of sniiilllnoprietora the, more safe and Stable the government. As the • feuded interest inustsov.: ens, the more it is subdivided and held by mile pendent owners, the better. What would bathe' condition of the State of New York if it were not for her independent yeomanry? She:would be overwhelmed and demoraiNed by the Jews, Modena and vagabonds of -licentious eities.— How can republican institutions, free schools, free churches, free social intercourse, exist in a mingled community of nabobs and serfs ; of the owners of. twenty thousand acre manors with :lordly palaces, and the occupants of narrow huts inhabited by " low white trash?" If the South is ever to be made a safe republic, let her lands be cultivated by the toil of the owners, or the free labor of intelligent citizens. This must be done even though it drive her nobility into exile. If they go, all the better. It will be bard to per suade the owner of ten thousond acres of land, who drives a coach and four, that he is not de graded _by sitting at the same table, or in the same pew, with the embrowned and hard-handed fanner who has himself cultivated hia own thriv ing homestead of 150 acres. This subdivision of the landa will yield ten bales of cotton to one that is made now , and he who produced it will own it and arid feel himself a man. It ie far easier and more beneficial to exile 70,000 proud, bloated and defiant rebels, than to expatriate four millions of laborers, native to the soil and loyal to the Government. This latter scheme was a favorite plan of the.Blairs, with which they bad for a while inoculated our late sainted President. But, a single experiment made him discard it and its, advisers. Since I have inentibned the Blairs, I may say a word more of these persistent apologists of the South. For, -when the virus of Slavery halt once entered the veins of the slaveholder, no 'subsequent effort seems capable of wholly eradicating it. They are a family of 4 tonsiderable power, some merit, of admirable audacity, and execrable selfishness. With impetnons alacrity they seize the White Honk, and. hold possession of it, as in the late Administration, until shaken off by the overpow ering force of public indignation. Their perni cious counsel had well nigh defeated the re-elec ,thni of Abraham Lincoln; and if it 810illd prevail with the present Administration, pare and patri otic as President Johnson is admitted to be, it will render him the most unpopular Executive— save one—that ever occupied the Presidential chair. NO the're—is no fear of that. He will' soon gay, as Mr. Lincoln did: "Your TIME iIAS "iTIME! This remodeling the institutions, and reforming the rooted habits of A proud aristocracy,-is un doubtedly a formidable task; requiring the broad mind of enlarged statesmanship, and the firm nerve of the hero. But will not this mighty oc casion produce—will not the God of Liberty and order give us such men 1 Will not a Romulus, a Lyeargits, a Charlemagne, a Washington arise. whose expansive views will found a free empire, to endure till time shall be no morel This doctrine of Restoration shocks me. We have a duty to perform which .our fathers were incapable of, which , will be required at our hands by God and our Country. When our ancestors found a "more perfect Union "'Jim cessary, they found it impossible to agree npOn a Constitution without tolerating, nay guar anteeing slavery. They were obliged to ac quiesce, trusting to time to work a speedy cure, in which they were disappointed. They had • some excuse, some justification. But we can have none if we do not thoroughly eradicate Sla very and render it forever impossible In this re public. The Slave power made war upon the na tion. They declared the "more perfect Union" dissolved—solemnly declared themselves a foreign nation, alien to this republic ; for four years were in fact what they claimed to be. We, accepted the war which they tendered and treated them as a government capable of making war. We have conquered them, and as a conquered enemy we can pee them laws; can abolish all their mu nicipal institutions and form new ones. If we do not make those institutions fit to last through generations of freemen, a heavy curse will be on us. Our glorious, but tainted republic has been borne to new life through bloody, agonizing pains. But' this frightful " Restoration" has thrown it into," cold obstruction, and to death." If the rebel States have never been. out of the Union, any attempt to reform their 'State institutions, either by Congress or the President, is rank usur p natio. Is then all lost? Is this great conquest to be in vain 1 That will depend upon the virtue and intelligence of the next Congress. To Congress alone belongs the power of Reconstruction—of giving law to the vanquished. This is expressly decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in the Dorr ease, 7th Howard, 42. The Court say, "Under this article of the 'Constitu tion (the 4th) it rests With Congress to decide whit government is the estabhaherdoue in a State, for the United States guarantees to each a repot.- ican form of government," etcetera. But we know how difficult it is for a majority of Congress to overcome prdconceived opinions. Besides, be fore Congress, meets, things will be so inaugura ted—precipitated—it will be still more difficult to correct. If 'a majority of Congress can be found wise and firm enough to declare the Con federate States a conquered enemy, Reconstruc tion will be easy and legitimate; and the friends of freedom will long rule in the Councils of the Nation: If Restoration prevails the prospect is gloomy, and new "lords will make new laws."