2riEllzavi3E3 : The (IMP/LIM is published every Monday inanslig, by HURT J. EITABLZ, at $1 75 per 1/1100./4 if paid strictly 1 anvaxca—s2 00 per annum if not paid is advance. No subscription distoutinued, unless at the option of the pub lisher, until all arrearages are paid. Aovuiissrsxrs inserted at the usual rates Jos Pam?rah done with neatheu and dis EZE Orrlc* in South Baltimore greet, directly Opposite Wamplere Tinning E4tahlishtnent-- "Commita" on the On. J. C. Neely, TTORNEY AT LAW, will attend to collec tions and utl other business intrusted to 311 cAre with prompt:icss. Olsce iu the S. E. corner of th , .. Diamond, (formerly occupied by Wm. 11. ) Gettysburg, April n, 1659. tf Wm. B. McClellan, A TTORNEY AT LAW.—Office WeerMid dlee street, one dour west of the new Court House. • Gettysburg, Nov. 14, 1859. A. J. Cover, ATTQRSEY AT LAW, will promptly attend to Collections and all other busitic AS en trusted to him. Office between Fabitestoeks' and Danner & Ziegler's Stores. Baltimore street, Gettysburg Pa. t [Sept. 5, 185-9. • • Win. A. Duncan, ATTOP.SEY AT LAW.—Office to the North west corner of Ceutre Sq %Are, Gettysburg, [Oct. 3, 17:553. tf Edward B. Buehler, A TTORNEV AT LAW, will faithfully end, promptly attend to business entrusted to nun. Ile speaks the German language.— Office at the same place, in South Baltimore street, near Forney's drag store, and nearly opposite Danner & Ziegler's store. Gettysburg, March 20. J. J. Herron, ATTOTCii: AN) C.ll::Niil.:L'.OR AT LAW. B p-e.trret, us.trly o2po sae F‘bne+tocic fir.4heri'Storp. Gettysburg. Oct. 1, DIM. tf • D. McConaxighy, A TTOI.NEr AT LAW, (Olen one - door west A.. of 13.10aler'3 drug Ind book store,Cham berauarg asset.) ATTORSFT ARO SOLICITOR soli PATESTS Amu Pe:sato:is. Bonnty Land War rants, tv sitspen , led Claims, and all other claims against the Government at Wash- In;on. D. C.; also ArriericanClaims Land Warrants located And sold,oadbouglit,nnd highest prices given. A.:eats engaged in lo cating warrants in tow.t, Illinois and other we,tern States. ftr.lpply to him personally or by letter. Gettysburg, Nov: 21, '53. Dr.A. W. Dorsey, FORMERLY of Carroll county, aid., haring permanently located in Gettysburg, offers professional services to the citizens of the town and surrounding country in the practice of the various branches of his profession. Office and residence, Baltimore street, next door to The Compiler office, where be may be found at all times when not professionally en,eged. RICVCRICNCIM. Prof. nthan R. Smith, B Altirnore, Md. Rev. All i4tas Webgter, D. D., Baltimore Md Dr. J. L. Warfeld , Westminster, Md. Dr. W. A. Mathias, " As Jacob Reese, Esq., 11 61 John K. Longwell,Esq.," 66 • Geo. E. %%Ampler, gsq., " 'AA Rev. Thames Bowen, Gettysburg. Ozt. 2.5, 1858. bin d. Lawrenca Hill, M. D. HAS on e t ; e Zi 432 64 Lutheran churcti is Chlosbersburg street, and opposite Picking's store, where those wishing to have any Dental Operation performed ire respectfully invited to call. Risk:cm:as: Drs. Romer, Rev. C. P. Kr.tnth, D. D , Rev. 11. L. El .111:her, D. D., Rev. Prof. M. Jacobs, Prof. M. L,Stuerer. Gettysburg, April 11, '53. Lime Factory TN GETTYSBURG !—ATTENTION, FARM ' ERS I—The undersigned would most re spectfully inform the public in general, and the farming community in particular. that they have erectua two sp,:cious 1.131 E KILNS, at the corner of Stratton street and tne Railroad, and are now burning, and will continue to burn, large quantities of the BF:.s . r LIME, which they will dispose of at the lowest living rule'. Farmers and others are invited to git e them a call. By supplying a good article, which they expect always to., they cannot fail to give sitisiac tion. McCURDY & CRASS. Aug. 20, 18C0. If Furs ! Furs 1 Furs! T AMES' AN C Y FUR EUPORIUM.— I J FAREIRA & THOMPSON, OW Stand, No. 818 Market Street, above Eighth, south Bade, Philadelphia.. We beg leave to call the atten tion of the risadie3, to our larec and varied stock of LADIES' & CIIII.DEF.N S FANCY lURS. Having had great experience. and enjoy ng peculiar facilities in the,elc, Lion of Furs, we confidently oiler our new stuck to 4,ite intpe-- tion of the !Adis% feeling assort d that they s ill decide with us., in its being unriN oiled fur beau ty and variety, eon ting as it does, of every description of a mak European Fur mann fa c t tired' OS', s ppr fed sdv les. Caps., Aktiei, C.uak.„ Naffs, Cuffs—cnibrac.n:: Martin, Grin in ritcn, z-11‘,r. Sci'rel.Frencli Sable, French .7-guirrd, Aloe! ft.aa Fitch, and Silver Martin. - - parTh.:lt'sfal for 01. , , very ,tberal parona:ze heretofore e tided hope to merit a continuance c by tarnishing a good article at the 3t la prat Cs. THOMPSON, No. 918 Mori.ct ,trect. Philadelphia. N. 8.--t.)1.11 FURS altered to fashiouab'e [Oct. 6, 1860. 