Zl4. *raid. CARLISLE, PA. Friday, Aug. 28, 1863. S. DI. PETTENIGIIIIL & NO. 37 Park Row, New York, and 6 State Bt. 'Boston, ore our Agents for the llEnAtro in thosucities and are authorized to take Advertise ments and Sut',seriptions for . nt otir losvest rotes. UNION NOMINATIONS FOR GOVERNOR, ANDREW G• CURTIN, OF CENTNE COUNTY FOR JUDGE OF TUE SUPREME COURT, DANIEL AGNEW, OF BEAVER COUNTY Union County Convention The loyal citizens of Cumberland county, without distinction of party, who desire cor dially to unite in sustaining the National and State Administrations in their patriotic ef forts to supress a sectional and unholy re bellion aghinst the unity of the Republic, and who desire to ;-upport by every Tortn of the Gov.rument our heroic brethren in arms, who aro braving disease and perils of the field to preserve the Union of our fathers, are requested to assemble at the usual places of holding &legate elections in the respective Wards, Boroughs and districts throughout the County. OIL Sat urday. September sth, 1863 In the Boroughs between the hcurs of 7 and 9 o'clock, \l, and in all the other Dis tricts between the hours of 3 and 6 o'clock, P. M. and e ect two delegates from each Ward, Borough and Township to meet in County Convention, at CAI:LISLE, in the Courtllouse,on Moinlay, September 711 i, 1863, nt 11 o'clock, A. M.,•for the purpose at pine i»g in notni atter] a County Ticket to be sup ported the cic..noc , October eltiction. • Tili6l.lS PAXTON, Chairmmt cub re Committee 1.01;6R I I,SO>:, Set ichli'y UNION MEETING In put stain ce ul pre,. ions notice, a large assembly of Unitin men (rem all partsof the county united in a poldi . j meeting at the Court House, in tiiis on Monday evening last. ler the purl se of expressing their views on the emidition of our beloved country, and the duties of all loyal voters in the trying cirenim,tanees to which she has been reduced by tre t tson and rebellion. The meeting w..s organized by ilia ap pointment of Prof. I). Denlinger, of White Hall Academy, as Presideut ; Capt. Steward .21.IeGowcu, ulatuaroe, C01..W, Woodburu, of Newvi le, °welt J;ttnea, of New Cumber land, Vice Presidents; 13,!.d. L. Kauffman, of Mechanicsburg, ana..l). LIENDEasos, of Ship penshurg, as Secretaries. The meeting was of by a stirring ad dress from Captain Ito', o IlurenixsoN, one of the heroes of Gettysburg, in which occa sion was taken to speak of the fire in the rear of nor armies from trtasunable batteries in the North, insane l by teen who are more intent to pri7l:7llg the war, and aid the rebel lion, than they are to sustain the Govern ment in its efforts to put it down and thus secure a lasting peace. Captain 141 rt lllS sox was followed by D. W. THRUST!, of Ship pensburg, Hull. Len rem. TODD, aLd Rev. JosEra A. Ross, in a general review of the evils brought upon the nation by .unprinci, pled party leaders, and in urgent appeals to the people forget party associations in this the..day...s.)l.themaiiunisper.l,..and_in the-cum_ log State election to bestow their suff-ages upon those, and only those, who will cordi ally unite with the authutities of the nation in giving the finishing blow to,,the rebellion. No formal resolutions were passed, but from the responses to the remarks of the several speakers, it was quite clear that ANDREW G. CURTIN, and DANT. AG NEW, the nominees of the Pittsburg Con vention, will receive the undivided vote of the party that is for the Union.— American. PI ye TaArrous.—Out of 'one hundred and fifty five votes cast ou the bill fur paying the soldiers in the field, in the House of the Rep resentatives, the following were the only "nays:"—Clement L. Vallandigham, of Ohio, the Copperhead candidate for Governor of Ohio. Benjamin Wood, of New York, re elected Representative to Congress on the Copperhead ticket. 11. C. Burnett, of Ken Lucky, expelled from the House of Represen tatives for treason, now in the rebel army.— Elijah H. Norton, of Missouri, who ran away from his home, and is now in the rebel army. John W. Reid, 111.issouri. expelled from the House of ltepreentatives for treason, and now, or lately, in the rebel' arm* With these facts known and read of all men, how can any citizen mivocale the election of a Copperhead anywhere, onto any position? Is not any man who does advocate such an election a "bird" of the same "fainter" as these five traitors? jaPW-WoonwAito, the copperhead candidate for Governor, took con , ,Olerablo part in the debate of the Constitutional Convention of 1837, and made his mart especially in his earnest efforts to disfratichin all foreigners in Pennsylvania. lie made ono of his ablest speeches in favor of incorporating the denial of suffrage to foreignere into odr organic law, but he failed, so that, the Irish and Germans Who vote for hire in October can do so with the satisfactory assurance that if Woodward had succeeded in his efforts to amend our Constitution they would now be without even the right to vote at all, for Woodward or any body else! So also, with the disfranchised soldiers.— Having failed in this first attempt to rob-a portion of our citizens of their votes he essays the same thing against our bravo volunteers; and succeeds in their absence in stealing one of their dettrestrights from them. Oh valiant copperhead. te m LET IT BE remembered that this wick edrobellion would have been crushed out at least eighteen months ago, and neither the first norette second draft would have been neoessitry, if it had not been for the aid given to the rebels by their Northern sympathizers and supporters. Those who are now most loud in denunciation of the conscription are alone responsible 'for its enactment. The conscription law is an effect, not a cause. TIIE FLOWERS OF CUBA.