trauldin ltpooitoll, wednisday, September 7. 7861. UNION NATIONAL TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, ABRAHAM ZINCOLN, FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ANDBEW JOHNSON, 07 7112MES8Et. UNION DISTRICT TICKET. FOB COMBER/4. WILILWII. H. KOONTZ. of Somerset. FOR PRESIDENT JUDGE,- AlWpFia JUNG, of Bedford. FOE AWF-MELT, ALEX. R. E., III'ELEE of Franklin NIANVEL ROATIL, at Perry. UNION COUNTY TICKET. FOR COM:MISSIONSR, 1112611( B. DAVIDSON, of Chamberebnre. r..k • POE DIRECTOR OF TEE roan, JOHN H. CRISWELL, of Green. I POE AUDITOR, MORROW B. SKINNER. of Lurgan. FOR CORONER, • MBAR E. WERTZ. of Quincy TERMS L_ _d ' THE:FRANKLIN REPOSITORY is published every Wednesday morning by "Tan REPOSITORY ASSOCIATION' at $2 penannara, strictly in advance, tie $2.50 it not paid within the year. All eubtcriptims most be sealed annu ally. No paper will be sent out of the State unless paid tor in advance. ADVEIZITSEICMTS are inserted at FIFTEEN CENTS per' line for first Insertion and TM: CENTS per line for subs, quent insertions A liberal discount is made to quarterly, hell yearly or yearly advertisers. All resolutions of As• iodations, communications of limited or individual inter mit, suadrnotices of Marriages and Desiths exceeding live lines, charged fifteen cents per line. JOS / BENTENCE of every style, in plain - and fancy colors, execu neatly, promptly, and at the lowest rates for cAsit. All communications should be addressed to M'OLURE & STONER, Publishers. -. rir Mr. John K. Shryock is our authorized Agent to receive Subearlptiome and Advertisements for thla paper, and reesipt for the mac COPIES of the OLD FLAG containing the full REIVEIITOSIC report of the destruction of Cbankbersburg Can still be had at this caw Price Eve cents. Persons sending orders frotas distuee mast enclose two cents per oopy for postage. Run WANTED.—Any person having files of the ItEP=Twit, however old,will receive a llberallprice for the same at this office. Several copies of the first number is sued by Welure &Stoner, July 8, 1863, are wanted. Any et mar subscribers hating that number will reefer a spe cial flavor by famishing us with it. UNION COUNTY COMMITTEE. . The following named gentlemen compose the Union County Committee for the ensuing year: Mth•=1:11-TBO& JEPFEBSO KILL North Ward, Chambersburg, A. D. Cauffutan, William Gelwicks; South Ward, Claambersburg, Geo. J. Balaley, Thee. J. Earley; Antrim, Wm. H. Davidson; Fayetteville, John W. Barr; Greeuvillage, Dr. C. T. Maclay; Dry Run, Lien W. Mackey; Guil 4 wd, Andrew Stotler; Hamilton. Andrew MElwain; Letterkenny, W. W. Britton; Loudon. Wm. Burgess; Dorgan, John M. Saltsman; Mercersbnrg, Tomas C. Grove; Welsh Run. Dr. John S. Angle; Metal, Jacob Flickinger; Onstown, Samuel Knlsely; Quinev, Wm. Fleagle; Peters, James Pattmi; . St. Thomas. Tankersley.; Washington, Geo. W. Walken Warren. Jahn H. Thomas; Concord, Samuel B. Heekenbery; Mt. Rock. Thos. E. Fuller; Sulphur Spring. Peter Shearer. The Committee will meet at the office of the Chairman, on Second Street, on Saturday next, the 10th Init., at 1 o'clock. A full attendance is earnestly requested.• FILL rp OUR BRAVE ARMIES! Loiha. MEN! Atlanta, the last inland stronghold of Treason in the Cotton States, HAS FALLEN! The victorious legions a the heroic Sherman now rest in that stub bornly defended citadel of crime, after a march and series of battles unexampled in the history of .modern warfare. Their noble sacrifices and brilliant achievements hurl back in confusion and shame the driveling cowards who proclaim the war a " failure," and give earnest promise of a speedy, honorable and enduring Peace._ • But one vital point of Treason remains, and that is wasting in strength under the tireless energy and unfaltering courage of the great leader and 'soldier of the Army of the Potomac. They ask for one hundred thousand men promptly to enable them to consummate their great work and preserve - to us and to posterity the blessings of Free Government. Let their shattered ranks be filled, and filled at once. Let every district waste not one day, nor one hour, untilits quota T 1 filled. Brave men are not wanting to respond to the call if citizens but do their linty generously in providing forlge wants .of themselves and their household gods. This is the work of every patriot, of even• christian, of. every friend of humanity, 'cif order and of government: and let it be done with hearty, ceaseless energy until it is completed; and our gallant armies, whose heroism and victories stand unpar alleled in history, will soon return to us honored, and honoring a Nationality that has swept treason to perpetual infamy, and given to the world a beneficent govern ment, an enduring monument of Civil and Religious Liberty ! TILE CIIICAGO NOMINEIIi . The Democratic National Convention 'met in Chicago on the 29th ult., and after three days • of caucusing, mainly - devoted to efforts to hold the hundrati of thous ands of loyal Democrats" to d.-thoroughly disloyalpurpose, nominated Gen. Gr.p,unF. B. M'CLEaLAN, of New Jersey, for Presi dent, and Hon. GEonpE H. Pi:SDI/ETON. of Ohick, - for Vice President. Both nomina tions were made without a serious contest, and; save a few harmless growls at the moderate evidences M'Clellan • has in his time given of hoStility to treason, with r - ientire unanimity. • Gen. M'Clellan is a man of blameless character, of moderate abilities, of faithful impulses, and, if left to himself, would naturally prefer patriotism to treason. lie is without achievements in the field or in civil life to make him a Presidentiai can nidate ; and is doubthrss to-day amazed at the.concurrence of circumstances that has made him the leader of a great party in a _most momentous p - olitiral struggle. That he is to be the instrument of others, if called to the Presidential chair. rather than the leader of an administration, is palpa ble from the notorious fact that the men who nominated him first adopted a plat- Jorm directly confronting every public profession he ever made touching the vital issues to be decided at the next elec tion. If he tvere a leaderLe bold, able matchless leader—a Napoleon or a Jack son, no conclave headed and controlled by Vallandighams and Woods would have presented him for the Presidency in