I .tiantlin ftivoitorg. Wednesday, September 14,11184. lUNION NATIONAL TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, OF ILLINOIS. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ilirDßEw JOHNSON, 1 UNION DISTRICT TICKET. FOR CONGRES, WILLIAM H. KOONTZ. of Somerset POR tRESIGF_NT JUDGE, ALEXANDER KING, of Bedford. FOR AMEMBLY, ALEX. K. 3('(4 TRE E of Franklin. 4141MVEL ROATII, of Perry. i UNION COUNTY TICKET. FOR COMMIASIONEIt,, nron B. DAVIDSON, of Chambenburg. II FOR DMECTOR OF TIIE POOR, JOHN H. t'RISWELL, of Green. FOR AUDITOR, MORROW R. SKINNER, of Lurgart FOR CORONER, • RAM E. WERTZ, of Quin The Old Flag THE OLD FLAGAtiII be furuiehed frail] the :25th 'of Aitgust until the full returns of ilTi; Presu Elec tion can be given, at the following rates: Singt te Copies' 45 cents 10 COples to one address $4 ou 20 I", 700 30 1" 900 50 1" 12 00 And at the same rate (25 cents per copy) for any addition al number over Illy.' 14' Additions may be made to clubs at any time to as to seMere the full advantage of onr club rates; and clubs amyl be divided between two or more Post Offices. We believe that in no way canon useful antfueceptable a campaign document be distributed at the same 400, as by circulating THE OLD FL.su. Each number is illus trated, and its reading contents are devoted wholly to the vindication of our Country's Cause in its deadly struggl t with traitors in arms. The Union men in every totntship s bould see thief:ill supply of THE OLD FLAG logliDnished to our brave sol dierit inae field. It Is a moot welcome visitor to the otrape' Azov gallant defenders, as it makes their cause its cause, and earnestly resists the platform and candidates which would close the war, when on the threshold of final viclory, by a peace that would degrade our soldier:, and give anarchy to the fairest Continent of the World. All orders should be addressed to 3PCLERE & STOKER, Publishem. I 'Eli, Wu. H. RooNTz, of Somerset, the Union nominee for Congress, spoke here •last evening to a large and enthusiastic audience. and goes to Adams county to day. He will return to this county on Saturday; and will speak at the following . named places: I WAYNESBORO', Saturdiy evening Sept. 17th. GREENCASTLE, Maday " " 18th. MERCERSBLRG, Tuesday " War: 1- We presume that Gen. Koontz can give n - - o More time to,this county than is re- tittired to fill the above appointments, as he has the three western counties to can-; sass, including Somerset, which will de- Mand a liberal share of his brief time. We ask men of all parties to attend and hear Gen. Koontz and also Gen. Coffroth, when he shl address our people, and judge between them. Gen. Koontz will advocate a vigorous and ceaseless prosecution of the war until traitors in arms propose submission to the power they have wan :tonly, insolently and murderously defied, . while Gen. Colfroth will declare the war a "failure," and demand an "immediate cessation of hostilities" to enable treason to recover from the triumphs of our gal kat armies, and renew its desolating, fiendish war. Let the people hear pa tiently, impartially, and judge between them. GEN. 11PCLELLA.VS ACCEPTANCE. We give in to-day's paper the letter of General WClellan formally accepting the Chicago nomination for the Presidency. It is a virtual confession that the declara tion of principles adopted by th&Demo- emtie National Convention is at.vatiance with the interests of the goverinnent, and needs to be modified, charitably el--plained. and elaborately apologized for, to rescue him from open, undisguised complicity withthe traitors in arms against the Union. This is a most herculean task, and no sin cere, earnest and honest patriot would have attempted it; but Gen. M'Clellan has undertaken the hopeless enterprise,. and has wasted every element of strrigth he possessed with many loyal Democrats because of his presumed manliness and . unfaltering devotion to the government and its faithful soldiers and supporters. The letter of Gen. M'Clellan will, when 'he shalt have been rejected: by a loyal people by an overwhelming vote, stand out as the- culminating point of his sacri fice of all the qualities of a true soldier and zealous patriot at the feet of a conclave of treacherous politicians. Their aim is well understood. Traitor and loyalist alike read their platforni and appreciate their purposes; and Gen. 31'qlellan, in stead of spurning their treachery and giv ing heart and hope to loyal men by man fully espousing the cause of the imperiled Republic, 'tremblingly approaches the traitor's creed—sugar-coats it with gentle apologies; dilutes it with a finely prepared imitation of fidelity to' our Nationality, and then swallows the dose down and seems to congratulate himself that lie has concealed the cloven foot of his friends and expoiAnts, and hopes to defraud a Nation, just about to triumph decisively over relentless treason, into colossal su icide. - • Gen. 14'Clellan's letter is unworthy of either i a soldier or a statesman. It has - neither the frankness of the one, nor the ingenuity of the - other. It-is miserably jesuitical, serpentine and treacherous; and if inspired by the genius of Treason itself, could not be more hollciw, hypo critical and deceptive in its aim. There is not a word in it that would offend the most earnest devotee of Jeff. Davis. All his rethorical repetitions about - preserving 'the Union can bring no terror to traitors as long as he is bound hand and foot by men whO favor his election solely because they know that .his adntinistration would bring no evil to the authors of this wicked, des olating war. They know. tlutt4lement `Vallandigham nominated him') they .know that the business of that Copilention was arranged in council at Niagara ,be tween the Thompsous, the Holcomhs, the, Sanders, and the Chtys on the part of Davis, and the Vallandighams, the SO monrs, the Longs, the Biglers and the Woods on the part of WClellan, and they have no fears for the cunning sophistries which he has assumed to weave about their fabric :of treason, since , it can accomplish nothing beyond deeeieving honest men into the embrace of their Country's foes. They know thatwith him on the ticket is Geo. H. Pendleton, who, while M'Cleßan was in the field, "thanked God that lie hhd never voted or given a dollar