Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, November 01, 1856, Image 2
TIIE ERIE OBSERVER:` BENJ. T SLOAN, EDITOR. _SLOAN 4- MOORE, PUBLISHERS SATURDAY. liTIONAL DRIOCRATIC NOXIJATTOIS FOR PREMIDENT, JAMES BUCHANAN, OF PIN!CS YL r • N'LA FOR VICE russimmr, JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE, or KENTUCCY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS = CHAT II BUCKALICW, WILSON MTA.NULESB. DIMLICT. 1. GEORGE W NEBEIGER 2. PIERCE BUTLER. S. EDWARD WARTY•N, 4. WM U WITTE. 5. JOHN IA'NAIR. 6. JOHN H BRINTON, 7. DAVID LAURY, IL CHARLES KESSLE#I, 9. JAMES PATTERSON, IS. ISAAC SLENKER, 11. F W. HUGHES,. 12. THOS OSTERHOUT, 13. ABRAHAM EDINGER, 14. REUBEN WILBER. 15. GEO A CRAWFORD, 16 JAMES MACE, IT. H. J. STABLE, OhB. JOHN D- RODDY, JACOB TURNEY. 20 Jos A J. BUCHANAN, 41 640 WILLIAM WILKINS, ... S. G. CAMPBALL. NNINGHAM, 2 AMY, ' 25 7 VIN ;PHELPS The Last'Appeal to Pennsylvanians PaLLow Otrtsame —You are asked to read ibis earefelly and •onscteouously, (r it 14 the last word of warning or •oeoeragetneot that span be add dto you before yoar votes detertatoe who shall b. Pretiditet of the United State. fur the neat four years Shell he h a neighbor soda frteed—s Piettes7lrani& anatomise, born and bred amongst y ou, the emert• of shove whole !ifs, private and public, has been with you, .aed with whine yes know the anuresis tat country arc oafs; ta shall it be one wbo. though a fortunate adventurer, a lucky Seder of paths whtch others ea brave ae . b•,.bad treirbe. fore, to utterly without experience, and, more then that, who,is the eandniate of siect,dualiste end fanaticism, and the worst art of speculative experiment, the candidate Joshua 11 li,d Ilnp, th. Ah-litiontst, and Giwrie LAW ale New York .q.w.ratt.., Thls tithe pie•tion which, in its moot direct from and freed from 111 collateral isius- -front all questions sa to who shall be metaber• of Conireiss, or the Legislature, or hold any other local trust. is now to be ilerlited by you Each in matt mu.t deride it ri.r himself It seem. to have heentne a tosteti.n whether Pennsyl vania. this ancient, loyal. true hearted eunailooweartit, shall hare any right of choice. or shall dare to exercise It in farnr of tier own sens. There has Jost been an e'ection in oar Stara, and it has shown this, itsuorig other results, that oar •ahetanttal, hardy, eon. live population, the cations of the middle and esvtern an southern counties of Penneylvania. including its great metropolis, have narrowly escaped the dominion of an abolition oligarchy, which born on the frontiers or States of adverse iniereet , and more adverse sentiment, has little or nothing in com mon with ise. While Berke and Nor! ialhpton, and MIA dolphin and Schuylkill, and Monroe and Columbia. and Lawns and Calabria. and tircene and ocher central and ' remote counties, the great mineral and agricultural and commercial communities, bronght their heavy majorities to tie support of a Pennsylvania man, and ware true to Penneyl•alla interests' and feelings, and the large mioori. ties in Lancaster anl t Chester and Dauphin and Hunting. don and •leewherc, owed that the Pennsylvania heart boat loyally there, too, a few border counties on New Y.irk, SW with fanatics. indigenous and imported readers of New York fanatic newepapers and lovers of New York Interests, turned their back, a/ usual, on Pennsylvania, and Mins near, by the concentration of their abolition force, snatching honor from a renosylvai,,s.late•ns.o,and earry- Lag it to the New York market, to plaee it on the brow of One who has onthing in oommon with us or ultra This enishisuitissi. is the frt.., • __CA ft r.te of Thaddeus Rteve , and abolition ism and beetionalism in our guts. who have boasted that Alwiliuonista could control Pennsylvania, add'with her control to defy the l nion The integrity of our commercial and agricultural popla tion, the resolute 10T! of Pennsylvania fur the Constitution and the Union, have averted this misfortune, and fur a time frustrated this scheme of wrong: and it may he well for Peousylvions men, and especially men of !melody; to pause aad meditate on this, and bring dearly to their minds the actual danger from which the victory in October has rescued them Let every considerate man. lire his party polities what they may, ask himsel f the question, what would have been the state of public feeling. socially and economically, had the Fremont faction gained an ascendency in the State and carried the October election , It may bean/wend in a few truthful, exact words. There certainly would have been no repose or swearity such SA now patois. The shout of triumph from a distance would have been vociferous. The opponent of the ettewszun of slavery, he who would ►t the same time guard the rights of the South under the Constitution, would have found his voiee of moderate rejoicing downed in the louder clamor of wild fanaticism. The extreme North would have boasted in insolence over the defeated and exasperated South. and the South thus defied and In sulted, might have sullenly and redly turned away even from iu brethren of the Forth. David Wilmot oLThaddeus Stevens or Simon Cameron, for the contest would have been eke. among the veterans and the recruits of abolition,' would have represented Pennsylvania in the Senate of the United States, and a scene Ilk* that which, under thejolist auspices of Know Nothingism and Fanaticism. disgraced Pennsylvania two years ago, would have been rereaseted this winter at Harrisburg Sod then over the business interests of the State would have rested uncertainty it* distrust and feerforthe fature. Happily the conjecture has bei.ome an idle one with us, at least, whether the Union wbuld have been endangered by real a reverse Many think it would—while