RATES OF ADVERTISING. Four lines or lege e onetitute halteruare. Ten lines more than four, constitote a sq 044)". day....._ SO ao One sq., one day. -- 5 0 00 one week.... 110 S{ wt . weer.... 200 one month.. 800 " one month.. 600 .4 three months 500 cc three months 10 00 ei3 motto.. 800 " 15 ro 051 " bas lOU &awe (11C! Business notices inserted in the LOCAL 00Ltlint, illit.l l ll marriages and deaths, TIN OBSTS PIC LIAM for al Lineation. To merchants and others advertbing y the year, liberal terms will be offered. 117" The number of insertions must be designated On he advertisement. Ufa Marriages and Deaths will be inserted at the sattes seem se regular advertisemen t s . • J3u9inos dctr4s. SILAS WARD. Nu. 11, NORTH. THIRD ST., HARRISBURG. sTZINWAY -) 8 PiAlt NELODEONS, mums, GUITARS, B an jos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, Accordeons, erraINGS, MRS? AHD WOK MUSIC, &C., &e., o YOGRAPH FRAMES. ALBUMS, L arg e pief WA Matta Illreers, Mums and Oval of every description madeto order. Itegatldingdone. Agency for Howes Sewing Machines. U"Y" Sheet Music sect by Mail. oetl-3 JOHN W. GLOVER, RUE UCH 4NT TAILOR Has just received front New York, an assort, meat of SEASONABLE GOODS, whieh he offers to his exu3tomers end the Wolfe at nor 22) MODERATE PRICES. dtf we HARRY WILLIA MB, cr_Lax - w gG 9 WALNUT &TRUST, PHILA.D E L P RUA . General Claims fir Soldiers promptly collected, State Claims adjusted. dtc., &c. mar2o-dlm SMITE & EWING, A,TTORNEYS-AT-LAW, THTRD STREET", Harrisburg, Practice in the seyeral . Oottrts of Dauphin comity. Col lections made promptly. A. 0. SMITH, J. B. EWING?. T COOK, Merchant Tailor, .. 27 CHESNUT ST., between Second sad Front, Hait,pret Paternal fromthe eity with an wslortaidat of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES AND TESTINGS, Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to order; and, also, an assortment of 'BEADY NADI Cletking and Gentlemen , ' Far miehlriAr :Deeds. • uovEl-lyd DENTISTRY'. B. t am, IL IL I" '44 4 ( 4 ; N 0 . 119 MARKET STREET, Nur% KUNKEL'S BIIILDING,IIPETAIRK janS-tf RELIGIOUS BOOK. STORE; 13-Acr AND STYNDAY SCHOOL DRPOSITONIT, E. S. GERMAN. w BOUM ItIOOND MUT, ADOlpl ORMOND?, naratiastrad, Depot !or Nis sale of liter,eoseopes,OtereosooPieViews, Made and Musical Instruments. Also; subscriptions takenlor religious publications. noBo-dy JOHN G. W. MARTIN I FASHDINA.B.LE .(3-A:RD WRITER, • HIRE,II HOTEL, HARRISBURG, , PA. All manner of VISITING, WRDD ING AND BVS - INTBSS CARDO-ezeousta 1494," in9ist artiatJe "Wes and. 1144.0 rmlimmatila tapies_ deO.44H UNION HOTEL, Ridge Avenue, corner of Broad street, HARRISBURG, PA. The undersigned informs the public that he has ra don* rendvatnd said refitted hie !PP-known " Union Heti" on Ridge avenue, near the Bound Howie, and is prepared to aecom nodate eitisens, strangers and travel era in the Peet style, at moderate r.tes Ms table will lid supplied with the best s the maekete afford, and at hie bar wi 1 be found superior brands of liquors and await beverages. Tee very best acoommo &Aims for rsiirosderis employed at the shops in this vicinity. [al4 dtfr &WIRY -1303TeliN. pIfANKLIN HOUSE , • DALTIMOBII, MD. This pleasant and commodious Hotel bas been tho roughly re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleimmtly situated on North-West corner of Howard and Franklin streets, a few doors west of the Northern. entral Rail way Depot. !very attention paid to the comfort of hie guests. G. Proprietor, jel2.tf • (Late of Gin= Grave, Pa.) THEO. P. SCHEFFER BOWL CARD AND JOB.. PRINTER No. Ni miLEHET STREET, HARRISBURG. try.. Particular attantioa 'paid io'priating, ruling and binding of Railroad NAM Irmrines Poll. cies, Oliardui, Billaeads, Wedding, Visiting and Busbies; eirihiPrlntede k t very low prices and in the best style. ;anti ROBERT SNODGRASS, ATTORNEY Ar LAW, Wee North Third street, thud door above Mar ko, garrisbtrps, Pa. N. B.—Peoxion s Bounty and Military claims of all kinds roxecnt.d and collected. Refer to Hone John 0. Kunkel, David Mumma, sr., and R. A. Lumberton. loyLl-d&went WM. H. MILLER, " AND R. E. FEUGUSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, OFFICE IN SHOD EMAKER'I3 BUILDINGS SECOND st - RE.Er, BETWEEN WALNII I and MARKET SQUARE, spaiardid Nearly opposite the Buehler House. THOS. O. .MAiiDOWE-L-L, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. Office in the Exchange. Walnut at., (Up Stairs.) Hawing formed a connection wifh parties in Wash ington City. wno are reliable _business men. any bold nets oeuneeted with any ot the Departments will meet with immediate and careful attention. ulB-7 C. WEICHEL, - SURGEON AND OVULIST, lininnENoll THIRD JULE, NORTE BTE.UET. Ile is sow fully prepared to attend promptly to th. duties of profusion in all id branches. A 2001119 aAn TRINY 8170011/311/11 11111PISTAI. 1 . 