— The Union party will be overwhelmed. The Copperhqd party has become extinct with Se evasion. ~ B ut with Secession it will revive. Un der "Restoration" every rebel State will send re bels to Congress; and they, with their - allies in the North, will control Congress, and occupy the White House. Then restoration of laws and an cient Constitutions will be sure to follow, our public debt will be repudiated, or the rebel Na tional debt will be added to ours, and the people 'be crushed beneath heavy burdens. Let us forget all parties, and build on the broad platform of "reconstructing" the Government out of the conquered territory converted into new and free States, and admitted into the Union by the sovereign power of Congress, with another pludt—k`Thte. PROPT.RTV OF TILE REBELS SHALL PAY OUR NATIONAL DEBT, and indemnify freed rims and loyal sufferers—and that under no • cir eumstances will we suffer the National debt to be repudiated, or the interest sealed below the contract rates; nor permit any part of the rebel debt to be assumed by the nation." Let all who approve of these principles rally with us. Let all others go with Copperheads and rebels. Those will be the opposing parties.— Young men, this duty devolves on you. Would to God, if only for that, that I were still in.-the prime of life, that I might aid you to fightthrough this last and greatest battle of freedom! THL ISLEBIGGING The " Beaver Argus" contrasts the 2d resolu tion of the "Democratic National Convifition" orAugust 1864, and the 2d resolution of the" De mocratic State Convention of Pennsylvania of Aug. net, 1865,in a way that ought to make tie face of Buchanan's Attorney General, Jere. S. Black— who is the author of the last resolution—tingle with shame to the end of his 4ays. Look upon the picture of shameless stultification, which the contrast between these two resolutions presents, and see what utter contempt for truth andconsis tency is displayed, by a patty whose only remain ing stock in trade appears to be unscrupulous falsehoodi, and gross vituperation. - LOOK ON THIS PICTURE! Resolved, That this Convention does explicitly declare, as the sense of the American people, that afte r. four years of failure to restore the Union by the experiment of war, during which, under the pretence of military necessity, Or war power high er than the Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, and public liberty and private right alike trodden down, and the material prosperity of the country essentially impaired, JUSTICE, HUMANITY, LIBERTY, AND THE PUBLIC WELFARE DEMAND THAT ATE EFFORTS BE MADE FOR A CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES, with a view to an ultimate Conven don of the States, or other peaceable means to the ,end that at the earliest-practicable moment,' pence]may be restored on the basis of the Feder. al Union of the States. 2d Resolution of Dem- National Convention, August, leti4. AND ON Tills! Rooked, That if the counsels of the Democratic !Arty had prevailed, the 'Union would have been saved in all its integrity and honor without the 'daughter, debt, and disgrace of a civil war. But when the formation of sectional parties in the North and South, and the advent of oue of these parties into the seats of power, MADE WAR A FACT 'WHICH WE COULD NOT COUNTEBAcT, WE oUSTALNED THE FEDERAL AUTHORITIES IN GOOD FAITH, asking nothing at their hands, ex cept a decent respect for our legal rights and some show of common honesty, in the manage ment of our financial affairs, but in both these particulars we wen• disappointed and betrayed.— Resolution of Dcm. State Convention of Penn syltiania, August, 1865, . . "You see, gem'men, I has these three thimbles and this little ball, which 1 calls the Little Joker. I huts this ball under this thimble and shoves the thimbles about--sot Con any gem'man - in the party tell me under which thimble the Little Jo ker .A.,e4.0r... , t ftankpt 'i.:-_,grimiitt,lig. WedifeadsP, September 20,1864. UNION STATE TICKET. FOR AVIITOR GENERAL, GEN. JOHN E. ELNEMIHANET. of Montgomery "FOR SERFVFOR GENERAL, COL. JACOB 31. C2I.III.PBELL.Qf UNION DISTRICT TICKET, FOR STATE StNATOR,. DAVID aicoittiGirr, of Adonis. FOR ASSEMBLY, COL. F. S. STVIII3AEGH.afFrankna. CAPT. GEORGE A. SHERAN,of perry•. UNION COUNTY TICKET. FOR SHERIFF, CAPT. JOHN ncEnrzu, Chambensburi. ; FOR TREASURER, • 'MAJ. JOHN HASSLER. St. Thoma.s. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, - COL. D. WATSON ROWE, Antrim. FOR SURVEYOR EMANUEL KUHN, Cluunbersbmg. FOR COMMISSIONER, ' DANIEL SKINNER, rannett FOR mu:mon OF THE FOOR, JAMES H. CLAYTON, Washington. FOR AUDITOR, SAMUEL W. NEVI N, Southampton. ACORONFA, Ds. CHAR T. MACLAY, Green. VNION MEETINGfii. Union meetings will be held in Frank lin county as follows : Fayetteville, Friday evening, September Chambersburg, Saturday evening, 4 Sept. 23d. Greenvilltige, Monday " - " 25th Mereersburg, Tuesday '• " 25th Greencastle, Wednesday - " " 27th. 'Waynesboro', Thursday " 23th 'Hon. David M'Conaughy, Col. F. ,S. Stumbaugh, candidates for Senator and Assembly, and others 'will address the meetings. Col. Stumbaughis well known to' our people as an earnest advocate of the Union cause on the stump, and Mr. M'Conaughy is One of the most accom plished campaigners in this section of the State. Let the Union men see' that these meetings are well attended. The time is short—much remains ,to be done, and every Union man must_ give his best en ergies to the cause. One entire ticket can succeed if we do ohr whole duty ! MR. STEVENS' SPEECH. We invite the earnest. candid attention of all to the speech of Hon. Thaddeus Ste vens, given-on the first page of to-day's paper. It is, like all Mr. Stevens' efforts, characterized by masterly ability, and as an exposition of the true policy of re-con struction many may ridicule, distort and quibble at it,- but none can successfully answer it. It is well in these days of de generacy in statesmanship, when politi ,cjamsswarm in our places of power and bat few reach the measure of even tolera ble popular leaders, to have a lull-in the whirlpool, of politics and passion s , 'and hearken to , the counsels of the few who speak the truth for the truth's sake, and defend the true principles of government regardless of the blandishments of favor or the prejudices which may happen to rule the hour. Such a man is Mr. Stevens. He seeks to enunciate no new or novel the ories. He seeks not popular