paik Ettegrao "OUR COUNTRY RIGHT OR WRONG." UNION RUIN NOMINATIONS FOR 1883. PLEDGED TO A SUPPORT OF THE GOV ERNMENT - TEE ENFORCEMENT OF TEE CONSTITUTION--THE EXECUTION OF THE LAWS-THE SiPPRESSION OP THE REBELLION-THE TRIUMPH OF THE "STARS AND STRIPES," AND A STEW MAINTENANCE OF TEE UNION. STATE TICKET. FOR GOYMOR, ANDREW G, CURTIN, by CENTRE coutyrr,,_ FOR JUDGE OE '!'HE APEEtIE CART; DANIEL Alf-NEW",' ow,speyiti,ciANTY COUNTY TICKET SENATOR. ➢AVID FLEMING, of Efarrisburg ASSEMBLY. H. C. ALLMAN, of Harrisburg. DANIEL KAISER, of NV:icoulsoo- SERRIET. W. W. JENNINGS, of Harrisburg ERCORDNII. JOHN BINGLAND, of Midcfletown TitliAlfUßlnt ISAAC HERSHEY, of South Hanover COMEMEONER. , . , B. W. lirCLErfit, of Harrisburg, 3 Oars . . HEW HARTMAN, of Wasbington; 1 year DIRECTOR OF THE POOR JOHN KRE AMER, of West Hanover. AUDITOR. _ SikITEL It'ILHENiTY, of_ - tower Paxton H A It-iR I 'HITH-G-; -- P A'i Nati:Lyda' Evening, Sept. 12, 1882. voTpßol Bee that you are asserted: To make your' right to vote certain this duty must 1;113 attended to. Of course there is an officer. appointed & attend to the assessment ; but, accidentally, he might happen to miss you. Isiok to the pub lished list, to he seen , in the county officei,nnii other public places. If your name and your neighbor's name, and the names of citizen'sol diers, absent in the late nine months' Service, and perhaps absent now in the ,service of the country, are not on it, see that they are placed there. Every citizen having a residence within the baunds of this Commonwealth has a right to vote. We have reason to believe that a conspiracy has been.organized by the. Democr acy, where the assessors' re of their ilk, to de fraud honest, confiding men of their 'votes.— Bee to it, freemen, that you are not thus de= frauded. Postponement of the Appearance of Generalllenj. F.. Butler By a notice of the Chairman of the:Union County Committee, in another column of-,-to 7 day's Taiwan n, it will be seen that , the speech of Gen. Butler, announced to be de livered on Monday evening next, has been postponed. The postponement -is constrained by prior engagements of the distinguished statesman and patriot, in it Will not interfere with' his appearance in thid city at same - day before the dose of the campaign in which we are now engaged with the avowed enemies of the Government. Hence we can afford tolidt; —Due notice, will be giien of Gen Butler's appearance in Harrisburg; when the 'Alma can be definitely arranged to suit his other engage ments: , A Suppression of a Tory orgtin iii Haiti inore • Our Baltlmore exchanges, to-day, contain ac-, counts of the suppression; in that city, by order of Major General Schenck,'of a vile, treason = ble, Tory-copperhead Organ, known as the Baltimore Republican. Its, editors were arOsterl and sent South, and the establishment closed. General Schenck would do well to direct his attention to other poitions of his Department, where he can find a Tory Organ viler in its op position to the Govermrient and more intense in its treason than the Baltimore Republican, and the suppression of which w2uld givilthe people renewed confidence in the ,yigor and PerpOse of the Government to crush traitors. Will Major General Schenck cast his eyes in this direction? " Troops at the Election." `u R• tinder this head, the Tory Organ •,continues to publish a garbled extract from the act of Jiff sembly of the Slate- of Pennsylvania, of 2nd Jnly,lBB9. The purpose which the Tory Organ has in view is the perversion of the law, by which perversion it hoPertto create the impression . that the Tkgislatnre or Pennsylvania delibe rately passtd a laW disfranchising titu:saldier, simply because he carried the arms and woe the uniform of the Govermient. Here is Mb de-, captive manner inwhich the Tory• Organ quotes, the law on the subject: • • • "No body of troops-In -: the army of _the Unitoi States; or of this. Comtmloyigth, shall be present, either armed or unarmed, .any pace of election within thu Omemchisecdh, during tree time of such election.' • . . . The intention -of this quotation is to mislead the peoPle. It 'Was qeoted for the delibiiritei purpose of distorting the.law,„QSeTtir liy t dirl riot the gory Organ' extract and print theEiroviao immediately fol;owing.the portion it quotei above. - That proviso 'Rads as follows: PROVIDED, THAT NOTIJING ILERtiN CONTAINED SHAIY, BL R:o ONSTRIJ'EIi AS TO PREVENT. ANY biFt'legE, OR gOI,DIER FROM.EXEBOISING THE 131GHT:.46F SUF— FEAGE IN_THE DifiTRICT TO wino :HE: MAT BELONG, TE'OTHEE*IBEI 'QUALWIED'•46PORpING. TO LAW. On this htsym ( o - i .i, ,f il i that every,SoldieVwhi 'may be in the",itatere,tJher : tilllf z ig the . 