Scuotcu to politics, literature, Agriculture, Science, iHoralitn, aub encral intelligence. VOL. 27. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., OCTOBER 22, 1868. 0. Published by Theodore Schocb. TERM.-' Two dollnrs a year in dn, cd if not p til lcf re the end oft he year, two dollar and fitfy cts. will be -hrpfl No paper discontinued unti 1 ?.l I arrearages re fmtd eictot at the option ol'the Editor. lO.V J vertiseinents of one fquareof (eight litre?) or les. nn or t hree insertions $ I M). Each addition! tiKcrtion, 50 cents. Longer ones in propoition. Of ALL KINDS, Executed n the highest slyie of the Arld CUth ir.ort icason-ititw Venn. Sign and Ornamental Painter, SHOP ON MAIN STREET, Opposite Woolen Mills, STHOLDSIJUKG, 1A., Respectfully announces to the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity that he is prepared to attend to all who may favor him with their patronage, in a prompt and workman like minncr. CHAIRS, FURNITURE, &c, painted and repaired. PICTURE FRAMES of till kind, con stantly on hand or supplied to orJT. June II, ISG3. ly. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. D RS. JACKSOA &. UlUIiAtK, are prepared ta attend promptly to all calls of a Profession j I character. OJiee- Op posite the Stroudsburg Bank. April 2.3, lG7.-tf. C. W. SEIP, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, sTiwunsBunc, pa. Office at. his residence, on Main Street, nearly opposite Marsh's Hotel. All calls promptly attended to. Charges reasonable. Stroudsburg, April 11, lSG7.-tf. Dll. I. IK SJI1TH, Surgeon Dentist, Office on Main Street, opposite Judge Stokes' residence, .STaotDEBVRO, Pa. (7 Teeth extracted without pain.Q August 1, 1SG7. A. Card. Dr. A. REEVES JAIXSCS, Phy iician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE Til AT HAV ing return:d from E-jrope, he is now prepired to re-urr.e the active duties of his profession. In order to prevent disappoint rnont to persons living at a distnr.ca wrl.o may wish to consult him, he will be footd at his office every THURSDAY nnd SAT URDAY fur cogitation end the pcrforu dice pf Surgical operation?. Dec, 12. l-GT.t r. vm. vr. pact.. 3. D. BOAR. CHAHLE3 DEA1T, WITH YM. W. PAUL & CO. ilanuf.ictnrcrs and Wholesale Dealers in BPOT8 & SHOES. WAREHOUSE, C23 Market St., & 614 Commerce 8t above Sixth, North side, 10, J. 60S. tf. Itcii! Itcix! Itcli! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! USE HOLLINSIIEAITS IK il i SALT CHEIE 0I.MSLM. No Family fhould be without this valna ble medicine, for on the firt-t appearance of the disorder on the wriz-ts, betweeu the fin ders, &.C., a flight application of the Oint ment will cure it, and prevent its beinr; ta ken by others. Warranted to give satisfaction or money refunded. Prepared and olJ, wholesale and retail, by W. IIOLLINSIIEAD, Stroudsburg, Oct. 31, '07. Druggist. J. LAA'SZ, uektist. Has permanently located him- .felfin Stroudsburg, and moved Jiis office next doot to Dr. S. Walton, where he is fully prepared to treat the natural teeth, and also to insert incorrup tible artificial teeth on pivot and plate, in tqe latest and most improved manner. Most persons know the danger and fully of trust jng their work to the ignorant as well as tie jt$.;fc;ii: dentist. It matters not how touch jespciifcjics a person may have, he is liable ,to l!ac soi.:e failure oiit of a number peases, ad if the duitiet Jive at a distance jt is frequently put ofT until it i too late to (ia-ve the tooth or teeth as it mav be, other jvise the iriccuvcnienee ar;d trouble of going yO far. Hence the necessity of obtaining the services of a dentitt near hoics. All work warranted. "' Stroudtburg, March 27, 1662. REV. EDWARD A. WILSON'6(of Wil-liam-burgh, N. Y.) Recipe for CON SUMPTION and ASTHMA carefully com pounded at HOLLINSHEAD'S DRUG STORE, 07" Medicines Fresh and Pure. Nov. 21, 1637.1 V. HOLUNSIIEAD. CI AN YOU TtlisZ WHY ITJS t that when any one comes to Strouds burg to buy Furnilurethey alwsy sinquire for McCarty's Furniture Stoe 1 Sept. 26. OJK'T FOitCGT Hint when you want any thing in the Furniture or Ornamental line that McCarty. in the Odd-Fellow' Hall, Main Street, Strouds fcur, Pa., is the p!acc to gel it. Sept. 26. LYNN'S GREAT GERMAN ROOT AND HERB STOMACH BITTERS! MANUFACTURED AND SOLD BY n. Linsrisr, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. These Bitters arc a certain remedy for DjSprpsiit, InJigrstion, Headache, Nerv oumctf. Lots of Appetite, and i3 a positive preventive of all DISORDERS OF THE STOMACH. The German Herb Stomach Bitters has a restoring influence upon the system, espe cially upon the Digestive Organs, and is recommended to all persons in delicate health. It is an excellent remedy for Sum mer Complaint, and no family should be without it. A. II. LYNN has secured the services of a man who has had in.my years experience in the manufacture of Bilters, in the well- known German Bitters Manufactory of fechiinmel &. Co , Leipsig, Germany, and has made arrangements with them for Ger man herbs, roots, &c, necessary for the manufacture of the Bitters. THE GERMAN HERB STOIHACII BITTERS is now ready to be sent anywhere. All or ders with which I may be favored will be delivered at short notice. A trial of the Bitters is respectfully asked. A. II. LYNN, Manufacturer, South Bethlehem, Penn. Sold by C. S. Detrick &. Co., Wholesale and Retail Druggists, Stroudsburg, Pa. June 4, lS6S.