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e ——— et Businces Notices. THROAT DIsEas! “We would call attention to “Browx's Bxoxcmiar Taocues’ We have found them effcacions in aliaying Irritation o the Throat and Brouchis, and wou'd com ‘mend then to the sttention of Public Speakers and others troubled ‘with affections of the Throat. They are iso an excel'eut remedy for ltlh.nn ”lhl‘}l' from col Mot AND FRECKLES. Ladies sfflicted with Discoloraticns ou the called Moth Patches, or Freckles, shocld we PEumy's celebrated MoTs axD Faecxee Lomiox. Itisinfullible. Prepared by Dr. B. C. Prexr Derwatologiat, No. 49 Bon . Sold by all Druggists tn New York and elsewhere. Frice. # * SQUIRE & LANoER, No. 97 Fulto Warones, Cuarxs, il kinds vk W) swall por centage o {Congregstiouslist, Boston. offer for sa’e D1awoxDS. 18 carat of Jxwkiny, Ensiiei 8 OVET ACTUAL MANTFACTURING SMARTHA WANHINGTOX HAIR RESTORER the Dest in use; two articles combined in one; o perfeet Huir Dressing wand I y all druggists. Cuakies N. Ciarreston, ol agunt 4 ¥LL'S, NEW NTVLE WEDDING CARDS ASD Patent secared. Very elegant, Sold ouly st No. 532 ew-York AT EvE Exveorss. B Ihe best m the world; i, the ow'y perfect Dy Fatenvion. old e witheut spectacle vuid on_ tecoipt of tew ccuin Addow | ndway. New-York | T Barcnror's Hate D Barmaiess. vliable, usten Brown. 0 wher doe cor, | % voi THE RUPTURLD.—Seit | Adéress Dr. E. B. stock of first Hars for Ladies, 3 G , No. 104 Ful Hoxs Canps sud Envelops. WILLCOX & GIBBS SEWING MACHINE. “Tta soarn, § r 0 foes lisbie to Tip i s or wenr Lockestiteh 3 Ser K 549 Brosdway. FIRST PREMITM Highest pre- xa-MAcmiNg Co. Xo. 54 CRISTADORO'S EXCHLSIOR HAIR DYE is universally acknowiedavd s the best extunt. Factory. No, 6 Avior House, OPPRESSION AFTER 1 lence, Sour rising and ev. r wioN's PruisTALTIC “THE Any AND LG, | “Intu- LATING, ailors and Coxraxy, OCK-STITCH MACHINKS Sxwixa Macwn CLOTHING. = try. Largest sssort Y. d 17 Lafurwtteplae o BRoKAW MOTTS CHEMICAL PoMADE Restores Gray Hi dre t N 2 Vooam vt TRUSNES, SUPPOR DAGES, the brst snd IL Surewoon's No. . AT GiMBREDE'S, Nox, 58 aud #72 Broadway, the finest Wedding and Vistting Curd st compiete stock of suall faucy articles, retailing st w o DoUniLe GUNS, 810, $12, §15, 20 out by Lxprens to order by , %30, $40, | g3 £ J. & J. Huesm. No. 13 Bowery, Nuw SUSTEM OF VENTILATION—DBy Tllustrated ociavo pamphilet of &1 p e, Sont fr L. A Gevgr. No. THE Hows Sewix For Fauilivs avd Mauufac — Tus Hows Macuixs Wnerier & WiLs i‘(‘ and loTTONROLY M GROVER & BAKER'S Hi Sriven suwise Macuixas. for Cartes Vignette, $3 per dozei: Dupl red. . A, Lewis. No. 160 FINeST OVERCOATS and BUSINESS SUITS ever seen fo tule country. Brozaw HroTisms Nos. 34 Faurthoave. and 62 Leyfayette-place, o smsmrsat sz@nr@aily Cribune, TUESDAY, OC TOBER 9, 1865, semeuts for this week's issuo of Tux WEEKLY TWBUXE wost be banded in To Dav. NEWS OF THE DAY e THE PENDING CANVASS.. Willinn H. Gleason has been nominated for Congress b,v the Republicans of the Ist Distriet (Quecns County), New-York. A rousing Republican meeting was held in Cuba, Allo- gany County, lately. Col, N.W. Danicls of Lofisiana and the Hou. Hamilton Ward were the prineipat speakors. ‘This district is safe to poll a Radical majority ext wouth, The Democrats of the Xth District (Rockiand County) hold & meeting ou the I¥th to notmnate a candidate for Cougress, There aro three aspirants in th the Hon. William Kadler. Judze Suffern, and Mr. C. P. Hoffman. A hvely time 15 anticipate ‘The Democrats of the XX Vth New-York District have nominated Henry O. Checsebro of Canandmzna s can- didate for Congress. Wm. H. Kelsey is the Kopublican pomince. ‘Tho Hon. Robert Gilchrist has accepted the nomination for Congress from the Vth New-Jersey District. AT On the inside pages of to-day's issue will be found Law Intclligence, Dramatic Items, « Mormon Colony in | Williamsiurgh, Brooklyn News, Commercial Matters, Market Reports, and severa items of inportance. Among the shipwrecks sed on our coast by the Equinox, the loss of the steamship Evening Stari usually appalling, and will be to many in this city a personal