RATES OF ADVEIVIBLN lour lines or less constitute half a square. Ten lines more than four, constitute a . eglare. sq., one day-- $0 30 On• Sq., one $0 60 t one week..— 120 " oue week—. 200 cc one month.. 800 cc one month.. 604 three months 600 " three months 10 00 if six mm&he.. 800 ci months.. lb 00 g one yes.t.-12 00 " one year 20 00 ET Business notices inserted in the DoCaL COLIIDI, DI Dasie marriages and deaths, Tea CENTS PER LIES for eh insertion. To merchants and others advertising the year, liberal terms will be offered. irr The number of insertions mast be designated on )e advertisement. 113 F Marriages and Deatatamillheinsartatat the same. 444 as regular advertisements. Business tabs. RoBERT SNODGRA'SS, ATTORNEY A r LAW, Office North Third etreet, /lard door above liar • . kat, Harrisburg, Pa. N. IL—Pension, Bounty and Military claims of all kinds rosecnt. d and collected. - Serer w ilea John O. Kunkel, David Mamma, jr., Lombertsa myll-d&weer, lATM. H. MILLER, • TI AND • R. E. FERUSON, ATTORNEYS .AT LAW. OFFICE IN SHOEMAKER'B .. BUILDINGS SECOND STREET, BETWEEN WALNUT and MARKET SQUARE, sp-29wScd Nearly opposite the Bnettler THOS. C. MACDOWELL, A.T - TORNEY AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. Office in the Exchange, Walnut at., (Up Stairs.) Having formed a connection with parties in Wash ington laity, wno are reliable business men. any bud wpm sounectesi with any of the Departments will moat with immediate and careful attention. 191. C. 2WEICHE SURGEON AND OCULIST, starmsawn TIMID NW& WASTE OTABBT. lie is cow rally prepared to attend promptly to dudes of profession in all-its branches. G. LONG AID 71117 131170011311FULe SIXDIOAL 1.172111131101 jetstisen him In promising full and ample satiefaetiOn tr. au who may favor him with a eall, be the diagram) Ohronis or any ether nature_ - mlB-dhwir -MILITAUY CLAMS AND PEN SIONS The undersigned have entered into an association for the collection or Military Claims and the securing of Pensions for wounded and disabled soldiers. Master-in end Muster-out Rolls, officers' Pay Rolls, Ordnance and Clothing returns. and all papers pertain ing to the military service will be made out properly and ovpeditiMinly Office in the Bachange 'Buildings, Walnut between Second and Third streets, near Omit's Hotel. Harris bu • g, - Ta. - "THOS- O MACDOW je26dtf THOMAS A. MAGUIR.R. BILA-S WARD. NO. U, NORTH MILD BT., HARRISBURG. STEINWAY'S PIANOS, lINLODBONS, VIOLINS, tiIIITARS, Banjos, Elates, Fifes, Drums, Accordeons, maxima, BRUT AID win 3toBlo, &0., ito., 4'llo TOO,RLPM 'FRAMES. ALMUMISt Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors, Ware and Oval F7llllB. ofevemdeacniption made to order. Regnilding done - Agency far !bowels Sewing Machines. 117" Sheet Music sent by Keil. oetl-1 JOHN W. GLOVER*, BEEILCHANT TAILOR! - Has jest received from New- York, an assort• ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, which lie offers to ale customers and the public al nov22) MODER4TB . PRICES. dtf SMITH at E WING,• ILTTOB.NEYS-AT-LAW, "THIRD STREET, Harrisburg, Practice ha the several COurtai of Dauphin county. Col lections :anode promptly. ' A. C. 834 COOK, Merchant Tailor, ci . 47 CHESNUT ST., betweenEecond and Front, Has just returned from the city with an assortment of - CLOTHS, CISSIMEkES AND VESTINGS, Which wiU be sold et moderate prices and made up to order; and, also, so assortment of BEADY MAD!. Clarthims said Gentlemen's FurnishiWg, Goads. ' now2l-I.yd RENT.T.STIIY. E. E. nun, LILA, ' N 0 . 119 MARKET STREET, #4li 111 BY & KUNKEL'S BUILDING, UP STAIRS - . jaaB-tf RELI e lOUS E 0431( STORE, =ACT AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY, - E. S. GERMAN, - - !7 8017TH 113100 ND STABAT, ABOVB 1311.1113 NUT, 1LLA11.113131726, PA. • Depot for !Miele of Bnoreosoopie,Stireooooo 0 Vier, mg Melia Inatrionents. Al/0, nallsorlotloni taken for religions pabliestions. nolle-dy JOHN G. W. MARTIN, FASHIONABLE OARD WR - ITER, HERB'S HOTRL, HARRISBURG, PA. All mustier of VISITING, WED DING AND RIM] - NESS CARDS executed in the most artistic styles and moat reasonable terms. decl.44ltf UNION HOTEL, Ridge benne, cornet of Broad tatted, HARRISBURG, PA. Toe undersigned informs 'the public that he has re cently renevatod-and refitted his Woll-known. "Tinton on nage avenue, neer the Round Hottoe, SIM is prepared_ to eseam netters eitmeao, avengers:mid travel eta in the Seat style. at moderate Ales His table will be supplien w.th the best the maskers afford, sod at his bar wi I be found superior brands of licpuirs And rniot beverages. The very beat seeentmn dermas for railroaders employed the chops in this vicinity. fa il dui HENRY BOSTIEN. FRANKLIN 1101J8111, 111L121Kbal, ND. Tide pleasant" and - eonunodione - Hotel has been tko roughly rolitted , end re furnidhed. It le plesOsotly situated on North-West - coiner of Howard and Franklin streets, a few doers wont of the Northern Central Rail way Depot. Amy atbsntiop paid to the comfort of his guests. G. LEIONNBING, Proprietor, - jel2-tf - (Late of Boil= Grove. Pa.) T HBO. F.' s L oB - EF F BOOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER, NO 18 111AR118T STREW!, HARRIBIII3RG. Pargianiar attention paid to printing, ruling and binding of Rafiroad %Auks. blanifeete. Fon. cite, Checks, Bill.neann, Wedding, Ifiniting and Business Bard/printed at my ion prime and in the bent style. jan2l TAILOILING. M 11C1). _A_ - • _llr_ IE-111 11:r %Er The subscriber is ready . at 1..0. 