-lyr. LOOK THIS WAY, ALL AVIIO WANT Carriage Work or Blacksniitliiug DONE IN A SUPERIOR MANNER! THE Subscriber begs leave to in fonu the public that he is fully pre- if pared, at his establishment, at tbe corner of Simpson and Sarah streets, in the borough of Stroudsburg, to make to order, every style of Carriage, Wagon, and, in fact, everything in bis line of bu siness, at the shortest possible notice, and ou the most reasonable terms. Carriages repaired, trimmed and paint ed in the best style of the art. Haviu first chtss material always on hand, and none but first-class workmen engaged, the public are assured that none but first clasi work will be turned out at bis sbop. In cjuucciioa with Ins Carriage Shop he has also a Elacksmith Shop, where superior workmen will always be found ready to attend to the orders of customers Tbo public are iuvited to call and ex amine his stock before purchasing else where. VALENTINE KAUTZ. September 10, 1667.-tf. Crystal Spriug Hold, J. L. Thomas, Proprietor, EAST STROUSBURG, PA. MThe Ilou.-e is fitted up with Mod ern ImprovementF, and is supplied with a choice Bar, where the best of Liquor9 can be had. The best ol Stabling aitiched, with accommodating hostlers in at tendance. 0IIorses and carriages can be had at all hour. 0A line of Stages running to Port Jer vis, via Milford, leaves the House, after the arrival of the morning trains. Sept. 3, 18GS. m2. For doing a family washing in the best and cheapest manner. Guaranteed equal to any in the world ! Has all the strength of old rosin soap with the mild and lathering qualities of genuine castile. Try this splen did Soap. Sold by the ALDEN CHEMICAL WORKS, 48 North Front Street, Philadel phia. Sep. 3, 'G3. yl. CRYSTAL SPRING BREWERY. east stpj) unit una, pa. BROWN & BURT, Proprietors. XXX AX.E & PORTER, Promptly supplied at the lowest market prices and of the best quality. July 30, 16G9.-ly. Cheap Feed. GRAIN AT 25 CENTS PER BUSHEL. Apply at the BREWERY, July 30, 1809.-tf East Stroudsburg. PUBLIC SALE. WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC SALE, on the premises, in Cool ba ugh town ship, Monroe county, Pa., On Saturday, October 2ith, 16G8, the following Real Estate, on which the sub scriber new resides, situate in said Ccvl baugh township, and containing Tliii I j-fivi! Acres About 25 Acres are cleared, the greater part of which is Meadow. The improvements are a Dwelling House, part Log and part Frame, a Frame and Log Barn, two vells of good water, and au ex cellent Apple Orchard. This property is situate on the North and South Turnpike, about three miles from the Pccono Depot, on te Delaware Lackawan na and Western Railroad. Sala to commence at 2 o'clock, p. m., when conditions will be made known by JOHN POPE. Ccc'taugh township, Oct. 3, 1S03. flllSr a From Forntrft Weekly Preta. Pennsylvania Victory. Thank God at last for victory I Thank God we've gained the fight I Though battle clouds are rolling yet, At length we see the light. Dark was the hour of deadly strife, And darker were our fears ; Yet not a true heart failed us in The breaking of the spears. "What cheer from Pennsylvania T" Comes flashing o'er the wires; "What tidings from the Keystone State ?' Each friend afar inquires. The land of Penn is saved again, The Keyptone State is free ; We've gained our greatest triumph yet A civic victory. Can Union men so soon forget ? Ther ask o'er rolling waves ; Is there by night no solemn light Above dead soldiers' graves ? No ! Union men remember well Those graves are altars still ; Hurrah ! the dead have fought with us, And nerved with heart and will ! And faster, faster, come the cheers, And louder ring hurrahs ; And wilder, wilder, are the shouts Of thundering applause ! From West and East they cry -'Well done " They sound it o'er the sea : It thrills fresh life to freemen's hearts, Our golden victory I What ho I through all your Southern land ! What ho ! through Northern pines I 'Ti3 heard in pleasant Italy ; It sings o'er German vines. In Paris, and in Burgundy, Such news the Liberals seek, " 'Tis well in the United States, Vice, fire la Ilepvblique." We'll let them hear such news again Before this fight is o'er ; We'll let them see that liberty Still lives upon this shore. Enough as Pennsylvania leads, The Union always goes, And Pennsylvania has gone And triumphed o'or her foes ! To the Soldiers and Sailors of Pennsyl vania. Headquarters Soldiers' and Sail-") ors' State Central Committee, y Philadelphia, Oct. 16, 1868. ) Comrades : You have turned the flank of your old enemy, and he is in full re treat j but you must not pause for an in stant in your pursuit. Follow him np and press him upon all sides until he is i.V ;i:i-iJ 1 t:' i J politic illy anuinuaieu, auu l orrust auu Vadc Hampton have surrendered in the last ditch. 