11 II OLUDIE XVIII.- :NUMBER 21 1 Tar. 1 IGEN. GEARY BEFORE THE PEOPLE. 1 The Pittsb urg OTTEß JOURNAL, 1 , Chronicle, Johnson pa ! per, says ,a grand mass meeting assembled I m Bucks aunty, on : Wednesday, which . I was addressd by Gen. Geary. That dis ezr Devoted to the cause of Re publicaniena. them- i tereitscrf Agrioelture, the adiancernent of Edgcation; tdrigl.llShed gentleman Made a speech that end the beat good 01 Potter counts. liwning no guide I no less icharacterizei bt candor than except that of Principle, it will endeavor to aid in the! was wort of more fully , Freedotnizing our Country, jeloquence. He said that Objections had WIC-Advertisements inserted at the followino. rate..l been made to him because! he had once except where specialbiirzain sins are made, A "-quarc" I been a Derm i. ,crat. He smutted the fact, Se 10 Hues of Brevier or Sof Nonpareil.types : 1 square, 1 imiertiou $1 50 but asserted that he had bee educated in • 1 square. 2 or 3 insertions .... - .... ..._ ...... 200 the true princlples of d i ehi ' racy. 'ln the Nash sub-egueot iusertioii less than 13 ..... 40 1 1 iguare, 1 year " 0° I rear 1844 he ; was selected by President ' Bo these Cards, 1 year- on 600 , Administrator's -or Executor's Notice , 3 Polk to proceed to Califo rn ia on a mission Special and Editorial Notices per line.— __ ,20 iof iriiportanCe.- On his; rristal at the N ear-AU transient advertieemeats,mte4 be paid in i ...: g, ‘ ~___'.. . , IV' wa s Cho - e I cbairnian of the evance,and no notice will be taken of adverti-ements cm , - cuit , "l l, , , „ram a distance, unless they are accompanied by the Central Committee of the Bemocratic par ' 'money or satisfactory reference. , . I and took an active part in the political Dar Job Work, of all kinds, executed with neatness , VI and despatch. ' strufferle incident to the creation of Califor - B- , zular State. The "fire-eaters" rustasnet , 11 1r ateiLARNEY, PlroprieUm. nia into a reo, of the SoutCcame there with the avowed purpose of Making California, a slave State. The peoPlelwere so abSorhett in mining op erations , that they ctia• not ,tege sufficient cognizance of the important issues presented, O. T. ELLISON, 31. n., l and John W. Geary was left almost sincrle -IDRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport. ra., I handed to counteract l the 'Schemes of the x resnectfully informs the citizens of the villaze and I . I' i'icittity that he wilt promptly respond to an sails for ; pro-slavery propagandists. He brought to feesional services Oilice on First street, first deur , ;.(' ' ' i the stru2-g,le all his re , ource of ability, seal best of his residence. 17-I0 and inilekible devotion to freedom, and in . JOHN S. MANN. 'r the end the cause' of huirain liberty and TTORNEY •AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. 1 , i . . • . . . and _ ~ Coudersport, Pa., will 'attend the several Courts repu [mean institutions triumphed, a Potter and Cameron comities. Ali bitsine,s' en. I A , iftirnia became' a free State.! trusted to his Care Will receive prompt attenltua. 1 5 Unice on Main street, in revidenze. ' In .18-'6 be took cba'rre of Kansas. l.• There the oia battle ryas to fight over again. 1 intended The autlic , r . :ties at W-.ashington to , make liiinsas a slave Stats Geary gives the fillow'i , c , brief and unvarnished story of , ~, and , is.A.Ac DENseN. , the seductions that were of to induce A TTORNEY.AT.LAW, C,mder -port, Pa.. win i him into a rbetraval of his c:onviction•-. Tlie A -..nd to all by-'ines.3 entrusted . .o , ln with care s i ay t oligarchy, lie sars, ap i proached me in . • NOTI. FS Free and Accepted Ancient York ?Saxons F°ULALIA 'LODGE, Nn. 342; F. A. M. Stared 1 hfeeting; on the 24 and 4th irecinea.layscit each; nil!. Hall, in the 3d Story of the ( , linteil Bieck. D.C.E•iminEs,Sec. WN.f. SHEAR, _-------i--------- ; ---_—_ A3tTll. tit G. ounsT ED, ATT.OIO.:EI" AND 'COUYSELLF..it AT LAW. Coudersport, Ps , viil attend to titrt.itt,inesii co-i rusted to his care with prom ittne, ,, :mil d hility. udice In the seeptid storey of the tHri.h.teit Dittek. 1 and promptnees. At..end- , C, , 01,t• - _ , . of WI:J:OH:V. corm-[ --: - ‘6 ..,,—. .,.