93 , MARKET ST four doors below Fourth street, to make BAN'S AND. BOY'S CLOTHING In any desired style„ and with skill and promptnees. Penmen wishing cutting done can have it done at the thortest netice. ap27-dly *CHARLES P. VOLLMER, UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street four doors above Second, (Oveninvo Wsainvorms Hose lionsii.) is Prepared to furnish to order, in the very beet fittkiitt Vorkmanstkip. Apring anti Hair Mattresses, Window Cur ia, i nS• Loungeß, and all other articles of Furniture in his 11 . , e. on short notice end moderate terms. flaying em p.ri.mce in thp business, he feels warranted in asking* nharn of public patronage, confident of his ability to give rati.faction. janl7-dtf (ZR. V . —LIGHT G A LLERY.—T he rooms on th- eorn•r of Market square and Market s . reet, oaen-;t« the Jones House, occupied as a Gallery for re ,, tvp,-. Photograph and Awbrotype ; , urposes, '''re FOR Ri.WP-Irom the 9th of Septembe• Apply to JOHN WTI.: I'S; jaB-4/411'3W iii- - - . • •.---:' . " \ - 14, \ ;,,-- -, .'''-"- - -&= 1 -- ' -....;"-- ,---,,:_ 1114 . • • ,==--, - 1 : : ' ,... t ; ,,, 5if t i, -.'q.. ,, ,- , :: 1 -, .;Nte . . 7 - • . . , 4',:- ..- --zs. ' - 1 .....%••^'""1t . ';'''.;',- t.'l;--- -:-1-.- . . , . ~. ,e. • _,-, =-..-r±,, j i ,g4111017 . :124 , 7717 7 4 . .. - . , s __ . I - ... - ':. - t - j7Y E Nj 0 1 * ,-;" .['_, I ' --• i - r . 1 .-__. . , • . ~,,..„,,,,,,:,,,...... „ L , '- E - •• . ~ . 111 . .. . ... . . 1111 -, litt olt . .,._ • , - v 1 • -,. . VOL. 5.-NO. 297. Mahal. ECM DR. SWEETS INFALLIBLE LINIMENT GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY, FOR RHEUMATISM, GOV, NiEURALGIA, Limmoo, ST/11 NECK AND JOINTS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUTS & WOUNDS, PILES, HEADACHE, and ALL RHEU MATIC and NERIMUS DISORDERS, ' For all of which it is a speedy and aorta% remedy, and never fads This Liniment is prepared from the recipe of Dr Stephen Dweet, of Connecticut, tnn fer mons bone oettor, and has been used i n , itie practice for more than twenty years with the most — astonishing suc cess. AS AN ALLEVIATOR OF PAIN, it is unrivaled by any preparation before the public, of which the most skeptical may be convinced by a single trial. This Liniment will core rapidly and radically, RHEU MATIC hisoaDmits of every kind, and in thousands of cases where it has been used it has never been 'mown 'o fail. FuR- NEURALGIA, it will afford immediate relief in every case, however didtreasing. - - - - It will relieie the worst Lases of HEADACHE in three minutes and is warranted to do it. TOOTHACHE also w.II it care instal:4lj FOR NERVOUS DEBILITY AND O.EIsreRAL LASSITIIDE, arising from imprudence or excess. this Liniment is a moat happy and unfailing remedy. Act ing directly upon the nervous issues, it strengthens end revivifies the system, and restores it to elasticity and vigor. FOR PIZ ES..—As an external remedy, we claim that it fa the best known, and we challenge the world to pro duce an equal_ Every victim of this distressing, com plaint should give it a trial, for it will not fail to afford immediate relief, and in a majority of cases will effect a radical cure. QUINSY aud SORE THROAT are sometimes ex tremely malignant and dangerous, but a timely applica tion of this Liniment will never fail to cure. S PS SINS are sometimes very obstinate, and enlarge ment of the joints is liable to occur if neglected. The worst muse may be conquered by this Liniment in two or three days. BRUISES. CUTS, WOUNDS, SORES, ULCERS, BURNS and SCALD.% yield readily to the wonderful healing properties of DR. SWEET'S INFALLIBLE LINIStiIiNT, when used according to directions. Also, CHTLBLArNa. FRnSTED FEET, and INSECT BITES and STINGS EVERt HORSE OWNER should have this remedy at hand, for its timely use at the first appearance of Lameness will effectually pre vent those formiaable diseases to which all horses are liable and, which render so many otherwise valaabis horses nearly worthless. . Over four hundred voluntary testiroonialdto thie won derful curative properties of this Liniment have been received within the last two years and many , of Vieth Item persona in the highest ranks of C C ILTTI4) N. To avoid imposit on, observe the Signature and Like ness of Dr. Stephen Sweet on every label, and also Stephen Sweets Infallible Liniment" blown in the glass of each bottle, without which none-are genuine, RICH a RDSON & CO., - Pole Proprietors, /Norwich. Ct. For sale by all dealers. • • aplleow-ddtw lagettuA. &LL WORK PROMISED. II ONE WEEKP 0. P E NI L T leL l l7 k 4 e . I N I: A BTEA~I. PiEtt74 *t.ii3LISHMEN - T, " ===U;GUil DETW4ENFDITATN AND dr/FTEr, HARD.IEIBURG PA. Where every deecription or Ladies , end'Oentlemen4 teretents, Piece Goode, dte., are Dyed, Cleiksuied, and Sashed ha the ttsst manner and at the shortest nutlet ncie-d&wis DODOI & CO. Proprietors. T. F. WATSON; . MASTIC WORKER ITC PRACTICAL CEMENTER, le prepared' to Commit the exterior of Buildinga with . he New York Improved • Water-Proof Mastic Cement; This naterial is different from all