in support of the scar, or in payment of Abolition sol diers !" and well do they kndw that with the triumph of that party all vindication of the majesty of the laws and all hopea of the stability of Republican government must end. With an Executive to control the destinies of the Nation who declares as an additional article of the Democratic fnjth, "that when any one State-is willing to return to the Union, it should be ceived at once, with a full guarantee of all of its constitutional rights," 'what has treason to fear? It is without penalty. It may drench this fair land in fraternal blood at pleasure, and forfeit no rights; suffer ne pmdslunent, and resume its place and honors in the family of States whin.: ever it grows weary of desolation and slaughter. Already treason has sacrificed half a million lives; has shadowed the whole laud in mounting; has spread the. dark pill i - tf sorrow °vet-almost every .fam ily circle ; has staggered us with debt—all by {a war the most causeless, the most wicked in the history of crime; and yet the Democratic candidate for the Presi dency, lest his meaningless flourishes on the side of war should offend some faithless luau, hastens to declare that traitors must be wl , lcomed to the fandly fold, and the highest honors and Prerogatives lavished 11p4them. And this from one, too. under 4. - litt military lead, full fifty thousand intive soldiers found untimely graves as sa4ifices to the fiendish ferocity, of trai tors! Is there no avenging hand this side of the Eternal bar for such wanton murder t Are there no violated laws—no sacred principle 'of order and goventnimit to xindicatel - Is the power of justice 'so paralyzed in this great Republic that it can have no terrors in its sweep to the arms of future traitors? Alati"! for the warrior of the Peninsula and of Antie tam, for what did he _draw his swerd—for what sacrifice thousands A. brave men in sanguinary war, if treason is no crime; Hit be a crime such as will justitlv the terrible arbiter of the sword, must it be crowned with honor in its dying hours, and exalted - to the highest trusts .(4 . the Nation when it is wasted in power; unable longer to glut . its infernal appetites, and seeks to be rescued faint the damning his T tory its crimsoned infamy merits? "If so, then is . treason a virtue — . then are mtuderers heroes—its desolation records of national prowess anti heroism ;And patriotism, lmmanity and justice, are but cunningly devised fictions and frauds upon mankind! 'We pass hastily over, Gen. M'Clellan's war upon himself. , The weakness that dwarfed him from the soldier and patriot to the awkward and mousing politician, explains it all. The first to order and en 'force arbitrary arrests and summary pun islunent, he now, in obedience to his man agers, pledges himself to maintain the "rights of eitizens"! inviolate "See that none escape.' were his peremptory in structions to Gen. Banks when he oil-Jere( he summary arrest and incarceration 0 the Maryland legislature ; but Vallandig ham had not been schooled in Chattanooga. and Richmond, to teach Presidential can didates how to attempt to give a crowning triumph to treason by systematic perfidy. The first to advise and enforce the liber ation of they slaves of rebels by military law, to° weaken the resources of, the en emy, he now reciter in faultless style 'the new lessons given him which 'call for a "full guarantee" of "all constitutional rights" to rebels whenever they will (yrign to accept them—slaves mid all!, The first to 'counsel war' until the insurgents sub mit to the authority of the government, he ni'iw pours the oil of joy into the deadly wounds our biiive armies .have given to teaso4.by donanding that they be in dunnified for,the 'past, and honored and secured for the futUre, until it shall be theirideasure to resort to rebellion, mur der and free-booting again. The first to demand it conscription of men to fill up the armies, he is now silent as the grave as to the shattered ranks of our heroic and still unfaltering soldiers, while every ri oter who abstracts men from the field to preserve :order at honie,. is -vociferous for the triumph of M'Clellan in November next. Notwithstanding .his rhetorical flourishes in favor of the preservation of the Union, he well knoWs that there is not an - ont-right traitor, nor a semi-traitor, nor a rebel sympathizer, nor a foe of the government of any stamp or persuasion, who will not most entlmsiastically vote for him ; and there is not a rebel in arms to-day from the. arch-fiend who presides over the withered wake of treason, down to the humblest of- his satellitesli crime, who will not watch every pulsation of the North with ardent aspirations for his suc cess! —Such' is the posit low of Gen. M'Clellar as voluntarih• made for himself. Who the 'free people of the North forget tlu claims of their sacred N'ationality ; whet they cease to mourn their martyrs in tla cause of Civil Liberty; when they fail ti rejoice at the triumph of the UniMi armies when,they accept treason as a virtue—or der and government tai a crime—then, ani pot till then, can Gen. Geo. IL M'Clellai be chosen their President ! ° WHAT OF PEACEI'.!' The e»entilm of the government are now exhausting themselves in the effort to se duce the people from fidelity to our noble Arnliek and our sacred Nationality, by the syren song of Peace_ - They appeal to every prejudice; to every a 1 of cupid ity; to every real or imaginary evil that can be traced to war, and hold out the delusive hope 'of Peace to inspire men with devotion to a platform and candi dates for whose success every traitor in arms is most solicitthts. How, on what terms. or with whom negotiations are to he made and Peace secured, they do not deign to state. They clamor for Peace ill and out of season, hoping that it may blind faithful men to their own best inte rests and holiest duties, and in the end give us universal anarchy as the legitimate fruits of the triumph of treason. We grant that the prosecution of this war one day longer than is necessary to" an honorable and enduring restoration of the 'Union, would be a wanton, - wicked sacrifice of precious blood iind treasure; but it is a truth to which no patriotic cit izen can close his eyes, that a failure to prosecute the war with