—Cuba produces, in a wild state, a thousand odorous and rare ilowers;Aelightful to the senses, but Bryan's Pulmonio Wafers impart to, your voice, lungs Roil throat, a, syveotni;ss and. perfectiOn that the flowers of Cuba cannot' surpass. .9,g14 by 5. Elliott 25 cents a box. Primary Meetings--Delegate Eleo- tions. On Saturday of next week primary meet ings for the election of delegates to tke coual ty convention to occur on the fellowihg day, will be held. We Wish to imiiress'as forcibly as words can, the iinportittiteof these elections. Th 6 careless inattention with which loyal men in this county are ac customed to treat the selection of delegates has been the prolific cause of many a defeat of our party. Two or three men in the inte rest of some aspirant for a county office usu ally meet together on these occasions and elect one of their number whose primary object at the meeting of the convention is to see to the nomination of his man, and then his businedis practically finished• If his man is not placed on the ticket he goes home grumbling at the men who made a differetit selection; thinks the ticket a weak cne, hard ly entitled to his support, and certainly not worth his active exertions. To this cause alone can be traced many a defeat, and the consequent predominance of disloyal copperheadism in our county. There is no more doubt that we have inherent in us the strength to place Cumberland county un waveringly on the right side, than there is that our side is the right one. The . way to do this is for every man who feels that the rebellion is a monstrous wrong which must be put down, and that the present loyal un ion party is the only one that is disposed to put it down, to give the cause his earnest and honest work now and always. Commence at once ; see who in your township are by their prudence and integrity best fitted to take part in the convention. Send these men whether they want to come or not. We shall then have a ticket which shall challenge the respect of our opponents and deserve the support of every good citizen. Their ticket is certain to be composed of copperhead de mtwogues whose lust for the perquisites of Alec has driven that patty into open opposi tion of the government and at least a qmrsi support of Jeff I tavi : rebellion. Woodward, their figure-bead, is the eirtbotlimuut of these iinpuhLys, ilia! his parasites heft-are sure - to tie of the same feather. 'ls tvl their bfeat the plain duly of every patri it? It eau be compli,lied by li.ttieuf, unremitting, labor.— I) this awl we shall suceseil as we will de serve to. Neglect it, and illeVitllblC defeat will place our county in unmistakable sympathy with slaveholders' rebellion. Woodwardians in Council pi._Tuesdayevel ? in g ,last,, the fa iends of Judge Woodward assembled in the Court House and held what they called a large and respectable Democratic meeting—surely it was large, for was'itt mir town full of York County drafted MC 11 ; surely it was respecta ble, for didn ' t George Sanderson come all the way front Lane tster to. 'sake it mpes/fowl bill respectable? But in the name of the ley al Democracy of old .Mother Cumberland, we protest against its being called a Democratic meeting. Loyal Democraey repudiates every sentiment that wou'd advance party at the sacrifice of country. And cries out Gel help us and our Institutions it such men as those who addressed that meeting, are to be regard ed as expounders of those doctrines which were am forth by the author of the Declara tion of independence, and triumphantly car rim] through-two CS - flllokig us - by the old Ileum of New Orleans. .No, indeed, Mr MeDewel Sharpe and Mr Goof ge Sanderson, ilic , e son tiatmut s.. and. al our i 11438 —0 f -y()Ur B._.which • Ilro. Democratic Heroes of Murfreeshoro and Vicks• burg havezo often branded as copperheadism are different, far different from the Democracy of Jackson and Jeffers( n— the one nt best would go no further than to gently chastise treason with a cat o' nine tails made out of " olive branches"—the other would have gone to the very end of the rope and have hung it. Save a sentence now and then interpolated in' hypocritical earnestness of dechimation about " the Union es it was and the Consti• tution as it is," we venture to say there was not a word uttered which would not have made the Halls of the Confederate Capitol ring with applause. And the hypocrisy of these few sentences, (strangers in a strange land) was so transparent that Davis himself would have shaken hig sides with laughter to have heard his minions thus " playing off" Union ism with such intensely straight faces The farceshould indeed have been transferred from Pennsylvania to Virginia soil with the sym pathetic purpose of relaxing the "facial" mus• cles of the Confederate Cabinet, which have lately been made so painfully rigid by such battles as those of Vicksburg and Gettysburg. After , the usual preliminary organization came a speech by J. McDowell Sharpe. Poor Mc! Ile started out in this world with rea sonably fair prospects, but we fear, that this raging anti•adininistration fever which is now preying upon his brain will be his death.