approbation. He would not bow to error however for midable or tempting its offers. He is de voted to the Republic—has struggled with a consistency unequaled by any other liv ing public man, to make it true to its great mission and -true to the thirty millions whose inheritance•it is. Itt 'tithes past, he has beheld the surges of popular sentiment sweep'over him as he maintained the prin ciples of Freedom' through evil and good reiort, and now when his eloquent warn ings of other days stand out in our history as propheby fulfilled, the candid and dis passionate will hear him for our common cause, and weigh well his policy for the safety of the government. No one of ordinary perceptions-will stu dy his exposition of the relations•the, re volted States sustain to the present gov ernment without sharing his convictions. This journal has--long since declared it alike a legal and moral impossibility to Davis or any of his associates of treason; and has braved some prejudice in accepting the inexorable logic of law and precedent which forbids the capital punishment of - the leaders of the rebellion, save for palpable infractions of the laws of war. However earnestly.\ve condemn treason, and execrate traitors, we have, by the deliberate acts of our own govern ment and, by the decisions of our highest judicial tribunals, placed them in the po sition of belligerents, and conceded them all belligerent rights save the formal recog nition of their government as the govern 'dent of the Confederate States. However we may judge them now, while the Sad bereavements of war are still thickly shad owed about us, the action of our own go vermment, and the undisputed verdict of history will accept the enemy as a power at war with us. States absolved them selves from the duties they owed to the parent government, in violation of the Constitution and of their plighted faith it is true; but the fact remains, and we must accept it and govern. accordingly. Others - dispute this fact with Mr. Stevens by plau sible theories, but the fact still confronts the government and compels obedience. - to its laws. No One can question , the pro positien, that if the States were not out of the Union, then is the appointment of a provisional governor by :the President an act of flagrant assumption; for if they. arc still States sustaining relations with the parent government as such, then must the officers of their choice, their Execu tives and legislatures, and their Congress men, chosen under any system of suffrage they may adopt, be the officers who have unquestionable right to govern and rep resent them without restraint. To this proposition no loyal man assents, and none of any faith can unless the fruits of the war are to be wasted and treason to reign as before without terms or penalties. Restoration is an idle term—it ,can mean nothing.. If the States have never been out of the Union, they have no need to be restored; they have forfeited no rights as States, nor can individtials suffer loss of property or citizenship, Save by the ver dict of a jury of their countrymen. Dis pute as they may, all in turn, either the oretically or practically, confess the poSi don impregnable that we have a conquer ed enemy to dispose of, and it is for us to with it as the enlightened justice and (Vie Franklin,uPtio.6 4 1orn i ilianibersbur4 o tld: .magnanimity of a great government would - dictate, looking to the Attainment of the gretttestgeed to thegreatest nobler, and -guarding apinst Wrong to any.. Accepting the South as conquered States the grave question arises as to the best method of bringing them within the reach of just government in obedience to the. accepted results of the war. That Sla very must be a crime of the past, all con fess'; but its legal extinction, and the so ' cial revolution necessary to wipe out its cancerous roots, are still issues which must reach positive settlement at au early day. And our crushing National debt, presen ted by Mr. 'Stevens in an aspect which all men fear to be true while few confess it, presents a problem that calls for a tangi ble soltiion. Already there are signs of discontent because of our onerous taxes, and from Democratic journals and ora tors on every side we are threatened with repudiation. They do not ,avow it in terms; but they resist every measure nec essary to maintain our credit, and their advent to Power would be promptly sig nalized by so diminishing our revenues as to render the maintenance of our end 'it an utter impossibility. If the rebel States are admitted into Congress, at their representatives with their ever will ing Democratic - allies in the North should attain supremacy, the repudiation of our National credit would be the first fruits of their power! On this subject we are no alarmist. We speak advisedly when we say that the men who are certain to be chosen to Congress in the rebel States, un der the elections about to be held, almost with one accord declare that they will have no part in the payment of our debt, while a portion of them openly proclaim , to their people whose suffrages they, are - seeking, that the rebel debt must be as sumed by the general government if the South must bear its share of our indebt ness. Thus wefhave a conquered people, who, by the accepted laws of war,. have neither lan& nor citizenship save as the mercy of the conqueror confers them through the legitimate channel of power, openly discussing how they will deal with our National faith to our creditors, and they are seconded and encouraged by the hope that the faithless men of the North will aid them not only to escape-the just penalties for their wicked war, bat also to strike4i fatal stab at the Republic th6y failed to overthrow in the field, by en tering its sanctuary of civil power, sub verting its - councils, and hurling the great Republic of the earth into the abyss of repudiation. We have well weighed the grave ques tion of sustaining our public credit and liquidating our debt. It must be dimin ished, or it Will be practically or wholly repudiated. It