M'Clellan of Antietara but, neither as a soldier nor a loyal man can I vote for the Chicago M'Clellan —tile's' are. hi my opin ion. two very different men. Antietam M'Clellan was cheered by th> soldiers of the Union, he fought for his Government and was the associate of such men as Reno, Hooker, Burnside, Fremont and Abraham Lincoln ; but this Chicago Mc- Clellan appologises to Jeff. Davis, is cheer ed by the soldiers id' the rebellion, and rioters of New York city; fie cries, "cease firing" aud is the friend an l associate of such men as \ alaudigham, \ orhees, Pen dlcton uud Jeff Davis. , ABRAHAM U.NCOT.N. Abraham Lincoln has proved himself j neither an adventurer, nor a monarch, j but a coo l president. Conciom that | while he was ilw ruler, lie was likewise | tha servant of the people; lie has not , sought tile id public opinion, neither has j he lagged bhittd; but realiziug the fact j that public opinion must rule in this gov- ' cnmient, lie has always acted with and consulted the best interests of the people , tinder the Constitution. His abilities, | his wisdom, anhis integrity have been tested as was never that of any other man 1 under this government, and he has prov- j ed to be a man posessing all the qualities | of a great, just and wise ruler. on may j too his greatness in his acts, his justice in j his punishment of traitors, his go jduess j in his emancipation proclamation, his inerev in his Amnesty proclamation, and ! hit? consistency in all his public life and ; documents, they are all true to Union. Liberty, and no compromise with traitors. , The man who has no friends except among | those who love this country. The man, j of whom soon it will be said, he has given j liberty to a race, freedom and peace to a a nation. Some talk of imbecility—you I c i'led the orator li the nation to Gettys-1 burg and Abraham Lincoln said more in live minutes than he did in an hour.— I Some complain ofhis tyranny, yet those are the very men lie has saved from the scaffold. Much is said about bis perse- i i- ttion of Yallindigham. yet he pardoned j V allindighnui from States prison and sen- ! him to his friends in the South. In four years he has driven the enemy frt I I turkey. Here lies your old pocket hook | but '-nary a rod." ilere lies your public j and private pipers torn, niuti'at d and de- ' Mroycd even to the deed of your place. ! Your daughter finds part of a letter from i her "Dear Dannie" trampled in the mud i with her Sabbath-school bible, but his | likeness isjost. Your boots arc gone but j ! you make a barefooted pilgrimage to the ! family graveyard." No neat fence now ' impales your noble dead, no sweet flower | ! blossoms oil the grave of your "little All- i j nie." And the marble blocks reared to 1 the memory of your ancestors have boon | broken down, white your hearts are bro ken nitrtr. and you weep over tho graves ! of the depaitcd You behold ( o,< did th<■ j • citizens n/ I 'liaiidiCi-iliiiri/} your house in ll unes. <)h the barbarians! Great heavens!! The barns mi fire !!! What ] shuH Ido ." Repent of your sins.believe ! in this Union, suppoit this government, j l vote for Abraham Liucoln and thou shall j jbo saved. The picture is uot colored, J ' these calamities have befallen your broth-' ren and may soon befall you. To guard your h mie .tr 111 such barb r!-tn, Abraham 1 Lincoln declared to tlieni, that thev | | -'should be | rateeted in all their rights j under the Constitution," that they "could | i have no war, unless they were themselves 1 the aggn >rs;" but they became the ag- I grissors. Since that, ho has enlisted sol- I dicr-. called for volunteers, called for mil | itia, drafted men, built ships of war, do claio 1 a blockade, proclaimed freedom to ; slaves, paid bounty to Volunteers, armed j the negro, fortified our cities and guarded | our rivers, all to defend you from snch j barbarism, and restore the peace and hap pness of this Union. He is now after those rebels, ho has just chased tlieni ■ through Wiuchcsfor and Atlanta and ! your brave sons and brothers who have marclie 1 without rations, fought without sleep, rail slept without a covering, blod without a sigh, and died without a groan, now look down from