13y the wayside you will find many heretofore misguided men who will gladly join your victorious column. To all such you should extend the hand of welcome, and forget the past. Re not blinded by the declaration that the Op position have given up the fight. Place no reliance in rumors of a change of can didates. These things are simply week inventions of the enemy, intended to in duce you to halt in your forward move moot. Keep up your organizations of "Roys in Rlue." Let them, in fact, be permanent institutions in this generation. Let them continue glorious monuments of a noble fight, for which your children's children shall bless ypu. Let your ef forts be solely devoted to increasing the vote of last Tuesday, and by this means demonstrate how overwhelming would have been your triumph had the band of Rebel vagabonds who invaded the City of Philadelphia been required by their allies at their own homes. Ry order of the Committee. Charles II. T. Collts, Chairman, A. h. Russell, Secretary. For Sale to Close a Concern. 100 reams Naturalization Certificates (queer), with signatures, seal of court, and attestations complete : only the names of the voters lacking, and theso to be filled in at discretion. 1 set ofstakes, ropes, &c, for the in stant setting up of a pugilists' ring say on the eve of an important election. 1 coffee pot and fixings that have seen service. Chej.p for cash. Inquire of Wm. A. Wallace, Philadepbia. Travels of a Green hack. In 1 803, Mr. S. S. Stephens, then of Rangor, re ceived an order from his son, mailed at Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, that letters for him be seat to St. Helena A letter containing a ten dollar greenback, was dispatched thither, but, owing to the change of purpose, the son was not there to take it from the postoffice. In course of time it was returned to the Dead Let ter Office, Washington, from which a few days ago, Mr. Stevens received it, with bis greenback in a good state sf preserva tion, after an absence of five years. '- At the convention of Massachusetts Methodist Churches, in session last week in Roston, Rev. Gilbert Haven proposed singing ''Praise God from whom all bles- sings How," in thankfulness for the great victories in behalf of peace and righteous ness which have been achieved in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Indiana. The pro position was received with shouts of "Hallelujah," "Auieu, and an an them was sung with great enthusiasm." They have at Easton, Pa., a girl about 1G years old who weighs over 5Q0 pounds. BEECHER'S SPEECH. The followiug is the conclusion of Rev. Henry Ward Reecher's speech at the Brooklyn Academy of Music a few nights ago: Mr. B. here read a letter, containing a scries of questions, and proceeded to answer them. You have here in a drop what you will get in the New Yorlk World in a prolonged squirt. Laugh ter. " Are not the Southern loyalists worse threatened now than in 18G5 ?" Yes ; but it is because of the hope that in another year Rlair will be President, wearing Seymour's veil. Let it be un derstood that Grant is to be the next Pre sident, and in a month from November all will be quiet and peace. Great Ap plause." How many more reconstruc tion measures shall we require? No more; all we want now is administration. When they know that Grant sits in the chair that will be enough. Applause "Why did not the Republican party in form' the South at the outset what they required of it?" Principally because they did not know themselves ; because they were not all prophets. The Repub lican party has had to feel its way. We were crossing a ford that had never been explored, and got many a souse before we got across. How cau an honest, faithful, intelligent, patriotic, Christian support the Republican party ? How can he support the Democratic party ? It is said that Gen. Grant is a drunkard. So it is said that Gen Rlair is one. I do not believe either. Rut, if "it were so, I would rather have Gen. Grant drunk than Gov. Seymour sober. Great applause. It is said Grant knows knothiug of civil