3m -- - "Wide Awake" Meetings 17 VERY NIGHT TillS WEEK, AT THE ."BLURS' HALL," and every day between Toe hours of 7 A. M. and 61, P. M.. at the south west corner of the Diamond. in Gelrge Armold's t..•tothing Store, he having just returned from the city with a superior stock of Black, Olite 'And - Brown Cloths, for Over and Dregs Coats, j.he best selection of Black and Fancy Cass,- meres, Gpburg Valencias, Solferinos, Mous. De- Ginghams, Calicoes. Bleached and Un bleached Mudins, Sheeting and Bagging, all of plain or neat fashionable figures; in a word, the styles are just the "Agony' for the times, all of which will be sold at the very lowest cash prices. ALSO—Ready Made Clothing in every varie ty, style and size. If we cannot fit you, W. T. KING, who never misses a fit, will take your measure and make you a garment on the short ,est notice. Oct. 6, 1360 - 11360. Fall Millinery, 1860. AND DRESS GOODS.—MISS IIcCREARY Es just opening a handsome assortment of NNTS & LADIES' DRESS GOODS of the latest and most fashiohatile styles, which she will sell at the very lowest cash prices. jpersedies, call and examine the,in. Oct. 1, 1880. lm Cancer Institute. MR many years of successful practice, _a: DR. SELLING still desires to do good to the al lietad. lie continues to cure all kinds of CANCERS, TENORS, WENS, SCROFULA, or KING'S EVIL, SORES, kc., if curable, without cutting or poison, lie does not matins him salt merely to the cure of As - above dis ea*, bet will treat all 'others with 11 Regal. ratiel l ts vlill . be visited, if desired,* reaeoriabla dlitiube. Persons deiiring to visit Dr. IL will leipaisteti at the I;lr xi oad Hotel in Mechanics burg, where th ey 11 be directed to his real. ;Aunty. For all p arts Lars wTits---state die_ asses plainly. Enclose a postage st amp to renewer. • Addseaa Dr. C. L. KSLLLNG, abarg, Cumberland co:, st. .. ••rw- • OW Gm 4..4. • WARK.—A new satOtiast teeimir r&WßldTlNKB' Erl BY li. J. STAITLE 43R.P. YEAR. Public Sale CIF VALUABLE BE ',STATE IN MUM niet le of au tied , r of the Orphan's Cuurt of Ad , county, the snb scribers, Adm ni.trators of the est , te of wki I). GODItICar, Esq., deceased, w,ll ()PIA. at Pub lic Sale, uu sue premises. on Toad t, tie cl.rti of 0 , -to!..er inst., r F.N LOTS OF GROUND, in Mummosburg, Franklin town-Lp, Adams county, kn , wn on toe General Plan of said towns LP Noi. 4,6, 7, 119, 6 and rot. On the latter are erected a Two-story Brick a Two-story Kitchen at- 1: , tached, a Wash-110,1,e, Barn, and (Ale oot-buildinj.,s. There are two wells of water , with pumps. The improved property is in respects v ry desirable. iiiirSale to commence at 1 o'clock, P M., on said day, w ben attendAnce will be given and terniA mad, known by LEN'JAMIN LE.,tBE, JOSEPH T. HARR, A doshissatrators. By the Conrt—H. G. Woir, Cerk. Oct. 6, 1860. ts Valuable Farm for Sale. TBE sabwr ber offers for sale, on very Le cornmo•lating terms, TWO FARMS. No. 1, alto to in Stratum township, Adams county. 3 miles east of Gettysburg, 1 mile from the Railroad, containing 110 Acres, more or less, the improvements on which ate a STONE HOI7SR, good Bank Barn, and other out-buildings.— About 15 acres are In Meadow, and there is running spring water in every tidd, which never Nis. There is a large trcherd of choice gritted ?reit, about 4 acres. About 2700 or 2800 bushels of Lime have been put urvin the farm, and Its convenience to the Railroad renders Lime very accessible. Thole Is a due proportion of Timber. No. 2, situate in Camberland toisnship, on the Kmmiusburg Road, a mile and a half trom Gettysb.trg, containing 145 Acres. more or less, the improvements on which are a new FILMS nwELLING HOUSE, large Brick Barn, and other out-buildings; a well of water nt the barn, and one at the house. About 23 acres are in Meadow. There is a due pro! ortion of Timber. About 3,000 bushels of Lime Lave bee i n t Anpon the Farm. to terms will he made known on ap plication to thy subscriber. Sept. 3, 1800. tf Public Sale. TN pursuance of an Order of the Orphan's emtrt of Adams county, the subscriliers, Ad 4 minktrators of the estate of JOSEPH Csicc , .ra. deceased, will off.yr at Public S le. on the prevn;ses, on Frichq, the 2ad de of November next. the following valuable Real Estate, viz : A FARM, situate in Freedom township, Adams county, on the Emmitsbur7 road, about 6 miles frum Oettysbnrir, adjoining lands of Jacob Brown, henry Myers, and others, containinz 75 Acreft, more qr less, with a sufficiency of firAt rate Meedew and Timber land. The term excellent cultic. lion, and good fencing. The improvemeats are a large Two-. iitury Brick Dwelling DOU:SE, 101 11e Onnk Barn. Wagon Sh:d, Corn Crib, and :,11 other necessary out- -• . • " hnildingr ; three never-falling -prings of water, also a well with a pump in it ; an Apple Orchard