271 " 11111 " b Pangs tam hi poi:oiling fall sod ample satisfsetion an frbo mayfewor bins witS a oall , afithedbeagO brani or en? nthe' natures. nfIR-riArview T AILORING. Cir 3B 40r . AL . XX, T.J - Er ar ME . The subscriber is ready at NO. 94, MeRKBT BT., four doom below Fourth moot, to mho MFN'S AND HOWA CLOTHING In any desired style, and with skill and promptness. Persosua wishing' cutting done can have it done at the lhOrtesc notice ap27-dly CHARLES F. VOLLMER, UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street four doors above Second, (Oprosne WASHINGTON Hose Flown.) Is prepared to furnish to order, in the very best style o. Workmanship. 4 pring and Flair Mattresses, Window Our talus, Lounges, and all other articles of Furniture in ba ne", cni short notme sod moderate terms. Having az Palawan in the business, he feels warranted in Liking a share of public patronage, contdontot hisability to gtv• satisfaction. janti-ntr MILITARY CLA MS AND PEN SIONS The node* signed have entered into an ee•o-iation for the collection - of Military Claims Cland the securing of Famous for woundieri awl dinoblai DotairTis M'Ct Pod Mueterout Rolla, officer , ' Pay Rolle, °manna- and Clothing returns, and all panne rierta u lag to them !nary serrioe will be made out properly and eapeditionely Office 41 the Fueling* Building*. Walnut between. Pees d gnu Third itreeta, near Hotel Randa ll a- Pa. THOS 0 biAeHOW Lt., dtf THOMAS A. . . , J • _ ffic ...._; 4 ___ ,4:. .. 7. Z__ .1...,.... ; , , - ___ ',... . - . . ___...- Mk ... - .•U. , . I inlet . 0 • . a _ ... > , • ~:__-1 - „AI- , • -.... • ,! , • .. . I . • . . ',. 1 ••.. . _ _ 111 I E , ti „. 1 . _.. I. ' _ ,ii.:_i_ l 1 1. ..._..._ _ .:... . . . . • •. - " ~... • . .- , vol., b.—NO. 281. ,bicai. 4-** DR. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIMENT, TIEli GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY, FOR, RHEUMATISM, 'GOUT, NEURALGIA, LUMBAGO, STIFF NECK AND JOIN I'S, SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUTS A WOUNDS, PILES, HEADACHE, and ALL RHEU MATIC and NERVOUS DioUIiPERS. Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Ceimeoticut, The great Natural Bone Setter. Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, Is known all over the United States. Dr. Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, I the author of 66 Dr. Swoon/ Infallillo liiremont," . Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures Rheumatism and never fails. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Is a certain cure for Neuralgia. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures - Burns and Baal& inuncdiatoly. Dr. Sweetie Infallible Liniment Is the beet known remedy for Sprains and Bruises. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures Reidaehe immediately and was never known to fail. Dr. sweet's Infallible Liniment Affords Immediate rend' for Piles, and seldom fails to cure. Dr. Sweets Infallible Liniment Cures Toothache in one minute. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Cures Outs and Wounds immediately and leaves no sear_ Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Is the best remedy lei Bores in the - known world. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Has been used by more than * million people, and all praise it. • Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Is tmily a u Mena in Road," and ovary family should have it at hand. Dr. Sweet's Infallible Liniment Is for sale by all Druggists. Price 2b cents. HICHARDSON & Co., Bole Proprietors, Norwich, Ct. For sale by all Dealers. ap2o eow•d&w J eiug. LL WORK PROMISED IN ONE WEEK! "IL CP - 16 0 .1 PENNSYLVANIA gTEAM DYEING- ESTABLISHMENT, 104 MARKIIT. 8T1(2117, . . BETWEEN. POCIATH AND PIPTII, HARRISBURG, Pk., Where every description of Ladies' and Gentlemen% torments, Pieee Goods, Ace., are Dyed, Oleo:used,- and laDdked in the bait manner and at the shortest mottos von dAcwlr ulnas,. a. . T 1 F. WATSON, MASTIC WORKER ♦ND PRACTICAL CEMENTER, 18 prepared to Comeet the exterior Of DWllitiOr with be New York Improved Water-Proof Mastic Cement. This Material is different from all other. Cements. ft forms a solid, durable adhesiveness to ssaly surface. imperishable by the action of water or-frost.; every good building should be coated with this Cement; it is s perfect prese , ver to the walls, and makes a bea u tiful, flue finish, equal to . Eastern brown sandstone; or any co,or dOifired, Among others for weom I have applied tho Mantic Cement, I refer to the following gentlemen : J. Bissell, residence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished five %ears. ' J. Shoenberger, residence, Lawrenceville, finished five years. James lif , Candlass, residence, Allegheny City,finlshed fine years. Calvin Adams, residence, Third at set, finished four years. A. Hoareler, residence, Lawrenceville, Walled four years. J. D M'Cord, Penn street, finished four years. lIOn. Thomas Irwin, Diamond street, finished four years. St Charles Hotel and Girard House, finished five years. Kittanning Court House and Bank, for Barr & Moser, Architects, Pittston. g, finished five years. Orders received at the flee or it Witidowney, Paint shop, 20 Seventh street, or please address • T F WATSON. mayl44f P.O. Box 13.6. Pittaburg, IVLESSRB; CHICKERING & CO. HATE AGAIN OBTAINED THE GOLD MEDAL! LT TUN MECHANICS' F Ant, BOSTON, 0 FEB M T i n ' I Y P T777IITh roB , 8 I Wareroom for the OHIOURING PIANOS, st Harris -7= 92 hfarket stree t * W RNOCEMS MI7SIO 5T02.2 I isDIKA I YOU KNOW—WERE YOU can get fine Note Payer ) E , •irblopes, Visiting and Wedding Cards ? At e(JR -EVER'S BOOKSTORE .1(11"VJ itIOR STOOK UN' IQU ;ltd.