- IWOuro, : ,(6azettil. lIIE9/01101101110=r.:EMET. 22, 18001 ---- I in --Union state' Ticket. • IN3B G07ES1108: ANDREW G. CURTIN. of Geo We. FOB MOON Of TIM 8171111p8e COM DANIEL AGNEW. of neaTtsf. Vales Comity Ticket. Por &viand Aair el , W owes Mart I 1/088:8 RAMPTON. w' log daroolOi/. z. /OEM P. GLASS. zz. ALLEM SLAM ac MUG B. SWIM B. DINED3TO 1. IBM J. BIGILAIL 2. JOHN H. 621" WAST. he Gob of Goorp. Wa. A. HUGON. • SO Om* Troomnr. DAVID AMOK, a. For lkoookw. ABDIII. HcCT.VBL r Toe liefloboa Wlti. J. BICIEWIDgeg. Ps Omit Onssiodcw. minas wanvroa. NW Dings , of Or Pee. JOHN Y. DRANO.. The Negroes at roit Iladscia. The pro-slavery Copperhead riewsParrat Bast and West, have been triumphantly quoting some espressiomi of CoL Greenleaf, of the 62d Blaesachusetts Regiment, In which they found a denial of the bravery of the negro soldiers at Port Hudson. CoL Greenleaf, it appears, has been misrepre sented. Be has written a letter to the Chicago .Timer contradicting the statement that he had ever dented the bravery of the negro soldiers, as the journals aforesaid alleged. Re believes the employment of negro soldiers perfectly right, just as their coiluet has been-courageous; but he has ter - reason to believe that they "fought like devils," performing waders, either with the bayonet or their "teeth." Cot. Green leaf might have saved himself the trouble of a long defense, by referring to the report of Gen. Banks. A Rebel Colonel on Pence." A story was published some days since, In a morning paper of this city, says the New York Doting Post, representing Col. R. C. Rill as telling Gen. Custer, under a flag of truce at Fredericksburg, that " there would, soon be peace," adding cer tain swami in support of this prophecy. The whole of this statement, as was sup posed at the time, turns out to be film. The Richmond Sustissi, of the 16th inst., published a card from Col. Robert C. HMI, of the 48th North Carolina 'regiment, in which he says that he had aninterriew with Gen. Custer, as stated, on the 18th of . Au gust, but that it lied reference to picket aringoppostte Fredericksburg, and nothing at all was said as to peace. Colonel Hill adds: aI am opposed to peace on any terms short, of a submission of the Federal" to such terms as we may dictate; which, in my opinion, should be Mason & Dizon's line as boun dary, -the esalusive navigation of the Mississippi below Cairo, fall indem nification for ail the peyote stolen and property destroyed, therestorstion of Fort ress Monroe, Jefferson, Key West, and all strongholds whiob may have fallen into their ontoiuring the,war. If they are unwilling accede to these term., I propose an indefinite continuanoe of the < war until the now existing fragments of the old Union break to please from mere rottenness and watt of cohesion, when we will step in as the only tiret-olaas Vower of the western herolsphercy and take posses sion of the pieces as eubjugsted end con— quered provinces." These are the people who are to be con ciliated by soft , word', and who would at once lay down their arms upon the with drawal of our armies from among them. Tim Issue—Democracy Venus Cop. perheadisin In 'letter from New York to the Phila delphia Prue, last week, Mr. Foal= writes : " I found much interest as to the probable vote et Philadelphia and the Bast-, ern counties in the coining election. I told them that the loyal men were fully up to the good work, and that I believed Phila delphia, Chester, Delaware and Lancaster, would surpass themselves. But Thai of Berke, Northampton,-Lehigh,, York? That is a question for the loyal men in those counties. It is clear that the Copperheads rely open heavy votes in their strongholds to overbalance loyal-communitier, audit is notorious that their chief dependence in produeing this result is theeystem of false hood and terror to which they hive ?Mort ed. What are loyal citizens doing to cor rect and defeat these schemes? If they are in a minority it is no reason for au pitmen. They Amid, indeed, work with all the more zeal to reduce the heavy ma jorities only given to embarrass the Gov ernment and to protract the war. Is Dia every one of the heap counties allu ded to, including. Berke, rose indignantly against the shameless treachery and pro scription which- produced Ms war. Le thal year we detested Disney Sone', and elected good old Schwartz to Congress, and we also defeated - Qweri Jones= and elected John' Mood. 