other Cements. It forms a solid, durable adhesiveness to any surface, imperishable by the action of water or frost. Every good buildifig should be,coated with this Cement ; it is a perfect preserver to the walls, and makes a beautiful, fine finieh, equal to Eastern brown sandstone, Or any Color desired. Among others for whom I have applied the Mastic Cement, I refer to the following gentlemen! J. Bissell, residence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished flue ears. r. U, ghotaltergig, recifience, Lawrenceville, at/11360d five years. James M'Candiass, residence, Allegheny City,finished five years. • - Calvin Adams, residence, Third st .eet, finished four years. A. Hoeveler, residence, Lawrenceville, finished four yeari. J. D WOord, Penn street, finished four years. Hon Thomas Irwin, Diamond street, finished four years. St Charles Hotel and Girard Rouse finished five years. Kittanning Court House and Bank, for Barr & Moser, Architects, Pittsburg, finished five years. Orders received at the nice of it llPEldowney, Paint Shan, 20 Seventh street, or please Address • T. 11 . miyl6-if P. 0. Dos 13.8. Pittsburg, Pa. Arseßs. CHIMURING & CO. .HAVE AGAIN OBTAINEQ THE G•OL_D MEDAL! ' AT THE - MEZIA.ITICS' FAIR: BOSTON, • HELD WHIM PiCORDING.WBEE., OVER SIXPY COMPETITORS! Wareroom for the CIFICHEBINIS-PIANOS, at Harris burs, at 92 Market street, 0e.24341 W_ KNoamin MITSICi STORE DIN` YOU KNOW vitERE-YOU • can get fine Note Parhsr, E. , velopee, Visiting and Wedding Cards! At men KFIFER , S BOOKSTORE AIITPWRIOR STOCK OF I.QIM WK. DOCK, Ja., & CO.. are now able to offer to their eustchlicrs and tnepublic at lArge i , a stock of the purest liquors everimpqrted into this market, compri sing in part the following varieties : WHIS K --IRISH., SCOT() H2OLD BOURBON. WINE—PORT, SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA. OTARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY. JAMICA SPIRITS. PRIME NEW ENGLAND RUM. DRAKE'S; PLANTATION BITTERS. Then liquors can all be warranted; and in addition to' these, Dock & Co, have on hand a large variety of Wines, Whisky and Brandy, to-which they invite the particular attention of the public. • ' W EtsSTEti, ARMY AND NAVY POCKET DICTIONARY. Just received and for sale at AEFFER'S BOOKSTORE. MEW ORLEANS SUGARA — EIKOT IN IT4 TEM MANS.HT !--For sale by i7/ 2 WM. DOCK Is., & CO. FOR SALE.—A. TWO-STORY FRAI nousE in Short street. Inquire of 6030tf VI. K. Ir.ERBEEM. THE HARRIS rlftG, Rik., MONDAY. AUGUST 17, 1863. T Weekly "Patriot Eit igir'Union," THE CHEAPEST PAPER PUBLISHED IN PENNSYI,YANIA.I AND TIEN ONLY ONNOORATIO PAPER TIIBLISHND AT THE BEAT OF GOVERNMENT! FORTY-FOUR COLUMNS OP READING MAT TER EACH' WEEK ! AT THE LOW PRICE; OF ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS! WHEN SUBSCRIBED FOR IN CLUBS OF NOT LESS THAN TEN COPIES 70 ONE ADDRESS! We have been compelled to raise the dub subscription price to one dollar and fifty cents in order to save our selves from actual loss. Paper has risen, including taxes, about twenty-five per Mint., and is Still rising; and when we tell our Democratic friends, candidly, that we can no longer afford to sell the Weekly PATRISTAND Dame 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 imbscrip tions, go to work with a will to increase our list in every county in the State.- We have endeavored, mid shall continue our efforts, to make the paper meta as a party organ, sod `welcome &We news messenger to every fam-' Hy. 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 tate electipe; and if fearlessness in the discharge of duty, fidelity to the principles of the party, and ananxious desire to pro mote its interests, with some experience and a moderate degree of ability, can be made serviceable hereafter, the Weekly PATRIOT AND UNION will not be less useful to the party or leul we/come to the family circle in the fn tire than it has been in the past.. We confidently look for increased encouragement in this great enterprisie, and appeal to every influential Democrat in the State to lend us his aid in running our supscription list up to twenty or thirty thousand. The expense to each indi vidual Is trifling, the benefit to the party may be great. Believing that the Democracy of the State feel the ne. ,ceeeity of sustaining a fearless central organ, we• make this appeal to them for assistance with the fullest confi dence of - success. • • The same reasons which induce us to raise the price of the Weekly, operate in regard to the Daily paper, the price s of which is also increased. The additional' cost 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 conse quence, we should still be compelled to make it, or suf fer a ruinouelose. tinder these circumstances we must throir ourselires upon the generoSity, or, rather, the justice of the public, and abide their verdict, whatever it may be. The period for which many of our subscribers have paid for their paper being on the eve of expiring, we take the liberty of issuing this notice, reminding them of the mwee, in order that they may RENEW THEIR CLUBS. We shall also take it as an . especial favor If our present Imbecribers will urge upon their neighbors the fact that the PATRIOT AND "UNION, ie the only Democratic paper printed in Harrisburg, and