of choice fruit. e-Per.onv wishing to view the property are requested to call on the last named Administra tor, residing on the premises. airtiide to commence at I o'clock. P. M., on said atty, when attendance will be given and terms made known by OCTAVMS CREEGF.R, JOSEPH M. CREEGER, Admen By the CoTtrt—H. G. WOLF, jerk. Oct. 15, 1860. ts Public Sale: • iiS undersigned will offer at Public Sale, on the premises, ea Taseday, the 3014 of October inn., her Horsz AND LOT, situate on the State Ro‘d, about 3 miles from Gettysburg, adjo"ning D. C. Brinkerhoff, John Maj )re, and others. The ionic is a new two-story Log, and the Lot cootains about f ;dun arm More land can be bought to it, if desired. A: the PWl3le time and place, she will"sell her Housg- HOLD FVIINITURB. Sale to commence at 1 o'clock,P. M.. . on ,rid del , when attendance will be . glren and terns made known by SARAII HOLLPIGER Oct. 15, 1860. ti A Gold Watch for You. A"pz.r,..on desiring to procure a good GOLD WATCH, warranted 18 carat, fin , a sure process, requiring no money and i.ut little exertion, can do so by addressing R. MELVIN, Book Store, 11'2 Sooth Third St., Philadelphia. N. B.—Having secured SPECIAL ADV AN TAGOiti, I am prepared to EXCEL ALL OTH;::11 Book Rouses in liberality and quality of Gins. I depend upon the SUPERIORITY OF MY GIFTS, rather than upon long advertisement, to secure a continuance of the patronage of the reading public, and purchs,cra of books ar.d agen'a WILL FIND IT TO THEIR INTEREST to order one of my Catalogues. Address R. MELVINI, 111 South Third et., Philadelphia, Pa. Oct. 13, lab). eln Wilcox & Gibb's TSEWING MACHINE. ' l• e great and lacewing demand for this remarkably simple machine is a guerantee of its superior excellence. PRICE $3O 00. For Sale at • • • FAIRBANKS; SCALE WM:IEIIOI7SE, 715 Chesnut Street, PEILADIMPRIA Sept. 17, 1860. 3m A Card. THZ undersigned tender their thanks for the liberal share of patronage heretofore extended to them, anti would now invite atten tion to their extensive stock of FRUIT TREES, embracing all the choicest varieties of Apple, Peach, Pear, Plum, Cherry, Apricot, kc., now ready for Fall planting. Our stock is thrifty and of fine rise. Satisfaction warrant ed. stay-Call with o•tr Agent, Mr. JOHN Score, in Gettysburg, Pa., or at the Nursery of T. K. COOK & SONS, Bendersville, Pa. Ott. 15, 1860. tf Miss & C. Howard WOULD reirpscently inform her friends that she has jun returned from the city with & large assortment of BONNETS am! MILLINBRY GOODS, and wril always have on hand a number of Beady-made Bonnets.— Ladies are invited to call, in Chambersburg •reet, and see for themselves. Oet. 15, 1860. 3t ROMHSTIO GOODS, in every variety, Ir. SCHICK'S, conesting of Prints, Hotline, ama, Checks, Tickle', Sheeting', ke. ALAW tot of Crociukry aud Qtresoorware for Nap HORISICI k MARTIN. 40D week -4 Atto pries. are the t h ima ga w hog i - fteeLtior Sky-tight TYSON k BRO. THE All strife between Douglas and Ilreekinridze men is now ignored in this State. Let them, therelbru, ILtLLY•TO THE POLLS, UNITEDLY AND IN THEIR STRENGTH, and deposit their ballots for the . Democratic Doctors. Let all conservative men do the same. It, this way alone can the tide of dis'nn►on ABOLITIONISM be stayed. Slur BEWARE OF SPURIOUS OR MIXED TICKETS! Before voting, COMPARE YOUR TICHETS WITH TILE FOLLOWING, NAME FOR NAME I PETER TROSTLE The Presidential Election.— Fearful Forebodings at the The probability of the election of Mr. Un holm is creating great uneusinevs at the South, even among the most cool and conservative of her citizens. The New York Express pub lishes the following private letter from a citi zen of Georgia, wh is said to be no firNenter, no fanatic, no disunionist or disorganizer, butan intelligent, conservative Uni. n man : SAVANNAH, OA, Oa. 13, 18GO. .Ify Deer : —NV hat I write for the papery is too opt to be set down to a desire for politi cal effect, and therefore I drop you this pri vate note that you may know the real condi tion of things at the &inch. The result in Pennsylvania has electrified this whole section of the Union. The friends of an independent emile4eiarii are jubilant. while the new has fallen as l!,e ; all ul death on us, who, through every trial, have stood by the work of oar fathers and hoped for an era of peace. Ido not even yet de.pliv, but our friends almost unanininsiy, are tirm in their conviction that the election of Lincoln is no longer a nrohlirn. What is to come alter ir, God only knows ; the idea of peace is utterly preposterous. The more conservative nien in the South are now for setting our houses in order, for calamity, in some firm, is obli ged to come upon the country. should n rceti Ur al government be placed over us. We--the Union men of the South—have heretitore fought gallantly