could be-tarried from gen eration to generation, but its repudifi- Hon is the darling object of the traitors of the South and the Democracy of the North, and we therefore cannot resist the conviction that unless there shall be cer tain measures devised for its rapid ex tinction, we shall fail to maintain our faith With the creditors of the -govern ment. To avert this fatal calamity, Mr. Stevens proposes confiscation. On his aide are law, justice and the precedents.. of all civilized tuitions. He ftr•es it not merely as relief for on trfully threatened credit, but he demands it as the only menus of supplanting the with ering blight of slavery with an educated, progressive and -honored industry that will make the fair fieldsof the South reach their full measure of fruitfulness. Ile shows by an indisputable - array of statis tics that the measure of confiscation-pro posed by the Union State Convention, would reach but 70,000 of the 6,000,000 of Southern people, and they the direct and responsible anthers 'of the rebellioo—the men who have desolated our land ; berea ved our homes.; sent thousands of woun ded and maimed soldiers back who justly claim the generous care of the "govern ment, and loaded us with four thousand millions of debt. They made causeless strife—dragged and coerced - their mid dle and poor classes into it, and are now a bonquered people, subject to the laws of war. With them the govern ment can elect to be severely just or generous. It may take all they possess, without distinction, and make them per petual aliens to their country. To citizen ship or property they have no just claim —it is at the option of the government to make restitution therefrom to its own trea sury and despoiled people, or to discrimi nate or restore as Congress may direct. And who will gainsay that the authors of the war shall bear its bitter fruits ? They have made us a mountain of deht--=-le? it be theirs to pay, and let it be theirs to re store to loyal men who have felt the tread of the despoiler, and to solace the wid owed and maimed who have been made by treason to drink the cup of bitterness. Is this not justice mingled with mercy ? Nine-tenths of those who have rebelled would receive generous pardon, and those who have written our history of the past four years in human blood, would in but a small degree atone for their crime against God and man. It would secure the certain and early payment of our National debt; would relieve us of our staggering taxes, and would make treason a crime unknown in our future history. Let him who -dis putes Mr. Stevens' positions, show equal fruits on the side of justice, of magnanim ity and in behalf of our tax-payers and imperiled credit, mill we shall be content. SHALL REBELS BETERN TO POWER? The citizens of the rebel States are pre paring for the election of representatives to Congress, Governors, Legislators, &c., and the requisite qualifications fin• admis: sion into the Senate or House of Repre sentatives are worthy of consideration. The several States, when once restored to there old position as members of the Un ion can define their Own qualifications for State officers; but Congress alone Call say who shall be admitted , to seats in either branch of the National councils. In December, 1861, - Hon. J. K. Moor head from this State, offered a resolution in Congress • instructing the Judiciary committee to report a bill providing that "any person or persons engaged or im plicated in the present rebellion. against the Constitution of the United Statesll3e forever hereafter rendered ineligible to hold any office under the Constitution and liws of the United States." It was adop ted. and on the 4th of June . following'the Hou e passed a bill by a vote of 78 to 47, deela g that any person elected or ap pointe, . I • &ice of honor or profit under the gover tof the: United States, either in th civi , military or na val service, excepting e , k'resident, shall before entering upon the duties of such office or receiving any of the emoluments thereof, take and subscribe to the follow ing oath or affirmation : "I, A. 8., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I have never voluntarily borne arms againsf the United States since I have been, a citizen thereof; that I have never given aid, countenance, counsel or encoura,gement to persons engaged in armed hostility thereto ; - that I have neither sought nor accepted, nor attempted to exercise the functions of any office whatever, under any authority or pretended authority, in hostility to the United States ; that I have not yielded a Voluntary sup port to any pretended government, - authority, power or constitution, within the United States, hostile or inimical thereto," &c. On the 23L1 of June the Senate modified the bill, and a committee of conference was appointed, which agreed upon a bill, retaining the Oath above given, met passed the House without a division anti the Senate by ,a vote of 27 to 8. It was promptly approved by the President and is now the law of the Nation. • —We notice that in the Southern States, and especially in:Virginia where candi, dates are canvassing for Congress, there are but few candidates who can take tIM Oath, and the few who could take it have just no show whatever for au election. The same men who are besieging the President daily for pardon, and professing •e - most cordial subinimion to the laws, arc openly supporting candidates for Cop -I,,ress who can never qualify under the laws of Congress, and with one accord they protest in their public meetings and through their journals, against the elec.; tion of any one who can take the oath:— in other words, they despise and denounce every mart as unfit for public trusewho did not give his whole energies to their murder - ons effort to overthrow the govern-. went. The Staunton (Va.) Spectator of the 12th inst. declares that," no man who can conscientiously take the Congressional oath won hl be a fair exponent of the sent!. inentß o/' the people ;" and Hon. A. H. H. Stuart, once a member