege of • the, water power. saw mill dani and mill race, and ten feet on each Fitle•of rare., for the ptirpene of repairtng the tall raw etta'mw mill dam, and keetting.the saint; in good order. :• No. it All that certain fartn or tract of /anti, situate in the e4.1111e township, boundsilltyland_s of latelteter ‘Giteln S. Enling, JobiF and. tract No. 1.,-containing 7d acres,. 137. pore/wit., strict :tnt:spere, wit thellppurtt•oarkes, consiFling-.ornA two stOry . stone dweliing house, with stone kittlt •. en Atittcheh, frame bank stable. water power saw . Ara/Ling stable and . blacksmith .shop; Abitut acre's . Are In good cuitivuti.t,.the renudtder being excellent The fmtellitser'd this - tract, and 11f 1 , 1 hai: the:use and prieflene. of . the. 61 , W mia•aom.end. mill race, as mehtioned in the adVertisemeidof . sale of One-third of the nut chase money to.remaln a lien • for. the me ofthe widow of decedent; as described in: the adverti•iement of imle of tract No. 1: late the estate of said decear.cd. Teims 'and. condi:long made known at the thee sea plow efsale.py JOSEPH MOYER, WM.' 11. ' By uidcr of the Orphans' Court: t Administrate*. DolilfalAtiN. clerk • • Stptinnfier Lith, ISiis. - • • 3s-3t LAIDIES,.. .. _ • IGOL n . wATip.r.m!4- .. .: .., . .. .- A Find stock or Ladies , Gold Watches, Chat tan-Chai ns; Sarkis, Sze. It, C. OF' TEN, • Watchinakersud Jeweler, Centre. street , Pottsville. December it.; •ici. • ' - . GLOCKS: CLOCIi!!‘ 1. C004$1.:: A large stook nt eight day and thirty lacer_ n lockii, every variety of style, fornale eliessl)Y. Watehniaker and'dep eler, centre .Street, Pottsville. December - 12, '43 ' • , . -N. . , . . . ~ . - • " . - - i_ --7 :- '• • - t, - ; 4E- ,„ ' ' ..-: - , A y. s. .., ~, , 4. -'', 7 A • - ';'; - . , '-':-; ~ ' •- ' . '' _. . ";" - 1 4 t. . 1 . • ' - ..-' - - , .'" • :- ' K -tE- ' -' n , e, -, 1114..‘i15t;;:3:4'45. - sk i ~- ...1.,, -- • ifi,' , --ItKI - Ip.- •..., 9 . J . ,_.,......,.,„ .„._....,.....‹.,.„-,. , . _ I F . , .. . ' • . :-- . . -- - tr,v-:-_: :-; .•. -- - - • -- --,- - - 7;.•:_,..,, - --.--,. .........":2- . ..,.-: . . .• - • •-:‘. _-- - 2 ;• * - - .4...*,— . • .• : 2 -1 , - ,,, --_:..., .e . —; •• --". . . • • • PHILADELPHIA. Tribune, Corrospondent. PIJBLIC..:. ,BALER. I win teach you to plane the Bowels of the Earth,' and king - Out fro m the'Caserine *inn:bans Nietaht uhlch will give atrength4Ontar hands and added all Nature tO and pleasnrer—ftit. JOHNSON DEAFNESS; N9ISE . S i THE. HEAD, DISCHARGES FROM; THE_ EAR; BRONCHIAL AFFECTION, :CHILLS AND FEVERS, THROAT DIFFICULTIES, DISEASED EYES, 1 s of Bair , Bysprmsla.-Eniarge . Meat Of the Liver, Disrase of the Kidneys, Constipation, • Gravel, -PileS. Insanity,Fite. Paralysis, - Rush of Blood to the Bead. . Every stoppade of the human' body is 'completely opened iffiand the offensive matter =Vied out of-the system by MRS:.,M. 0.. BROWN'S • Metaphysical Dis covery.. PRICE • • .• • • •• $6 00 - Celebrated Poor Richard's Eye 'Water: . . Large Size $ll-_5O Mnool.' , . • . • 50 Cc! cbriured ... 50 OFFICE—No.:4 i 0 Arch Mti. rhilnila: • . No. I BONI) St:. New : York .. , No: IS PEMBERTON SQUARE: Biieton No. 147 BALTIMORE St;d Baltimore. The people. oft Penneylvania [dew Asir .their Druggists Tor' t her abtive Medicines if. they cannot-- be suppled-by them euerose the amount above stated In a letter to 21m. IC G. Brown, No, 419 Arch' Street., Phil adelphia: -The Morley willcome ettfe in,This : Way and the . nfedlaine be forwarded on- ieceipt - .of the An Appeal to. the Intelligence of the People: greater_laial t he offered •to au Intelligent. people I hail that of 'getting 'up a d•tmplicated inhuman marhine wherewith Proper:tie on the delicate organs of the .head -•pi.sing- through t _on and up the hos- I rims . for !retire; Of Catarrh and ..Deafuess:' :This • men st rens mode of I reamenC. ,may he :resorted to where there is neither light or - knoWledge ; it is a lie on' the character of God it, is 'Magical. iturl : - . as opposite' to toth, as light.te darkness . nicks and: ilestroys tilt; entiee'neivraia system, and many never recover- from 'the.terrilde disaster. ...Many never. rally; frOm this Un natural 'inti• violent .mode.-of treatmeati some have 10 . 4 flair reasoh: • .Godis plan simple and easily un deisto(id they that run may reruL -•'. • , • U; foolish people. who hat h hewitched,.37)fi thllty.OU F•hotild believe a lie? Be lothical ; uee . Our. intents: and find that- ronistnre—At •thedivincitlan - for•the phy.3 . - ical world as well as'the • - •• LIFE OF TIllt: ' The sunken machinery of the eYisis:the: sure pre- , thimir of disea.e and death. ".The methodical listhof POOR • RICIMItI. • EYE AVATElf.Morning and - night, will in.thie !time lift the eyes and . also prevent. the-.eyes- froth sinking.. It will als:1 cleanse the eye+ and keep- thorn in life as deWdrothi the "Franklin's :Alumnae"- Mom which ths.Eye Water derives its.name) sari "au' ounce of.proyenfre.is Worth it pound of-cure." REIMARRABLECLIRE OF IfRAYNESS, DI72PNESS.,I .AND NOISES- IN THE BRAD. SWORN TO. •• • • Oxi - onti, P. Jan. 20,..1865. • • 11.1iSilf: 0.• BROW(-r-MAti.vm:•-‘I have got . entirely ,well. and. under th,d, t owe it to von. Aly right.en! I have-not hem d any . .%%!th for a number of yearn.; I can . tioiglienr My leftear e the hearing left it jest .after harvest in this Way: I took a dizziness in my head, so I could not yiork. accompanied:with a diming noise in rely ears, -1 *as- so bed that I-conht not hear 'without they •Ivotilil hallo al the tOp• of their voices; I wthit to Philadellibia.• put .iny•SAt ander . the 'eare Of. a celebrated aurist 7 - be • bored . army • ears • with bistro nient, run others - nii ,my• nostrils. "Tor. five weeks, and ended by cheating me out of seeentv , tive dollars: I then Saw one of your advertisements get the Met , aphYsitul Discovery,' used mid more:than half .of it. and trace recovered my . bearinc;..o hichl had . lort•for you*. ••.• . •••• '• • ..,• I remain yours truly,: , •••• ‘TIIOS:•D. Dic."KET: Orford. Chester Co.,•Pa ••• A ffirined Mutenlisciibed to belore. - . Me • this •Zilst day of March, A., T.•lort.roN, •.. • .•--, . • ' , " d:Juoire.of the Peace. • • • DOS. D. DlClth.l. . . •-•• •• . GOltl , oli, 5C117.131ki100.. Pal, • Mita. M. G; Bettaya,-Tftiaror t•Liontrn: the date Of- my birth (Zit years ago) I have been afflicted with (at stated tvriodSt•.witat I.Stipposed was a - gatheting, iii the bead; anti treated it *tench. and would obtain a short respite.. Ilk from one month - . to rwo, ' n hen I would' invariably be troubled with a repetition of it—lasting - Trona one to two months; then became convinced that it•was shinettiing more. na I began to .feirl:•ltne spirited, mil rose and alldell.: • 41-1141?1) became-taciturn::: rarely speak-- • trig unless directly appealed to.: and felt a s if I• were an ineumbrance. to • myself and - everybody around Me.,, Mytnernitry. - which Was 'very - powerful; began • ft! fail me, so they; could not remember the, particulars of any occurrence two days after it , happened.:: • '• Abtaii this time :(which was About. three „Yeats thm)' a : celebrated • Aurist; -who Nt•as on a professional : tour throughout the. -country, made. a.stop hi a few dayit whese-1 was •;laceerdingly. called upon him, and had hint - determine I the. nature .of my cold. plalnt•ittid the ventedyfor it. : •., . • • . wastioonw•d IP dittaPpulnttnent Retold me it was canned-by hut. it 'being of the bone and not of the flesh. it would be an, utter impossibility for . human Itancls or re*rdirs to.effect. a cure. Yet, I did' riot despair t. I Wentto rither 4 s brit waktold the Same. Was beginning then to lose . all 'hopes, • when chance placed one of your advertisements under my eYe. - then became hopeful and. resolved not to rest mail I' had fried your -remedies. • Itiave tried them and With the following refmlig ; ", • . _ . My memory' is improving my former • lively spitits have returned: • •Formerly...my.nleeti Was.brolten and dig il h uthend I.always witha. very 'bad head ache but. now me nleep to 'tm.mint"..and• sound, and I arise'in the 'morning without a vestige of my tormer headache: . • ••• • Theae arc.thp happy yrAanita an far. - thronui the'naeof SOnf MetzlPhYblud Diacovery—and I truat by the Ides,: Goct 'and continuance of its .use. to be a cured, . . 