2733. o Alio g3a.gtxa-3.gixa.! TIIURSDAY::::::::::::::::N0VEMBER 3. NATIOXAL UXIOX TICKET FOR PBKS1DKNT : ABRAHAM LINCOLN, of Illinois. 'My enemies thetesd I am now cacyi:co on the Wah Fon the sole turhose of Aboli tion. SO 1.0SQ AS I AM PnESlUKST, IT SHALL BE CUUUEI OX roU THE SOLE PURPOSE OF kestokiso the VxiosrAEliAIIAM LIX COLX. s FOB. VICE-I'BESinENT : ANDREW JOHNSON, ot Tenncspee. I W0CLD HAVE ALT. TRAITORS ARCESTKD AST tried for Treason, asi if convicted, by TU ETSRXAL OI, THEY SHOULD SUFFER THE lENLTY OF THE LAW AT.TIIS HANDS OF THE " Executioner." AXDREW JOIIXSOX. ELECTORAL TICKET. ' ' SENATORIAL. Morton M'Michael. T. Cunningham. RETRES 1. Robert T. King, v 2. G. M. Coates. 3. Henry Buram. ' 4. William II. Kern. 6. Barton II. Jenki. 6. Charles M. Runk. 1 .' Robert Parke. 8. "William Taylor. 9. John A. nit-stand. 10: Richd. n. Coryell. 11. Edwwrd Haliday, 12. Charles F. Reed. ENTATIVE. 13. Elias W. Hale. 14. Chas. U. Shrincr. 15. John Wister. 16. I. M'Conaughy. 17. David W. Woods. 18. Isaac Benson. 19. John Patton. 20. Samuel B. Dick. 21. Everard Bierer. 22. John P. Penney. 23. Eben. M'Jtinkin. 24. J. W. Blanchard. A I-ast Word. - Before another cumber of this paper, the Presidential election will have come and gone. Reader! have you thought of the tremendous issues at stake in the contest issuas greater by. far than ever before agitated tho mind of man ? Have you given the matter that serious, prayer ful consideration which it so eminently deserves ? Never again, live you a thous and years, will you be allowed to partici pate in tho arbitrament of a question so great, so grand, and so grave as the one you must pass in judgment upon on next Tuesday. For the question is Shall tee, or iludl we not, have a Government hereaf ter? We are now in the midst of civil war. Fathers sight tho gun and point the bayonet at their own offspring, and broth ers lift up their hands against brothers. It is unnecessary to here discuss the prime cause which led to this unnatural, unholy state of affairs. Enough to know that war, in its deadliest aspect, really exists. "Who commenced the war? The South commenced it. The first overt act of hostilities was committed during the ad ministration of President Buchauan, when (January, 1861) the rebels fired upon the "Star of the West," a Government steamer employed oa legitimate Government busi ness. The most bitter partisan cun not therefore say that the present Administra tion id responsible for the war. Abraham Lincoln went not . into the Presidential chair until after seven Southern States had gone out of the Union so far as they could vote themselves out, and until af ter they had defiantly scunded the tocsin of war. It is quite common nowadays to hear Copperhead orators and newspapers charge it upou the present Administration that they begau the war how can the facts in the case bo made to bear out the assertion ? . March Jlh, 18G1, Abraham Lincoln, the legally elected President of tho United States, was formally inaugurated. In his inaugural address, he assured the South that their "rights" would be as much respected under his rule as they ever were under , the rule of his predecessors, and used the following language: "Apprehen sion seems to exist among the people of the Southern States that, by tho accession of a Republican Administration, their property and their peace and personal eccurity are to be endangered. There never has heen any reason or cause for such an appreJicnsion." He then adjured them, by the memory of tho heroism and suffer ings of the fathers of the Republic, to not consummate the sin and folly they sought to commit. "What was the response of the South to these pacific aud patriotic words? In April following, a month thereafter, without due ca,use or provocation, they bombarded Fort Sumter, a Government fort I Then, and hot till then, did Presi dent Lincoln, in pursuance of his oath registered in high heaven to preserve, protect and defend tho integrity of the entire Uniou, take mea&urcs, as the head of the Government, to fc tern the tide of rebellion. Oh I the Government was slow to anger. It bore aud forebore with its erring brethren ot the South uriH forbear ance ceased to be a virtue. It received cuffs and blows upon the right cheek as well upon the left before k atruek back. If it be not held that the- Union is a a mero temporary combination- of States, dependent upon the