— I,J WM DOCK, Js., & CO.. are now able to offer to their mato ..crs and toe public at l'rge, a stock of the meat Liquors ever imp mted into this market, compd.. dug in put the followina varieties WHISK V IRISH, BCOTUH.OLD BOURBON. WINE—PORT, SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA. • OTARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY. JA MICA SPIRITS. PRIME NEW - ENGLAND RUM. DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS These liquors can all be warranted; and in addition to tbeee s Doek k. Ca. have on hand a large variety of Wines, Wh'ssy and Brandy, to which they invite the particular attention of the public WEBSIEWS ARMY AND NAVY P CHET DICTIONARY. Jut recehro4 mod for sale at fi AtAPPIRM ROO MORE. NOTIONS.—Quite a variety of useful and entertaining artiebes—ehesp—at OfIFINIFF MIPS ROOKEITORII. RLAolcmi I !—MASON'S 4 feIIALLENG2 ILJ thatrininfi....l.oo GROSS. asmated eiso, bit $. laved and roc sale, wholesale mid retail. awel• WM. DOCK. 7t.. a. no wmpow sn - Apus of linen, g il t" bordered; and PLPER BLINDS of an endlees m i e of designs and ornaments ; obey 01 : 7814 " 1 iao TASSELS s , very low Pry Gal at Seheffees Beobistore. HARRISBURG, lA., UFSOEVY: JtPL'Y 28. 1863. T H E Weekly "Patriot & Union," THE CHEAPEST PAPER PIIBLISHED IN PENNSYLVANIA! Atm THR ONLY DRMOORATIO PAPER PUBLISHED AT TRE SEAT OF GOVERNMENT FORTY-FOUR COLUMNS OF READING MAT TER EA= WEEK - AT THE LOW PUCE OF ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS r • WHEN SUBSCRIBED FOR IN CLUBS OF NOT LESS THAN TEN COPIES 70 ONE ADDRESS! We have been compelled to faille the club subscription pries:. to One dollar and fifty auto in order to save oar• selves from actual lose. Paper has risen, including taxes, about .twenty-five per cent., and is still rising; and when we tell our Democratic friends, candidly, that we can no longer afford , to sell the Weekly PATRIOT AND Union at one dollar a year. and must add fifty cents or stop the publication, we trust they will appreciate our position, and, instead of withdrawing their sunecrip tione, go to work with a will to Ingram our list in every county in the State. We have endeavored, and shall continue our efforts, to make the paper useful as a party organ, and welcome as a news messenger to every fam ily. We flatter ourselves that it has not been without some influence in producing the glorious revolution in the politics of the State achieved at the late election; and If fourleogneee in the dieeherge of duty, fidelity to the principles of the party, and an anxious desire to pro mote its interests, with Fume experience and a moderate Ilegree of ability, can be mule.serviouble hereafter, the Weekly PATRIOT ARO UNION win not be lees useful to the party or less welcome to the family circle in the fu ture than it lies been in the past. We confidently look for bummed eneenregement is title grant enterprise, and appeal to every Influential Democrat in the State to lend us his aid in running our supacription list up to twenty or thirty thousand. The expense to each indi vidual is trifling, the benefit to the paity may be great. Believing that the Democracy of the State feel the ne cessity of sustaining a fearless central urgan, we make this appeal to them for assistance with the fullest confi dence of snow:gni. The same reasons which induce az to raise the, price of the Weekly, operate in regard to the. Ilaily'paper, the price of which is also increased. The additional coat to each subscriber.will be but trifling; and, while we can not persuade ourselves that the change necessarily made' will result in any diminution of our daily circulation, • yet, were we- certain that . such would be the comm.. queues, we should be compelled te tas.ke it, or ant-. fer a ruinous loss. Under these circumstances we must throw ourselves upon the generosity, or, ratluir, the justice of the public, and abide their verdict, whatever it may be. . The period for which many of our mibscrikers have paid for their Paper befog on the eve of expiring, we take the liberty of imulag 'Oa 249tice, VemintAing them of the mime, in oilier that they may RENEW THEIR CLUBS. We shall also take it ee an especial favor if ourpresent subscribers will urge upon their neighbors the feet that the PATRIOT AND UNION is the only Democratic paper printed in Harrisburg, and considering the large fimount of reading matter, embracing all the current some of the day, and TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCHES from everywhere up to the mnment the paper goes to .press„ political, miscellaneous, general sad local news market reports, is decidedly the CHEAPEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN WEEZZA There is scarcely a village or town in the State in which a club cannot be raised if the proper exertion be medor, - emlimenly - there - are - fewilleced iwwhich one or more energetic men cannot be found who are in favor of the dissemination of sound Democratic doctrines, who would be willing to make the effort to raise a club. DEMOCRAT OF THE DITEIIIOII, I Let us hear from you. The toleting war, and the ap. proaching semdons of Congress and the State Legiela. time, are invested with unusual interest, and every man should have the news. • TERMS.' DAILY PATRIOT AND 'UNION.. Single dopy for one year, in advance . .. .