end with suc.ee , 4 ; but now oar arms are titrielea clown and our hands tied. My honest conviction is, before God, that the election of Lincoln will nut be submitted to by a inaj , ,rity of the S , ,uthern States, and such will he the fury and excitement that is cure to follow the announcement of such an event that alt tbeconservittism of the South mill be but as a feuther before the storm The North now has the hopes and toe destiny of the country in its hands. . . May we nut hope that the untropiticus re sult of the late elections will fire the patriotic Men of the North to some powerful and un usual etTort to stem the tide of anti-slavery fanaticism, and-care the Union from the die. aster that so imminentty threatens it ! I hope so, and just here is our only trust. D) nut place it in the power of even a minority at the South to involve us alt in one common trouble ; for I tall you, come what may, right or wrong, wise or foolish. v collision between the people of the South on the issue of sustaining or ma kiung war upon a Black Republican govern ment will never take play. The North may rely on this. I have never berets felt so downcast and desponding with regard to pJl.titutl affairs, and I write you this hasty note for your own private information, and with the hope that you will present the lune to your people in its true Bight. Ob that they weld only lmow, and in tuna, the real iehtiusenth of their tiontbern liteithreir - tosi this totlassatous qua. lion 1 / as. very truly, yours, ** • gl arr Ficwt and NJ31111141. GETTYSBURG, PA.: MONDAY, OCT. 29. 1860. /bTThe following is the Democratic Electoral Ticket, formed by the State Convention, at Reading, in March lit.t It is th(i only- Democratic Ticket now in the field, (the straight-out Dtfuglas ticket having been withdrawn,) and the only one that stands any chance of defeating that of the sectional Abolitionists, who have Lincoln for their candidate. Of President and Vice President of the Vnited States. George M. Reim, Richard Vaux, Frederick A. Server, William C. Patterson, Joseph Crockett, John G. Brenner, George W. Jacoby, • Charles Kelly, Oliver P. James, David Seimll, Joel L. Lightner, Samuel S. Barber, Thomas 11. Walker, ‘• Stephen S. Winchester, Joseph Laubacli, Isaac Reckhow, George D. Jackson, John A. Aid, Joel B. Danner, • Jvse B. Crawford, Iforatip N. Lee, Joshua B. Howell, :Nathaniel P. Fetterman, Samuel Marshall, William Book, Byron D. Hamlin, Gaylord Church. South. COMP " TRUTTI TM NIMITTI", ANT) WILL iiirvArt." lla~~~~~~ Ohio Carried by ibe Negroes. Ti returnsaf the Ohio election disch.se the fact tl•at tllft Black Republican inajoriLy is only 8,794. Fourteen thousand negroes were allowed to vote under the tleci•• ion of a Black R publican Judge. Leaving out this negro vote the Democrats have a ma jority of nearly six thousand. Thos the start ling, the humiliating fact appears that Ohio, a sovereign State of the Union. is UNDER NI GRO an a. To such a disgrace would the Black Republican party reduce the whole country. This thing is too shameful, too sick ening, too revolting, to contemplate. The follovring.parograph is from the Cleve land Plaindea ler: • •Full blooded negroes voted in several of the wards yederday. At the Second Ward nezroes as blnck as coal peddled tickets. Ns gross hired carriages and carried white men to the polls. Negroes where everywhere.— The refrain commencing, meet's t,.0 good for negroes ;" is an Kurtlity. Here on tl.e Western Re serve rout beef in hardly gond enough for them. They sit at the first table, and white men are forced to lap up the crurnha at the sec ond. Thai'.4 the stt le here. That's what ails I , R. We have met the Africans, and tle are Melt s l" One of the members of the Republican County Committee has boasted that they hired men to attend the election polls in the town of Oregon, and other places, and ely ablid agairat tile attempt of the locolocos to elrct to office a Roman Catholic.— Wayne Coax ty The Issue u the South Sees It. The Virginia Sentinel. in an able and nun perms article on the possible issue of the Pres idential election by the choice of Abraham Lincoln, says : “If Lincoln is elected, the South will put herself in immediate and stern opposition, which can never be relinquished or abated, until his purposes are abandoned. Resistance may commence in various ways, nada, the forms of the Constitution, of which we bear so much. It may commence bi rejecting in the Senate every offensive appotnUeent or in; deed every lip paiatament which Mr. Lincoln may mend in. It may be node by menthe tionidly obstructing the legislation of Con gress. ,It may be made by withholding ap propriations. It may be made by Slate action. If the Legislatures of alssood every Piertiern Stale may wake it et crimes, ratialiabie by *en vy cad ems infamous penalties. for one of *heir edit": to aid se the ersctitims of a constitutional taro passed ire psresanee of a constitstional as gsgesecsf,—wo Innen the Lors fur the arrest of fligittive slave..