whims and caprice ot those States for its very existence, and we think no man of sound understanding will fo hold- it will not be denied that tho Government was powerless to prevent war. The South had virtually seceded from the Union, and had levied war to insure their "independence." Pleadings and promises wero alike ineffectual to win them back from the error of their way? they were joined to their idols, and wanted to be "let alone." What was to be done? Taking the broad ground that the Union sustained the ame relation to them that a' father does to his sons, which was unquestionably the view of the f ramers of the Constitution, what remained but to "coerce" them into obedience? Once acknowledge the right of secession, andj where would the Uuion be ? First would cooie a Southern Confederacy, then a South-western Confederacy, then an East ern Confederacy, then a Middle Confed eracy, then a Western Confederacy, and soon. tho Union would be sliced up in a half-dozen different shapes and forms, and all semblance of tho original compact of States, for the establishment of which our fathers fought, bled and died, wiped out of existence. Without consenting to the utter dissolution of the Union, and thereby to the assassination of civil liberty on the Western continent, a3 well to the mani festly fallaciou3 proposition that a. minority should rule in a nation, the present Administration was powerless to prevent war. The contest which the South precipitately-and causelessly invoked has been going on for nearly four years. If it was right and proper in the Government to fight in tho first place, it is right and proper for it to continue fighting. And it must fight on until tho rebellion goes down. There is no other way. We could not escape the issue in the beginning we cannot creep out of it nor get behind it now. Human ingenuity can devise no settlement of the difficulty other than that contained in the abandonment of the cause of rebellion, and the renunciation with it of the theory of secession. Unthinking men may cry "peace !" but even they must admit that the peace, to be acceptable to the people, must be an honorable one. How can we arrive at au-honorable peace except over the ruins of tho rebellion ? The South consistently declare they will stand by their mushroom Confederacy to the last, and that they will not consent to a restoration of the Uoion ; we started out with a determination to smash their mushroom Confederacy and make them ! come back into the Union. 'The issue is j thus made up. Why not fight it out first as well as Last fight until either our side or theirs is compelled to succumb ? During the terra of wnr we have already had, our successes have been commensurate with the greatness of our cause. We have conquered an extent of country fifteen hundred miles in length by six hundred in breadth, and obtained a firm foothold in every insurrectionary Scate. Besides this, wo have taken every stronghold held by the rebels at the start except Richmond, Charleston and Mobile, and, unless the signs of the times be strangely at fault, these will speedily share the fate of the otheis. The rebels have confessedly "robbed the cradle and the grave" to enable themselves to make a last stand ; they are at the rope's end ; they are about played out, and can continue the contest only a limited length of time longer. We, on the contrary, are strong as ever, buoy ant as ever, and as self reliant. If necessa ry, wc ara able to fight on for an eternity in behalf of the principles we have espoused. It is sometimes charged that President Lincoln's Administration has done com paratively nothing toward the putting down of the rebellion. Taking into con sideration the manifold difficulties to be contended with at the breaking out of ths war, when an army and a navy had to be created, tbe national finances established on a firm foundation, and treason rooted out of every department ot the Govern ment, every unbiassed man must acknowl edge it has done all that could be reason ably be expected of it. Sins of commission and omission many and various are charged upon the Administration; but, although not claiming for them that they are infallible, still we unhesitatingly de clare our belief that no other set of men on God's green earth could have done more for the nation than Abraham Lincoln and his Cabinet. War is an evil, but a necessary one. As we have