14 — The who milteg the • above does not Avis!) his name to' he published. Eiln , letter can be eeeu • Cnoteoi • - .lExttuct fmm,t Baltimore letter.? Mrn M. G..l3n.nws-Mnni'si write - to inform Yiiti that Lhave been . rirtidlgposed to pulmonary and 'throat ditileulties—and have bail a scrofulous swelling for the past four vest's standing . on the right side of my peek. Every remedy I have tried failed tortach my case, • till lisp illy , 1 obtained your AletaphysiCal niecovery .• the •result is, that my gent-n:1 health is much -improw:d and biive once more become - - energetie—mentally and physicallY. My throat is much better ; the swelling on tWy,neelr lino altm , ertlisanpeared. .• A neighbor a mine. is •also :liking your Metaphysical Discovery With . very sitistactor2i - results: . Myadthess is N. Jay Street. • . • EXTRACT FROM A LETTER • • • ..• 'July 1, : • Moti.3l: G.• BriOWN-MAPASIK:—I. have imd your 111etaphysiCal ;Discovery, and can praise" 1t above all metlicinesz-for diseases 'of throat.. lunges, pains. sore:. and stiffness of Disjoints, also sore eyes.. It has -indeed tibiae wondera for me. I now find it a pleasure to worh. walk. at and aleep,'•andlhel asmbiable as I did twenty years ago. . • .• '• . . and Child...-. dune S. 1865 . •I: Mrs- - Chipma n{ tit ;Parker Street, Charlet , — town.. Na.F., 4o cuff) , for the. beilefli mothei s. and 'children who are snfTerers as we were: that I have-been afflicted With confusiim and diXxinges In my head since childhood—ticing up and sitting down 'wan obliged to hold-my bend:. my eyes n - ore ,drawn aud 'Contracted, - also dry:and painful.. -The circulation- throughout my system was weak and poor .my feet being' always cold, even to summer; I was obliged to wear woolen stock ings. and have -them :rubbed .reguitelaf. - My mental powers.. suflercd also—so that - r could. not hold my 'thoughts on anyone bubject more- than a few minutes At a time ; 'my.lontuory failed me and my whole system .wangradually ojnking. • . • • ' - Everyattempt. to relieve the for . ..thirty - yearn peeved treeless, most pmvidentially I noticed Mr p. R. G. Bnnitna I,le.taplet'slcal Discovery advertised in the'lloWt. ton 'papers CI thought.l woutd.try-it. I did, with the most delightful : termite:. disease was broken at mace. - the conflisines.4. and..aininess in my head gave AveryL-plispritri and tn:)chte ceased'. eyes began., to expand: and are now-Clear and strong' - • :.• -circulation -has taken 'place throughnni,may entire system had not to. warm my feet at .the • flre-onee last, winter: ••I am convinced is the .onlyantidote ever fetrod.that could reach Mily - case; and . I am .confia• dent 111.1 it will -briak up the worst sold: • : • PASE ITT LITTLE DAUGHTER. • In relation to ray child' of fourteen montlet:L.She was very sick with vomiting and rhenium. fieni teeth= ing.. MI lost two children before .In the same way. I hrumn to fear she Worrlitttri tam. and realiahig'the bene llt I had received- froni the, Metaphysical Discovery.con= 'darted totipplY it - to-my child, - and did 'so. airhen she fell asleep and slept fear honrs: Qn awsiing discov ered her ears were discharging Most bffintsive 11'rom that moment my child began to get well. It Is 'acnv.six months Shun, mid from that time .sh 6 has nev er bed disease . of anyklud.,- loctyer sit'vr,ii Child 1,764; sweetly and -lei • • . . I.lnd been far Mrs..M. a Brown's Metiphysi cal Disco e 4., I beligye.iny . beloved . Oil& would have died, swine uamy Otheiehddten did.• . . : The following persons have been cared of the above diseases; thrtrughthe use my. Metaphysical Marv - . ?dim, lielieeca Watson,.St. Paul. St, Frankford. cared of .dearness.and noise-in the trod, ; cannow:heac the children . called by their names in the next bonze.... • . Wm. Einwechter,- 1340- North: Front. street:4 lad of about 15 Yeats . , Was:very deaf -; cant:W./hear the. votes distinctly on the.plano. :.Cguld not . hear,e,sorind ;be fore=his whole system ie wontlerfully„hegellted, ashe was in invalid. ' •.. • • • • • Peter 'Kelly, 162 T. South Second street, was quite eaf in one ear. and partially.se in the other;. hal regained the hearing-of both.well, - - ' 'The above Medicines are to be' had of ail druggists and. medicine dealers', _ , -• Spt.-f,„ , 1 (March 11, 'W-10;6ni7 C.&TARRII CONSUMPTION, NEURALGIA. RHEUMATISM.; .ASTII.1119; SCROFULA; [Extract of a ietter 3 M=EEMZi= ;sNT,III, - pAygo.R.MNG.; . :'.sgP7t3l.P.k ,- 40;t86.5'; PFNNSYIN.ANIA::: - POLITIC.Si ADDRESS OF THE. UNION STATE 0011- . MIT TEE. , THE ••isroatutt OF. ; Tilt: C 01111 6 .• CAiIL THEYNSIIRS INVOLVED 'AND THE WAY TO MEET TIMM • TO THE PEOi'LB,OTP PEN*ENtVANLI.: The !Verdict 1864. ..... IZ FELLO3Ii'..-CIT&NS:: - a . : short - time . you, wilt again. -'he.'dallcd - tippii!tei exercise :the highest: :perform...one of. : the most.. sacred' ,duties Of .freemen,:: One* year agO,our State WaS deeply agitated by a' con- - flict.Of opinion, Which, ;leas emphatically rind' uninistakably- settled at the ballot-box.. Then the public Mind WaS'-thoroughlYtirpuSed - :by the..:w arm Lb .'and abiluy of •t he contest: :...fin ,both sides . arrayed men.wlin earnestly; - and : perhaps, in -.Most cases, sincerely; en, dearoreit .toliersuade ,their • fellow-cittiens . that thejriumph .of their. views' tiyas indis pensable to, the welfare and prosperity of. the - State; the peace MA enjoyment of the people, and:, ihe duration and- life• of the nation:: ter a long, well-conteated . aud thorough .earF, yass; the people. of . Perinsylvania,. - . by more than twenty. thousand, and the people of the nation,.y.y.p . or . than four. hundred - . thousand . majority,. rendered their Verdict: lines audthe tssue - clea . fly and • fully, made up . It Is ImpoSAble . for rin,Y and to bemistalien as to the Character' cif the.trial, .or the `nature of .• the. yerdiet. •The trader' : of Abrahani.,Lincoln 'was on' . trial: The American . people. ere he, jurois:* -The contest . Was waged by his friends; under most `inauspicious - circumstances;.andiin the midst of Unparalleled.. ditheifities ,atid.. trials, No eirent,.. in the hiStory of. the:hitt:nail jade, Was, so .Well 'calculated tO test' fully and Complete ,ly the: capacity of. Man for..self;goyernete'nt. • The people'were callekupon, tax. : tlieuiselYes fertile .payment evan My , menses imd• 'daily" 'increasing debt:., They Wer9:-asked . ;to furnish-Mare men for the army Mid ou. the very eye of the . ..06*(416m. President LinColn- proceeded to. enforce:ti. draft to fill tili. the army . at' ell . Wards, pre ferring the stippresAMl• of the .rebellion .and.. the life ,of the Iteoublie, o; his oWnsueeess at. Tells, an example of: disinterested pa-. • t riotism. mid of heroic atitiort; never, surpassed by any .rider named in .history. • • ' The people.Of :the. - ITpited- : - States . proved tlientSelyes worthy:Of such a ruler: led 'IT .a lofty pa 11l ntiSM, Lig aboye all. con siderin inns of selfishness, and having resolved their knees and. in: -thei r closets . that the. noble old Repiddie_ormir. fathers should not 'perish; spite.pf. all our etietnils at. home • Am I abroad,. the ..tyrants and aristoirmles - .6f .guropei• the. kings orthe :earth, ;armed' await, 'ors.