considering the large amount of reading matter, embracing all the current news of the day, and TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCHES Sri= everywhere up to the moment the paper goes to press, political, miscellaneous, general and local news market reports, is decidedly the CHEAPEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE STATE! there is scarcely a village or town in the State in which a club cannot be raised if the proper exertion be made, and surely there are few places in which one or more energetic men cannot be found who are in favor of the dissemination of sound Democratic doctrinee,.who Would be willing to make the effort to rage a club. DEMOCRATS OF THE INTERIOR I. rot us hear from you. -The existing war, and the ap poaching sessions of Congress and the Mate Legisla ture, arerinvested with unusual interest, and every man Ghoul/ have the news. TERMS. DAILY PATRIOT AND UNION Single copy for one year, in advance. .. ~......$5 00 Single: copy during the session of the Lee;lotus...2 00 City subscribers ten cents per week. Copies supplied to agents at the rite of 11 foOPer hun dred. • ' . . _ . WRERLY PATRIOT AND UNION, Pub:lilted every Thursday. • . Slagle copy one year, in advance ' ... 00 Ten copies to one address 15 00 Subscriptions may eommence at Any time. PAY AL. WAYS IN. ADVANCE- We are obliged to make this imperative, ' Is every inatemte eaala. mats* accompany subscription. Any person sending us a club Of twenty subscribers to the Weekly will be entitled to a copy for ins services. The price, even at the advanced rate is so kw thit we cannot offer greater inducements than this, Additions maybe made at any time to a club of subscribers by remitting . one dollar and fifty cents Tor baeli additional name. It Vet necessary to send us the names of those constituting a club, as we cannot undertake to address each paper to club subscribers separately. Specimen ceples of the Weekly will be sent to all who desire it 0, BARRETT' & CO., Harrisburg, Pa N. B.—The following law, passed by Congress in Isoo, defines the duty of ,Postmasters in relation to.tbe de livery of newspapers to club subscribers : (bas Lsttio, Brown 4 Co.'. edition of tho . l,.stos of 1860, page 38, chap ter 131, 4eiiian. 1.) ((Provided, however, that where paeltages of new pa parser periodicals are received at any post office directed to one address, , and the names 'of the olub 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 to their respectivp owners." TO' enable the Postmaster to comply with thie regula tion; it will be zieceeaary that be be tarnished with the lid 1;4 nituma-conpuiting the slub i and paid a itaarter'i for year's) postage in advance. The uniform "courtesy of Poetmaetere, affordo the assurance that they will akeerfuliyaccommcinat e club subscribes; and the latter ighould take care that the pogitage, which ie•bnt a trifle each case, be paid in advance. Send on the clubs A. SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF EITHOGRAPIIS, Formerly retailed at from $8 to $5, ere now offered at 50 and 75 cents, and $1 and $1 50—Published by the Ar traion, and, formerly retailed by them. Splendid Photographic Album Pictures of all distin guished m 43.11 and Oonorale of the army, at oak,' 10 et.- For sale at 8011,EPPER93 Bookstore, • 18 Market street, Harrisburg. ASKETS! "- LA Um TRlonnan, MARKET. ORKOOL, • • 1r PAPER, • KNIPE. CLOTRER, ROUND, CHILDREN'S, . GALE, For low, by jol2 MITI B RANDY I !!---Folt, PREssRV7 G Puaroans.—A very enperior article, (strictly pured,inst received and for sale by jalyl Wlll DOCK, Jr., & Oo ACKERFALI • M - -- • 151/11)1EEREL, Noe. 1, 2 and 8, in all sized packages— new, and cads package waria . .sted. duet ieceived, and far sale low 1w •Vivt. Inltnl Jr.. if, inn B • LACKINU I—MAsates "URALLSI4 6 . I BLAOKING.”--100 Gaosa. aiseorted, size , just r. solved and fok eale. irlutiosale and retail. ' al WM. DOOR, Ja., & CO WI D f k D S of iirm. gilt bordered; and PAVEIC.ELINDS of .111 endless variety or designs- and orua•.ieets also, CURTAIN FIXTURES and TASSELS at Ivry low prices. °all at Schttlrerlo Boolistore. WM. DOCK ? Tr.. * Co tie Venal tt# Rion. MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 17, 1863 EVILS OF THE TIMES AND THEIR REMEDY-LETTER FROM BON. CHAS. R. B MCA LE IY. • The *following letter, written by the Eon. Chas. R. Buckalew, addressed to the mass meet of the Democracy which was to have been held in Independence ,Square, Philadelphia, on the 4th of July last, but failed to come.off on ac count of the disturbed condition of the State at the time * , has found its way into public print without the author's name. We make the cor rection, while earnestly commending the aft gaoity and philosophic force with which its political viels are presented. Mr. Buckalew's letter will camand the serious attention of every thinking man who will give it a perusal— the approbation of every one conservative enough to understand the broad principles it so admirably applies to the solution of the great national problems before usi The capital evils that afflict the nation are, a . broken Union ; civil war ; an immense and increasing debt ; great and unexampled bitter ness in the social relations of men ; and last, but not