1 VOLUME 15. ' " PtJBLIBHED 1TIBI WID519V1T ST . WM. II. JACUBY, Office on Main St., JrJ Square below Market ' TEKMS: Two Dollars pr annum If paid within 3 months Irora the time of subscri bing : two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within 3 months. No subscription taken tor a less period than six months; no discon , tinaar.ce permitted until all arrearages are tpaid, unless at the option of the editor. ' 1 h terms of advertising will be as follows: (Dae square, eight tines, one time, 91 00 tEvery subsequent insertion, . . . '. 25 )ne square, three months, 4 50 if)n -rear . . . 10 00 . ADDRESS OF THE STATE CENHUL COMMITTEE, iO the Citizens of Pennsylvania : A prescribed duty, as well as lorrg- sstablished usage, impels us to-address you in regard to the questions involved in l the several elections now at nana, in discharging this duty we shall speak plain (1 y and candidly what we know to be truth. Ia this, the fairest, richest, and (until Llately') the most favored laud of all the earth ; here, where the last footprints of civilization bad been planted ; iu this land (alone of all the Christian nations of the World the fell spirir of war is now rag ling,, Our proud aid unexampled carrer Vol prosperity as a nation has been-thus n rlnl .(li.ilrjil rmr indnstrir t.hK ! nnt devoted to the purposes of a destructive .war,-has bccom piralyz.jd ; "our finan cial concerns have be-n thrown into utter confusion aud debasement j we have hence forth probably forever to fetagger un der a load of debt greater, aud under tax- d'nn mna Anpfniu than that flf inv Ot.her nation on the globe ; coLadeoce iu the ' stability of our institutions is everywhere sadly diminished in fiue, gloomy fore bodings as to the future, alarm, embar assment, and distress have- taken the pTace of the happy peace, confidence, se curity, good order alid contentment we so lately enjoyed. Nor can hope find a resting place in contemplating the MS who now control OUT "jrovsrniuens -ua airuioist.er 113 snd it turns eickeued and sadiy away from the audacity, arrogance and tyranny it finds in h gh pia-cs. vtu iu the very eitidel of the cauou. Sciolists iu govrn jnent; atheists to religion; men who are free lovers io 003 sphere, a id free thieve in another ; renegades iu politics, aod scoffers at every well settled principle of public right and private viitue, now sway the dentin es of this Republic, and are crushing out the very tit's of "American feeidoui. For three long fearful )ear3 have the best blood at-d scarcest efforts of our peo ple been freely given in a civil war wiiich has no parallel ia the Li-try of the world. When fhis war conwuvwred, the Demo cratic party iu the North, as such was prostrate under recent defeat, which re sulted from its own unfortunate divisions. B it what a grat.d and inspiring Fpectacle was presented on bearing the first thunder .of rebellious arms ! Polit.cal and partisan feeliDgs, even iu that hour of party hu miliation, where ail laid upou the altar of the country, and the sua of Heaven never shone upon a people more uniud.resolute, and determined than those of the Noi th em States at the period we refer to. - Whatever migbC have been the views of the Northern Democracy in regard to the causes which untimely eigjodered this un happy strife ; however much in their in most souls tbsy dcploied the mad and reckles career of Abolitionism ; however Jeep was their de-tination of the course of those party leaders, wh had been for years sweeping up all the low, lurking el ements of bigo ry and frnaticism, and di recting their vilest efforts against the rights, interests, and institutions of ihi Southern people itill the attempt of a portion of that peoplet in consequence, to "break down the authority of the Constitu tion over the whole country, aod destroy' the Federal compact was a crim'nal act which could cot be tolerated or justified. The amplest retredies for the wrongs complained of were not oo-ly within hope, but at hand. Two millions of voters had jast recorded their ballots in a general popular election agaiust Abraham Lincoln and the one million ho ear-ported him and his policy. There was besides, a Democratic majority in one, if not both branhces of Congress, which would ren der him powerless to inflict any permanent evil on the country. The right of secession, claimed by the South aa the remedy for their grievances, its a political heresy .condemned by Mad jaon with bis latest breath, and by many others of our. ablest statesmen in all sec tions of the Union. Call the Constitution -a compact, if you will as does Jofferson in the Kentucky resolutions of '09 but it is a compact ol1 sovereign State, made with each other as such, having n j right of secession "nominated or constituted in the bond," The Union thus formed was in its nature, if not in terms, perpetual. Secession, then in view of the compact, is limply Revolution ; and the breaking up of the Union