earnest, ceaseless vigor, until traitors in arms conSeut to the re-union of the States under Cone-benefi cent government, Would be a fatal, crown ing suicide. The people of the North, and doubtless. the -masses of the South also, sincerely d4ire peace. There is not a loyal man lam does not de'site it above all things, save the honor and unity of the Republic ; and the moment that the war' \Can ik ended by , a recognitionthe ma jesty of, the law, So long and so desperately defied by traitors, this bloody drama of treason will be gladly closed by the gov eminent. , - -BUt will the rebels assent to: rterths\ based tine - n - 111e unity of the Eittiteff mat the luasses of the people fu tlte revolted Stoles would do so with alaerity had they an opportunity, we do not Illoubt ; but would Jeff. Davis and the other leaders and officials in the rebel government'. What-have they to gain by, s4ch a peace?. Now Mr. Davis is one of the tillers of the World—a despot before \chime absolute prerogatives legitimate despots orVe Old' World seem liberal and Ddnocratic. matters not that his throne is crimsoned with the blood of hundreds td thousands of his fellows; that be rules over a land made a withered NVaste by his fiendish ambition; that he has exchfinged peace for war : plenty for abject waid ; and made his dominions one vast cdnetery for his wanton sacrifices: still he bi a ruler—one of the potentates of the Wkld, and will he consent to peace on thi. basis of re union I If 'successful in 4kt:titling his power, he may measnasbly j etlitce the in - - finny with which impartiali history must charge him ; bat if he shalli surrender his bloody, wasting Novo-, lie funst be shun ned of all men Wliil7;livingt and his name -go down to posterity as thdeollossal 11101I ster of the human race. Will he consent at once to-..surrender his scleptre and con sign his name to perpetual ;;Hominy' Be wlnralleges that the rebel elders are pre pared for peace and re-un,ion, are either sadly deceived, or deliberakely ; dui to de fraud the people. On this point we do n t conjectute, While Democratic oratt and journals clamor for peace, they are most carefid to withhold the persistent tbiclarations of re bel officials and journals tibat there ran be no peace eieepting by di+tion! (hi this )(whion stands Jeffi 1);) vsolution and desperati( aeterize endangered eV Min :Amid the rebel pre waive:: of the several Legiz.lature,,; the relai very °filer element o power. Differ as they desolation and bere:tlements they have wrought. they neverthtless have one point of eommon unity—that they will prose elite the - war while they can tied men to oiler as sacrifices upon the altar of their ambition, with the hope of subverting the government and dismembering the Union. The rebel Secretary of State, Mr. J.,l'. Benjamin, in an official letter dated on the 25th ult.. gives the following as the dec laration. of Jeff. Davis to Messrs. Jacques and Gillmore, who proposed peace on the basis of re-union, and we commend it to the carefuh_candid attention of men who are clamoring or hoping for peace by nc gociation. Hear what Davis says: "Tlie separation of thi States is a n arrompliilted fart ; that he had no iiiithorit Neel% e propos als for nvgiwiatlim eirept rirtue of his Offirl as _President qj an Is DEPENDENT t'oNttyi:lev c: and on this basis alone' must prapysats Ile made to him !" • Remember that such was the &Aga tion of Davis to men who. earnely desiring peace, went to Richmond to learn what terms, if any, would be entertained by treason to preserve the Union; and they area answered that the government of trai tors is "an accomplished fact," and that he could receive no proposals for peace, excepting as the Executive of an "Inde pendent Confederacy." Nor is Mr. Davis singular in his deter mination. He :is sustained, as we have already stated, by the whole power of the rebel 'local. governments, and . by the rebel press. The Richmond... Era miner, one of the leading rebel journals, tlnurresents the propositions fen• re-anion. It says: . "Let its get rid of the whole vile cant, and say at onre -we are for war, and nothing but ,ear, until as Davis is said to hare said , !the last of this gem r ation falls in his track,' and then that we mean to pass it to the nett as an inheritance. It is for those who have unjustly and wantonly - invaded our country to Mier us peace; and whit they do, they will still offer it in rain until their armed men are withdrawn from the sod of these Confederate Stares, and th, felon fleuz of stripes is hauled down from every fart within our borders. After that, it will be time enough to prate about peace. Now, the very word is nonsense. The Atlanta Register, then published within the sound of Sherman's guns, said: "Lire with them under the same aovernment tee never will, But in the meannhile, if they use the hallot-box against Mr. Lincoln, while we use the cartridge-hoc, each sale will hen. helper to the other, and both co-operate it) accomplishing the 'greatest work which the rountry and this conti nent have witnessed:" The Richmond Sentinel first congratu lates despairing rebels that the disloyal men in the North are shout to interpose in behalf of treason. After predicting that their allies of the copperhead stripe would give us "mobs, riots, revolutionary. out-breaks and civil war" when the draft is to he made, it assures its readers that— "At rib time during the war hate we stood un such high vantage ground.' At no time hare we had so good reason to insist on all tee hare ever ask ed; untramMelled, unconditional independence." The Richmond Dispatch in a recent ar ticle, speaking of the rebel govertnnent meeting the propositions for peace, say's: "It can make peace on no other terms Ito far as we call see, than those upon which it hai more than once pledged itself—absolute independence, and the complete integrity of till the States." The Richmond _Enquirer in'a late semi official-declaration of the position- of the rebel authorities, declares— " Sate on our men terms ire can accept no, peace whatever, and must fight till doomsday rather than yield an iota of them, and our terms are _ " Becognition by the cnemyof the independence of ,the Confederate States. "Withdrawal of the Yankee forces from every foot of Confederate ground, including Kentucky and Missouri. - "Withdrawal of the Yankee soldiers from Mary, land until the State shall decide by a free vote whether she shall remain in the old Uniou'or ask admission into the Confederacy. "Consent on the part of the Federal Government the iranklin Ittpositoin, trip, • to given? to the Confederacy its preportioti of Mt nargas it stood at the time of secession, or f'opayfot the same. 