the, face of his recent declaration at West Point, that treason must be stippressed by force of arms or. the government surrendered ; but they have ventured to assume that he will stultify himself; that he will be pliable apd therefore most useful in their hands; itig now forhim to detefinine whether tipy shall win a traitor, or. he lose a nom-, thation proffered with the condition of perfidy to himself, to his noble, army. to, his country. The writer hereof is of those who have ever judged Gen. M'Clellan kindly, and who would greatly prefer tb speak well him to-day than to condemn him. , When in command we have ever sustained him ; and when deprived of his command, al though painfully' cominced of the justice that made it inexorable, we hoped and urged that he should be called to -some position in active service suited to his rank and conceded milithry abilities as an or ganizing and defensive officer. Notwith standing the cloud of treachery- that Ills- , tend its fatal grasp npon him at an early , day, and,impereeptibly nyule him his own and his country's foe, he never surrendered the paramount claims of the government to assert its inherent power to live : and when he manfully re-asserted the doctrine of the_patriot.at West Point in. a recent speech—declaring that there was no rem edy for rebellion but war until traitors submit to lawful authority—we rejoiced that he seemed Equal to I - hi:great task of defying the traitors who dogged his steps, basked in his fame, appropriated his power i and hoped to make him the great 'suicide of our National Freedom. -7-Tlie day of trial has now come, and he stands before the country dwarfed and shorn of his only strength—and about to bow in humble submission to the leaders who have resolvsed at Chicago that his de clarations in behalf of the nmintenance4 the government were but rethorical falSe hoods, and that his .sangtrihary battles were but remorseless butcheries of a braVe but injured foe. Wheli a platform was first made deckling the war a " failure," and demanding an " immediate cessation of luistilities," just ' when Sherman was entering Atlanta with his victorious ;pity:. when Fort Morgan was just surrendering. the Mobile Ray to Farragitt, and when Grant is steadily but surely advancing to the very vitals of treason in its last strong hold, - we felt that it-,was a sad. sad day for our boasted American Nationality; but when Clement C. Nallandigham was by consent aceoriled•the honor of moving to nominate Gen. •M'Clellan fur the Presi 'deney by acclamation, who that bad a la= _tent spark of Patriotism could fail to feel that any other than a faithless, treacher ous man would spurn such a nomination. and hurl from him the proffered embrace of men who openly declare their sympathy with the relentless murderers of ourbritve sons and brothers, and the free-booters and vandals who sack and burn our holy•s, and spread withering desolation through out the land. Such is the paqt,'sttell the ilutie,t. elto,•em - Y the Chicago Conventioin'or General M'Clellan, and he bows to their bidding. He has already spoken in response. and returns grateful acknowledgements for the honor conferred upon him, but with out so much as a feeble allusion to the _peril of the great Nation to whOse Chief calico he now fopnally aspires. Thus sur: rounded—thus made to avow hostilitY to the integrity of the very government lie aims to administer, he will find arrayed against him every dictate of patriotism. of justice, of freedom—every hope of the living, every sacred regard for our mar tyred dead—andlie cannot he chosen! The timid Will be aroused to energy; the doubt ing to hopeful conflict: even the despair ing will shrink front the darker future of treacherous triumph before which the present pales ; while the earnest, the mu faltering, the devoted friends of Right will go forth ten-fold strengthened„bytrw mad-. tress that made perfidy unmask .. itself: and the Republic will live. as the home of the once. honored McClellan fades out- with the grovelling traitors who dragged huu with them to a caninion, a:dishonored grave'.. , —Geo. 11. Pendleton, the nominee for Vice President, owes his success solely to the fact that next to Vallandighman he is of all others most like Vallandigham him self. He has been in Cohgress ever since treason culminated in deadly, wanton »var, and he has never cast n vote or uttered a speech that did not give joy in the do minions of crime. He it NV:Urili OvOS ten the military tribunal, the C. sf' , 4iNtriet court, and the highest judicial trifumal of the Nation had all deelared'that Valluu digham wds,a traitor, and as of traitor rightfully convicted and punished, moved in Congress to have Vallandigham's se rest and sentence declared unconstitu tional, but found only forty (Coffroth of cn se included)' others who werehithiess as himself and willing to justify treason in our National legislature. He is a Man of superior aililities, and would do credit. alike in fidelity and in; htness, aS" presiding officer of what little is now left of the re bel Senate in Richmond. When lie is de feated here, as he must be,- be has that refuge, if there he still a sP4I of the r con tinent that owns the dominion of treasdn, and thence let him go m peace. —Loyal men ywr task * before you. The issues are ma(4....upso plainly that lie who ruffs may retie , ,Th integrity of this Republic flinnot 4urrire the success:of the Chicago ticket with its tleeloratiott . of prin ciples! ClI00:.1: BETWEEN TILE LIFE OF THE NA'rioN ANn THE SUCCESS OF 'CLIE CHICAGO DEMOCRACY! • REBEL PRE..Oi ON CHAMBERMBrit.