• ~ - . „ ~, ties. °thee on Second ,treet.near:.tne AI it.g ,- ;:y brld [4- [ this manlier: "If you make . ' Kansasla slave 1 F. W. lENON. i ,qate. v.: , 11' have just to name Your price; . „ r •1 • - ,k TTOFINT,Y AS I - ) COL7SzIELL,OII AT LAW.; ..lo Ulla, :Mu II ypa -Want guueruatorial or AA.. Con lerenort, 1'n.,..w 11 . a:tend:he Lle.uttslin r ot- '1 tailliateffial honOt= or weiritlL You have only - er and the adjuinnig counUe, --------7--- 3111:LER 6 3IcAIpkIESEV , 1! whether there %%,I_ anythini; in inv official ATTou,:ays..-AT LAW, - II tott,ernri, Penn .- A.— . _'upon . 1 ; ~ , . ... .: Agent , for the 'Collection of Claild.i.ng.,l ,t Lli•eel N% II tlit., h.. 0 prel.atul the iin tied !stiles and 'late ,io,ernololit-....1..0its Pen,io:,-. • ,zuth2e.5,..., O. ' their scheme br which justified ounty,A7ears of Pay&e-A.,llree , B-.x 9. ~ r r, • hr.rZ. J. C. M'ALMEN EY I them in approaching me in such a manner. ir U. MILLER, , '----------71----- I I then told theM to rzo bacit to those from mile ' arid tell ihern there was 1 - enough in the Treasury of the lies, though it should he heaped ihrh, to swerve me one hair's. in the path of duty.';', i , ourse of his address, the speaker, the minor that he wOuld have. to have been the Democratic: __. ,foi'.' ti.iovernor of Pennsylvania. , 1 - w -,,,_: ET -, - ' ion hel returned from the field,' I no political aspiratio of ,any ; he was called upon I. leaoing . .a. politicians and regtie:;ted to' CHARLES S.] JONES. I A vitcl , ocr—D ~,r , I , p,,,, g0 Nr,,a!5:,,,,t,,,,,,.: ! ialiow tie 9;e iif his mime in conneetioL with dll . Oils - .Flney.l-1"-ricl]:,‘ Sitlon - erv, Dav Cia , ,l-: .the dieinueratic nomination, bud he had laroceries,.&c:, ]twin rit . r,etl'Cintiler9io - rt. y.i .' i - . i myatiably (-riven a co l d shoulder tel allfsuch D. I. oiLni.vrii:D. !intreaties, and he expressed his dpinibn of : . AfEkriANT--Dealc - r in 1):.y Gisils. Iterely-Tade , fl'emocnitic teachirPrS in terms more t..tith I Clothing, Crockery, (i,lrocera , , } l-nr. I—ed, , -, ' tir, Pont, Provisions, St.c., Main stvet, Cott leriTce t. Pa fitl than complimentary. He then with! . comaNs scrirru. 1 , the utmost emphasis declared, tha;t he I firm..! RCRANT—DeaIer in p-y Gno is; Crroc , rle... Ily adhered to the;great triv..lis r.,./4 forth in,: 3yiProvisipns, ilar,lwariiiiQiiee ,sivare. Cutlery. the phitforrn of the Republican flaky Of the'l and all 4.i.0 Is trixOy foun.l illti a enntry store. n'6l , H. J OLSTED. sented hy his fellow soldiers on tie fittht of TT ARDWARE Merril:int, alai li-a1 , .1 - in S'ores. , - ~ II Tin and S-niet Iron•Wa e. Nl:l'n street. riind,r . dune, a -t; also the amendment VrOposed by 1 . eport, Penns. Tin and tri'li..tilt llr , in War, made to Cong.reSss to the Constitution of the I.Tnited order, in good styl., on sli , rt 1,,,,t:_,. P • I 1 States.. That is plain, and ut equivoca talkinn... - , 1 , He Made a summary of the Concr'r4 • • M. W. MeALARNEY, - _ ,I EAT, ESTATE and INSUR. tNCE AGENT.— l WriOril the) Land• Bo3ght. and Sold, Taxe.; paid and Tales p..,, I not manes . n cotigated. Insure 4 property aznin,t firen tip. be.,4 I , 1 . . companies in the Country - . 111 ry, and Person: , a4nin -t Acct ! Ctilteti St.. dente to the TrAvelerg in,r.r.Ln - c , Con:lntly of Ltart...,....l ..:....... forcL Buoinra transact.-d prornytly I,•f:'3 iii,../Intitain • ! breadth fr'. P. A. STEBBINS S Co., G u oo lor and everything ustt ll!. kept ie a g .od country !tote Produce bought and cold 17 2.:1 . . i . ' c. 11. SIMMONS.- 7( rErt.cn.k.s:T —NV ELT.tiVII,LE N Y.. • ...: • . H.r2 siil , l %,.* 111 sale rind Retnil Denier in Dry Goo' . , Finry and . ii was wii Staple Goods Clothinz,Lalies Dre, , ii.nlds.(irc. ,rie , . 1 1 , . ~ Flanr, Feed, &e. It.tailers stinplied l in libera: term, ' r.trl , 1.1 --- 1 - V -m ,-, - i ocrattl , COUI)ERSPOiIt IZOTEL. F. G . LA.SSITIRE, renprAFTaß..C.r.er c'SNI I in .• t. D - and S,condstrec'ts.Colet.port Potter Co . A Livery St.ble is ab , o kept in con r.cii , m with th;. sional [Plan of recoMitruct:on. The first Hotel. 'Daily Stage= to and from the Itnilroods. I ropO i sition of that plan simply y ga N Co Potter Journal ' Job-Office. a les '11: ' ITATI NG lately added a tine new a=.9_rtment ef evervi Man e q ual ( . - iVii r i 4 lll-S • It 'W I V -- ; JOB-TYPE to our a'rea.ly larze a-sorint.