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VOLUME Lyon'g Katbalron. Ka,thlron ia from the t)reV word Kithro,1 'or Kthirts" svgstfying to clu, rsjsrensU ad re store, rni article is wbat lU nam aigaifiess For preserving, restoring and beautifying the iunu hair it is the Boat retnirtnble preparation in the world. JU i. again owned sad jmt .apt the origi- 'kill and' atUottun Which gave ft a sale of oTer one ullion battles per aanwsn. i ;' ' It is n most delightful Hair Dreasing. - It eradicate scurff and dandruff. " rIt keeps the head cool and clean," , " ' ' It makes the hjuravfti and glossy.' ' it prerentre hair from failing off. -- --.It prevent the hair from taming gray, ' It restores hair npon bkld heada. Anrlady or gentleman who values a beautifol head ofbair should hm Ljti'i Kathairon. It . is k oown and used throughout , the civilised world. 1 J 4 Sold by all respectable -dealers. . - . - -i DE HAS 8. BARNK& jt CO. New fort. Mar. 2-ly" IIaa;an'a Magnolia Dalm. Th ia ia the moat delightful mid extraordinary arti-tiole ever discovered. Jt changes the sun burnt face and hands to a pearly atin texture of ravishing beauty, imparting the marble purity of youth, and the dUtinyne appearance so inviting in the city belle of i uaaion. It removes tan, free k lea. pimplea and rough-hess from the akin, leaving the couapjepien treeh, transparent and sinodth. It contains no material injurious to -the- kta. ' Patronised by Actresses and Opera Singers. It is what every lady should have. Sold everywhere. ' Preparee by W. E. IIAGAX, Troy, N. Y. Address all orders to DEM AS S. BARNES A CO. New York. Uar.2S.ly . . . nElMSTREET'S Inimitable Hair Restorative, MOT A DYE Bat restores gray hair to its original color, by supplying the capillary tubes with natural sustenance, impaired by age or disease. All Mix-n dye are composed of (mwr cam tic, destroying the vitality nnd beauty of the lair, and afford of themselves no dressing. Heimatreet'a Ini eitable Coloring not on. ij restores" hair to its natural color by an easy process, but give the hair a '".'. Luxuriant Beauty, promote it growth, prevent ita falling off, eradicates dandruff, and imparts health and pleasantness to the head It has stood the test of time, being the original Hair Coloring, and is constantly increasing in favor. Used by both gentleman and ladie. It is old by all respectable dealers, or can be procured bj them of the oommer'ial agents. Ii, 8. BARNES A CO. 202 Broadway, New York. Two aixes, 40 cents and $1. Mar. 2-1y Mexican .11 ns tans Liniment. The parties id St. Louis A Cincinnati, who- bare 'counterfeited the Mustang Lihiinpnt under pretense of proprietorship, havo been thoroughly estojud by the Courts. To guard-against further imposition. 1 have procured from the United States Treasury, a private steel plate revenue stump, -which is ilucvd over the top of each bottle. Each stamp bears tho fae mitc of my Signature, and without which the article ia a Coui-terfeit. dangerous and worthies imitation. Examine -every bottle. This Liniment has been in use and growing in favor for many years. There hardly exists a hamlet on the habitable Globe that doe not contain evidence of its wonderful effects. It is the beat emoliment in the world. With its pros-tent improved ingredieats, ita effects upon man and beast are perfectly remarkable. Sores are healed, pains relieved, lives saved, valuable animals mads useful, and untold ills assuaged. For cuts, brniKcs. apraina, rheumatism, swellings,' bites, cnt, enked breasts, strained horses, c it is a Sovereign Recue dy that should never be dispensed with. It should be in every faiai'y. Sold by U Druggiat. i Dt S. BARNES, New York i Man 2ftly . j . i : r T. ISO OX. Persona of sedentary habits troubled with weak taess, lassitude, palpitation of the heart, lack of'ape-tite, distress after eating, torpid liver, constipation, c, deserve to Suffer if they will not try the celebrated . - Plan tat Ion Bi(terv which are now recommended by the highest medical uthririties, and warranted to. produce aa immrdi'itr beneAeial effect. -They are exceedingly agreeable, perfectly pure, and must supercede all. other tonics where a heslthy, gentle stimulant ia required. : They urify, atrengtheu anr't invigorate. They Create a healthy apetitw. ... They- are an antidote to chaage of water and diet. , Theyovereome effects of dissipation and late hours. - They atrentheu the system and enlived the inhtd. rTb,ey Prevent miasmtic and intermittent fevers. "They purify the breath and acidity of the stomach. They cure Dyspepsia and Constipation . They cure Diarrhea, and' Cholera Morbus. They cure Liver Complaint and Nervous Headache. They make the weak strong, the linguid brilliant, nd are exhausted nature's great restorer. . They are composed of the celebrated Calisaya bark, winter-green, sassafras, root and herbs, all preserved in perfectly pure St. Croix rum. For patticaiars, see circulars and testimonial around each bottle. ; Beware of impostors. Examine every bottle. See that it has our private U. S. Stamp unmutilated over the cork, with plantation scene, and our signature on . at-tne steel plate side label. See that our bottle is o( refilled with spurious and deleteroua stuff. Any -person pretending to sell Plantation Bitters either by the gallon and Bulk, ia an impostor. Any per-son, imitating hlt bottle, or selling any other material therein, whether called Plantation Bittera or not, is a criminal under the U. S. Law, and will be so prosecuted by us. We already have our eye on several parties re-lljiog oar bottles, Ac , who will snc-eeed in getting thesaielve into close quarters. The demand' for D raited PlaatatSon' Bittera from ladies, -clergymen, merchants, Ac, ia incredible. The sim-pie trial ef bottle k the evidenoe we present of their worth and aapexiorityv They are toM by all rea-eotsble dfogghrt; grocers,- physicians, hotels, Balloons, steamboats ad country stores. P. II. DRAKE A CO, Mar. 28-Iy , . . , , 202 Broadway. N. Y. : e'jiir:.; . ; "': , ' afEJV.YOUK STATE OIPLOHA IVARDRD TO JAMES DURNO, Albany v 7or tio'Bet Qfan$&e&6gt&&Agt DUENO'S OATABBH SNlLFFa B,l.U0iINS0, SsVy.. T6CFArroy,tVit. - Thi most desirable of all remedies for Catarrh tia no equal in. medicine. It strengthen the sight, fiiprnret the searing, ta beneficialin-Bronfehnia. and puri&es the Breath. Itia thS Ladle eefatrired-for VerVou nal. Mhe; eoataiutnoTobaecof lhlghty aiotttiitrt, pro-Jaoing a pleasing sensation and bsnefteial reaulta to "A tiia IltvAII, lL5rSoI4bjr: iMUMOrmciiats. rW, 55 .m (Jasajw sIa. VkAMnAtAB Ik. .S!nM f a Mats. erlFoa Hosaj, ft W DeUar, witlbeianL prepaid y aaatT, from the DEPOT of th Propruior, Deaaa 8. Bamsa V Co., JTew Terk, Wholesale 8 ft," '.(V'iBi ., JlWaWtp,icll4.-. lr. C. ftZT.uiU. - Jw.8ir!"-TkUU rtifr taat I was severely VVow a 1 aaed then with great saeeeaa rd'tk my frUniU 4o ears the r Sincere Priend, w" p;: EDITED BT J.. HARPEX. THBEE FACTS. 1. Ahranam Lincoln' and" the Republican -party; when th war began.' pretended that it wan wr, me restoration of Tne union and tne indication of the constitution and raws':' ;7'n proof of this, we ask the' reader to observe, with particular, attention, the,Crittenden resolution." which" we Duhlish below, and whirh 1 t ; -tf 5""'" eTBryepuuiican pa- per and politician in the adhering States, a p- - proved. Here at it : - TH CltTTgNDC.V KKSOLCTIOW. - . " That the present deplorable civil war hag been forced upon the country by the disunion-ists of (he Southern Stater, now in artiiB a-parriHt the Const ft ti?onal Government, and in arms arouhd the Capjtal ; that in thin National eiiTergency, Conjrreee. Imnishing nil feeling of mere patron and resentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole -country ; that thin war is not wsgel on their part in anyspint of oppression or for any purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established institutions of those States, but to defend and maintain 1 he supremacy of the Constitution, knd to preserve the Union, with all -the dignity, equality and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease." 2, Abraham Lincoln, and the Republican party, when the war had progressed for several months, declared that it was not for the Union only but for the abolishment of slavery. . Tn proof of this, we ask our readers to o'iserve, with particular attention, the following maui-fest of the President, which was applauded by his followers : : Lincoln to the Jichtl Commissi&iers, July I8lh, 1864. TO W HOM IT MAT COJTCEftX. Any proposition which embraces the restoration of peace, and THE ABANDONMENT OF SLAVERY, ami which comes by and with art authority that can control the armies now hi war against the United States, will be received and considered by the Executive Gov-em Mien t of -the United States, and will he met by liberal terms on substantial and collaterHl points, and the (e:irer or bearers thereof shall have safe conduct .both ways. AUKAllAXf LINCOLN. 