— Ills speech was a skilful tissue of sophistry abounding in mistatements of facts and fal lacious deductions. Listen to hint. Ile said " This War will never, call never be success fully carried on under the radical measures of the present administration;—until its policy was changed we met with nuvariod success." Were the battles of Helena, of Gettysburg and Vicksburg fought under what he calls the former purpose of the administration, or under what he calls its present '' radicql" 'measures. Mr Sharpe, the truth is, you know as we all know that the prospects for an utter euppres sion of this rebellion never were so bright as they are at this hour , Next came George Sanderson of Lancaster. We all know how bitterly he has opposed this War from, its beginning; aye * , how he op posed it long before, as he-says he says, Pres ident Lincoln changed it from a war for the restoration of the Union to an Abolition Cru sods. Mr. Sanderson was full of the " nig ger." his brain seemed to be loaded down with frightful phantasmagoria) of niggers on an equality, of whites enslaved, and Rebels wronged. , " We-pity-him. We have Been in our own midst how this terrible disease, "Nigger-phobia,'.; und,ermines constitutions, and leavai him, :Ville was ouoo a sound healthy bodied Democrat Of the old Jackson noh6l, a miserable, sickly copperhead.' And then el: (gently and bravely lie charged on Thaddeus 1 . t, f t 0 o p r l a i e re F w - . -- 1, o P hw o o o w h r Thaddeusih.so mustb reputatione( m , yl 7 must e bayonetted noteinisahaiiyid3 asta 14 - this - old copperhead Warrior. At this point the meeting practieally ende(l. %me, Col. 'Penrose was galled upon and ttrae; iit,theit, it was merely a short coat sleeve, a long arm, the buret of a McClellan bubble, and a disappearance. With three sheers for the candidates proposed,sl we' think, hY -Mr. Shapley, this eminently pntriotio meeting ad jiti:ir ATHEISTIC! TENDENCIES. : In accordance with the request of a friend we give the folloWing article from the Evan- Afessenger; a religious paper puhlish ed in-Cleveland,.ohim We commend it to those of our readers who believe that copper head resistance to the governmet.t can be reconciled to the professions of intelligent christianity. The advocates of slavery and apologists for treason, care not how they sustain their cause. If they can press the Bible into their service, and can make it prove slavery right, and treason a virtue, they-are flu m Bible be lievers I If they can make capital out of mercenary preachers, who stoop to defend such iniquities, then they have great faith in an "upright ministry;" but when they dis cover, as they are fast doing, that the Bible is against them, and ministers of the Gospel are therefore on the side of Truth, Justice, and Mercy, then they sneer at the one, and effect a devout horror at carrying politics into the Pulpit. This conflict, they find out, is as much a moral as a physical one, and (hey are aware that they must conquer the Bible, Churches, Schools, Ministers, and everything that is holy, before they can tri umph with their unholy cause. A few months ago, in a lour through In diana and Ohio, Vallandigham denounced the schools and churches, and some say even railroads and telegraphs, as being ii.stru mentalities of Abolitionism, and exhorted his hearers that De/Am - Tray must " c out (ruin among them" and be ye separate."— We admit that the churches of the North are all antislavery, and all loyal, and the ministry, with rare excoptions. the Caine; or if it please the traitor better, we admit that they are all ,tho/itionize,/! But this, if a Mot, is a startling one. The ministry have no reasons to be dishonest in their views of .lavery, for they s(..d: no otliee from tiny po d:16,10 -party. -Can 8:1 as- ni-nelr?- \ nil if ininistiirs and Churches do not nude' :land polities as well ae p diticians do, yet 1 - they are generally supposed to be tolerably ivel - I vers. d in the teachings of the Bible, an 1 that they rise up from their study of the 11i hle and unite iii condemning slavery and trca: on, is a fact worthy 61 the consideration of honest men I Not a Synod, not a Confer ! mice, not a Convention or General Aseembly, that has denounced treason. and its cause. Richard : O'Gorman, a of .1 uly speech in the - N. Y. Academy of Music, lauded the French Revolutionists'for tearim - r down the Ifastile, and compared it to the " tyr luny" Of the Federal government. He did not tell his hearers, however, that that event was He precursor to the bloody Terror nil Atheism which s(-)on succeeded it. NJr dial he tell tlt •in that the military dcsptei.iin ui Napoleon 1; (napart, took it,: tir.it origin in a Park in I), ()I' which the New York mob was an excellent imitation. The Chicago Times, the great Copperhead paper of the West, attacks the teachers who wiseinh!ed there at the National :\ esociation, ' and also the clergymen of that city, for keep ing Thanksgiving Day. And this is the general tendency of slavery advocates and treason apologists. We will yet illuote a few ' extracts from an atheistic sheet,-,published by 1). Tuttle, it) Benton co., Ohio, and we !Ile nu oil) of - Ole paper, -- ao - tUr any reatko. !nay solid to the Doctor, for NO. 3, of Vol. 4, of " the Divinity Physician and find our extracts Correct, for, unless fully proved, they seem too blasphemous to be lieve, that any man in his right mind, in the 19th centur,, could be guilty of them. We make our extracts from one of our daily pa pers. This Tut ti', having heard that some of the Christian public were shocked at his impious blasphemies, uttered in a speech of his, some time before, said : "Now, I will hereby inform these pukes of Abe Lincoln that they have not by all their threats Or anallmtnas moved toe one iota from toy old