our fathers had bequeathed us, was, under all the circumstances we ' have detailed, and tha thousand other con siderations and consequences which must crow! every intelligent and patriotic mind, not only treason ft law, but against the -best .hopes, of mankind. , We could not then: cannot now and never will consent to if. . . - ' :' Ia this spirit of determined loyalty, to the Constitattoa and Laws, the Democra cy of th North, with scarcely an excep tion, relying upon the pledges given by President Lincoln, yielded him their Teaayasa eiacient support. Wzsac were Wh s-,- cf toss cledea 7 First ia his oath cFcl : "I Sn tlo i BLOOMSBURG. COLUMBIA of the United States, so help me God." Then his Inaugural Address, and with this solemn adjuration fresh upon his lips, he said : -tlI do but quote from one of my speech es when I declare that ''I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the Stater where it exists. I believe I have do lawful right to do so, and I have no inclinatihn to do bo." ' Those who nominated and elected me did so with full knowledge that I made this and similar declarations, and. have never recanted them. , I bow reiterate these sentiments ; and in doing so, I only press upon the public attention the most conclusive evidence of which the cae i susceptible, that the property, peace and security of no section are to be in any wise endangered by the now incoming Ad ministration. I add too, that all the pro tection which, consistently with tho Con stitution and the laws, can be given, will be cheerfully given to all the Slates, when lawfully demanded, for whatever cause -as cheerfully to one section as to another.' The repeated public pledges brought voluntarily to the standard raised in bo half of th union, hundreds of thousands of as brave men as ever breasted a bayo net. The armie- tbu ;aisd were pre cipitated on the South, with varied icr tunes of victory aud defeat, and war, civil war always the most bloody of ill hu maa strifes has ever, since Taged over some of the fairest portions of that unhap py region. But the long cherished schemes of fa naticisni lor trie extinction of African ser vitude could not be given wj. No matter if Massachusetts, sixty cr seventy years since, did sell tlaves to tha pe pleof the Southern Statts, under the guarantees of : Constitution which she helped to form still, Massachusetts meddlers, both in Congress and out of it, now determined, since they could not 'Tail," they would rend 4 ithe Beal from off the bond." The gallant ''three thousand clergymen of Saw Euglaud" (worthy dicipies of the Prince of Peace ) rallied to a man, in the new crusade of fanaticism, and wrought, side by tide, with infidels, who haveior years been in the daily habit of eneetiug at the Christian's Bbi,aod blas pheming the Christian s God. The fears of our timid and facile Presi deut were worked upon, as well as his van. ty, and desire ot re-election,' by the extreme and radical members of his party, and the emancipation and confiscation measures were forced upon him, aod made a part of bus policy in thd conduct of the war. Every etfoit of the friends ol peace but forth iu t.ongrfess wa defeated. The hostility ot the Abolition leaders to serf dom iu the south to employ the words of the lamented ' Douglas - "was stronger than their fidelity to the Constitution." l'hey beiieved that a disruption of the Union would draw after it, as an inevita ble cousequenc-j, civil war, servile msur rejtious, aud finally, through lhe.--e, au utter extinction ol slavery in all the South ern Sutes ; and, it would seem, they act ed even, ou this terr.ble belief. Look at the r -J cord : Ou the 18th day of December,-1660, SeLutor Crittenden ol Kentucky, the boBome friend of Henry Clay iu biS lifc-timo introduced into the Senate ot tbe United States a series of resoiations, as a b isis of settlement be tween the two eectioos of the Union. The secession of South Carolina look place on tbe 2lhn of tie same month, and her members of Congress retired from their places. We are thus particular in refer ence to this subject, because our oppo nents, througk their Central Committee in this State, luve introduced it iuto a late address to yu ; and there is a specious effort made in that address to turn aside trom the Pkcpublicans, the just obloquy and reproach which the defeat of Senator Crittenden's proposition has fastened upon their party. The offered compromise would.in terms, have sealed more than three-fourth- of all onr territorial domain against slavery for e?er placing about 90D,00U mile? under the provisions ol the Ordinance of 1787, more recently known as the "Wiltnot Provision" living the remaining 300, 000 miles iubjxt to whatever laws thoe who settled upon it mighC establish tor themselves, wlenever they become a State. All the other features of the pro posed compromise, were nothing but re aflirmanees of '.he plainest powers and provisoes of the