some, tour* cionlldent, think it would not But no one will question that from this October to next March, there would have . been doubt and fear for the fatuare—dritibt whether the designs of fanaticism were to be frustrated by the personal dishneor of the eandidatearether he remaining true to his professions and his the conflict of sectional ism was to begin It would heve been the darkest five needse this country had aver seen, and no where would —the cloud have been thicker then here in Penneylvania. We should have bit the gloom socially, politically and economically. Economically in this The struggling and peculiar in termite of this oommonwealth, which, without demanding , extreme or offensive protection, are now developing them selves—mineral, agricultural and mechanieal—would first have been struck by the paralysis. They ask nothing now but to be let filmic The policy of the Abolition party, as avowed by its leaders, was to encourage the free and uo reetrieted impartation of the very raw materials which the hardy and psuent industry of Pennsylvania, is digging from her inouotaisis or gleaning from her hills. Platen eoed and Candian grain, and English iron, and Australian woo', were to be poured into the country fur the benefit of Massnehussetts and New York, (or /Asir factories—and main t ops of dollars were to be voted out of the public treasury for local enterprises in which Pennsylvania hate De iaterost direct or remote It was Nathaniel P. Banta, of Mossesbusette, let it be remembered, the present .iisolition Awaken. at. Washington, the leading lecturer fur ?rooms as t hi s ehis p isigna who voted always for remission of duties on railroad iron against Pennsylvania, and also . , us the 24th of February, I SU, proposed io the House of Representatives that wool should be "free of duty, without limit," and on the steps of the New York Exchange, less tßasi a month ago, morning a new the interests of Penn sylvania, re-averted the eociamical policy which thew I pa- The melodeon buying Editor of the Aswericia— would prostrate our interests. Thus economically, would the veritable man that carried Fred Douglass' carpet-bag P•nrisylvania have been perplexed mead perialysod. from the Depot to Brown's Hotel—hi very mach out of Politheally, it would hare been still worse. Time* would humor becalms we insinuaLed that the result of the electio n mos. been danger of the restoration of the dart lakiiiitioe pa the 14th almost ceased a collapse in that wonderful es .d 18.54--the iniquities of secret and corrupt combinations, tablishaeitt. He /aye It is uo such thing—that he issued seek as loudly governed Philadelphia for two years, and a fourth of a shoot because he had a mind to, but prine, , 01 , olgo lied Übe Skate Legislature for one—when bribery and pally bemuse an "excessive good of Job work" "rendered eernsptien was systematised, sod votes were bid for and a full issue almost impossible." Perhaps this is so—hu . t trsilielted with for monoy. That we have been saved from if it is, ail we have got to say is that an -+'exceseire /o us t the danger, let the record show. On the sth of rebury, of job work" has idea awfully bombed'. He says also that 1355, • Possisylvaala member of Congress offered this he is "pressed with public patronage," bat we think it was resolution the melodeon man, sad not the roadie, that "pressed" " Wtsaxaa, eolf•esioos have been made le this HO." him! ' is Committee (Abe Whole, • hie's, with other oirsitaistamsee, lead to the conviction that there exists ilia cellatr7 an ler liaillill• Tour Tickets ! Be sure that they Cur er wastes oathbound amoriatioa, which seems in tended 14, Litafers with the parity of the *imam and the rearmed with . the DIM*, of the electors published ie this leesiatisa of the country, suck an association exalted pa Bops tickets may 1.• about, ther e f ore b e easeful t he loses, and iadaeod the swims' srandai of Wasbingtoas is his Farewell Address; **rotor*. Iteseiva, That ht the opinion of this Hose*, the etas. tens. of merit oath-boned polices! associatioss, baYtal is elite sa Wider's", with saaetity of tit* hallot.boz, and the direction of the muse of motional or asnioipal ineessistent with, sad daaprous to the insets• none of republiesisista, sod directly hosine to tee pt, tee of this Government. NOYIMBE& 1, 1844. " Reefsherd, That every attempt to prescribe an) class of citizens on meant of their religions opinioas, or to favor or injure •n; religions denomination by national legislation, is in direzt opposition of the spirit of the Constitution of the United States. " R cooked, That while a careful and strict administration of the naturalization laws is a solemn duty, yet every in terforence with the guarantied rights of naturalized citizens, inconsistent with the plighted faith of the nation, and must . diminished its growth and prosperity "• And against this reisolatios, so tioaservative, so un questionably patriolie, voted all the leaders of that cum. hived petty-of sectionalism and intolerance, which has Jut been defeated is Pennsylvania, Nathaniel P Banks, of Massachusetts, and Onetime B. Matteson, of New York, and Galosh[ A. Grow, of Pennglvania Bad as was Know.Nothinglsm whoa it first started into es istanoe, it would have been a theassiad fold worse if reetured coder the auspices of confederate abolition. Bat socially, what an scrape has Pennsylvania and the Nation had: There is no measuring the actual consequence of our defection from the cause of the Constitution and the Union The first would have been—for the wirds of fasaticum once again let loose, would have blown into s flame the &lame( ectinet spark of civil discord—the renewal of strife 1111:111 bloodshed in Kansas That afilicted territory /11 at peace, and his bees so for