political or religious land marks, neither can they do it so long as I have my senses. I have been arrested and imprisoned by the infernal whelps, but they have not silenced my tongue nor my press, neither will they do it while*l live. * * I now repeat my wicked•speech again: "I owe no allegiance to Abe Lincoln or his seavinger, Governor David Todor Jesus Christ. And will add further, I owe no al legiance to any King or theological God, or any other God in the universe. Now, ye political, religious or hypocritical.laints, whoever you are, you may chow over it, you may smoke it, you tour snuff it, or you may growl and grunt or wag your head over what 1 have said." These sentences, so choice yin the use of language, so delicate in their allusions, are natural to a supporter of the man who advo cated the abolition of schools and churches, and to a lellow conspirator with those who sacked an orphan asylum and propOsed to burn the Astor Library at the time of the great New York riot. • To show still clearer the Christian teach ings of this man, - we quote further from the same article: "Resistance to tyrants IS patriotism. But I do not believe it is obedience to God, tor I never heard of a God who was not a tyrant. The God of the Bible is an absolute tyrant, but 1 do not consider him such a perjured usurper or sm h a tyrant as Abe. Lincoln." Again, of the ministers of the Gospel, he says they are— reverend hell-wlielpl of their so called Zion. They are nothing bet wolves in sheep's clothing, thieves and robbers." And, in another article, the vile blasphe mer says : " From all the facts in the case, I cannot but come to the conclusion that fur the pease of the -country, and lor the peace and happi ness of the whole world, that all kinds of religion shall be banished from among men." A - nd. boon more': ' " The Christian priests are the only human blood•houuds in this country and throughout_ the world." Next to the Members ,and ministers of Christian Churches, the Divinity Physician pours out its fiercest invectives against Presi, dent Lincoln. Here is a 'specimen of the "free speech" which the Copperheads claim as among their" rights ; " I said publicly, eight months hgo, that Lowed no allegiance to Abe Lincoln. My God 1 I would as soon pay homage, respect, or allegianoe ,, to old LucifeF, or to all the n devils while holding i4s-iiieetirreili ns to Abe Lincoln, President of the United States." " Does the old fool, though he is law-giver and law-maker for the freemen of Ohio, does he think because - he is a knave, that all other Men are fuels? * * * I now charge old Abe with lieing'gnilty of all the crimes known in the catalogue as perjury, stealing, murder, kidnapping, house breaking, bur glary, 'rand, falsehood, and other acts, which could till - the measure-heaping full and run ning over, of and man's villanies." "I; therefore,..,sentence old Abe Lincoln to be hung by the neck and \ heels until he is dead, DEAD, ,DEAD I and a there is any God who has a disposition to hare mercy on his infernal, black soul, then there is no need of a devil or a theological hell." It remains for us to show who is rho stand and bearer of this defier of God and man ; who is his political loader; rthoso cause does he serve by such a course. ' This is announced by himself, lie days in one place : "I am a Democrat, and an infidel t 30," and_ elsewhere he hoists his ticket: For Governor—C. L. rallanclighans," and then puts in his claim to share with the Chattanooga Rebel the honor of having nominated him : "Almost a year ago I publialted the n tale of this patriotic and moral hero as a candi date for the next Governor or Oitio. One hundred thousand of the freemen of the state, on the 11th day of June Pant, refilled my nomi nation. * 11 This coming than is des tined to be not only Governor of Ohl), but al so President of the United States! Put that in your pipe and smoke it, you damned min. ions of hell." This, vto'ilresetne, is enough to disgust our Christian renders, and fully nough to prove what •we have aseerted, (hat this conflict is a moral as well as a physical one, and that it aims at the overthrow of everything holy, simply because everything ho!y is opposed to it. May honest hearte I Christian men reflect before they join these enemies or C ri tin their nefario y u: , , schemes. Extracts from LI1C) Last Public Spocch of Goo. W. Woodward. " N . Cp . rl) ::11 in g. " I I,,ithl :CI I lira lmi in mitii 1. ly ordained." Lwat sail, Ll. V." IL ,4,2111.4 t i lip. o.i! 1 1 r whon :',L!! I, u•', inn ih it tural ri z lo (/,./..7t ,I.llYlll , lllelly tr',.// ,, . I. /a , ,t//:, , ./ . ch . ,/ NVe rind the al) , ,v, .e th , ,l 1 t ' Spoecli 11,, \v. Coppurheul ell!iiii.l 1.,r )voillov, County /itt,//i , /c/if.,;/.. We have 1;4,1 9t'611 S11'00(11 , TS 0. 1 Ilt , "11 Ir . , 4(• ;• .high-t CWO , I 11 , 1 , 1 1111' We Imvo, Woo , lwar I niakk of t:l,llalig't.i,4. , nt trilnttrl to I,i(n. ',hat trYic 1i; t. , •rt2,1 Irk :+lr. \Vo.”l.var I i it 11)1 H rrot! I o p 1 ,2: au I tlio I or to pre-;ent t ) in.A.ll for tlio E , :ectitlve otileo in 1 11 Catniiinnwt.3l II ancli more to nik or t 2 X pl'ut 1110111 to vote ler hiin The rnan who i,•11 I th,?.-1:1! is NUL !lilt() live ii a free atittiot "Segro'SY.t.,:k2ry i Si ing !"—Why evert Jeff.Lvii will 11,tr,Ily so tar as that I "'lnman hankla,m ;L•;,1 proporty in man aro divmely s.idelimm I 'lir' 0i d.11111,1 C• 111 );11 in tt-fr , t, ..itittey l i-v ing CI:11111111;T 1111111 It 11 , 2111011 . 