affairs. It is certain Seymour knows nothing of military affairs.. It is said we want a statesman for President. What is a statesman but a man of common sense and uncommon honesty? And where shall wc find a man of such common sense, such honesty, so modest, with so little self-seeking? I believe him to be a man who will give us an Administra tion resembling that of Washington him himself, taking counsel of wise men. If Gen. Grant sits at the head of the Gov ernment, not one working man, net one poor immigrant, not one dusky creature that by his pine-knot candle reads his spelling-book, that will not feel that he is safe. Who is his antagonist ? A man of amiable private life ; a man whose faults lie wholly in his public administra tion. Seymour is not a man of ideas, neither a leader nor a general, but a man that will be managed by the men about him. Ry not a single act of his life has he t-hown himself to be a man for this era of liberty and progress. If, with such platform before the American people, with these two men one representing all that is true, advancing, free and noble, and the other retrograding, timid and time serving, you should chose the wrong one, I should almost lose faith in the De mocracy. Rut I believe that ere four weeks have rolled away, the voice of this nation, scarcely less sublime than the thunders that sounded from Sinai, will declare for liberty impartial, universal liberty and for Grant. Greatapplaose The Georgia Massacre. Camilla lies not far from the old prison Ma l m . . 1 pen ot Andcrsonville. iuc rebels in that neighborhood, as is well remembered by a few survivors of the horrible prison pen, were trained during the war to see Lmon men starved, abused in every cruel way, and shot to death for the sport of their captors. It appears that they grew niuig- nant that a Republican meeting should be held among them. Instead of leaving the procession alone, they met it, obstruct ed its march, fired upon it, and here is the official report of the killed and wound ed, sent by a United Stated officer : "List of killed and wounded in the af fair at Camilla : Twelve frecdmcn, names unknown, at a pond near Dr. Dosher's, two miles from Camilla. 13. 1). O'C. Polhirs, freedman, shot dead ; 14, Peter Penes, freedman, shot iu leg, wrist, and neck; 15, Unknown freedman, shot through bowels and in head mortally wounded ; 16, James Ingrahani, freed man, killed shot repeatedly while lying wounded on the ground ; 17, William Dcssm, freedman, shot in shoulder; 18, Unknown freedman, shot in thigh ; 10, Union freedman, shot in knee and breast; 20, James Dickcrson, freedman, shot in arm ; 21, Wesley Chatham, freedman, shot in back ; 22, Unknown freedman, shot in back ; 23, Freedman, shot dead ; 21, A. R. Collins, freedman, killed shot after beingwounded, while on the grouud; 25, William Landscy, freedman, head cut by blow with clubbed musket; 2G, Ran dolph, freedman, shot in the leg; 27, Rurrill Jobnsoo, freedman, shot in should er; 28, Squire Acre, freedman, shot in shoulder; 39, Ren Lumley, frecdmau, shot in thigh and in leg, below the knee; 30, Howard Runcc, freedman, six gun shot wounds in head, car, thoulder, arm, elbow, and side, dangerously wounded ; 31. Handy Robinson, freed aian, shot in both legs ; 3i. John Murphy, whitr, con tusion of head by blow of musket barrel ; 33. P. Pierco. white, diot in leg; 31. P. F. Putney, white shot in shoulder. Of the attaching party only two are re ported wounded James Johns, the ring leader, who has a pis-tol ball in the fore head and two in the buck, said to be mor tal, and Collins, slightly wounded. It is estimated that at least fifty frecdmcn we e killed and wounded," "Now, Jet any one with this report be fore him say whit party he bupposca to have been armed and ready for attack, The solder being educated for the camp and which one unarmed and unprepared, is totally unfit for civil responsibility His It is clear, as daylight that the ex-rebels profession is lawlessness; his teachings, of Camilla took their measures carefully, tryanny; his law, the bayonet and the that they were fully armed and determin-1 cannon ; his constitution, his own will; bis cd to disperse the Republican procession, 'supreme court, a military commission.