'Yielding up of all pretensions on. the' partof the Federal Government to that portion of the old Territories which lies west of the Confederate, States. "An equitable settlement on the basis pf our ab solute independence and equal rights of AU ac counts of the public debt and public lands, and the advantages accruing from foreign treatiee." • The Diezjiatok in a quite /we* article reviewing the peace questiop "Then the Only thing we ennAis tii' ; keep : on beating his armies until event/whether Occurinff here, or within his own Ten:Varies, force him to make proposals. Then we OM meet him with the only answer it is possible fume to give: Withdraw your fleets and armies, treat on the basis of inde pendence and integrity of boundaries, and we are ready to send Commissioners to seltlc all matters of minor consideration." + —We have given no ga'rbled extracts, nor have we selected excepthmal arikcles. We have taken the latest and mor, an thorltative testimony of 31r. Davis: him self, and his ablest journals. and they breath but one sentiment—that of cease less, relentless:War-until we either utterly destroy their militiry power' and disperse, tl teir government, :or submit to a base, cowardly severence of the Union of the States. Snell is -the el nel necessity ha . posed upon us by , treason, and we inust meet it in a spirit Svorthy of a fh.e, people ' , :ttruggling for the perpetuation of their own freedom. We - &inot hesitate as to the choice. Our thousands of sacred lives sacrificed to defend our Nationality; the millions of Money expended; the noble achievements of our gallant armies, and above all, the high and holy duty of pre serving to ourselves and — to posterity the great fabric of 'lnman Libel CS reared in a terrible baptism of blood by our fathers±- all demand that the tz ar must be prose- cured until Treason hides its horrid de formities and traitors it, ;ions sithmit to the majesty of the laws! Ourlll - VC hi/11111.PS Call not, tight Wing. in the tiehl and at the• same time• 'attem to having thrm.e•lreh :ISSVS:f4.II at ante, s( as to s•enrc their votes at tht• next"clef tion. Every hol dittr who has not Been 11 . 6 sessed must In as eyed iu the• &strip, where be resides Nrhpu at home, alidnins pay a comity tax of ten cents to give him the right to vote. Commissioned officer must pay the mine taxes imposed apoi citizens. Any citizen. V 41.11 present' the 'trunks of soldiers to the .assessor of the proper dis trict. and he nntAt as.:es:: thou. - and collet.- tin., tequirvel to receive flit tax and give a certificate of payinent when the a, ses:Anent is made. ~asst ssorzi who ietlist to assess names of soldiers presented to Idiot by any citizen, art- lialile . to a sever( penalty. -is with all the I that- ever char- ninals, and With t 1 rebel Ex- States; the rebel —We entreat the .I'Mon men of every district to ..:re that ore,r . l'i soldier in thv'ser vice front their respective Wald's or tots n-. ships is properly a-zseAsed. ,The Deloo- - crats will not assess the soldiers; and die Union men should do-the work thoroughly. Exclude no .soldiei because. hi nary have been Or still is a Democrat--let all our sol diers in the field have the privilege of vo ting for such rulers as tlWy deem bi , st. There art few who will V(he to' bring M:4- honor upon the war, to which they have devoted their lives, by declarilfg it but "four years of failure," and endorsing a platform and candidate in - favor of 1M "immediate cessation of hostilities." No matter holy:they will vote—let the Union men see that till of them have the privi lege. We are willing to trust the destiny of the Republic to the suffrages of those who peril \eQ thing to di•fend it. - • Congren.q. and branch of rebel may over the satl The following letter, written by Gen. Grant to lion. Mr. 11'ashburne._shinthl be printed in letters of gold. It gives' not• only an encouraging view of the military situation, but is a most effekive argument foi'a vigorous prosecution id the 3vat. and" the re-election of the presept Administra tion, which is alone pledged to such a course. No higher authority in military matters can be consulted,':ind wheit such a clear statement is made tif our good prospects should riot one more uprising of the North take place I : ' !MANI_ ARTEES AlLMEs...iir TILE t*lirrim nrArks, City Point, Vu.., Aog. tt. .1.Ne.4. 5 To Hon. E. B. Washburne.—Dear state to all citizens who visit the that all we want now to insure au early restoration of the Union is a determined unity of sentiaent North. The Rebels have now in their ranks their listinan,-- The little Inns and old men are gatiriling prisun ers, railroad bridges, and funning jlgood part of their garrisons for intrenelted positions.-- A man lost by them cannot be replaced. They have robbed the c‘radle and the grave ivally to get their pre,ent tome. Besides What they lose in frequent skirmishes and battles, they are now losing front 'desert him, and other gauges at Iruint one regiment per day. • With this drain upon them tint is not far distant if we • Will be only true to ounwfves.— Their 01115 lope now is inn CBS Met) North. This might give them reinforeements fq,m TeallessVe, Kentucky, Maryland and Misirtri,:while it would NNeaken us. With the draft quirk 4 entbreed the enems would become despondent, and would make but little resigtanee. I have no' doubt but the eueutt are exceedingly anxious tit hold out until otter the Presidential electhin. They lute man) hopes from its effects. t They hope a counter niolution ; they hope the eleetion of the Peave,v 4 andidate'2 In filet, like " MieaWber, " tttey hope for Soznellibig to " turn ! up." Our Pellee friends, if theY export peace front sepanniou, are nitwit niktithen. It would but be the beginning of 'war With thousand of Northern men joining the South 'because of our disgrace in allowing separation. 