3. Abraham Lincoln, and the Republican party, knoxv thatXhe war is to continue beyond the day on which a President is to be elected, declare, that th war is not for the Union, nor the aloliliment of slavery, but for the single purpose of continuing Abraham Lincoln in fxwcr. In proof of this, we ask the reader to observe, with particular attention, the following language, used by Secretary Seward, by order of the President, in a speech deliverel in Albany, New York, on the third day of the present mouth : "The war i at its crisis. It it clear-there- ore, that WE AUK FKiHTlNG TO MAKE AKKA 11 AM LINCOLN PRESIDENT OF THE VV1IOLE UNITED STATES; under the election of 18GU, to continue until the 4th of March, 1865. In voting for a President of the United States, can we wisely or safely vote out the identical person, whom, with ore and jrms, wear fllilUIiNU IN I O TLIE PRESI DENCY ? ' No, no." You justly say No! It would be nottiny . less than to uive vp the VERY OB JECT OF THE WAR at the ballot-box. The inoral etrenith which makes our loval position impregnable would pass from usi'nd when that moral siren jtt!i ha nassed awav. mat'rial forces are no longer effective, or even avaiiable. By such a Droceedin we shall have given bim lie victory. Important Accessions to General Hc- Clellan. A dispatch from San Francisco, Oct. 12th annouuoee that lward Stanley, late Military Governor of North Carolina. apoieted by Mr. Lincoln, has published a leUer favoring Gen McClellan for President, and opposing the emancipation policy of -the Alministration. He expresses great kindness for ike AduiiiMe- tratioo personally. Hon. R. B. Curtis, late Judge on the Beach in the U. S. Supreme Court, and who gave an opintoa onter to that of Chief Justice Taney and the majority with him, ia the D red Scott cose, is now for McClellan. .... Oeaeral Frask O ranger, ; Ex-Post master. General, and a trfe-lomg trppouemTJt'tke Dem ocrats, comes out far MxCleJIan. He fg -one of the most, influential mea in Central New York. Up to this time.he baa cerer before acted with the Democrats. Ho.i. Edward Perkins, of Norwich, one of the most talented men io Connecticut, and who has acted with the Republican party ever since iu existence, ia out for McClellan. So they come.;" ' ' ''.'"':-- "To mom it May Concern.! . CoIoueJL tVilaox, Postmaster in thia 'State, baa received the following telegraphic dispatch which may be of important- interest to those concerned r- r .'; . WasHiNOTOs.Sept, SO. , . . Men drafted are ir service iy being drawn, and any enlistment afterwards-ia void., . Drafted men who enlist before or after ttotice arc held under the draft, and wHI be credited to the localities from which thev sue drafted1. - Any United S tat ea txaaty paid them as recruits will be chareed.gaiisthem o tbeir rolls j and it is your duty, as Saperintendent of Vol- untary ueerutung service, to ere that tlieir record shows tbem.bvawrriee as draied: men. Oo your.: application :Md recommendation to the . Adjutjuat General of the Army,j.hey imay oe eaeigneo ii tbe organiiauoa ta wuioa taey rtlistsd. ,&sji that moetering I officers and iroe xaroif meoiaBderstaud thit ' ii - '-i j- WTMftiM fys that thetataber in the prseAaaioo th BetjdUiete ratilcatioa iet- iog in New York was about 500,' ., and ft'1bjo agility ef gesture that waa dooJbUesei aoanired at the eatswegensAMeiMeaartere, where w uapaMwj asi awii .aoM 4sky ArsWar. sat M .Vn ' - - . . intka cirmB aaiWaJlsr. ilifciM. Aiiia" fMa JmJtJt 'MOUNT VERNON, Trrrr. 7TT- The Carrnptioa of the Lincoln Administratioit. ; " CHANGES M ADE, BY SPUBLICA9ft. RECORD FOR HO.VEST MEN TO . f BEAD. - - ' Below we giro extracts frctta leading Republican papers, leading military and political meii all now Repnblioans, in refer'ence to the extravagance, feckless-ne8 and eorraption of the present Ad ' ministration in power. The charges ! are not overdrawn, and they woe all : made at times when no elections ! were pending and there were no- motires7 to conceal the troth. Let honest' men read, and say if they" are called upon to give their vote to prolong for four years this corrupt state of things. The extracts, one and all, speak: forthemselves.;-- - - ' . : ' ' From the Albany Evening Journal, -(Rep.) Contractors have fattened on fat jobs, adventurers have found the war a source of private gain, moral desperadoes have flocked about the National Capital and and lain in wait for prey. The scum of the land has gathered about the sources of power, and defiled them by its reck and offensive odor. " From the N. Y. Times. (Rep.) The mighty interests of the nation have been made, subordinate to the greedy avarice of swindling contractors. The War Departmentiiaa been virtually in the hands and at the mercy of men who care nothing for the sufferings of the people, except as they serve their own ends, and give them a chance to enrich themselves out of the calamities of the country. Hon. J no. P. Hale, Senator from N. II. I declare upon my responsibility as a Senator, that the liberties of the country are in greater danger to-day from the corruptions and from the profligacy practised in various departments of the Government, than they are from the enemy in the open field. Brig. Gen. Wilcox. Contractors have carried on this war. The blood of our men, the groans of our wounded2, the tears of the orphan, the wail of the widow, -have been coined into money. Men without patriotism and wisdom have urged military plans which have not accomplished anything. From the New Haven Courier, (Hep.) Contractors have carried on this war. The blood of our men, the groans of the wounded, the tears of the orphan the Wail of "thewidow, have been coined into money, This is true. Contractors ha?e carried on this war. They have swindled the Government ; . - p 1 i e ii"- mi i nut. nf nuri(lrpfl . of "million.. - 'I hoxr . -. - - . : have piled tortunes upon tortunes. Corruption runs riot in Washington. Even Senators acknowledge taxing bribes of half a hundred thousand, while leaders who have tasted the spoils are lounging about the door of every Government office, and by threats and bribes compelling tho gratification of their wishes. Political purposes and selfish schemes have ruled generalship and conducted our armies to ruin instead of victory. Newspapers and cliques have directed and changed from month to month the policy 6f the Government, and unsettled even the Cabinent itself, so that no one rises on this New Year's morn (1863) with the confidence that any stable and efficient course of action will direct the. administration of affairs through the first quarter of the year. (From the Dawes investigating Committee. The larcencies practiced ' under the Administration ha vie exceeded the en tire epeoditurfca under the JministraiJ tion of James Buchanan. Front the Chicago Tribuae's Washingfn - : Correspondent. (Rep.).: , ..; : . -. The tone of morality, ra considerably. lower tnan it; ever baa been - before- This is admitted on all .hands, and can he proved or rather needs bo proof, for the air is heavy with public and private guilt. The Southerners, as a elass, had a very nice sense of honor, so far a4 the public . treasury was con-: cerned. When they held- the power here, there were comparatively little thieving, and when any was discovered, it was promptly exposed and denounced. There has been a change, a dreadful cliange for the worse. Oh, those rascally contractors, says some honest man in the rural districts. For every dollar 'wrongfully taken by a contractor, five have Jbeen taken by public servants.'. ' IFrom thetCbase-Pomerey Circular. - -1-That even wer& the re-eleetion of Mr. i Li acorn desirable, -it : ia praotlcally iiJf)ossible'asaitist- the "anion influences that will e opposed to him. -. J.-.-.a 2. That should he; The re-elected, his manifest thdeniy iovard compromises and tempprarj je x6odien ts .of policy i irjn oeeome atroyer.yam ji aeeona term than t lias been ir tlt"."1 the. cause pf human liberty, ' SltttS aUg-nitj and hojwr ilie natioit peronafljij3rr a;Wie the may coQtinae2 ta languish,' t" whole admiiilgtfatmnliathe ptfblhxdebt'W MeomeuoMu3daikitor gtft-rtz be bi I has been to rapidly " increaaea, and tol ffach an e&orxaoua extent, and tro loose j place astojrenerf the application of 'the, one jin R$iple', absol u fcely es-sentfaT Wthe cectajitiafety'of our Re- fiafefy pubCAtir.intituiioas:o . ' v--..1-.i - Frank the Springfield ftepnUleao, 'Ivep, . ' It is aad shocking picture ; of the life at Washington, Irhlch our coTres pondents are giving as, A bureau ' of the Treasury Department made a house of seduction and prostitution. ; The ne oessi ties of poor and pretty women made the means of their debauchery by high government officials.' Members Of Congress putting their mistresses into clerkships in the departments: '- 'An honorable Senator knocked down in' the street' by a woman whom ' he had outraged. Whiskey drinking ad libitunt: The Government cheated in contracts, and openly robbed by its employees. ' Writes our most careful correspondents a long resident of the Capital : " Washington was never so villainously corrupt as at the present time. In the palmy days of Southern rule, there was not half the corruption there is now." We do not doubt that this is true; and we repeat, it is a sad shocking pictured General UcClellan and Bishop Whipple The following is worih producing now.r "God bless Little Mac !" say millious of warm hearts to-day. ilSAOQ, CARTERS A HUT OF THE PoTOWAC. JHy Diuzr Bishop: Will yoii do rue the favor to perform divine service in my catnp this morning. If you can jrive nie a couple of bourn notice. I shall be glad of it that I may fe able to inform the corjn in tlie vicinity. After the jrreat snceeis that God has - vouch-' sa fed ue, I feeKthat we cannot do (ess than avail ourselves of the first opportunity to render to Him tlie lhanks thai are due to Iliiri alone. I. for one. feel that the great result is t tlie result of His great urcy ; and would be glad that you should be the medium to offer the t hanks I feel due from this army and from t he country. Earnestly hoping you will ac ceede to uiy request. Your humble servent, . (lEC B. M Cl.EI.I.AX. .'.Major (general Com iiiuudiiig. . : Fheoerick. Sept. 27, 18G2. Mr : Dear Gemskau I have spent the day in visiting your, brave loys who are. in 'the hospital liere. I had the privilege to visit thjp wayaide hospitalsbetwen here and the c-iiiip; I mil sure it will gl.viden your hearts anl it surely did my ont to see" t he great love they have for you. W h'en I told th ?ni' how tenderly you had spoken of them, and how you knelt with ine iii prayer for Cod's blessing upon them, many a Jrave fellow wvpt for joy ; aud on every side I beard "Xiod blens the General." while here ami there sonie veieran c'aim If I did not fear of wearying vou. I would write an hour, telliiiir vou of wonla of lovrmrl confiden.e epoken by. these brave Bufferere. ..ci . . - ,.