calamity. Three hundred lives were lost, yet there is hope that additional names will be added to the list of the saved. The Catholic Council continues its session at Balti- ore, but the proccedings are for the present secret. The President has appointed November 29, as a day of National Thanksgiving. At the shameful riot in Cairo, which broke up the Union meeting addressed by the Southern loyalists, the streets were noisy long after miduight with hur- rahs for Andrew Johuson, and checrs for Jefl. Davis. Daring the disturbance in front of the theater, cries came from the crowd, * Take down that Yankce flag.” In a like spirit in a riot lust Saturday in Indiana the tegal votor who is ombarrassed, whon he offers his vote, by finding his n ly registered or not at all, blames us Las heen told we de- vised the re on purpose to deprive legal voters © incorrec of their rights, and Lis a nee gives color to that charge. L and work to bave the rogisters of « tricts perfect next Tuesday s to be done 2 perfect we should hat ren t nnossi snin gy trinmphont tho C ' be eutreated to look mow ud see that our fri your Cou iall have preparod, additions to an to be made on THE MEXICAN JOB. s renews its appeal nment in th mand argum inter our Cov tics - the Frene o apt snd 1no—that of r hae! boen devi cirtion, conld no That Mesico is a 1 ol stitution, and ity and! forc forcible. civil discond aud arazchy ber 's con- Our Government bas usifcemiy beld fore and fon use rather thua the cure of Mexican con- i e Times, assuming that p, BAYS quest avd Maxomlian's potence. Max is about to eseay E “Ihe ol er. I ox tis in the puner, nt to g —Weappeal to ev of the truth that the abuve 4 guments for interventicn, with scy lotter. We are urged to’repoa titu sors. alized & Mexican with most of the he bad the sp Pope, aud the v port of Fran to subdue & place, and atte what he b between the ¢ Santa Anna and like wator for an end which exp, unattainable. For Juarez is not uow ** Const President,” whatever b may have b could not take the part of oae of th authonty withcut incurring the hostility of al rest. If ‘itho everlasting anar nAintain desperate ‘crew of usurping chiefs” is about 1) ! renewed, its extirpation inaccessible, so arid, so slend as Mexico, will require 1 sand men, with countless n il yet he Iversaries. Yet w: ity L “others;” and to poar out © ce has P ilions of wmoney. balf of our sorely triod tax-payers, we jusist that our | Government shall let Mexico alone. —_— HOU FOR THE POOR. Mr A wart, it is said, has offered to exju $1,000,000 in erecting dweliings for the poor of City, provided the City shall give the grous npon to build them. The bouses, we infer, leased for whatever rents they will command,and the net income constantly applicd to the building of more habitations, carefully adopted to tue needs and means of the industrious Poor. 3 The gift is o noble one, and its object most de- serving. Wretcbed habitations are here a fruitful source of vice, crime, direase and death. There are many more thicves, burglar,, drunkards and lost women in our City than there would be if houest in- dustry were amply supplied with decent, commodious dwellings at reasonable rates. Our tenement housos are, for the most part, libels on Christiavity and the Nineteeuth Century. They are as inconvenient and unhealtby as they could well be made. They seem calculated to destroy all jnstincts of modesty, delicacy, decency and clean- liness. That portion of our workers who can afford to live five to ten miles from their work may be quite comfortably and cheaply housed; but most of the poor whose avocations confine them to the lower half of this island are lodged abominably. Mr. Stewart's philanthropy has taken sn excellent direction, sud we a Rebel flag was raised und the Union wen driven out of the county. REMEMBER THE REGISTRY trust it may serve as an encouragement to others, ‘We hope, therefore, that he has not determined (as is reported) that his generous gift shall be expended in building small bouses for the accomodation of sepa- Tuesday of mext week (Oct. 16th) is the day fixed by | rate