lbast, multiplied and grave" errors, usurpation and abuses of power by men in publip authority. How these evils can be mist surely removed, and their recurrence prevented, is the great, :the.. all engrossing question which now confronts no and demands rep That reply is • furnished in declaring the policy of the Democracy of Pennsylvania—a policy so simple, so just, so perfectly conformed to the necessities of the times, that none can misunderstand it, or sincerely question its fit ness for the repression of existing evils: That policy is connected with a sincere devo tion to the laws of the land, and with a deep conviction of the necessity of maintaining them intact and. unbroken. These laws consist of the COnstitution and statutes of the United States,and of the Constitutions and statutes of the several States,gand include much of the common law of England - and those legal guar antees of liberty which are the boast of British history. These laws of the land make up that American system of free government which has insured our prosperity, and given us a high place of honor among the nations of the earth. But those laws hive been assailed,,.—that sys tem of governmen has been inteoupte . d in its co - ureethe Steles are broke,, asunder, and sounde Of violence fill the land. It is time, then, to inquire, who have assail ed those lews„end who are now the enemies of reunion and liberty ? Against whom, against what interests shall the voice of 'this great State be spoken and her power be exerted 'l_ Unquestionably the radical Abolitionists of the North assailed, the - laws persistently and earnestly for years—by incendiary documents transmitted through the mails, to excite insur rection in the South ; by seducing negro slaves to abscond from their masters, atensting. their escape, secreting thern from pursuit, and by raising mobs to resist their reclamation. They also created and kept . up agitation in Coograss by petitions for unconstitutional laws, and the- John Brown raid into Virginia—a mission of rapine and blood—was assisted by their-coutri butions, and, was followed by the canonisation by them of its leader as saint. „Instigated by them, , many of the Northern legislatures enacted statutes to defeat or 'impede the recla mation of fugitive slaves under the laws of the United States, thus giving State sanction to the revolutionary spirit. At last the - ItepAbliciin party was founded, and drew most of the Abolitionists into its ranks, and along with them obtained their passions•and , their fatal dogma that there are laws of the individual will, higher in obliga tion than the lawe of the . laud, and that the latter, when they conflict with the former,.may be broken without guilt and without reproach. It followed, in dpe course, that the decision of the Supreme Court of the Bni:ed States 'upon negro citizenship and the rights of Southern men in the territories was denounced, and ac quiescence in it refueled by the Republicans, ,and the validity of any - establishing sla very was . denied in their platform adopted at They refused 'to he ,bound by the law, and their platform was itself a .repudia. Lion of the laws, as it denied their obligation. The Abolitionists and the Republican -party 'are, therefore, first. in fault, in breaking sway from good faith, duty and law, and their exam -ple, and the apprehension of further acts of aggression upu Southern rights by them pro- PTOTOked (a►thungh they could not justify) the exis.ing great rebellion. ' • That, rebellion was against the laws of the United States, arid put the whole - body of them at defiance. Although it as-erted for itself a -legal ground of justitiJation, it is more mani fest that it iras lawless and unauthorized. The compact of Union being ariihotit limitation of time, must beheld, as intended by ite.aut hors, to be perpetual; and the provision contained in ir• for its own amendment provides the only lawful mode by which its obligation can be limited or changed.. COnsiclering secession as a breach of the public le4, and iii fleW Of the immense interests put in peril by it, this State concurred in measures of hostility against the South. But this was done to vindicate the broken, law, and to - secure the objects for which the government of the United Stites was Originally founded, and for so purpose of conqueet, .of oppression,' or of fanatical experiment. Upon this ground we may justify our •conduct, and submit it, withbut apprehension of censure, to the judgment of future times. But the war has lasted more than two years, and its' management, and the measures of leg islation and of executive policy which have ac• compahitd it, have given occasion for frequent and just complaints. It has been so managed, that our armies htyie been outnumbered whrre decibivs 'battles were to be fought, or have been rashly thrown upon. impregnable position+ of the enemy. Our forces, greatly outnumbering those of the Confederates, have been so disper sed and so handled that their superiority has not determined the issue of campaigns or con cluded the contest. After c...titributing one fifth of a million of men to. the war, our Slate is insulted tty raids, ma is made dependent upon the friendship of neighboring States for her immediate defence. But it