'Every One of the 'potent preponderating Demooratb counties_ felt the shook, and ito Majority was tither re versed or gretitty. nut tiown:r. York, extent _ the strongest of thole •.1114114 101411 was shaken !min its herders to.its heist by,j the bold Masai therovolCut Democrats, and the bolder treason of the Buchanan parasites. Surely, that whichthen stirred so many Desecrate is not now,indifferent ly remeadatreil? Surely, the crimes whioh succeeded and were born of this treason are not to be overlooked and forgiven? And surely, the men who rebuked Buchan an for his yams cannot now sympathize with , Jefferson Davis? These are quee - Ilene that men must answer to their con eoleziewrand their God: Do you notice hew the Neer York Herald excoriates the Cop. porta& because they were so deadfall ly siaughtsred is Maine? Jae is s Th Is the re dassentrof cruelty. Is ' tabbbi g a dylog friend. Bat it tents anlthew moral and administers another lesson. ' 11=EZ=Z1 The citizen m e e tin get in Watts county, Mismari,"for the ikursiderstion of the ques tion of emanelpatlon, vas very lergelyat tended. The speakers partiotosting In the dismzulon were these most linguieled foe their hostility to emancipation ia former times: Of these, CoL James N. Burnes wee prominent, who spoke for an hoar is favor of the immediate abolishment of 'Way in Missouri. Ms position was =stabled by the needn't although hoe Morin opposed As proposition. 'A resolution favoring the sell of a wr Convention vas_peseed, when the Setting Wearied: , Ms Is one:of the meet remarkable revolutions la public sea. timed ever witnessed is . any 'Platte mat, less always.beea neoet: mooed -to emmorapatiois : In. any fem.' lea 4 at one ilme,dingerotte for a free Mate man to'givitutteisam to his asalinunits in that sistatp /I It , :ii.irealtby community . Mae of the'ettleeeCeal or were large slalllogdere.tt was, - at one Mlle. the bums Witzialit!gfgk -4koldrialAttek pima aNwits47lA, the, defence .ed the laiti.4lolll.ol/Ithe 4141, liMlne et Saw ass. MI ~ • • , „t-• i •;-' • V‘"l,.'" • Woodward on Two Hones. 'ln the official report of-the debates in I the Constitaticall Convention of 184 vol. 10, pp. 16.24, a speteh-is to be toned, made in that body by Judie Woodward, thepres ent Democrat'''. cendidate for Governor of Pentutylnala, width Es in snob striking contrast with that dellrend by him in 1860 in Indepradnee tonere, that we desire to all attention to it. We quote some ca rnets: • Wberaver the stn of letneg the diameolas AM MO, or tearing lilts from his be= and county. and euryloghlas loth hopele,a bmdage In • rthdant lend. Unit Os door of England And Uttalawir sell hes reavited. or Is to remit to the colored pride or the =alter of this country, from tits inwitution of doe mettle elan*. and the pansy. among as of brut liwelem - of &Enid= and Wretched libelee It 6 1,0 ly chlirgenble to the intim= pUic of that Brit w" , II e?.olunies deshei participation in thb nee , futons Crab, thi ware eulusbed. by the elutwußal'' deg istrumenny of the mothercounti. • And this Wig. so di/graceful to England end ro inlariout to the adonies—en Penn& IVY olkerkt to Whew. and to =cadent bibitter fret el pre no— eras ithe of the atm wtdch finally bound the wile anise t 3 throw off their alleglanos to area Britain." .The herniation was not Pt fought—theta' lob- Poideno. was not yet establblied—when the 'Old Dominion' and the Mare 'Soutane' of the Federal web extingnisted forms vitt= their borders the neferleas train in hum= flesh.. "Los