Constitution, cave, possi bly, tbe fair and equitable stipulation that slavery should lot be abolished in the District of Colunbia, as long as it exist ed in Moryland and Virginia, the two States which had ceded that District to the General Government. On the 15th ot January, 1801, Senator Clark, a leading Kepublican, moved to amend the Crittenden proposition by striking out all the material provisions certainly all tiiae contained the olive branch of "peace, - and inserting a single resolution breathing war and threats to wards the South. This amendment was carried by a vte of 25 in favor, all Re publicans, against 23 Democratic votes. But says tbe address of the Republican Committee ''ehc Southern 8unators re fused to vota at all on the, proposed amendment ;" ted then with a degree of cool assurance remarkable even in these times, it goes ou to tell the people of Penn3yivani4ihat had these six South ern men voted against the Clark amend ment, it would ave been defeated, and tha Crittenden Compromise might have been taken op and carried by the same majority." General Cameron who pats forth this addresscannot be very proud of his own share in this record, or he would not have kept outof view tbe fact that he himself voted for bis very Clark amend merit and the sam- dav moved a recon- sXltion ; Ztoqi 1 was called up only three days afterwards, he voted asamit his own nia'ton io ret . , i -.l consider. It was carried, however, with the aid of at least tivo (Johnson and Sli . del! ) of the 'fcix' named, and the Compro mise was again in statu quo before the Senate. It was finally taken up on the 3d of March, and defeated many of the 'Southern Senators having' withdrawn from the Senate in the interim, tho States 1 having seceded from the Union. Now (ieneral Uameron, wno issueu the Address, knows just as well as did Senator Cameron, who sustained the Clark amendment, that it required a two thirds vote to cive vitality to the Critten den Coinnroraise. Ue knows, too, that den Compromise. Ue knows, too, that every Republican vote, including his own, in the Senate, was given agamt tne mea- ure, in effect, from first to last He knows furLlier. tliat tho lieDaolican bon;itors re , fued Senator liigler'a propo-al to sub mit this Question to a vote of the Di'Dle A a a as instructive of Congress. IIj ku jws alo that Mr. Ck-men, ol Virginia, oti ihe 17lh oi February, before that iState adoo ted eccesion, endeavored io the IIou.-e of Iltpresentatives at Wa-hiugtoo , to ob lam similar arrangement iu that bndy to te-'. the question of compromise before the people, aud it was voted dow.i by 112 itepubiiein agiint SU Democrats every Republican in tho House vot nf iu the negative, l'hey would not tuey did not dare to trust the people, the legisimate source of power, on this quei-ti -n ! At the hazzurd of turui-hing unnecces sary proof on thi point, we b g attention to tbe clear and explicit evidence of Seua tor Pugh a coiemporary of the author of the Address, io the.Senate of the United States. Iu the course of his speech iu the Senate, in March, Ibdl, be says: "The Crituaden proposition has been endorsed by the almost unanimous vgte of the Legislature of Kentucky. It has been endorsed by the noble old Common wealth of Virginia. It has been pet tioned for by a largr number of the electors of the Uuited Spates than any proposition that was ever before Congress. 1 believe in my heart to-day that it would carry an overwhelming majority of tha .people of my State, ae,ir, of nearly every State in the Uuion.- R fore ihi Senators from the State of MifM..-ippi lett thia chamber, I heard one cf them, wfco as sumes at least to be President of the Southern Confederacy, propose to ace pt it, and maintain the Union, if that pro pooitiou could receive the vote it ought to receive from the other nide of tiie cliauiber Therefore, ali of your propositions, uli of your amendment, knowing as I do and knowing that the historian wiil write it down any time before the first of .Iai unrj, a two-thirds vote for the Crittenden resolutions io this chamber would have saved every Slate iu the Uion. except South Caroima. Georgia would be here by her representatives, and L;u:siana those two reat States whicn at least would have broken the who e column of Sece.-sion. Ulobe, page I30U, Upon the same point, on trie same day, the clariou voice of the patriot Douglass bare tes'imony as loiiows : uThe Senator .Mr. Pugn has said that if the Crittenden proportion could h;ive been pa9sed early in the susbion, it would have ?aed all the Stat,- except South Caroiina, I firmly believe it would While the Crittenden proposition was not in aucordauo willi my cheri-lud views, I avowed my readiness and eagerness to accept it in order to save the Uuion, if we could unite upoa it- I can confirm (he Senator's declaration that Senator Davis himself, when on the Committee of Thir teen, was ready at all times to compro mise on the Crittenden propo-itiou. I will go further, and Eay that 31r. Toombs was also. Globeyjage 1391." How preposterous at this day then, this attempt of one of the leading actors in that pventtiil drama thus to stifle coicieuce, and so seek to rescue his co-cou.