- ht. tit e:..S9'utli ; . in the North; and 'all the enemies . of human libertY : er ryW I ter e: tlir y, heroically au 4-colifagolis ,ly recorded their yerdier gat the•hallot-b0x.... Both. parties. went- innyithe'enntest.with their " .principles plainly, inscribed _upon their ban ners, and.it to suppose that - the :people slid.netunderitand the nature, -extent, and trtie:,eltaraCter Oaf 'the issues .Which they were trying. The Luiein.Convention n ' t : Baltin • nominated' tincOln and Jehrtotis declared as .Rasorsgri That It is the . higheSt alutfof 'every. Ame: rictut citizen to maintain igaitist.sli.themenenties the integrity et thetnion, and the paramtnint :urthorityo( the Constitution and the laws ef thetrnited States that,. laying asidlyall differencmi of Political opinion. We, spledgeoprselveiZ Union Men., aniriinted PS.. a common soiniment. apd taithing at a otintnon object, to do ay erything.in our power to aid the Government - in Oen-. %I lug; Ite Fonett or A El. the rebel lionnow rttgitstagtrost its hiltherity, Mid in hringing.to the panisitMent duet to their crimes, the. rebel's and traitors arrayed ngainst ft: 'Firtensitn. That - we apprece the determination of the 'Government of . : the United States, not to - compromise with:rebels; nor to: offer any' ternitt of peace except such tie Maybe 'based' 111411. ati "unconditional wren 'der' of - their hatititty,:and it mtnrn' to their Just allegl; . twee to the,CoOstittitlon and laws Of the,United States. and - that we call upon the Otiveruntent to, maintain lids 't.tsitlarfand to prosecute the *sir With the ntmost Able vigor to the complete suppression of- the rehel , lion, in full reliancr:,imon the self-seer:lice. the patriot itt , in. the heroie.valor,.tind. the undying - tlevoi or.the A Mei lean people to their couutry and its. free iMtitrt- . . . as slavery 'wits the.' cause. and now constitutes the strength of- this rebellion; end ns it' mnst • be alWaYsanditverywherc hostile tp the principles el repablietth govern ment_ justice and - .the: national safety' "dentund Its utter and coinplete extirpation fromthe roil of the Republic; anti that we Uphold fetid maintain :the nets'ankproclatnations by. which the* ,Government,. --indts own defence, has aimed a deathblow at, this gd-, 'mimic evil. We areas favor. furthermore. of such tin 'amendment to the yoastitutimi..ta bemade by the pet; : in conformity with - its provisions. au - shall ter-. initiate,' Mid fiirever prohibit the existence .silvery. within the limits of the -. jnrisniction of the United .1 - tr. - stne. - rn. That:We:approve and - applaud the practi Cat wisdom. the uneelfiblt - pairiati4m; and. unswerving fidelity:to, the Constitrithiri and' the principles of Ameri; can liberty with Which'Abetham Lincoln hasilisclittrued, under' mccumtitancei of •unparalleled difficulty, ....the great duties and responsibilities of the. preshlential -of fice t that we approve and &Worse. 'as demanded by the and -essentiaLto the. pre.s4rvation. of the. na--: pion and as-within the Constitution the measnres and acts which he has, adopted to delehd, the ,nalion - ntta Just its open and secret 10e$ . that Mt HiTraKe especially the proclamation of einanchattion.. and the emPloYment *.its Union si ild le rs of. men 'heretofore - held. in -.slave t- and_ that we have hilt confidence in his deterinination - te car- ry rhea( and all bt her constitutional measures essetitiar to the salvation' of the toutitryi: into and cent Plete . . • In opposition :to . the .views and principles thus announced the : representatives of the party in opposition, ;to the AdministraitiOn Inct at, Chicago, nominated Atee,lellan and Pendleton, and erected a platform which, atnon , other thingi, contained thefolloWing : Rrintymi,, That this , mnvention 'does :explicitly de clare, as thesense of the"-ArreTican'people,. that after. four 'years of failure to restore the Cahn by the experi ment of wan ditrin&,..which.tnider the , pretence' of military necessity of vrar.pewer - hit!herktban the Consti= teflon, the Cnristitntion itself .1m- been dlsrepirded In. every part. and public" libertY and private- right: , alike irriddentlown:.and the Material prosperitypf the coun try essentially linpaired,PisHce.immanity, liberty, and. pnblieyelfare demand that himiediate eirorts he made tor n'cessittinn of - -hostilities.. with a Vieiv to . 'an ulti mateoon of. all:the Steles. or:other peaceable means.to theSenit that at the earliest nracticable:mO .ment . peare: may be . rk4ored 'on'the basis of the Federal -• ..Ilrstii.vvoi. That the elm and object of tbe'llemocrat ie party ieto preSerre I:he : Federal Union'and the rights' the States unimpaire:o - and .. .they hereby declare that they consider the administrative usurpation of extraor dinary. and iiaturt•rtnstrailyers. not granted by:the...Con stitution:, the subverSien ofihe civil by military.law St: l es • nOt•lti insurrectiOn, the arbitrary, military arrest, imprisonment; blakand sentence of .;Atherlcan citizens 'lnStates. a bereCiyil laW exists. in fall :force.. the sop. .Prestiion of freetini . .of speech and of the•preSic the Dial of the right of asylam,..the open and avowed disre-. }-ardoiNfate riUlits, the employment of nutisual.test.- oat Ir. , and the interference wit li and, denial of the. rtubt. of the people'tO bear arras:, as calculated .to prevent a restoration of the Union, end the: perpetuation of .a G.vernmelkt deriving ite,:j4t pLnyent from. the:consent oil he governed. : • , .• . FALSI.:: AND TRIII: . rßEnrcTroxs 'OF TIT E_CAT'TASS. . . . . -the -eaelpaigu: of IBa4."dliespeakers,. writers, and canvasser§ filled the country with their Mines . and fears, their (ipiniont.endlirophesies... - InacCordance • with „the platform of the oppOSition,..: their leaders boldly denounced-'the War , , as a. are, t.ipenly.prodaimed . ..tiMt the Southneier "could" be conquered, :end that the re=election ,of Abraham'Llidni . W iviitildCertainly. prolong the ".war for. at - leak four years. more, and the lend with • debt; shame;"- and diSgince, and . trith Untald. horrors . and woes, and finally :destroy.: the tep . ahlic - nf. Ont. fa thers and rear . great -Military•deoPotiSia ow, ruins:..its On the:other *hand, the friends: of the .Adm . inistraticin urged that.there could . no Safety 'for thnnatinn except in a , idgoreut prosectit ion of the war, and that the.:re-elec tion would . go.. far 'An& Oo :much , to luisten:the overthrow. of the . . rebel_ - 1i0n....: . The resititis....before world; The pinntis.es:Mul. pledges•pf Union:men , Made :ln 1864, havenll been kept andlitliilled..'?.Those• ofottrporilleal adversaries: have all 'been dis= sir - kited '.and proved. , hollow, • dehthive: and: false: The ballot-.box • .etihibited it... Majority, .unprecedented in the history.. of ,The' 'nation. The . erierttiei of.liberty.in forpiiriltindaisinod appalled etthn. *result.: • Th . n . friends,... of the Union eVery where took new courage The rebels.treinbled . with-fear, the, - .heart . .of' the. tebellion-greW.sick •and tank-i the besout:Of treason; and theJ3ympatitizera with : . ebellion :in the North .hid theniseives .. rityttY • frOpa the acid Many nfthein.: . to-daY deny Ihat they : - :ever idvoeutoti: the . doetrines•-or. Made ,_the ."prophesieas. Which:- they then so . earnettly defertjedi.end etitifitleno.:iprp elairned. • • .• • • . 2 . •.. ' Thanks to the lieroiSm, courage and skill '_of American* soldierj, SailorS and ofliceri; and the God of battlts,- the 'war is, Over,. onr tion saved, and, tbe . .good old Repulllic, still -PeaCe has again spread her gentle , *inns over our once hrippy•and lie land! , The &ind of trumpets; , the noise of - canuon,attd:mnsketry, the tread of armies, the vietorious - Cheers.. of citir brave soldiers and thesickening, groans of the•wenrided and, dyirig are-no longer heard in our borders.