—saby lin lOW MI arena tuts iv ♦ cams To ea nreVarr tea rat: tuna qrteats Clorox Wean r 40. Is ha mefu I Boast. Iffiiil k k MECHANIC% ANIf WORK- INGM EN. We invite your serious attention to the petition assumed by the Republi• can party on the question of slavery in its relation to the laboring interests of the country. Hon. FRANCIS P. Bu i sia, of St. Louis, who recently maJo a stumping tour through this State, speak ing at Harrisburg, Philadelphia, and other points, in advocacy of the election of Carrist and LINCOLN, laid down the proposition that "the real point in issue between the Republicans and their op ponents is the predominanee of one or the other of the two systems or labor, free or slave." He further said that "the Republicans would be false to their miition if they did not endeavor by every right means, in the language of Mr. LINCOLN, to put the question where the public mind will rest satisfied that slavery is in progress of ultimate ex tinction." Th, mission, then, of the Republican party is to abolish slavery, so that all the labor of the country may be per. formed by free laborers. Let us see ghat good this Would do tho white Mechanics and Workingmen. Nearly All the slaves in the country are employ. ed as field hands. A few are house servants and a few. mechtinies. In what way does their labor ae slaves Conflict with the free labor of the coun try ? In no way whatever. The white Mechanics and Workingmen of Penn sylvania surely do riot want to go down into the pine forests of North Carolina to gather turpentine, nor into the Peon ping su n of Georgia and Louisiana to pick cotton or hoe cane. And if they do not want to go there to do these things, then clearly the existence of slave labor in those forests and fields is no injury to them. Slave labor can only become injurious to free labor when brought into competition with it; and so long as they occupy different sections of the country, there on lie no oouglict, or competition be them. The white laborer of the North moves in one sphere and the black la borer of the South in another. Free labor travels ono road and slave labor travels another. They can only come in collision when both of them attempt to travel the same road. Now when will the free laborers of the North and the slave laborers of the South stand side by side and compete with one another? Not while slavery lasts. That is clear. But abolish slavery and open the South to free la bor, as Loccot.s and the Republicans propose, and what then ? Just this : the South would be as firmly closed against white laborers as it is now, un less portion of the liberated negroes came North, anti a portion of oar white laborers went South to fill their places and work in the fields along with the negro laborers remaining there I There is not a white laborer in all the North who would not feel insulted if be wore advised to go down South and seek em ployment along with a . gang of nogroes, whether slave or free, in -a field or a factory. Yet this is 'just 'the employ ment offered to him by the Republicans in exchange for his vote—the pay they propose to _give him for voting for LINCOLN and helping to "put slavery in progress of ultitiosto extinction." Nor is this the worst alit. When the Republicans succeed in the "ulti mate extinction "'of slavery, the wLito laborers of the North will not need to go South to get the glorious Black Re publican privilege of working alongside of negroes. Whenever the Statoq be come "all free," as SEWARD and LIN COLN want to make them, hundreds of thousands, and perhaps millions, of the liberated negroes will come North and squat down among us and enter into compatition with our white Mechanics and Workingmen on our own soil.— Then we shall have an " irrepressible conflict" between white labor and•black labor, and unless the white laborer is willing to work as low and live as mean ly Its the negro, Sambo will get all the work. Aye, and the Republican em ployers who aro crying oat so loudly for " free labor," would be the first, to turn off their free white laborers and employ free negrocs at lower wages. Probably, if the truth were known, their great reason for desiringthe "ex tinction '' of slavery, is that a horde of liberated eegroes may come North and by competition reduce the wages of labor. This is just what it mast and will come to, if ever the Republicans get the power to Garry out their programme for the extinction of slavery. The worst day the white laborers of the North ever will'see, will be the day wheadikblack laborers of the South Wl4 tree. We 'want our 14- ..