-nt iat it IM1) ted negro suttrage. It race the we are now prepared !.o do all kinds of work, Cii,,ply rig * ht. to sue and be itied;Thom proi-,erty,; and with taste and neatne-s. Orde-s sr.licite.l. , etc. iThe wi! , Ae question of negro sutitage. LYIVIAN HOUSF. , Congress was referre , t bv to the differerit . .. ~ LiftWi§villei Potter ourity, P rieylvatua. States respectivels •,, committed entirely to : 131ERT0N LEwits: Proprictor.i. 21,..inx ' ~ the keepinc , °tithe Suites, and each State, taken this excellent Hotel, the proprie, , , anshe , I ..n 1 . ~ o make the acquaintance of the travelinz ,Iplib;ic anid, might, at. its pleasure, dislranchise or refuse. eels confident of giving satisfaction to al' why! tear . , 10 - enfranchise Sts ne6 - rrees. - It was a Ties-, ell on him.—Feb. 1'460 If " -----1. tion, too that Could not come up in Penn-; MARBLE AV 0R1N,,,, Isania for 3tar-„ The Constitution ofi ~ , ik I -- . the State could net be altered more than, A , t . , Monuments and Tomb-Stones ir 1 t ...--,-* - of all kinds, will he furnished on reasons,, 4. '11" ble terms rid i short venues . once in five Years,l and having two years: h y ,ago amended it sOlas to allow the soldiers r , • -• --,.. ~... „ , c. lirennlf. ,CO vote, it was iMpossible for the people, , • ..., Residence: Euiraift. ts miles "in:. Ci , . ' "'... Coudersport, Pa .on the Sinnemahoninz, again to amen that instrument until three Road, or leave your orders at the Polollice. ferYi ; . year`more had . elapsed. 'The speaker s DAN , BAKER. ' i, thou g ht negro sittrrage , might be a verii Yi: • 1 , :.;ip e C t., l,A o pi t f he AG p r „ .7 ,, C nt , proper question to consider in 1870, but at r7lPN'on'snp°rocNu-reld. and s-v , I Val: who are disabled by reason of wounds received: present it wits la myth. or disease contracted while in the servlce of the Unite .1 , Gen Geary procee States ; and pensions, bounty, and arrears of pay obi ; 1 . , tamed for widows or heirs of ;hose who have died cut: Democratic tactics. Whilst .neg,ro suffrage , been killed while in service.; Ail letters Df inquiry' , promptly answerel, and oa receipt by mail of a _fate 1 . was kept up as • a blind to delude voters,' meet of the case of claimant,il. will forward the nee, the sugary paper. for their siznature. Fees in Pem,lot Congress e e , , opponents of C •- w t really eases as fixed bylaw. Refers to lions. leaic 13ensorql „ striyi to bring in a very, large number Of, A.G. Olmsted, John S. Mann, and F. W. Knox, li,rl , i DAN! BAK Mt, , tates based .on the negro count in the, -1 'Julia et Claim Agent, Cou,lersport, Pa. I I South. Under the old order of things, the! 1 rin ok I, sur every where %IA" ch Per Tear', We want neenni number of representatives from South to sell our IMPROVEIi , _l, - Ls i • 1 S. Sewing Machines. Three new hind, j toder and ' Ula-seol upon the negro count was `theees en (..e 1., tipper , feed. .Warrant,l tic!, yeari. Ahoy!: s ' l l the blacks now being no longer slaves, the , or large tor:lin...ions paid. rho nNLY machines soh 1 In the United States for less t i tian po, 'vrhich are itqw number of,repre:sentatives from the States, licensed by Howe, Wheeler S. Wil,on, Grover a.... 13:4 w ,., • ric ....., 1 tea ed,iby eleven, making the whole; 1 ker,6inger & Co.. &8.,ehe1 , 1(4. Axt other cheap ma: : _ chines are Infringements and the , eeller or user n.r, ; nun' ber ba ed. l upOn the negro count alone, liable to arrest, tine, and imprisonment. Circulars I - a ,rea. Address, or call upon Shaw & Clark, Blade.. about twen 21 ht. In the S tates of Geor: l . ttra,maine, or Chicago, .111. Di . ,.. 26, 1855. lowly. I i gia4Missis.ippii, Alabama, and South Car- ' -"- the proportion of whites to blacks; about s one to two and a half. The uality , f representation as between the th and the South could thus be easily If tie P °positions of Congress were.' ctlu • owt ~the South would be admitted 1... , • eprese talon upon an unjust basis. [greys roposed to let thorn cOme.in on i I I term ~a nd held the doors wide open I Itch ! Itch ! Itch ! ,;0 in' .SCRATCH! SCRATCH! SCRATCH IN' vas . ine WHEATON'S' OINTMENT, ' Noi . , 1 - Will Cure the Itch in iS Hours! : see I Also euris SALT RHEUM', ULCERS, CHIT, _ BLA.INS, end - 11 THE a c F I Price 50 cents. For sale by all drntrCiets. By sendintr - t o ' 60 cents to WEEKS sc POTTER, Sole A;:ente, 170 Con Wubln•-•ton street Roston, it , ll he lfo - war!ed by ] u see, free of pr..,11.;i ce 'e,i4-1 an: part Of the United Statei ' Jens 1, lice,fop netice.."4".