-T-and kill a part of its members. Evening (Applause.) If Grant be elected, he Post. feared the last Presidential, election wilf have been beld iu this laud. Shadows of eJnoonh Of CoL Robert M. Donglas in; Raleigh. The Raleigh (N. C.) Standard pub lishes a report of the speech made by Col. Robert M. Douglas, son of the late Ste phan A. Dougla3, at the Republican mass meeting in that city, on the lGth inst. Col. Douglas said that he believed that the main issue of this campaicn was war or peace, and quoted from Gen. Frank Rlair's letter to Col. Rroadhead. He then continued. If any further proof was needed to show the revolutionary spirit of the Conserva tive party, it could easily be found in the violent harangues wc daily hear around us, their bitter persecution of Union men, and their unrelenting hatred of the North and its loyal people. This bitterness to wards Northern men who prove true to their principles, and do not bow in slavish submission to the opinions of these haughty aristocrats, self-constituted judg es of honor and morality, I know form personal experience. Though descended from one of the oldest families of this State, and born and partially raised in Ruckingham County, upon my return j nearly two years ago to my native place I j a r was denounced as a Yankee, and general-j ly received with all the coldness and dis- trust due to one of that detested race. Notwithstanding my own nativity and could never ionzet tne ruritan oinn oi my father, whose native State, Vermont, with her 30,000 majority, so nobly leads the van ; and I may add, could never for give his dying efforts in defence of his country. Speaking of him, and feeling that whatever importance any words of mine may have, is derived from the name I bear, and the affection may still fall toward one who through life proved him self the people's friend, a few words con cerning my father may not be deemed in appropriate. It was with feelings of sur prise, and, I must add, cf indignation, that I saw his name inscribed upon one of the transparencies borne in the late Conservative procession. I thought that common decency at least would have pre vented them from dragging from the tomb the name of a man whom they had betrayed and denounced through life, and after his death, whose children they had persecuted. hue gazing upon that name, I remembered the time when those same men declared hitn a traitor to every principle of honor because he preferred his country to his party, and bitterly de nounced him for his efforts to rally the people of the West for the defence of the Union. I remember all these when 1 am declared a degenerate son ; and for every quotation they give me from his speeches will give them a dozen. hen the sen tinel parades a sentence concerning a white man's government, I would remind them of his dying words. hen the wife bent over the scarce breathing from of tbe expiring statesman, and asked if he had no message to send to his children, "Tell them," said he in a voice rendered almost inaudible by the near approach of death, "to obey and support the Constitu tion and the laws of the land. This solemn injunction I intend to obey. When I see myself personally abused by the conservative paess on account of my political sentiments, and called a traitor to the State in which I was born, I would recall to their recollection the time wheu I was declared an alien cne-my. About the year 1SG2 a bill was filed summoning Thomas Settle (now Associate Judge of the Supreme Court) and R. A. Ellington to Greensboro, to show cause they should not surrender the property of Robert M. and Stephen A. Douglas, alien enemies of the Confederacy ; and when I ara de nounced as a Yankee and carpet-bagger, I would remind them of their efforts to drive me an exile from my native State, and reudcr me a stranger to the land that gave me birth. As, however, I have inherited my father's name and his prin ciples, it is natural that I should inherit a a .a their animositv. Nevertheless, it . is strange that the.e men, his bitterest cno inics in life, should now claim to be the truest exponents of his principles ; but not more strange than that they should now assert themselves the best friends of the Constitution of the United States, and the infallible interpreters of its provisions, after thev havo sacrificed hundreds of thousands of lives and thousands of mil lions of treasure to tramp into the dust that sacred iustrument. Adolph Moses, Esq., an able Jewish Liwyer ol Quiusey, Illinois, nnd who was selected to preside over the National Or ganization of Rnai Rnith at New York in J uly last, aud a Democrat, and recently an editorial waiter for the Democratic paper in Qui'jcy, is out in favor ol Grant. Gold fell nearly two dollars on the news of the Republican victories. Democratic triumph would have deprc ciatcd the paper and enhanced the mcta dollar, but Republican success generally makes the national currency equal to specie. YUanditrhatu nominated Seymour and has been defeated. Seymour was for Vallandiifham. and has received uoticc that the san:e fate await! him. elections may gull the people, but ther4 tociy corporate win De dead, uct reaay then, said the speaker, to bend the supplo hinjreg of the knee before Ulysses pa n r thr Itmpa nAfnro