-piraiors j from the recorded verdict of hi.-tory, aud ! the deserved and inovitibi : cond;-ui;i-itiou i ,1; ! Tho coutroll'.iij; ) 1 i urjbi A k iu L.' pirits cf the R-;public:in p rty never; meant peace uutui . first to last, any time or in any form, save ! ' J. iir.nn thf oriA ilrf unr aud UcVili&h . Oil ditiou of turning to-se upou our laud throe ; aud a halt millions or tdacK semi-oaroar-ians uuder th? specious pretense of free dom ; while in reality, it was only to tear so many of these poor creatures away from their homes ot comparative nappiness and peace, to find starvation, misery and death in an inhospitable clime ! President Lincoln ha3 but recently de clared, in very definite terms, he will lis ten to no proposition for peace which does not include this Africau millennium, not-withstatdinj-; thosa plain constitutional prohibitions of all right on tha part of the General Government thus to intervene, which he himself, with the oath cf ofBoe fresh upon his lips, declared he "h'l no legal rtghl '&nd no intention'' to disre gard If we were to credit the ravings of tho chief advisers ol tbe President, or, at least, those who seem-, to iufluence him most fully Sumner, Baecher and Phillips human reason has been making uch rapid progress in these latter days, that the haven of human perfection must be near at band. But alas I when we look hojefully for the blessed gale which is to bear us onward in its course, we hear nothing but the loud breath of the tcm pet; see nothing all around us but the angry snd the troubled sea, every where sparkling with foam and surging in its madness; atd we are tempted to ask, can this indeed be "The wind anii the atorm fuiniliag hi word I Thp-ft men are mistaken and mad, or are traitors ot the deepest aye, reserving traitor', darkest doom.' This equality 1 are traitors of the deepest dye; deserving COUNTY, PA.. WEDNESDAY OC'IOBKK 1.9. 1804. j of the black and white races which they are neenmg io ".uiu - -j - i v...i - J A itpnam. Tvhinh a briet n oV.a.tnl and idla dream, which a brief j contrast of their progress and peculiarities must dispel from every tnougutiui miuu. A little more than two centuries since, when our fathers first planted a few germs of our race at scattered' points along the North American coist, the whole number of that race in the old world did not ex ceed six millions. England, Scotland and Wales then numbered fewer inhabitants than New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio do now. Mark tbe progress : in North America at this time (including a whole Bn -i a r?el tin infusion. there are at least fnirrw milllnnq. snd in the whole world tmny muuous, uu m (confessing there also the gime infusion,) irom nguijf o uiu, . r- r.-, ! substantially Anglo Saxon in their origin. mnrp Klncrrrif;h racw?. or hetnminc tbern in e are every ytui - v u t - .- ' ci every side; and at this current rate of increase, in one hundred and fifty years from tbiV'timo, will run up to eight hun i dred millions of human beings allspeak- ing the same hugaa-re, rejoicing in tha I same hih intellectual culture, and exhi ! bitin the same ioherent and inallenablt I : characteristic 1 - Ou the oiher hand, the African race has never, anywhere, given any proof of its capacity for a sdl-auuuied civiliza tion. Since th suu firot shMi on that continent it . h is remained in tho same state of mental gloom. Cru d, brutal, vol uptuous, and indolent by nature, the Af rican has never advanced a single stop beyong his own savage original. "Sla very has ever been, and to this hour con tinues to be, his normal coudition,throijgh out every clime he can call his own ! And yet they have had as many oppor tunities of improvement as the inhabitants of Asia or of Africa. Along the sborei of the Mediterancau was ouca concentrated the Literature and Science of the world. Carthage, tho' rival of imperial Rome iu the arts of commerce and ci v iliz ition, ex isting for many years on the A'ricau bor der. The Saracens, the most, polished raco of thi irnmc, founded and maintained tor centuries a continuou. empire Still, for ail this, the African has.coiitinud to piovvi ou through his lou niht of barbar ism, ai.d thus, in ali hmuao probability, be will coutinuo forever. Tell us not that his wont of progress in ciziluation is the result of long established bondage. So. for centuries, was our own raca bound t the earth under various uaodificatiou of predial , vassalege. But the white soul expanded, a id mounted above all its bur thens and trammels, and finally, in this couutry, readied the full fruition of repub lican freedom We grant this mental inferiority of tbe African (we forbear, in the spirit of so briety, any physical