shown, it was- impossible for our country not to become involved in civil war. Since we have go iBto the difficulty, it is the bounden doty of every American freeman to see to it that we get out there of honorably, and after , a full realization of the eojects for which we contended. Tens of thousands of precious lives and untold- millions of dollars have been spent thua far in- the solution of the problem whether wc have a Government, etmpetent to protect alike its citizens and its own iptegrity. The qucstion is being settled day by day, and must be definitely deter mined sooner or later. Determined in the affirmative, then the country will speedily recover fom the evil effects of the war, and at once take rank foremost among the nations of the earth; determined in the negative, it will be rent continually with intestine strifes and discords, until anarchy at last will come d jwn like night and seal its eternal doom. Abraham Lincoln is the standard bearer of the party who believe that the Govern ment cannot, must not be destroyed, ne is the candidate of the party who declare that enemies at home or abroad are alike impotent to disrupt the Union. He is the candidate of the party who go not into war of their own choosing, but who, once gone in, in behalf of great and eternal princi ples, never say yield until their object has been most fully accomplished. In short, he is the candidate of those who favor a perpetuation of the Government in the future as it was in the past, with all its rights and privileges intact, and its glori ous traditions untarnished. George B. M'Clellan is the candidate of those who believe the experiment' of self-government to be a failure. He is the candidate of those who say the Uuion is irremediably destroyed, and the Consti tution not worth the parchment whereon it is written. lie is the candidate of those who call the sacrifices of our brave soldiers on many fierce battle fields a "useless waste of blood." He is the candidate of those who desire nothing so much as the recognition of the Southern Confederacy. He u the candidate of those, who love Slavery better than their own souls. He is the candidate ot Northern Copper heads and Southern rebels, v A vote for Lincoln is a vote for the perpetuation of the Union and the Con stitution. A vote for M'Clellan is a vote for anar chy and disruption, and a Southern Con federacy. Choose ye I A Chapter of I lie Unwritten His tory of the Democratic Partj of Cambria County Chica nery and Double-Dealings Pursuant to a section of the Act of Assembly legalizing the Soldiers' Vote, the Return Judges of Cambria county met at tho Court House, Ebensburg, on Friday last, to count the returns from the army. Mr. Chairman Bowen, of Cone maugh, called the convention to order at 2 o'clock, p. rn , and signified his readi ness to proccetfcto business. THE LAW ON THE 8CBJECT. ' The law provides that when an election is held in the army, the Judges thereof must, after duly canvassing the vote, transmit to the Prothonotary of the prop er county their poll-book, list and ballots; when it becomes the duty of Euch Pro thonotary to make a certified copy of the returns so received, and submit the Fame to the Return Judges of the county at their meeting, for their guidance in cast ing up the vote. . MICHAEL HASSON ON TIIE SUBJECT. At the precise juncture when the Sec retary commenced readiegthe first return from the certified copy, which had been duly furnished by the Prothonotary, Mi chael Hasson, ostensibie editor of tbe EP ccsburg Dem. & Sent. a most pestilent fellow jumped excitedly from his chair, assumed a perpendicular position, and, brandishing his fi3ts in air and wildly rolling his eyes, proceeded to strenuously object to receiving the returns in the shape in which they were submitted. He held that the soldiers' vote ought to come be fore the convention just as received by the Prothonotary, in the original package, accompanied by poll-book and list of vo ters that no certified copy would answer the purpose that the Judges must go back to the fountain-head for the figures. He said he knew what was what, anchhe wasn't going to have things done "uncon stitutionally." COL. 1IAS80N'8 MOTIVES. What Col- nasson's motives' were in taking this stand, it were not difficult to make plain. By requiring theconvention to examine and count separately each dis tinct package of votes, comparing the