•. • •• • .$5 0 0 Single copy/tering the mansion of the Lei-alatere— 2 00 ' city sebneribars ten dints per week. Copies supplied to agents at the rate of $1 60 per hun dred. WEEKLY PAVRIOT AND IINION Published every Thursday. Slagle copy one year, in advance ' ' ...i7 00 Ten copies to one address ' 16 00 . Subscriptions may oommence at any time. PAY AL WAYS IN ADVAItOE. We are obliged to make this imperative. in every instance cask must accompany subscription. Any person sending us a club,of twenty subscribers to the Weekly will be entitled to © for his services. The price, even at the advanced rate is so low that we cannot offer greater inducements than this. Additions maybe toads et anytime to a club of anbeerthers by remitting one dollar and fifty cents for each additional name. It is not necessary to Rend as the names of those constituting a club, as. we cannot undertake to address each' paper to club subscribers separately. Specimen copies of the Weekly will' be sent to all who desire it 0. BARRITT . & CO., Hiparlabarg, Pa N. B.—The following law, peened by Congress ta 1860, defines ttut duty of Postmasters in relatiOl to the de livery of newspapers to club subeoribers (See Ltttle, Brown ¢ Co.'s edition of the Lases of 1880, page 38, chapter 131, section 1.) csProvided, however, that where packages of new pa pers or periodicals are received at any poet aloe directed to one address, and the names of the club subscribers to which • hey belong, with the postage for a quarter in ad vance, shall be handed to the postmaster, he shall de liver the same ty,their roopocitiv, ewavre , " To enable the Postmaster to comply with this regnbi tion, 'twill be necessary that be lm furnished with the list of names composing the club, and paid a quarter's (or year's) - postage in advance. The uniform courtesy of Postmasters. afford. the assurance that they will eheerfnliyaccommoaate dub subecribera, and the latter should take care that the postage, which is bat & tint In each case, be imbi,in advance. Bend on the clubs A . SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF LITHOGRAPHS, Formerly retailed at from $3 to $5. sr. now 'rffered at 58 and 15 cents, and $1 and $1 511..tublifilied by th e Ar Union, and formerly retailed by them. Splendid PboMerapbic Album Pictures of all distin guished men and Generals of the army, at only 10 sta. For sale at SCEINFrItit'S Reeksterei 18 Market street, Harrisburg. BASKETS! LAIIRQ TRAVELING, MARKET. RBliouL. PAP RR, KNIPE. CLOTHES, RODED, tHILDREN ) B, CAKE, For sale low, by jell WM. DOCK, Jr., & Co. 3,000 BUS H E LS York State Potatoes, of ditlerent kinds, 1,400 Bushels pork State Apples, . A CllO 4 CO lot of York State Butter. Alan. a SU "' lo t lot of Catawba Grapes, and SO bushel. Shellbarks, jusi received and for sale low by W 8I ISLE VQ- 1 doc7-dtl No. 100 Market Moos. WRITE BRANDY ! ! !—FOR PRESERV . • • IMO PIIIIPOBIB.—A very superior article, (strietiv cured just received sad for sale by falyl WM DOOR. Jr.. & Co EW OR LE ANS SUGAR -Mgr IN LI WIC MASICIT !—tor sale by 1712 WM DOOM la.. & Ao ACKERELI Vl MACIEBBAL, Moe. 1,1 160 3, in an siseoi and tank pachngs tonvanted. Just-Treeivedoind Cos Isl. kmbl WM. DOOM & SO. Etc Vatrint itt - Union+ TUESDAY MORNING. JULY 28, 1808. REPUBLICAN TEA CHINGS. Firma the A ge Messrs. .afitors: It is the policy of the rem nants of what was ones called. the Great Re publican party, to allege that the Democrats have produced the late riots throughout the country. lam very glad to see that. you are, in your paper, fixing the responsibility upon the shoulders which should bear it. The pre sent spirit of lawlessness is truly the result of the teachings of the leadere of the Republican party, as the following extracts from their speeches will show: I tell you, fellow-crtizens, the Harper's Ferry outbreak was,.the legitimate consequence of the teaching of the Republican party."--Senator Wilson, of Inssaehusettso—Speech at Syracuse, October 28, 1859 sg If I am elected Governor of Ohio, and I ex pect to be. I wilt not let any fugitive be re turned to Kentucky or any other clove State; and If I cannot prevent it in any other way, as Commander- in -Chief of the military of the State, I will employ the bayonet, so help me God."