contemplation orcoii-tra-tj doo not give a doiiiiuatit race the right to convey hiia Irom his own benight ed i md to a foreigu bondage, even under the forms of a purchase from his African uiaeter. But this natural iuferiority mtt bo considered by the btatesmeu iu training laws, and adopting Constitutions for human government, in Pennsylvania we have always afiinuei tl:is inferiority iu our luu daruental laws ; and the 'bams has been dou.; ia almo-t all the free States of t e Union $ euerally excluding tho African trom the right tuifrae. This necessity ol duty regarding the law of races, is thus forcibly comme nted upou by Lamartiue (a scholar aud a statesman, ilwajd in t ivor o man s largest liberty) iu a recent work : "The more I have traveled, the more I am convinced that races of men form the I treat secret of men and manners. Man is not so capable ot education as philoso phers imagine. The iu3uenca of Govern ment audlaws has le.-s power, radically, th.iu is supposed, over the manners aud iuwinct of any people. V Lil; the primi tive constitution and blood of the race have always their iafij'no, an 1 man iT.-st tiiemsidvis thousand f jears aLcrwards iu the jr iiy sicat f;i mati-vi and habns of a p-cu'iar family or tribe. Humau nature flows iw rivers and -trcsm- iu the vast oee.in of humanitv ; but its waters miDgle but fiowlv sometimes th'V never mingle, - j - c and ,t emerges a-uu lute Rhone rom the r...i- r ii,.i.oi..i wiih iti nwn tste aud cneva. witn its own i;sie color. Hero is,iudetd.an aiyssoI tbougbt and medita'ion, and at the same time a grand Jocret for legislators. As jong as they keep the t-pirit of the race in view they frucceed ; but tb-ey fail 'l.en they strive against this Latural predisposition ; nature is stronger than they are.'' But why thus enlarge upon a topic which Las undergone so much.and such frequent discussion I Why becau-o this idea of working out negro equality ou the pait of our opponents is the very b mis of our prcstui jioli'ical itrugg'c. Let uo man be mistaken. This is really me leaams issue of the present moment between the two parties. To carry out this idea has come at last to be the ruling, if not the s ;le pur. nose of the tear which is now dclttgi tg the land WWi fraternal iucna i xor i.uia, the Constitution and the reserved rigbts of the State and the peopie have been mock ingly trampled under foot; for this, both impertbus and imperial 'edicts, such as would seud to the block any monarch in England, have been issued by the Presi dent and sought to be enforced; for lhis t . ....... ,-1 1k,hi.., fn T.nril' T.vnns oecrciary oewaiu - j "I can touch my office belt'at any moment, sina order io oe arresiuu any wucu cbuntry"'-has teen all too trequenty realized ! The extent to which the party support ing the President are willing to go in ne gro affiliation, find3 a memorable illustra tion mine pro josiuu unuo uj w.v.-.; i..mnrnn tha f ret nf ihe several occupants tion in the proposition made by secretary oftheplacaof Secretary of W-r under! President Lincoln. He cooly proposed, ! in hi first and cast annual communication, m m urts m to free, and thea to arm tha whole bUek population ol the South, and turn them against their white masters iu a work of indiscriminate butcberylThis truly infernal suggestion was not adopted by the Presi dent when first proposed, but it has since been acted upon in more instances that one. We have charged the party at present in power, fellow citizeus.with tyranny and usurpation. We now go further, and solemnly assert our belief, that there ii a deliberate design to change the character, if not the lorra of our government. The leading papers in the support of the Ad ministraliou openly advocate a modifica tion which will place greater powers in the hands of the President ; and if their ad ci,n,,,t Vn ortnt.tpd hv tha r.eonlj". in ' I r yum u v j - r I I ! a short time the chains will be firmly rive- ted, aud our liberties completely suDver ted. The Philadelphia Z'ress not log since remarked : 'Another principle must sertainly be embodied in our reorganized form of gov ernment. The men who bbape the legis lation of this country wheu the war is past, must remember that what we want i-power and streng-th. Thb problem will be to co ubine the forms of a Republican Govern ment with tbe powers of a Monarchial Goverment. About tho the saino time, as if by con norf wn lii.d in the Nortk Avxer'v.aa : " I hi war has already shown the ab eurJity of a Government with limited pow ers, it has shown that the power of every Government ought to be and must be Un LIMITED." Such doctrines as these would have met with rebuke even at the hands of the elder Adams ; but they were tho natural pre cursors of the "war power" which has been made to over ridu the most explicit doc trmes of the Constitution.' Tha very wrongs, is fact,complained of by our fath ers, and enumerated in their declaration against tho English monarch, have been revived upou their sous. This Adminis tration lias wilfully violated its own oath bound pledges, aud sought ''pretexts of innovation upon the establii-hed principles ol the Government ;" it has fostered a "t-pirit of encroachment, which reuds to consolidate all the departments of the Gov ernment in oue, aod thus create, whatever the form may be, a real de.