same with its accompanying jpoll-book and list, which would require abcrut three days' time, ho hoped to throw mu?h odium upon the experiment of soldiers voting. Or, did he hope, through unlimited pretension to legal acumen, to 'gerrymander the con vention into absolutely throwing out and refusing to count at all the vote ? Of did he expect-to precipitate jthat body into a row and free fight, pending whieh the lights should be put out, the door locked, the convention declared dissolved, and the soldiers' vote allowed to go by default? MATTERS AND -THINGS BROT. TO A STAND-STILL. Col Hasson objected most emphatically to receiving the certified copy. The Chair man read the law to the disaffected indi vidual, wherein is fully set forth that a certified copy, aud not the original packa ges of returns, is what must be Iaief before the Return Judges. Whereupon the Colonel waxed indignant that the law could be presumed to know more than he, and he frothed at the mouth and made a tearful noise. COL. IIASSON CAIXETH FOR A "DIVISION." The Chairman proceeded to?the perfor mance of his duty, and ordered the Secre tary to read out the returns from tho certified copy. At this, tbe Qolonel went off into clonic spasms, and, usurping the office of Chairman, roared out "I tell ye, I object to 4he whole proceeding; all in favor of me and my position come to the side of the houso where I am standing aU opposed to me and my position go to the' other sidel" Whereupon all the Democratic Judges flocked iunto the Col onel, even as sheep flock Unto the bell wether. ADOCT TIIE SIZE OF fT. ' All this, it must be admitted, was exceedingly egotistical in Cl. Hasson. It was more it was both imprudent and in solent to the last degree. But some pork will boil so, and what i9 in) Philip sober will assuredly come out of Philip when he is drunk. Col. n. flattered himself that he was subserving in his own peculiar way the ends of Democracy: wcj may remark just here, en parenthese, that he receives to-day more kicks than kisses from Iks political friends for his illy-advised exhi bition of spleen and dishonesty. CONFUSION WORSE CONFQUXDED. Affairs had now reached a pretty pass, to be sure! The Chairman, backed by the Union Judge?, was fully determined to go on in the performance of a plain duty and count the votes as. per the certi fied copy of the Prothonotaryy- while Col. Hasson, backed by the Democratic Judg es, objected to so counting them, and threatened to secede from the convention unless the original packages were sent for. Was there no oil to calm tbe per turbed. waters no friend to whisper to the Colonel that it devolved on him to occlude and quit making an ass of him self? ' ORDER RESTORED IN WARSAW There was. Gen. Joseph M'Donald, Prothonotary of Cambria couuty, proved to be tbe foreordained of God toeay.to the raging elements "Peace, be still 1" This gentleman made it known to the convention, through one of its members, that he understood the law to its minutest particular, and that a certified copy of the returns was all that was required by the convention ; and he furthermore assu red them that under no circumstances of combination of ' circumstances would he lay before the convention for their con sideration the original packages of votes. ; COL. HASSON WILTETH. Now, be it known, Gen. M'Donald is a good Democrat, standing a head and shoul ders higher in the estimation of his party than Col. Hasson. "Call you this back ing of your friends?" quoth the Colonel "a plague on such backing!" The tide had set in against him, and he knew it; and so, to save himself from being overwhelm ed thereby, the doughty Michael hastened to withdraw his objections to the certified copy, and humbly begged pardon of the convention fur the innumerable insults he had heaped upon it. THE END. And thus it was that the soldiers' vote was counted according to Jaw, and not to suit tho whims of a demagogue. Thus it was that the expressed will of legally qual ified electors was not set at nought. Thus it was.that Might fought with llighr, and came out second-best from the encounter. MORAL. Don't attempt to act tho rascal, in poli tics or out of them, for it never pays. Take warning by CoL Hasson, and be honest I Tho Book, or Michael, Com monly Called The Paddy. TRANSLATED OCT OT THE ORIGINAL SIIEDREW. : Chapter V. Michael is tent for, and goeth to the Temple of Maynoolh The Wise Men look vpon him at a Great Curiosity The Master jdecideth that he is a Man, and employeth him as a Servant Michael remaineth two years, and then re solveth to go to Ameiica ind become a Great Man The ship on which he embarketh is lost, tcith all on board, except himself He etcapeth miraculously, but is afterwards harpooned at a Whale, and it in danger of Death, when he is carried to Xew York and placed in an Hos pital for treatment ow there was in Maynooth a great temple of learning, and when the master thereof heard that Michael was in the city, he sent a man-servant after him, and bade him come to the temple. 