families. He might as rationally buy or hire five law for the official registration of the legal voters re- siding within each election or poll district throughout hundred stores for the transaction of his dry goods business. The great economies which distinguish our our State. In those districts only which polled over | ag are achieved in an opposite direction. An edifice 400 votes lust November, the registering officers will | covering a block 400 by 250 feet, or thereabout, six sit also throughout the following day; but itis best to | storios high, with & single entrauco from the street, have the voters registered, so far as possible, on the | o manand wife keeping the door and supervising former day. everything, with lodgings in the attic for virtuous, in- This can bo very genorally effocted if due attention | gustrious single women only at very moderate rates, be given to the subject now. We entreat our friends | and all the modern appliances of gas, hot air, hoist- in each election district throughout the State to com- ways, &, &ec., with a promenade on the mence forthwith the preparation of alist, 1. Ofthe voters | roof, a children’s play-ground in the center, last year who have since died, or migrated, o that | aud a common sitting and reading-room for all the their names should now be stricken from the regis- | inmates, would afford comfortable house-room for tor; 2. Of all who have, by immigration, or coming | more people than could be sheltered on a bundred of age, naturalization or otherwise, becomo legal | separate city lots at a like cost, while the comforts of voters within the year, so that their names are 10W t0 | the spagions edifice would be immeasarably the be added to the register; 3. Of those who were Jegal | greq: voters last year, but failed to vote; and agree om | until he shall have considered plans and estimates ( OWN in turn. Stewart not to decide this point ‘We bog Mr. some one who will present these lists to the register- | (which shall be forthcoming) for an edifice which will ing board next Tuesdsy morning. In this City, s new | gfford at once pleasant, commodious homes for at wogister is to be made in each district; elsewhere, the | least & thonsand persons, suggestion and incitement rogister of last year is to be revised by sdding and | to the capitalists and philanthropists of other cities, subtracting as above. The end in either case is the | and an ornament and honor to this emporinm of the formation of an alphabetical list of those persons, | New World, snd thoée only, who are legally entitled to vote this year. And we exhort our friends in each ‘We are mfll every 'NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNI, TUESDAY, OUCTUBER 9, 1866. PRUSSIA. The annexation of Hanover, Hesse-Cassel, Nassau and Frankfort to Prussia has, at length, become an shed fact, the deeree which proclaims the fact heving been pr gated. ‘The treatios with Bavaria and Hesse-Dar the full text of which Las been published in THE TrisuNe, sceure to Prussia ory and population. , the retrocession of a g to Denwark has, of late, bacanse at sevoral mestin some a to represent as the true expression of ion, prolests against eny partition of the duchy been adopted. At all events, the retro- cossion, if any takes place, will bo small, and the Kinglom of Prussia may now be said to be composed Tnkabitants. 10,304,713 R w44 EaTRat natadt out about) ias not ign Kingdom of Saxony 1 Strongly supported by fo , that little kingdom makes to the Prussian 1 stubborn resistance, It i, however, ful that in the end the piincipal demauds u concludod. ;dx-nm 1s hardly do; of Prassia will have to be conceded. PETRENCHMENT IN THE NATIONAL EX- PENSLES. Joint Committee of Congress upon Retrench- acopted a new metbod of investigating the wee and extortion which are presnmed to Governmont departments, and one which, T pointed the Committee. It has sent to a number of the United States officers in this city, and we presumie in othe: places, a blank circular, including 25 ¢ tions in regard to the lawful compensation of each officer, his emolnments, the possibility of frand, the ! mssessments, ete. These bo s re- swer, and it is there that the poiat comes be answered ? the expenses of any offi s circular will be filled up honestly; but g ance is practiced, it is too i to make volunt are honest snot 2. Tie Joint 1l ot AGRICUL or t CEINEMLNTS o advance of the al estimation of welane poulation m all g wnd refinemert, and thes » in good mwauners al Fa ve % in towns 101 t but I pocts made 1 eritical coutempt. Diocletian sho s power aud 1t » has been } that The y farmers into old farming lite to carth earthy, to the me routive, and to & contempt for the polished pursuits of literature and art. Unfortuna sufficicncy also extended to a cont 15, this course se discoveries, to a foolish distrust ol v provements, to anything out of the 18 al aud tine-l of plowing clumsily. reaping painfully, exbousting body and soul and soil, all threo together, by a bigoted adhierence to the wags of the forefathers. The farmer was a thrifty, hardworking peasant, with his ehief pleasures alimentary; and his boys and girls (it is not to be wondered at) ran away to the cities to become brokers and the wives of brokers, merchants, milli- ners—anything but the weary drudges of the field and the dairy. A modern Agricnltural Fair proves how all this has been changed. The material improvement is ma:vel- ous as shown in the increased produetion, in delicate fruit, in gigantic vegetables, in golden butter, and in stock advanced almost to perfection. This is to be referred to that simple principle of competition with- ont which the world wonld cease to move, or would only retrograde, The prizes bestowed are something; but they are too small to be regarded in the light of remuncration; they are like the cross of the soldier, or the simple certificate of merit which the school-boy proudly carries home. The moral advantage is that the farmer sees what bas been achieved, and is fired with an honorable ambition to equal or to excel. ‘What Jones has done in the way of pigs, or Smith ac- complished in the way of pumpkins, Brown feels that he can do—and does it. But above all, in the solemuity, if we may say so, of the occasion, in the ability of the addresses and their subject matter, in the judicial estimate of the merits of the exhibitors, in the general pomp and circumstance of the whole festivo sffair, the farmer feels that the importance of his profession is admitted, that its dignity is respected, and that it is recognized as the calling of all others nored course without lapsing into barbarism or expericncing a vast amount of social suffering. He comes in contact with all his fellow-farmers of the county; he gives them the ripe result of his experience, and ho carries off their Intie sharp collision of many minds, all working in one dire:t'on, there is always a birth of new ideas and 8 regencration of old onos. The Agri- cultural Fairs aro the Farners in Conneil, and the Farmers are the Conscript Fathers of the Republic. Another great gain arises from the circumstsnces of the time. We have just emorged from a long and wasteful war. ‘This did pot, it is trne, immediately interrupt our peaceful pursuits; we were spared tho dlistrict to take as much pains to register the names of | loyal movement in the South, but when we find the | mortification and distress of neighboring ravage sud those who will vote against us as of those who will | Legislature of Texas opposing a candidate for United | raid; but the work of the agricultural population vote with us. A perfect register of the legal voters | States Senator upon the ground that he was loyal to | was, to s certain extent, interrupted, and for a time ouly is of itsslf & triumph for our side; because regis- | the Union in 1861, and declaring that no one should | its quiet monotony may have scemed inglorious. fration was demanded by us and enacted at cur re- | be elected who did not sympathize fully with the Re- | However we may regard it, we must come back to it, guost, while pleotion of our adversaries have for it the proverbial | bellion, we caunot think that Texas should be trusted | and pursue it moro steadily than ever. The