•/>T• i eql.l I . . .:. . . , AO. !Iti k : A 1 0- . . . ---,................._ _ . • ••), -... . ( e \ ' , ; 0 1 . _ : I # _ - ! - - t ‘t. ‘ - o I . ~ Al I. 1 ._. ~ ,-1( , 1i.,:.: 0 , ___ e .. ..i ip 1 .g( ~ ....._. 1 t i • 1 , .... 1 ~ I . . , I , 1 , t _ __4 -4•--- _-._ , 1 , . • , . r ln the < alluded to cotisented ea:p.(l id a te Debotea to the ?lipcipies of Irto DcOenlq, qrl COUDERSPORT, POTTER. COUNTY, PA • . . =--- - , fot thcrn, facing down only one condition,' States met in conrenshun and let 11 rule namely, that the votes of all men, White 'em, and ez I,contemplated the scene I t i p." arieLfack, should be counted alike—that wept, but it wuz in dead earnest. ode 'white vote in the Xorth should not be 1 "What are you blubberin for!" asked a; made of less weight than one white vole ;enthoosiastic delegate in front UV me.whot ; in the Sonth.. ; I was a swabbin !his eyes With ahandkercher. , `The General made some eloquent alln "I'm a postmaster, ll sez I, "and must do; sions to the Meiican war, and paid a grarid MY ddoty in this crisis. ; What are you tribute to` the I gallant men whO fought sheddin pearls for," retorted I. "Are you for the flag during the rebellion. His a postmaster?' -- i speech was received with tremendous en- 'Nei," set he, "but I hope to be," and thusiasm, and will gain him; many votes: 116 swabbed away with rerlood vigor. ! His election, by a handsome majority 64y. "Wes the matter With the eyes uy all. be considered as a certainty, i the delegates?" sez I. 1 ; . ....... ...- "They've all got postoffices in 'em,"jsez' I he, aid . he worked aWay faster than ever.; I While gettin a fresh handkercher (which ; , _ [From ; the Tole.° Blade.] 1I I borrered from the bind coat pocket try a PosT-OFFICE ~ ONFEDRIT X ROADS (wich) I delegate near me; and wich, by the way, 1 I ' is in the Stait ur Kentucky. ' . in my delirious joy, I , forcriA to say' anythin i ' August 14, I'SG6. . Ito him about it), I looked, over the Co'- I Peace is onto me! I hey spent many, vention, and agin the tees welled up from happy periods in the course ur a eventful' my heart. ,My soul; win full and over life, but I never knowd what perfeck satis-jflowin, and I slopped over a - the eyes;l faciton wuz till now. The first week I wuz! there, before me, sat that hero Dick Taylor married to my Looizer Jane it wuz hevenly, 1 and Cuth 'Bullitt, and there wuz the Nel I j for independent 11 1 , the other blisses inci- 'sons and YeadOns and the representatives! ;dent to the married 'state I bleeved : that Inv the first families of the South, and in I !she wuz the undivided possessor of a farm, Philadelphia, at a Convenshun, with all the 1 'kir rather her father wuz, which on the old s leadin, Democratic, uv the North, ceptin ' man's decease would be kern, and the pros-, Vallandigham and Wood, and they wuz I peck of a life-time with a amiable, well-Iskulkin ' around within call, with ' their i huiltj woman, with a farm big enough to! watchful eyes on the proceedings. Here is !support me, with prudence on her part, !a pro Speck ! Here is fatnis! The Presid %.vuz !bliss itself, and I enjoyed it with a I dent into our confidence! The Postmaster; 1 degree of muchness rarely ekaled until. I a runnin the Convention! ; The bands a! ;found out that it wuz kivered more deeply iplayiri Dixie and the Star Spangled 'Ban , with mortgages than it wuz ever likely to iner alternitly, so that nobody cOod cornphiin! I be with crops, and my dream uv happines iuv partiality, or tell reels wich side the; , busted. Sweet ez wuz this week it wuz; Convention wuz on, or wich side ii had i , , j misery condensed when compared to the; been On in the pasL Ali! my tog sus- !season I her just passed through. ; ceptible sole filled up agin, the tears started, I I: I wuz a delegate to Philadelphia! I but that vent wazn'tjentiff, and I fell faint-I ivuzn't elected nor ncithiu, and hedn't any ; tug on the floor. TWenty or 30 Northern! credentials, but the door uv the Wigwam I !delegates seed me fallin, and ketchin site i passed nevertheless. - The doorkeeper wuz Inv the gray coat with the star