of Congress and subsequently a Member of the Fillmore cabinet, loving disqualified - himself for seat in Congress by signing the ordinance Of secession in Virginia, nevertheless runs as a professedly loyal, repentant candidate in the Rockingham district, and Openly declares in Lis recent Charlottesville speech, that the Congressional oath is unconstitutional and therefore nu l , and void. He therefore proposes, after having exhausted himself in a rota bloody but unsueees,fal ettolt to overthrow the dm eminent. to dictate his own terms of oftb mis.sion as might the victor, not the van- gni:died, and he gives notice - that he will get his seat regardless of the law.. If lie can't get his seat now,he argues .that two years another party will be in power which will admit traitors in full fellow slr?p aml power without teaching the mas ter spit-its of treason that they must an swer to the bereaved living, to posterity and to God for the widespread sorrow-and desolation they have so wantonly wrought. lie says that "the present dominant par ty will be certainly prostrate in tWo- years." and t here t*Ore be argues that he will procure his seat ii elected, although his name is subscribed by - his own hand to the stupen dous fraud that plunged Virginia into per iidions hostility with the parent govern meat. —ls it not time for the loyal people of the 'Nation to declare that the power of this government shall not pass into the hands of blood-stained traitors Does Stuart err when he assures his insolent fellow traitors that when the Democracy triumphs, the penalties for treason will be forgotten'- Will the Democratic journals explain ? THE President has pardoned Mi. Men gel Reed, of Bedford, who ,was recently arrested on the charge of tretistin and con veyedto Pittsburg for trial. It is worthy of notice that he was not discharged from arrest by the legal authorities of the gov ernment, nor liberated by taking the oath of allegiance, as must have been the case had Mr. Mengel Reed applied for relief as a citizen of the North whose fidelity was unjustly assailed; but he sought pardon under the act of Congress as an enemy— one who had taken up arms against the government. and the pardon recites that he is pardoned as a traitor—or,,in other words, that be is justly' charged with trea son and the President generously relieves. him of its fearful penalties. Thus while the Democratic papers of Bedford, Fulton and Franklin have been promulgittirig all manner of falsehoods to save Mr. Reed from punishmenttinsisting_ that he had no syjnpathyhthe rebels and was their unwilling cafe=when the question is about to be tried in the United States Court, before' a Democratic Judge, Mr. Reed sends Gen. Coftroth to Washington and applies for pardon, just as every other repentant rebel has done who wants to escape the, just penalty for his crimes. If Ali.. Reed is henceforth censured for both treason and falsehood,-he must not feel aggrieved, for his ow n icord, as made by himself, or by his authorized representa: tive, stamps him as guilty of 'both. We do_qot complain of his pardon—indeed we think it best that it: - .should be so, fora the government has 'Ortainly mufe im portant duties to perform than to try such half-fledged traitors as Mr. lb'ed, who was 100 titithless to be loyal and too cowardly to be traitor with any degree of manhood. l le is very properly dismissed ns that class of game that is not worth the powthir. If in this article we do injustice to Mr. Reed, he must return his pardon and correct his own record before he can deem himself wronged. It is but fair to judge him by his ,elf-assumed position to escape the avenging pthver of !lie law. Certainly an innocent man would have preferred a fair trial to a previouA pardon, which closes the door to investigation. lIIi, OW still be arrested for treason againit - the State, and his pardon would be conclusive testi mony against him: but we presume that his arrest was designed mainly. to - estik lisp the faCt that he -wee - .v.eltuitturre" emit in the rebel service, and as he liaS now yielded the whole issue and regain s his Citizenship by the President's clemen cy, it is likely that no farther proceedings will be instituted. We think that he has inflicted upon himself a degree of punish ment never contemplated by the most vin dictive of his,alleged persecutors. If-he is satisfied, surely they will be content. THE Democracy of 1864, declared the war " but four years of failure" and de manded "an'inamediate cessation of hos tilities" to enable them to save their rebel friendsfromtheir ine`vitable doom. They were tried at the great bar of the people, and not a loyal State sustained them. In 1865 the so-called Democratic Conven- - tions of most of the Northern States prac tically declare Democracy a failure, and act accordingly. They have at last real ized that treason and its sympathizers cannot win the confidence of the people.. and they therefore wipe out the shattered remnants of Democracy and turn over a new leaf. - The saine Democracy : in Penn sylvania that resisted by all the power of party discipline in the legislature and sit the polls, the - extension of the right of saffrage to our heroic soldiers, and that resisted every measure designed to fill up our armies and provide means for paying our soldiers, now nominates two soldiers for State offices, goes begging forsoldiers as local candidates where they cannot elect in the variona counties, and to vote their tickerbecanse they are the friends of the soldiers they have hitherto persist ently vilified and of the Union they aided in every way, consistent with their safety, to destroy. In New York the adminis r tutors of the deceased Democracy went farther. They not only ignored the old leaders, and the old platforms, but they made a portion of their ticket Republican. Gen. Slocum, their candidate for Secreta ry, of State, and Mr. Robinson, their can didate for Controller, aro both Republi caus---have never voted Democratic tick ets since the inauguration of the Republi can