- ; - j. - - who have been with you in good and evil re- iwii. r win iiui.. uiii. i uniiuun'juic mt-.iui lit- 1 . - . , leiiing vou how sweei ia me rsmemiirunce 01 ed the privilege to nay -God : less Little Mac" - r,. - xjLnJiar - the wisest and best statesmen iot I had the opportunity to eAtgmend fome dying ! v1 "rpi g. uic jiuiuiw u.pgm-iu.vi th; r,v;,l -n4l rniint men to God! aid to whi.per Tl.e Savior' name 'j the existing administration in that city time againstthis rigid and naugnt in lhi.ir Pnn fnr t Ii o laal inr.rr.pv Af.tliolr ant moa nf. a I ntr tholr mode Ot treating great UlSCOntCntS. .1 - i. - - r i 1 I ask God to hie vmi. Yo.ir war i- rt,uri, ncBure fuu umi it is Diea&tire everv iav 10 1 Many do not know vou. Many are jealous of , your success. Many will try to tetter you.--r-But. let no cloud alove, or throng leneath. trouble you. Above is God our father. Chrit our Savior, the Ifojy Ghoal our Comforter.- God will hear our prayers. It may be. a weary, foot eore way, but there is light beyoud. Goi b1e8H you: r ' I am, with love, your aervant, for Chrict's sake. II. C. Waiprta. McClellan in the Empire State. ' The Pht lpe Union Star, pufIirihe! iu.Ontario co'baitjr.'New York, baa abandoned the Lincoln cause, anj hoisted the McClellan flag. Some of its Republican subacriltera -: have angrily etoppei their papers, ad the iSfar thus coolly replies: !" .' . . C" Aa we have thus lar been favored with more than two new subscribern for every one who has left us. we eball pereevere in mistai'.iag the Democratic ticket to ilie oest rf our luim. ble ability, trusting that after our former patrons shall have reaihVed th happy and peace ful results of the rejection-of the gallant McClellan, they wjllie willing to take us by the h&ud and thank.ua for tlie honest course we. have'taken: 'It' ?s- ihdeel astoiiiihing to pee the mighty political change whieu is taking place aroururus.- - s - In speaking of the present tumble in tbe prices'of provisions and the failure of a num-ber of firms in Chicago and elsewhere,; the Cleveland Herald refers especially to' the enormous speculation in whiskey alone, during the last two years, s.nd charges members, of Congress with.complicity in the bnsineW. The Herald says : The whidkey eepedulatioo has carried a number of Cgicago banks by the board. When at Chicago we saw a! freight house of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, that is six hundred feet in length nod fifty in widtli which was filled from end to end, and from nde. to aide, . with high wines in barrels piledfonr tiers deep. -r Think of that oQevdepoait of whiskey,; lying there-, for a rje, and- has lain there .tor mouths. A: slight depressjoa oa a gallon, upon that ,on lot would eed a good si?d bank as high as a kite. , . - ... 1 .- . ? - . , ' It is eertaleihat lioa.t D.' VoorUeevii re-electeI to-Coagresa fsemHhe Seventh CongJ reaeionar; uietnet. : -.""- ' - ; ;.. , So far asJieard from the Senate will have a , Democratic aiajority of four. tJ - :- rtdugh has uot been' heard7 from to deter-ttiae how the veas ill stand a will be Very ctoset and we aar have 'Democratic. majori Tha-gftiiling.ia. Illinbia. ' ' '"' tAx. rreepoodeai of - thev Chisago.. JToiBayja gixiog aa aecoaal of a lexBoerauo eaeetiog: io tha:t,ah Mtiirt,.? ,t; j;i ,J.tf -muatfimU jcf arteejited Jj claix' de'egauODpvipgr the '"Mtsawwragarav sorts, from 4haL onntv. .Dn hnnlrJ anJ forty-one old 'BeDablicmoa beloh ' 1 3e IX c- . - r" :- - ,m - - -. Sabeeribe lar the Baoaer. inepieaSa,.,eery,cene... M. vouroamp. .or o,fid eU'tv-presaerit Lincoln in his messn to concede every reasonable ue-. OCTOBER - 22, KatioaaTBemocrati tTosuniUee. TUC trU r the XaUloOftU na the "r Ktemedy', ' ' Tk lAi PfatXeiV&ri;&ato&'X'S(.;i. The Democratic National Committee of the United States hold it to be their dpty s to call the attention of theirfellow-countrymen, without distinction of party, to certain grave acts of usurpation and wrong now practiced upon the otti?ens bT Maryland and of Tennessee, but involving the ; deaVest rights of all the people in all the- States; ,and the very. existence, of those, constitutional remedies against executive wrong-doing which have heretofore saved this nation from . the convulsions through which popular liberty in' other lands has been forced to assert, to maintain, and to extend its guarantees. . In the State of Maryland, on the 30th day of September, the Evening Post, a journal printed in the city of liaJtimore, which' had that day for the first time nublished the electoral ticket 6f the"Democratic pa rty of th" t State, was suppressed by the following order of Maior-ireneral Wallace ' counnandinrr tine tne L. &. troops in that city; EiuuT Amy Corps, Baltimoke, Sept. 30. Editors of Evening Post: . Ac the siiresf means of preventing your "of fi'e. heiq'g niHle tlie 'su1jet of. v iolence, you will dicoiitinue the publication of your paper, the Evening Post. .1 - T VS ' ' . 1 he sole pretext for tins order was the aertion that several ulliera subje-t to thei&esion to tins p- licy Ol ms own party command of Msj. Gen. Wallace, intended to create a riot in the street or Ualiimbre. and jouesiroy me property ot t tie snppre.1 jour - f1! on accouiilof a statement upon its bulletin nal on accounwof a statement upon its bulletin Ward, announcimr as an item ol Wws ' a fear- ful riot in Cincinnati, during which a Lincoln club procession from Kentuck tired nion the i.. ii i&vii... iiifrii ; w'iiicri nun viiiiuirii, Drvrrai ur" i ing killed and woundni. uch a pretext For such an order is e , : ... . so maniiesiiy aisCTaceiui to tne mituary - , J. .fo . . . - , , mammy to restrain goiiuers oi tne na- . , J . . - ... ? ..u:. ' - e t i onai service irom acts ai once oi nil u- i . . '-..Jt , e i : tary insubordination and of civil out-! J . .. - . ., , . , : rage, tnat it is impo?siDie to Deiieve ne .wu. wu v v v,- a v w fv v a 14 v. v u -. uiiivv rAiiltJ hnvA rwion ?rTstiTift!'l fia ti smrA has been in his comm ilnnf P TTTiiT-Ofl ft-- land by the Presi- tates, had not tne uctib vt tiit .wiiit k;vh,oj iiu't nut ivifv' . T-i. '.. suppression ot tne Evening I'osu wiucn ,vo viu.v . .wj ....0 was the only Democratic journal pub- door of reconciliation. v I ycannot per-lished in Baltimore, been desi ned by (Suade myself to forget the warnings the fiftiitivfi for thft PTnrPsa nnrnosft -that have deoended to us from many of ftnini.n? and ven of dissemiTi-itin'fr thn i- . - - t .i iniormation necessary io cume me vo-T iry to gui - f thir nirrv to intnllitrnt nctinn tersOt tMeir part to intelligent action lilt 111c uuus r. . , . , J J . inr to n. Inirn I ?staf --- 'In h(r age to congress on tDe .zotti ot uecem- : bir, 18G1,' bears "this emphatic witness: "Her bridges and railroads are repair ed and open to the government; she ' already gives seven regiments to the-cause of the Union and none to the aw amv enrl n r T-trlrt of i romi 1 o T $ election have sustained the Union by ' er nggre- i efore gave ': a larger majority and a larger - , 1 . ' gate vot ; tnm t iey ever Detore gave : to any candidate on any question. No enemy now treads I'ler soil. The victorious adva nee of Sheridan has cieareu eveuuer tut tuc uoru.-, ot a rebels in arms. Her people are as ful- ly entitled to absolute freedom at the Lvn j .11 i: puiw aim , vuc "uu. Fullfc- ical questions, aa the people of Massa- chusetts or New York t , To sanction an act by whuj they are shamelessly deprived of this freedom is . r 1 ' .' - . '- . .. .. lv : a treiineraie assumption oyne execu- nve 01 uiaimeiiuou to pcrpc-tute nia authoritv by any exercise of arbitrary power in contempt pf the popular will, j - er- er - - - . . . -T . and in violation of all the laws by which liberty in America has been nitherto ! protected. All doubts as to the meaning Qf this conduct of the executw rn Maryland is put at an end by the simultaneous occurence in the State of Tennessee of an act equally lawless, and equally eloquent of a settled purpose to retain the control of tho resources and destinies of the people by means foreign to our institutions and fatal to our liberties. On the 30th day of September, An-, drew Johnson, a brigadier general of volunteers, hohiing by appointment of the President.', the ofEce, unknown to our laws of military governor, of Tennessee; and, by; .the nomination of the Bepublican party, a candidate for the vicerpresidency of the Union, issued "a military order commanding an election for the .Presidency and .Vice-Presidency to he hjeld in that State, andprescrib--inj ajhftrarjr: qJ jcaoha, for voters at heIecliopjThls order la Based.on the p'rpceedin gs , of aTpblitical meeting which; tne military governor treats as a Iree convention of the people, absolute-ly.subjected by the will of . Mjr. Lincoln to his authority, and in it 'the following oath i prj8robed.to belaJtciilit the it: -tI tolemhl : swear that TlwiH J hence forth ' support-- the t Conatitntitm of the Umtad r otatea, and elefend it - against the aasaultr of 'ts enemtes; that I Tam air sfre--friend iof the' Oorernment oi the United States, -and k erxe&rr of the eeeailed ntederate Ctatesf that L tently desire the BnpbwsmsPGm Dion against the Government of the United Statee; that I jceriy rejojp in' the triumph of -the arpies indVavief oi.uie. ynuett states, anu in ine aeteat Jae4 :crv erthrow .of the , armies, : navies, and of-all -nned combinations inv the interest of th6 'so-callect Confederate States; that ZvHl cordially oppose all armisticea or ' negotiations for peace with rebels in arms until the Constitution of the United States, and all laws and proclamations .made in pursnajice thereof, shall be establUhed over all the people of every State and territory emP braced wihin the National Union; and that I will ' heartily aid and asiit the loyal people in whatever