onto it, ! j a old ilinookrat, ; and my breath helpe me,' rushed to ketch me, and they bore me out! my nose, which reely blossoms like the l uv the Wie:warn." Sed one: "Wat a tehchin 1 lobster, wui uv yoose, and I spent my herin t scene, overpowered by his fealins!" "Yes," a gray coat on_ with a stand up collar, with Isel another,' "he deserves a apintment!" a brass star onto it, wuz; wat finished the' I didn't go back to the Convenshun coz i biznis. The Southern delegates fought, I knowd it want no goose, and *ides; after !shy ur me, bat the Northern ones, bless !all the tears that had been shed, the Mem- 1 their souls, the rninit they saw the star on; bens wringin• their handkerchiefs or+) the the collar .uv my great Coat, couldn't do ;floor, it ii uz• sloppy underfoot. COncilia- t chuff for rue. They addressed me es Ker- tion and tenderness gushed out ur edi. I I net and Gineral, and sed. "this wui trocily l knot; it it would be all right— it coilldn't! I . ,an untneritid honor," and paid my drinks,; be otherwise. There wnz bonds Which !and I succeeded in borroWin a hundred and held the'Members together and preve' nted i . 1,-twenty- dollars tic em on the first day, I j j the possibility uv trouble. ; Johnson hevin 1 iiii g lit hey doubled it, but the fellows wuz a ambition to head a party, must hey a ' took in so easy that no fipanceerin wuz re-1 party to head. The Northern dele ,,- ashun quired and it reely wuz ; no anaooznaenf. ; which bed formerly acrid with the 1:11alish-; The Convenshun itself wuz 'the most of-,nists; couldn't do nothin without the De-I fectinist gatherin 1 ever Iwitnist. I bed a; mocracy South. The President coed F• de seat beside Randall, wh wuz a nianagin! pend 'on the De.mocrisy North. coz be holds, the concern, and I cook see it all. The !the offices; the Democracy North could crowd rushed into the bildin, and ' filled it,: depend on the President coz, he must hey; :' when Randal ldesirecl attention. He hein: their votes; the President cood depend on the PostrnasterGeneral, every one' of ern, the Domocracy - - 3crth coz they want him, i dropped into his seat ez drough he bed bin, to make a fight agin ti Aholishen Congris, I shot, and there -waz the most perfeck quiet! wich is a unconstitooshnelly keepin uv ern; ' I ever saw. Doolittle, w'io wuz the Cheer- i out and preventin em ; from ivolloping their! 1 man,! winked at' Randall, and nodded his i niggers; the Dernocraey Southcood depend head,' when Randall announced that THE lon the President coz he must . have their 1 DELEGATES 'FROM SOUTH K.4..RLINT AND ! Representatives In their seats: to beat the THE;DELEGATES FRONIi M.ASSACADOSITS Abolishnists in Congris; all cood depend WOCI:1 ENTER ARM. IN AR!it. ! With a slim; on all, each coed depend on the other, coz; and measured step they cum in, and at a each faction or rather each stripe lied its; signal from Randall, the cheerin counnenst,' little private aite to I grind wich it coodent i and sich cheerio! Then 'Doolittle pulled !do without the others to turn the grind-: i , 1 :out his white handkercher and; applied it: stone. I ' -. I to his eyes, and every delegate sitnultane- t The Southern deleg,ates, seine on 'ern, I ously pulled out a white handkercber and : wuzzent so wel pleased. ; i applied it to his eyes. f "What in thunder," sed one uv em, "did ; i To me this wuz the ptaudest Moment , they mean by pilin on the agony over trio uv my life, not that there wuz anything Yanks we killed ?—by plcdgin us' to give; partikilerly inspiritin in the scene afore me,' up, time tee uvlseceslien, and by 1' ;gin on I for there wuzzent. Orr, 'from South Liar-j us to pay the INashnel Yankee debt?" ' ! , ollny, looked partikilerly - ashamed of his "Sir :" sed 1 1 1 , "easy over the rough places. self. ez though be wnz going through a - Styx:ft iend, they didn't mean it, er if they highly' nessary but extremely disgusting di - dri - e - didn't: r. Is an oath so handl() break ?! :Ceremony, and wuz determined to keep a I Wood it trouble that eminent; patriot Breck- I stiff-upper lip, over it, and Couch looked inridge, after all the times he swore to sup up to Orr as though he wuz afeerd try him ; port the Constitution, to swore tei it midst' and ez though lie felt flattered by Orr's; more? and wood ti it