the good soldier's re-t 011 high, and ask your protection for tbeir graves, for the cause and government for which they died. And now in tho I name of humanity, in the name of all | that is near and dear to humanity, in the j name of the God of humanity. I ask of you not to vote against your chief magis trate and his noble army, who through perils and sufferings yuu know nut nj\ have defended your lives and property from de struction. your families from misery and 1 want, your altars from desecration, and J the green graves ot your sires from dis j honor. PEACE. I wonder if any of you men have lived ] in a land of snoke3 all the days of your J life, and don't know that when a Copper -1 head cries peace, 110 means to bite you. — j L have often spoken to you in times gone | by, and many of you are sorry you did not ii -ten to my warnings, but to-day remeui j bcr I tell you this cry for peace means secession, means a division of the United States. The Copperheads see this rebel lion nearly run down, they sympathize, with it. they think if they cdipnot fight | for it, they can stand back hero and call | the dogs of war away'. Where does this cry of peace come Irjm? Docs it come f.otn those who desire to see this Union ! p cserved, and this Government perpetua -1 tod ? Does it come from those who are fighting for its preservation ? No! It j c nuts from such men as Pendleton, who I always voted against coercion, and such ; Democrats as voted to rob the -soldier of j his right of suffrage. We have 30,000 | prisoners to-day. in Georgia, suffering all that humanity tun suffer, offer them a re j lease if they will sign the Chicago Plat ■ form, and tlicy will tell you like true sol diers. that they will die first. President Liueoln. the Republican par ty, and the soldiers, arc ail for peace, aud lieve been from the beginning; every I time the soldier goes 11 fire his musket, | he cries '-peace," if the Johnny's come ! over, lays down ther niuskct, swear to suj>- I port this Government, and be loyal, he is ' sent as far doi-ili as Philadelphia, and goes on his way rojoiciug in peaeo and freedom from the draft—but if 110 body comes over, the soldier fires again; this is the peace we demand : - Obedience to the Constitution and laws of the United States," but the peace of the Chicago Platform aud its appoloi/i~er. G. B. Mc- Clellan, i.s first, a ceeessation of hostilities, second, a withdrawal of our army; third, a raising ot our blockade; fourth.- disar ming of 100.000 of ourwtldiers. and their delivery to the enemy; fifth, a strength ening of the rebel army, of their firts 1 and fleets, a replenishing of their Com missnries and Arsenals, and tlica the I haughty baud of treason, will show you i the boundary of the -Confederate States of America." But there is a man over I there, who ought to wear gray clothes, 112 says to me : Nixon, don't you tliink if wo would declare a cessation of hostili ties. and tee Pemncratt would go down to Chhrle-tmi and commence where we left off in 1860, take off our hat*, get down upon ourkuees and say to our friends of the south : "We lost Hull Hun" and now we arc willing t > vote for the Breckcu ridge I'latt'Um. and say that a "territorial Legislature had no power to exclude sla very from a territary," that we would dis arm their slaves and tend them back..re establish slavery in the District of Co lumbia, rc-cnact the Fugitive Slave Law. r.-peiil the Confiscation Act. Don't you think if we would do this, nud ask them t i receive us back iato the Democratic party, they would do it ? Well I think they would not. Hut suppose they woul 1. the next question would be. who do you propose for president ? Yjm say M'Clel lan. they say Jeff Davis. The liextquci tion is, what will you call it ? You say I'nion. they say Confederate. Well you will compromise we know that. 