party, and do not now 'intend to be Democrats.. They endorse President John -son, _declare for the maintenance,of our credit; and nominate a mongrel ticket. Can any of the Pennsylvania leaders in farm us whathas become of the Democra cy: that ruled in 1864 -1 WE die into-day's paper the address of president Johnson to the delegations troll]: the rebel States which visited him • , recently. It is worthy of note that just about the time the South Carolina del egates were vouching for the loyalty of their people, every Union candidate for the South Carolina Convention was .defeated, in accordance with the publish ed advice of Gen. Wade Hampton to the people to confer trust only on those who had been faithful to the traitors' cause— Hampton himself being one of the suc cessful candidates. The' President is evi dently resolved to test the fidelity of the Southern people quite thoroughly by a most generouspoliey ; but if asnow seems probable, they will reward his leniency by electing td, Congress and to their les pevtlye legislatures the same class of men 3vg,o plunged us into wanton war four yerzgo, Congress will promptly reject them and the President will doubtless ac cept the only alternative their teaching allows, him and resort to a system of gov ernment in the sitbjug,ated States that will insure republican:governments and safety to loyal citizen S.., It is for the revolted States themselves-to determine whether the palpable results of the war shall be come the 'policY of the government by their voluntary acts or by the exercise of the strong arm of, the conqueror. We must confess that so far we have seen lit tle disposition can the part of the rebels professing repentance, to submit to the inexorable teachings of their own cause less war, and until they do, they must not be put in a position 'to wield -the power of the government. If as President. Joh nson has so often and with such emphasis declared, " treason _is a crime and must be punished," there must be more than mere empty professions of fidelity by way of atonement, when their acts persistently confront their ready professions. THE Lancaster Intelligencer assumes that the chief editor of this journal made this enateiial district with the view of being returned to the Senate ; but he afterwards became satisfied it could not be carriedby a Republican, and for that reason the nomination was conceded to Mr. M'Con aughy. The Intelligencer errs throughout. The majority of the apportionment com mittee first framed a Senatorial district embracing Franklin for the purpose of returning the writer hereof to the Senate last fall, and)he peremptorily declined to accept the position under any circumstan ces, although the nomination was well as sured and the Union-majority very large. We•' protested against the district as unna tural, and did ask for• Franklin and Adams because it isa fair district. We protested against the whole apportionment of 1863 as wrong to the minority and dangerous to the majority, aid had we been a member of the legislature it would have been mo ditted it we could have effected it. •As it was, w"emerely protested against unna tural associations in our own section, and succeeded. The tithon nomination be longed- of right to Adams this fall, as Frinklin had it .in 1859 and: Fulton in 1862, and at no time, did any one in Frank lin think of contesting it. Considering that the Intelligeneer is wholly wrong in its .premises, weiluibmit that its ungener- • ous and vituperative deductions touching Mr. M'Conaughy are entitled to little credit. if it is not pow, it some day will be a matter iaf grave regret on the part of Mr. Stahle and his children that his record for loyalty in,tila dark diys of the Repub lic does not equattlidt of Mr. M'Conaughy. He has ever been faithful, and if ho has ever erred it was on-the side of an imper iled country.• THE re ; constiuction convention of Ala bama decided by a vote of 58 to 34 not to repudiate the rebel State debt; We would be glad to see so strong a vote in the same body in favor of paying our Nation al debt. LEGISLATTST, liblincittozirs. The following is a Dirt Of, - the legialatiretomit nations made in the different7distriets and Comi ties of the State, as far as theylave beencompleted by both parties. Those marked with a star (*) .are present members; those marked with a dag ger(f) have beenmemberasome timeTroviously, and those- in SMALL CAPS are independent Repub licans: I . sY.SATontat. i moo.l ' DEMOCRATIC. Co 2. Jacob E 'Rdgway.* Sam'' H. Davis, Jr. 4. Geo. o ell*. Geo. W. IL! Snuth. 12. L. D. 8 oemni . - Stanley Woodward. 19. D. M'C naughy C. M. Duncan. 22. Gen. If rry W le.l . Kennedy L. Blood.t 25. J. L. Graham. , Col. George S. Hays. 27. Rev. R. A. Browne. Col. Wm. Sirwell. W. A. 'Wallace (Dew.) of the 23d has also been re-nominated, but his apponents is not yet in the 'Ea. - ASSEMBLY. Philadelpha . 1. Geo W. Ghegan. , Henry Starr. 2. W. H. Ruddiman.* i William S. Gregory. 3. John M'Caw. 1 Samuel Josephs.* 4: Wm. W. Watt.' Chas. R. Newhauser. 5. Joseph T. Thomas.' Martin 31'Neil. - 6. James Freeborn.* Edwin B. Hutchins. 7. James Sabers. Jacob A. Day. 8. James N. Kerns." . Robert W. Kensil. , 9. Fred'k Dittman. Geo. A. Quigley? 10. Elisha W. Davia.t S. Gross Fry. 11. F. D. Sterner? Albert D. Boileau. 12. Alexander Adair. William E. Fordliarri. 13. W. Schollenberger. James Dannelly.* 14. Francis Hood.* William P. Hood. 15. Geo. Dellaven, Jr? Albert R. Schofteld:t 16. David A. Wallace. John F. Gibson. 17. Edward G. tee.* Thomas B. Worrell. 18. James N. Marks. Capt. Henry L. Hagner Allegheny. Capt. Andrew Large, Major Thomas Gibson, - Henry M'Curry, George Ewalt, Francis M'Clure, - Major James F. Ryan. Alfred Slack,* John P. Glass,* G. Y. M'Ree,* H. B. Herron,* J. D. Danke, David Shaffer. Adams Lieut. Philip S. Houck. I Dr. David S. Feller. Armstrong, Lieut.. Frank. MeeWing. f A. Anderson ;Jerks Capt J. Trexler,Frederick Harmer; Capt. Joe. S. Holmes, I Henry B. Rhoades,* Capt. Josiah Groh. •John Missinier.