trouble him tt break,it 1 condescension in walkin at all -with such anymore than it did in 'ail ? Nay verily. , a umble individjooal. But to my eyes the' Dismiss them[ gloomy thots, Vallandig , scene wuz significant. .T. hooked into -the; ham was kicked otit,l;tit. a thousand mules,! filcher and wh.,t did I see ez them two; and all us em old and experienced, coodn'ti I men, one sneakin and tether ashamed uv • kick him cut cf our service. Doolittle; hisself, walked up that aisle? Wat did I; talked Northern talk coz its a habit he gong. s , -.e I I saw the Demccriey restored to its; into doom the war, but he'll 'get l over id; nateral condiShun saw the reunion us' Raymond will be on our side this yearl; the two wings-- , -in fact I saw the entire certain-; for his year he wuz agin us, and Dimukratic bird reunited. The North one Iby the time he is ready to turn right he'l wing, and the; weakest; Kentucky the beak, be 'worn to so . small a pint that he won't' sharp, hungry and rapacious; South-West,; be worth heien, and the Dimocrisy ur time the strong, active wing; Vire"iuny, the legs North aruz altilZ owin g an , l if they wuzzent,, and claws; Ohio, the heart;Pennsylvania,,' the offices Johnson hei in reserve will draw 4 the stomach ;:South Caroliny, the tail feath- ! em like lodestim. t ens, and Nbci-Jeniey, the balance uv the i "My deer 'sir, I wunst knowd - a Irishman bird. I saw these parts, for five years dis- j who wuz sense killed in a Fenian raid, eMi severed, cone together holdin nigger in • ployed as a artist in well-digging. It niz one claw and nost=offices in the Other, sain,' his lot to' go to the bottom of the eXcalial I "Take 'em both together—they go in lots." i ticir and load the buckets with earth - . The , • I saw the old Union—the ,bold, shivelrous ; dinner horn' sounded and he, with the' alacLl Thee is a; great deal of theologY in the Southerner a guidin., controlling and di- j rity characteristic uv the race, sprang i 9 tp idee et the little zicl rile wisliedshe could rectin the machine; a'ad assomin to hisself the bucket and told them to hist liwiYl. be goOtTWithout obbving her grandmother. the places uv, honor, and the Dimokrat'uy ; and they hilted, but ez they histed the ' She said it was easy qnoug'i . .to read good the North follerinm like a puppy dog at hi- aoozed themselves a droppin earth ottej books and prar but it was, pretty hard to heels' taking sich fat things ez he cood ' him. "Shtop l' .. sedlie, "or be gorra I.llthi i .j c i . grandmother.l _ . ____!.. . 1 Nasby Attends the Philadelphia is; La_ ~.,- D. - tn snap up--the Southerner ashaed uv his Cut the 'rope!' My dear Sir, associations but forced to . voose 'em—the ..Doplittle,aud Seward and Jt Northerner uncomfortable in-his presence, i h:istin us out uy the pit we fel but tied to him by s.lf interest. I saw ai 1 All went - MT satisiieti—tl comin back the good old times Tvhen 34, men, for they carried home wi Convention Disseir)iiAtioß of Yol-Aiiig, ife.Ws. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 11, 1866. 1 cornmishuns—l, feelin that rriv , Postoffice wuz sekoor, for ef, with the show we've got, wel can't re-elect Johnson, I the lore ur the . Dmperacy has departed inch i d. ' PETROLEUM V. NAsn P. M. 1 ' (which is Postmaster.) I UNMISTAKABLE. The Potter Journal, as vell as the rest of:our Republican cotemixwarieti, hare had it continually belched into their ears by the rebel press, the copperhead ()reran in this town, that General James A.-Beaver, H. N. Mc &llister . '7 Esq and other Zild Re- , publicans, had joined that little. Brigade now being led /into temptations by the bread and — butter which ',the murderer of J. Wilkes ,Bboth placed in the . hands of An drew Johnson, will find, , by referring to the proceedings of the UniOn Republican Mass Meeting Which wns held !in Bellefonte on Wednesday evening last; that the General is not the apostate to the great principles which saved this county,'}' during the lion, and to maintain which with his sword, be narrowly escaped death from a rebel bul let iu that terrible conflict With the traitor army at Chancellorsvilie, and sacrificed a inlei the last. sanguinary struggles before Richmond. We were Called. upon by our brethren of the press in this District, to' deny that Gen. Beaver