'lit have," peace 011 nor terms" the South tvould -demand theirs, toration of their slat es alreads freed; titer would deniandindennity-tbr hisses sustained, and they V.oold 'Armand n treaty which would 'make the North slate-hinters for the Smith. They would demand pay or the reBtOratlon Of every Slane es caping to the North. Yours, truly,„ t • U. S. GRANT. HON. THADDEUS STFA'ENs Wits MlaIA -mom:ly nominated for ri;-election to Con gress by the Union men of the Old Guard on Wednesday last, =lle will of course be triumphantly re-elected. lle first en tered ,Congress in 1849 whet! the Slane power was tanking ifs exhausting struggle for the possession of Califoknia and ,the Territories, wherein to spread 'the-with ering blight of human bondage ; and he grappled with it then with alb the Inas : terly ability he possessed, but it neverthe . - less triumphed by a compromise. in which Bight suffered, as it ever unjust in concession to Wrong. lic was re-elected in 1850,, and after serving two terms retired. Again in 1858, when the same insatiate poWer had ruthlessly trampled under foot ,the solemnly plighted faith of our fathers, by the -repeal of the Missouri compact, Mid had culminated in Alto l..ecomPton ittt INANE SOLDIERS .ASSESSED \ EETrtat tacom GEN. GIIA:T btr6bilrg„pa. famy. he. consented to return to our Nu tido:ll councils. and he has been sneces: sively chosen. in 1860 and. 1862, and will soon' be called to his sixth 'Om. where, if he shall ue spared to fiat l e is trust, he must witness the final tridmph of the go vernment over remorseless' Treaiou, and the great Republic of the world Free na the genius of its authors, founded it. He has already reached the period allotted to • mortar. but his eye is still undiumed, and ; hislieart still strong,as when fired by the energy of youth, i❑ the-mighty work of disenthralling a continent froni the deso lation of Treason and the brutalizing waste -of Slavery. - • He appeared before the nominating con vention and made the following pnngent and pointed remarks: He ;aid there are two classes of men who busy fhemselvtAt, its clamoring for peace, who greatly but in very unequal degrees. ,The one' class urge the President to €icek negotiations - with the :traitors on the basis 'of the integritt• of the Union. These are well-meaning' but foolish counselora. The conduct of •them MOO does great mischief: ft discourages our loyal men, who are• led• to be that there is' an urgent 11P004 , 4t) for so ,lOl unhating a einwse. It is to he - Loped th at acids their di.ffro•rl'ul trei tbling. seek moral courage for "the•utnehes, and inspire courage into Ott.' a. There is another coin moldy known as Copperheads, whose 'representa tives assemble at Chicago, whose clamor for peace is a moral rime and political treason. Thew cnen•ll+k you to elect a,peaceable warrior. 'He is to bring peace about by allowing the• rebels to have their own way. -Elect 11PCIellan, and the Republic has ;ceased to exist. On it„ ruins will spring up nutheron. petty empires, w•to,e•future• condition wilkbe OOP o f perpetual wars and grind ing Klarery. Reeleet the Balm statesman who now pre•sldea OV,Or the nation, and he• will lead you to an honorable prate and to, pelmanent'lib- platform adopted Lc the llemoi•niey at Chicago .f 0411110 We, tllll,—, "Respired, ; That in the (cure, ac' in the past, we will adhere with unswerving fidelity - to Me rnion under the Comititution." don't doubt it! The-"unsi'verving fidelity" of the 'Democrat - h.:party iii , the " Past," is ipost consoling to Union Dent oOratS'for,trie-friture. The DeuioeratB were in pony): in (Term State Mat xeceded front 11!e rnion ander Daris. I;,ve*: thith less Govhoor was of the Democratic filth, and every State government that arrayed itself in °ru t . insolent, 'wanton hostility to tin , government. did its , murderous lyork in the name :null. under the mantle of Democracy. Do the people wa»t Dem ocratic , "fidelity to the ,i`iiion" in the future. ' as in*the If so, let - the platform and candi date, of Vallandighain triumph at the puffs.: llow many States-would be in the Union aft!, , r finir years of Dyntoeratie rule - if they should keep on preNerving the .Uniim as they did .durin g the last four yeast If thirteen Democratic (..-i - einors a ndlegislatnres in their fidelity!' of best," took thirteen State,out of the Union Until. one yeas. how long would it require the same "piswervin4tillelitY" to get all the States into the dominions of Jety. Davis if they should attain supreme powi.4. of tliei.Mvernmelit t A very simple rule of simple arithmetic will solve the problem. Will some of our Denioeratie friends, win) honestly want the government. preserve'd. work it out, and let us - know how they like tile result t VLILIIONT, flee glorious star that pales in fidelity to Nationality and Free dom, was the first State to respond to the Chicago platform demanding "immediate cessation of hostilities," and declaring the war, a " failure:f • Her State election.wmi helii on Tuesday. the - tith 4 , iiist.. and the largest vote ey'er polled at an ordinary eleafon gusts ti,, largely ihcreaSed - Union 'majority. ei-fov. Smith is re-elected by over .2.2,ooo.l n ajority—anincrease of 5,000 over last ; not one Denmerativ . tor has la.eirchosl.l . l and fun HOlnze is air most uhaninfimsly ridom Does' General , • hkar f f. tni the Sallie day Wilmington. the chief' citroflaWare, held ,a Municipal flee. Lion, and dig 714 mi catulitlates were chosen by over 4514,majorityand :every Union -Ward-can4late elected: Thus does Lit tle:Del:twat+, just redeemed from Slavery; shake hands with Vermont, to protest ag,ainst the humiliating surrender of the government to despairing traitors. 