‘ EV 10111 TWO DOLLARS A-YEA'R ebonies and Workingmen not to stiffer themselves to be misled on this subject. A vote for LINCOLN is a vote for the abolition of slavery, End it vote for the abolition of slavery is a tote in favor of bringing Southern negmes hero to throw white men out of work and re duce the wages of labor. This is the honest truth, and it ought to sink deep in the• mind of every poor white man in tbe North.—Stateanurn. The Great Issue! TO DE DECIDED IR NOTEMBEI. SHALL THIC Constitution and the Union *TAN I, OR FALL ! SHALL SECTIONALISM TRIUMPH I THE CONSTITUTION PERVERTED I AND THE UNION DE'TROYED I OR SHALL WE CONTINUE TO HAVE ONE roc•Nrrn - 1 ONE UNION I ONE CONSTITUTION I AND ONE GLORIOUS DE:;TINT I Lincoln and Ilia thiprorierst • BEHOLD THE RECOaD I TDB REPPRLICAN PARTY ADVOCATING DISUNION AND REVOLUTION I The Black Republican party is most esPen tinily the disunion party cf this country.— Tilev advocate doetrines that must inevitably lead to n disruntion of the Confederacy.— They are the littitimate offsprines of that party that, from the foundation of this Re public, have Ovum been opposed to territori al expeneino. Their doctrine wits to confine the Government to tFe original 'thirteen States. Failing 'in this, they now seok Oracleit the channel of shivery aeitatioh, and violent al•nee -Al this South. to hying tout a disoolution of the Union. and tt geniederali fnr whi. h they ha long and peraistentiv labored. Their. rs s e ek thin end by nmon.titilti mid ieenults atm the South, by violent abuse of Soothern men, by a tiyatom fetorn.tl Writ ti,,n, by '• blockading slavery" end etosiiinc." it not. S one of the m , however. oe 'fie nit ly and avow their ohject. We prof use tb give a few in titaness. • Governor Flank., of Movvaohnmettv, who was electo4 Sp-alter of toe House of Repre• ventatives in 1f 4 56, by thetlaok Rep•tblienns, in a speech delivered in Maine. in the prece• ding year, said : " Although I em not one of that class of men who cry for the preeerration of the Union ; though 1 are willing. in a Alp stale of eire-untioanccs to lel it slide,- I ht o fear for its nerp•tnatiun. But let me *ay. if the chief niject of the pent& of this country be t maintain and propagate chattel property in man—in other wor.la, human slivery— Ws not r% cannot awl OUGHT NUT TO STAND." Still later. in 1856. in a speech in Mann zhnaettn, we find Mr. Banks turning prophet, and predietingit tt'military dietatortil govern ment" in thin eounl4l, lie had nn feith in the ntabilite of" freexuttitutions." Ile said: I can conceive of a time when this Consti tution shall not be in existence; when we shall have an alrolute military dictatorial government. transmitted from are to age, with men at it, bend who are made rulers by military commission, or who claim en heredit ary right to govern those over whom they are placed." In a speech at a masa meeting in Awe. 1856, the same at which Mr. Banks spoke, Senator Wade, of Ohio, gave utterance to the following treasonable sentiments : "There was no freedom at the South for either white or black : rnd he would strive to protect the free soil of the North from the eagle' blighting curse. There way renily no union now between the North and the South ; and he believed no two nations upon the earth entertained feelings of more bitter rancer to- wards each other than these two sections of the republic. The only salralion of ite Union, therefore, wool- to be found in divesting it en tirely from all taint of slavery. There was no union with the &nth. Let us hive a Union, or let us sweep away thin remnant which we call a Union. Igo for a Union nirre.all nun ore equal or for no Vision at all, and I go for right.A And, alit to murk their approval of such doctrines, the Black Republicans ,if Ohio. the very nest year. r«-elected this dieun imist to the Senate of the United States'. Now-,let n hear fr ) n Julge R &It P.firmill ding.. a delegnre from O'lio to the Black Re pulWant:i national C‘ , 11% C 160114 01 1816 and 15460. Ile made a lineeeh in the convention of IFIVS, a Ilia no:nit:met! Fremont, in which be earl: "In the cave of the ehernntivee hying pre eented, of the cahliimanre 1.,,f !darer', orliq prillit;on of the Union,' AM rOlt 1)1:7•SOLO TION; and I care 14(11r Tor!: tt e.ane3." Hon. Ilornce M min wai ()nee of C,,ngrelA fr‘ in IM:l , •nAn.ette, rtn , l n I truritr elder insthe Itholc Ile p.,1,14.:m [...mech. 11 e quote from hie speech to the lluu e nl itynre- PeNtntivy4 " I have only to n l 1, under a full bens(' of my re-tanisitolity to tub comor ! my God, I , feliherittelv env, 13ETTER I,NusioN. liErrEit A SERVILE WAR, better any thing that God in his Providence shall sen I. than an extension of I.und•• of shivery." Senator Sumner, of Mas,-achwett.. in a speech dtli v. red in Panetta