task now Old Serpent for holy water. Apy | to help make laws for the United States. | before us is literally to farm ourselyes gut of debt. for scientifie | with which the world is utterly unablo to dispense l afford to await a direct attack before making an ener- | zenment of the | 1 from bis | 1 anybody doubts this, let him ask himself what all our greenbacks and bank notgs and other public se- curities would be worth if all eur arable land were to-morrow to be stricken with sterility? Tae manu- facturers will pay their share, but the ability of the manofacturers to pay anything depends upon the ability of the farmer to raise corn and of the grazier to supply meat. So, after all our caleulations, we come back to Mother Earth at last. The sooner we can triple or quadraple our production, the speedier will be the reduction of taxes and the payment of the national debt. From the weight of an irredeemable paper currency the farmer must take the lead in res- cuing the nation. Our solvency is in his fields and crops. These are purely practical considerations. Some- thing might be eaid of the advantages of innocent s-of the bright holidays coming, with their healthy inffasnces. When the year is most glorious, and the skies, cool but still sunny, look down upon the Blue valleys and Uie pacti-colored forests, the smooth well-reaped meadows and the fields full of yellow stubble, the good farmer and all his family have camied u season of rest and these few days dedicated to sight-seeing. He will go back to his farm with new ideas, new ambitions, and new knowledge: and every successful Agricultural Exhibition is a sure portent that the next cud the next will be better and better., It is the pistol which lishes the electire fran. chise in Texas. The qualification of a voter is service ‘n the Rebel army during the war and hearty support of nson’s poliey. The ‘‘unrecon- structed” villaing of that State, reckless by char- acter and boldly frauk from the freedom and of their geographical- position, blurt ew policy of the unwhipped Secessionists, and a new peril to the country ** Wo have learned some- by this war,” they say; *“we have got a new wrin wour horns, Had the South refused to go into the Presidential election in 18360, and instead of that, passed ordinances ot secession and perfected the Coufede Bucha van would have recognized it, and secession eould have been accomplished before Lincoln inangurated. Vou d——d nigger-worshiping Yanks ar'n't out of the bush yet! We have a South win the White House and & bolder man than seeurit out ax was ern Buchs nifing and pistoling friends, pre The October and No- vember electi avo Texas as well as the pation. Among other blessings, they will in time give your State im 1 suffeage, and that will make you loyal within twenty-four hours, and unstrap the revolvers from e man of you. Wait, and you will see the heali wer aud glory of Freedom, 1 ely Of eon=se the Constitutional Amendments will be adopted by the South, and the pacification of the inangurated, if the policy of the Pcople’s ately sustained by the People and mad carcer of revolntion- ams like the following from have become frequent in the The Picaywne has ¢ st it wilk in the future ndvo e Constiattonal Amendment. glives t meut a tacit support.” up the happy day which shall see 8 rennited and a pacified count We especially invoke the rerchants of tl t commereial city to give their t endeavors to ¢ immediately and forever the erable strife which among its other evils has un- settled trade, made ts to the Bouth insecure, re- tarded iudustzy there, bus alarmed Northern capital 1 its flow to the unreconstructed States for ment in mining, manufacturing and agricultural Your interest in giving s cettled policy to viry s snpreme. The Peoyle, beyond all doubt, are inflexibly determived that that policy shall b the one which they have declaree _hrough their Accept it, and help to establish it. Tt quiet to the whole country, restore friendly , and invigorate the produc- busine an was a little more than a year ago yan from the Steedman who did his best to n the Freedmen's Bureau, and