“ Tits rebel pressvehili!es with the most fiendish jot` over the destntetion of Chain bersburg.. We have already given the ar ticle"from the,ltichniond Re), tine! eongrat ulaiting despairing traitors; thatat last they Iliad prostituted their armies to systematic robbery and vandalism. `Failing to make the confederacy :a natiiM among the powers of the' earth, the readers whose mad ambition and shameless perjury plunged us into desolating war, are now descending into the lowest grade of crime, and their only joy seems to be over some' appalling crime committed by theirtroops' We earnestly commend the attention of armistice men, unconditional peace men,' and fraternal comproinisers in The North s , who insist upon bowing their necks to the yoke of the Earley's and ll'eausland'S who now fitly and confessedly represent' the cause and purposes of traitors, to care= fully scan the witheted waste of eliant bershurg, and then read the following ar-; tides from the- accredited brgau of Jeff Davis. If they still insist upon a base surrender of a great Nationality to such eollossal criminals, then is the word cow ard to feeble to express,their deepest depth of hum diat ion and Shaine. We quote from their fraternal organs in the land of trea son. The Richmond Dispatch, speaking of the burning and rubbing of Chambers burg says: _ "We lore to hear thoSe cries of anguish. This howl of desolation and despair from the quarter in which it is heard comes upon our ear like' mu sic on the waters.' It is sweet beyond earthly uratitiration. Glad are we that retribution has at hot put tlwth its terrible aria and aisumed.:its most terrible shape. We hope it w ill be - pushed NI the farthest extremity to which it is capable of gldlig. We should be glad to hear that the whole valley of the Susquehanna was one , unbroken,' irresitilik flame, not toisubside as long as a house ore tree, or a blade of grass, or a stalk bf corn, re main to testify that it had ever been inhabited by man. No sight could be more agreeable to our eyes than to behold ercry part of Yankeedom within reach of our armies, ronrerted into a' mass of ashes—to see every beast that walked on four feet,rnnd could not be driven Of for our use, slaughecred and left to rot upon the ground." The Rithmotal Enquirer of the 234.1 thus savagely justifies the destruetion,of Clnimhersburg by ilf'Caushtud " At this particulo moment, nothing that we can think of would prOduce so fine a moral effect in the North as another advance of Early into Penn. sylcania,-and the burning' of Irurk, Lancaster and Harrisburg. To the Sviii spirit - of the enemy that would operate as a sedative. It would diffuoe gentle thoughts of peace and good will to man, and would make sure at the Chicago convention of a no bkpeace pldtfurnv and a Reace President. There is no other conceivable Move - in which the Con federates can help that Wssed canoe than by burning a few of their towns and laying waste a few of their valleys„ and it so happens that the Contillerate forces would not only be fully justi fied in doing this by the strictest laws of war, but are absolutely called 'on to do it as a sacred duty in order to protect our no.:-emnbatent popu liana' from the nivages of future invaders. Some Cinifedl•rate journals, we observe, Mildly imagine they can help the peace 'party at the North, by giving it sound advice as to its true policy and by _encouraging exhortations to go ahead'. That does not help but hinders that party. The more interest we appear to take in the sum ss of their movement, so much the less sucCess will attend it. The more we seem to wish for ; peace and talk about it, ex actly the farther off will it be. On the otherhand e shall be very near to peace the moment we show that we recognize that we are at war and ail aeconlingly." ' THREATENED REVOLUTION Thy• New . York Herald. M'Clellan'; ear and most devoted military organ. frankly confesses his defeat on the Chicago platform; but expresses apprehensions that the rebel sympathizers in the North Will attempt to levolntionize when Lincoln is. re-ele'efed. • Never mind! Sherman is pretty well through with Hood; Parragut eleaning'up Mobile. and thousands'of loyal heart. and; strong antis are docking to Gen. Grant to enable him to finish up on Lee, the vandal Earley and free-booter n'eausland. and the VallandigbantA N\ ill 'cower befui•e tbv , over - krbehning and trium phant patriotic sentimeun of the North, and will hide themselves in - confusion and shame as they witness a Nation rescued front the grasp of treason by a brave, in vinc•ible army and a faithful! people. Doubtless the Chicago Convention looks to revolution, hi imitation of Jeff. Davis, when Lincoln is re-elected, as the Con vention, instead - of adjourning sine dics as such bodies have always done heattofore, it adjourned to "meet at the call of the committee, which means to give Valland ightim and his adherents a cheince to hatch a evolution in the North when the people decide against them in a peaceful and con stitutional manner; but as there won't be any more left :of Jeff. Davis and his fast waning laigus Confederacy by that time than of the Peace bogus Democracy, they make a respectable revolution if they sllonhl even join hands manfully to gether. It may lie a nice question about that time whiiih shall administer upon the - effects of the :other; but as Davis is the chief of traitors while Chicago merely de vehipes chattels for his 'aid. we shall insist upon his rights as administrator upon the bankrupt concern. - —Treason in the livid and at the polls is about to receive the same death blow, and thenceforth we shall have a peaceful, united and free people. Steady, loyal men— steady; tin good cause goes well ! BEAR OUR NOBLE CHIEF! Gen. Grant asks for one hundred thous and oi the new levies to be promptly.fur nished, as ample "for the capture of Rich mond, and to, give a finishing blow to the rebel armies get in time jiitd !" The brave old warrior 144 no uncertain sound—no delusive hope. ple is holding treason in its LAsT :z - ru! - *cf - morln as with hooks of triple steel, and lie calls upon his loyal countrymen to rally to his shaiteied but still invincible and unfaltering army, and close the bloody drama of traitors at once. Genenmsly. nobly, freely, aoe the peo ple re:Tondhig. n o m ecer.k side webeat. od• men. strong in heal t and faithful in pttrpow•. rushing to our canips,to swell the bravest army tlu• world has ever wit flos,ed. Let the good work lie accelerate( tlit aid and encouragement of ever.) patriot. of whatever political persusion and this will virtually be the last struggle of the armies of crime. The folloWing i,s tine . otlic•ial announce ment of the condition and wapts of the HEM • 4 WAsIIINOTON, September 2, IStt-1. 