-potism ' It has rendered "the military superior to the civil power." It has superceded iu a r. ign of lawless fotce the security prescribed by law against seizure and imprisonment "without due process of law." It has verilv "created a multitude ol new offices, and bent among ns swarms of officers to harass our people and eat out their sub stance." By an iu;quitous Conscription law, it has distributed its agents among ihf peoplfbacked by bnyon -ts.and cloth ed with di-retiouary powers over tbe iiber ert;e: if not the lives of our citizen. !t "has quartered large armies of troops among us." It has "imposed, taxes on us without out consent" Finally, its chosen and purchased advocates are now clam orous for a stronger Government, that "our charters may be taken away, our most valuable laws abolished. and the pow ers cf our Goverum jnt altored fundamen tally." These, we submit, fellow citizens, are all of them features fairly exhibited, of that 'stronger Government,' which our forefathers, appealing "to the Supreme Judge of the World," einhry year- ago, pl-dj-ed their lines, their fortunes and tbeir'saTcd honor" to put a side forever. We have before spoken, fellow-citizens, of the depressed condition of the country. The mountain of debt which has been pil ed up so recklessly, cannot be less than three thousand millious of dollars, when all is fairly counted. Of this, Pennsylva nia's share will be at least one-tenth of the whole, or S3.M),O.U,0OU- The annual in terest uion this i-u:n (more easily eetima ted than paid) will be about eighteen mill ious of dollars. This, added to the annu al interest of our former debt,ruaks an ag gregate of interest now, and henceforth,to be borne by tbe people of this Common wealth, ftaied in round numbers, of twen ty millions of dollars! We cantos heigh ten this picture of the stern reality, which an inezorable antnmeucai caicuiauou gives. Some make evm a deeper debt and a darker prospect of the future. Taxation always falls heaviest upou labor ; it will now grind the poor to tho ver' earth. And yet the mock philao throrists of the day are increasing the taxaiion, and urging on a system of meas ures, which, under the pretense of ameli orating the condition of the African, will, if carried on much longer, practically en slave the laboring white man and starve his family. And besides this, if the for cible abolition of bondage at tbe South should suceed, it will only be to bring the white working mm and women of tue North into competition in the same paths of labor with the Africau they have been taxed and beggared to bring here and support amount us ! The favored eajitalist, who has money to lend the Adminitration, gets his bonds, upon which xhereis no taxation ; aad thus is increased the burdens of the laboring and middle classes. But we forbear to pursue this melaucholy train of facts and reasoning, and turn to the more grateful consideration of how we can do something for the correction of these evils. It must be plain, fellow citizens, the on i it uju.. ( 7 Jy hope that conservative men can have of i bayeiu mc tuuwwjr nom - chy and nlimate ruin, is by uniting with thA Democratic oartv the only party now left that is truly national in its character and conservative in its aims; the only nartv in the countrvthat has ever been able to govern it, for any length of time, j auio ,j guiu , " - to tha satisfaction of the neople at large. .This party has now presented for the PreBidency,and Vico Presidency, two men of the most unspotted lives and unblemish- . i u I cd ttihon unassailable, except by the corrupt and mercenary creatures io the day and prom ise of the existing Administration. In regard to George B. McClellan, wa shall not pause here to write his history That is already engraved on tbe hearts and 1 consciences of a grateful people. We fed confident, also, that his admitted ability, , integrity and independence, the manly firmness he has always exhibited, and espe- ; cially, and abovo all, bis- heroic devotion 1 iu tbe darkest hours to the true principles of the Uons itution will draw around Lim now, the nation's confidence. This confi dence reposed in such hands, would never be batrayed. lie stands at the present, as he baa al ways stood, whollj- aloof from iiitrigue. He is allied by no ties or contracts with mercenery adveutuiers iu political life. He seeks not the office for which he has been named ; but has all aloug held "the noisleas tenor of his way,' free from tbe embarrassments which trammel the active and ambitions candidate for office. Rven it defeat should fall to