'MO PEOPLF: 'newt that there shall be' peace and cessation of hostilities just whentrtii tors'in arms submit to the lawful-authori ties of the government they have wantonly and murdeionsly defied! Be'patientVal landigham fi. CO Wait till the Army answers the proptiSition to bring dishonor on their crimsoned battle-fields! TUE REBEL PRESS ON ATLANTA The capture of Atlanta, the objective point o Gen. Sherman'x grand campaign,. and r the most stubbornWdefended inlaiulciq of the South, alike because oitjts. strategic importance, its vast man nliietorie and railroad connections, has dealt a staggering blow to traitors. The rebel command er, (Wu, Hood, thus officiallynnuounces the aban donment of his strong:kola : . On the evening of the 30th of August the ene my made u lodgement across Pint river, near - Jonesboro. We :a - tucked them there on the even inf of the 31st with tc..o corps but foiled to Wit them. made it ne'eessnry to abandon Atlanta;_ which was doni , si the night of the lst of Septem ber. Our lusg on 60 rvi fling of. the .31st On the eveninF of the Ist of September Gen. Hardmoit corps, in rosition at Jonesboro, Wallah.; milled ity a superior force of the enemy, and be ing mittliinked, was compelled to withdraw during the nighti with the toss f eight guns.' The epetny's prismwes report their toss very" severe., b, J. Hoop, General. The 4nnments of the rebel press show how deadly i the blow delivered by the victorions'ar tny of Sherman The Iliehmond Examiner!de nouncesilliaxlifor sacrificing his men fruitlessly, - and for want of generalship. It , admits that Sherman's plans were devised and executed iu such t skilful manner as to sever Howl's army, and gain a comparatively bloodless but most im portant vicbiry. It says'that "this abandonment of Atlanta, tinder the circumstances, is not agood Ming," but it adds; "the loss of the army, w o uld jthve been,withoul a remedy!" , lint greVions us ii the loss of Atlanta to the ye brls in a military point of view, theExamincr stricken with sorrow because it Clouds the pros pects of the ,Chicago nominations. It says that "the - Imo& 124 disaster at Atlanta, in the Very nick of time when such a victory alone could save she party of Lincoln from irretrierahle ruin!"—and for this result Gen. Hood in unsparingly denounced as "notoriously Melt Wile of managing any thing-tar gcr thttn a dtvigium" As the pronjOTts ,f the bogus confederacy 'gen- eralli• are fading out since Atlanta has fallen, the Eraininer gives Davis a kick along with the rest. aSpeakink of the military management 4.1.1 P- via aadeveloped by the logs of Atlanta, the eaui paper says: "sow, is itnot hard—is it not; cruelly hard that the struggle of eight millions, who sacrithe their Money, sacrifice their lives, who groan in 'the excess of exertion, who wrench terry muscle till the blood starts With the sweat—should come to row/a—should end in the ruin of uiall—that the 'predilection and antipathies, the pitiful personal frelings of a single man maybe indulged. The lamentations of the Examiner cOnclude by_ declaring that `!the morals -effect of its (Atlanta's) loss, though it may be timporary,trill be great. It will obscure the prospeeta.of peace, late so bright. ,It may render incalculable assistance to the party of-Lincoln, and -enable: him to execute the draft. It will also diffuse gloOm over the South." And now that it is needless longer to in sist that Atlanta 'cannot be taken; that Sherman is nbmit to he cut to pieces, and that Wheeler is destroying all the railroad bridges, we have the truth of Wheeler's operations, mid they amount to a gigantic failure, as the rebel jotITIMIA now confess. Shenntasihies are not even impaired, and it is virtually confessed that-they cannot be 'seriously interrupted. _ Atter publishing from day to day glowing accounts of Wheeler's operations before the fall of Atlanta, the Examiner now gives the friith of his movements as follows: " W.. .just nothing ihrther front Wheeler's wkly.-Incas in East 'fennessec. The general (Ta hiti here is that he i.; makialtier, NaShrille. late Bristol parr says it is all a lie about his har ing destroyed the great bridge orer the Tennessee at Loudon. The KIHIV paper saywbe seeme studi -41 rinFly to avoid the e vais'g bridges and limo of elmanuaieation, , an de,rotes himself to runi r ting about abo the country pie 1 ;ing up small hits offirisoners." —.Such are the rebel 'ebnlbsaions touching the: fill Atlanta. It is confessed Lc; a most &num lug blow to treasonlu a , yital point, not only be eanse the rebel stronahold of the (cotton Btatem is surrendered, but abm heMlustras for Examiner Kap:, it styes the Liticohn party from ruin, secures the era a-cement al the draft, :ind must make the rdlaudighams and their 00-lborers at Chicago - powerless to carry a niagle Northern State in fit cur of submission to rebels either by diplomacy or otherwise. Well do the despairing rebels on derstand that the xeecceas of our brhie :willies de feats their cowardly sympathizers-in the North and insures-flee vigorous prth.ecuction id the w ets until traitors bow to the lawMl authority of the government. IION. LOUIS' W. HALL, of Blair, and Hint. KIRK HAISES of fern y , wen , on 'the Ott nomiliated as the Union'eandidates for SenatOrn in the 21st district, composed of the counties; of l'err, Juniata, 31ifilin, Centre; Huntingdon and Mr. Hall 'is one of the most pronlising if cam: turn in the State, and the ~Dnion party rejoice that he is about to enter the Senate ugain. was elitism' in a decidedlY Deniorratit: trict in 1859, and served with great credit Huth as Senator and presiding officer. In 1862 lie was again a candidate, hut:although Carrying his own cloudy by nearly 1800, was defeated by CU-at:field :Ind Cambria. lie will at once take the highest auk iu the,Senate when he r.turns to it in Jan :. Slr. Haioes is a most meritorious gentleman, an expi:rienc'ed legislator, and a moot 'upright and fitithink 'man. ;He originally acted with the Dernocrati4artyjudil the repeal of the 'Mhtsouri compromise, when he ran as an inde pendent candidate for the legitiature and tito tri- . umphantly elected. Be Ni an again a candidate in 1855, autt MIS re-elected over Wm. S.,Mitellell, now - Democratic candidate in thin dictlict, by 200 majority. Ile will bring fn the Senate iu dustrp, t•xperieuee and fidelity. and will do credit to himself and the district. 