-- The nation, as in foririer ' times; comes ofit of ' the 'fiery Ordeal, triuniphatit,' nod - .liow' re deethed and vindicated. before the world, standS forth more bright than ever bafore as a beacon to the , down-trodden and op: pressed of all lands,. as a terror to tlie tyrants of the earth, :as an asyluin for the oppressed .cif all nations and as the wonder and admi ration or the lovers. of:Freedom•everywhere. The grass - which we were told would grow. in the.streets of Northern -cities . in _case of war,. is now growing in the streets where the. proPliesy was inade. The:ruin, piwerty and suffering. Which were to overtake the people of the'North are resting upon the people who prayed, for such blessings - upOtroor, heads.— Tbe new paradise whicli was to be discover-z* .ed delight the - saints of• the "Southern' Coofederacy,". is darkness and gloom,- with sorrow and woe: , . •- _ . The, large - and mighty armies of treason have been overthrown and scattered ,bgfore The larger and more powerful •arthies of the Repubiic.'" Traitors and their friends, every where, have been eoMpelled. to yield • to the greatness, ' the poWer, the energy; the resour ces of the nation,. and the emtrage, skill and endurance of our heroic sou 'Some • of. the leaders or the rebellion are buried beneitth the soil'they 'attempted to desecrate, somea r re fugitives in foreign Linds,, and others . areswartmn,gthe NAtional capital 'and crawling into. the White House., begging pardons from the roan whom, of all others in the land . they, have most fiercely denounced 'and most bitterly hate: The chief Of the re bellion him:Wf, =-from . his prisim at Fortress Monroe,. surveys • the .ruin he-has wrought among his own people, and silently and-enl lenly awaits the aelion of the nation he vain ly attempted to destroy, to mike known to him, iu its own good time, the dooni le so richly merits., - . . .. . . . . . • Ili . the North. we - -hairerosperity and plenty, all "the -evidences . . of increasing powet and greatness,-,eVerYvliere ipreseut, - and, the nation surely and certainly . advancing ,More . rapidly than than ever.before . - the;patli or , prd-, greys.' ..And,:notwithanfluding- all the .ealaini- . . ties end stierifieeS . of leer years.. of bloody.. war:(inade more: destructike by the inhuman .ity.and barbarism of our:enemies), • we have. jest welcomed ;to heir homes inore than one Million of brave ten; who saved' the nation. and made their antes immortal. •....- :...: .'••' ".: . - ....inE,lssus . ov •Trin :4711EpEST4' . OAMPATON.' • After the :ettleteent of.the'lssues, of:18'0, / so disistrOusly iii the field and, so overwhelin : - ingly - at the ballot-box, against.our . ad Versa-- riek it Would .seenf most:singular.that .the sante questions;should 'be again. presented - to. the. people. of the Keystothrstatei:- But they • 'have - selected their ground ; acid we,Willingly . and 'gladlyaCcent the challenge;: At the con-', vention • of their'Organi7,atiou r recentlYrbeld at LTarti4itirg; At . w.aS yeiolved; . that ." the: men and the partyalministering the Gover nment. since !SG! . have betrayed. their.truat, Violated their sacred obligations - , disregarded' .the commands. - ot the' fundanental law, cor ruptly'squandered the public Money, pervert-. :.ed the `_whole: Government. from its original :-.purposes, and :Thereby haVe brought . untold .calamities upon • the cotiatry." The meas -lireS of. the adMinrstratiOn of Abraham...l.4l;. - ..C01e; so recentlY..endorsed . by: so . large a ma= jOrity , of his - conntryrtien.;Are here.:: foolishly 'Anil •Wichedly . denotineedbY.the members of I this..coevention;:and .pie - people of Pennsyl .vania.are exavely asketi . . to. Onethin The act . reverse Their .ewn jedgmCllt. land Jetenliitte the verdict of The naticin .Solemnirreadered. -at the ballot-hint: , ....' • .... -.' -:. .- .• . • • • - • The . 'sl6"B.emper - tyrhrinis" . ot the ever-ti be ecyat ed, f Boot h, uttered ,he ....rushed from the scene of. thegreat crime of the . age,: 'cloveys no :greater insult: to- the - memory of Abrahani:; - .Linenlo,...nOr runs more :directly .-connter to the feeling - B.'and sentiment:9 . of. his countrymen -than does This utterance of:the `hoe •so:sallcd beinocratle convention:: Let ,the whole .arinY : : , ol. freetneti,which:marehed . to victory in 1861, tinder, the banner of hamyLincoln, again ealled..iiito the field,_ and. march` to the -polls iii October,' 1865, . to resent the ipaulj, to.his themOry, '.Let there be o o Ow] tecsOo -deF,ert but let the old • soldier.s, Officers, hod • Men,' 'with:a host:Of uew.Yeeruits;.be On hand, ready for . thelfiglit - , • , our adversarit s Were . 'not. content to 'stOti with this . ;reselittiott. -They say jr!' sub stance andeffect that existed' as 'a - fact upon the advent 'of- the,. 'Successful `party -in. 1860,0A:the seat, cif-power"-that `.`slattgli ter, do tit and disgrace: are the results of out:late, civil War," and that - . "no' Mord . persOtts. shalt Mord ered .by military Coat missiens. ". We d_thoughtthat"it.had been .pretty set t ed the ..American-peeple that the--war 'was - caused.. cOnimencell - and forced, upon-us by . the actions.and 'conduct'or trailers, and that the election of . a President according- to the provisions : of the :CenafitutiOn . and:lanitt of the.conntry.'Was no cause .Of.war..what-. e.ver.".. We thought,. too,: that . .:sneeess - ,:the glory, greatness atid,-renown: Of.opr:Cointiion -eountrythe.death of . treason. - slayeryc State . seVereinty,.and the, right Ofsecessten, and 'not Siinply, 'debt.- disOtice . . and slaughter", .were results -pi the war:.: AA' the action of the , military- . .commission' had. mist only the: liVes Of a :fen- of ..the .aSsassins . ef. - Presuleitt Lincoln;and as only a few Vilest Of. the: rebels were in 'danger from :shrtilar.trials, - - it is : next te: ittipossible t.o.diviiie a motile for. the . :hostility. of the late.. cartvemioit toward military commissions. It Would be unChar liable to* intimate, that it originated in-svmpa tby.iwilli such criminals asl i firz. or.-Jefferson . . Io contrast With this 'remarkable :platfortri. of Onr - political;opponents i we. have . that of otirown 'represent MiVes, , whielt;'antong other things, contains - the • " • `The: Quinn party ofP.innaylvania,dnstate convcation lissciuhlcd;- declare: .-.• That . aS representatives- of the, loyal People. of OM Commoiturealth,' we reverently desire to, - offer..oor . • gratitude. to Almighty . . God; Whim fatior has •Vouchaafed• victory to . fhe.national - grins, - enabled Its . to eradicate the crime Ofslaveryfrom. our ~ .land, Ind' to render treason againstthe Reiinblie imposai r ble forevermore ; and -nest..te him our thanks. are flue andftre herebytendered . to our brave EK Adi er s 6, 11 d . -sithor .: l; who, by their-endurance,. aaerificeS,. illustritius :heroism; have.. se , • cured'. to: their..cou nI ry , Ipeage i and to lie doWn-trodden eireryWhere an .asylum of ljber .tY . whohaye shown that the, wa r fdr. he res toration of the. Union: is not a failure, and_ whose valor has proven fof . all time the • fact than. this Government of the..p.etiple, - :: by the pebple, for:the people: .is as:invincible in: .its strength as it is : benetieent iu its, operations." I‘he doctrines•:and princiPles of the • party in. : lB64,ltaye. been re-asserted by - they conven7 tiOn Of 'lSi;:i., It is confidently - believed that • they Will not. beideserted nor abandoned... by. the.people.at the poll in OCtobef MPTMEI====9I3WCTWrIffIMMI There exists - between the two parties, and indeed among persons , of the same political faith, some difference of opinion in regard to the true Condition and standing pi States late ly in rebellion against. the- Government. It is not proposed to discuss the point of differ ence which mostly involves an answer to the question = "Are the: States now, and have they hem dming the war, within the Union - or not?" If by. `the States" is meant the soil or territory embrae,eil within 'their boundaries, or the space occupied by them on the map, then we rejoice to - believe that . not - One inch has ever yet been or-even cinibe taken out of, the Union. But it would seem- equally clear that the - governMents of those . States hive beer: wholly and utterly subverted, and. for four years and.inore have been violently hostile - and:antagonistic to the Union. - We find that on the. 20th day .of November, 1860, the Attcirney General of the United. States .