1 a 1111 , 1 11 11 111 1 1,111111, SIIOIIIII 111 Silllo Of thu 11,1111111111LtS Of the Dee laratiun of Indt.lwndence and thu Itule: hold such doctrines ati t111•.4e7•• 13nt again, Judge Woodwar 1 rormr..ed declaring :n I*.tvor ul 1 , 2,u :1 1 1! ,. 6 1 , 1.1':U Lin between the Nord' and tho, South. How, then, uu It • be a Union man? yopeaccubia,"is what deli'. Davii ticl his whole traitor crew have been clamoring for Isom the etnentencement of the Rebellion up to the present moment. But4tLige Wood wavd goes still further, if he is correctly quoted, in the concluding sen tence. Ile gives it as his opinion, that the slaveholders had a right to rebel, and that th .y were justified in taking up trios against the Government ; Every Union soldier kill acCording to his logic, des,yr , l It,l ide, Every Rebel battle fought, every Southern Union man hanged, imp' isonetl, or compell ed to take up arm 9 for the 'Conlederau . was in defence of the "n .rural rights . ' (tithe insurgents, "us it seats" to Judge Wood- Is it not an outrage that a man who Iddil.; such doctrines should have a scat on the Su preme Bench of the lit)al ~t'itate of Penu-itl :Amnia, and he placed in by -It, bel symp ithtzers in our midst for the chief magistra l ,cy of this glorious common- wealth ? But notlonly does Judge Wo , ),lward hold such sentirAents, but it was their utlerauce that secured him the nomination. The lead ers of his p:irty are birds of the slim,: I, atioT. What, have they done I'm the t.:111,11 ? Do we find any of the leaders in ihe array, either as officers or privates? Not ww. 'Thor stay at home to cavil ithillt 010 "Constitu tionality" of laws enacted for the preserva tion of the . Union, and the crashing out of the Rebellion. They carry on it fierce /P.,/it icad warfare against the government, as a!! jos to their Southern friends. From the com mencement of the War to `he present they have been persistently on the Rebel side, and by poisoning the of of the. miss, s, have done more to aid the South th an if t h ey had taken up arms in her defence. 'Should tliey uuceeed at the °cipher election, ono of the first acre of the Copperhead administra tion would be to withdraw the Pennsylvani a troops, acid allow the I{-1101461liCiath terms of peace to suit themselves. All, we ask is that the voters of the com monwealth shall contrast 'he past course-of Woodward he — (..pper - Tritd, with gallant ANDY CURTIN, the true Union man and soldiee'sdriend. It they do that, they will not be at a loss to whom to give their support. _ _ ANOTHER STATE CO3l - 1NCI: —NSValli is about to ask forMitnisAion into the Union A Con stitutional Convention of Dolegates is to meet oa tho 2nd of nest month, and their applica. tiou will bo presented et the nest session, of Congress. "The Territory him', more than 60, 000 inhabitsntS. It was organized in March, 1861. ItYeentains great Mineral and agri cultural reititirces;and is . destined to become a wealth; and flourishing 9tato. [Nrom the Missouri Democrat.J A Maryland Journal on Emanoi- ThO'Cambridge (Maryland) Intelli.'ipicer, of July It3th, has a long and able editorial dis cussing the question of emancipation;in which it very sensilty oomes to the conoluilion that if it were in Missouri, it would be in favor of immediate emancipation. The following is what the hitelligenger has to say on this point • We nro in favor of a system of gradual emancipation for Maryland, If we lived in Missouri ,' we should be like our friends there, in favor of immediate emancipation. But the condition of Nlaryland is materially different from that of Missouri. There slavery has carried civil war to the very hearthstones of the loyal people, antrolimsoned their homes with blood Radical measures are essential to the establishment of peace and quiet there. Here, we enjoy sco irity and tranquility. the, public exigency is not so great, and we may abolish our system of labor with less violence to other public interests. 'The disease in the "body politic" of both States is the same, but they require different remedies. hat while vie are in favor of gradual emancipation, we do not mean that it shall be so very gradual as to be just nu emancipation at all. We are willing that it shah be gradu al, but it must be speedy. Though gradual, it moot be short. We are opposed to any sy-tent which contemplates lengthening the lilt' of slavery a single day beyond what, is tib.oluttdy necessary for the peservation of other public interests frola too great a shock by Ors change of labsr. Ten years is long eniiii,4ll. We want slavery throttled and de stroyeil. and too, in time for us and our dren to enjoy the benefits of freedom.-- Oar fathers and ourselves have suffered much from the curse of slavery, and we claim that onr,elves and our children shall enjoy the Llessingi of freedom " So far as the foregoing argument concerns Missouri, it is unquestionably wend, tot it have safely, been carried, with the samti application, to a much wider extent. Ono of e •t important lessons Ihe War has taught the e,,tintiy, 1 that no grottier humbug has ever been i:.,ll' , zed than gradual emancipa ti •u. It -!,,ve , are (Ic ior ireedom at all, th..v are 't Gt for it now as they ev.ir will lie si.ce •,1 terry. Thc t rm.t scho , l for any in in, It 1,•!; or white, is which to acquire knowled..ro ~ c 'f government, is that condi huh itt w,tielt 1,1 k: furls him elf tvhcn 011'01711 11p•M Li w n re , ,, ones. The poorest school aii is that e.r.dit inn, the inevitable tendea cy of whic!t i to legrade and destroy the contidenee of the man, Tit, lieriment of itnmeiliate etiancipation 11n.