is'uot the mismanagement of particu lar mditary operations, nor other mere error of policy of our rulers, that-has clunk into th e hearts of freemen as matter of moat deep and en during complaint. Mere mismanagement,or er ror may be imputed to inexperience in war, to accident, to exceptional or temporary causes,cir, at the worst, to incompetency. Bat what shall be said of acta'of Coogreas and aeta of the Ex ecutive in CO:tempt of the Conetittokm, Which, bearing upon the war, have protracted it, uni ted • the enemy, uivid. d our own people, and placed us in a false position before the nations of the earth ? The Coufiscatiou Act : and the in Bauciratien Pfeelataatii,n ale; in the opinion PRICE TWO CENTS. o' a large part of eur.people, not only unwise and injurious to our cause, but also wholly un-; authorized by any principle of belligerent o' constitutional law. We need go but a little way beyond the doctrine of these measures before we conclude that the torch may be applied to entire towns, and a servile, savage race be let loose to works of rapine and ballatio war. - But not merely in the policy of the war—in our relations with the enemy - hags with consequent evil, appeared. In these North ern States, wholly untouched by revolt, -the public sense has been outraged by repeated and flagrant acts of arbitrary power. The enumer ation of these would constitute a volume, and they furnish a premonition of evil in the fu ture which every patriotio mind should view with deep apprehension. How long clan the law be habitually and offensively broken by the public authorities, in peaceful and' free communities, before resistance will be pro voked and a reign of social disorder estab lished? Thus, upon reviewing our affairs, we per ceive how the spirit of revolution—that of dis regard and oppositton to law—has worked to our injury; how it presses upon us with a heavy band at the present moment, and threat ens oar future welfare. And we discover also the parties or interests who are, in this con nection chargeable with guilt. The pictures dark and gloomy enough to create both abhor rence and fear. Unfortunately 'there is no certainty of the amendmrent of our affair by parties or admin istrations now in possession of power- The Abolitionist stands iqtplassa.ble and insolent as of old. and gives perverted direction to the war. The Republican party, incapable and prone to abuse, has control of the federal gov ernment and of most of the State governments North and West; and the Confederate gov ernment, inimical to reunion, holds position in the South. From none ,of these can we ex pect the firm establishment of Union, order, liberty and law- We are not to look to the guilty for salvation, nor to those who break the laws for their restoration. The Abolition ist, the Secessionist, and the Republican ad ministration and party, have each gone away from the laws of the land, and it is - because of their unfaithfulness to duty that wasting Thar and the other evils before - meationed afflict the country. , It is, idle to expert, from eitAer a restoration of good government, and a firm Union based - upon the affections of the people. Bat for all the Wrong that has been done, and for all the consequent calamities that have fallen upon us, the great majority of the peo ple of the United States are not responsible— .at least not responsible in the sense of having intended them. And there can be no question that if that majority could. now act directly and fully upon public Wain, they would de oree immediate peace, union and lawful rule, as they existed in former times; apd would put down, or put aside, all who would venture to oppose, or would seek to delay, the realiza tion cif these great objects. The Abolitionists proper never commanded a majority even in the North; the Republican Rom was in a mi nority of nearly a million of rot es at the Presi dential election of 1860, and it' is believed that a majority oV the Southern people were op posed to secession even after that election, and abandoned their Unionism reluctantly, under the pressure of subsequent events. In point of fact, active earnest minorities, North and South, have seized power and con trolled the course of events, and the great mass of the people "Bate amieared to be unable to direct their own destinies and secure their own welfare_ They were prepared at the outset of the rebeijion to havemaininined peace by some settlement of existing difficulties, and if , the Crittenden Compromise had been submitted to them it would have been promptly and gladly accepted. But that occasion was permitted to peas by those who could ht►ve improved it. War came, and for more thhn two years a great, intelligent and free people, most earnestly desiring peace, have been slaughtering _each other, accumula ing enormous burdens of debt to press upon themselves and upon tiatire generations, and have not vet been able to ex tricate themselves from the difficulties that surround them. What then is the remedy . for these evils ? One would . think that he that rq,ns might read it Surely our experience should light: up the road of safety, and cause willing feet td turn away from the oaths of error to tread it. The rercedy•is, to call•to places of pogo* the men who have kept