weeks, if not months; and no cad Kid man, no lover of bus country doubts or wisher to deny it. The instant an honest Pennsylvania man war sent there, one whose first thoughts were to restore inter and do his duty—ono who was actuated by the moderate and unsectional feeling of a Pennsylvanian—that instant violence CM ■li 11140/ was rebuked—adventurers cf sit parties who came for mischief were repelled—the adminf oration of the law restored and the way prepared for that fair popular decision as to organic institutions which the people have a right to I orm The only chance which Kan•a• ha. ~t" coming :too his eonfederacy free from the ii”titut ton of domestic slavery, is whet, good order stra.l he confirmed and peaceful cottony from the North and from the South. from a distance and from Dear at hand. i who come weenie In goled faith, with the rights of property of all kind which tb• Constitution seemos, shall base the chance ~f paying f..r themselves what their wishes are This may be-yet—sad if it is, or tf it is not, by the honest nod unwed expression of the Glassine, the whole country will acquiesce But this aegumeenee can alone be bad in that period of national repose which a conetituttonal Pr, sident Itke Jame• Buchanan Las ',noised and can ware A Pennsylvania man in Kansas has already done cinch Cr.. law and opine and domestic peace A Pennsylvania President, oustainevt by C.institutional men in Congress, may do the rest Freedom oan never tome, except through pesos And what would blue been the doom of Kansas (this is a question worth c.risttiortng, had the new 'reached there that • dynasty al sectional abolitionism; was to be it.. augursted at Washington, and that mainly through the agency of Periney:visuia ' The struggle of fierce •nd violent mew would, before this, have been renewed The law would have bean stl•t,t in the din of ready artni The new erusades would haire begun already. New outs.ions ries of blood or .uld have crossed •11 its borders n new errands of violence The roman: press would have wadi new Issues of propagandi,m. Much would have Lad t be done ,trt tate etde or the other he(•re u.t.tt Mart.h, and whtle we to Penney Jeanie might ha% e had ere m•tnth• enet•me itorpl , itty, they to Kettle. w.tulti hey," 11%4 mrtothe of blood From all this, a reality and not a •peeulat.i ri—the of Pennsylvariti .•n the fourteenth of 0•-tober has thus far saved us It was a tt•tor♦ gained over a Jalt;wn the most compact ever made out of repulsive materials The words of 'serous,' which Mr. Fillmore, more than once toss uttered, fell unbeededon his frtondshere They coalesced to their own ruin with their worst enemies. Know Noth• logs who proscribed a man for kiss religton•s *site. or for Lu aecidental birth-place, were to Le seen hand to band with mercenary tt•nerant agents hired to appeal to foreign i.,sympathies and satipathies. It was complete and perfect, and no. or was sundered till it fell It hie fallen It is broken in pieces, and from its fragments are disengaged many particle■, that will, by the attraction of honest and patriotic sympathies, connect it emeelees with the great eau.* of conserriurre Democracy. Many a roan,who under delusion, voted the Fusion ticket in notober, seem now Use misehierous error which ruled him—and will sustain the great cause of the Constautton and the l nom. The fanaticism of Religious Intolerance end •leo:tnoo Whether this Xlll be so before the rresioetn,s, in November, only three day. distant, may be pronounced a matter of entire uncertainty and indifference. The duty of every Constitutional man, and especially of every Peen ,ylvanian, is clear in any event, and these la•t words • counsel arenow sent to you and your friend. ando•ighLours, to bri;ig that duty clearly to your mind. If in octuber, with odds against yuu, and all the embarrassments arising out of local and personal preferences, you tealousi.) labor ed for the Milne we 'have at heart, saerificed your time, eontrilmted your effort, do n.d forget that a greater duty yet remain, to be performed—to %,,te, and get y ntr frieoda to yolk use the direct .iorsti•m of the Presidency, and in sy,„ doing to swell the majority of 'hole .his yet think the Constitution and the Union w.,rtli preserving Men of Pennsylvani•--Deinuerar, tires of all parties, this last appeal is ulnae to you • Mr. Witte', Reeuluti4i. C. , ultrer , etoost lilvbe. 2.1 See., 33rd Cortgrrae, p 571 A Gammas liwww-Notlolas. The fact that tune always •indicates the truth has never been so fore.bly illustrated II in the course of the German paper here, called the "I"earee Wei/ " It will he recollect ed by our readers that in June last that sheet, for a eon siderat ion, as we believe. unfurled the Black fag of Repub. bean ism And ever clue. it hap been vindicating tta claim to a paid hireling by !musing and traducing the en tire Democratic party At first, to cover its perfidy,it profess ed to shape its course a. it did because. of its fealty to the cause of "the people"—its love for cur "local hobby." and It, unwillingness to sink the questions involved in our rail road didieulties in order to make room for the poltical ques tions which a Presidential contest would evolve. Many perhaps believed thissincerity of its professions. We did not We knew the man toowell. We knew him as vernal cad Lao*, sod knowing this we did not fail to warn the Democracy and "the people" of hie true character. We told them that two years ago, when K now Nothingion was sweeping down the rank. of the Democracy like a pestilence—at the time when the " dark lantern" overthrew the noble Baot-ca -- that this hireling would bare foresworn his nativity, be. lied his professions, and proved traitor to those who had nursed bun, if he had not been furnished with osicisindred