'J hey say if we give you M'Clellan, you must 1 give us the name ; you say we have 11I : ways been for the Union, we can't call it '."confederate'' so you ta-c Union and j Jeff, such is your peace, such your com | promise. Then why in the nnmn of com | 111011 honesty—you miserrble sneaking I Copperheacs don't you vote for Jeff. Da vis noir. But thy mill tell yon, you talk like a : crazy man. What goo I will y air Hreck- ! | enridge platform do us where slavery is j 1 disorganized, the territories free and sla- ] very abolished in Missouri. What good , | will slavery do in the District ol Coluin- I l>ia with Virginia and Maryland free. ' '1 M what use a fugitive slave law. while j you prui/ lorthe oppressand what can ! j we dr. with an Abolition soldier as a I j slave. Once we fought for slavery, but I j now it is dead, wo have no hope in union j with you. we de.-ive none. To talk to the ! 1 /,ii /<•)•.« of this rebellion about peace, it is | o ,ly to exasperate them, tlioy remember | the sweet peace they once bad and the ] j guarantees of property, but now all is gone. Hi- looks upon his once happy j family, brought down from oppulcnce and j pride to want and misery, ho looks upoti j j lii< ruined estate, his d .vastatel fields and 1 with the energy ot dispair he resolves "to j | swim 'ln-' scant' slaughter ors.nk beneath j ; iho wave, you ran not compromise with ! these arch traitors. I ike rebel angels j j they have lost a heaven and only sock to | in hell. Hut there are a class with j whom you can compromise, tlicy had j j nothing to do with this rebellion except 1 they were force 1 to fight its battles. They ' have often told me they had 110 interest ! | in slavery they owned no slaves, they ha j tod both master and slave, they don't j | like the society in which they have been j j raised because it don't like them. They 1 will tell you that when they goto the | masters house, its not " good morning j pool man.'' but, he sends his nigger out 1 to meet him at the gate and inquires what he wants. These men with few excep tions can't read, they know nothing ex .coptthat its "a right smart distance over there a clover ways" and have no idea I about this war except that they will toll you " we don't think youu's all ought to come away down here to fight we'eus all. They think that ice rebelled against the [southern Confederacy and come down there for plunder. Many of thcin enlist ed for six months and have now bcou in three years and a half, they would like to [ see the war ended, but there is only two | ways for them to get out of it—one is to i crawl under the ground and the other is, J to crawl into our lines. The former, j Gen. Grant says in a letter the 10th ot August, about a thousand arc doing ev ery day. 'J hey swear to suppoi t tlie gov ernment, are liberated and sent North. We have several regiments in our service composed exclusively of deserters from the rebel amy. llcie is the road topcaco they cannot long stand this deci.nation, support your armies, prosecute the war, declare freedom to their slaves, freedom j io their soldiers and sooti by our example we w ill lie able to declare liberty to the world. Well, but you Democrats think slavery is in the Constitution and you ought to do something for it—.veil now what can you do? Your fathers thought they would do something—they took the powder of slavery and the lighted match i of freedom aud they put them into the Union gun, the powder exploded anu tiie gun burst, we are now gathering up the pieces you want to put slavery back in again, hut when you come to look for ii j you can t find it. '1 he fact is slavery has been a thorn in the body politic of this nation since its formation, the body has gone through all the stage* of .nflama- Hon. it is now festered arid Abraham Lin coln who is sworn to preserve protect and defend the body, has declared it neces sary to preserve the body, that the thorn bo taken out, and here history dates tl.c natural and painful death of American 1 Slavery, and every Union man thanks j God. This institution has marred our peace and happiness ever since the for- ' mation of the government, we look Hit- j ward with bright hopes, for we know of J no subject, so aggravating that could ever | arise again to divide us. Heing one peo- j pie. speaking one language, inhabit ng one ! country aud having a common history, in j the deal 1. 