2. And when the servant had made known his business, Michael was 6ore afraid, not knowing the desire of the master's heart; but the servant bade him be of good cheer; so Michael went with him. , '.. 3. And when Michael had come, the master brought in his disciples, aud did even so with the wise men and the 6cribcs that were within the temple, and he set Michael in the midst of them. 4. And they began with one accord to ask him questions, and he answered each according to the thing that he required, albeit he took heed not to say aught con cerning his ancestors or the place whence he came. ' 5. And they were amazed, and consult ed their books and writings, and took counsel among themselves whether he was man or beast, and some said one thing and some another; 6. But the master gave judgment that he was a living soul, for that he was gifted with the powr of speech like unto other men. ' 7. Now the master was well pleased with 3Iichael, and said unto him, I have need of a fellow like thee in the temple, andif thou wilt be my henchman, and serve me faithfully, I will reward thee according to thy works. 8. So they agreed among themselves, and Michael served faithfully, and his calling was to carry filth and slops from out the temple, and to clean the sandals aad polish the shoes of the wise men and the disciples ; 9. And in return the master gave unto Michael his meat and driuk and raiment ; likewiso the wise men and the disciples each gave him a penny now and then, a3 seemed good unto tbem. , 10. And it came to pass when Michael had been two years in the temple, he com muned with himself, saying: Lo, I have served in this place a long time, and have become something of a scribe, yet have I not got learning enough to put me beside myself ;. 11. For, albeit there be many things that 1 know, yet there be many, things that I do not know, and herein is a diffi culty; nevertheless, I would faiu be con sidered wise and great, and have my praise on the tongues of many people. 12. I will arise, therelorc, and journey afar off, even unto the land of America, where the inhabitants know not so much as a whit, and I will say iluto them : 13. Hearken unto my voice, O ye peo ple of America, and listen unto my words; for, behold, I am Michael from the temple of Maynooth, a man gifted with much learning and great knowledge, understand ing and speaking the languages of them who lived and spake in the ojden time. 14. Aud by this cunning device, I will gain the hearts of the people of America, and I will wax rich, and become a ruler over their affairs, and my praises will be sounded far and wide, and I thall be known as Michael the Mighty. 15. And it came to pass when Michael had done communing with himself, he sold his father's ass, whereon he had journeyed to iYlaynootu, and the scrip which he received therefor he put into his purse; m 1G. And he acquainted the master of the temple with Tiis desire to be gone, and the master was grieved thereat, lest he might not; be able to find another to do the things whereat Michael had wrought. 17. Howbeit.the master, in the process of time, gave his consent, and when he had put upon Michael a new raiment, he bade him depart with his blessing. 18. Likewise the wise .men and the disciples made him presents of rare and coftly things, curiously wrought in brass and other precious metals, which when they had done, they bade himgo on his way rejoicing. 19. Then straightway Michael turned his back upon the land ot his lathers, and went to the seaside, and got upon a ship bound for the coast of America ; and that ho might not spend the scrip in his purse, he took passage on the lower deck of. the vessel, and becamo even as an hireling. ; 20. Now wheu the ship had been at sea many days, the provisions thereon became exceeding scarce, so that they who were on tho lower deck. were fed upon mean victuals, the same being none other than bean soup, and onions, and boiled chestnuts. 