nis lot io this con test, (wnich we cannot believe,) he will be condoled with the consciousness f having implored no man's aid ; pledged in tdvonce uo places that would be in his gift, if elec ted ; and that those who had espoused his cause even trom the beginning, acted from sympathy with a biave, persecuted, and patriotic man ; acted from piiuciple and love of country, Beeking no reward of future favors. Mo one who has been named for the presidency de'ircs it less ; uo oqc certainly, has counted it less, and this is an additional reason why he should be, and will be preferred by the thought ful and the upright. Th varnished repoits of rivals in com in and ; the suppressed aud distorted facts of a partisan committee of Congress ; the constant jealously and maglignant opposi . tion at every step of those who feared his success and dreaded his popularity, have all failed in blasting bis military reputa tion. Intelligent men evervwbeie, in ev cry land, have read the libels upou this accomplished soldier, only with a spell ing sense of their injustice and venality. In this country, they have penetrated tbe hearts of our soldiery and the people at large, only to kindle there & troaler and brighter flame of devotion to their intend ed ii tim; and tbe world, ere long, will witness with approbation the reward which they will intte out to a national benefac tor. Tbe eminent statesman who Las been nominated for the second place on our tidket, has long been conspicious in the legislative branch of the Government Remtmberiog his years, few men iu our couQtry have ever reached a higher posi tion in thf respect and confidence of tho public. No man in the present Congress possesses to a greater extent those gifts of oration and accotnpitfbments of a states manship, that amptv justify the wide pop ularity and esteem with which he is every where regarded in the etctioa of tbe Union that gave bim birth. He, like our Pres idential candidate emphatically belongs to the you.no men of this couutry. These nominations are essentially, their nomi nations. The fact of youth tdiould give a deeper interest, if possible, to this class, in the struggle now at hand The whole of active life if before them, with all it. purs iits, hopes and enjoy n.ents. Lei them weigh well, recent and passing events and mark tho rapid coiling of despotic power ; let them resolutely see to it, that the wise and beneficeut iuititutions of the pure men of former limes become their owrj sure heritage, and that of their chil dren. Finally, fellow-citize: s of Pennsylva nia, of all clatjies and conditions "it is in your power to dissolve the clouds which now threaten to overwhelm all our bright est hopes, an! bring upon our country a long uight of storm and darkness. Agaibst tbe usurpations and evils, which we are conscious of baving.but too in.per fectly depicted, let us array ourselves in combined strength The electiou of our Coiigre-gional, Legislative and County tickets in October ii of the highest impor tance, if we would succeed in tbe Presi viential contest iu November. Success here will inspire the Conservative men of other States Defeat will alarm and dis hearteu. It U the DUIY of the Pennsyl vania Democracy, and those who unite w ith us, to4curry this electton,if we would not bring on prematurely, thit which is sure to follow in the end, if finally we fail in November '77iC despair which uni cornis despotism t or tin rage which wtl comr.s anarchy." Let our watchwords be War (if we mustjhave it)for the true, legitimate objects of feuch a war, and none other; for PEAC E the tirt moment that peace restore to us the common heritage of a united coun try ; for the imperishable glory of the old Union and the Constitution unimpaired ; with sympathy for our soldiers in the field under their trials aud dangers ready ev er to aid and to honor them which can not posibly be better done, than in giving our best efforts in endeavoring to so mod ify the grounds of the struggle they are maintaining as th.it it shall appear purely just before men, and iu the sight of God 1 We implore, then, ali who love peice and order; all who wish to sea iodutry successful aud property secure ; all who are willing to support wise legislation, pub lic virtue, and constitutional liberty ; all who wish to leafi! prosperous lives them selves, and enjoy in quiet the fruits ot their own industry ; all who wish to trans mit their property aud the' b!esings of free institutions to their children, we im plore all these to unite with us We go for the country, the 7noLE country for Union Libkrxy and Law. If a majori ty o the people will thua. be true to them selves, "we may hop soon to see our couu try resuraei o Mfjthjrn ious career free, prosperous and hsppy tbe pride of her eitaens, and the ad miration of the world ! . By order of the Democratic State Cen tral Committee : C. L. Ward, Chairman; R. J. Hemphill, Secretary, ?, To ten. George B. Mcl'lcilaa. Brave