1 of slavery there remains uo longer anything to distract or divide us, and in the bonds of liberty and union wo rejoice in the prospect ol eternal perpet uity and vigor. Hut cowardiy spirits im patient tor immortal disgrace still cry, peace! peace! Who ever heard before of a man when he had his antagoiiistd down and was about to give him the death blow, cry peace, it is not natural, the fact i.s the cry comes from some friend of the man Jeff who is down. It reminds me of the erue. mother out west, she had five j sons and a pet bear, the boys quarreled about the bear, the bear got loose aud j killod two of the boys, the other three to j protect themselves and avenge their broth- j ers death fought desperately with the j bear, at last they got him down, one stood j over him with an ax and was about to in-! flict the death blow, the cruel mother had been looking on all the while, saw her two sons killed without saying a word. j but now she comes out, ■'duut strike:'! "peace," "an immediate cessation of hostilities" its my bear" rajsed in the fam-1 ily" protected under the Constitution." | So with the Democracy, they have | looked on during tiiis struggle and have j a :cn the bear murder K'o,ooo of tbeir , brethren, but now when they see the bnre-miked boast of slavery down the ax of death uplifted they rush out, "peace," "immediate cessation of hostilities" "it is uiy beast, and never should have been interfered with if it did kill the boys, they were to blatue, it shall uot be hurt, it was raised in the family and is entitled to protection." The moral is which will you do, tAe the part of the cruel mother and help the be* st or will you help bleed ing suffering Immunity. Do you wish another family circle formed including the beast which has murdered your brethren, or will you vote for " Union and liberty." The in epressible conflict is upon you, you are called upon to bear your share in the great work in preserving this Union from destruction by the bare naked beast of slavery; of prcsorv ngita home for Liber ty of speech liberty of the press, a home | lor Bibles, for Christianity and the op- I pressed of every land. If it were possi , lile lor you to shrink from so noble a dntv j I acaco" "eessn- I lion id hostilities" "bring hack your ar j in es" "evacuate your positions" and yet 'those men who thus seek to pave the way j tor the overthrow of this nation, pretend |to be / iiinii men. They remind uie ol (Jen. Miles in September iMiJ, he was left to defend Harpers Ferry, he destroy e+his large guns on Maryland Heights, and evacuated that position a thousand foot above the ferry an Iso steep you | might throw •hand grenades all the way ■ down, with his eight thousi.nl men, he | e >uld have held the ferry against Jujiitir, but just as the Copperheads now propose, ! he left the heights came dywn into the I valley of hum. liation. Jackson occupied ! iho heights tin I Miles cried - peace." j Miles died by t'"e terry, and you may die J ! y this I'liiou bui you can never hold it, I il you evacuate tlio position that com mands it. (len. Met'lellan may tell usto | evacuate the heights, as perhaps he told Miles, but we as citizens hivetuoie privi : lege than ;is soldiery—not a private sold j ier but knew it was the loss id' th * firry to give up flie bright*, but soldiers have ; to obey orders, but to-day we say, Mr. Mc j t.'lelhin we tried your plan unco, now we j intend to stand fiy the l'ruidvnt —hold ! the Ucujhti —li ild ih ; ! ll ion, and you may j g i to'l icii on N.J. This isthesoldierstr , ! w ill you say to these men who have toiled lor three years and borne their tattered 1 flags over a hundred buttle fields from ; Williamsburg to the heights of l'eters j burg, that they shall evacuate and com ! promise the honor and existanceof the nation lor a peace of an hour T/iry are I the men who know the value of whit ! they have gained. They are the men who | have suffered, they are the men who have felt the hand ol oppression (lor to be a soldier i- to he a slave,no Habeas Corpus there ) They are the men who have ; inurelinl while you have shjit, /ow/hl while you have i/renmril ught as they thought and the desertions daily from ihe Coppcihead party, arc nearly cq iul ,o the desertions nolo ihe rebel army ; and more encoura ging 11 the friends of this Union. Let us learn "to labor and to wait." 1 prac tically appeal to the young men o" our country, to be faithful, I aui not uumind tuf how they have responded to my call, fought aud bled for their country, while tiieir fathers remained worshipers of early piejudices, thc.