IMtrcana th a First. ("Never! never I") Loioenstien, Memphis. Not one honest man south of Mason'a and Dixon's line is ashamed of tbe mus ket be bore or the sword that he drew iu defence of the Confederate flag. The" man who says he is ashamed of it, lies. Let every honest man at the North bo sure of the fact, that the man who says so wants to swindle money out of somebody. He is a knave, either of the first or last; degree. Charleston Mercury. The Democratic party have also pnS claimed the Reconstruction acts uncon stitutional, null and void, and if their candidates are elected the leaal govern- ments of the Southern States shall ba reinstated, though the sword be invoked;. A ugusta Const it ut ioan Us t . We do not admit that the consolidation of the States and the destruction of their sovereignty are legitimated by the result of the appeal to arms. We do not love, and will not pretend to love, that Union-,'- lh h we hfT0 d t0 ob the h rtP Tf thn . , iT rnn , , ro,?ore, W:H hnne to eee the gouth inde dcQt before e die . and if JacobiDisui3 t0 tecome supreme in the K - Qrtb ut tL rouia be an irnpa- all or crulf between it and the Southern States. Jlcmjihis Appeal. For as many crimes against law, consti tution, and human nature as our Congress commits, the Rritish people would smashi Parliament and hang peers and common ers in Hyde Park. Blood is thicker than water. Race, stanes by race, all except Rump Ccngressemcn. They stand by the negroes, whom they stir up to rebellion. The new rebellion will array the people of tee United States cgainst two hundred thousand negroes and two hundred white negroes in Congress. God save the Rad ical rebels if they bring on negro war, for the people wan't save them. In case of a new rebellion, Jefferson Davis will have a chance to go bail for his .bondsman, whose paper now stirs up war. AT. Y.. World. The bold and stirring letter of Frankr Blair in favor of that counter-revolution for - which the people everywhere are sighing, and through which alone there is hope of escape from military despotism.; and barbarous mongrclism, touched the popular heart; and as the representative -of these counter-revolutionary principles he received the unanimous endorsement, of the convection. Culumlus (,0.) Cnj,---is. Address of the State Central Committeev Rooms of Uuion Republican State Cen tral Committee, Philadelphia, Oct. 14 S63. Republicans of Pennsylvania : Yesterday you achieved a triumph at the- olls scarcely less important in its results than the victory of arms on the field of Gettysburg. The integrity of the Uuloa. and the perpetuity of the Republic wc- ecured by the one, its permauent peace and future glory are insured by the other. - lour verdict, thus pronounced, will be recorded by the American people in November next in a most emphatic con demnation of the party false to the coun try in the hour of its peril, false to liber ty and the rights of man. Every lover of peace and good congratulates you on your achievements stripping sach an or ganization of all power to inflict future in- ury on the country. Henceforth it must sink under the same obloquy that rests - upon the lories of the Revolution and the Federalists of the War of 1812. In trusted with power, it wielded it for the 1 dismemberment of the Republic. Confided in by its devotees as the guar dian or liberty, it exerted its energies for the perpetuity of human bondage. Pro- essing reverence for free speech anl rcedotn of the press, it silenced both with bowie knife and revolver wherever it had la a supreme coutrot. Assuming to bo tho guardian of the rights of man, it became the champiou of human bondage, and stood sentinel with bying blood hound to seize aud return the fleeing fugitive, and at last, dissatisfied with tho result of a lair election, it raised its hand against the life of tho Republio, and. Samson like, would havo buried itself in the ruius of the grandest temple of liberty ever- reared by human hands. It is bclittiug that a party scarred by such a record should die at tbe hands of the people whole sense of justice it has outraged, and whose dearest rights it ha trampled in the dust. Republicans of the Keystone! Your brethren throughout the Uuion havo watched the struggle through which you have just passed with intense interest and its result gladdens every patriot heart. Let not your victory dampeu your ardor or relax your energy, but march on with closed rauks and solid colums to couiplcto victory in November.' GALS HA A. GROW. Chairman State Republicau Committee. St-Tucsday of last week was a terriblot day lor the copperheads of Pennsylvania, Ohio and ludiaua. It sco.tv.fced lb'tubad.- lv enough. 4") - Or 1. M Si t , M 1 i!4 in i ; Y ! - ( ' il. t .' i ;r: i- i '.f i! i x I n n