show that m States were only joking when they re- and were all the while loyal to the Union. In by him at Toledo, in May, 1865, he ak de i« im defense of —shall be degraded Il kiow 1 never was & great wh as ciril rights v bt | mast not be unwilling to do him jus ticalarly should T uvoid injustice, when I fnt g him on the picke v deeming d, shadl e | o, in God s ir atd by such | presence He used yet stronger language in speaking of the right of the Government to fix the terms upon which the Rebel States should be admitted: Rince that day the loyalty of the freedmen has not wavered, but how mighty is the change in Gen. Steedman and Andrew Johns mentions o fact in British politics which marks an im- portant difference botween popular representation in a Republic and under a monarchy. It say Everybody who has any practical knowledge must know that the farther one s the social sealo the less fmportanc conerally does the possessor of the franchise givo to his vote. 't wny Do wrong, very wrong, aud uupatiotic--probably it is wo=bitt still this is the fac educated, and in telloetual communitics suffer the d * y 8. wy are sufficiently and leisurely to think of going intv Parlament themsel r if taey are deeply interested for somebody else who entertains that intention, the personal mo- tive is strong enough to rouse them; but the mere gratiication or duty of exercising the franchise iv ono which experienco s Dot very decply affect the higher classes of English al ambitious and self-deny in If this is so it is because the franchise in Great Britain has not been sufficiently extended to enable the interests of the many to balance those of the fow. The “‘higher classes of English electors” have no reason to care for the result of elections in which their privileges are not involved, and coolly contem- plate the struggles of what they call the mob. An aristocracy vested with rights which aro above the voice of the people to confirm or abridge, may well getic defense. But in our Republic every man has a personal interest in the Government, snd the greater his fortune the deoper may be his interest in the poli- cy of the nation. For soveral days after the intelligence was received jn South Carolina of the thundering majority with which Maine sustained Congress against the warfare of the President, The Charleston News and The Mercury woro significantly silent. When comment came on the great political fact, see tho vindication of the wisdom of the people's policy of recoustruction, as declared by theirrepresentativesin Congress! Each of those papers published leading editorials, intimating that the poli- tical situation would *‘compel” the Prosident and the South to accept the Constitutional amendments as the “final adjustment™ of the difficulties of recon- struction. In mercy to the deceived, misled and ruined Soutd, roll yp our Congressional maioritios iy every Northern and Western State, and knock from under sectional hate, mortification and discontent the sole fonndation on which they stand out with obstinate hope—the treasonable **policy " of Andrew Johnson. P ] ‘When Jobnson accepted his nomination as Vice- President, he touched the heart of the country with this declaration; ** If the man who gave his means to destroy the Government should be permitted to par- ticipate in the great work of reorganization, then all the precious blood so freely poured out will have Dbeen wantanly spilled, and all our victories go for naught.,” Now he threatens to “kick out” every federal office-holder in the United States who does not support his policy of instantly admitting Rebels into Congress to settle the terms upon which they are to be received back into the Union. The people in their turn unquestionably will ** kick " every office- holder in the country who does ot support tiris policy, and will kick bi e —— “A disunion Congress!” ‘'An uncgmu'tntionl Congress!” ** A Congress hanging on the vérge of the Government!” expectorated Andrew Johnson as he swung round the eirole of suicidal speech-making. To get rid of this lawless and accursed body several hund- dred Virgivian and iMaryland