-e old men one by one win die and be lorgo:ten, I hope forever, for I never would wish their children to be taun.ed as were the deceudants of the j tor es id the revolution. hat man over j there wonid think very hard if I would J tell him he shot his own.son, fdo not be lieve lie would do such a thing, and yet I tell him before God by his vote he en couraged a rebel todo it. In this war brothers are often arrayed against brothers. In the spring of'o3, I stood picket on the Itappahanock. One day a rebel Soldier came over on a raft to trade sonic tobacco. 1 told him I didn't use the weed, but he drank some coffee wiili us, and I expected as did his com rades on the opp site shore that he was going back, but presently he said, "I have been fighting over (here for two years, I have nothing over my brothers live in Indiana, if you have no objections 1 believe 1 will not go back." I sent him with a sentinel to Head Quarters. As lie went up the hill, I expected the rebels would fire and I told ourboystobc ready. When he got started •> piece they hallow ed, "John, where are you going." ' Go iug to see my brother," he said. "I al ways thought you were a d d abolition ist," and that was all there was of it.— Now believe me that man wa3 a good sol dier, he had the manly appearance and beariug of a soldier. He had fought with these men through Williamsburg, Han over, Malvern Ilill and AnfLetam, aud, although he had no interest with them, yet 1 could sec in that man's countenance, that while those old comrades iu battle stood oti the other shore, it was wounding to his pride to lcavo them. So it is with uiany noble dcmocratcs we have among us. their sons or their brothers are over on this side, awyiy down in Virginia or Geor gia. fighting to maintain this government, but they have been fighting on the other side tor twenty years, and to-day, although they have no inteiest there, aud feel in their heart that they are wrong, yet they caimot wound their pride so much as. to come over. 1 would say in all kindness, if like this man they had lived a soldier's life lor twoyearsit might lielptheirpride. Hut let me say to you today, you know you are wrong. 1 ask you kindly to como over, I don't want any of your democracy. I don't use the weed. But you have been drinking of the bitter waters of re bellion for four years, come and drink of the waters of Constitution and Liberty You know that you are wrong, and the sooner you swim the Hnppahuuuock th ,t separates you froinyuur sons and brothers, the sooner you will have a clear con science. When the Democracy halloo. "Where are you going ?" tell them you have a wounded son or au affectionate brother over on this side and you are go ing to see them. They may tell you that fliev always thought you were an Aboli tionist, arid that will be all there will be of it 'I hey won't lire on you. for we stand on this side ready to tiro back.— "The bravest deed over a man done was to acknowledge that he was wrong." 1 am pleased to see that you still con tinue to build churches,unlill they are al most on every hillside. 1 love to see it. (fnly sec to it tint you vote as you pray. 1 wouldn't give more than thirty pieces ol silver for that man's religion, who can taste treason in thesaeranicntal tnip. And what are you worth as a christian, to your country, if you votuwiih Hie New Yi»rk rioters and Richmond rebels. We are told that religion and politics must be kept separate. Yes, we have no r glit to a-k what church Abraham Lincoln b'dongs, but if we suspect his loyalty, and know that he was nominated by such traitors as Valandighan.i, was cheered by the rebel army and the New York rioters, it would bo our duty to ask what denomination we belonged to, what was our profe-sii n. and whether our religion would permit us to vote for liiln. 