1 - pion men of the 21st district! there should be nu sort of doubt of the s'necess of 3our ticket by 1000 majority. Your verdict will _determine Whether the next Senate shall he for the government or, against it: . MEM! GEN. BuTLER, in a late letter to Judge Ouhi, the rebel ctuninissioner of exchange of prisoners, thoroughly eXposes the thlsehood and hypocracy 'of the rebels on the question. of exchanges. It seems that they have now accepted the proposi,- tionsmade by Gen. Butler eight months ago, to ese . hatige officer for officer and' man for man until one 6nle is CfX11:111Stell. In reply to this proposi tion ofJudge Otald, Gen. Butler says: " I unite with you must cordially, sir, in de siring a speedy settlement of all these questions, in view of fine great suffering endured bv our pris oners in the hands of your authorities, of which 3 till eo IMdingly speak. Let toe ask, M view of that ..uttering,, why you hare delayed eight months to answer a proposition which by nose accepting you admit to be right, jest, acid humane, allowing that suffering to ronthate.so long One cannot help thinking, then at the risk of being deemed un effaritabW, that the benevolent'sympathizes of the Contitderate authorities have been lately Stirred by the depleted condition of their armies, and a desire to get into the field to a f fect the present campaign the hale, hearty, and well fed prisoners,, held by the u n it e d States in ex rhangefor the half-starred, s irk emaciated, and unserviceable soldiers ofthe United States now languishing in your prisons. The events of this war, •if we did not know it before, have taught us that it is not the Northern portion of the American people alone who know how to drive sharp bargains.' THE Union men of •Bedford county had an nn'- mense meeting in the court hbuse on Tuesday of last week, at which lion. S. L. Russell preeided, and Gen. Koontz and Col. Jordan delivered elo quent speeches. A number of ladies were in at tendance. The Inquirer says "the meeting was The largest in.point of numbers ever assembled in the court house." , Resolutious eudorsipg the na tional and_loeal noininntions:were unanimously -iidopted, aue atnoinrothers thJ followitg === !. "Of Mr. Pendleton's position there is no uncer ' taintv He is an ardent peace man. The fart that such a man was nominated is a strong proof that Milan's position cannot hcicidely rancni. The contest- which now commences will be brief, but it will be violent." Rrso/red, 'That we are higily gratified at the unanimity 'with which our political friends have presented the name of our distinguished fellow citizen, Hon. Alex. King, as a l candidate for Pres ident Judge of this Judicial District; we regard this as but a just tribute to his qualifications and character, and pledge him our united and enthu siastic support. • Resolved, That while we regard our honored fellow citizen, Col. Francis Jordan, as eminently entitled by his integrity and ability to have re ceived the nomination for Congress, and regret that the: choice of the convention did not make him our standard-bearer, - ive cordially endorse the nomination of Gen. W. H. Koontz, of Somerset; as a gentleinau-well worthy "to represent with dignity, ability and zeal the interest of his constit uents, and to take cap• of our National welfare, and we pledge him our earnest support. THE rebel journals understand the Chigo nom inations. Prior to the meetink of th 4 Convention the Richmond Sentinel urged' that. Gen. Weans land lay the Cumberland Valley waste with sword and. torch,-as the best means of recovering a Peace platform at Chicago., Gen. 3PCausland tried his hand on Chambersburg by way of fulfil- Mg his part of the play, and how far Chicago re, ;Totaled, let the Sentinel explain. Speaking of the action at Chicago the 'orgati of Jeff. Davis says: ' "Of the candidates, M'Clellan, who was form erly a derided war man, is ,represented to have greatly modified, if not, indeed, abandoned, his belligerent sentiments. The support given him by the many decided peace men, lends strong con firmation to the report; and nothing would Le easier than for M'Clellan to reconcile adeclarcition for peace in the present state of thrquestion, due, as one May suppose, to Lincoln's management of the war. EVRItY man of business should have the Amer• Iran BankVate Reporter, published weekly, semi. monthly and monthly, E. Cohen, Philadel. phia. It contains the official list of the National flanks; reports - of discounts in eighteen cities, regular quotations from the ;four leading cities, and Pa generally as complete in all departments as iv possible to make such a. patient - ion. , September 14, 1864. - THE New York Herald, speaking of, the Ver mont election, demands that The Chicago conven tion be re-called to put itself- on an honest and loyal platform. It thus acoepts the lesson of the "star that never sets:" • - -^ r It means that the personal popularity of Gen. 3VClellan; as the war is now going, will be l es t upon that platform; that the. people of the loyal States will soon adhere, to the idea that Grant, Sherman and Farragno are_ on the rigid road to peace, and that they mnsthe supported, whatever may be the delinquencies of the administration. A few days hence the State election in Ilaine;we guess, will go the same way as this of Vermiint, and early in October, , from -all the signs of-the times, we may look for similar results from the State elections of Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indian. ..4s they go so will the Presidential elation so in November. If there - were any positive reaction at work in the popular mind in favor of the Chicago democricy, on their equivocal peace platform.we should have had some' manifestations of it even from Vermont vfor a popular political reaction is spontaneous and general, and operates with re markable uniformity upon a Presidential istrae in all the participating States. Ir is a fact that not one single man has Telma torily enlistq since old lascots issued his Eman cipation Proclamation. All who have gone in since have been paid large bounties., and have no heart in Ltscouies treasonable designs.