measures may be adopted for the attainment of thoae ends. ' -:j This oath is directly intended to uV-. pnve all Joyal citizens of Tennessee who nray be constitutionally entitled to vote at all, f their rtffhts to support at the polls any policy for the suppression, of the existing rebellion, save that which is advocated Jy Mr. Lincoln, by Mr. Johnson, and by the party sustaining j them. That policy repudiates any ia-. sue or the war now waging, save tnesuo. juration of the States in rebell on and 1 the abolit ion by the Federal power of j the institution of sla very, and utterly ' forbids all neffotiation, not onlv with the so called republic of the Confeder: ate estates, but with any single Mate, while a soldier remains inarms against the Union. The oath prescribed by the Republican candidate for the Vice-Presidency to the loyal citizens of Tennessee requires of them an absolute al- i as the condition of their exercise of the most sacred riht of -citizenship. In r.,, - - - ..;a nnmm.ATUU nwrv ' ; ' loyal Citizen of lenncssec to vote lor ' the Republican CJindidate.or to abstain ! from tne polls. Under the operation ? jof this oath, any citizen who holds such views of tlie policy proper to be pursued , ., e . k rrrr .,0 unan toward the.States in rebellion, as those : e u r i i -Tl 'put forth for example by the lion. : Charles Francis .Adams, actually Min- . e . Tt . , c. t ,ir, iister of the United btates in London, , , , ,. c f."i.i,-tU'KBniintj would be disfranchised by the bayonets --r, . rp...loo of the Executive in lennessee. ,, ., , said Mr. Adams in the Huse f Representatives, January 31, '1861r "I am 7et ready to take the x ui kjiixt. " - " W f i . - ari-9 - nnoiKilltv tYT hari I ft I V OinlTlfT tllO al.ll I Cannot overlook the Tact that in the .ldvs nf nnr f:ithf.ra thp lmnrnous snint v"v " -rr - : Ot. Cliatnam UHl not ieet itseu as eacriu-; r;.;'i.fcj,.i:::u ' Kctfln n tkuir rripvin(-p si nd . joi.i. n -" . fe""- , , 1 "I t vfo -vt V-j r , selves in armed resistance to all the nower of Great Britain. Had George I IT. listened to his words of wisdom, ? he miMit have saved the brightest jewel! of bid crown. "He took the opposite course. He (renied the existence of grievances. lie rejected the olive branch. 'History, records its verdict in favor of Chatham, i - ' anu against the iving. , , . , 0 , - . . : - t Hundreds of thousands of cititens of the LniOn, Without distinction of party, animatea oy a similar Bptr.t nxm mz a like instruction from the lessons of history, believe with. Gen. McClellan j . , .V .t. ,t:j:.i ,n nis tetter accept ;xi - nomination, that . , soon as it is clear or even proba- Me that- ou present adversaries ready for peace upon the basis of the u nion, we snoid exuau ait tne rour- .. . . , .'".; 1 1 Ces ot statesmaosmp praciiceu y 1- ized nations, and tauirht by the . tradi-, ".' ' . 1 . 1 tions of the American people, consist- j UeOUie, tUUSlSl jent with the honor and interests of .thej country to secure such peace, re-estab lish the Union, and guarantee for the future the constitutional rights of every State. The Union is the one condition of peace; we ask no more." All such citizens: are outlawed in Tennessee by the arbitrary will of the Republican candidate for theVice-Presidency, nor will any man be suffered by him to do the highest duty of a freeman unless he is ready to accept a policy 'which substantially -'reeognires the republic of the fjonfedi te States, by refusinir to the several States now; un happily leagued together under that name the right of returning to, and of making peace with, their sister States of the Union.'. . , .", -. ; ,, - ''' ; Such is the necessary effect of this u precedented course of the military eovernor" of Tennessee, a course, of which, in the words applied by two Ungui&hedi.membrs of the Kepubllcan party, - Seaatbr t-' Wade, of -Onio, 'and the conduct, of 'President. 'Lutcoln in onUwfolJy creating another ?rnUUary royernor for the State of Louisiana, if may be said is "whhont authority ef law and,, therefore TOidT a .VWow, th3righs ot hransnjty and at,theprij. ciplea of republican - governments-This coarse the President has sanction ed as he has saDctjoreiJ.thA- c6hrse"6fj Major. General . Wallace .Maryland,, there m -again forgettiig wtmSi of the same 6istiriftiiah'ed Bepu"!. execute, not make .the law; to suppress by arms armed reblion, .and lea.ro po- self to bj jexecjtAJcJiatjejs; ta Qeyjnd lUljjalrcorrixatiba'tp Conrgrt" -i' If the support,ea.;okf thotjgo'tem-mentJ'Senatcr Wade and Tepree ent-ve.DaVilJgp ooi a y? .'fail to mi ist ,.' oilth'it, they heconle responsibleor"lh usurpations which they, fail to rebuke and are justl liable tp. the indignatioa of the people whose rights and sectxrity committed to their keepingthey aacrii fice." . '. . ; -4 ; - -To this plairi fpcaiinf ,of taen einj-? nfent -in the eptthlicair Jprtf"wet might well! Content "J uTselve'a' 1rjh" pointing the citizens " ot tho4 United . SUtk;? fn the presejfee' of these newXnd atrocioii attempts; npon the freedom f discussion and the sarereignty of therjepple But we cannot forget JlU&t i.tto. very, men who have so earnestly denounce executive' usurpation in the past have now become its passive instruments and" its silent apologists. Thb " conquest of the last voices of constitutional liberty in the bosom of the Republican party by the seductions of power and of place makes it imperative upon "us to- warn, the people f America that the .perils prefigured Jby such men".'.ag Senator . Wt.d; and Representative Davis' are upon us to-day, and, that they can pnly bo! conjured from the future of our.cpuntry by the united. and resolute action, not of the partisan; supporters of a partisan," government," but of a patriotic, poopte" combined for the defence of the Cohsti tution and the laws: r The conduct of President Lincoln in. Maryland and in Tennessee distinctly rev als a revolutionary purpose'. The electoral votes of those States, eighteen" in number, cast at the dictation of arbi-' trary power, may neutralize the same number of electoral votes freely and lawfully ctst in other States of the Union, tlpon those votes; therefore, the whole future of. America may turn. To control those votes in the way attempted by Mr! Johnson in Tennessee, and by Gen. Wallace in Maryland, is to plan a crime against liberty and thej republic. We are fully aware of the. public. We are fully gravity of this charge, but the rights, the interests, the issue here at stakg-. are not less grave. ' ' ' Again and again for the past, four years Mr. Lincoln and his ministers, ; under one or another plea of military or political "necessity," have transcen- ded the limits of executive authority, ' have trampled upon the sanctity of com- mutual and individual rights. If may well' be doubted whether any "government in the old world, claiming to hold its authority by Divine right, would " have been permitted by any people 0f ' " -"".VI'v l""""" .ovmw of law and its eonmnt of lihprtv. ka far as the American people, in their de- - - . . . ' . , 'lu inr uu ,,;:,? cuuc,t,ilUB ;- !-. I T -rirv-n k. - r-.IT...-I .1 administration of Mr. Lincoln to go. But the patience of the American' ' people has been the fruit of their tradi?Z 1 : " : . : . r - -L 3 ' tional reliance upon the remeffy provid- ed by the Constitution tlie right freely to tpedk their thoitgltts, freely to print their thoughts, and above ally the inahen ' able rightfreali to choose and to change a rigrujr tne agents o Unce Del )f the public VDxlL before in our history, tinder rtne pressure 01 an liniueni national uan-r I A. - - . 'ger, - executive recklessness ventured g infraotion3 of popuiar right, tam4 ' ' , InarOTifWnt "amm,h ta dar.-UifniL- these nsurpitioM irjr Maryland 1'. mr - r - - ;-. .Ji : m., t,"woU t'v:'fwfcVw' Ihen, however, though in the infancy . j0f our constitutional experience, the" uise devotion of the people to the T5rin 1 ci lcg or oar .nztionafirfj triumphed: 0orthe assumption of power, th'. ccul revoutjori of-lfifrtJ Wde- T 0 . Jf ftVfaon.'- seenfed tona sirtv ' years of freedom andof projtress." " ' The ambition of Mr. Lincoln and his g of freedom andof ptogressr J vr V::.i.'.. .nnnn,f on nnv tlinlinil th ei FM J rnnh edies throngh which the peacefiil Tev olution" of 1801 was accomplished, ' ' This revolutionary ambition" has 111- ready been met by Senator Wade "n"T" Representative Davis, ia a1 tenrperiar." revolutionary, with a formal imn m ona. of: the people to extreme and ultitrrior inens- " ures. - " . - v-. " ' - ": n r.w '4 tliijul- his favor- they exc.la4nv "is it" to-be J supposed that hia comrie'titor: defeated ' by such means, . wiH acquiesce ":a j Xiet the people consider the remedy .. v.:.- ior these usurpations, and aanng foaxxl ; it, fearlessly execute it. ;' l The Nationa .Democratic Committee' ! do not. so far . despair of the future . of . the republic They ; believe that -the - American people armed with the maj- ; estic authority of the Constitution and the Iawa will meet these begfuninga of usurpation in the spirit, and ritlf the determinatiori of their fathers; nor1 sixfH.; fer; executi ve arohition so far oorrjaptTi the oontitnUona"emedjes oi,xee!attjeJ. wrong adoing Jas t condemn ilaa-great r-and free'people In the" immedate"f attey" to the conditioTi," and with the condStlo ' to the remedies, of the subject popUr tions of ihe older: warkL - v xi"-" '. i -&t -t - f Arcrrr Bsunvr.C3iaIrsaal;f i LF.iOawes Saxretary; r-t r.x-T ' ': . - -Vt m- eioee tbs Wi';&mt;Bjr6';tue fhastl ira i. of om ihoetattif ITt la ererr 1 jtweati-for jOMft ..J&vtfj XU ei2:t ta ep LpezseXCJen ila appatUea fth .1' .. lllagy abolHKWJSta. whonsed. 46 clam or. v.ihtLy Few York Tribrj, a battle a tU.