golden P. 4001410 ',masa trite Undoubtedly many Demo. meta who sympathised with the "people'." movement, and hoped to have the influithee of the " W.lt" in that cause, did not place entire conk len , * in our warning. All to , h, however, weuprehend, have ere this 'teen evidence con arming ereriAing we charged then For instance. in stead of rytnpathiaing with the people's movement, the Welt was the very fret to raise the entire Republican ticket for county "see,. Neither the Glovers. nor American eauiti hare bee. m•ore rained( In advoea leg the election of that tieket-- , and this, too to the face of the well known fact that a majority at the names on the ticket here well known member. of the Know Noah tag order This a rignificant; but its significance dwin• dies in comparison t• the fact that last week 'hie lierman Knew Nothing unfurled the "Union Electoral Ticket," composed. as is boastingly &reread of thickens Know Noth ings and thirteen AVolitiuniets. Among the former is Si mon Cameron who was the mamas nominee of the "dark lantern" party for United State. Senator two years ag.. But we need.not add words to this matter. The " f Welt," and its Editor, are just where they ought to be, and Jost when they would have been two years ago if moue) had not been used to keep the concern straight It her not only deserted the Demiieratie party that fostered and protected it, but it has proved traitor to its own blood and language, and sold itself to .10 the work of those who would stake birth and religion a pre.requisit to citizenship. It has (wind its level, and there let it remain. It was Lour( since powerless fur good—it is now powerless for evil The only moral to be drawn from its history for the part few months is, that time vindicates the truth' ' VietorPr , 1 A Vida . 0,4 4 p :Lis an ansertaanitd f ,t the Coulreellelottld nota . f , [kits Stag AIMS a , ur TWJILVE BUNDLED fu the Oppositiss. I 41 armorer not of the strength of the partiee than tb” result on the Mean Tanliell s for 4, , very good reason that the tote as Wine and thigazpres•iem made In direct reference to the sets end policy of the National Admanistrati, , n li e cannot, therefore,award the Duelten an Democracy the ' brilltant actor," they are 1 , . exulting ly claiming. The %awry la, to f•st. en the other side.-- The people bane declared, through t'e ranittdat•s fi,r (-..,, I . gr,o.i an the senerna D sera, t.. that ti.. ) DIPIAPPRI , I I' .•1 the e , urse ..1 Franklin l'iiir, niol li,. iiiinte , liat . irporiero 111 rewind to the 311114111u111f/ L.Luyiviiii.e mad the •d•Ats of K 113.1 1 ,1 Territory —'loser. TAPre I. r n•cit:ess disro-gar 1 ri truirtu •iv...en that seenip ■aonuhiog 1 r ertla.t. the 6,rittlervnlA rlrt barn 11/11.it • iht..tatrment wtth , ul t,. , ,:1 • 14 11, r turt.• • t the maim! Coogrissioast district*, ao.l those rotated com pletely stamp the claim of twebe huatireJ tuejortty" for the Black Republica/lc upm the vote f..r C•thgresetnett tar truth the •typuhenta f the Dem...ratio } arty having "tw.l.• buttJtod a tpatti, we hart egg/green keouireti uati etgateet. 'majority er the cosi.- s .4 the it..pahlacau mud lahwer Nuttituig tah•l• date?, and hacd..,l and •It•ly ..1•r the Republican, ta..he r Here it the tole, r•Tie,l trout the PtiLla Bailettsi, Republicaa paper Dietrtete I.t i)vtu In the sh.. Ye, the rode of Faust, Aro anti Kelly, Rep 1: the Fourth dhirtet, are added together, •o. also. 1., the rot nl !..mrkin, Am and Bowen Rep in the 6th anti of tire, 9 ), A:u st..i Bch hic, R'nrdc•oc &IA in the 21,1 and 22d district,. tho. I.- se.•n tt.at the ti•tutt , •••,.• • /o:tr If • taauot fofeat It ell—wo "thr rl ha. • derlatv,i, thruu,o the cantit live* t ,r u rhr• u,lh tu... in I , •lalu f r appro. of the fortuetpla, vt the hen-a- e'wasit it bill. and "dtooppro," vf It ••!,n 1,1 f r Ir I .11, - and the Kansa. humbug .•! tt.• •tgitt•to .kt; hunt, t.. th, r .,„ , l'..nnaysva4.s, we say from their prinetp.e. bs the pr.... brig end eAsiner p. Lt cei prteete, made 4, 11111.1te t..c 14111:1 ether e! the Repubit •hy the fr.. 110 e,,titiehee lealgee di.uh bintl • f, z: (:h~• , :•1 of the pure proud myna tat uI :du.ti...11 I..rakrritd . At r to Peril vy,••ll.a' Jso rielAtikC I 01l tlls I.ul ti. r I • 4,,0 ni t ‘O. I=llB st, dr.% r r,i• •Irr J. to. 4 I r. t,, ltt n.,••• ~,•• .1, h i., Ti ry% C y •.. r,uiu Ler ~ ,o I e It, ,ecui elly ft n.h n. g Jeff., n •nd w Jaelgo.•e, • a ~f 111 !. a t110•Iro US ~,r, • • P nrl• at In' 111•12 EM V. hat n INoll WWI O'er?, 31, Count, rumen .wet. niy 'la. Pill I. V rr, ••...) .1.2.41.1...11.1 of lurk,* it, <V el) 11.,arr, s..d it e‘ery 6.,41 , 5, • An.l 11, neat I inTtikilid, d u t eiricnow, , lge tho truth (.1-,h4 “p..eticati hoense, - it is br:supe “erery body and the re,t of o.ann Lod • Lava not had the pltnsuro of read.og the 1 .1. pr.utthis — LitiiinpuriaLt hamlet by the way bide" la/ t he note* wail wont t, call Erie iluriug the rail r• war Ilefere the eventful electiet, en the 14. b, • :tu..trozottiQti loot enchantment I, every view," f u r io iniAprinato:n the p .wer •nd pomp of Alle , eAft, the Ple,o •• f let , 17. and the at" of ‘llficial peculato•n, al: ot,sp:r: 1t • /ITVW ttle.r Ellrytial path. ei,h ft :w: r. llut now, whet a eh•nge Is , . autumnal frost ' , ter cast sucu a obadow on a cadent landscape., 1“ the result ..1 the election 111 Indiana and Pennsylvania bas thr , :wn across them h-pev. The Poet °Mos, Cvllectorehip, and their opuils—to •1.1)111g about the fat j••he that toigLt 1 e picked up th the new 4 paper triol - .harr Penn.,t‘illlat• Would repudiate - 9:ti Burk" by z',ollo, they .s. I -and as they said it. how the ' spoils' Saner.: to Indiana was •ure to rebuke thr - 1 - trr ler Itut- tb I r) y awerrEd—ana ■e they made the .ledarat,oh u ,ph At ,. ti,e Culieet.,rahlp I.,,thed up in the ME The Pr•trier are all on fire, and -blee'ding Kanea._ 'tti'eed u u. re , ebiirused the whole tribe iif big anil ohr.t ker. .tri.l a• the u•ni r nn i . how they r. at .1 th. it I hatred of Iletniteracy under tLeir tongue., in all' I• et of !x•L tiler had dtr , overed the 1,1.4 w-r.l f I pile Satyr money bag. " But whst a , a:. WWI thuir, my countrymen " Priaisyl aid •I•an h, ps. rumbled to tern, 1r li ana et. k., at,l Jown th,.t went ,till lower. and when the wL it ~ , untry •Isettki , •,n Tueeti•y next, the wav,e t,t ~h. t w,ll hurt them all deep that nothing short of a ope , lai I r rillrhec witl err,. itring them to the wurtscr CCM Hut Three Day• Mere There are tut three day. tore for 14"hor The issue i• Wade rip The time for talk and argument i• gone by.