9:tea1... , in OctOber§ri*liohiaXoelikili #cnne'onl hour beftefOrthelpolle qicee,ltas viiss - ;Lista"' TO VoT The alert ‘foideprive 'hineef that right vionl4 ; be as unmistakable as act of rebellion as are the efforts enfranchise slavery by destroying the Government. A New Game to Perpetuate the Disfran chisement of the Soldier, Every man of sense is perfectly well aware that the leaders of the Democratic party, in Pennsylvania, long sinew conspired to disfian chine the'soldier—the soldiers who aro now periling life and limb in a fierce struggle to crush the slaveholders' rebellion. This con spiracy is spread out in the proceedings of every copperhead meeting held for the last two years. It is contained in the deb4tes of Legislative bodies, and is a portion of the records of the Su preme Court of Pennsylvania. It has been and is, in fact, the leading policy of leading Democrats, to effnt this disfranchisement, in order that they may the better be enabled to overslaugh the loyal sentiment of the land—beat down the devotion to the Government by a political vic tory at home,,. that they may be placed in posi tion where they can betray the loyal valor 'in the field, into the hands of the - enemies of the I Union. All this is a fact, long familiar to the, people, but the mode is not so well known. As the campaign for daVernor and 'other officers , Progresses,. develepments are made by which the, people,bscome daily more enlightened on this sut t iect. One of the plans now adopted to further'the success of this diabolical scheme of disfranchisement, is confided to the execution of the different coppearhead assessors l in this and other cities.' THE tam , COMM' IN omrermo OH THE esszsacks'a LIST, ALL SOL'OISRS WHO AAR AB SOU BIGHTING THE BATTLES . OB.THE UNION. This is the last trick in the infamous . plans of the opoositica, to degrade, outrage and disfranchise the soldier. Bet these wretches overreach' tbomselves, in this desperate bush:live; _a@ At matters not whether a voter is assessed or not; solhat . he has paid a State or,county tafewithin two Yesrs, he is still 'entitled to his vote Tl2ie conspiracy, pr the , negligence of an assessor, cannot disfranchise:reefreeman.-: We call attention of fle'ti.ilgergdfieere, the blends of,the soldier,• all the soldiere them selves,lo this:base plan to commit a villainons; fraud: ' Keepllt Before the. Voter. That GeorgeW. Woodward; in 1837, opposed the right of, foreigners to, becOthe citizms of the ;United( States. His-plea is , opposition to the naturalisation Hof the foreigner amounted• to-the , charge, that ' , the Irishwere . tootreachertius and the Dutch too mercenary, for t'he high; political privilege of American citizenship. • • : That if George W. WondWit#l's doctrinal with regard to- foreigners were now the law of the land, the gallant Irish hero, Meagher, would be in the position of a slave, disfranchised by Government' for whose safety he ,crimsoned himself with his owu blood—and Sigle, the UR; denoted German veteran, would be in the same position, after he.had fought like a lion in de:- fence of the Union. And with these brave leaders would fall thousandsOrothers from tbir native lands of each, •all degraded by the: die:- franehiseterent polic,y'Of George W. Woodward - . That George W. Woodward gave encourage , moot and comfort to the rebellion when it wsur precipitated, aThits, acts, from the Murdering of defenoelesa women and, children to , the sacking ,of unarmed 'ages, on° the . plea that the slaye-holdera resolved rights' in slave property, for the de fence of which they were justified in going to any length in war; and to,any extreme inlitrd city. - That George W. WoodWaid declared - hogrO slavery to be an incalculable blessing, to think; against, which was infidelity_ and to oppose which was a crime That George W. 'Wends4idls pledged to op pose the. National Government, should he t be elected Go'rernor :PenttlYlvania; in all its efforts to brit& rehellloo;by fefasing to alit)* the collection of national hutes, by , ordering the r stoppage the • draft, and by. attempting the withdrawal of ,suchof- the troops of Penn sylvania as are alseady 'in the .field gallantly fighting ior the -.defeade of the Union and:the Constithtion.: The Tol4*auFilt.• We have leng lreen =winced, and have so denominated it, that- whet is now claimed by a band of demagogneeas the Democratic; is only the 2ory r party. Like,the tortes of ,thellevelu tion, the Demodracy of to-day affiliate With.the enemies of the Union—are the allies of ‘those who,opPoie freedom. , But sonieWhit'ro markable, that away off iin the golden State of California, the'rotten. Careless. of DemocraCy / Should also be regarded as'only the representation of the