Rebels have been im- ported into Pennsylvania to vote on Tueaday nest. The Police in Philadelphin last Satarday picked up and jugged one Sauruel Miller, an ** unreconstructed ” soldier of Stonewall Jackson’s Division, who defiantly owned up that ho was one of a ** consignment of xix” who had been sent up from Loudon County, Virginia, railroad-fare paid, to vote for Heister Clymer and some good Union Congressmen' —_—_— From all parts of Ohio we have cheerful letters. A correspondent at Columbus says: ‘*Although the Unionists do not flatter themselves with the idea that they can carry the State at tho coming election by the unprecedented majority of 1863, yet they will not be so far behind but that they will equal or ex- ceod that received by Mr. Lincoln in 1864, which was 59,58, You may rest assured that this is no random giess, but is a statement based upon the estimates of safe and trustworthy judges—men who have not hereto- fore been far out of the way in making similar prophe- cies. Not one of them will place the figures lower than 50,000, while a few claim as high as 65,000 and 70,000." — Gov. Brownlow's theory of war, which kas supplied 80 many Copperhead journals with a text for foolish sermons, was proposed only in reference to another rebellion. While the Torch-and-Turpentine policy is being discussed, it may be as well, perhaps, to quots Jeflerson Davis on the subject. While on his way to Montgomery, to be inangurated President of the Con- federacy, Mr. Davis made frequent snd violent de- nunciations of the North, and in one speech #aid: “Your Rorder States will gladly come inte the Southern Confederaoy within ) days. as we be their only friends. England will recognize us, and we have s glorions future before e The grnes will grow in the Northern cities where the pavements have been worn off by the trewl of esmmerce. We Will enry the war where it is casy 10 advance ; where food for word and torch await our armies in the denwely populated ities ; and though the encmy may come and woil our crops, an raise them as before, while they eannot sear fhe citics whicl took years of industry and millions of money te build.” The following pcmgmpfi scems to demand some sort of attention from those it ineulpates: PrrsiEst Jousso asp THE FExiass—The Sandusty Register states that i o speech in that eity » fow diys: ag Hom, Joseph M. Koot late United Stuten District- A ttorney for Nerthern Ohio, said he considered he was not breaking official ard totho Administration g the Canadian excite- Masshal Bill, moeived in clowely all organizations, in case of any attemptod recfere to prepewd the move- the natruetions, Wi WAKKS, TC., HAVE GONE A MILE OIF TWO VROM THE CIEY, WOW TUEM UE ! And it is known that for threo or four days the Fessenden lay in tae Cuyahoga River, with steam up, ready to exceate this ond The Hon. John Hogan of Missouri and ‘“Dick” Vaux, esq., of Philadelphia, addressed the Democrats at Harrisburg last week. ‘The formerspoke for nearly two hours, talking of nothing but the ** nigger,” while the latter threatened civil war in Pennsylvania should Gen. Geary be elected. Not ome word was said re- gording the election of Clymer, as the dofeat of that gentleman is admitted by the most prominent men of Lis party. Were the election one month distant it would require, the day after, an affidavit to prove that Heister Clymer had actually been a caadidate for gubernatorial honors. . The Rebels having failed on the field of battle, are now trying the field of politics. Their object is to get into Congress. Their Lope is that Andrew John- son will build up a party that will enable them to overthrow the Union party of the loyal States, and again dominate the country, or strike again and suc- cossfully for independence. The seed of anew civil war is wrapped up in every ballot cast for a Copper- head candidate for Congross. Throughout all the South not one Union man sus- tains Andrew Johnson's ** policy.” That of itself is an unanswerable, conclusive, startling argument. Among the hundreds of thousands of traitors North and South there is not one who doss not sustain