Zuglarid'a ;anion dwell on her °entreaty connection with slavery is every pert of the vorK, L. t them andempleta the hap aln which rests upon her consciencar • • • "She ameba= tun fr m th.ir homes, to Africans or eaten =Winos of henna beings. and carded them my fete hopekos: emery. If the Inn*, tutted of al4ilradding to their guilt by attempts tadiwedie our Union, and to milks their litottles; wen to enlighten, chitin : and dirtetteelst th e renteinhig Wilkins= the cone nun% of Africa, they would scarcely atone for the &ego end unutterable Waite tuflided on that Ms by the pressrun= of ) the else trade. "They (t =gross were excel upon us. They ' cuts not as he the primitive Weald, time. u rtg a ll for liberty. but noniron their oaths son bylli rapacity, they WON brought hell elm." Is the great excellence sad beauty of our rye. ton that it Is founded on the =sent of the savag ed, e 3 that, sibilance and fidelity resat ea netwoary M n N t= ;s a d e a n t d Bu t , a e l n e t , anudt byhn*g = paw resented, and their preen= hers, el , m wee procured by tonal sad Lacs, weld not be con. thread Into an adoption of lb. country. or en swabs came in ire tonne of govern reset. They wwebnught hers to be slum an not freeman." "The act of 1710, Ed= stiollehrl slavery to Peon sylvan's, wall • proud atonement to the tonne pal oy of the Stets. It veined out the 'stain of slavery. which Tog and had left on our soil. and con ferred on the nog o what be had not Wore enjoyed— d ell fr.siont. Lt secured to him those civil rights to which he In common with ell otberbumen beings, of whatever clime or complexion had an inallerniele title. and reshot he aver ought to have been de. prised" eqfzr the minified unit which connect thentealue with the black population of this country—slavery, abolitionism, questions if suffuse, end ell—there is Taney. Its colonisation. The capote tidal to Africa—they were cruelly torn from =et country, and U they coold now be returned to their father a o n a , t w o t a h a t n h d e ?elision,, c i t v he l i s r . ad a e t nd mgh t gFhn ra bleed= to the benighted =Moe s of that .onuse=s" belie= the unto nu to be =Able uf f' gamine. et. Undoubtedly they deserve chased te net= freedom, and, with proper =nose see ape ble of enpriiig It. - And, sir, verily do I tel eve that the much wronged penli of the south would odd to nut of emigratioe gradually aboildileff my. and sending noir lecke to Africe, so that we might hope that our cauirty wend gee the day when Wray on her soil word be extinct... Such sentiments as these, spoken by Ho publicans or Union men, always bring upon those who utter them the reproach of abo lition, from Democrats. How it happens that Demooratto politicians can give them vent and yet be the very champions of con servatism, is one of the puzzles of partisan ship:. Judge Woodward was a leading member of the Reform Convention, and by I no means a quiet one. He made speeches on most of the exalting topics before that body, and he spoke with remarkable free- dom. So he still has a habit of doing, as will be seen by the following extracts of hie speech In Independence square: -.Everywhere In the South the people an beep sing to look out for tie mesas of self-debnos. o.eli It be expected that they would be indifferent Wench Kenn se bare oismuu r That they would stand idle and ate means convened and carried forward for the annihilation, sooner or later, of their pm. petty to elm? Such expectations, ff tedulged, are rot ouressonable. "When you combine all In we glowing picture of unbend prosperity. remember that cotton, the pro. duce of due Mu, has been con of the Indisperisthle elements of tot prorpetity—it moot be an indis. peroableelement In ad our future prupwity. I say mut be. "2h3 law of self-deka= Includes tights of pro. rn m I t ho s' we . 