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1864-10-22 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1864-10-22 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1864-10-22, Vol. 28, No. 27 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000004 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7912.42KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0603 |
| File Size | 7912.42KB |
| Full Text | VOLUME Lyon'g Katbalron. Ka,thlron ia from the t)reV word Kithro,1 'or Kthirts" svgstfying to clu, rsjsrensU ad re store, rni article is wbat lU nam aigaifiess For preserving, restoring and beautifying the iunu hair it is the Boat retnirtnble preparation in the world. JU i. again owned sad jmt .apt the origi- 'kill and' atUottun Which gave ft a sale of oTer one ullion battles per aanwsn. i ;' ' It is n most delightful Hair Dreasing. - It eradicate scurff and dandruff. " rIt keeps the head cool and clean" , " ' ' It makes the hjuravfti and glossy.' ' it prerentre hair from failing off. -- --.It prevent the hair from taming gray, ' It restores hair npon bkld heada. Anrlady or gentleman who values a beautifol head ofbair should hm Ljti'i Kathairon. It . is k oown and used throughout , the civilised world. 1 J 4 Sold by all respectable -dealers. . - . - -i DE HAS 8. BARNK& jt CO. New fort. Mar. 2-ly" IIaa;an'a Magnolia Dalm. Th ia ia the moat delightful mid extraordinary arti-tiole ever discovered. Jt changes the sun burnt face and hands to a pearly atin texture of ravishing beauty, imparting the marble purity of youth, and the dUtinyne appearance so inviting in the city belle of i uaaion. It removes tan, free k lea. pimplea and rough-hess from the akin, leaving the couapjepien treeh, transparent and sinodth. It contains no material injurious to -the- kta. ' Patronised by Actresses and Opera Singers. It is what every lady should have. Sold everywhere. ' Preparee by W. E. IIAGAX, Troy, N. Y. Address all orders to DEM AS S. BARNES A CO. New York. Uar.2S.ly . . . nElMSTREET'S Inimitable Hair Restorative, MOT A DYE Bat restores gray hair to its original color, by supplying the capillary tubes with natural sustenance, impaired by age or disease. All Mix-n dye are composed of (mwr cam tic, destroying the vitality nnd beauty of the lair, and afford of themselves no dressing. Heimatreet'a Ini eitable Coloring not on. ij restores" hair to its natural color by an easy process, but give the hair a '".'. Luxuriant Beauty, promote it growth, prevent ita falling off, eradicates dandruff, and imparts health and pleasantness to the head It has stood the test of time, being the original Hair Coloring, and is constantly increasing in favor. Used by both gentleman and ladie. It is old by all respectable dealers, or can be procured bj them of the oommer'ial agents. Ii, 8. BARNES A CO. 202 Broadway, New York. Two aixes, 40 cents and $1. Mar. 2-1y Mexican .11 ns tans Liniment. The parties id St. Louis A Cincinnati, who- bare 'counterfeited the Mustang Lihiinpnt under pretense of proprietorship, havo been thoroughly estojud by the Courts. To guard-against further imposition. 1 have procured from the United States Treasury, a private steel plate revenue stump, -which is ilucvd over the top of each bottle. Each stamp bears tho fae mitc of my Signature, and without which the article ia a Coui-terfeit. dangerous and worthies imitation. Examine -every bottle. This Liniment has been in use and growing in favor for many years. There hardly exists a hamlet on the habitable Globe that doe not contain evidence of its wonderful effects. It is the beat emoliment in the world. With its pros-tent improved ingredieats, ita effects upon man and beast are perfectly remarkable. Sores are healed, pains relieved, lives saved, valuable animals mads useful, and untold ills assuaged. For cuts, brniKcs. apraina, rheumatism, swellings,' bites, cnt, enked breasts, strained horses, c it is a Sovereign Recue dy that should never be dispensed with. It should be in every faiai'y. Sold by U Druggiat. i Dt S. BARNES, New York i Man 2ftly . j . i : r T. ISO OX. Persona of sedentary habits troubled with weak taess, lassitude, palpitation of the heart, lack of'ape-tite, distress after eating, torpid liver, constipation, c, deserve to Suffer if they will not try the celebrated . - Plan tat Ion Bi(terv which are now recommended by the highest medical uthririties, and warranted to. produce aa immrdi'itr beneAeial effect. -They are exceedingly agreeable, perfectly pure, and must supercede all. other tonics where a heslthy, gentle stimulant ia required. : They urify, atrengtheu anr't invigorate. They Create a healthy apetitw. ... They- are an antidote to chaage of water and diet. , Theyovereome effects of dissipation and late hours. - They atrentheu the system and enlived the inhtd. rTb,ey Prevent miasmtic and intermittent fevers. "They purify the breath and acidity of the stomach. They cure Dyspepsia and Constipation . They cure Diarrhea, and' Cholera Morbus. They cure Liver Complaint and Nervous Headache. They make the weak strong, the linguid brilliant, nd are exhausted nature's great restorer. . They are composed of the celebrated Calisaya bark, winter-green, sassafras, root and herbs, all preserved in perfectly pure St. Croix rum. For patticaiars, see circulars and testimonial around each bottle. ; Beware of impostors. Examine every bottle. See that it has our private U. S. Stamp unmutilated over the cork, with plantation scene, and our signature on . at-tne steel plate side label. See that our bottle is o( refilled with spurious and deleteroua stuff. Any -person pretending to sell Plantation Bitters either by the gallon and Bulk, ia an impostor. Any per-son, imitating hlt bottle, or selling any other material therein, whether called Plantation Bittera or not, is a criminal under the U. S. Law, and will be so prosecuted by us. We already have our eye on several parties re-lljiog oar bottles, Ac , who will snc-eeed in getting thesaielve into close quarters. The demand' for D raited PlaatatSon' Bittera from ladies, -clergymen, merchants, Ac, ia incredible. The sim-pie trial ef bottle k the evidenoe we present of their worth and aapexiorityv They are toM by all rea-eotsble dfogghrt; grocers,- physicians, hotels, Balloons, steamboats ad country stores. P. II. DRAKE A CO, Mar. 28-Iy , . . , , 202 Broadway. N. Y. : e'jiir:.; . ; "': , ' afEJV.YOUK STATE OIPLOHA IVARDRD TO JAMES DURNO, Albany v 7or tio'Bet Qfan$&e&6gt&&Agt DUENO'S OATABBH SNlLFFa B,l.U0iINS0, SsVy.. T6CFArroy,tVit. - Thi most desirable of all remedies for Catarrh tia no equal in. medicine. It strengthen the sight, fiiprnret the searing, ta beneficialin-Bronfehnia. and puri&es the Breath. Itia thS Ladle eefatrired-for VerVou nal. Mhe; eoataiutnoTobaecof lhlghty aiotttiitrt, pro-Jaoing a pleasing sensation and bsnefteial reaulta to "A tiia IltvAII, lL5rSoI4bjr: iMUMOrmciiats. rW, 55 .m (Jasajw sIa. VkAMnAtAB Ik. .S!nM f a Mats. erlFoa Hosaj, ft W DeUar, witlbeianL prepaid y aaatT, from the DEPOT of th Propruior, Deaaa 8. Bamsa V Co., JTew Terk, Wholesale 8 ft" '.(V'iBi ., JlWaWtp,icll4.-. lr. C. ftZT.uiU. - Jw.8ir!"-TkUU rtifr taat I was severely VVow a 1 aaed then with great saeeeaa rd'tk my frUniU 4o ears the r Sincere Priend, w" p;: EDITED BT J.. HARPEX. THBEE FACTS. 1. Ahranam Lincoln' and" the Republican -party; when th war began.' pretended that it wan wr, me restoration of Tne union and tne indication of the constitution and raws':' ;7'n proof of this, we ask the' reader to observe, with particular, attention, the,Crittenden resolution." which" we Duhlish below, and whirh 1 t ; -tf 5""'" eTBryepuuiican pa- per and politician in the adhering States, a p- - proved. Here at it : - TH CltTTgNDC.V KKSOLCTIOW. - . " That the present deplorable civil war hag been forced upon the country by the disunion-ists of (he Southern Stater, now in artiiB a-parriHt the Const ft ti?onal Government, and in arms arouhd the Capjtal ; that in thin National eiiTergency, Conjrreee. Imnishing nil feeling of mere patron and resentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole -country ; that thin war is not wsgel on their part in anyspint of oppression or for any purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established institutions of those States, but to defend and maintain 1 he supremacy of the Constitution, knd to preserve the Union, with all -the dignity, equality and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease." 2, Abraham Lincoln, and the Republican party, when the war had progressed for several months, declared that it was not for the Union only but for the abolishment of slavery. . Tn proof of this, we ask our readers to o'iserve, with particular attention, the following maui-fest of the President, which was applauded by his followers : : Lincoln to the Jichtl Commissi&iers, July I8lh, 1864. TO W HOM IT MAT COJTCEftX. Any proposition which embraces the restoration of peace, and THE ABANDONMENT OF SLAVERY, ami which comes by and with art authority that can control the armies now hi war against the United States, will be received and considered by the Executive Gov-em Mien t of -the United States, and will he met by liberal terms on substantial and collaterHl points, and the (e:irer or bearers thereof shall have safe conduct .both ways. AUKAllAXf LINCOLN. 