- lin e n testi , ' in Loiti a. where thousands of Mc 01avi•s wen• sndl•lenly given their i; nnd. if we are to believe the testimony of :ill the britni-s-ies in the cave. witho•ot. any or Litt tow of 11),, , e evil eotierionc.es 1' llnw !=1 I:III I'.Cip 01.01 11 . 1 h 1.1•11 aVInl•-'lOlll , l pl.:110 s E ill I. ,t,l-iart,t, it IS -at',2 anywhere in the litilteil INEM Union State Centro! Committee 1".1.• N (tiou I Ci S:•Lte (_`,ol(ituit y• l , o uitr,l by Lb,: chairm 01 or the vats c—z,vuutuni, hehj, their first meeting ni g 1 ,y .10,gast 20, at 8 do nut:juiri a li,sL of lacalberB of :Lt = C'):111111 , C , !t; =MEI El= W v:.1; 0: C 111.: icrcouuty, chair G ihnestock, John It P3inter, .I.lwes L. Graham, Vim. llcnry, W. B. N..gley, Soul 1.. llmqsell, . 11 . 1 n. B Lint. C11'11.011.11, .1 1.1111t!:111 Ila.tit, 1. 11. Si. tukling, 1,. nucl A C F nnoy, ‘..ti.a..-14--Mis-Grillt.l/11:48, • • ......141114..5. Ch.11.21:1•4/1.-. .1 .1 I,gol', Ur IVni 11'orthinglon, .1 Dr . I' ..I"hn, N JL l'&lll,tur, .1. C. 1.1,,ya. (....1. 2 0 \V. I.:Itt1(2 ) , .1 , 1,11 u, • 1•:y re, 11. W. II ie.:4, ,Tmas Henry Souther, A K I.eClttre, E. W. S iyers, S I.; I \V. M Stewart, Henry S IVll.lr.on, John ,1 P.itterson, Jos pa Ilunderiun, S Litil P. I.,Higstrect, 11 I' 11 tut-. \V If Armstrong, ti 11' 1' Boyd, I..:citis Itolgers, Peter AI irtin, I. 11. Itobinson, Frederick lyer.s, I). W Wo John \V. \Vallace, John W. Stokes, lobo 11, urge, I)tvel Krause, John II Oh‘er, II Dickinson, 1)1. S 1113 s, ('has Jones, II D. txwell, hurry D .1(oore, A Taggart, Clagliorn, It. It Sot brie, N. B Browns, John \I Boller, John Pomeroy, E twirl II Merrick, John titronso, A. Walbmm, John S, Mann, lhuurl Beitler, Geo. Dellaven, Wm. B. :Malin, James Lill kely, 11. Campbell, John J. McPherson, John Bilger, A W. Acheson, Win, Picking, M L. Tracy, Thos..) Ingham, .1 It McAfee, I, F. Fitch, A. K. Peckham, Win. !If Cobb, Ilirain Young, .John B. Lion, " Cam, Nu MAN Loral.," said Gen. ROUS - S , SII, in hi-; recet,t speech in Philadelphia, “who 5t . 111.1,1 hin %Veen ;he Goeruwrut I.llil the suppression of the relie.lion. " Gen. Rous :Inn is a soldier in the army—a representa tive vi vi to tuWing Kentuelty--one who has prove I hii p.iiri,usin upon every great battle tiehl in the Southwest. We need n better or Mire disinterested authority or counsel. The test which he offers every honest. man will ac cept. ihIS war," said Doujjas, "I hero ell be but teed palnie,S, 0110 for the Goverti mew, and one against it, " friends of lees.— This truth the loyalists of the South ire con stantly teauhing to the disloyalists of the North. It the patriots of East Tennessee, the people of North Carolina, and Louisiana, such patriots in the smith as Etc Governor li3OUSslinn, Johnson, and a score of ' others we might Udine, are not yet convinced that secession is right, and oar government is a wrong and an oppression, It w shall we be taught by our enemies in the North that it is unconstitutional to defend ourselves—that we should not put down rebellion by every means in our power? Cau Wood, Seymour and Woodwafil hike us believe that Rousseau is wrong I Vet Rousseau, and the groat army of t he.WesC, ' ' Who make the same thloompro inking 1001 of loyalty, would be called,- we presume, _by our constitutional disloygsts, "minions of the administration, " and "lovers of the negro." jati.r" 1311 AR 1T 1.1 MIND that Goo. W. Wood wai und wmter 11. Low r ie, the Copperhead candidates for aovernor and Judge of the Su preme Coot t, are the men who decided the Aot of Assembly, allowing the soldiers to vote, to be unconstitutional, thus disfranchising thousands - upon thousands of brave Penn sylvanians who have loft home and friends to - defend the cause of the Union against armed traitors on thelitittle'field, and allowing them no voiee in the selection of officers to admin ister the very Government they are periling' Altai lives to upli'Old , portion NEM Mr A Claim for Rebel D epredations at Sea The Messrs. trprop, of, Boston, owners of the ship Nora, which was recently destroyed by the Alabama, have sent a memorial to Mr. Seward, protesting against the destruction of . their property. The chief points in their memorial are ihe following: The Nora\G legally registered American ship, was chattered at Liverpool by Mr W. N. De Maltos to carry a cargo from that port to Calcutta. While on the voyage she was boarded and taken possession of by a vessel calling herself the Confederate State man of. war Alabama, by whose captain ft part of the stores were removed and the ship sot on fire. The owners protest against this destruction of their ship, and demand reparation 11'0111 the British Government in tne sum of $BO 000.— They base their claim on the fact that the Alabama is an English vessel, having sailed under the British flag and never having en tered a Confederate port , that the British Government has never interfered with her un lawful acts; and on the additional fact that, w the time of the capture of the Nora, she was principally manned by British subjects. In view of these matters, and of others which may be made to appear, the memorial tots have entered their solemn protest against the British Gogetininent and people, as willing parties negligently culpable in the destruction of their property upon the high seas, and thus in first violating the proclamation of Queen by building and manning said steamer, and then allowing her to continue tier depredation And they ask through the Government of the United States that' a proper represeuta• tdon may be made of their loss, that in the end due reparation