21. And it came to pass when the ship drew nigh unto the coast of America, there came a violent storm, and the winds blew with great force, and tbe vessel was beaten against a rock, and'parted, and all they that were therein, save Michael, per ished and were lost. , p2. Now Michael wa9 mysteriously spared, and it was id this wise : For just bejfore the storm set in, Michael, being aoj hungered, bad partaken of much bean soup, besides a plenty of onions and boiled chestnuts t !23. And after b, bad bo done, behold Michael was seized with a violent win(j colic, insomuch that he became 8wollea and puffed up to a great size ; wherefo wheu he fell intoyhe sea, he did nots'isi by reason of the wind in his bellv ' 24. So Michael! was tossed to and fr! upon the tea, evin as a ship witho,, rudder, until at length he drew nigh am0 a vessel that was ruisiDg ia thosa partj for whales. 1 25. Now when they that were on the vessel espied Michael, they supposed ho was a whale ; wherefore they s mote him with an harpoon, thej which having l0(.ed in his belly, they straightway hauled Lira ou board the vessel. 20. Which when fthey had done, they discovered they had committed a grievous mistake, and immediately they hcan to make amends as best they could; 27. But, behold, when the harpoon was taken from Michael, there appeared a grievous rent in his belly, and immediate ly the wind rushed :out thereat, and the sound thereof was like unto the sound of a great trumpet; I 23. And suddenly the air was filled with a great stench, anJ it entered into the nostrils of them that were oa the vessel insomuch thai they cried out with one voice 29. Verily, if all he carcasses aud dead men's bones which! are in the valley of Jehosaphat were collected together, they could not make so great, a stink. SO. Now when the wind had done is. suing from Michael, behold he collapsed, and for a long time it was feared he would give up the ghost ;; but there was a learued doctor on board the vessel, who gave him good heed ; 31. And when the vessel had come to New York, a walled city by the seaside, Michael was put in a place called, id the Shebrew tongue, an hospital, that be might be ministered unto and cured of the ill which had befallen him. 32. And when Michael bad been brought in and cared for, tho master of the hospital searched his pocket, and found his purse with the scrip therein; S3. Likewiso he found rings of brasj, aud other costly ornaments, which Lai been bestowed by the wise men end the disciples; but of rubies or other preeioui stones Michael had none about his person. OH! WHVlVWrUT'S THE MATTER? - i Tho XTIIth Congressional Dis trict Ilcdeenicd ! corrruiiBADis.M wiped out ! VERDICT RENDERED IN FAVOR OF TUT. PERPETUATION OF OUR GREAT AND GLORIOUS FREE GOVERNMENT! Union Majority: 507! THAT'S "WHAT'S THE MATTER!: Tho following figures constitute the official Home Vote and the semi-official Army Vote for Congress in this (the XVI l"th) district : Home Vote.1 Barlcer. Johr.itcn. Cambria 1,591 2:C34 Blair ...2,534 2,209 Huntingdon : 2,53 9 2,022 ilifiiin v 1,4U7 1,43 Aunt Vote. Cambria soldiers 2P5 &! Blair 253 maj. Huntingdon " 171 ' Mifflin 42 " Grand totals....... 8,832 8,333 8,325 Barker's actual majority. 507 He may be an ignorant Yankee, alltt way from the" State of Maine he may be a fanatical Abolitionist he may bo miscegan he may be a miserable, com mon, every-day sort of fellow he mJ e a maker of shooks and a driver of oxen he may be, in short, a plebeian, as the op position are pleased to style hiu, but, ia addition to all this, it must be confess Barker is e-l-c-c-t-c-d t o C-o n-g r-e-t-t So huzza! huzza! huzza! The Union and the Constitution; The Stars and Stripes shall wave -Till the day of resurrection I Whack-row-de-dow ! Where's tbe usual Democrat rooster this fall ! Whack-row-de-dow 1 . How are you, Copperhead torco- light procession ! P. S. : If the Ebensburg Dtm. & &nt' and the Johnstown Democrat, to eay noth ing of tho ether oppositions papers ia the district, should, through some chance or mischance, . happen to Hear The From Maine within the next six weekf we hope they will each as soon as possib issue an extra with full particular! con cerning the which, and send us oae oopj of the same, marked !