7'o iibtotr Grurreil Mt, .V-w York: -- It is ascertained with n.asistable certainty that the naval and other credits, required hy the act of Congress, will amount to about 200,000, inchiding New York, w hint has not yet been reported to the I bTartment, so that the President's call of July I~th isPraetWally reduced to finis. hundred Anu s:mil men to meet and take the place of first the enlistments in'the navy, seceond the casualties of battle, sickness, prisoners, and desertion, and third the hundred-days troops, and all others going out by the expiration of service this fall: One. hundred thousand new troopspreimplly fur nishrd in all that General Grant asks for Ay rapture of Iliehmond, and to give a finishinyldow'ro the rebel armies yet inthcfleld. 'the residue of the call would be iidi‘huate for garrisons in flirt and cities, and to guard all the lines of communication and supply, tree the cowl try from guerillas, give security to trade, protect commerce and travel, and establish peace, order, and ti‘anquility in every State. EPwll,.; M. STANTON, Secretary of War. 011 x franklin Ittpositorn, tbainberzburg,, Pa. Tat Democratic County Convention met last week, and tmanimously re-nom inated Hon. J. 3l'Dowelt Sharpe for the legislature, and also made nominations for the minor county officers. Congressional conferees were int - tended for the re-nom ination of Gen. A. H. Coffroth, and judi cial conferees favorable to Judge Kimmel} were selected. John Armstrong n long standing and respectable candidate for floating honors, takes another turn ,in search of the Commissioner'.4 office. --- We are inclined to the opinion that-the Demdcratic managers will have a fair share, of trouble in getting the confused and conflicting elements of the ticket to harMonize, unless one side or the other is systematically stied.' Gen. Coffroth will be for war of the blood and thunder order, but it must be most carefully managed so as not to hurt rebels or traitors. He isfor war only against loyal men and a loyal government; but when he is called upon to vote men to strengthen our shattered armies, or to pro-vide means for their pay ment. lie invariably votes' no, or in any i way to favor war against treasomand grumble and borrow the brains and argu ments of Vallandigham and Jeff Davis to dismember our Nationality,hya disgrace-, ful peace. Judge Kimmell, on the other hand, will be for war rather , against traf tors than against the government. He has stumped the county in favor of war, until traitors unconditionally submit to lawful authority, and we have seen noev . ideuce of his conversion, save , his doubt ful company. Sharpe will come in with war and peace blended in all the beauty of rhetoric and sublimity:of poetry—,par ticularly peace. 'When the caravAiarts and the e4hibition opens, we shall see how the machine, works. The- resolutions, however dimly the truth is thrown upon the surface, mean peace, submission, dismemberment--even h'ere in the midst of blackened ruins, re, lentless robbery, and, atrocious vandalism before which. Sepoy Ir. fare piles! Are the people of the -Green .7 mt" prepared to sanction Kuehl, platform ;et its over sanguine authors wait and 'sed, GEN. XN has made his naitn campaign speech. On the evening of h . nomination he Was serentled'at his resi dence in Orange, N. Jersey. and his speech on the occasion is thus reported by the Newark Journal, his home.organ: M FittENDs—The events of the day are 80 new and of such vital iniportanee ' 1124 ,to our, children and to our country, that cannid as yet realize them.; nor do I yet fully comprehend the po sition in which lam placed. I thank von sincerely for coming here. for I knatrfrom daily eiperie net. the fatiguing walk 'you hare taken and the-difficult hill you hare ,had to climb. l' um. sure you will not expect me to make a speech. , If the. acrid', Otto: day leads to the results we all expect, I think that yon will have no - cause to regret whht has been done. Most sincerely do I thank you. cure frieddi, and neiuhbore, for this' kind visit and these hearty congratulations. Ibis Gen. M'Clellan tbrgotten hinutelf-? I lad he not evilit one feeble weal in behalf of a country. he vainly hopes to preside over, in ils deadly t-truggle with tienaisk traitors i-Lnothing for the noble army Ire othrled, to cheer it in its glorfonS work? Ahis, its triumphs over treilewl 11cov mast fall like the chill of death upon hik sup porters, and he must be silent. Would he, strike Antietam and Maleern- Hill from our brilliant history of noble dtuAng and victory, and cloud them with shame by humiliating peace ? Where it'the Patriot of the West Point oration—the Soldier of the Army of the Potomac? Was tie one a lie. and the tither a fraud ? A faithful peo ple want.to know! As obstinate, erratic felluw Gen. Sher man. Not having the fear of the chiyago Convention or the rebels before his er uust while the Vallandighams mul Wder' were declaring in their Platform that the um• was but •• four years of failure" and demanding !that "immediate. cilia-is be made for the cessation of kostilities," he, cut Gen. HoOs' rebel army in twain with heavy loss: killed Hardee,• one of the best Generals of the hosts of crime, and crowned they most brilliant campaign of modern warfare 14- setting down in the . captured rebel stronghold of the Sthith and inforMing the 'government that HE »AD co x kIiED ! Is he or Vallandigham. the best Conunissioner of Peace ? Let the people and the army who have sacrificed their best blood and treasure to preserve , our Nationality, respond to this vitalques tion. We are for Sherman and Grantas copu»issioners until Mm brave armies crowntheir sacrifices ivith decitiive victory, and traitors of every shade submit torthe laws and authority they have so wickMly, so wantonly, so murderoasly defied, What say the People ? • What say the Soldiers ? WE have had "four years of failure. to: restore the Union by the experiment of wal," says th* Chicage Platform. 'The rebels in a little over three t ears har = e lost nearly two-thirds of their territory origi nally hehi ; have lost the Mississippi ;'have lost the control of tlu. Cotton States by the fall of Atlanta ; they are without re-, serves to till up their glittered and de , sleaiiueg armieS; their credit is irretrive-: ably brokep, and their currency confessed ly worthless; recognition is abandoned because of the hopelessness of their cause; but one alloy of traitors remains that is , not utterly broken—that of Lee ; and every AS't«te in the ntion'has the Flaq of the Free now tearing over the whole or part of its territory ! is this " foun years of failure 1!! If the Union party shall experience that sort of " failure" in prosecuting this Pres idential campaign against the Peace Dem ocracy, how much would be left' of them to vote against the government by the Ist Tuesday of November. Boys, get your slates and figure it up ! berks' might be earriedevery other district doubtful !