1 like to f-ee consistency. The heath en. when they go away from the temple, or wherever they go, have a small god in their pocket. I want to see men who prolesi lo believe in Christ, to cilrry him along to the election. A i one who lias labored eight years for the salvation of this country, I take this opportunity to return ihe thanks of the country to the ministers of the Christian church. They ! have been her right hand men in this great struggle for national existence and uationtl liberty. I have found tuem al ways with us. iu the church, in tho elec tion. in the battle and in the hospital. 1 know I speak the truth when I say that Abraham Lincoln owes hisclection to the spirit of Christianity in our country, and as every act of his administration coin ports with a pure Christianity. T have reason to believe lie will receive the -tune support from tho Christa'n churches. I am aware that in the first of tli's war do" ; Davis fousht to protect slavery, and Abra- I ham Lincoln, fought that no person should touch it. But that policy has long since been changed, and his emancipation proc lamation is before yon for approval or dis approval. We have iu it a guarantee for ourfuture peace and prosperity, something worthy of the great crisis through which we have passed, and above all our country yet remains. Let us protect and defend it. This war has been no war for con quest, for every battle has been fought on our own soil. It has been no war for persecution, for the enemy have been wel come at all times to come and share the blessings of liberty with us. CONCMTRION. Tn conclusion, I again appeal to you to stand by your brothers in arms, do not say to the enemy surrounded by your brethren, that lie need riot surrender. Do not tell the enemy they can have the gunboat Naslivi le, Or the gunboat Slavery. No man ear. believe you are in favor of this I"11ion, when you are opposed to fighting for it. \'on fight your neigh bor for twenty years for a strip of land the breadth of your biic", but. more honorably you cm light your enemies, mi l get a clear deed for the breadth of your bacjf down in A irgin ia. 1 have told you slavery was the hinge of this rebellion, we must cut the hinge before it will drop, it isa::d always has been a military • eees-ity. He hail no success until after the Emancipation 1 reclamation, Slav ery is the horn which has goaded you from one compromise to another, and finally goaded eleven States out of this Union. You can have no' peace until you destroy the horn. They tell their slaves you have lived on black meat, but the fact is they have clothed ond fed th tnselves with black meat ull their lives. You must not allow them *o return to their canni balism but learn, them to live by the sweat of their bpow and then you can live with them in peace, llad sla very not existed you could have had no rebellion. Had we no rebellion we could have no war. Already sla very has taken your first born, and draped :very house in mourning, and again I say. Let them go! Let them go !! I have told you, compromise with traitors is treason and under the c«fc* cumstances cowardice is no name for it. You remember in refused to compromise' but now Stephen A Douglas is dead and you would go back, to Ccarleston and tell them they fired *he first shot, they might fire the last for you would lir;?nomoro. ! You would hold onto the broken bri dle but let the horse go. We say mend the bridle—it was slavery broke it, kill the monster, harness up anew, drive on with our tuirty-fonr horses and this grand chariot of universal fret'ilom, and let crowns and kings, thrones and despots tremble as we pass. Will you with McClellan cry "cease firing" or will you with your President say, no compromise with trai.orsif Will you with McClellan and Miles evacuate the heights or will you with Abraham Lincoln, Grant Sherman and Sheridan hold the height hold the ferry, hold the Union, hold the free Government of your fathers and the respect of thecivilized world. The prospect is glorious, flis prodigal son that left his fathers house, has spent his fortune in r otilig'urul rebel lion. lie has lost his territory he has lost his slaves, he has last his \ ieksburg, his Port Hudson, his Mis sissippi. Ins i'ort Morgan and his At lanta. lie has lost his cottin, his corn, and his salt and soon nak dnnd starving, he will be coming back, then wu will go out and meet liitu and cry " po ce" then we will kill the fat ted