ll.tll, Boston, November 2, 1831, said : " :Cot that 11, re the Uhlon le-s, but free dom more, do I now, in pleading tide grett cause, insist that freedom, at all Iva tido., hall be preserved. God forbid, that for the sake of the Union, we should sacrifice the very thing for which the Union was made." Sill later, on the 19th and 2.Utit of May, 1856, in a speech delivered iu the Senate, Mr. Sumner held this revolutionary langauge : " Already the muster has begun. The strife is no longer local, but national. Even now while I speak, portents hang on all the arches of the horizon, threatening to darken this broad land which already yawns with the mutterings ql*Cli'lL WAR. Toe fury of - the propagandists of shivery, and the calm deter minatwu of their opponents, are now diffused from the distant Territory over wide spcead communities, and the whole country in all its extent—marshaling hostile divisious, and foreshadowing a strife, which, unless happily averted by the triumph of freedom, mill be ams W AR—FRATRICI iv& PAKRICI DA.L WAlt--witb an 1100L1111uned wickedness of any war in human anualis." Following in the same strain, Senator Sew ard, in his speech in the &onto, 4pril 8, 1854:1, jeered the South with the taunting menace that she should hare no repose, but that fleas and cannons would take the place of words. Hear him : ••The satemsnity of the ooearion draws over en: beads that cloud of disunion whiah ways arises whenever the subject of Amory ie sesta& etta She debate goes on snore ar -4,0. 4 ..,4 , # 4,-.1..." i , 7 r. -1 / 4 . NO. 4. dently, eerneeily, and angrily, Slitiziever he- Cre. It employs not now merely iogie. re mnants. menet*, retort, andendear*. BUT SABRES, RIFLER. AND MINYA -- De von look throngh thin incipient war quite In the end, and Pee there pence, utile,. and har mony on the suhieet of slnvery? if so, pray enlighten me, and show me how length. we, hp which leads to tint repose. - 11 * He who found a river in lie path, and est down to wait for the fl(m4 to pass away, *as not more unwise than he who expects the agita tion of slavery to cones, while the love of freedom animates the bosoms of mankind." After showing that thin agitation will lea 4 to •ar between the North and the Soatb. Mr. Seward Puzgestgito the Nellie States that then would bn (Weir time to withdraw from the Union. lie contitood: " Then the free Staten and ASTI, States of the Atlantic, divided and warring with each other, would disgust the free States of the Paeilie, nn.l they would have abuncinal cause fl ,„; j„,/,:, r dion . for withdrawing Irons I s r'aion productive no longer of peace. Wet" nni liberty to them•elven, and no loner h o ld• in up the cherished hopes of mankind." Arvin. in hie speech at Albany, October 11455. Mr. Seward Paid : "Slavery la not, and never eon be, per. nvtn al. It will he overthrown either pence folly and lawrnlly tinder thi+ Crnatitution, or it will work the nbrersion of the 03netita lion, trv - w‘ther with if• rwrit, corthrnw. Then the SLAVF,TIOLDiIi. WOULD PERISU IN TETE STRITC;(3LF,." Armin, in his speech in the Senate, March 11, 1855, Mr. Seward thretttetut..the South with "civil war" unless they eat their %litre,. Ile said: ~., . "WbillWiressnr , er,shall be will annear that thtf l attestlon or dh, . the Union is a eempllfiql-•tion ; that it eat aces the fearful ionic whether the Onion *shall stand, and slavery, inter the stently peaceful action of moral, soel.ll and political causes. ha removed I,v gradual, voluntary effort. and with enynnen•nt ., ” . or whsther the UNION SHALL ISE DISSOLV E lt, anti civil wars en sue bringing on riote,ti /oil cow pi rte and isms moqiate emancipation. We are now arrived at that starve when that cri-i• can he r ereseen —when we must foresee it. It is directl be fore. tus. Its shadow is np in us." In plein words, Mr. Servant mare to the South : "Yon rem I , ase union and the credits al emanc i pation of shot •ry. or you shalt have diounion, civil war, and immediate coaancipa tien !" This, in plain English,' was his pro positirt3. General 'Limes Watson Webb, the editor of that leading hit-k republican sheet, the N. Y. Conner and Enquirer, was a dele gateni to the on •eSti , a that nominate(' Rm. mont, in I.SSG d Li.lr.ln in 1.801. In th e former eotiven ion he made a speech, which was loudly rtpri.uulel, but no sentence re (mired more botstecJus applause than the fol lowing: "Our peoplr—leving order, loving law, and wiilingMln abide by the ballot-box—come to gether from all parts of the Union and ask us to give *in a netnination which, when, fair ly put Wore 01 1 unite public, sen timent, ande allot bpi will're strain and repel -t le:pro-slavery extension, and this. aggression of Ahe slarrorscy-- Whet else are ihey iting? They tell you they are willing to-abide by the ballotAbnz