3. Abraham Lincoln, and the Republican party, knoxv thatXhe war is to continue beyond the day on which a President is to be elected, declare, that th war is not for the Union, nor the aloliliment of slavery, but for the single purpose of continuing Abraham Lincoln in fxwcr. In proof of this, we ask the reader to observe, with particular attention, the following language, used by Secretary Seward, by order of the President, in a speech deliverel in Albany, New York, on the third day of the present mouth : "The war i at its crisis. It it clear-there- ore, that WE AUK FKiHTlNG TO MAKE AKKA 11 AM LINCOLN PRESIDENT OF THE VV1IOLE UNITED STATES; under the election of 18GU, to continue until the 4th of March, 1865. In voting for a President of the United States, can we wisely or safely vote out the identical person, whom, with ore and jrms, wear fllilUIiNU IN I O TLIE PRESI DENCY ? ' No, no." You justly say No! It would be nottiny . less than to uive vp the VERY OB JECT OF THE WAR at the ballot-box. The inoral etrenith which makes our loval position impregnable would pass from usi'nd when that moral siren jtt!i ha nassed awav. mat'rial forces are no longer effective, or even avaiiable. By such a Droceedin we shall have given bim lie victory. Important Accessions to General Hc- Clellan. A dispatch from San Francisco, Oct. 12th annouuoee that lward Stanley, late Military Governor of North Carolina. apoieted by Mr. Lincoln, has published a leUer favoring Gen McClellan for President, and opposing the emancipation policy of -the Alministration. He expresses great kindness for ike AduiiiMe- tratioo personally. Hon. R. B. Curtis, late Judge on the Beach in the U. S. Supreme Court, and who gave an opintoa onter to that of Chief Justice Taney and the majority with him, ia the D red Scott cose, is now for McClellan. .... Oeaeral Frask O ranger, ; Ex-Post master. General, and a trfe-lomg trppouemTJt'tke Dem ocrats, comes out far MxCleJIan. He fg -one of the most, influential mea in Central New York. Up to this time.he baa cerer before acted with the Democrats. Ho.i. Edward Perkins, of Norwich, one of the most talented men io Connecticut, and who has acted with the Republican party ever since iu existence, ia out for McClellan. So they come.;" ' ' ''.'"':-- "To mom it May Concern.! . CoIoueJL tVilaox, Postmaster in thia 'State, baa received the following telegraphic dispatch which may be of important- interest to those concerned r- r .'; . WasHiNOTOs.Sept, SO. , . . Men drafted are ir service iy being drawn, and any enlistment afterwards-ia void., . Drafted men who enlist before or after ttotice arc held under the draft, and wHI be credited to the localities from which thev sue drafted1. - Any United S tat ea txaaty paid them as recruits will be chareed.gaiisthem o tbeir rolls j and it is your duty, as Saperintendent of Vol- untary ueerutung service, to ere that tlieir record shows tbem.bvawrriee as draied: men. Oo your.: application :Md recommendation to the . Adjutjuat General of the Army,j.hey imay oe eaeigneo ii tbe organiiauoa ta wuioa taey rtlistsd. ,&sji that moetering I officers and iroe xaroif meoiaBderstaud thit ' ii - '-i j- WTMftiM fys that thetataber in the prseAaaioo th BetjdUiete ratilcatioa iet- iog in New York was about 500,' ., and ft'1bjo agility ef gesture that waa dooJbUesei aoanired at the eatswegensAMeiMeaartere, where w uapaMwj asi awii .aoM 4sky ArsWar. sat M .Vn ' - - . . intka cirmB aaiWaJlsr. ilifciM. Aiiia" fMa JmJtJt 'MOUNT VERNON, Trrrr. 7TT- The Carrnptioa of the Lincoln Administratioit. ; " CHANGES M ADE, BY SPUBLICA9ft. RECORD FOR HO.VEST MEN TO . f BEAD. - - ' Below we giro extracts frctta leading Republican papers, leading military and political meii all now Repnblioans, in refer'ence to the extravagance, feckless-ne8 and eorraption of the present Ad ' ministration in power. The charges ! are not overdrawn, and they woe all : made at times when no elections ! were pending and there were no- motires7 to conceal the troth. Let honest' men read, and say if they" are called upon to give their vote to prolong for four years this corrupt state of things. The extracts, one and all, speak: forthemselves.;-- - - ' . : ' ' From the Albany Evening Journal, -(Rep.) Contractors have fattened on fat jobs, adventurers have found the war a source of private gain, moral desperadoes have flocked about the National Capital and and lain in wait for prey. The scum of the land has gathered about the sources of power, and defiled them by its reck and offensive odor. " From the N. Y. Times. (Rep.) The mighty interests of the nation have been made, subordinate to the greedy avarice of swindling contractors. The War Departmentiiaa been virtually in the hands and at the mercy of men who care nothing for the sufferings of the people, except as they serve their own ends, and give them a chance to enrich themselves out of the calamities of the country. Hon. J no. P. Hale, Senator from N. II. I declare upon my responsibility as a Senator, that the liberties of the country are in greater danger to-day from the corruptions and from the profligacy practised in various departments of the Government, than they are from the enemy in the open field. Brig. Gen. Wilcox. Contractors have carried on this war. The blood of our men, the groans of our wounded2, the tears of the orphan, the wail of the widow, -have been coined into money. Men without patriotism and wisdom have urged military plans which have not accomplished anything. From the New Haven Courier, (Hep.) Contractors have carried on this war. The blood of our men, the groans of the wounded, the tears of the orphan the Wail of "thewidow, have been coined into money, This is true. Contractors ha?e carried on this war. They have swindled the Government ; . - p 1 i e ii"- mi i nut. nf nuri(lrpfl . of "million.. - 'I hoxr . -. - - . : have piled tortunes upon tortunes. Corruption runs riot in Washington. Even Senators acknowledge taxing bribes of half a hundred thousand, while leaders who have tasted the spoils are lounging about the door of every Government office, and by threats and bribes compelling tho gratification of their wishes. Political purposes and selfish schemes have ruled generalship and conducted our armies to ruin instead of victory. Newspapers and cliques have directed and changed from month to month the policy 6f the Government, and unsettled even the Cabinent itself, so that no one rises on this New Year's morn (1863) with the confidence that any stable and efficient course of action will direct the. administration of affairs through the first quarter of the year. (From the Dawes investigating Committee. The larcencies practiced ' under the Administration ha vie exceeded the en tire epeoditurfca under the JministraiJ tion of James Buchanan. Front the Chicago Tribuae's Washingfn - : Correspondent. (Rep.).: , ..; : . -. The tone of morality, ra considerably. lower tnan it; ever baa been - before- This is admitted on all .hands, and can he proved or rather needs bo proof, for the air is heavy with public and private guilt. The Southerners, as a elass, had a very nice sense of honor, so far a4 the public . treasury was con-: cerned. When they held- the power here, there were comparatively little thieving, and when any was discovered, it was promptly exposed and denounced. There has been a change, a dreadful cliange for the worse. Oh, those rascally contractors, says some honest man in the rural districts. For every dollar 'wrongfully taken by a contractor, five have Jbeen taken by public servants.'. ' IFrom thetCbase-Pomerey Circular. - -1-That even wer& the re-eleetion of Mr. i Li acorn desirable, -it : ia praotlcally iiJf)ossible'asaitist- the "anion influences that will e opposed to him. -. J.-.-.a 2. That should he; The re-elected, his manifest thdeniy iovard compromises and tempprarj je x6odien ts .of policy i irjn oeeome atroyer.yam ji aeeona term than t lias been ir tlt"."1 the. cause pf human liberty, ' SltttS aUg-nitj and hojwr ilie natioit peronafljij3rr a;Wie the may coQtinae2 ta languish,' t" whole admiiilgtfatmnliathe ptfblhxdebt'W MeomeuoMu3daikitor gtft-rtz be bi I has been to rapidly " increaaea, and tol ffach an e&orxaoua extent, and tro loose j place astojrenerf the application of 'the, one jin R$iple', absol u fcely es-sentfaT Wthe cectajitiafety'of our Re- fiafefy pubCAtir.intituiioas:o . ' v--..1-.i - Frank the Springfield ftepnUleao, 'Ivep, . ' It is aad shocking picture ; of the life at Washington, Irhlch our coTres pondents are giving as, A bureau ' of the Treasury Department made a house of seduction and prostitution. ; The ne oessi ties of poor and pretty women made the means of their debauchery by high government officials.' Members Of Congress putting their mistresses into clerkships in the departments: '- 'An honorable Senator knocked down in' the street' by a woman whom ' he had outraged. Whiskey drinking ad libitunt: The Government cheated in contracts, and openly robbed by its employees. ' Writes our most careful correspondents a long resident of the Capital : " Washington was never so villainously corrupt as at the present time. In the palmy days of Southern rule, there was not half the corruption there is now." We do not doubt that this is true; and we repeat, it is a sad shocking pictured General UcClellan and Bishop Whipple The following is worih producing now.r "God bless Little Mac !" say millious of warm hearts to-day. ilSAOQ, CARTERS A HUT OF THE PoTOWAC. JHy Diuzr Bishop: Will yoii do rue the favor to perform divine service in my catnp this morning. If you can jrive nie a couple of bourn notice. I shall be glad of it that I may fe able to inform the corjn in tlie vicinity. After the jrreat snceeis that God has - vouch-' sa fed ue, I feeKthat we cannot do (ess than avail ourselves of the first opportunity to render to Him tlie lhanks thai are due to Iliiri alone. I. for one. feel that the great result is t tlie result of His great urcy ; and would be glad that you should be the medium to offer the t hanks I feel due from this army and from t he country. Earnestly hoping you will ac ceede to uiy request. Your humble servent, . (lEC B. M Cl.EI.I.AX. .'.Major (general Com iiiuudiiig. . : Fheoerick. Sept. 27, 18G2. Mr : Dear Gemskau I have spent the day in visiting your, brave loys who are. in 'the hospital liere. I had the privilege to visit thjp wayaide hospitalsbetwen here and the c-iiiip; I mil sure it will gl.viden your hearts anl it surely did my ont to see" t he great love they have for you. W h'en I told th ?ni' how tenderly you had spoken of them, and how you knelt with ine iii prayer for Cod's blessing upon them, many a Jrave fellow wvpt for joy ; aud on every side I beard "Xiod blens the General." while here ami there sonie veieran c'aim If I did not fear of wearying vou. I would write an hour, telliiiir vou of wonla of lovrmrl confiden.e epoken by. these brave Bufferere. ..ci . . - ,.