Would accept the Copper-Johnson nomination for Congress, and to states the truth •as to hiS alledged hostility towards Gen:Geary. We deemed it unnecessary ,to do so; knowing the whole to be a lie,--ancl the charge an unpossibil ity on the part of a'soldier such as Gen. Beaver truly is. Mr. McAllister is in favor of Andrew Johnson's "polie'y of nicking treason odious and punishing traitors,' land so are we I 'He ,is in favor of the Amendments to the duistitution, and so are we; he is in favor of the election of Gen. John W. Geary and the entire, Union County Ticket,whichisprincipally made up I of wounded and capable soldiers, and so are we; and if Ole lying Watdtntan can recog nize in the PRESS a friend of the late trea sonable poli4 of Booth's Copperhead Pres s ident, it has less than nothing, to hope Sor in the corning elections when the people will so thoroughly rePudiate Copperheads, itreason and traitors, as to entirely clean out l'that danger+lS tribe. The Watchman is now Bwari3 that it lied; that it will retract is out of the questionl; it,-business is to de fame loyal. men, all of whom it hates, and to White-wash, as best it can,.the- charac ters of all its seekes after bread and but ter at , the pllblic crib. Our Union Repub lican friends !can now see anew with what, brazen-faced impudent zeal : this Copper head sheet puts forth falsehood upon false-, hood in orde'r toldeceive. best John son men in Centre ciOuntv are the worst species of COpperhends that disgrace the valorous deeds of bur brave soldiers, and dishonor the canse in which they fought; bled and clied.- 1 -L'ellefont Press. aff Egotist. 'is noeP.otist-,-oh no. Ile ti rely when he essays to, is and soars away into re-: n Johnson.• This is so; s himself, and "lie thinks spgelh:' to. the delegation Iphia !Cony ention,he vind i modesty in the folloWing •i 2'6 ot The Presider., ! forgets himself address the pub rions remote fro' if he understan , he do." In hi ,ere is the letter'Mr. Ottci i lsendi us--;:it is ,d the point: I . expression: 1 ' I l Ma. Eii - In : T -- - In the Voliintec . r . of thy' ,"Mr. Chairman and gentlemen: Let'77i , , Iqd i of 4ugust, 'I am se as IrlW in this connection, ask you what can /wish in, acted .as President of a!, Clvrnei• inet-t: more than th Advancement of the public! ing.•7 in South Middleton iolwnship: Ide - welfiire ?. I d l id i as much Opposed to the' sire to say that the statement is tiiiqUali indulgence of egotism as, any one." 1 i fiedls false. Three years sellice in the ; war . 1 I , - • In Drool of this delectable piece of mbd- just past, and nine months in An estr; the Chicago Tribune has taken an I ville prison entirely cured me of any scut- inventory of the fiersOna! allusions to him-1 pathy With Southern rebell and NOttherif self in the speech of fifteen minutes, of . Copperheads. I fiinglit ford mycihritry, 1 . which the above is a part, and it,is found . will vote for it, and mil - 4 and Will cote for that h. , has referred to hitnr , elf in that effort;lGear l y and the Union -ticket. .- ...i more than one hundred times. Here .is, Respectfully; JOHN OTTO the Tzz rili"s statement,of the case. He i .- alluded to A. Johnson as This humble individuall :Myself _ - I Me My I from the Phila eated his natir 5 times. 11 times. • 2S ti mes. 70 times. M-.sides speaking of himself one hundred ancbfift4n times, in the! singular number,: he rings ip the plural "us" four times, "ours" three times, "we" about twenty times. ' am as much opposed to entism as any one." "No power i can change me from my purposes." TI am "some pump ' kins," Com - rress mast 'stand aside for me, '; clear the track 'When the butgine ebmes. I"This humble individual" liiinself is to smash the party which put• doW'n th'e re bellion, and make loyalty "adioh's," and `Union men "take baclseh, ts," I, me, my' *lf rill run "Lrue. rauchin . e--Ncr 'ten'rr e :' ' Randall )Imson art n fientiman, wallong with two !a -1 into in . 