the laws. and to eject from power those who- hape broken them The right of suffrage yet exists It h.s not been stricken down by mil tary force, and it remains to us as the great •instrument sr sovereign power prepared by the care and wi,idom of our anoes‘ ore not only for prosperotts times but also tor the misgovern ment and calamity. By wisely exercising it we may yet redeem our fame, and secure the More. ,• The Demoeraey of Pennsylvania stand upon this necessary and rightful principle of puha° morals atitil of national redemption : The resto ration and the support of all the laws of the land as they were agreed upon between the States, or have been enacted by Congress • Tots rttotiplea all PUllificatt;ka, secession, pro.tiamatioo-isw, arbitrary omits; al-olition mobs, and Chicago platforms. But it is pot incooeisteot with the repeal or amendment of particular statutes, or with the amendment of the Constitution. .Tbe power of amendment is itself a fundamental law, and air invaluable - feature of our system. Wi.h a good cause, and with candidates worthy Of the cause, we stand up once thorein this Commonwealth and invoke the favor or the •people. Our party has not struck at ttie Con stitution, nor broken the laws,• nor evoked the demon of sectionalism, nor: been in any respect unfaithful to those vows of union whidn our fathers pledged to the people of our sitt r States. The words of faith pronounced on tie half.of Pennsylvania by the Clymers, Pil'Beanis and Ingersolls of former. times, we have kept, and we intend to keep them in letter and spirit 'Tinto the end. What is proposed is, that this State shall, at the coming election, take a tront rank in a gen eral movement of the c'entr'al Stales fok the re demption of the country from misrule and wast ing war, and impending haukruptey, and from utt r disgrace. New York, New Jersey,'Ohiq, Indiana and Illinois, 'and' the border States sough of these, can stand up with Us, and agree with us in u tering the words which will save the future from the grasp of ruin. And let it be said : _ The sectional Republioan party shall go dawn —shall be voted out of powe - i.. 'All laws . , shall be•kept, and kept as well by Iltesidetit as by ettiv.n, • No proclamation-made law. • No arbitrary*arrests. No hostiles. - - . No suppression of the press or of free speech. No confiscation of private property except for crime judicially ascertained.. No emancipation by Federal power, or* On> exp•-nae of the Federal treasury. $ The IaWS of war shall be observed. r Toe Confederate government must retire from the scene, and its armies be aisbandeii or put down.. • The.. Confederate, debt to be the concern of the &am winch incurred it, PUBLISHED EVERY MOVAitte, SUNDAYS NEONPVID BY O. BARRETT * OS Tan Data? PA.entOr Ann CXIOIII win bo sum il *Mb. scribers residing in the Borough few Ton amino mis 'Mks payable to the Oarrlor. siabsuribuni, InTa NOMA" rums aneOn . • Tii WIMLLT PATilelf £$D II non is published stow° DOLLARS ran shim, invariably in advance. Ten sop!, to one address, ilfteen dollars Connected with this establishmens. n extensive JOB OFFICE, containing a_variety of plain and fancy type, unequalled by any establishment in the interior of the State, for which the patronage of 'he Pablie so. Honed. • The Union shall be perpetual, and alkali be declared eo. The recent legislation of Congress shall be reviewed and corrected. The public debt of the United States shall be honestly paid. • No duties of taxes except for revenue. A convention of all or three-fourths of the States shall be convened. constitution shall expressly provide in ao very machinery of government, a power of defence against sectional parties. . Reduced to their simplest expression these declarations signify that we shall stand to law and duty, and provide against future dangers. And if they, or the substance of them were distinctly endorsed and held up to public con templation by the States just mentioned, can any one doubt that the effect produced would be immediate, and extensive, and . salutary ? The end would then come into view, and its c3rta.inty would acceleratq, events, and give them proper direction. We would have a question of weeks or of months, instead of years or of an indefinite period, in reaching the day of relief. And when reached, the ad justment of our troubles would be complete and permanent, differing in both these respects from a result achieved by force alone. It ought not to be our desire, and it is not our interest, to make a Hayti or a Poland of the South. But it is not here proposed to discuss'gener ally the question of the war or the qUestlon of the reconstruction of the U . nian but to present the ttositions of parties with reference to the principle of lawful rule: And the point in sisted upon is, that a party faithful to law and duty must take possession of public power be fore we can reasonably expect a just and hon orable peace, firm reunion and enduring safety. Let this thought sink deeply into the minds of the people, and they will certainly restore the Democratic party to power, and will put down the guilty and lawless facti• is whO have abu sed their confidence and betrayed their hopes. EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE." AMERICANS