Ziut Atratd. A. K. RHEEM, - *A i i - c ;i t i, A ipropriotois J. A. DUNBAR,. T.:, I -S - 1 , E •-P A . Friday Morning,, July 17, 1868 3 1 - LETEEIyr,:- gen. Ulysses S. Orant. VICE P;tEElDENT—SCltacyler• Colfax. Aux:OK . s',":I:EN'L-40/42/ , _.Tl'. Xlcyrlralbft.. §NEV'R GEN'L—Jacob 111: Cankpbe -4- Meeting of the Republican County Committee. A meeting of the Committee will bo bold at the office of thetheCbairinan inMarlunßall Building, on Saturday July 18th at 11 A. M. A full attendanCe is desired. C. P. HiTAIRICH REPUBLICAN PLATFORM .The National Republican Party of the United States, assetabted in Natgonal Ogneention in the City of Chico gg ',out he 21st day of May, 1868. mac the follaieging Declaration of principles: I. Wo coogratplato tho country on tit.. assured SUN ems of tho R coostruction policy or Congress, as evinood by tbo adoption, in tbo Truk' rlty or tho States !ably In Rebell! n, of Conatitut,Ona it curial 'Equal CM. and PoliticalaWits to nil, and It is tb • duty of the'GoYernatent to dif.tain thoso institutions and to proven , tho people of such States front being retnittod ton Moto of anarchy; ' 11. Tho guaranty by Congress of Equal Suffrage to —all to al men' st—tho , °nth was demon ell -- by ev ry consbiera - lou of public safety, of gratitude, .and justice, and must be maintained; while tho question of suffrage, In 'nil the loyal-States to Oporly belongs to the peopb of those States; 111 We denounce all born. of • Rennin lion on a 'lagoonl crime; and the nationd honor requires the payment of the public ind btedne.ss in the uttermost good faith alt creditors at home and Abroad, not only accortink to this' let: er but the slilrlt of thu laws under which it wad,chntractod. -- IV. It. is due to the-Labor of—the-Nation that taxa- Von shou'd bo equalized, and reduced aa rapidly as the rilronal faith will, permit , V. Tho National Debt contracted, as it has beon for the pre•ervatioo of the Union -for all limo to come, should be extended over a fair period for Redemption; and It is'the duty of Congress to reduce the rate of In forest thereon, whenever It, can be• honestly done. VI. That tile best poll to daninish our burden:6'f debris to so improve °uremiit that capitnlists will seek to loan toe money at lower rates of interest than w•• now pay, and must continuo to pay 60 long as repudiation partial or total, open or convert, is threatened or sus pected. VII: The Oovernmont of the United;States Should • be administered with the strictest economy; and the corruptions which have boon no shamefully nursed and fostered by Andrew Johnson call loudly for radical re• form. VIII 390 profoundly deplore the untimely _and tragic death of Abraham Lincoln, and regret the ac.. cession to .the Presidency of Andrew Johnson — who has acted treacherously to the people who elected hint and the cans° - ho was pledged to - support; who has usurped high legislative and Judicial functions; Nybo has refused to execute rho laws; who has used his high office to indite° other officers to ignore and violate the . . laws; Who has employed his executive powers to rms. dor insecure the Funnily, the peace, iii crty and life, of the citizen; who lots abused the pardoning power, who has denounced the National Legislature ns uncon stitutional; dho has pervlstently.and corrupt 13 , ' resisted by eveo , sienna ales power, every proper attempt nt the reconstruction of the States lately In rebellion; who Ilan p rverted the public patronage Into 'an en gine of wholesale corruption; and who hes "heenjustlyr imp •ached for high trisect and misdemeanors, and properly pronounced guilty.thersof by the rotes of thirty tivoSenators. . ' _ IX. The doctrine of Greta Britain and other-Burn peon vowers that, became a mass is once n subject he is always so, mum be resisted at every hazard by the United Statil. at a relic of feml:sl tinsel not author ized by the laws ornations, and_ at war - with Our na tional honor and independence "Naturalized citizens urn entitled to protections in all thelr_rights Of ellizen ship, no though they were reitiv,horn: mad no citizens of the United Stateanative or natuntlizml, must be lin o to arrest. Ikulj jwiprisonniqu by any f_s,ige - for arts done spoken in this ethustry; and If so arrented'and imprisoned it lathe duty of the Cron °Himont to Interfere in his behalf. X. of all who were - 14101U in the trials of the late Over. there wore one entitled to mare especial honor Omaha brave soldiers ;foil Rgattiell. who Ontlill , ed _hardsh pa of campaign antlethise and imperiled their lives in the service o the tout, try; the - bounties and pensions pr vldecrby the laws for unite brave -defend ers of the nation, are obligations never to be forgotten the widows arid orphans WO gallant dad _are the 'wards of the pe pie —a sec