(Judge Black,)in afficiat;opinion used. the following language_:: "If it be true .that war cannot.be declared, rior..a system of general hostility •earried On by .the Central Govern— ment against .a State, then it seems to follow that an attempt to do so-would be ipso facto an expulsion tifif such. State frcim the :Union, being treated as . an alien and an enemy, -she would be compelled .to act accordingly. And. if Congress should break - up the present Uni on by. unconstitutionally putting. sti ire arid enmity and armed hostility between different sections of the country, instead of the doilies tic tranquility- whisk the constitution was cineant, to insure,. will not all the States be ab solved from ; their Federal' Obligations? Is any-portion of the people bound to contribute their money or - their bleod to:carry oira con test like , that.? it, in accordance with this view, "those Stares!were expelled from the Union," and if • 'l,hey , were absolved from their Federal'obligations,!! it•,would seem to be pretty clear that they:. : were . out .of - the • On the other side of the same question 'We have the Immei authority. At the. convention Of August 24-03, 1863, Judge Black, chairman . ` of the cbminittee • on 'resolution - 3, , repOrted; •among other things,: the following . . That .tht3 States could not absolve the people front: their Federalabligationa; that the State or! :dinatices of secession were nullities, and therefore when ihe attempted revolution came to an end by the subiniasion of theinsurgents, • the States were as Much & part of the Union as . they: had. been before." It, would seem from these views that when it suited the con venience, the fancy, or perhaps the wishes .of some 'persons to have the :insurrectionary States nut ciPthe Union; then they were out ; - and., .when it was desirable' to have them back again, then.tbey were s in and had never Vire are sometimes told that the ordiriariees of secession were null and, void: : ' 'lt , iNe01:1 ceded that they were illegal and unconstim= tional. -Soitis to commit murder. But you cannot restore the life of the :victim by de claring the illegal act Pull and void. It is unlawful to steal; yet if your horse be sto;. len you.c.antiot.brinc4, him back by .deelarinc , ever so earnestly that 'the act is .null.and . Concede that the act' of secession wasnot only illegal' and unconstitutional, .but also null and.void: If the foundation is .removed the superstructure must tall It is a matter of history, however, to every one, that in those Statcs all the judges, Legislatures, and officers • chosen, and all • the laws passed since the •eomineticement of the rebellion; were. chosen. arid passed in pur suance of the ordinances of .secession.— Of course, these, actions areall null and void. Hence, wend these States withont GoVer nors, without Judges, without Legislatures, and with their entire' government - subverted and overthrown: - "Being, however, a part, of the soil and territory of the" nation, it, ts..for the within to proiide a:government - for then' until their people, - ; freed : from, the odium of treisbn, trod taught to submit in good. "faith to the issue of the contest J through which they have jitst passed; shall prepare and adopt fur them.selves a truly, republican form of government, recognizing all the great truths Vindical ed• and established by the blood and treasure of the nation. ' * Alit it matters-but little .as to the opinions we may entertain in. regard to the abstract question, whether. these•.,statesure in or out of the Union, because it ,must be conceded, an all hands; that they have been reco , rnizett bellig---nts. Our 'political adversaries were the 14.-3 t to insist that these rights should be conceded to theta.: Foreign nations se conded the demand,. and our Government yielded to, it and treated them as Bach. Lest some one; now thid the r Var is over, should iiisi9tthat they were. not in ,the positibn of belligerents, let us examine what the highest legal:tribunal of the,country has declared up on- the su . • The Supreme Cpurt'of the United Stites; in . :the -prize ease .reeeritly 'decided,' 'says . : 'lience, in organizing, this, rebellion, - they have acted as States claiming to be sovereigt. over all, persons' and property within their respec,tivelltnits, and .a.serthig aright to ab solve their citizens final_ their .allegiance to the Federal.G • - "It is Lo hiose, Unorganized inssurrection, haying no defined - lintuidary or pos,session has a boundary marked by lines'of bayonets, and which. 'can only be: crassed by force. Boutit of tlds line is enemy's territory, be- . cause it is claimed and held in possession by an organized-hosale arid belligerent potter." Had There been - any doubt before, this would clearly set, the. matter at-rest. liairing enjoyed the rights of belligerents,. shall they avoid the , responsibilities and duties and 're fuzie to submit to the treatment of. bellter ehis ? What are. some.of these liabilities? .• "The conventions and - treaties made with. -a. nation aye broken yor annulled by a war arising bet Ween • the .Contenning itrdea.- .Yattel,- book . 3; Ch.: 10,. 5ed...125: • . • In discussing the same . point; land after:al luding to - a former custoth. which required -a formal,dcelaration• of War.. , Phillimore, p. 662, says "In the 'place crf . it has arisen-the gen eral maxim . : that war: foso. facto,:abrogates treaties between the belligerents:" ; . • On the.same subject Oharmellor Kent 'says i "is .grcral rule, the . obligationioftreaties are'.dissipated by hoStilityj • I gent, .175. On this Subject - Prof. Leiber says, on , p: . 8 f‘,Al,l lllllpicipat-laiv of:the ground on:which the armies . stand,..orOfthe countries to which . they silent,- . -and. of .no effeet.be tween armie in. the. field." . . .A.hd •• :Sergeant Wildman. (page ~5,). : - a ys ."The'Priantry daiiet :of . the .war is. to estin euich all civil intercourse, and to .place. all . subjects ,of_ belligerents-in the condition .01 enemies.- This principle extends not. only to the' flat: v s-14mo -.Subjects, but to - all persons domiciled.in • the enemies', Ceti:aerie:4i. to . all whoeMite to reside . therewith knowledge, of the-war , ,--and'who, having core to reside.be-: ford the war, continued .their.. - reskleitee after the commencement of hostilities. for a:long?.r. time than is riebesSurY . .lo:-their convenient departure." • ".•'.-..• . For ;fear. seine might :contend . .that these principles do not apply in. eitses•ot Civil war, we add . an: . ad ditional••authority. • . • In considering this'quegileti;Nattel,' iri his 'Law of cations, .on pages 424 and - 425; uses . thislanguage.:, • • • • ... into iu republic•the - nation . l6 diy:ded bite . tiro opposite :factionS,. and both sides ,take - up :arms; - ceded's 'The sovereign indedirtieveriails to: bestow the appellstion.pf,nour.Ls such of his subjects - as'openly . resist.- him When - the latter have' aequired,a Sufficient: strength • to giVe him. effectual Opposiiion; , and oblige him to carry ;on the war :against, thein , according to the established' rnies, he must necessarily submit to the 6 . 0. Oflhe:!.term,. wer.'