* EMII I M. B. Morrow Bucks. Joseph G. Adlum." Luther Calvin,* F. W. Headman' Capt. Joc!Thomas, Capt. Alfred Marple rififfi Fred'k Kurtz. Chester. Nathan J. Sharpless,* IC. Colehower, N. A. Pennypacker,* W. L. Latta, W. B. Weddell.* James Lysle. Clarion ami Jefferson. Col. John Ewing. [ W. W..Barr.* Gen. Jae A. Beaver Co u is and Montour. CoL Chas. W. Eckman. I W. H. Jacoby.* Crawford. Lyman Hall M. W. JenningS. Cumberland.. - Co j. T. B. Kaiifman. I Philip Long. - Daurhiu. Dr. Lewis Heck. H. C. ALLMAN _ s ` Delaware Ilwood Tyson J.C. Sturdevant* Geo. IL Bemus. Henry B. Hoffman, Dr. J. Seiler. Dr. C. M. Griffith. Fayette. • Capt. J. M. Dushane. f Charles E. Boyle. Greene. Silas M. Bally. I Thomas liose.* Huntingdon. Mifflin and Juniata. - - Ephraim Baker,David Banks, James M. Brown. -1 / John M. Porter. Indiana and Westmoreland. J. R. li'Afee,* H. B. Piper, James 3PElroy,*James Rutledge, George B. Smith.* - I James B. Sansom Lehigh. Capt. A. B. Schwartz, I Nelson Weiser,* Lieut. Jas. M ' Quillan. 'James F. Kline.* Luzerne Col. B. F. Haynes, Anthony Grady,* Lieut. John Harding, Daniel F. Saybert,'" Capt. Cyrns Shaw. David S. Soon. Lycoming, Union and Snyder. S. C. Wingard, John Piatt, Capt. D. A. Irstirr, Dr. Charles Wilson,2 Dr. Isaac Rothrock. Daniel S. Boyer. Montgomery. Gen. M. R. MlClennan, I Dr. A. D. Markley,* Lieut. Jos. F. Moore. ( Ed. Satterthwait.* Northumberland. r Gen: C. C. APCormick. f Charles W. Tharp. Perry and Franklin. Col. F. S. Stambaugh, I William M'L . ellan. Capt. Geo. A. Shuman. Capt. D. L. Tressler Schuylkill. Gen. W. Reifsnyder, Dr. K. Robinson, Capt. James K. Helms, John M. Crosland, Dr. J. C. M'Williams. Peter J. Collins. Somerset, Bedford and Fulton. Moses A. Ross,*A. J. Cotborn, I D. B. Armstrong." George A. Smith .Venango and Warren. W. L. Whinan, James P. Hoover, Col. H. Allen Joseph M. Neill. Washington and Bearer. James R. Kelly,* John Birch, Joseph B. Welsh,* Asa Manchester, M. S. Quay.* J. A. Vera. York. Capt. W. Bergatresser, James Cameron,* John Bear. - f A. S. Lawrence. ; Was returned as elected to the last louse and was re jected in a contest with Mr. Manly. ' WE invite attention to the large sale of valui: ble Real Estate to-morrow at 10 o'clock by A. K. McClure, Administrator of Rev. Jos. Clark, dec'd. It embraces the extensive Steam Saw Mill and Planing and 'Pash Factory of -Shepley, Clark & Co., with its large assortment &worked and un worked material, of which possession will be given immediately ; the desirable residence of the late Mr Clark, and several other houses, lots, tim ber lands, horses, wagons, gears, &o. MR. ROGER SHERMAN, an ex-rebel officer, ap plied for admission to the bar in Erie recently, and Judge Johnston rejected his application. THE Juniata County Agricultural Fair will be held at 31ifflintown, on the 11th, 12th and 13th of October. WASHING-TON Quietness of the City Lectures by Arte mis Ward—lllness of Werze—The Com mission Adjourned—The Prisoner At taekedby theilother ofTwoofHhi Yietlins—Lo y al Pennsylvanians Coin ing Home to Vote. Correspondence of the Franklin Repository. So. SLV7Lj WASIILNGTONCETT,-,September /7, 1865, • The week just closed has been a remarkably quiet_ one. No murder was committed and the robberies and street fights did not amount to more than two hundred and fifty. Thpsaumer ous sports of the city who delight in these pass times, are lying back taking it cool and waiting for a more congenial season. The weather has not been too hot for Artemis Ward. He has come all the way here from-Great . Salt Lake City to bid " Moo, Moo" to his hun dred thousand friends, preparitory to his going to Europe. This " Adoo, Adoo" has been very af fectionate. Not a dry eye in the audience. "Ma ny could have borrowed money from him on the spot" During this warm weather "No family should be without him." Although " his style is so different from Washington Irving's, we can not be blind to the fact that Mr. Irving's stylti is'different from hie." His entertainments were nightly crowded and thousands turned away una ble to get even a "pup at him." There never has been in this country a more witty lecturer. His entertainment commenced by the Pianist, a gentleman who used to board in the same street with Mr. Gotschalk. The man who kept the boarding house remembers it distinctly. The ov erture at this opening consisted of a medlefof airs, including the touching new ballads, " Dear Sister, is there any pie in the house 7" " My gen tle Father, hare you any Fine-Cut about you"— " Mother is the Battle o'er, and is it safe for me to come Home from Canada 7" and (by request of many Cronies who. hadn't heard it) " Tramp, Tramp. Tramp, the , boys are marching !" While Septembee 20, i 863. the enraptured ear drank- in , this_ sweet music (it , was very sweet, as.Arteurns pays hie pianiat nine dollars a week - and " finds him") the eye wasei chaitiekby the magnificent green belie covering of the yanorama. The green baize cost 40 cents'," a yard at M. Stew art's store, it. having been in deference to the present popularity of " The wearing of the green," for Arternua says - he is " bound to keep up with thetimes, if he spends the last &diem his friends have got". Artemis next made his appearance and was greeted with immense applause, especially by his ushers, who were charged to particularly attend to this,. After quiet had been restored, Artemus 'presented a rather frisky prologue of about uteri ' minutes in length and of nearly the same width, without regard to depth." Here the green baize is drawn aside and the moving panorama com mences, giving a. magnificent view of .Artemus' trip to California and thrOugh Utah territory. The popularity. which Artemus has obtained is derived altogether not from what he says, but the manner in which he says it, with the most grave, serious and immutable expression, - constantly keeping his hearers in a roar while he himself ap pears as if totally unconscious of having said or done anything to awaken their risible faculties. On account of the sickness of Werze, the corn mission adjourned on last 'Wednesday