ABROAD-SEETCjIES OF SOUTHERN VOYAGEURS-SOTS DE BO LOGNE BY NIGHT-A CREAMERY IN THE QUARTER LATIN-POLITICS ANA NEWS OF THE DAY. Special Correspondence of the Patriot and Union. Penis, July 31st, 1863. Harrieburg being out of danger, the world no longer trembles on its axis, and I have, been observing the countenances of my &nth ern brethren since the fall of Vicksburg. There are in Paris -several hundred youths from the Confederate States. In my own qtrarter there are thirty or forty, and as they circulate freely and talk with ctutracterietio modesty, one can not *ell mile their meaning. Here itet•Prodow bow, for example, a Louisianian, and a prime fellow,, as his comrades say. Six years ago . Prcidowbow sailed from New Orleans to New York to take the -Liverpool steamer. He had nine thousand dollars in his possession, and he ventured a thousand of it in faro. The fourth night of Prodowbow's tenure at the hotel found him without a penny, borrowing money to tel egraph to his banker. A thousand dollar draft was honored at sight by said banker's corres pondent, and Prodowbow fought the tiger again and won fourteen thousand dollars. He sailed at once, came direct to Paris, and met hosts of good lads to share his friendship and his money; At an opera ball, - one night, he met it dashing actress from one of the minor theatres, and ad dressing her, was repulsed. Nothing daunted, he commanded his coachman to follow hei car riage, and sct locating the house, addressed her e, letter. The end of the affair was that Pro dowbo w took , apartments St; six hundred francs a month, and- his lady spent two thousand fiance a month for him. suddenly the guns of Fort ..lumpter echoed upon Paris. Where were Prowdowbawis drafts, and gesiggers," and cotton bales? You will find him Cow in the seventh story ,of a seventh rate house in 'a room seveu feet square. • lie smokes your to bacco, as he tells of his past greatness; and hails felicitously your proposition that be shell takes drink. Prodowociw*lio drove down the Champs Elysee three years ago, with four men in livery, a diamond pin, and bows from every cafe, is wondering today whether he shall starve or beg—anything but work. Here is hlctecogee, a handsome Georgian, soft, insinuating and successful.- He was -a. small merchant in Savannah, failed, and se cured a clerkship in a New 'York city bank. Thence, to the relief of the bank of f icers, he was transferred to ,s United States uevai %res er], but on the breaking out of the , war threw up his PUrser•ship because be could not fight his Southern brethren. He came to Paris pen niless, but ingratiAed himself with folks, bor roweds thousand francs here, a hundred there, obtained credit with tailors, caterers, and pub licans, and kept the run of all newly Sr. iviag Americana, Yung 8 wiggle, fear` example, a Philadelphian,. with . more Purse than britins,. encountered Minicoy-1i at. Munroe's, the Ame rioau banker He. was going to the Levant and Jerusith m, pot for information but for tun, and' tie invited Miii.cogee to go also at S wig gle's expense They ittivnt slit tholleand dol lars, rung in a thud associate, .and returned to Paris, 'alter four months, having tsugbt S wiggle the use of Absinthe and —Vermouth. He'heearee crazed with driuk eventuatly, and was fuund one morning in the.hiorgue with his throat cut from ear to ear. Muscogee suffered somewhat in character from this trabsti.di and forthcoming Americans commonly refu;tv - to know rum • - Ac present be has neither bed• nor dinner, and waylays , youthtui voyageurs in the Pedals Royale, and construe to take a meal with them. Ele says much of liks stonks, ,cott , tr, and merchandise, destroyed by ;the Yankees, and it ie nuderstoo - i that hie last re sort will be a Loretto whom he fascinated many years-ago, . • • might. run this list far enough to include P lit he who run the blockade successfully seven times, bringing out cotton tor which be gave eight Genie per pound, but which 'he Isola in Liverpool far sixty odd. He baa made $lOO.OOO by the war, and intends to dwe l in Paris with a New York lady, leaving a. wife and two chil dren in the Sunny 3°llo'i—or Tamper, who used to be an 'oVerseer, afterwards a -slave buyer, but whce 'proe6 its ',himself a' French planter, and who dines at the Maitann D'orse every, day in seven at forty:live - franca per meal. " • There is a creamery near the. Odeon, on the . Rue Vaiketraru, where these:folk meet when there is nutm ty in town to " pinch." It is a cozy place, so retired and guarded that I won der Orsini did net obtain it - to develope his atiti-Napoleoniti plot. Welt! et the hour of al*, P. M., 3ou should see les Anterietsins withl kereche h. side them, playing/it-gad ur tiagnant, always for money,. when they haue any ,— and composedly inviting R.oullege, the proprietor, to.."' chalk " their score. It doesn't matte great`differeneci which of them it is entered against, ternone have the remotest idea that ,it will -:ever be paid, but now and then they 'take, the °old man aside, whisper of the limed anent en Affierigue, which divides them from their immense possessions, awl _wink at each other behind his stupid' and mercenary grin. These are the g.llant hearts of the South Much good cloth travel do them. Wuen, 110 W