- .on; : ..earth- they -htrie no .cotnmen superior; :they- stand.' . precisely . ' in . ..the- same,-Ptedica* went as INYo nations .who engage in a.cait:. lest,.. nbd, being .unable. to • opine tcran agree ment, haverecourse.te armS.r. • . .. • .1t istheretOre; perfeettly.inanifestAltatAliese . late febele are . now - iti tire. Condition ,of cone iftlered, subdued belligerents: - - Sow rhay we lawfulfy , treat Ahern? •-:..:. • ,:... -: . ,• .. :-. : • When the war hasbeen unjuSt; Vattel says: "The whole right of a - conqueror is - derived from justifiable .self defence, whit h 'conapre lienclS'tbe support and. prosecution .of Ids rights. therefiwe, he has subdued ft hostile nation, he.: - Undeniably. may, in the first place, do himself justice respecthig the object which lias given.rise, to the war,.nnd indemnify himself for the expenses and dein: ages he has sustained,by -- "We 'have a 'right to deprive our enemy of .his possession of everything which may aug ment his strength • and enable him to 'make war." (Page. 364.) , - "Everything., therefore,- which belongs to .the nation, to the state; to the .sovereign, to the-subjects---eveiTihingfif that kind, I say, falls under the deseripttim of - things belong. big to the enemy. (page 125-) • • • "A -conqueror may with justice lay buidens on the conquered nation, both ilea compen sation for the expensed of the war and a pun ' ishment." (Page 889.) - • . ,• Oh this subject one of our ,own . authors; Chancelkir Kent, saysi 'But', .however - strong the current of in thority in favor of the modern and' milder construction ofsthe rule. of ,national law• on this - subject, the point seems to, be .no longer open for discussion in this country and it had become definitely settled' in' favor of the an . - .cientand sterner rule by the Supreme Court of the United States.•" (Kent's Com. ' page 59. Also, see Broliti vs. the United Slates - ,` 8 Cranch,,llo. See also, Ibid, 228, 229). Kent, in the same cohnection, in referring to the case of the cargo. of:the ship Euaillons, 1 Gallison, 583, in thee=Circuit Court of the United States, at Boston says: -! • '- " When the case was brought•up, on. IT peal, tietbre the.Supreme-COurt ofthe United States, the brOad principlewas assumed, that war gave to the -swereign full .right to take the persons and confiscate the property. of the enemy wherever found;. and that the niitiga tions of this, rigid pile. which .the wise and 'humane ot Modern - .times : had dneed into, practice, 'Might, •.`inore Or leas, • af feet the exercise of the right, bucould not: impair the right itself." . . TREITILLENT OF ILEBELEL • We'have thus seed how we_ may. legally treat those lately in rebellion against us.— How. should we treat them? All, will adwit that we should desire- to ant towards them-in such , a waysas to promote the welfare of the people, and add" most to the greatness and glory of our common cOnntry. ' will de pend touch upon our action.whether, the war justclogetl, the.mast .gigantje In the world's history, shall produce `substantial iesults, or whether'tha blood.ancitreasure.of the nation laive been shed find expeitged in wain. -_ We must be thereiful, but"_ mercy. must be temp-, ered lVith juance. Iniliscriminate mercy to the enemy;would be danger and:injustice to the 'nation. We must 'neither seek - nor 118 k • fig verigeauce. • Whenever out. late - adversa ries come in a true spirit ofiirrow end repen tance; sheath the sword and agree to obey the ; aw, in the fiance we Will-extend to theta the right ',hand ofi fellowship, and forgive - them for • the-, past. • .After they. -shall have givea.tis satisfactory, -security for the future, by a reasonable probation, we -will then, but not till thn, restore, them. to 'the. enjoyment, of. all thd Inestimable. 'rights - ,and high prisi: !egos which they so recently. to defiantly, and so cauielessly trnmpled 'under their .feet. For defiant, and unyielding.. rebels; for titow Rho keep the sword -still drawn; reeking witt the blood of our brothers; for those who refuse_ to .accept and submit; in good faith, to the results of the wail- for all who glory in the part - they took in the rebellion, end who still insist that they: were right and the nation wren& we unust-have confiscation, loss_of Citizenship, and' in the- end, . banish .meitt or the haltei. itlnder the taw of nations, and by the laws orivai, we have a clear right to enfoiee the great otlects of all wars—in, demnity for the past, and security for the futUre. • This right extends to the confiada, tion of the enemy's property after the war is' over. : . Even as a question of - policy and ex .•pediericy, or Spon the gpund" of humanity; -it is by no means certain that some such measure is, not • required •for ..the, _ security: of the future. The war is. not ended ,until the conquered petty' has fairly accepted all its results; Ai we haie 86611, we hold - the late rebel States by the power of war as. Nut= quered belligerents., It %mot only the right, but the solemn: 414 . 9 f the Government to hold these belligerents in the military grasp until all shall he demanded and . obtained which maybe necessary to secure the nation in the future, ruid . render another•rebellion another war impossible. , In accomplishing ' these ends, who could- reasonably: complain if itshould be: found necessary "to confiscate the propert3r - of the - rich, influential, and ac tide traitors... , If, the aristocratic: element of the Smith will not bi taught to-obey the lair, let its poiver and' influence be taken "from :It by taking "away its wealth. • What' loyal. man could object,' that' by raeans . of this fund a . few of the comforts, tf-tiot the luxuries of life; shotild he added to the tables of those widows thriinghouV - the land whose firesides have been made desolate by the war, or rather by' the, trmoti- whieh caused it?;:Who .would object that the bounties and pensiona of our soldiers, by whom the victory. was. WOll and the nation saved, should be increased,' and a :trifle added to the pecuniary compenaation so justly due them for. the sacrifices made? Who could object, that by means of these funds, so justly forfeited, -a large portion of our na tional debt - should be paid, and thereby :the taxes of all classes of our people diminished, ,and apart of the heavy load-imposed.upon the shoulders of our people - by treason, thus 'removed by. treason, itself? The 'rich men" of the Soutli-,-the aristocracy of the rebellious States—ere alinost entirely respoasible for the ' rebellion. For Ceriturlim they have been Hy- - log login ease. abd luxitry, sustained, - sup ported, and enriched_ by the sweat :and toil of the slave. Our so,-called Democratic adversaries tell ui that the .war was for the negro, and for the abolition of slavery: If, this be true, would it not seem to a lust:judgment or• de cree Of an overruling Providence, that the fruits of the negro's labor and toil should thus tie wrested trom the !Audi of his master to purchase and seeure.hiS own freedom?. It is absolutely indispensable to the future pcace of the country that the world shall. be made to, • understand tliat treason is a great crime; and most be punished: Xer, in the settlementof these questioes,- the.rebels shallspeelVe at .our hands all that justice and safety - will permit us to grant. Our treat ment of them Shall be greatly influenced by.. their future conduct and actions towards the - nation. Arid in shaping these, - it would be well for : them to remember • that the war was of their own seeking, and of their own - making, anti" that - no one is so - completely bound by a verdict as the man who sought the advents . gas of •ihe trial. - • , • - ' TOE SOLDIERS Extraordinary efforts are being made by our opponenta to Obtain the votes of otir fel low citizens. recently returned from the set.- vice Of the Country in the army Of the nation. In these-efforts, they-should,. and kis con& dently believed, that they will • .. Because, a vigorous prosecution of the war for. the suppression of the rebellion has • ever-been urged , by_= the Union party of the 2. &cause the war - has never been Sus tained or 'advticated by the leaders of the par ty opposed to the •Administratiom 32 Because the friends of the Union cause have always sustained and supported the - sot= diers in the field, andlhe leaders of pretend ed Dernocracy have. 