11 "ET:* end ii . o a rlif: 0117" I. irrepressible, - wt M r " ). suireholders may law folly fit back on their natural rights, and wept= in defence of their property whatever moans of protec tion they posters 7 or can command. They who push on the, conflict hue coneissed one or more Southern States that It hat slresiy come. "The providence of that good Ding who be watched aver m from the beginning end said lia , tram exterui Wes, been ordered our Internal nose es to soak* negro slavery as incalculthie Wow- I log to us: te bonier will study the Patriarchal and Levi ton wit we the rinole of ha bertap institutions divinely sanntatied If not p divinely ordained " 'here could hardly be a stronger contrast than is afforded by the spirit of these ex- tmota. In leas he spoke of slavery as 4 4) nefarious traffic in human flesh," a "huge sin," as having introduced among us large masses of degraded and wretched blade," as a "stain," an "evil," and as in liming "deep and unuttersbli injarissa",cni the African , red; as depriving the negro of rights to which he had an inalienable title, .ko. In 1860 the same person delib erately mounts a rostrum in Independence Square, within a short distance of the spot where he had spoken thuiof slavery, and told an immense audience that Providence had made - "negro slavery en incalculable blessing to us," that "It must be =indis pensable element in all our fixture. prost parity," and that "Inman bondage is 111-. vine ly sanctioned, if not divinely ordain, ed." Going further' than these mere ab 4 sued = deolarstions, his Independence, &Fere speech; it - will be 'deterred, fully i jastitles the South in rebellion under exist- Lug cirocunstances--that is, in their spirit and intention. He said that they had right' to rebel, that the time had arrived to do It; that it was purely seltdefenee with the rebels; and that it was not en potted that they could, in the nature of things, pursue any other course. in 1888 Judge Woodward spoke the sin- I core sentiments of his heart and brain. He was then young, and having been Maned up amid free institution_s, he was true to them. But since that period he has borne s leader in a great political party. lie his been a candidate for 'United States Senator, hag reached the dignity of a Jusl Iles of the Supreme Court of TennsYlvania, and been very ambitious for higher honors, Which, in his judgment,can only be reach er by pandering -,tri this southern cense. The - .truth io,lhat.the tendency - of-Judge Woodward's mind Is, always to-run Into extremes. .oe. the slavery question he ime eircueinavigaus4 the political arm. and. on the natura li sation question, he ha s delta about the same. in 1838 herr= a nativist ant; anti staves!. In 1881Ae is.pro-slave ry, and bitterly anti-native. In 1888 he thought and boldly said that the negro had born torn Isom his African:home by fraud and vicious°, and consigned to hopeless bondage; hilt in-common with all other Wogs of whatever clime and complexion, he had BM inalienable title' to chit rights, of which be ought never to have been deo prived ; that they are capable of self-gov ernment, deserve civil and religions fed dom, and with proper culture are capable Of enjoying it. In 1860 ha considered negro slavery an incalculable blessing, an Ludbpensable element in all fast, prosperity.; that bun. man bandage was, divinely sanctioned, if not divinely ordained, and that the slave holders had a right to rebel in its defence. In both cases it will be gum that Judge 'Woodward wu an eitrinnist, and that is the natural ohaticter of his mind. We call** attention of the ,people of Penn sylvania to these entreats, as illustrating more-forcibly: than anything we can say, the peculiar dander of the , man miscon, the Democrats have nominated for Gov- ernes of Pennsylvania. as does, that the Bouthlai ita3datustfor Wien; that the slaveholdere were justi fiable it their course, and that the war , on the part of the South is simply - Glee I self- defence, what kind of a Governor would he make for the great. State. of Pennsylvania in thiserisis ? ' Worild he totport a dishes; ta widoklais sympathis