- Tnr•, war has been but " four years,of failure," says the treacherous Peace-neon= gers at (Chicago. For particulars4Ve 'beg the delectable Vallandightun toluquire of One Gen. Hood, lately quartered at Atlanta, and now supposed to besomewhere else! A modest inquiry might also be made of one Robert E. Lee, who left Gettysburg about July 4th, 1863, and Inns this season quartered at various points from the Rap idan to the south of the James=each time moving further South. Perhaps Pother ... ton who once ruled in Vicksburg Gard ner who in brighter days of treason chose Port Hudson as a rendezForisi and then visited -Fort, Warren 'in the Marth, might also give some reliable information on the . subject ; and if Gen. Maury, of .Mobile, has time to ans*er, we hope he may be called to, the stand, while Gen. Page, late of Fort .Morgan; and Co]. Anderson, late of 'Fort Gaines, might also furnish valuable corro berative testimony. How ranch longer could treason stand such " failures " with out. the, aid of the Chicago politicians GENERA! ; COFFROTII has made another speech at Bedford a few days ago, and is thus reported by the Patriot: "I and opposed to this war, and I am going to make a, statement which may startle the Demo crats of Bedfhrd county. I say that every man whoeftwors the' war and sustains Abe Lincoln, would hkveleen a ton-, if- he had' lived at the time orthe Revolution." , If Judge Kimmell were on the bench we should apply at once fair a committee for our friend the General, as he would cer tainly do that mueli for a- wayward rela-. tire: but as he is not, and Judge King hasn't had his band in very long. we al- Actionately entreat the General' to appeal at once from Philip drunk to Philip sober. That's,the only way to get opt of such in tolerable, nonsense as the abOve. :Beaten he will be; bait is not an imperative ne cessity that IM should put to shame nil his relatives, his Party and decenciand truth: Its early iuTthe struggle yet, Ortinei 4 al— your lititude at once! • EVERY voter in,Capt. Coffey's company, which lett here . on Tuesday for Harrisburg, was, a De mormt.---Shippensburg'Scitinel. i . G,1..u) to hear it—they are sadly' eeded to get ni) a proper equilebrium of parties in the' field; but will they so remain t They Must have much more hostility to rebels and traitors than bad the Chicago Convention, which seemed ignorant of the elistence of i the treason that has wantonly sacrificed thousands of lives, or they would not array thy.relve,s in deadly conflict with men whom the Democratic leaders lie not even venture to i:ondenin. We beg the &One! to keep a sharp look out for this Demorratic company about the ides Of November. Hit grapples with treason in the field, it will 'hardly grapple With loyalty at the pails, Brave soldiery will • of want to mingle their ijoicingswith, f•N IT murderous traitor over Democratic victo4es.' Keep an eye on them—if tIMy mi'an ti , , , Art they'll bear it! ‘ , (40tl if the (lathed tig - sticks!" as the Irishman sail when lie staMked the letter! Tit E'Atlauta kel) Register says that if the peace bemocrh s tusethe ballot-box against Lincoln, while 1? - tIlse the cartridge box. eacli side Will be 4elper to the other." What is to be act•orplished bi these mutual and humaneetlbl s Maybe learned from the same article, whic states that "live with "them (the 'North) n der . thc• , same government we never The" Chicago peace means disunion, what ever may be the-preferences of Gen. Mc- Clellan; and he must be faithlessto those who made him President, if elec,ted, or ottcy-ty ip the courit,ry. Which is it? ' Wit has beconie of Democratic Na tionality? They made the coutitry,echo inliSfifi with the charge of sectionalism bOatise the Republicans nominated two Northern men for President. and. Vice President. Now they take one mail from Ohio. and the other supposed to be a Toter in the same State for the first two offices of the gavel-meld. is this &lie because if Democratic policy is carried out during the nest adininistration a Southern Vice President n it be a foreigner t Who can tell' Hasit ; became sectional to' -be for one Nationality on this continent? Tin Bedford Gazette of last week eon ,tains the following dispatelt, from - Mr .llyerN, its Eoitor Lnd a tideglite to;Chi Cinema - % Anwt 31, 1864. To 0. E. Shannon, Esi.—Ml.llellan and Pen dleton unanhdoualy nominated—PEACE PLAT hanonio ' B. F. MEYERS. Mr. 31eYe'r evidently understands what the ClOcago[ platform means, as well as does Jeff. Davis or Gen. Mg Causlana. .The cry of peaeO from such men means humil ation, disluemberment, and the supre macy of treason.. Does Gem Id'Clellan heart TuE Democratic convention &dares for peace, without pretending to say or know dhow it is to be attained. The rebel journals also declare for peace, and say the only:Way to;attain it is : to send 11Pbans.- land to, layi Pennsylvania waste 'by the torch and sword. AsAPClellan and Me - -- Causland are representative men 7(if the same mission, will some one be kind enough to 411 u - t; : just where they diyerge in their,policy, if they diverge at all We knoW riPeanstand's plan—what is Vela: lan's!,,, THE rebel Generals kept drawing that. indomitable , ' Peace Commissioner General KheOnan into "joist where they wanted' him" until he sat down with his creden tials, in the very heart of the Cotton States. 