egacy bequeathed to the nation's protecting care.. Xi. For ign Imldgrafloti, which In the past_ has added so much to the wealth, development itml re" sources and Increami. of power to this republic, the 'asylum of the oppressed or 10i natl.., nhould „11/Aft..., broil and enconragea bn 0 Ii era! a. d Just policy XII. ,This Convention declares m It elf in sypathy with all oppr seed people straggling for ttt"tr pia to Vaantrnously added on motion ni Con Schur, lieseifred. That 'we hi lily commend the spirit of inagnanithity end forbearnm o with which ni, n wire have served in the Rebellion but who sow frankly and honestly cooperate with us in restoring the ..peace_of th • country anti re - cunstructi , g the ,Southern State governments upon the basis of Impdrthil Justice and Equnl Rights, are r ceiVed back into the • oinnistilon of the jeyal people and wo ilivor the r moral of the disqualifications and rim t fictions imposed upon the late R.hels In the same !nearer° no their spirit of toy city will d rect. and an may he eon isteot With the safe. ty of the to, al people. Ranieri, That we rocog-ize the great prinefPles laid down in, the immortal Reel ration of lndepend we, as the trite foundation of democratic govern ment; and wo ThiS with gladness every effort toward making these prlnciplim n ilvi. g reality on every inch 'of Atgorlean son. - • The "HERALD" for the Campaign • ! RATES VERY LOWS Friends, ,4.9stst us by Getting up Clubs: Fully appreciating the vast importance of the' present political , campaign, and being aware of the fact that there are many persons in the county who do not feel themselves justified in subscribing for the lull _year, we have determined to furnish .the HERALD - at rates so low for the campaign that it will be within the means_of every-man in the county to se cure it. The present bampaig,n is one in which every principle for which the war was waged, i t at, stake. -. Already have the rebels, throngh'Wade Hampton, declared that their cause le 'not lost, but, that in some form or other, it will yet triumph To assist them in securing the triumph 'hp 'predicts, the Democracy Italia united with them hand and heart; have placed in nominatiOn for the Presidency the man a their chOice; and have construct ed. the platform in, accordance with' their Amtation. ' MM=ll 9111 —telligentlylin this contest -they.sbould inforsihemselves thoroughly as to the natinfe 'of the efforts these traitors are making to secure at the ballot-box what theyinat in the field; and this they , do::only through the medium of Bound and loyal,journals. It will be our effort to present the issues truthfully, and to arouse - every Patrio ) t to a true sense of the danger which' threatens the '.country should:JlM rehel•Demooraoy sueeced - ,in --electing theiricantlidate, ' - We will ad. ,voctUe to the:l:test of int ahnity 1.110 great and:getterons principles or theTepubli-, ! Mtn, party, and in So doing . 'wol labor ecreestly to sebum the - election •Of GRANT ana,-00prkx.:, *. : Our rates,'•strictly iu adiranee, from this until after the Presidential election' , . will be as follows: : Foy one copy, live: ropiest. • . Ten copied . ; ' We Rope 'our ,fr,iende will assist us in securing a large eironlation.: . In a•veiy gho>t limo We will greatly - enlaige the . linuALP, adding a, column te'sasb`tago r thus- be -enabled to furnish- the i !argerit and'obeapest piper, 9*,i3,?„'04.111,611* tgeb 41ii'm the county. The Llenteer . ale . „ . The nomination of.HOßATlOS:tictoult foi the,Presidency, and 'et Ennwors P. jr., - by the pro-phel Dernooracy. ion matter of no little iongratulittion'on - the — part -- of — thif - ftiends I.3InANT and 'CoLFAx• wrier for 'lll3 instant en "tertained the SlightestdOubt of the suc cess of the Republican party' in the present campaign; but now is that suc cess rendered ..certain by the action-.of europponents. PEitni,now,HENDlticits, ll.s.wouch.• or CEA sE, all of, them men of of a national ,reputatien,, had either been nominated; might have carried with with- thete . snme enthusiasm, and some remote hope of success; but, Swrsto.un,, a local politician, known outside of his own state only for the unpatriotic deeds done! by him within its borders, adds weakness to weakness. • • Chairman We believe him to be the very weak: est candidate they could have chosen, and for these reasons"; isthe"verY emboTh- . 