'ridiculed and derided . the soldieraot the Union, called thein:`,'.Li,n --_ coin's "rebbeis," . eplitriderers," and other epithets unfit for'repetifion. , Because :when 'volrinteers were called. for, they demanded a draft. . 5.- BeCilUSe.When the draft came,• they op posed the commutation clause,' and declared . it was a discrimination against the poor man. p.. Because when that clanse was repealed • they coinplained that, the only : hope of the poor-tnan was gone: •• . . • - • 7: Because they denounce:d• the - war as a negro war, and_ did nothing•to aid or assist in ' carrying it on. * • • . 8. Because the* . .hectime iedignant when negro troops were Caliedfor, and threw. the benefit or all-theif-sympathies . With . the 92 B'ecausa they opposed .every measure the Goverurnet4 . .found it -necessary to adoPt foe the suppression of the'rebellion. 10. Because :they.magnified, every rebel success, and depreciated every Union victory., -Because, in 1864, they declared the mar a failure. • 12. Beastlie, in 1865, -they - declare that the fruits of the war ara ' l / 4 1eht, disgrace, and 13, •Becaase they tried to prevent the ei tension of the right of suffrage to' soldiers in service. Their leaders opposed it in 'atmOst• every form. Senator Wallace,- now" Chairman of.their Slate Central' COrnmittee, said (see Record 'of , 1864, pages 335.339).v '.cj vote. against this bill upon principle, as : well as fcir form. It is said: hat' so meritorious a Class is vciltintaer soldiers should not' be disfran chised.. To this'''. anawer, that neither the constitution of 1790, nor,that of 1838, Confer red.-this privilege, and the act of - the soldier. in taking upon IhiriSelf duties that are- from their nature incompatible with the right ofsitf frage, deprivestim. of This privilege. - He dis-. franchises, himself when he ceases to he a citizen, and takes upon himself the duties of a soldier." When the amendment of the constitution was Submitted to a , vote of the, people, many of . the *so Called Democratic counties' gave majorities against it, while every county 'blithe State (and it...is- believed. every election precinct) , which gave -Abra ham Lincoln a, majority :of its votes gaire -tt Majority in favor of the amendnient.' . - :_ • 14. Their-JeriderS almost invariably , off- posed. giving bounties ,to voltinteers, while the fricaula,of the Union party .alWays, stis tained and supported these •measures.. 15. Even since the war is, over, theY' em = ploy their ablest laWyers in an effort' to de clare the - bounty laws unconstitotional, and really persuadedtheift - twi:V- friends on the bench of the SupremeConrt so to hold. ~ When men were greatly needed to fill up ; the ranks, and -the Government ,Ordered a draft, they resisted, and all of 'their represen; fatty& upon the. bench of the Supreme Court declared ,the , law , authorizing the National Govcrnment to lake men out of the State,- by draft;' was unconstitutional ' and "void. Men• were 'only" bbfanied; 'and the 'nation saved, beempe their party',was defeated, at the polls in 1863, and the act of three of those judges rebuked by the peoFile r •and one of their pla ces filled by 'a loyal man and-sound judge.. 17.: Because they have tried to injure the . Credit and disparage the currency of the corm trY, by Ineans'of 'which . the pay, bounties; and pensions of the soldieican alone be paid. This ,point the 'also pressed before the. Su preme Court b the State, and failed by a di vision' of three to two. _ . • 18. .Beelms the platform of the Union par ty ,recognizes the services: of the- soldier ; de •clares Iliarthe war ;was-commenced by reb els ; that peape was; the result of the courage and heroism !of the Uiiion Army; that the „cause in which he fought, Was holy and sa cred, and that "honor. glory, and-prosperity . to the country; and not "debt, disgrace; and • slaughteri" are. the legitimate:- fruits- of his 'l9. BeCause, when; Unionmen expressed 'thC hope that bur trciotis:might scion be able to conquer the Soutb,•eve,n by their exhaus tion and want of tined, ~ those- leaders •of the new Democracy :declared:that "we Could never conquer the Sorith,",and 'that "they had More to eat in, he South Wait wehad in the North:" ' 20. Because when rebels were starving our brave soldier by thelnindred at Libby, Belle 'lsle,; Andersonville, and, elsewhere, these Mule leaders excused orinitigated the criine by declaring that "they fed our:prison= era' as well' its they..did their own men; ' that "owing . to the: unconstitutional ,blockade .of the' tyrant lineal, they could. not.-obtain, a • sufficiency xif fnod.". . _ . . PREMDENT Ji)if,lBo,N 4Np:T:IIE.:.:OPPO§ITION. !The opposititni hati'r(oV 'been so consistent - in their course tewirde President' Johnson as they have on, the subject, of the war. Pri or to is renomination, they abused, vilified and denonneed him. . Prom the' time' of his nomination until . the eleetion, no epithets .BANNAN'S BI AR PRINTING OFIVE. . .Ha . • • Having twocared three Presses; we are now prep:rail to execute JOB and BOOS PRINTING of:ever, de =talon at the oditor of the limns.. Jotrazar, damper than it an be done skaay nth"? gatablivinguiat iti also . . , , _ .0 . ~ ". • .• I Hooke, Pamphlets, . ' Stile orlasalfrisr. • 'Large Poetteray • . •-- Roamed Tickets., Had: lßille, , . ... .. . - , Paper itiooka, - ' Articles elf Artwessent, Time lltooks, - Rill illeadmit , • - •' • Order. Ilooke, • &et /it the very etiniterit Mince. Nieto& of:7011 TYPI, .1s more extensive than that of any other office in, this 'section of the State;-and we keep bands employed az poesely for Jobbing. Being a practical Printer oenreli.' we will gesnowee our work to be as neat 'as - any that out be tensed out tri the calm - MatPIING IN COI.' 888. done at the shortest notice - . . • • - - . BOOB:; 1111Atit . . Etty. -• Books bound in every variety etatyle. - Blank Becobir tit el eIY dmieription manufactured, bound and ruled t• NO. 39. were too :coarse. FrOm the - inaugundfon • until 'the death of President 'Lincoln, they continued in the same strain.: After Oat they. - began to flatter—then to approach. -. When he - ordeieit•the, exectitionot•tbe 8581481138, they sent forth a loud howl of indignation.— When he . ordered a trial of the Andersonn vide wholesale murderer,', and talked of try- ing . Jefferson Davis, they were about to give up in despair. " But now - they profess to . grow a little more confident. They • en .dorse him in Maine and 'New York., They . endorse - him (provided he will do as they wish) in Penniylvania. In 1863, they spoke of him thus : Senator Lam .berton, Record .of 1863, - page 863: .t'But then he was Andrew Johnson the Democrats Now, however, ,he has deserted his post of - duty in Tennessee ; he in:stultifying his past record- he has become e pensioner on pow-.. er, ant a: - defender of the - tutttrpations - 'of - - Abraham Lincoln;"and he appears anion; us - to-day - as an itinerant peddler of abolition-, isni."Senator Wallace, page 874 • "During all the existence of •the where - dr . Andrew Johnson ? In the. Senate 'of the UhiteiStates, seeking protection for-himself and his fellows under the bayonets of the sol-- diers of McClellan. He is never -found in arms in defence of his State; or • valiantly fighting in defence of.the liberties of his peo-- • Ple, against the armed cohorts of the rebel lion: • Never! never ,! " Senator Clynier ' page • .377: "I say, sir, that his"- (Johnson's) 'tap- • pointment, by the President 'of-the 'United _ States, to that position, was a _usurpation ,of , power, on the part of the President • • ,That is my•position; so , far 'fla • concerns this pretended Governor of Tennessee, out regard to any .questiou of his official po sition, take Andrew Johnson as an individ ual- * * * I never, by my vote, will Allow a man to borne into these halls and front - this place speak to. the people of this great State, ' in support of what I knOw , to be illegal, un constitutional, and tyrannical acts of the Fed eral GovernMent. I know, air, that Andrew Johnson has gone as far as the• farthest, and is ready. to, go still,further to dektroy, to up- • root, to upturn every principle_ upon which. this great and good Government of bAv urd'as '• founded.