— Governor Dennison, of Ohio. • It On the action of this Convention" (the Convention which nominated Fremont) " de pends the fate of the country. If the Repub licans fail at the ballot-box, we will be forced to drive back the elaveocracy with fire and the sword." --Genera/ James Watson Webb, the pre sent Minister to Brazil.. • 411 sineerel,y hope a eiril war may burst upon the country I want to see American slavery abolished in my day. his a legacy I have no wish .to leave my children. Then my most. fervent prayer is that England, France and Spain may speedily take this slavery-accursed nation into their especial consideration, and when the time arrives for the streets of the siting of this land of the free and home of the brave to run with blood to the horse's bridle, if the writer he living, there will be one heart to 'rejoice at the retributive justice of Heaven." W. 0. Duvall, of New York, a leading -Republi can politician:- - • • she Union is not worth- supporting with Llts;;SoutliP—HorobeGriclefr. • - • - "I am willing, tinder a certain state of cir cumstances, to let the Union Nathaniel - P. Banks. " Correct your own error, that slavery has any constitutional guarantee which may not be released, and ought not to be:released. 'Bay to slavery. when it shows - its _hand, (Mavis the Constitution,) and demands its pound of fleet, that if it draws:one drop - pf blood, its life shall pay the forfeit * * * * Do all this, and inculcate all this in a spirit of moderation and benevolence, and not of retaliation and fanaticism, and you will soon bring the par ties of the country into an effective aggreadion upon slavery."— Wm. IL Seward, Cleveland, 1848. "Send it abroad upon the wings of the wind. that I am committed, fully committed to the fullest tent, in favor of the immediate and unconditional ttl olition of slavery, wherever it exists under the Situthority of the Constitution of the United Matte . —Senator Wilson of Ilfasaachusats. " We urge, therefore, unbending determine• !ion on the part of Northern members hostile to this.- intolerable outrage" [slavery] "and demand of them, in behalf of peace, in behalf of freedom, in behalf of justice and human'iy, resistance to the last. Better that confusion should ensue; better that discord should reign in national councils ; batter that Congress should break up in wild disorder ; nay, better that the Capital itself should blaze by the torch of the incendiary, or fall and bury all its in mates beneath its crumbling ruins, than that this wrong and perfidy lihould be finally ac complished "'e—Horace Greeley. " In case of the alternative being presented of the continuance of slavery or a disooliitlon of the Union, I am for a diesolution, and I care not how soon it comes. "-Rufus B 'Spaulding. "I detest slavery, and say, Unhesitatingly. that 3 am for its abolition by some means, if it should send - all party organizations in the Union, or the Union itself, to the devil."—B. N. Addison, of the American Advertiser. "If peaceful means fail us, and we are dri ven to the last extremity, where ballots are useless, then we will make bullets effective." —Bon. Brastus Hopkins, of Massachusetts. "By all her regard for the generations of the future, by her reverence for God,and man, the North is bound to dissolve her present Union with kidnappers and murderers, and form a Northern Republic on the basis of No Union with elaveholders.' "—Hon. Henry C. Wright: of Illinois, June 9, 1856. "I did not even say that I desired -that sla very should be put in course of ultimate extinction. .1 do say so now, however, so that there need be no longer any diffieulty about that It may be written down in the great Pp ech "—Abraham Lincoln. published in a campaign edition of his speeches "I have always hated slavery, I think, AS MIMI AS ANY ABOLITIONIST., I have always bPen an old line Whig. I have always hated it, but I have_always been quiet• about it until this new era of the introduction or the Nebraska bill began. I always believed that everybody was against it, and that it was in course of ultimate extinction. . We are now far into the fifth year since a policy was initiated with the avowed object and confident premise of putting an end to slavery agitation. Under the operation of that policy, that agitation has not only not. ceased, but has constantly augmented. In my opinion it will not cease until a crisis shall have been reached and passed ' • a house divi ded against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. Ido not expect the Union to be dissolved; I - do not expect the house to fall: bu. I do expect it will cease to be divided ; it will become all one thing or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery wilt arrest the fur ther spread of it, and place it where 'he pub lic mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push irforward till it shall become alike lawful in all the States, old as well as new, North as well as South. "—lbid. Afterwards, commenting on this, he says : "I only said what. I expected would take place, I wade n prediction only ; it may base tern a foolish