'Wonder where thi , y , will "want him "- nex f For information inquire of a mot ley Crew, of dilapidated managers who were lage beard front at Chicago, where they resolved everything but_ treason to lie in "failure!" WE must addthe indomitable Old Tar . Parragut td the list of Peace Commission ers. He has brought peace and order• out of a Wiwie b'eyy of rebel forts about Mobile, quid Will) . yeach peace in Mobile itself. Bully for yhyragut., • • Gov. CrRTIN hatkiStated an itiider for the or , ganization of the ..Ylmnsylvania State Guard:— Three regiments oalifautry, two sqqadrons of cavalry and tbur batteries-Of field, artillery will be recruiti*and organized without delay, to be yomPosed of veteran soldiers and - able-bodied per , Korth 4tetweei eighteen _and fifty, giving preference to those,whoare not subject to draft under the laws of the United States. They will be Aimed by Men elected by the who have been in service and honorably diticharged. The term of service will be for three years unless sooner dis charged, und!will be used, only for the defence of the State. If the number is not raised by'volun• tee t ring in thirty days, a draft will be made to supily, the deficiency. Lemuel Todd, of Carlisle, fortherly of the Penna. Reserves, has been Com, missioned State Inspector General, with the rank of Brigadier General, and is charged with the or ganization of the force. Frankhn county has a" deep interest in this organization and should eon tributi; liberally to its numbers. The pay and in dent; Will be the same as those given in the United States service. - J. GLANCY JONES has conic to grilsagain. From being mi indifferent preacher be became a worse pohtiman, and has waded through a world of tribulation; He wha beaten for State Treas.- t urer;some years agO rid fainted over the Migrate full)emocraty of tie legislkture. In 1868 he 1... eat • was aen f r Congress byithe people of Old i3erks, who e eeted honest John Schwartz, and he then took efuge in a foreign mission. Again he turned up , his 'fall as a candidate for Congress, and after manipulating the editor of the Gillette so as to decline in his favor, the unterrified and unwashed of Berks dell)erately ro.nominated Mr. Ancona for a 'third tetri. We would affection ately advise Glancy to go south and turn preacher wain in rebeldom. If he couldn't demonstrate to despairing traitors that the people are not fit ted for self •goverinnent and the election of their ow n rulers,-particularly Congressman, we don' t know who could. Pass over Glancy ! WE haven letter from P. D. 8., a gallant)oung soldier from this county, now in the Army of the' Potomic, who speaks most hopefully.of the con- Zitioil and prospects of the army. He says he hopes soon to be able to return to his borne to enjoy pence and prosperity in alre-united govern ment, and adds that he will be more than com pensated for hls sufferings by the redectiOn that ho was one of the brave men who fought in the bloody campaign of 1864 for Human Liberty and the Rights of Man." Thus do the heroic defend ers of the Republic respond to the lose proposi tions for peace and disunion which, beset us from faithless WE are glad to learn that Rey._l3._ S. Sphneek of this place will soon have published by Lindsay Blakiston, Philadelphia, a pamphlet of some eighty pages giving a concise and reliable account of the destruction of Chambersburg by the rebels. 'Persons wishing an accurate narrative of this atrocious vandalism of the rebels,, would do well to procure a copy of Dr. Schneck's publication. We' need not say that anything on the subject &rim his graphic pen will be worthy of preserva tion as part of the truthful history df rebel bar barism: . .Thl! Tribune in a review of the position and nominees of the Chicago Conveiitinn pertinently CM They intyf be baffled and beaten, or the 'New World is surrendered to the odious spirit of caste —to the - iron- ride of those who believe hard lmnds a badge of gervitude, and at once dread and de test the education of the Children of the Poor. Unionists of every State! we adjure you to shake oil your apathy and rally for the imperiled liberty and life of the Nation! WE are glad to record the re-nomihation of all the Union Congressman of Philadelphia—Hon. Wm. D. 'Kelly, Hon. Leonard Myers' and Hon. Charles - O'Neill. All have been most faithful to their conttituents and to the great cause of the Union;. and Jai State can boast of a truer or more eloquent champion of the right than Judge Kelly. He has been twice chosen, and will doubtless be returned - again by a large majority. - 130TH the rnion and Demomitie meetingsheld - recently in Somerset passed rilsolutions requesting w commissioner of that county to donate $l,OOO to le suffering people of Cbambrrsburg. W E M Itim..T. K indebted to Hon. Wm. D. Kelly and ITorebead for valmible publie docti- lIMEI2 The ChicigConvention. Humiliatine, Pe ae e \Demanded THE WAR DECLARED A "FAILURE!' "IMMEDIATE CESSATION. OF HOSE TIIITIES" WANTED! VALLANDIGHAM MOVES TO NOMINATE GEN M'CLELLAN! . FCLELLAN AND PENDLETON, THE TICKET The Flag of the Free Prostrate at the Feet of . Treason - The Democratic Natiouril Convention met at Chicago on Monday, Anguet 29tti, fur the purpose of nominating candidates for President and Vice President. A very large crowd of outsiders were in attendance, and the vast preponderance was boisterous for M'Clellan. A strong, steady cur rent was Manifested for an out and out Peace mau headed by the Woods, Vallandigham, Harris, Long and others: but finding that they dare not take one of their own kind, they resolved to take a man with a moderate war record who would yield implicit obedience to their treasonable policy-r -and purposes. - Gov.l3igler of this State was honored with the temporary chairmanship, and., he was thus ma... , bled to get off one of his stereotyped speeehes, containing nothing but what somebody has said` much better before. Little else was done on the first day. On the second day Gov. Seymour of New York was elected permanent Preshlent, and he made a most diplomatic Speech, concealing his rebel proclivities with tolerable grace. Long and Vallandigham the open, insolent traitors of Ohio, were the representatives of their deleg,ation on the most important committees—Val being on resolutions. Hon. Asa Packer was a Vice-Pres dent, and Frank M. Hutchison one of the Secre taries—both from this State. The first struggle was on the platform; but it' was a feeble effort of the war men. They were utterly overwhelmed by the followers of Vallandigham. Mr, Guthrie of Ken4wky, made the report, which was adopt ed withibut four dissenting voices-.opus, showing that the entire party was bound body and soul to submission to the traitors who are murdering our brave Bonn and brothers, pillaging and, burning our towns, tend starving our