6C1.; dies, 'stepped on a bogglead hoop, that fley le N, or th4rn up and struck . Lim in the face. "Good gra b em tbLir i cicala I" said he,"which of you dropped that lill• , ,- e' TERNS::-$1.50 PER LiN1011M; Tha Cchrrt House Bell in, StuitniTy; At the 'recent of df the new court house in . Sunblty,lHis Honor Judge Jor: dan, delivered an appropriate address, ft-0M which we lextract the following: "The hirce aid excellent bell that called us together this morning, - ii, the gift of Gen: Simon Cameron to the, citizens of Sunbury; where, when a youth, he lived for several years, but) to be used in the court house foi the benefi l t of the citizens of the county: He is a native of Lancaster county. His father and family removed to this place itt March, 1808, where the father, soot after, died. Tile General was then nine ye:U . l3of age. After the death of his father he lived in the farnily of Dr. Peter Grahl, of thia place, who adopted him as his ion and' ' heir. The Doctor, at that time, ;was a mini of consid4rable wealth, :highly j cultivated: Manners, of varied and exterisive learbing .—was a fbreiguer by birth, and had seen much of the world. He died abobt tla4 year 1814, having before his death wasted all his prciperty: 'The General was thud left to combat with the ;world--=a podr orphan bdy. At the age o' sixteen he left Sunbury, to whicll he was Much attached, and where he ae: quired a taste fur literature, to seek his for: tune among strangers. Then he was known bUt by few. Now, no'''on© in his native St4te is ignorant of his history for the last (thirty years. He has occupied some of the most important positions and officeS in t i the Government. On some men fortune never smiles ; their pathway through life is dark and dreary, and if occasionally a ray et .iunshine darts across their path, it . is followed by dark clouds And gloomv prospecti. Not so with Gen. Cameron: Fortune p smiles have not often been with held' from him. For the people of Sun: bury, the descendants of-thei friendi of his early lift 44 lie cherishes a strong attachment; and for t;he last forty-nine years has not failed to:pay an annual visit to his old love's hone, where, perhaps, he laid the founde• tion of his future prosperity and usefulness! He has presented the citizens of Sunbury with a gift that; long_after he, and hint who now addresses you, haye passed off did stage of action, will awaken by its solertni peals grateful memories of him, who be: • I e stowed It. . 1 _ T _ From the Car:lele Iforold.) Don't Like Rebels or Copperheads. John Otto; whd subscribes to the card hereto attached, joined Gend (then Captainy HendersOn's company on its first organiza: tion, and served faithfully With it through mit the entire war; nide Irrionth§ of the• time he suffered as a prifioner in the horri-, ble pen at Anjersonville. Three years of st cli stern lesso'ns as the wqr against trea: • son's rebellion alone could impart have en tirely cured him of any leaning towari Copperheadisrn. Who wodderti that the brave boy is indignant at tho use of his, name as presiding officer of a meeting' of those men who elicouraged a war in his rear when he was battling, in front; and who are now laboaing day and night to el- . vate to the Gubernatorial chair of our - Stat4 a meaner enemy i than thol - ie who starred! !din and his brethren at A.nllersodvillel r.kLLANDIGIIIII ON THE STUMP.-- , ,1110, Democratic State Central l eordmittee of Ohio has put Vallandigharn on the stamp, iissigning him more appointnients than are given to any other of the orat44: How do' the Union Johnson 10;1' that. style of pblitical affinity Fl at its expounder and advocate C: Vallan dirrham ? - This is the man that is put forWa'rd N. a; the leader of the new dispensatio”; an't the soldiers and Failds of the conntiv are in vited to follOw holdin-i a univen tion at Cleveland. We greatly mistake the tone and temper of tne soidiers'an.t sailors who saved the nalhati; if they are prepared to minr+le with arc folto'W tlio4 who viould,here e destroyed it: • 1 ti m? adon • JOKE c& BEEctimi.—Henry Ward Ereecher, hzs ICtely been pitchinz' into the practice of wkfiing railroad' c;,n -d uCtori and drive-rt.:on Stroday. The oth4,. day, Mr: Beecher, in his peculiar wa, tnaking inquiries of a Brooklvri es&,ildnetor to Whom h'e was unknownij fo whether the Sunday rilitig could not: be broken air.: "I think it; raigh be," said the con:lir:tor; but for that confounded fellow, Beecher. So many ftncy people; from all parts„-vi=it big establishment, that it makos the i‘P'l profitable. If he would only sir , it the thing could be done." MI