one, perhaps. I did not even say that I desired that slavery should be put in course of ultimate extinction. Ido now, how- * Compare with speech of ann. William H. Sqw ari, July 7, and tha doctrine of tha irrepressible wri thes • 1:63. "The Union taro be Wed. of er all. only by human efforts—by the sff,r.s of the pAnple. Those of forte hint n 6 made in Iwo forme—you • nut vote for the Union (I e. the Republican.) through all d•ecourage monte. and ala•me end or•mpleiate, woethtr tho a in whim , you have reprised confidence a• e wise Or nn•ise, competent or incompetent, IleeCe-ale: Or n nxaCaerafal. I f the Capital must fall barer it see be etred, welch I have alwayu thought unnecessary. ard which now ,viarxrs impopeible, even in that muse 1 t ne ire buried le-‘neath 1e ruins. For mc■elf. this is my resolution. If the le pie of the United States her virtue enough t••• mare the Val , n. (I. a. ano 'lionise the South,) 1 elliallhaver their virtue. If th• y h. va not. (I. a., are not Aboli tion et. ) then it shall be my reward Mainly virtue as gelled that of lay .v,eattryetex.') PRICE TWO CJKNTS. "" 130 titeic need bc no longer ariy difficult" about that. "If I were in Congress, and a vote should come up on a question whether slavery should be prohibited in a new territory, in spite of the Dred Scott decision, I would vote that it should. " What I do say is, that no man is good enough to gdvern another man without the other man's consent. 1 say this is the leading principle—the sheet-anchor of American republicanism. * * The powers of government are darived from consent of the governed. * * * Allow all the governed aft equal v airs in the government ; and that, and that only. is self government. Howells life of Lincoln, page 279. " That central idea. in our political opinion, at the beginning walk, and until recently con tinued to be, the equality of men. And al though it was always submitted patiently to, whatever inequality there seemed to be as a matter of actual necessity, its constant work ing has been a steady progress towards the practical equality of all men. "Let past differences as nothing be; and, with steady eye an the real issue, let us in augurate the good old central ideas of the repub lic. 'We can do it. The human heart is with us God is with us. We shall again be able', not to declare that all the States, as Statez, are equal; nor yet that ail eitizens,-as citizens, are equal.; but renew the broader, better declaration, in cluding both these and much more, that all men are created equal."—A. Lincoln—speech deliv ered September 16,1856. Thus these antagonistic systems are con tinually ,coming into closer contact, and colli sion results. . Shall I tell you what this colli sion means ?' They who think it accidental,. unnecessary, the work of interested, fanatical agitators; and therefore - ephemeral, mistake the case altogether. It is an irrepressible conflict between opposing and enduring forces; and it means that the United States must and will, sooner or later, become entirely a slave holding nation, or entirely a free labor. nation. Either tee cotton and rice fields of South Caro lina and the sugar plantations of Louisiana will ultimately be tilled by free labor, and Charles ton and - New Orleans become matte for legiti mate merchandise alone, or else the rye fields and wheat. fields of Massachusetts and New York must again be surrendered by their. far mers to slave culture, and to the production cif slaves, and Boston and New York become once more a market for , trade in tike bodies and souls of • mtn. , It is the failure to apprehend this grew. path (?) that induces so many unsuccess ful attempts at final compromise between the slave and free States, and it is the existence of this great fact that renders all such pretended compromise, when made, vain and ephemeral." —Mr. Seward. " Slavery can be limited to its present bounds; it can be ameliorated. It can be, and it mtlsE be abolished, and you and 1 eau and must do it. The task kr simple, and as easy as its tom summation will be beneficent and its.rewards glow mg. It, only requires to follow this simple rule of aolion : To do everywhere and on every oc= casion what we can, and not in neglect or refuse to do what we can, at any time, because at that precise time, - end an Vila particpar occasion, we cannot do - more. CIECIMISTAISTIO " DETER MINS Possintiariss."—Tbid. “Extend a cordial welcome to the fugitive who lays . hie weary limbs at your door, and defend him as you would your ;internal gods. "Correct your own error, that slavery has s any congeaujiNta guarantees LSehlels may hot be re leased, and ought not to be relinquished.—lbid. "What a commentary upon the history of man is the fact that., eighteen years after the death of Jobn Quincy Adams, the people hare for their standard bearer Abraham Lincoln, confessing the obligations of the Ilianzz I.Aw which the Sage of Quincy proclaimed and contend. ing for weal or woe. for life or death, in the irre pressible conflict between freedom and slavery. I desire only to say that we are in the last stage of the conflict, before the triumphal inaugura tion of this policy into the government of the United States."