and willing to make that last appeal. Ij me' fail there, sub& then? Ws WILL DRIVE IT - nktw, SWORD IN HAND, and, so heciP me Ondi bt , lit ring that to be 1.101, /az iota them. f Laud ch, -, ..r5, and cr i t of "(hued")— N , rthern ger.'lamen, on r ItediNd &panda the result. Y-ii may, wi th God's bling„ present to this country a nartitis - :ra4ylng Around it ell toe elements of. thg opposition, and thus we will becoute t se strong that,, through the ballot-box, -we shall utve the country. But, if Ai: be presen7 el on' tohitie we mast not ra nd the consequence is CIVIL IV A It—not/sag more, nothing keg, but civil war—l ask, then, okal is our first du ty r ' In the same strain P vice !be Hon. Eraetne Hopkins, another member - of the convention. ile said : "If peaceful mane fail ne and wears driv en to the last extremity. when ballot. are use lei, then we will make BULLETS EFFECT- Ron. John P. ll4k, of New iistnpshire, scot also a delegnte to the convention, and addressed it ins long speech, in which he said : "He congratninted the convention upon _ the spirit of unanimity with which it had done its work. I believe (said he) that this is not so much a convention to ()bangs the administration of the government,• as to say whether there shall be any government to be administered. Ynu have assembled, not to y whether this Union_Aall be t preserved, hat to any whether it shall he a blessing or a sown and hissin among the nations.!' As this gentleman ii one of the main pillars in the black republican edifice, and bi t ,' been twice elected by them to the United Stately Senate, we bore examined his record pretty closely, as d..velopod in his speeches to the Senate. On the 314 t of May, 11448. he said: "Let tilP Conar(vionces be what they. may I am willing to Once inyhelt upon the great principle of hn:nqin right ; to stand where the Word of (3•,d and my own conscience wetter in placing me, and there hid defiance to ell consequences. And in the end, if this Uni on, bound as it is to the hearts of the people by.tnany endearing associations, has no oth er principle of cement Olin the blood of ha man slavery. Zed it sunder." Anin, on the 12th or July, he sai4: "All the horror* of dircolalion I can look slefOlasay in the fare. before I could look to that mural ruin whir must fall upon us when we have so far prn•titnted ourselves as to he come the pioneers of slavery in the Territo ries." From another 01Tweeeh of .fr. TI 'le. tie lirere4 in the San tie, Voir-Imre, 26, 1860, we extract the following bluod-and-themier morel "I thank Gil that the indications of the present day ream tru prantise that the Ninth. !lure at last got to the walL.and will gn nn further. I hope so. The Senator says there cosy be a power that shall sly. `Thus tar sh'alt thou go. and no further.' GLIM!! Good I. s;r. I h ope it fe w eoe,e; and if it ~I tne.t to blood, LET BLOOD COME. Nu, sir. if tbat Issue must let it cwae, aid cannot Come too , * Sir,,Puritan blood has not always etrank I'r:in even those "nuns tars ; and I'i-font the war has been p ell with the Litife. and the knife ti the the. steel has some'imel glistrue , l in their A s; and when the battle wt over, they wore out always second best." In the same vein do we fin* Mr. CIO S,hurz. a dele:ate from Wisconsin in the Chicago Convention that nomionted Hr. Lin coln, And now the moat a ctive Bh i el A .llAp u 6. licAn Atumper in the Northwe'st, spw.tking in St. Lonio, ..nlv A few dot t ago: " Muy the G,.1 iu hunhoa nature be aroused and pierce the very 1501} lof our nat i w i th an energy that 1.11111 I poNeop, tog with sh e b ewna of destruction, this aboutination of slavery from the land. call this revolntion. II it. In this we n olusion ; we metat,, we will care it. " L CO M K l',' ‘ Ol. Now hear ilitrace Greeter thunder forth his revolutionaryliltiee to the 11l.tek ItZpulilicium in Congress, when the Kensite-Nebraska Lill was pending. .. We urge, therefore, unbending determi nation on the part of the northern members ho%tile to this intolerable untrage, end 4eiuiotl of them, it behalf of peace, in behalf agree. duos, in behalf of jostle° and humanity, re. elegance to the last. Better that cantstifun should ensuo--better teat 'discord shueld reign iu the national councils—bet* Oaf Congress should break up ig w ild ifi l loyd...— nay, better that th e Cap itol . Near s d blase by the torch of the taceittliary, or II and bury its inmates .bsneath ita . ,erals . ruins, than that this lielidliesisd In tik I bl a be dually socomplishr . 7 . Among the 'duos,. sa:piebireliol . . - and circulated I? ' ,tika. •• . • ... * ~.„,--- committal se it;, , . .., ,„. . ~,,.,,. , i , , , , a. eciriacon .' Z., gr lk ' .fit , . Fears, at ti, 1856, PA Ildi *it daTtaiita a
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