- I know that be has bent with sup knee before the throne' of power;'l . know that, for pelf or some other consider- . • atiota he has succumbed to every; measure presented to him for approval or , disappro- These political leaders now • are simply watching . their chances: lioping that some thing may turn up which may enable them to return to power, In New York they adopt= ed, a platforni at variance with all their past prOfessions. and actually refused to,condemn negro suffrage!: They hope to use President Johnson to subserve their selfish purposes. THE CHARGF. OF NEGRO EQUALITY. • For, many yeafs ous4telitical opponents seem to have a large -in eestatentdtt slavery and the negro. Now that slavery is prettj generally admitted to be dead, it was thought that they might allow the old subject to rest. But not so. They return to the 'question, With as much - apparent zeal as ever. With it full knowledge of the fitct that negro suffrage and negro equality are not anctcould not pos sibly be' an issue,- in the October contest they are making extraordinary efforts to mislead and deceive their fellow-citizens' into , -a con- trary. belief. They think that - our hostility and prejudices against the negro are so great, and that they have so , f ten appealed to these with some show of success, •that it is only necessary to repeat the effort in order to ac complish their designs: They tell you,that efforts are being made to elevate the negro, and to place the two races on an equality.— They . seem to be very afraid that some poofdegraded negro may outstrip them In the• race of life. They tell us that these negroew are weak; ignorant, and inferior to the .whites. If so, it would, seem that they needed our help ai3d . assistance to educate and instruct them. The only danger of equality we can: see•is, that. some white men. by continuing• longer in such a course of argument, is utter disregard of truth, experience, and' history, for the base purpose of reaching the prejudi ries of the thoughtless, max at last succeed in bringing themselves down to or beneath, the , level of the negro. The time was when they confidently declared that the destruction of slavery - would send swarms of negroes . into our midst totrive away white laborers; -Bs perience:has shown'that the few we had here ran away from slavery in the South, and that bad there been no slavery there these negroes in the North would have long since moved South. They told us, too, that in ease of a war, the slaves' would all fight for their mats ters. Neither, Southern masters nor their Northern,' allies have say faith in ,this doc-• trine now: But these tioliticians cannot live without' the negro. • He comprises. nearly theirentire stock in trade. One year It-is one phase 'of the negro question'; another year. it Is- something else., The great work of Bishop • Hopkins was once one• of . their standard works; It; is ranter dullsale this year. The conduct of these politicians to:. the poor. degraded -Ingo, would be past all compreheosion,'had we•not a kheino • rabid example of the same kind in 'the early history of the human race,',. All the trouble-,:r some and deadly Plagues otEgypt, including the death or all the, firstlern of the lank., were'ndt sufficient to jeach the heart of Pha rash, not to: persuade;ffie•Egyptians of Hui errors and sin of Slavery.:;So that, even at; ter, the slaves had left- the country, led by a pillar of a cloud by _day, and a pillar of fire by night, the •ruler and his hosts Of 'subjects ' follow ed •the m even into:the midst 'of, the Red Sea. Our nation has suffered molt:Abort all • the plagues,of Egypt. - As thelaw of primo-, geniture has 'been abolished 'among us,' the', deaths, were not all our firstLberil; but noir- - ly one of estry household yet.these deluded. hosts, led on by. hard•hearted and ;wickedP,haroabs, as leaders, areiiill.pursuing even into the midst ,of the Sea. Will not the " waters standing as. Walls of safety" to the slaveso-return again and Cover Pharoah and his hostsi-and all that come into the sea after them,..until there shall remain not. eo much as.one of them ? " ' 'OUR CANDIDATES. For Auditor GeneraL.We: have presented the . name of, Major, General John. F. liar tranft, of •Montgomery; .and for Surveyor General, that of Colonel Jacob M. Campbell, of Cambria. • As biographies•of there two gentlemen have recently been published aqd, circulated among their , fellow•citizerts,- it is 'only remarked here, ,that they are both brava and'kallant soldierS..amf• espebially qualified for a satisfactory discharge of the duties of• the respective offices for which their .fellow citizens have nominated' them. , IMPORTANCE OF THE MEE. , It is not 'to'be disguised that there is a large number cif persons both at the North and at the South, who. have -not finally aban doned the hope, of the ultimate - triumph of the principles of thelate rebellion.,. They, hope to secure by-the' success of their views at the ballot-box;lhat which they failed to accomplish by . arined,forne: - .lt may depend utionr the decision :of Perinsylvama Gn the 10th of October, Whether the war shall prove, at last, a' failure—whether its fruita are to be only ' "debt,-. disgrace and slaughter," or whether it is to have substantial results in the death and burial of slavery, State sovereignty and tne right of seeesSion. • - 'lt is a well-eitablished fact, that the con test was long protracted by reason 'of the hope and belief-entertained:by- the &nth that they weuld.. reneirfe.;,aid and sympathy . from the North. : .: . It is now all . important to the South that they ohOttid be assured that this hope is fallacious, .and. that the North :will adhere unfaiterhigly to the doctrines, principles„ and 'Views which carried them-. triumphantly thicaigh the four years of bloody war. It is best to let 'them know, at once And: forever, that there' is DO hope for therifinal triumph of the doctrines and mem ures for which they contended • in the field. We have seen that the men'ainong ifs who 'were first - to urge - Upon - lb& GOVprninent to hold the rebels in the light of bplligerents;- are now the,first- to, strive to relieve .them -from the,consequenees and penalties of their belligerencY, Those whO were 'collation in their predictions that the "war would Bever end," mad that •tthe South , cotild never be nonquered," are now, meat ready to insist that :the war is over, and that,its :objects and re-' snits shall not be secured, but that - rebels Shall be instaritlyrestored to all their former rights- under. the Constitution- and ...laws' of the : country: These, same:'men - who are now appealing, to the soldiers tor: their votes, offigially denounce" ' murderers"as" all those errgaged . aint;.pitnishing by military , commission thrLauthorii.of the ,wholesale slaughter of their companions in arms. All this . - and More they do with a full Anowle,dge: of the "law" •of nations, and - the'laWis of war,': which declare that these men :have .-forfirited their •rights under . the .Conatitution, - ". and- that. they now lie prostrate •at the feet Of, the 'victor, as conquered, overthrown- and subdued belligerents ; with =inst., - "sunb rights 'and
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