prisoners. The folloir lug is • TILE PLATFORM. Rewired, That in the future, as in the past. we will ad here with answorving fidelity to the Union under the Cou stitution as the only solid foundation of our strength, secu rity, and happiness as a people, and as a framework of government equally eondoeis e to the 'welfare and pros. penty of rail the States, loth Northern and Southern. Resolved, That this Convention does explicitly declare,' as tbO serene of the American people, that, after four years "uffaittire to restore the Union by the experiment of war, dtirifix , whirls. under the pretense of a tralitury necessity . or war power higher than the Constitution, the Conntetu-'. tion itself lens been disregarded in evert - part, and public liberty and pri'sate right alike trodden ;town, and the ma terial prosperity of the country essentially impaired, jus tice, humanity, liberty, and the public 1; clfare, demand that'itionedi n te efforts he made for essation hostili• tees, with a view, to an ultimate Convention of all the States, or other peaceable means to the end that at the earliest Illructicahle moment pence may be restored on the basis of the Federal Union eel the Rewired, Thnt the din-et interference of the military authority of the Ilnited States ire the repent elections held in henttioky, Maryland, Missouri and Delnware. was a shameful iulation of the 'Constitution, and the repetition such nets in the oppronehour electron will be held as rev s lntionary. and resisted with all the means and power un der our mintrol, Resolred, That the aim, and object of tire Democratic party ss to preserve the FtMeral Union nod the rights of the States iiiiintpainsl; and they hereby declare that. they consider the Administrative usurpation of extraordinary and deur...its powers not granted by the Constitution, the sutra ersion of the civil by military law in Stales rent' In in...11114,1t0n, the arbitrary military , arrest, imprisonment tnrel and oentenee of American citizens in Suites where civil law exists in full force. the suppression of freedom of speech and of the press, the denial of the,right of asylum, the open and avowed disregard of , State rights, the em• plovment of unusual test-oaths. and the interference with nod denial of the right of the people to bear amid, as cal culated lo prevent a restoration of the Ulthttl and the per petuation of a government deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed. Resolved, That the shameful disregard of the Admin istration to its duty in respect to our fellow-ilizens who now and long_ have been prisoners of war in a suffering condition, deserves the severest reprobation, op the score alike of pnblio interest and common humanity. - September 7, 1864. Raaced, That the sympathy of the Democratic, party is heartily and earnestly extended to the soldiery of our army, who are and have been in the field under the flag of our country ; and. in the event of our attaining power they will receive all the care and protection, regard and kindness, that the,brave soldiers of the Republic have 1,3 , nobly earned. • General nominations itPresident were then made, and the names of Gen. Geo. B. M'Clellari, Z. W. Powell, Thos. A. Seymour, and Franklin Pierce were presented. A spicy debate ensued, in which a tilt was made at 31'Clellan by Mr. Harris, of Maryland, who deuounceil him as a ty rant,and assassin for arresting the Maryland leg- . islature. He said that "all the charges of usur pation and tyranny that can be brought against Lincoln and - Antler 1 could make and substantiate against br allan." He further said that "Mc- Clellan was the assassin of ytate Rights; the user per of libel.rties, and that if nominated he would be beaten er l erytchfre as he was at Antietam!" Char ley Carrigan,'of Philadelphia, attempted a Judi • - lleation - of M'Clellan, and General Morgan, who ,basqly ran away from Cumberland Gap and was 'compell€4l to retire from the service therefor, fol. r lowed to rescue 31 . Ciellan from the loyal act for which - he was arraigned. Mr. Long, .of Ohio, next preitested against the nomination of M'Clel lan. He said: "Lincoln ha:liven guilty of interfering-with the freedom of sivech.fik freedom of elections, and of arbitrary arrests. He coati:Mel In your resolution:: you have arraigned him before the people of the country for these tyrannies and usuritations, and yet yore propose to nominate a man who has one even' further than Lincoln has gone In the • perpetration of similar tyrannical measure upon the sacred. privileges and rights of the people. McClellan is guilty of the arrest of the Legislature of a sovereign State. He has suspended the writ of ha bras_arcpus, and helped to enforce the odious emancipation proclamation of Lincoln. the willing iustraments of a corrupt and tyrannical admin istration, aiding while possessing military power, all its ef• forts to strip American freemen of their lilwrties. Will you so far stulify yourselves as to make him the standatti-bear er of the Democracy I With all his heart he hoped ;rat tle had never done otherwise, and as between Lincoln and Fenuont and any man culling himself even half a Demo. mat, l W0u1d..„ . . have a choice, and would be found voting with hit:friends ; but be legged the Coaveution not to nominate MeClellan. Almost any other man who claims to be a Democrat would satisfy him—would satisfy the Northeast. Weak a= is your platform in many respects, we will stand up, do all in our power tom:detain it; but, in God's name, don't add to its weakness by placing such a man in nomination.", After this terrible assault upon the "Little Na poleon," Charley Carrigim again rushed to his de fence, but as nobody listened to it, nobody deem ed it worth reporting. After Long had closed bia speech, some one insulted him,' whereupon the pugnacious Long knocked the impudeu t delegate dowu,aud a row occured, from which the Conve ntion was rescued by an adjournment. The Convention reassembled at 10 A. M. Wed nesday, and without furtherjdebate proceeded to nominate a candidate for President. All the can didates were withdrawn before the. ballot but Seymour and 31'Clellan, and the vote stood - as follows Maine New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts.. Rhode Island... Connecticut.-- New York New Jerriey.... Pennsylvania.