- ; - j. - - who have been with you in good and evil re- iwii. r win iiui.. uiii. i uniiuun'juic mt-.iui lit- 1 . - . , leiiing vou how sweei ia me rsmemiirunce 01 ed the privilege to nay -God : less Little Mac" - r,. - xjLnJiar - the wisest and best statesmen iot I had the opportunity to eAtgmend fome dying ! v1 "rpi g. uic jiuiuiw u.pgm-iu.vi th; r,v;,l -n4l rniint men to God! aid to whi.per Tl.e Savior' name 'j the existing administration in that city time againstthis rigid and naugnt in lhi.ir Pnn fnr t Ii o laal inr.rr.pv Af.tliolr ant moa nf. a I ntr tholr mode Ot treating great UlSCOntCntS. .1 - i. - - r i 1 I ask God to hie vmi. Yo.ir war i- rt,uri, ncBure fuu umi it is Diea&tire everv iav 10 1 Many do not know vou. Many are jealous of , your success. Many will try to tetter you.--r-But. let no cloud alove, or throng leneath. trouble you. Above is God our father. Chrit our Savior, the Ifojy Ghoal our Comforter.- God will hear our prayers. It may be. a weary, foot eore way, but there is light beyoud. Goi b1e8H you: r ' I am, with love, your aervant, for Chrict's sake. II. C. Waiprta. McClellan in the Empire State. ' The Pht lpe Union Star, pufIirihe! iu.Ontario co'baitjr.'New York, baa abandoned the Lincoln cause, anj hoisted the McClellan flag. Some of its Republican subacriltera -: have angrily etoppei their papers, ad the iSfar thus coolly replies: !" .' . . C" Aa we have thus lar been favored with more than two new subscribern for every one who has left us. we eball pereevere in mistai'.iag the Democratic ticket to ilie oest rf our luim. ble ability, trusting that after our former patrons shall have reaihVed th happy and peace ful results of the rejection-of the gallant McClellan, they wjllie willing to take us by the h&ud and thank.ua for tlie honest course we. have'taken: 'It' ?s- ihdeel astoiiiihing to pee the mighty political change whieu is taking place aroururus.- - s - In speaking of the present tumble in tbe prices'of provisions and the failure of a num-ber of firms in Chicago and elsewhere,; the Cleveland Herald refers especially to' the enormous speculation in whiskey alone, during the last two years, s.nd charges members, of Congress with.complicity in the bnsineW. The Herald says : The whidkey eepedulatioo has carried a number of Cgicago banks by the board. When at Chicago we saw a! freight house of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, that is six hundred feet in length nod fifty in widtli which was filled from end to end, and from nde. to aide, . with high wines in barrels piledfonr tiers deep. -r Think of that oQevdepoait of whiskey,; lying there-, for a rje, and- has lain there .tor mouths. A: slight depressjoa oa a gallon, upon that ,on lot would eed a good si?d bank as high as a kite. , . - ... 1 .- . ? - . , ' It is eertaleihat lioa.t D.' VoorUeevii re-electeI to-Coagresa fsemHhe Seventh CongJ reaeionar; uietnet. : -.""- ' - ; ;.. , So far asJieard from the Senate will have a , Democratic aiajority of four. tJ - :- rtdugh has uot been' heard7 from to deter-ttiae how the veas ill stand a will be Very ctoset and we aar have 'Democratic. majori Tha-gftiiling.ia. Illinbia. ' ' '"' tAx. rreepoodeai of - thev Chisago.. JToiBayja gixiog aa aecoaal of a lexBoerauo eaeetiog: io tha:t,ah Mtiirt,.? ,t; j;i ,J.tf -muatfimU jcf arteejited Jj claix' de'egauODpvipgr the '"Mtsawwragarav sorts, from 4haL onntv. .Dn hnnlrJ anJ forty-one old 'BeDablicmoa beloh ' 1 3e IX c- . - r" :- - ,m - - -. Sabeeribe lar the Baoaer. inepieaSa,.,eery,cene... M. vouroamp. .or o,fid eU'tv-presaerit Lincoln in his messn to concede every reasonable ue-. OCTOBER - 22, KatioaaTBemocrati tTosuniUee. TUC trU r the XaUloOftU na the "r Ktemedy', ' ' Tk lAi PfatXeiV&ri;&ato&'X'S(.;i. The Democratic National Committee of the United States hold it to be their dpty s to call the attention of theirfellow-countrymen, without distinction of party, to certain grave acts of usurpation and wrong now practiced upon the otti?ens bT Maryland and of Tennessee, but involving the ; deaVest rights of all the people in all the- States; ,and the very. existence, of those, constitutional remedies against executive wrong-doing which have heretofore saved this nation from . the convulsions through which popular liberty in' other lands has been forced to assert, to maintain, and to extend its guarantees. . In the State of Maryland, on the 30th day of September, the Evening Post, a journal printed in the city of liaJtimore, which' had that day for the first time nublished the electoral ticket 6f the"Democratic pa rty of th" t State, was suppressed by the following order of Maior-ireneral Wallace ' counnandinrr tine tne L. &. troops in that city; EiuuT Amy Corps, Baltimoke, Sept. 30. Editors of Evening Post: . Ac the siiresf means of preventing your "of fi'e. heiq'g niHle tlie 'su1jet of. v iolence, you will dicoiitinue the publication of your paper, the Evening Post. .1 - T VS ' ' . 1 he sole pretext for tins order was the aertion that several ulliera subje-t to thei&esion to tins p- licy Ol ms own party command of Msj. Gen. Wallace, intended to create a riot in the street or Ualiimbre. and jouesiroy me property ot t tie snppre.1 jour - f1! on accouiilof a statement upon its bulletin nal on accounwof a statement upon its bulletin Ward, announcimr as an item ol Wws ' a fear- ful riot in Cincinnati, during which a Lincoln club procession from Kentuck tired nion the i.. ii i&vii... iiifrii ; w'iiicri nun viiiiuirii, Drvrrai ur" i ing killed and woundni. uch a pretext For such an order is e , : ... . so maniiesiiy aisCTaceiui to tne mituary - , J. .fo . . . - , , mammy to restrain goiiuers oi tne na- . , J . . - ... ? ..u:. ' - e t i onai service irom acts ai once oi nil u- i . . '-..Jt , e i : tary insubordination and of civil out-! J . .. - . ., , . , : rage, tnat it is impo?siDie to Deiieve ne .wu. wu v v v,- a v w fv v a 14 v. v u -. uiiivv rAiiltJ hnvA rwion ?rTstiTift!'l fia ti smrA has been in his comm ilnnf P TTTiiT-Ofl ft-- land by the Presi- tates, had not tne uctib vt tiit .wiiit k;vh,oj iiu't nut ivifv' . T-i. '.. suppression ot tne Evening I'osu wiucn ,vo viu.v . .wj ....0 was the only Democratic journal pub- door of reconciliation. v I ycannot per-lished in Baltimore, been desi ned by (Suade myself to forget the warnings the fiftiitivfi for thft PTnrPsa nnrnosft -that have deoended to us from many of ftnini.n? and ven of dissemiTi-itin'fr thn i- . - - t .i iniormation necessary io cume me vo-T iry to gui - f thir nirrv to intnllitrnt nctinn tersOt tMeir part to intelligent action lilt 111c uuus r. . , . , J J . inr to n. Inirn I ?staf --- 'In h(r age to congress on tDe .zotti ot uecem- : bir, 18G1,' bears "this emphatic witness: "Her bridges and railroads are repair ed and open to the government; she ' already gives seven regiments to the-cause of the Union and none to the aw amv enrl n r T-trlrt of i romi 1 o T $ election have sustained the Union by ' er nggre- i efore gave ': a larger majority and a larger - , 1 . ' gate vot ; tnm t iey ever Detore gave : to any candidate on any question. No enemy now treads I'ler soil. The victorious adva nee of Sheridan has cieareu eveuuer tut tuc uoru.-, ot a rebels in arms. Her people are as ful- ly entitled to absolute freedom at the Lvn j .11 i: puiw aim , vuc "uu. Fullfc- ical questions, aa the people of Massa- chusetts or New York t , To sanction an act by whuj they are shamelessly deprived of this freedom is . r 1 ' .' - . '- . .. .. lv : a treiineraie assumption oyne execu- nve 01 uiaimeiiuou to pcrpc-tute nia authoritv by any exercise of arbitrary power in contempt pf the popular will, j - er- er - - - . . . -T . and in violation of all the laws by which liberty in America has been nitherto ! protected. All doubts as to the meaning Qf this conduct of the executw rn Maryland is put at an end by the simultaneous occurence in the State of Tennessee of an act equally lawless, and equally eloquent of a settled purpose to retain the control of tho resources and destinies of the people by means foreign to our institutions and fatal to our liberties. On the 30th day of September, An-, drew Johnson, a brigadier general of volunteers, hohiing by appointment of the President.', the ofEce, unknown to our laws of military governor, of Tennessee; and, by; .the nomination of the Bepublican party, a candidate for the vicerpresidency of the Union, issued "a military order commanding an election for the .Presidency and .Vice-Presidency to he hjeld in that State, andprescrib--inj ajhftrarjr: qJ jcaoha, for voters at heIecliopjThls order la Based.on the p'rpceedin gs , of aTpblitical meeting which; tne military governor treats as a Iree convention of the people, absolute-ly.subjected by the will of . Mjr. Lincoln to his authority, and in it 'the following oath i prj8robed.to belaJtciilit the it: -tI tolemhl : swear that TlwiH J hence forth ' support-- the t Conatitntitm of the Umtad r otatea, and elefend it - against the aasaultr of 'ts enemtes; that I Tam air sfre--friend iof the' Oorernment oi the United States, -and k erxe&rr of the eeeailed ntederate Ctatesf that L tently desire the BnpbwsmsPGm Dion against the Government of the United Statee; that I jceriy rejojp in' the triumph of -the arpies indVavief oi.uie. ynuett states, anu in ine aeteat Jae4 :crv erthrow .of the , armies, : navies, and of-all -nned combinations inv the interest of th6 'so-callect Confederate States; that ZvHl cordially oppose all armisticea or ' negotiations for peace with rebels in arms until the Constitution of the United States, and all laws and proclamations .made in pursnajice