-- w .• the hole w irk—work—work—downright work, an I nothing else. To day and Monday should be occupi e I in tiog your neighbor. In this way many men wt.: he hr iught to the polls that otherwise would rema;a at h-ore too many estimate the right of suffrage eu lightly that they will hardly take the trouble io go to the ballot_ to:Seek , ut these—take down their names sad residen rep —anil. srtien election day C.,MVP, •e. that they are drought to the polls Then, there are senres of others who •re still bee:tattoo and doubting A few words, fitly Pr, ken, wtil confirm their faith, and bring them ever to the right sole. Seek oat all such -talk to them new—and he pure of them on election day, There are thousand of est. well meaning meoywho now peeing clearly that Fre_ moat bits not the ghost of a chance, will rots for Buchanan with but little ?ersuasion. Democrat.' let not that per. be wanting • -, ee to it that the brethren are cup plied with the true documents and the right sort of news papers Loubtleu many of oar opponents will spend to m ,rrost in preaching "bleeding Kansas" instead of the ~ ot let no Democrat desecrate Ilse . day to that way. W e heat them, and •till glee them the adsatitage wh.eh scree day• devoted to polities lia• ov e r .r.r All we At every l're.idential , t 1 bugh• ar is got up to frighten foils Wit. tl JetTeri,uu ruu he was charged with being au Infidel, and ill, people were told that it 1.1.‘ wa4 c stud hr w ;ul.l burn all the Bible. in the in 1, Anil twrioditee the worship of the G;Ades• r;sason i ' n.tead of the Gospel of Chri.i \VI.; n Csi n J et run, he was presented it• a milli; irL t) ran'. wii would usie the purse and Nati ;ri pace ' bin:.(lf in absolute power, Ind enffin hin ibilis were circulated t pr - iv,i hi- oriel and bt, ,n thirsty character ore lul ;us peopd , n lily. believed this the II r; .1 wr 1)i iti• rut with snot sir nim's wit.% wgrl.'r , 'l LlVltti.l men ;n odd blood, and if deer; 1 President a' et 1 pr'- claiiu hin:ho If Knit' • au! ,•r•i.ll Th. Itli he fought e ; bra% t;; .1 f r. i Van I3uren was a candid 01. • Speech waq eiroula•eil bar :oil a do, and tit- pco. plc swallow;I the iirepo , t; r iu magnitii,nee ;if the :urniii.r • r t t :ons ;if M iii stoutly inswed al., he w ;net I.r id rev, nine% of t h e Naito.) I'd 1p! lin!. .1 biro'. , ~t mahogany, with r it 01. i ar l sup front golden with it it til l mr. We .htet hear , f quite .o many rot. , taken on' diamond', While k. u 1-.. pie the r • ',in••e the l'eon•ylt inin and Indians Roul Ibe obliged t• lice On •'(.'n CCU ., it 11.ty au l What ot the reac.r.' Ilan the oho that inked th e r ,,t ee t sleep under a sirs at flight " N)w t p •.ti crawled ottr a very , mail huh% and hauled it in after hunt bugbear i. h i e • ling. Ii. 11 1 ,1 ••• do I ••z, • W. fru., so , hut it is nu matter—we'll take a tote on negro." To hear of the ratt' ,n 4 • ;:irteker ,• ' hoard of the ' , hip ut•tate next Tawdry that will settle all one would think Ch it the G•iv , ria wept 1 1 , i •] a it i , The ok•r" papers declare that the increased ting t,,l ' lO but t . . t care of near ; race, :in r.eer ri.lll , leiptiis ,• - alarming " Undoubtedly 'hat is let white take cif rlieiu4elvos; t i o. but tt ;I• 'warm - the Deiniuravy much—they're mi s t; of in , r,' iinportine, titan want to to hav• a full vote, and a full vote can alone he te ,ure.l by work Work, then, krhi'e you earl Rt 4, t• The New 1 cr. bp1.7,,,,1•41 Ward Bet, Ler'. paper, ot last week has au , rtginal Fremont 1„ )toti 1.1 which the C.'l- , wing. i• . , irtion T. Larl If All hs , tr.l . u. What..., root 1,.• do Ti tit , t otoritt and the momarst • t.l•, ln4l 1,1, it troll 11,111 k that Hill e,1•1 I. to or N. tlrl 1,1 0..1. Is.. 11,;•••••• •hro For the raft vat real for Feted... 1- • vr,r-r ,••T .iimputr , u•r I r•. .... __._. .________ _._ _ the eutir , thirty o n o ~4t,., 11. 1 , thi; lop,:be ir, ).-._ , k •ti.rit of " brag ati.l blaster" riles Vir"Ligri tile like the othure we has , ` went] 'U I, wti • ion pa• • eeola,.. I t h e 1: ~, I Pom ,4. r . The Warren /.•.i9. , , Brain. - t•rit b... ~ i 1 and her llernio'irtitio print. are kitnii,,ety 113 t.) oblini 'U. It,L.L„ iii_a I.w yoar• P. •,[•: • %,:i ..htrt-tort«.l. file editors are in tact afraid 61 defeat, wonde r that thov were ever 1, e tsil v , I•ir. d and ;.‘ n.i• wake a loud noi-o to keep op the courage of ' • their :ii,lonerm -";01..,s fie. [ • ", 0, i ti 'h. 7 1:0. ,i -::nd of in(a The Co: to , vidtntly thinks that telling the I "1:Ip Guards, and at Them?" w..ai- , ,t, i ; II:; , / - ; Lok! rl.l .. , a1 In )uth. d truth is " brag and bluster." We told our read- . ! Sutli t , v r he,p. I up n '; uth (Aro in. 4 12.4 spring. darer*bre (nese word. if tia todeon riientiil tri..ro .1, era before the October election that the Statet i k yr.une.y t...i..n at pr,ent. ,—(loratre N,i w it t- , P. , tin-o. tv.int a's turn t.) be ualutnuiat would be carried by the Democracy, and it was ! If we mistake not, it was Wellington, and u ot roi hy tv. .