until next - Monday. The prisoner has greatly improved in appearance and will be able to appear on Mon day. His wife is allowed to visit him, but the two spitillial advisers, Rev'. Fathers Hamilton__ and Whelan, whom he asked to see, have pot yet visited him. This is considered a queer affair on the part of the Reverend Gentlemen who were. put in possession of passes to visit the prisoner immediately after his request. Do these - fathers consider - the prisoner sunk so low in infamy that they refuse to, put forth their hands to pace his soul? Verily it does appear as if the crimes of Werze are so monstrous, so bloody, cruel and in human, that every living thing on the face of the earth has deserted him. On Tuesday lust as be was being taken Co his quarters from the court room, in charge of the guard, an elderly lady, aged about sixty years, who had been waiting to see him, stepped up to the guaritand inquired if the "prisoner was the butcher of Andersonville." 'The guard answered in the affirmative, when she flew into a paroxysm of passion, and made at the . prisoner with her umbrella, exclaiming, "you wretch, you butchkr, you , murdered my son at Andersonville." Being unable to reach him' with her umbrella and fists, she got a brickbat and whaled away at him, praying for the guard to on ly let her get at him. It was with great difficul ty-she was restrained from "clawing" him. - It was ascertained that she was en Ohio wo man, who is here for the purpose of securing the back paY of her sons—all four of whom hate been in service—one having been killed in battle, one murdered at Andersouville—shot dead en the dead line while endeavoring to reach a mouldy crumb of cheese to appease his hunger; another made hopelessly insane by the - Cruel treatment of this fiend Werze and his hirelings, and the fourth only left to return to his home at the close of the war a mere wreck of a 'loam sound and heifay man. Has * not this poo l old woman a - cause for her actions; a heart so sad, feelings of filial love so blighted, that nothing but death alone can re lieve her. of her misery 1 -Will the four thousand secesh she devils from Mississippi, with their friends and allies who are petitioning the Presi dent for the pardon of Davis, the real author of her misery and woe, takel into- cortsidenationbei case and the thousands like it? Will his Excel lency, the President, white so liberally pardoning "distingefished," noted, rich rebels, men who have a record almost as bled,. as Davis himself, con sider the case of this peor old Woman How many mothers are there like her all over the country? The loyal Pennsylvania associat of persons temporarily employed in the government service at this place, have taken-into consideration the importance of every vote being polled at the com ing election in the State, and have resolved that each and every one attend. The Pennsylvania and Northern Central railroad companies, with that liberality and loyilty for which they have been noted throughout the war, have consented to issue excursion tickets, good from the let until 16th inclusive. This will enable all the employ ees to reach home at a small cost. s. r. PERSONAL. —Governor Aiken, of South Carolina, has been pardoned. —Gen. Fitz Henry Warren has been appointed Minister to Gautemala. —Ex-Gov. Page of New Hampshire died at his residence in Haverhillon the Bth inst. —Secretary Stanton and Surgeon General Barnes are in Boston, the guests of Hon. Samuel Hooper. —Gen. Grant is expeted to reach Cincinnatti on the 30th, and extensile preparations are being made for a grand reception. . „ —Damel Webster, moil of Fletcher, and grand - son of Daniel the great', died at Marshfield on the 9th inst., aged 25. ; Gen. Hambright, of Lancaster, bee been ap pointed brevet LieutemMt Colonel in the regular army, to date from the bBth of hot June. - " —Mr. Algernon S. Roberts; an old and honor. edcitizen of Philadelphia, died on Thursday last, at his country seat in Montgomery county. —The death otThonias Chandler lialiburtoo better known to - i l he wnrid as "Sam Slick; the Clockmaker," is announced by the lait steamer. -3laj. Gen. Banco l ck is sojouring -with hit family atNorristown. The hero expresses him. self in favor of the election of Hartranft and Campbell. —Jeff. Davis, on Friday, was taken from his casemate prison to a reom in Carroll Hall, in Fort Monroe. The change was made on account of the declining health Of the prisoner. - -Letters recently received from the family of Judge Bates, late Attoraey-General, represent the health of that distinguished gentleman to be such as to create the most serious apprehension. —Ex-Governor William Smith, of Virginia, is expected in Washington in a few days, which he has the permission of the President to visit.— The parole he received heretofore required him not to leave the county of Eunquier. Medil, a well known Democratic politican in Ohio, 'and who has filled important offices of trust and lionpi in the State-and nation, died at Lancaster, Ohio, on the 241 instant. He was 60 years of age, and died of paralysis. Volney Dorset, Treasurer, of the State of Ohio, was arrested at Columbus, Ohio, on Monday week on a charge of enibezzlement and breach of trust. Mr. D. gave hail in the stun of $600,000. The Governor has issued a "prods,. oration declaring the office vacant. —We regret to announce the death of 'Miss Rebecca Magraw, daughter of the Hon. Henry S.. Magraw, formerly State Treasurer of Pennsyl vania. We learn that she died on Tuesday week after a brief illness, at her, father's country seat, near Port Deposit, Maryl an d . The d ecease d was a young lady of rare Personal gifts and intellec-. tual endowments. —A little daughter of Geo. W. Mull, of New vile, Cumberland county, died suddenly, a few days ago, from the eras of eating grapes. Dr. Zitzer, of Carlisle, says he has had several cues in his practice, this season, where persons died from the same cause. He believes that there is a poison of some kind in a large portion of the grapes . ertiwn this year.