'went of all-that was base and despicable in the olden time. dough-face, "and of all that is cowarly and unpatriotic in the tnoddn day copperhead ; his heart is full 'of, malignant •hatred for the great party that rescued the life of the nation from the grasp of the Slaveholders' Re •ellio'nond against it has his tongue been constantly et2n—uttering the tno t willful and persistent falsehoods his every faculty and power have been pros tituted in the advocacy and dissemination, of every theory and dogma which is at war with - the spirit and geniu .s - of our In stitutions Wort, his record as a poli tician (and to no higher title can he as pireis - one of the very' worst and-black est kind: • When the Eouther.n Senators and Rep resentatives withdrew from their seats in Congress,. preparatory to their entering into the great struggle to overthrow the Government, in a speech delivered at Albany, he had the temerity and men• dacity to say that, "all virtue, patriotism and- intelligence seems to have_ fled from our National Capital," at the same time banding the-inen who stood bi 7 the Gov ernment as " imbeciles, madmen and fanatics." This was his position when the rebellion broke out ; :and during 7 the continuance of the war to suppress it, he endeavored by all means in his power to discourage the friends of the union cause. He exaggerated the evils of the war; he depreciated the National credit; he de nounced every man who sustained the measures adopted to carry it - on to a suc cessful. termination ; and - when the eriti cal time came, after the defeat of HOOKER at Chancellorsville, 'when the rebel-horde was iiinding_our state, and the Govern ment-in its great need of troops ordered a draft for three hundred thousand-men, with which to fill up the depleted ranks of -the army, he quibbled and:fought with the ['wiled States authoritieq until lie incited the bloody-riots of '63, in the Streets of New York. No With certainly )ens forgotten the outrages and damaged perpetrated -in those three tearful days, by the cowardly mobilint. ran riot through the streets, pilfering and asylums,_ murder ir:g inoffensive black men, women' and children, and hanging union trifiecig updn the lamp posts; and-no man - curt forget, however anxious he May be to do so, the riot that Goo. SErJuuttic pentritted this of to go on for those three days, and then went down among the murderers an'd I/ Fisassin, called thvin liis noble friends, and told them to:de-ist, that he would see that the drug should be sus r.endeu: h ither he. was clis/opti, and desired ilii . Srebel diversion to have full swing, or else he was a coward, who.was 'afraid to eiero.se 'the authority vested in . him as Governor of the State. Doubt,- less, hc•wuuld have permitted it to have continued even longer than it did, had it not been for the unexpected strength displayed by the Union Armies, under Ma DE At Gettysburg, and under our greatest soldier at Vicksburg.. The thins of the burned and desolat ed asylums that were plunderod,byvtira "upwardly and murderous DemoCratie mob (Governor Seymour's -Vriends,") utter ibeir,.piotest, arid the blood \ of-the inof fensivelnegroes, and gallant union officers who were suerifded to glut its rage and fury,ories out againat the outrage and in famy of placing this bad man in nomi nation for the highest positibia -in the land. These aro but b levy - of the many black deeds of whteh he ha's been guilty. We shall advert to others hereafter. All,that is necessary fo make his defeat sure and overwhelmink is tohce.p his reeersi.ler.. liiii:73:l:hei 7 people ;- -the_, facts speak for theniselvea.. 11f FIiANCIS, P. BLAIR, Jr., whose nomination we are told was made in de ference to the wishes of the Democratic soldiers and sailers; we have liut little to say. lle comes of a family that has done mare to break up adwillilitrations' and parties than any otber4sit of mon in the land:; and wo think, hie nomination at this time is but a`fitting prelude to the diesel aticn of the . Democracy. • Prom his earliest life„he was an abolitionist of the most altra'stripo % _, When the war broke? out he aticeeeded, through the influence of his brUther Moistgotnery,,:who was then a member of Me; I...xxcot,w's net, in.seouring at first a - Colonoloy and, afterwards become 'a IVlajor-Gen* 4 l. Mr. LINCOLN found it necessary to dis miss AIQNTOODIJERY BLAIR cab hist, and from that day to this has a bit. ter hostility against the Republican pJirty boon growing up in the BLAIR family:— no 'went to the New. York .Convention t arid, in the , :hope.of deauring the first position .npon the ticket ; published a, manif , :sio ae vevolationary , and as. lull: of 'treason BS any iebel couldVritte,ti in 1861. This,. iPoi 11 . true, did Pot' • pail:lo4 its objeoc,but did tiouro liim $ f.. 3 00 ,-.5 50 i 1 ,V.,„ the nomination for the Vice residency by that Confed e ra te Conelare;__L„____- Re entered the union twiny - 10i' ;Ms own advancement: l arukhe na*: seeks:AO assist in setting iside l the logical of tke_war;....by_uniting_his_pol d itiOaLfor.- tunes With the.ptirty.th4 was ai all times 'the friend of the rebels," auk the foe of the unio, (muse. ' He' adds \o strength to th