• !, oi.: 'th , "inn r %.eak .)Iri?Lnner Mat, according to the Gazette, was " bray"— , v ...apnieon, that said " (/') (iu 0 r.,4,, , ,,,1,,t Th u ',„ . , " ~t i I „ n t:, • t:i ill' lin but 1 few weeks ago, 'that Our neighbor toll Itis,rea.d r• t hat we would be And he said it, too, when he was after a " lit- t L.. w:,ite p., p.o ..4 l',no•)1;aili a ought to be all deli-att.,' by a larg.• majority, but the " boot was tie Frenchman" with a sharp stick—just as the slaves ...lud Gieeiey adds I 11,4 t, our State liili on the tither leg." Thai was'nt " brag," we De w inocracy are now after another, and the mud t (11;1 of toile , ' in the 'lays of the revolution. suppose '. We tell our readers now that we shall will be same—a Waterloo defeat ! A tn• , re infatu ,us he could hot be uttered. .go carry the iitioe on Tuesday by 20,000, and that, ; .•:r.,t 1 , mr,..1 -iv ii. r bin . I and trea.ures more we suppose, is " bluster." Well, we are willing Sas. The Republicans are looking lip er , r) where -- steel ) in our gr...ta b tevulutiurtary struggle than xt(rogl i.:ralfingt. 011ie, and u.. , ese has a hist , a c y oun mor o e iato pru s ud a4 a sa n i d i to let Tne.ulay decide. whether we bare been re- i '' . e 4. How, in Maim., can they help 1,1,••••9 tll, when they foe - 4 - - sorting t.. " brag and bluster to keep up the cat—on test: baeke.—Elpiwe Ow.reii.. - ... -lor,on. Vet these bale courage of the Democracy, or wier the Ca.. True; but "how in blazes" can they lo 'l,• at Peno7twittia now as they , I , 'uth Carolina. --.:“/. is not now doing " that saw" in orderio all, with one eye smashed all to Binder, by a Atli why ts this' :iittip' boosuie the proud keep it moldy party from otiOkimmibilationt ' boulder from Indian*, and the other by a toe of and swatly yeomanly of rennsy/rittlia will not even before the battle is began I Anthracite from Pennsylsania! des...rt aim own fellow.citizens and neighbor to Opp,..iti q 7276 6411 67.13 911' 80u1 8383 8789 3947 1001 9227 6418 7667 5063 1312., 9448 9630 971-6 8792 10400 9411 81,1 7121- 9495 6014 7933 0:79 51157 4 4 6024 10221 V9!l 0320 7360 310010 10442 11235 5301 990 11191 10224 8478 8724 10207 6467 977 a 4215 6552 Vll4 6211 20V 662 ;:11.4tir 21iV.662 1.919 1=•=11:1 I lro. 0411 oil ite u•.l MEE Still Adheres to the Palsehoe4 • • The Gazette still insists that the Fi'Wore men of Pennsylvania mi.! Itansis voted the Derno.iatr is State Ticket.. It persists to this, 100, in the very teeth of facts and figures The c ity of t Philadelphia contains as many Film re v.,tos as all the rest of the St a te ; and there the fact perfectly demonstratathat while the Repubi_ oau party proper did nut pull quite teu thous And votes, the Fusion candidates fir state officers l polled over thirty thousand. This is shown by tile vote on Proth•ityar, I •t. which 'iffi ••.! thcre were three eandidates--a Demoerat, t. Republican and , a Fillmore roan iw this being the fact ) whew . did the state tick , :t, if the Fillni•a••• in, 0 411•Pnt vote fur it, gets its twenty thousand more votes than the Republican candidate for Pro thonoter? Answer us that,-will you ? But the I •IGazette parades, as proof conclusive, a circular professed to have been issued by the Fillmore etector in the Mercer district, calling upon his party friends to vote the Democratic tielmt ou the 14th. It is sufficient to say that that cirri:liar •,nells very much ”( forgery, and that for pub: lishing it, the Edit..r of the Mercer TVlog lr J a hewn personallysobast i.e.! by the person by wlisAn It purports to have lice° written : The Gazette. ma y think th a t k i nd of proof conclusive, but it seenni to 11.1 that the figurc.i . of the city of Phil. t delphis as ronre so. . In regard to Indiana, it quotes 3...4 profo of its I charge, the iitatemonts of tho Loui.villeJourna/, i paper that never tell- 'he tru'o, teen whoa it ha. no motive to lie But in thi.ea.e is m tire to make its read( r, i t!lit:vo that the Fillmore w e t ; f ludiana (1,.(1 r , alesee with the Repub lteauti t. apparent If it .h appear that the Fillmore men in lu.Lana hal been c(lales ,- ...ing with the Republicans, it would debtruy what lit tle chance Fillmore hal of carrying Kentucky, and hence the L uisrtll Jaurna/,-4rith ready tart, earnestly ecoleay. , r- to make it appear that. a+ national men, they preferred to vote the D 111 *wrath: ticket rather th to .ce a .ecth,n.ii party, like the Republican., cuceeo , l. Thu• the lie, that the Fillmore men of Indiana conicsced with the Democracy, 11.0.1 for one purp 1 , 1 Ken tucky, revatupod and 111.Lik s. fee the ‘..ry pootte here. But We Vivto w.nids upon the l'i•nerte loan convinced :Igainst his will i. 11,: Thor, i, i•tic c the result of Tue-,,lay ta•zt will c,,n6uc' the Gaz,tte and itA r#aiter4 that t Fillmore men vote ‘with th;2 Democracy ,•n the I It h What will Mrs. Grandy say 7 lur Black Republican brethren hntl luu. a P.e r lee at the I:. , urt lionsc, - un Tu ..lay erottlng The att,n.lanve W.A4 n testr•t but the performanco ;Iva, It was opened by brother AKA, ..1 ho GAzette, calling up .n brotlo tor WALK F.R,—..hda • recollect—to preaeli the iuneral sermon 11.. dnl NVltat 11;s t,ct was ec did , but it c, rtain!y ' , ugh' have I'A...en a welt known Christlau injuu,teub amended t.. rend—" Waiker and (tiara sLiol down together. and C .ehran ,lia!! lead them And then, the cht , .f up , inosr , an I re'ative• could have retired to their se‘eral fu'ly rerhzing that in pviltic., as in tho t .a.h, tlo long separated shall Is. united and the , Itoei made to speak : But handiage amid , Whli will Mrs. Grundy say We mean tho Mr- Grundies who con.ll.,i,ntuefwvptishicitigi dawn printing offices were 1,14 friends !