—Carlisle 'Untunteen Thus dues the leading M'Clellan organ of Cum- - herland county libel the brave soldiers in the field. We (mote the article just as we found it, italics and all; and commend it to the hundreds of gal lant none of Cumberland - who are now periling their lives to preserve the blessings of Free Gov ernment to all. How many votes will the VoluM •teer's peace ticket secure from the army this fall? We hope that the Union County Committee=of Cumberland will. circulate si'Clellan's Carlisle organ freely in the army. It‘__its hatred of the defenders of the liep r iiblic it tells the truth most inopportunely for its friends and candidates some times. - GEN. GILLEM, of Tenn., seems to be kicking awfully out of the Chicago traces: He BO far for got that the war" is a "failure," and that there should he . an "htuairdiate cessation of hoitilities," as to attack, defeat and kill the rebel raider Gen. John Morgan on the 6th ult., and eapture his staff; artillery an destroy his command. The following is his - Official report!: 811.01 GAP, TENN.... gt. G. GEN. Purprised, defeatedand killed John Morgan ut Greenville this morning. The killed-are scattered for miles and have not yet been counted. They probably number 50 or 100. About 75 prisoners were captured, and among them were Morgan's staff, also one-piece of artillery and it caisson. The enemy's force outnumbered mine, but the surprise was complete. - ALVAN C. Gru.Em, Brig. Gen. WIIES ' Vol. Hood abandoned Atlanta, after sacrificing thousands of lives ,to raise-le siege, the Mayor and Sheriff of the -place forrrally sur rendered the city to Hen. Sherman, ;islet that 'non-combatants and prirate property be respected." ) city - captured after bluely resistance, is at the mercy of the conqueror; but Gemm. Sherman is as humane as he is brave, and he illustrated the high est type of the humanities of war. The request was promptly acceded to audlitithfaliy observed, althotigh among the gallant soldiers in that army who marched into Atlanta as victors, were a. num ber from Chambersburg, whose homes-are now but blackened, shapeless walls because of rebel vandalism in a town that was utterly defenceless. Thus do lJniou armies wage war, persistently as rebel and copperhead journals defame them. THE Judicial Conference for this district met at Bedford on the 30th pit. As all the counties were instructed for Judge,King, conferees from Fulton and Franklin did not attend; but authorized by telegraph their votei to be cast for King. Tho' following conferees were present: SOMERSET=—Johri W.- Parker, Geo. M. Neff, Harman G, Cunningham. • Benronti----Jereminh Bowles, Sam'l L.:Russell, 'Thomas Hughes. Mr. Hughei was; chosen President and Mrs .ceff'Secretary, after which Hon. AlexandeeKing was unanimously nominated as the Union candi date for Judge of this district. WE have several numbers of the Lancaster In telligeneer, a spicy and ably edited Democratic daily published by Cooper, Sanderson & Co. It wears - a very clean face, and in all but its politics is highly commendable. Mr. Cooper was form erly editor of the Spirit of this place, and was the owner of the Spirit building burned by M'Caus land. His loss is some • $12,000. When he gets to fraternal harmony with Early and M'Causland, we hope that he may square the account in some way or other. He is a vigorous writer, and will give the Examiner and Express a foeman worthy of their steel. WE were made to say, by a typographicol blun der in last week's issue, that Gen. Coffroth, when called upon to vote men or means to prosecute the war, "invariably votes no, or in any way to favor war, against treason." Of course it shbuld have read "or in no way to favor war against treason." However, that an article about so un intelligible a subject as Gen. COffroth Should tan gle the types unintelligibly is moat natural, and it is hardly worth the correction; but in justice to the general we make it freely. THE Palley Spirit sprung from the ashes on Monday of list week, and loOlta as gay and bright as if nothing had happened to nobody. We wish it abundant success in all but its politics; but of that there's no particular danger since the Chi cago Convention annexed the Democracy to humiliating peace. 11-r}: German Reformed publiostions---theMu senger, the Guardian, and the Kircher:6,4mi will be re-issued at an early day in phlulelphis, A double number of the Guardian will be issued this month. Correspondents will address B. R. Fisher & Co., Publishers, care Jas. B. Rodgers, 54 North 6th Street, Philadelphia. THE Union men of FultcinleountY nominated James Pott for Assembly; Benjamin A. Lyon for Commissioner, and Alex. Mayne for Treasurer. The legislative'conferenee has since met and nom inated Gen. Moses Ross, of Somerset, and D. B. Armstrong, of Bedford, fol. Assembly. WE bare used for some months past, the ex cellent Gold Pens of A. Morton, New York, and can confidently commend them as the best peep in market. 'See advertisment in to-d4s paper. EDITOR OF REPOSITORY:—Dear Sir, With your fterudisiott I wish to say to the readers of your paper that I will send. by return mall, to all who , wish It (free), a recipe, with full directions for making and using a sim ple Vegetable Balm. that will effectually remora in ten days, Pimples, Blotches. l'an, Freckles, and all Impart. ties of the Skin, leasing the same soft, clear, smooth and beautiful. I will also mail free to those haring Bald Heads, or Bare Fares, simple directions and information that will enable them to start a full growth of Luxuriant Hair, Whiskers, or a 'Moustache, in less than 30 days, All applications answered by return mall without charge. • Respectfully yours, 'PHOS. F. CHARMAN,Chernist, _ 831 Broadway, New julyW-3m] A CARD TO THE SuFFEfema.--Swallow two or three hogshead; of "Buchn," " Tonic Bitters," Elam erudite," • • Nervous 'Antidote, " &c., Stc., find after you are 'flattened with the result then irp one one box of ()Id Doctor Birchen's English S'peelfin nd be restored to health find vigor in less than thirty days. They are purely vegetable, pleasant to take, prompt and salutary in their elects on the broken-down and shattered oonstitu lion. Old am! young can take them with advantage. Imported and sold In the United States only by JAS. 8. BUTLER. No. 427 Broadway„ New Turk, Agent for the U. 8. P. S.—A box of the Pins, emu:rely packed, will be mailed to any address on receipt of price, which L OcR DOLLAR, post paid—money refunded by the Agent if en tire satisfaction is not given. LIW2O4m EYE AND EAR.--:Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D., Oa. culist and Anrist, formerly of Leydon Holland, is loca ted permanently at No. 511 Pine dtrat, Phi/adelpAia where persons afflicted with disease of the Eye or Ear, will be scientifically treated and cured, If curable. 15" Antmteist, Ens Inserted without pain. No charge!' made for Examination. N. 13.—The medical faculty is invited. as he tins no se• crib in his mode of treatment. Mly6.ly •