— Wm. H. Seward ACCESSIONS TO THE DBMOC RATIO PARTY.-•-- Judge Rankin, of Columbus, Ohio, who, two years ago, was on thO Td ticket for the Legis lature, is now out for Vallandigham and Pugh. Bo is R. A. Dazue, of Morrow counsy, hereto tore .a strong Republican. The Mono*. Gilead Union R•gisier states that he is a talented young man and a good speaker. Hon. George 8 Hillard, of Boston, a cotem porary of Webster and Choate, and an old Whig when that great old national conserva tive organization existed, in a letter to the New York Academy of Music meeting, on the 4th or July, remarked : "I have neier been a member of the Demo cratic party, but I am convinced that there is now no hope of ending this deplorable war and restoring the Union but by and through that party." . And the 'Hon. Joel Parker, now occupying the chair of Chief Justice Story, and never be fore a Democrat, speaking to the mass Meeting held on the 4th at Concord, N. 11., remarked: " Most assuredly, I do at this time deeply and cordially sympathize with the Democracy in their efforts to maintain the Constitution, preserve the rights of free speech, the liberty of the press, personal freedom from arbitrary arrest and imprisonment, and the eupreinney of the civil law in all places not occuried,by the forces of the Union 'for the prosecution of the war. Legitimate martial law can not ex ist in places where there is not oniy no war, but no troops for the prosecution of the war. What is so called, and is attempted to be en forced as 'martial law,' in such .places, is merely the exercise Sr arbitrary power, -with out any warrant of law whatever." ELEGANT EXTRACTS FROM CABINET LITERA TURE —Tbe following elegant extracts—rare specimens of rhetorical beauty and flourish—are taken from speeches wide by Hr. Lincoln and Cabinet officers ar. the Washington celebration of the capture or Vickeburg : Mr. LinColn—The cohorts turned tail and run. Mr. Stanton—The sneaking Copperheads of the North would be driven hissing to their holes, Mr. lialleck—The Copperheads, as my friend, the Secretary, has said, were driven hissing to their holes. Any one can see that Lincoln, Stanton and Halleck are "statesmen'—shining sneem , sors of Washington. and Jefferson, and Jackson, o,nd. Marey—by the remarks they made. STATE RIGHTS.—Tne ROIL Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury of the present ad ministration, in a speech made by him in Ohio, August 26. 1857, said, in referring to a slave rescue case • We have a right to have our Slate lowa obeyed. • We don't mean to resist federal au thority. Just or uujust laws, properly a/min itvered, will he resproted. If dissatisfied we will go to the ballot-hox and redteas our - wrongs. But we have rights which the federal government must not invade—rights superior to its power, on which our_ sovereignty de pends, and we do mean to assert these rights a-aiust all trainaidal assuoiptious of agtbo rist. ISIINDATII lIXCETTID, BY 'O. BARRETT & • 400 Tee buLy PAratcyr •en thruntwill be wined to Mil xenon residing in **Borough for Ter mare mews* payable to the Carrier. Mail relbeeribere, rise Mt Mum. TIM *Min.! rawsilm AND UNION le F61111111(4 stew° DOLLARS rim ANNUM, invariably in lacunae. Ten oepie to one address, fifteen dollars Connected with this establisbinena n extendee .708 OFFICE, containing a variety of plain sod fancy type, unequalled by any estiblishilent in the interior of the State, for which the patronage of the public is so licited., ANOTHER ABoLfriON OUTRAGE. To the Editors•• of the Patriot and Union : The Jacobins have made another raid on the 111-fated Monitor. At about three o'clock this morning, under the shelter of darkness, in creased by a dense fog, a gang of armed sol diers arid citizens broke..the tioar'of the Moni tor office, entered .and destroyed several oases of type and a portion of . Lhe furkilare.: 4 de tachment of a military patrol discovered the proceedings, and rallied their comrades on a double quick, but the depredators Iledwithout finishing their work and without detection. -.lt will be recollectid that: in the fornler 'attack there was an entire destruction of all the ... ma terial of the office. The paper will aPpear without delay. Mobs and outlawry are detestable and dis reputable to the commonities where they are tolerated; but the repetition of such meanness evinCel 4 low et444l4rii in the morale 'of the community, fitting them for whatever degra dation and disaster awaits them. An excited populace, laboting under real or supposed evils, might possibly have some claims to. in tinlgence ; but that turpitude-which goes forth to repeat its hrntal malevolence, sinks once to ,the level of a Malay or a. Hindoo, thug, Where all claims to civilikation are - forfeited. There is an earnest about the Abolition.par deans of this vicinity, and I shall endeavor to give you an occasional' notice of