—the Mrs Grundies who the tight our " I 'cal hobby'' of so much importance that , they must to ed- get up meetings and appoint Cocumittees t.. iuterr date the several candidates in r•ord to it •-wli short, have been working all glimmer tv rc lace the Democratic vote this e•unty by 4 , t(tn.: up " People's C..m‘, torus - '• pio . , Tiek• ets" in order to cover their trunks : repeat, will //vat Mrs. Gruudles say whet' thsv are told that even WALKER It w been ritiotr,,i to speak for Fremont ,:v n in the -iered preein, t, of the " Old Bailey, - cage I vu:, t and cheered by Lowry, Smith, Bcatty, e.thrau, and Kennedy ! Yes, indeed, it hit will Mrs Grundy say " ? ME Political Bugbears he Last Cad ota D lii th , I lz;n 4traev ' The last . ord a dot , now be gig eireakkled by opitan , 4l. uti 11111- .td of '/IP Ye* 'Demob cr:cdk Deillk, le I ' l Ittikinfaa: pr.,,ltietion Is mcide up )n p trt ~f garbled i.xtraes from utaaawn, enthusiasts, fur wh nt4 t a.m..x , ratio party i no to ,r.• 0.1 I it for the B t.f 31or mnn Err•rt fnrrera , and fal.witnwd relmrted to out tru-.u4 "1 , “! r ()nee, for.:1!1, than, w- r pe.,4, party ii respoostbiu Luc ut, • •,itn; Lti 4000 ' ( Ls:- train: .no i p:Atforni :vint.tr Gin• einni , r, t' Ca.form, :1 , 1•1 pith the eaudi I r. • • d t stand or f ti: •,.• , 1' _ll. , mo,raey end( N.:F , ‘• - it.. .4 liacTl nd to sq+pa- pr ra, n fri - • • r wh• - r.• - pub.lll , e'l, the De I) r 1.• Cnion KnAw Sinthiug of w.tr • .. A.r .:,aad," then; it is a devi'c ol'll ,t 1 ir foo shallow to duuf‘h , 111.o:1i:cut, :c' in who 1- ap: proao' • • of 1.9 4 irculator4 trowto upon both a• • J on , •• f• to the Twenty-Fourth Co .;., , -•••..t . -,trlett, moister: tit* Conrretwuonol del^:", 6 - liwt re net • ct , t •• A atom:, ierpoettion 11. Deareerats 13, Din ‘rattc It^t 1.--61ert.tts. (;•izore :I .l y net uron the principle thy Pi •,c 1 1 ;••• grAi a, the truth -1,1-e wh', - , • l t 11. , election of 11 R ;. tf;l , r+ 1 Cone r rr . .. 4 , when w11:c 11,.91 dof , In 111.• • I. MEI b• ••tii Another Patriot for Buchanan. , t 1;, 11. L.% Pr r• ' r t r. ' r u.t I Tr'r h .• , in.t.renco It 14 one MEM lIIM iy owl patriotic I,l' , r ar ut a the gtarlar , l of the Democratic party iu ate pruaatit , • - Ti,' liti ,thrr grea t c• :ito • • f t.!:11 danger • • . ••ri i -If • the perpetua 1 - nt tk" pr •-orynt too if the Con- OE MEM! t ,:n f It 141. I ,11a.at , wand pr..-penty f urr t b w rank. .1 , -pitP all f”rmer Kh 1 :)1 11 11 ! - 1 =I I .I.IK tba: I ' : v if . , /. ' Kt.., I. it i EIMEED T,' r ( m I'• No Bloomers in the White House I; n K i• I Mr: lIEI 'II p ,Ti! ••L t.i •b• 1= Jf* , .. , j. ij I •,1 r it i' •te tit r f,•, „r , ; • L , .av , .!, birth, ~z . •• II ‘r:wo Gr,••:cy r -pir t 1\ ho. II . aut the b,rry t t t' w is 'tot ;, lire• d •.utuu• "..r,• r I •%, to ••i , r t ply t,. It tl, re4u,t ‘,l Coe EM=I MEE %;:1••• 111,1 t r 41 , 1 r ••L v, - ~.:.in ~ s• ; . 1 I OE t . 4 4 =9 Eli= r' 11111 MENEM OEM MEM fi : . ~ .~ • 111'1,• 1 a r IK . •• • 1,1; I . n;nrr k-. .. 1 :11 , (U 4 , '' ‘Vii•h 111;!rrll, `Vert. ~ (1i0r%,, .'n acku , ,wledg , d, return., show, the lecti,n of •ocl ,411) 10 Fremont-r•? Why unto ILIA :man a Demncratic itas twt 11 . upon the stump • 'II w•a , the regular 1) uite:ac., id Chester and Del , • • know any hotter, “r .1 • • thinv, Ihr.iugh uri Enquirer rt coutly aimoutieett ' r, it 1111 , 1•-•19roll himsrif • • n -I Mr 13aellactan t. - ) the • .+3lt 1 , t , . , -tip , nt I- fully confirm. I /' 3 ratoptit Fre• w attlek Judge the t;utc4 to •oe '4lls Is,: i - s 1 pr.,. We Have a Governorll .1111 • Al',.iora' ti I iovernor, t, .it :lies- are mistaken MIMI ; ..; IMM r \*l t. 1 y.IP hag recently !MI • '• • • \ * (;',t 1).-•06-c , tiAR.k return thank,: EINIIIITIEN - , 011 r.l ;C• •t WII Ite ME • NI • '; T; MEM MI irr 4 .q.) lI^I •;t'('i('N , t we -tats a+.sun• Us I i:h h mmerable illial ; r through • :; Jame, I. u , ..t t., United IMO A Base Calumniator •-• iu Icr uur t.jd Kev vi tow ,+... I ,:1 Itr U,ll. of tip r • f , i , •.4 20i-latri SAYS r r ; , ` ,•, 1 I .;0 0 0laily : 7 111 Lip of hoi rift . .. , i . ;; mN •w York, r alol r, p l o• Ponn• Mil MO i' 0 ' NEE • .. ouotio', . ' I ‘n I , r 1 1 49'` j 1, S , " nn 411 , 1 i.4.•11 I.loUor.lb:y vote for a renegade South Carolinian for th. Presidency Because Pennsylvania wilt not .1.1 this, she was full of traitors and tori. , iu the days of tho Revolution, says the liar, tireel , y Lot Greeley pour tooth this foul calumny a whil.. Unger, and proud and seositive Pcno.ylvania L 1 will leirn to understand the feeling.; that. goadeid - •, •t t „,. on a Brooks to commit a harsh and improper act '" • Ir '"" ." " "'• •-• in the Senate chamber This vile sl•in•ler of a " ' • '":" t' r 1.. \:!, .t. 'I , .-t. wbola Commonwealth by abolitionist. will not ~• ,•,• ,•• r• .•k wri t li be borne with patience mu. I r, m I rl,ll 0, t . 1,L.• .0 I 4 ') and violent men may conclu•le that iri. ..1. Cr. • . :In • rigl t the cowhide is no very inappropriat, roil h r Pitt Post. The Republicans are trying to bolster up their sinking muse by pretending that " The " are brightening in Pennsylvania " .11thoilw, \" ' this flies in the very teeth of facts, it show• s(lne logical consistency. It implies a perception ef in •.1 the undeniable truth that all the fortunes of ;he 1 Republican party are carried 'in so frail a bark as their prospeck• of winning Pennsylvaui., shows that the most hot headed and cretielou. of Fremont's partisans see that if Pennsylvania is lost, all is lost. But how does the case really stand ! What is the value of their present brasts' Th—e w lio are not in possession of sufficient faet• t form the basis of an opinion, earl infer entnethin,7 f the value of Republican boast' in" g , neril recollecting their sanguine prediction; „f a t „ triumphant victory before the State. e!..0 , 1..ti -- Something likewise can be inferred fr ui tie. broad and undeniable fact that the Be, Ilan in party on the 14th inst , coped sucoe , f4j) the united opposition If they were -up ri r t the opposition united, is it not cortain tli thoy will be superior to either section of it wL. vided ? So much for general con, , ,iderate,t,- us look at particular frets I: 1- known that the New York 'feral,' sopi, r' er of Fremont, and that no public j eurrill in th , o)untry cherishes a more bitter an! 1/11'.;;Tiaut hostility to the American party It '- habit to ridicule and belittle that 1, irty, I t,) look as its strength in all par:, :,! rh , iwry through the wrong end of a tel p - 11' t anxiety to float with the p , p I:31 cure tc first led it into the Frewoot party. 