— Delaware ..... Maryland Kentucky Ohio Indiana Illinois. Missouri ..-...... Minnesota lowa Kansas._....__. California Oregon EMEI When the' vote was announced it was received with great enthusiasm, and the duty - of moving that the nomination be made unanimous was fitly assigned to Clement C. Vallandigham, who, on making the motion said that "from the first mo tion lie had been animated by but one sentiment in this Convention-;peace--to the end that there might be peace in the land. He then moved that the nomination of Gen. Geo. B. M'Clellan be the unanimous sense of the Convention." Mr. Wick liffe offered a resolution to the effect thatKentuc• expects the first act of M'Clellan, when elected, in March next, to be to open Lincoln's prison doors and *et=the captives free, which Nas..car tied unanimously. If cren-Breckinridge or`any other rebel happens to be is power in Kentucky when Gen, VClellan is elected, they may look for a good time generally, and the freedom of the town. The Convention then pr .ceded to nominate a a candidate for Viee President, with the following result: James Guthrie. 6.31 IJ. D. Caton 16 Geo. H. Pendleton 3411 Governor Powell .7 32k Daniel W. Voorhees... 13 !John S. Phelps " - S -Geo. W. Casa. ... ..... '26 Blank.! 11 Augudns Dodge 9 I . While the second ballot was in progress all the other candidates were withdrawn, and Geo. H. Pendleton of Ohio, was unanimously nominated. Mr. Pendleton appeared and made a speech, after which some unimportant businesstransacted and the Convention adjourned. It is worthy of note that not a single speech made, or a resolution offered or adopted, was there one word said in faver of subdueing treason or resenting the Republic from the traitors who re the authors of this wanton desolating war, inak not one word of denunciation for Jeff. Davis and his murderous 4 crew, but all ter a loyal pee. ple, fer.loyal measures and a loyal administration. With thiS.record the Democracy go befor the peo. ple in the great struggle of 1864. RATS DbiERTING THE SHIP! The New York lieropi, long the apologist, de fender and- organ of Gen. 31"CleHan, both . as a military and political leadersquarely deierts the sinking Chicago ship and giveir‘tMticeliiAl'Clel lan himself to stand from under tlie, magi to come upon the craven Peace-mongers wiio, controlled the-Democratic National -Convention. \ gear nit Herald of Saturday last, in its editorial leider re viewing the political situation. It says: "We have not the slightest. doubt that there is" , a mutual understanang between the Seymours, the Woods, ralandigham and the rebels. This un derstanding is shown in the the secession platfor adopted by the Chicago Convention, and in the _ nomination of Mr. Pendleton, of Ohio—who is a practical secessionist—for Vice President. We have-now driven the rebels completely to the wall; General Grant has the best ofthem at Richmond, and General Sherman has succeeded in capturing Atlanta. This is not the time, then, that any reasonable man would be talking - about "an im- - mediate cessation of - hostilities!' We are in fa- • vor of an armistice, like that between Prussia and 'Denmark, where both sides hold their ground and are ready to begin the conflict at any moment but , there,is a vast deal of difference between such an , armistice and the "immediate cessation of hostfli- - ties" which the Chicago platform requires. Noth- ing can explain such a platform trceept die hypothe sis that it teas dictated by Jeff. Dans to the peace democrats, and that these peace merefoisted it upon the Chicago Con Gentian as the price of their endorse ment of General Al Clellan,s nomination._ "For three years past the HERALD has sustain ed and defended the hero of Antietam. We have done" full justice to his generalship, his statesman ship, his honesty and his patriotiarn.• Batt tchea McClellan takes his' stand upon a cowardly peace platform we arc at a loss how to follow him and de- - fend him. This the General has not yet done, and we hope that he will never be foolish- enough to do it. We advise and urge him to come out bold ly and declare that his only platform is his past record as a Union genenk and that - his sentiments are those expressed in his letter from Harrison's Landing and his oration at West Point. If he -hesitates to do is lost. There must be no pre rarication nor equirocction. The rotten Chicago platform must - bikeel to pieces and McClellales own platform substituted. He had better a thou sand fold decline the nomination than to accept it upon such conditions as those imposed by the Convention. The Chicago platform. m ites defeat, and it must be broken up,..either by McClellan him self or by the coke of the people at the polls !" - A GENUINE DiscovEny.—Radway's Ready Re lief, Is tke only genuine discovery in medicine for the Relief of Pain and Cure of its Cause, that can claim orig. inalitv. True, there are hundreds of medicine claimed to be diseownes, represented to possess similar curative powers to Rndway's Ready Relief, yet whea we come to reduce these medicines to an analysis, we disckver them to be nothing but imitations of the original discovery, At the present time there are only Twelve Original DiOOOV pries of EX•OFFICLVAL Medicines ail the rest are mere Rol _ lotions, Railway's Ready Relief. was the first and le the only 31edieine discovered that excels Opium, Morphine, ChM. reform, Nerntrine, &e., in relieving pain without injury to the pen•eptive faculties, as °emanating insetlibiliti or stupor. - Yet we find hundreds of imitations under the name of pain killers, magic relief - speedy relieff. liniments &c. Not one of these remedies ore the result of original diseoveyy, but all imitations of Radway's Ready relief. Ask for Radwags Ready Relief, price Y.r cents per bottle. Sold by Druggults. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHRE t or Cough Lozenges, cure Cough, Cold, Hoarseness and ltinenZal or any Irritation or Soreness of the Throat " Great serrice in subduiair Hoarseness." - Rev. DANIEL Yirlsk, New York. "The Troches art a staff of kfe to me." Prot EDWARD NORTH. Pres. Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y., "A simple and elegant coralthuaion for ohs ori r." Dr. 0. F. BIGELOW, 3I'CLELIAN: SErkIOCR. 5 5 15! 4 . 6 33 , 15 6 91 3* I