may be made to them by the said Government of Great Britain, or that the Government of the United States may as sumo the same as one of the government I obligations to protect the rights of their citi zens, thus wantonly violated. This, we believe, is the first protest of the kind which, has yet. issued by American suf forms by the Confederate privateers. CHARLESTON The riled A , 11e/c WI fur( Sumpter—Fe Irly leer ,Y,/ ear rl,l , l,Sampler (Jr,e (I y Duni ir . —The Flel (11 , 11 . ;(4 r Dra h of the C vete. 1.3 —Steno Illoer end Cu: 110 1,,r I'illl With 7'u rpte' , ,es Till! follt,wmg ,lest aid, is from Mr. C. C. Fulton, Ow agent, of Ilht .I , 4oeukto•l : FLAn situ , Dissmonn Thurs,lay morning Angu , t 18 The attack 011 but t Sumpter ‘V,IB COlll - a day hre yesterday morning by ttio it e gun, at lieu GLlWurc" and the naval b.Litery , h , ,rc At six o'clock A.lmiral U th!gren procet-1e . ..1 on board the %Veehawken, ;Ln.l, with the Iron sidcs WWI the entire monitor fleet, iLitacited Voris I', ,igiter and Gregg wi. It gt eat fury, c millet , ly -ileuced Fort W.tguer and almust silent: mg tot t Gregg. ivmelen gun 1/011ts, seven in number, alt joined itt the as,ault, and enabled all of the 00 . 010 ballet tee to pour their shot Lind 811011 into Sumpter 10 the .1 Imira' changed his 11 ig t ; th..! mil 1%1111 Ilia ar•C ( - 2.•,•ded . 11l W.(111 , 1 ;111',1 , . 1, 10:) - y7iirds' of in :s , iinver 111 , 1 :.:11,•11cd tile sea. wall whit the rtllt guile tC thtty vessels for about. an hour at h etr2et. tiump(cr tired :111nost Idly return shot, doing no damage to the vet s Is, whilst tti , 2 • Waild of 6utupter Fiert Captain Henry W. Rodgers took corn iwtn I ut nt, nit ves•.el, the Monitor Cattki:l. and Went up intO the, tt Ira, gulag within one hundretaut fitly yards of the beach front el Fcrt 1V ignur. Alter tiring a number of :diet, a ,dim from Wagner broke loose a piece of the iniejlor of ine pilot hinse, which struck ou the he 01 ul Collllllall , ler it. rigors, instant• ly killing him, As well as Pa) uot,ter Wood lorry, wllO 11,3 'O,lEl4lllg at hiss ide. Both of their hca.l-; -p it Open. These were the on.y per-ons injorel on land or water during the kix hours' eugageinvnt. 'rh o dam,tgo lee to Fort Sumpter by the singe ha,teries of Gen. Gt!more is visible with out the aid of Thu rebels had erect. ed a. false wall against the wall exposed to the truly ba,iories It extended to within tun feet of the lop of the wall, was over for y trot 1114 h, and ion feel thick I • tiiB wail to Lnow . -a - -010 .old-wali-ie ot ep ho!o:+, the p,t.,pet I I, an I rho northwe-t coiner gished and er,icked dnwri ititn•w4 to the rue harbor and ;.itolic river are tilled with t,rpedoes, about a duLen of winch have beet picked up in Stone, undone, was exploded un der the l'Atap.co. ru,itig her a tom out of w iter, but doing no harm to theye ,, cl. None mil the vessels were injured in ate least, and the Admiral and hi, officers are o•dilident in the ability mil the monitors Lu batter down Sumpter. The Ithuir,:l is anxious, however, to save the vessel.; tor the heavy work Tl - 11111re,1 of them miller Sumpter iv taken, and to let the army reduce Fott Sumpter, if possible The fleet, except the W,..ehavvisen and Na hunt, all retired beture 2 o'clock, but they rem:tint:Ll to keep Wagner silent doting the atternoon, and tu prevent the remounting of the EI,IIIIIS. The 3hol'o batteries continued firing all pie afterno,m and night on the walls of Sumpt . er with good rffect. This morning the weather is cool and clear, and the batteries steadily at woik The Wee hawken and Passaic are keeping Finds Wagnfiy and Gregg silent, and up to when the Ark.insas sailed, the remainder of the fleet We e lying ;it their moorings. The b of Capt Rodgers and Paymast er ‘Voodbory have been embalmed, nud will go Nort II on the ArkanStlB. Gen. Gilmore announces that the work thus far has been entirely satisfactory ; that the fort is badly damaged, and the'wtok prov,res,s- Inc finely. Admiral Dahlgren is much depress'nl by the loos ut his fleet captain. but is highly grati fied with the operations of the fleet and army, and vety hopeful of ultimate success. Up to the moment of the sailing of the Ar kansas, at noon the siege guns have been hurling itliout live shell per minute, during the inurning, at Fort Sumpler, with marked effect. Two of the monitors, the Ironsides, and some of the gunboats, aro shelling Forts Wagner and Gregg. FYI IEN 8-INCH PARROTT GIINR OPENED ON TliE CITY NON COMBATANTS LEAVING IN•PANIC FORT''••MOULTRIE SILEINT6ED The Bombardment Still Progress- UM NEW YORK, Aug.- The steamship Constitution arrived tlt!S evening, frqtn Moon Head at 7 A. m. on litig 22d, and Charleston Bar at 5.3 U P. m. of the stuno day. Left at anehor oil Charleston Bar the United States steamer Brooklyn, with hutuni up, for New York, having on hoard the rellllOllS tit' Ch pt. Rodgers and Paymastere )Voolintry; of the - -- The bombardment was going on midi great energy, and the tiring was very r.tpid,— The hutt. report fewn Morris Island was, OW Sumpter had not: responded to our gunj3 • for two days, and W:l9 almost entirely dLlmohshed. Fort. Moultrie ha I also been silenced. • The Arago was to leave on Monday. Retorted Death of the Rebel Gen Pemberton. Capture of 100 000 Bales. of Cotten► CINCINNATI, August 26 The (I(nrette's Cairo dispatch says that over 100,600 bale of Confederate cotton had been captured near. Natchez.., It is reported that Gen. Pemberton died last ivetticat 3iilirin. Ala. Gen. Grant and staff, and Adjutant Gerior. al PhiMons,' left Cciiro on' Monthly" night, - for Memphiti. ' Gem Hellen is on an expedition up the Red river. • There aro 8.000 rebel troops at Monroe, 65 miles west of Vicksburg. Nalher and Heber are in command. Kirby Smith is in :Texas. Johnston's forces are scattered in the Chun ky-River country, Returns 'Train 106 counties in Kentucky gitii Bramlet to 50,692 majority. TIM NEXT U. S. HOUSE OP REPRE SENTATIVES, 80 far as yet chosen, is Politically divided as follows ; Mm. and War Unionists 84 Opposition 74 Kentucky Delegation 8 To be returned ; Missouri Delaware 1 3 Maryland 0 3 WesL Virginia 3 Vermont Total We shal be sorely disappointed if the Cop perheads get three of them outside of Mary land ; and we guess they wilt not exceed that. number in Maryland. 