calf, and there will be joy in the land, us was never known be tore. My Democratic fi4eiids swim the river of your party prejudice which aeperatts you from your coun try. Co tile over and rejoice with your wounded brother on that great day. Come out to the election, yon have given the soldier » vote, come and vote with him. You can form a line of battle here a thousand miles from danger, and give them a support, that will cheer their hearts until they will shout for joy, will you do this, or will you vote so that the cheer shall go in hell-born shout from the ranks of the enemies? Come out to the election, you pro fess to believe in the Bible, fetch it along, if you can't find a ticket put the go d book in tin; ballot box, ev ery line of it is for Abraham and the Union, no compromise with rebel an gels, but a reward to the faithful. " Peace on earth, good w ill towards men." Come out to the election, you have the best Government on earth help your Chief Magistrate to pre serve it. Are you in favor of this Union, vote for Abraham who is fight ing for it every day. Are you in fa vor of peace then vote to conquer the enemies of your country. I>o you v'ish to live an honorable life and die an honorable death, then vote to j preserve the honor of your nation. ! THE AMERICAN CITIZEN. 3=--========. .. ■: ■■■ i- " ■" I Sutler, Pa., Wednesday, Oct. 12,1864 T V" \ c j \ v | to tlif> AVEMCN CITIJU:* Printing Oflloo in the Southern ,F.-f.er- .it vtrvvt. ! THE ELECTION CI I ■ 4s# I j Till-; KJ.K TIOX <>. K. IN OHIO. INDIANA, AND PKNN'SVI»VANIA. The Election. The election passed iff quietly, so far as we have heard. The returns are in complete, but sufficient is received to war rent us in saying that the county has been | carried by the I'nion party on tlin h'tnu ! vote. How the majorities will bo swelled when the soldier - are board from, all can imagine. The following are the returns as far a« heard from. Democratic majorities: Mercer. -! ; Butler, 42; Summit, I'll; Clearfield. 11 e surprised if ho had seen ttio capitol of the, so called Confederacy, for the lust time. Richmond must mrnn faH. Every , where the skies are brightening —peace and plenty will soon bless us once more. The Fair. Soon afterthc Agricultural Society had determined to hold a Fair, it became evi dent that there was an entire want of con fidence iu the possibility of the Society ; succeeding. This impression was harder to evcrcouie than anythingelsc ; notwith standing this discouraging feature, the Fair was by no means a failure—quite a variety of stock of all kinds was on hand, iia also agricultural and other The ladies too, done their part —their needle work, their floral collections Ac., a bled greatly to the beauty and interest of the occasion. The weather Was beau tiful and the attendance Wn« eotresnpn* dingly large, every thing p»ss«d off pleas antly. Now that it has been dettoestra ted that a fair can begot up, nbder even discouraging circumstances, let all muko up their minds that wo will hate a good Fair next season. ttsiF At a Democratic meeting held i'i» the Court House on Wednesday evening lust, two New York speaker* we A' prct* out —the name of foreign SJXHJMMS had brought out a resectable meet into; —how they were disappointed I One speaker took his sent after speaking a few liMHutei? —could not speak audibly, think he -»nid Something abuut a flow of blood to iVic head, the second speech was rather a tuinu affair so far as wo heard it—not thinking it time well S] ent we did not. stay to hear lii in through. We xyuipa h zed with tlie officers of the meeting, who must liuvo li'lt essentially luiared by the performance. Wc afterwards learned that one of tho speakers produced our paper of Inst week, and read ihe article in reference to Major M'Daughliu—saying that it vt< ulddothein a vast amount of good. That's an old game with them, and pretty well played' out. Kvery meeting wo had last fall was said to make them votes' it Was in ibis way that our majority for Curl in was cut r/oirn to 15.0U0! (Jen. Lee was much obliged for having his army cut to pieces |at Spottsylvauia and driven back to j Richmond—his base was so much nigher! • -till we think he would as leave have staid j at the former plaro: irrital siiui Itcpartiircuf MnlU. | Tim nrdlfrom flutter to Hint Hand?. l-v way of lloly. <-ke. 