chieftain, in a nation's heart 4 " Thou hast a warm-abiding place ; Thy deed of valor, deep engraved. E'en Envy's Laud dare noi efface. The fires that Malice kindles now - Around thy dear and honored oame Will, by their tierce but transient glow, In row brighter losire 'round thy fame. . - The stint of falsehood Truth will beal, Wipe tul the t-car and soothe the pain. While, with a strong recoil, H drives Tbe venom of its source again. . Let him who is without a stain " Cast the first stone,'-' il will reboand, Leaving untouched the " shining mark," And at the (dinger's feel be found. Thou needst not fear tbe -vinged abaft Tbe hidden arctier letieth lly ; . ; The wicked band that bends tne bow Uas aimed so low 'twill pass thee by. God holds a shield above thy bead ' That turns iach pointed dart aside, And in impervious armor clothes . The Hero a .d the Natiou'f Pride. We iovKd you when, vi h martial race, You wore tbe well earned wreath of bay, While loud hos-annas weetly rang To iaud the vicior ol the day. But more we love the pauent heart, That beats the wros- ihe taunt, the sneer; Thai 'ttJet lliee nobly good as brave- Above r-proacb a well as tear. ' How beau'iful he reappears When clouds have long obecored his form, The regal run whose I'ght doth ebine More glorious after gloom and storm. So ibou frnm rhadow shall emerge With burnished armor, waving crest ; While yraielul hearts replace with joy The otar ol honor on thy breast. A VKIOH WOM11T. Tote fur an Honest Man. Hae honest Republicans, who have rraintained a course of strict integrity them 8elvee, aud desire, aboe all things, to im press upon their children (he conviction that dihonest men never prosper, even in thi$ world, sufficiently reflected ou tbe conse quences to follow from oting tor re-election of Lincoln, alter all that has been proved upon him ? Ot what avail to denounce dis honebiy in all other men except ihe-President ot the United States i Will upright Republicans vote lor a re-election of a Pra ideut who has notoriously permitted the misappropriation of public money under his very eyes, and received and enjoyed ihe fruits ot the plunder? Why imprison Kotinetanim tor lite, mid sentence Ham in ond to te u rever excluded trom holding any office of trost or emolument under the) United Stales, and vet vole lor the re-elec tion of Abraham Lincoln? Will somebody tell us ? Don't go oil iu a paroxysm of verbose vituperation, Messrs Editors of the Ynbune, Times aud Post, and come down on Democrats lor making euch charges, but bo uood enough to come down on oar ques tion atked trom day today. Will you ad vocate the re-election ot a man to be Presi deui who pays for coats, hate, and silver, bickles lor bats oi bis coachmen and fool men, out ot money appropriated for im provemeut ot public grounds, and then per mits the ot jeel ot (he expenditure .to be falsely staled 10 the accounting officers of iiid trertaur Wodd. The Rhh'nond Enquirer is out in favor of tle re election of Mr. Lincoln. Ii considers him the bent man for the South. The Con lederate believe there is far greater chance of obtaining their independence under tha administration of Mr. Lincoln than -under McClehan It says: "Whether we view this nomination in the ligb: ot eacj or of war, we prefer Lin coln io McCleUan. We can make better terms ot peace with au an'i-idavery fanatic than with au earnest Unionist. We can jam more mili ary success in a war con ducted on 'my plan' than one ot a real sol dier like McClellan, and sooner destroy the resouices and strength of our enemy when ihy Hre managed and manipulated by the 1 1 ii t i fingered gentry of Messrs. Chase and Feoseudeu, than when huobanded and skill fully controlled by ucu a man as Gurthrie." McClellan. The Schenectady Star (in dependent) but which ban sustained the administration in the main, speaks of Mc Clellan from the knowledge of its editor. It calls him ' a Jackson iu firmness a Docglas in all thai ia ptrictly just between he North and ihe South :" and again, "the superior of even Honest Abk in e'.aiesman slup, in military ability, acd iu that natural aLii ity which should always be attached to the otfice of President' The S3 racuse Courier, speaking of a comj pai.y ot United States Regulars, thai passed through that city on Wednesday for Allan la, jys : While waiting the outgoing of tbe car--, the Uegulir saw fit 10 cheer lustilf tor their old commander, General McClel lan, and they did it with a will. Many of 'ihem wore McClellan badge, and all were enthusiastic tor their old commander. I.' you want peace, if you want tow tax es, it jou want no more conscriptions, itp you want to save 'be government of your fathers, if you want your children to enjoy. thebIeosing of liberty, if you want union in place of disunion, prosperity in place cf adversity, harmony io piace of discordt peace iu place ot war, and plenty in place) want and destitution, vole the Democratic Jjlc b 1