1,3.1- it, I. ,w that the tide has turned,. to .tate t'i , troth r spectiot its prospects The ‘n yesterday's Herald commenet.s tYI - the October Pentoylr.thri i• ~ t , have detailed several intelligent st-,ecial r• from this office to that :•-•:t.ite, th • p trp •-• • securing the be-t r r ence to the prospects of the Pre.i tent: tl • le:•• From two f these Herald Ceintui--1 tt r= w , have received the telegraphic advice. fr,in II ir— risburg and Lancaster, which we pub,:-11 -• where in this paper, and ~or nurnet r u- r , el , r-, of all parties, will find the.", ingly interesting, instruetii., significant 14,0 L gun tr. it Lae taken to pr),!ure ret , ibl. the //er , 7l rare- , m..,rui for tti•., exponent of the aetuAii.t.i:. ot --11;,t:. .1 than for the :41.1CCeNi of any put th•. Till it would not of cour... ,:, 1 r ~ after havini r w, warmly advocatui ,laut ••, ao c..utidentiy predicted hi. • I :1, dh, do by the stern ! ••f t Is the conclusio . n which tt rt ache. att• r Cal r ! (' nq,tB f u Thanizsgir givtn t•ne f:4l ,) the t: tp.v. with the rank 1\ LI, N t. TIV:I3 by has taken no mu:%h pawn to obtain A. the battle now..atantl., with tht ticket of Fillmore and Doneln,n—isur- 11,1 . the field in Peon , 3lvania to i N iv .1 n •s, all th- nrobabilitten i the the conlu-ion that 1.)-th th for Buchanan . 813 , 1 it 1, not n• further, for they wl,l he Tilt h;m ;in k ' 'Ler, .i.• , r. will nlt rh pr.••iii,ll dr, el ICI a❑,l n. u- "But en, , ugh of this A ti.vi , u ”ct Ith •1 p g ' non f Tee% in New Jer.ley an , l without ping further, up.'n tw., t•ek••:-. a•i.. • the clein”eracy are eoneentratc.l up• 1= alter the 1:1 n h.• to There wil! enough for a pretty .afe prelich t4t tl t r ttu The ft tllowlng extract whiio i• •,, 11 , r dumposltittn t.. undorclitt ‘ n 11.%pitality I Ihiug, wij ef the Americans, sb,w, iu 11 : ,1v v.ery number of handq it s•uppo-c , tio• Lti.vico ..f cr 1 , 4 placed “Two thowaud, one thousau•l vote 3 for the Fillmore ticket—iktre iu l'eunsyleaoia, may rlo the work. mel sume that at least a the u.atoi v•• 1,.. 1 lw , • t;,•••• been drawn off from the unl. , n ti, 1, I th•• r • cent India rubber and,lobuy • perati 't and Forney, to aay nothing, of " At least a thousand cute cc innate. But if a tbou - and r tire hundr.. , l ALLICrIC3.II V •t, r ecourt f.• it Pr. IL _l•t it.t what is rho prosptiet when we truthful, but still unjuit tmat, , Philadelphia l am follow,: P•rtn-vlrania "After frequont conver,t.o.ll %c rig 10.11 -t partieo in the State, I conk. table repre,ents th tru , -;roi rr r ,•1., interest., in it .;:rt it cr;.ti In t ful The Americans thu.l ue'el 11, I ~:.tte• • t ; er, and their ,trength d,‘ 1: e••• district, whore it Clitl Uti Innst avalial • tri ". city an , l county et" Philadelphi,i, •r. . Cti • xrota. !alien r.•ll4"Cin tho cannot number cm - ire than Ir )tn ••• , 14 i 1 .1 w 1-410 thly tualrx the f,.11 ,wing c xtrt, r. tr pitch ..f thtt nrl , l* rei).-Tte_r II ,r "The fait difficult) LI , LIIIIJ3I. 11 ton tier Vice Presil tit by the v-oti in. and that nf .I.lin,ton by ti, 1 nventinn Thcrinw .I, ;] A I; r , I' , r"- an i :‘ 4; • - rsiinwr • . hat ,4f I ytn ,t the Seward clique stuok to Oity l'enns)lyanut roan. 11-race 11 Pay, t, ig Law, and other, held t...1.tin.;,.14 al, I t! . Petltia)lb4l.lla ciique 11 Dayt•.o hal 0, t , drawn at 01:10 , , aU , I .I , loeoti uit.rrnT t": I' nu would have urgint,i. •1 at .11.••• t ,1 11. nhiut But thni pulley ,1:.1 II a I who did not want Fremont - - Then corutueuved the seefrt war 11.1.1 :11'r =SI 1 'oun“ _roar rll.llttl Niece wq ,0 between Weed and 143, inn ,ranee and imbectlity ieorge I.tw tot 1,,. Qt“ t ue, have prollicol ma and New Jersey Taken in t the Cithbuos and Saudi rsou totti U. tI,• 1 • t tLec.; nothtng but heartburning- 11 received a letter fr••m tl. ; 7 0,:ctary t ,if Pennsylvania this mounts,: II•• " I ("unless I have nut nlu, h Imp" d •ra.. 2 .; State in November W.' failed a: the ; ~ . tioa for the want of etticient i t ; ) information was not definite, and , 11 rt. w all made on the surface, while the dew cratco • r gal3iitafinti wail perfect in all it+ d. I,i. ' In au interview with ijov, me that ten thousand naturaliz trid 1•••• made in the State Pince the Ist ••f ti. p:, r, and that the colonisations had reached 101 l t rt ty five thousand on the unfinished puti;ic .1-it..., the most of which were in the hawks ••f lc contractors " Prom all this it will be seen that tic pretenc' 4 1 1. 1 that the I!.epublicane can carry l'eurisylennia ' ' next week, in the merest bosh—a decoy held out 1 to keep the party together in other Btatee, r on t The Prospect in Pennsylvania. • Wo C3ll cr(dlt ;Lt. suit, w. 11 . rh• p I=lll letuotrats Republicans Ku , w Nothing, pr to ip‘r, •. fFr rn. qu , i hi in Boil' 1.1, Lois of the Propeller Toledo--Sixty-e vE Lost ! .• . I NI„ i II I • %t • I ' ll T• • I) , i-t. in \i, MIME Le L ;% .1 s ,v t ISM EMI r.il 4.,t1 1 =ME MEMO OM MEM • '• in•lr I IME MEE El =I OE I I - ,t niter... 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