thereof, shall be establUhed over all the people of every State and territory emP braced wihin the National Union; and that I will ' heartily aid and asiit the loyal people in whatever measures may be adopted for the attainment of thoae ends. ' -:j This oath is directly intended to uV-. pnve all Joyal citizens of Tennessee who nray be constitutionally entitled to vote at all, f their rtffhts to support at the polls any policy for the suppression, of the existing rebellion, save that which is advocated Jy Mr. Lincoln, by Mr. Johnson, and by the party sustaining j them. That policy repudiates any ia-. sue or the war now waging, save tnesuo. juration of the States in rebell on and 1 the abolit ion by the Federal power of j the institution of sla very, and utterly ' forbids all neffotiation, not onlv with the so called republic of the Confeder: ate estates, but with any single Mate, while a soldier remains inarms against the Union. The oath prescribed by the Republican candidate for the Vice-Presidency to the loyal citizens of Tennessee requires of them an absolute al- i as the condition of their exercise of the most sacred riht of -citizenship. In r.,, - - - ..;a nnmm.ATUU nwrv ' ; ' loyal Citizen of lenncssec to vote lor ' the Republican CJindidate.or to abstain ! from tne polls. Under the operation ? jof this oath, any citizen who holds such views of tlie policy proper to be pursued , ., e . k rrrr .,0 unan toward the.States in rebellion, as those : e u r i i -Tl 'put forth for example by the lion. : Charles Francis .Adams, actually Min- . e . Tt . , c. t ,ir, iister of the United btates in London, , , , ,. c f."i.i,-tU'KBniintj would be disfranchised by the bayonets --r, . rp...loo of the Executive in lennessee. ,, ., , said Mr. Adams in the Huse f Representatives, January 31, '1861r "I am 7et ready to take the x ui kjiixt. " - " W f i . - ari-9 - nnoiKilltv tYT hari I ft I V OinlTlfT tllO al.ll I Cannot overlook the Tact that in the .ldvs nf nnr f:ithf.ra thp lmnrnous snint v"v " -rr - : Ot. Cliatnam UHl not ieet itseu as eacriu-; r;.;'i.fcj,.i:::u ' Kctfln n tkuir rripvin(-p si nd . joi.i. n -" . fe""- , , 1 "I t vfo -vt V-j r , selves in armed resistance to all the nower of Great Britain. Had George I IT. listened to his words of wisdom, ? he miMit have saved the brightest jewel! of bid crown. "He took the opposite course. He (renied the existence of grievances. lie rejected the olive branch. 'History, records its verdict in favor of Chatham, i - ' anu against the iving. , , . , 0 , - . . : - t Hundreds of thousands of cititens of the LniOn, Without distinction of party, animatea oy a similar Bptr.t nxm mz a like instruction from the lessons of history, believe with. Gen. McClellan j . , .V .t. ,t:j:.i ,n nis tetter accept ;xi - nomination, that . , soon as it is clear or even proba- Me that- ou present adversaries ready for peace upon the basis of the u nion, we snoid exuau ait tne rour- .. . . , .'".; 1 1 Ces ot statesmaosmp praciiceu y 1- ized nations, and tauirht by the . tradi-, ".' ' . 1 . 1 tions of the American people, consist- j UeOUie, tUUSlSl jent with the honor and interests of .thej country to secure such peace, re-estab lish the Union, and guarantee for the future the constitutional rights of every State. The Union is the one condition of peace; we ask no more." All such citizens: are outlawed in Tennessee by the arbitrary will of the Republican candidate for theVice-Presidency, nor will any man be suffered by him to do the highest duty of a freeman unless he is ready to accept a policy 'which substantially -'reeognires the republic of the fjonfedi te States, by refusinir to the several States now; un happily leagued together under that name the right of returning to, and of making peace with, their sister States of the Union.'. . , .", -. ; ,, - ''' ; Such is the necessary effect of this u precedented course of the military eovernor" of Tennessee, a course, of which, in the words applied by two Ungui&hedi.membrs of the Kepubllcan party, - Seaatbr t-' Wade, of -Onio, 'and the conduct, of 'President. 'Lutcoln in onUwfolJy creating another ?rnUUary royernor for the State of Louisiana, if may be said is "whhont authority ef law and,, therefore TOidT a .VWow, th3righs ot hransnjty and at,theprij. ciplea of republican - governments-This coarse the President has sanction ed as he has saDctjoreiJ.thA- c6hrse"6fj Major. General . Wallace .Maryland,, there m -again forgettiig wtmSi of the same 6istiriftiiah'ed Bepu"!. execute, not make .the law; to suppress by arms armed reblion, .and lea.ro po- self to bj jexecjtAJcJiatjejs; ta Qeyjnd lUljjalrcorrixatiba'tp Conrgrt" -i' If the support,ea.;okf thotjgo'tem-mentJ'Senatcr Wade and Tepree ent-ve.DaVilJgp ooi a y? .'fail to mi ist ,.' oilth'it, they heconle responsibleor"lh usurpations which they, fail to rebuke and are justl liable tp. the indignatioa of the people whose rights and sectxrity committed to their keepingthey aacrii fice." . '. . ; -4 ; - -To this plairi fpcaiinf ,of taen einj-? nfent -in the eptthlicair Jprtf"wet might well! Content "J uTselve'a' 1rjh" pointing the citizens " ot tho4 United . SUtk;? fn the presejfee' of these newXnd atrocioii attempts; npon the freedom f discussion and the sarereignty of therjepple But we cannot forget JlU&t i.tto. very, men who have so earnestly denounce executive' usurpation in the past have now become its passive instruments and" its silent apologists. Thb " conquest of the last voices of constitutional liberty in the bosom of the Republican party by the seductions of power and of place makes it imperative upon "us to- warn, the people f America that the .perils prefigured Jby such men".'.ag Senator . Wt.d; and Representative Davis' are upon us to-day, and, that they can pnly bo! conjured from the future of our.cpuntry by the united. and resolute action, not of the partisan; supporters of a partisan" government" but of a patriotic, poopte" combined for the defence of the Cohsti tution and the laws: r The conduct of President Lincoln in. Maryland and in Tennessee distinctly rev als a revolutionary purpose'. The electoral votes of those States, eighteen" in number, cast at the dictation of arbi-' trary power, may neutralize the same number of electoral votes freely and lawfully ctst in other States of the Union, tlpon those votes; therefore, the whole future of. America may turn. To control those votes in the way attempted by Mr! Johnson in Tennessee, and by Gen. Wallace in Maryland, is to plan a crime against liberty and thej republic. We are fully aware of the. public. We are fully gravity of this charge, but the rights, the interests, the issue here at stakg-. are not less grave. ' ' ' Again and again for the past, four years Mr. Lincoln and his ministers, ; under one or another plea of military or political "necessity" have transcen- ded the limits of executive authority, ' have trampled upon the sanctity of com- mutual and individual rights. If may well' be doubted whether any "government in the old world, claiming to hold its authority by Divine right, would " have been permitted by any people 0f ' " -"".VI'v l""""" .ovmw of law and its eonmnt of lihprtv. ka far as the American people, in their de- - - . . . ' . , 'lu inr uu ,,;:,? cuuc,t,ilUB ;- !-. I T -rirv-n k. - r-.IT...-I .1 administration of Mr. Lincoln to go. But the patience of the American' ' people has been the fruit of their tradi?Z 1 : " : . : . r - -L 3 ' tional reliance upon the remeffy provid- ed by the Constitution tlie right freely to tpedk their thoitgltts, freely to print their thoughts, and above ally the inahen ' able rightfreali to choose and to change a rigrujr tne agents o Unce Del )f the public VDxlL before in our history, tinder rtne pressure 01 an liniueni national uan-r I A. - - . 'ger, - executive recklessness ventured g infraotion3 of popuiar right, tam4 ' ' , InarOTifWnt "amm,h ta dar.-UifniL- these nsurpitioM irjr Maryland 1'. mr - r - - ;-. .Ji : m., t"woU t'v:'fwfcVw' Ihen, however, though in the infancy . j0f our constitutional experience, the" uise devotion of the people to the T5rin 1 ci lcg or oar .nztionafirfj triumphed: 0orthe assumption of power, th'. ccul revoutjori of-lfifrtJ Wde- T 0 . Jf ftVfaon.'- seenfed tona sirtv ' years of freedom andof projtress." " ' The ambition of Mr. Lincoln and his g of freedom andof ptogressr J vr V::.i.'.. .nnnn,f on nnv tlinlinil th ei FM J rnnh edies throngh which the peacefiil Tev olution" of 1801 was accomplished, ' ' This revolutionary ambition" has 111- ready been met by Senator Wade "n"T" Representative Davis, ia a1 tenrperiar." revolutionary, with a formal imn m ona. of: the people to extreme and ultitrrior inens- " ures. - " . - v-. " ' - ": n r.w '4 tliijul- his favor- they exc.la4nv "is it" to-be J supposed that hia comrie'titor: defeated ' by such means, . wiH acquiesce ":a j Xiet the people consider the remedy .. v.:.- ior these usurpations, and aanng foaxxl ; it, fearlessly execute it. ;' l The Nationa .Democratic Committee' ! do not. so far . despair of the future . of . the republic They ; believe that -the - American people armed with the maj- ; estic authority of the Constitution and the Iawa will meet these begfuninga of usurpation in the spirit, and ritlf the determinatiori of their fathers; nor1 sixfH.; fer; executi ve arohition so far oorrjaptTi the oontitnUona"emedjes oi,xee!attjeJ. wrong adoing Jas t condemn ilaa-great r-and free'people In the" immedate"f attey" to the conditioTi" and with the condStlo ' to the remedies, of the subject popUr tions of ihe older: warkL - v xi"-" '. i -&t -t - f Arcrrr Bsunvr.C3iaIrsaal;f i LF.iOawes Saxretary; r-t r.x-T ' ': . - -Vt m- eioee tbs Wi';&mt;Bjr6';tue fhastl ira i. of om ihoetattif ITt la ererr 1 jtweati-for jOMft ..J&vtfj XU ei2:t ta ep LpezseXCJen ila appatUea fth .1' .. lllagy abolHKWJSta. whonsed. 46 clam or. v.ihtLy Few York Tribrj, a battle a tU. |