6ilotun anb taunt niatttrs. niAYoung Ladies, intending to enter Emory I..'ernale College, are invited to he pres • ent at the College building, (Emory Chai)el,) on T/,uro morning, September 3d, at nine o'clock. LosT,—On Wednesday morning last, a Jet, Breast Pia in the form of a cross. A liberal reward will be paid on its delivery at. this office. CARLISLE BARRACKS TO BE REBUILT. —Quartermaster Wilson of Harrisburg, has advertised for a large quantity of yellow pine and hemlock lumber to be used in the re building of Carlisle 134 racks; already the work has «Munenced toirl wi!i - be pushed to a rap id completidn. The eithwas of Rending made overtures to the War Department look ing to the removal of the post to that city, bm the many advantages our town offers, in coneection with the numerous and almost hallewrd a,stwiatiens cosneeted with the budding ❑ud grounds decided in favor of the old lue Rion. THE WOltßiNi is OF TIFF. - DRAFT.— rhe liotr,l of eurAlment of this district have I),.cti busily lICC.II* I e‘or Sine() the comple- tiou of t LI, an/W . lllg U 1 Clio comes, in examin ing and substitutes. The first fun r sub listriets 'vivo been disposed of and a number of men cut into camp Notices, stating the time at wlii.fa drafted mon are to report have been furni-lied ev.ry lean and the dates have barn so arranged that one day ot e,s.tl_:±ab._!l:3titet, tharebya.voil ing the rush and sera:utile which would otherwise be inevitaliie.. Our cast ward will rcio.ri ou the of September and the Went on T..e a,!2••ptanee, of substitutes, many of whom have proved to be deserters, tutu intro I Is ileierl s onin.fter be in:7, mustered in ai !h.:7 iian'e-icape, has de• cide I the b i.irl to re.ptire of 013 substitute offering some evidence of previous good chi:vac...it% riTi.l honesty of purpose. The boar I m t lily at the fair 5i.0uu.1.4, where the ample room and acc0m m.,1,!i,,,." • (!wicr l'itocELDiN(;s.—The proceed ings in the Quarter Sessions commenced on Monday morning with the case of Comprt'h. vs. Ben and Sarni. Shireman. Indictment hn malicious mischief—breaking into selmol 11 , 11612 in March last. Verdict not and Dr. Bram'', the prosecutor, pay fat-t-iii---vos-is xnd deleTtants-ptry-half; Pcnrostt for Corn. Hepburn for, de f en. vs. Andrew K.er.—Assault and Bat tery, on mob of Corninan. Defend akt guilty and submitted to Court.— Seittettecd to iiny $.; fine and costs. Gale. len for Com. Shapley for deft. Coin. vs. David and Franc,es Miller. Sure%- ty of the peace. Urances bound over in the sum of $2OO to keep the peace for one rear and to pay costs. OiHelen S: Penrose for Com. Sand. Hepburn, jr. fur deft. Coin vs. John Spence. Assault and Bat tery and r.ipe. The offence was committed on the person of Sarah Stouffer, and defend ant had wily returned a short time previous ly from a live years' term in the penitentiary for a similar Aimee. Plead guilty and sub mitted to Court. Sentenced to penitentiary fur five years, $1 fine and costs. Cinder' for Com.' Todd for deft. Com. vs. William Williams. Burglary.— Breaking into the house of Jno. Male3f, of West Fairview, and stealing several articles therefrom. Sentenced $1 fine and one year in the penitentiary. Gilleleu fur cow. SharpQ fur deft. Coin. vs. Wilson Sin:th. Fornication and b:tstardy. This dolendant turned up miss• Cum. vs. Jos. H. Hummel'. Po e'ation apd bastardy. This gentlmuan/Seemed to have kept company with S r.... !!pi1, for he too was nwz est inn-illus. Corn. vs. David Whitmore. Fornication and bastardy. Ditto as to the two above. Com. vs. Win. Goodheart, Assault and b.ittcry. Defendant struck '.qcoire Elliott. Plead guilty and submitted; lined six cents and costs. GiHelen for Cum. S. Hepburn, Jr. for deft. Com. vs. Sarah Jenkins. Larceny of a gold chain and some clothing from Mr. Ruby of Shippenshurg. Plead guilty and submit. ted. Sentenced one year in penitentiary, $1 tine and cos Gillelen for Com. Thrush- fur deft„ t;nelitis Rea tiden and Johq Wilsoli::AlAtlaiiy. ••These defendant's broke ttftu ILl:A:fuse of Win. J. Platt, of Worinloya hu'rg`.it'f*dien arrested had in their posses- S.Wt seia4heuksandelothing. Their ceutt,! se iCaPAI that as! the goods were not remo-' ved :; finin'the prentises, , no felony was com mitted: Acquitted. Gilleleti for Corn.—;. Todd for delis: , Cow. vs Willjam Lynch. Surety of the peuc'e on onths,o;f : os. tiler / Llld 1). Strom; . Bound over „ foNrio year in the suw of S2QO to pak!Costs .Gilleleu for' Com, .447 burn lot , (164. Com. vs. Paul Martin. Assault and bat tery en Leou Allman. Plead guilty and submitted. Fined $lO and costa: Gillelen for Com. _Sbarpe,for deft. . Com. vs. Jos. Doal_ Larceny-of a gun froth Geo. Poland. Guittyr Sentenced tO jail 3-mouths. vs. -Wm. Jones: , Likrooriy of $2O,
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