'Awrtiih Mnrrirtfcvllle and ''l'lit »n --vltlc. fVI mile*; Un«t»* llutler on and Friday < 112 ' i-ru-li week. at ft o'i-fc«r!t, io I*, ret«vrn» <-o Tee* lav nnit ' H ititrday of Hfw>, w»i kiti 1 oVjorli. p. in.. Tin- mall from Rirtf-r to Pro** VfomlN. 1-y way of ! P'lX'inltnrjc. HnrTer*vlH>i FT»eport, Phearev'afriwa Rondft, Mr|, tiit/hUn':* re and OnMHml ff »K Cr niUm; If tv- - Midler •>* Twrnbiy nail of •• .«-ti week, n' ,•*• <' •••k.m : refnrm i4> Frwtovy itt*l Vfontfcity it titi lt « at «»'< I >«~k 112». n*. j Tin* nnl! fl*"w ijrrtMi-tn tr mv t t M<»itnt • ('|ii*mint, I'nrtmivilh* ttrifl '•tor*. 2H tuilnii; l»"i\ ITuiloror* nn4 TTinroddf of Mtnh wf k. Nt j • M. |.,tk • »»»: Mtirt'im - » itral brt Uv of Moh %vc» k, nt * r. m.- I The iii u'l front >».► f>r way < N>w Itrfflrfon.. hy wtty > 112 ro -lu»r»?. Airk inMifi'fCtl tr(p< 1 I'.ntlcron «wli W h, t»i 7 «*Vl«jck. n. »n.: re- I urn«« on Tint »-Ht«-i|, nl ' lo r lTk.|,.m. Tim nwil from \T*ii>, Itf-f Hi'r.'f' n , J I : ; , ry-Hoek. North l«U»#-rty. lx»tMll*tl nn»l llnlm. .'ft! /tiitlrr tmv «tny. Fnihl'ty mcc|»- twl, nr I f»V|iM Xp m : mtnrtm f#y tli»- «tine ron'f»». evory n«. wnv »112 Coylrt , v"II ■. VVorthinKtMn, Kittnnnin-.'. met Hholnrtn, ! ! ml'- : W ••/» K'atl.-rom fT or *?**/- myA Tlmrwlnv of onrlt j \v«s 4 k, I •> plop it. n. in.: return* o»TM»«Jny Jtn-I Fridar of e irb «>4, ; o » ft. W p. m. I Thf nnil from flutter to fTo*'l*fo*rn. f\ mi7P« t'»n»»«* I i; .vt•♦..tmrm 1- .Hv n»>rivin*'>f rarti «r«.«-k. arn»«M. at I'.ntl." in tK«- rTen n.n ; ilfpnrt* H.r R<»r«l«town HIUIIH day j after the mrtT.iJ of the IKlilfhtm Pltt«liur|!lk • i < >-. »i|. \ KEfCfSQ 112 J,' J -t-ito.l mef tiVicwnt tlm tflnlt. on ytreef, ytreef, Hufiri fVtnrn. f*cry Nixo'rlork. from +tt«r Is»Ik<» ;«r re«pretfnl- Iv tnvltml tnMteivl. Uv order of tfi* X. (J. I n AY. >!.—ltwtter Lodge, No. J72. A. Y. M. ImDU « A if- U"*lnrfP[iic. , Hii»dtf'»H Krtlnw* llilf. on ' M tin !rtre«». lintU-r Fn on- tlm fir-* \Vftdnft*< j / "112 irtrfi rnoiifft. Hrrtlirift from Ai*t*r- I ' 112 \ iovitv.l ti»nttviiMt c t'M. Add r «—« .» \ mkß s nr Tf.Kn. •»<»r.«m>'A^t-«t r 4C7. Rr*» wJj»»w y»rv York. ' Joly 2T» Vf' -fc-Jiuio. Erfltar* ''Ul/eni 1 etr s*ti. —VFitli v.it f wf-h to my t»» 11:tfidrr-t of y.mr p'fut that ! «HI »»en l. hy refnrr* , rn id. to nl. * h vri-»h if free . .-t fieeefpp; \»tifi dlree j ti"n«« r>r Kwkj'nf'iwlu*in( ;» »itnyiv lt ilm» I tint triff »»flf »tinflv reniofw. in- ton A»y», I'itnple*. i I'd .tr'm<. Ttm Fun'klan,»nd >tll ftuy»nitrtr* of the .*k)ii* !...v:nir thf suite « ft. clewr. •month >rrel homffifrtl. I v\ik| nui' 0«•*» u» iMTjrijc i; ri4 H»-wK.or ; rtfir*' Fr»rr«. •irnplc diveefi n« nn«l inf'rmoflon thrtf will entitle them n*r?.a fott Lirxurtanl Hair, ; W!. kern r;» i or three ~ Itnrho," "To nic Hltt«'r#».'' - S»ao ipai ilia, M NervoiM AnUtlotoe." Ait*.. At . Ar.. and aftor v<>»i are «»ti4lfd with the reodt. I t!;•?n try .n.'U.x t »Lbl>KTi>K Itl t UAN S hNGhlHll ! HI'JX IFIC IlLl.Sl—and he re««tor<-d to health and ri«or j in le^than thirty dary». They aro puroLy ! pl»-i-:it»t to take, prompt and Mil?)(.'try in tlWr efTert* I oi> ihe hr-ikeivdoirn ittwi «hatt«rwf luiwlitltlun. Chi and young mi take them with advantage. Imported , aud iu tU« United *'*?«« "wlv Uy J AS. a. BCTLKTI. N«. -IJT Hri»a/l*ay Sew York. July 27,1 W4::3in«i. U&"Agent f»r the |'nitol Uwcount*, 2f.194.00 I nited Btate< bond*. M.OO.smd and ).134,4A : Ihie from Dnnka and Banker*, 16,4^7,14 ItilU > 112 (Lit iiaok on band 11,72 A, hill* "112 and National l>auk« on hind,... 'JnOl Hmikinu Uuiw. 2,57H.'iJ Furniture am! Fixture# 4(J»5,80 Current Kmhwo', 1047.'Jq laxui piuu C'. a. U4,6^W. 112 Capital Stock, fiO.OUO Circulating Not« r 40.'KK) Due Dep. rtt tun, fi2.JOU.4d Jointing*, 2,5111,73 i*rv>ti;auti Luju 100, 00 1»4..H20,18 I hereby certify that the above in a truo abstract from thu See- nd Quarterly Report made to tlie Comptroller of the Currency, to Oct. 3, lst>4. I. J.CUMMrNtig, CaaUior, Oct, 5,1864. ~ LOST! ON findi r will he liberally rewarded by louving tt at tiio flcoof the Am< rjenn Cltteeo-rn-th«."nit»?trriiHT. 7. !*4c:3»* M SIIIRV