them. It is idle to nodes any of the alleged proteneee for the attacks , on the Monitor. • It that journal claimed nothing more than this, that " every ? body has a right to sneeze," being' a Demo cratic paper,-it would be subject to the attacks of the Jacobins. • Among the efforts to repel the late invasion, a military camp was established here, with a view of mustering three regiments. TWo were readily recruited, when the "emergency" seemed to be hastily subsiding. In camp there is a respectable representation of Demoorats, aS my punctual knowledge worrnwto me in sta ting. A few scoundrels are clamorous . *bout their principles, and anxious to display their "loyalty" by the destruction- of private pro perty, and kindred meanness. ' These who have left their homes with Euch principles, leagued with the desperate portion of our eiti- Was who prate about war, but never'go to re lieve the soldiers in the field, are a bad ele ment, eating into the heart of our free institu dons ; but they are doing nothing for our country, nothing for ISO stipPression- of the rebellion, and nothing for the credirof Ameri can citizenship. CLARENDON. NEGRO Faaanow—GEN. MONTGOMERY'S SYS= TEM.—The following extract from the letter of a Maine boy, dated Helena'lsland, June 30th, shows how Colonel Montgomery, of 23, South Carolina, (colored) maintains discipline ; Last Sunday a member of the 2d South Car olina (colored) regiment, in attempting to de sert, was stopped by cue of the agents that the government employs on the plantations'on this Wand, and broughtin to the Colonel of that regiinent, Sim Montgomery, (of Kanses noto riety.) The Colonel was talking to him (the nigger) about deserting ; the nigger said he did not Care,"but if he got a chance to shoot the son of a b—h that brought him beak, he would. The Colonel says, "Ha! .Ha !..yott will, will you ? We will see about you." He had the regiment fall in, post bane, marched them down to the beach, plated out twenty men, loaded their guns, stood the nigger off twenty feet or so, and they fired, putting:thir teen balls into him. The colonel then examined their guns and found one tit - tithed not snapped his cap. He turned to a (takeout and Said, "Sergeant, put this man in the guard house. I pie& I shall have to shoot him tool"' I tell you,'Jini Montgomery is not to betrified with by negroes, —Bangor (Me.,) Times, Aboliiion. The Poston Courier confirms the above. It A DEMOCRAT. says : "Since Gm Minter has left Port Royal, the accounts we tectiltA regarding negfo soldiers have materially changed their complexion.— We are now informed that they cannot be de pended on. "Montgeniery, the Kansas Aboli tion ruffian a.u&saint,linly maintained a pre carious diseipline in his band by shooting dpwn malcontents without even the fOrmality of a drum-head court-martial." When free Speeah and a free press were use ful to the Republicans to set two sections of . the country by the ears they were invaluable they - were the life and 'soul of a free State. When free speedh and free press are used to denounce Republican folly, and to expose Re publican imbecility, they are inopportune, Obt noxious, and must be " crushed, out." When mobs broke np Copperhead presses there was no harm in mobs, but when one even attempts to destroy a Republiaan press then up goes a cry for Martial law. - When the President ex iled a man for speaking his views of a ridicu lous order it was all right; trot when a poor Irishman,who knows not hinelhout law, rushes into a riot, " hang him" is the most-meroiful cry. "Verily, as ye measure it shall be meted unto you."—P ttsburg Post. • DoN'T Dec EWE YOUB.StLVES —With the de lusive idea that people why have wtelded arbi trary power will willingly lay it down. The catch phrase is, When the war is over there will be no 000imion for the exeroiee of these unusual means to preserve the peace." It won't do to trust people who tied so many pretexts for dispensing with the laws, and the ordinary channels of public administration. It is by all odds the safest to cling to the old party whose traditions are for strict construc tion of grants of power and liberal construc tion of the reserved rights of the people.— Washington, Fe , Review. THE EEFOREEMENT OF las Lia.iFF—A Spicy COMMENTARY —" We print ibis morning, with sincere pleasure, the official aueouncement of the Provost Marshal General that the draft is to be everywhereentorced by military power." This is a sentence so eminently philanthro pical that it is barfly nece.sory rrs say that it .emenates from the Nu* York Tribune, The individual who can “take pleasure" in such a prospect as this official announcement opens up—is, no doubt, one of those who believe the chief delight of the blessed to be the observa tion of the torments of the deansed.—Boston Ovuricr,, T'B province of Telugu, bpaiu, is suffering fie a plague of locum. (V° thesaenti peo ple w..ro employed to destroy them; sod if they railed the military were to be called oat, PGBLIBEED EVERY MORNING, .11urrixoDox, Pa., July 25, 1868.