this “‘policy.” Can auy voter who yet hesitates about his duty to his country need more to decide him than the bare statement of these two facts? The Rebels, repudiators on principle, have, in their new State constitutions, repugiated the Confederate war debt. They nover would have paid it anyhow. Bu’ they have nowhere repudiated their purpose to make the United States pay it. On the contrary, the very first month that sees them, with their Copperhead allies, in a majority in Congress, will see that debt fastened on the North. Precisely one of wues forced upon us in the coming elections by Johnson's * policy " is, whether one white Rebel in South Carolina, like Wade Hamp- ton, shall count as much at the polls and in Congress as three such New-York patriots as Peter Cooper, zra Cornell and Reuben E. Fenton. [ —————. ‘We want guarantees, not promises, from Andrew Johnson's Rebel friends. Twenty months” trial of the Presidential agent of the **unreconstruoted” has taught us the utter worthlessness of professions and promises made by unrepentant rebellion to loyalty. ‘The country now demands Constitutional guarantees, and will take nothing less. Does the right to make laws for the people of the United States reside in a Congress elected by the bal- lot, or in a President elected by a bullet? - TRREE HUNDRED THOUSAND MORE. ‘Weare coming, Father Abra’am, three bundred thousand more, From Mississippi's winding stream, and rom New-Engluud's shore ; Woleavo. our plows and workshops, our wives and children dear, WWith Learts too full for utterance, with but a sileat tear; ‘Wo dare not look behind us, but steadfastly before— W are coming, Father Abra’am, threc hundred thousand more. 1f you look across the hill-tops that meet the Northern sky, Long waving lines of moviug dust your vision may descry ; :nd :ov the wind an hu‘lu:lt.t:‘m‘:he °h£:'|=b ’n oats aloft our s ., in glory i Aud bayonets in u.a"-'-mm ‘gleam, aud ma-'fr‘-r- mosio Wo are coming, Father Abra'm, three hundred thousand more. 1¢ you look all up our valley, where the growiag harvests shine, You way see our sturdy furmer boys fst into line ; Axd children from their mother's kuees are pulling st the weeds, And leaving him to reap and sow, their country's needs. against And o farewell group stands weeping at every cottage door— ‘We are coming, Futl Aln"'.-._mn hung-d thousand more. You have called us, and we're coming by Rishmond's bloody To lay us down for Freedom's sake, our brothers bones besido ; Or from foul Treason's savage grasp to wrench the murderous And in the fao of forelgn foes its fragments to parade. a; hundred loyal men and truo have gone before— ‘e are coming, Father Abra'm, three hundred thousand me®. PRRSONAL.~Major-Gen. Thomas and family) and Mr. Kortright. British Cousul at Philadelphia, aro at ¢he Bre. voort House; Gor. Burnett of California and Judga “aschial of Tgxag are at the Motrogolitan Hotel THE ELECTIONS TO-DAY. ——— Wo give, as follows, a correct list of the tickets to be voted on to-day in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Towa and Nebraska, accom the vote at lasy election. Renominations are cized : PENNSYLVANIA. roR R, . Dnion. Vote of 1363, _Demoerat. Vote MajorGen. J. W. Geary 209,49 Heister Clymer. Curtain’ n“flad Lincoln's maj Jority in 1865 for 2, 21, John Covode. .. 22 Gen. J. K. Moorhead 4,220 A, Thomas Wikiame. .. 3558 Billings G. Childs. . George V. Lawrence..1,638 Wi, Montgomery —— OHIO STATE TICKRT. Sceretary of State. Win. I ith Ten) Tuige Supreme Court. .. Jostah oot iom, Lourd Public Works. ohn M. Barrere. Thos “..!{ In 1864 the vote for Secrotary of Stato stood: Wi, Swith (Unioa), 237,210; W. W. Arustrong (Dea.), 182,439; Union majority, 54,771 Gen. G. W, Joln B, Young. . Martin D Fol 77 CL l‘k‘h?flv)! 17. Eph. R. Eeld 18, Teufus P Spalding. . H. 19 Gen. Jay. A. Garfield 18406 D. C. Coolman. In 1864 the Democrats elected two Con, Francis Le Blond in the Vth District, whoso m was 2,091, and Wm. E. Fisck in the XIIth Distriet, whose majority was 1,616, ——— INDIANA. STATE TICKET. 3 G. Badger. B. x Schools 3 u"'.'?"" lllt'h; i Suy oo w‘: 0. . . fi 1%64 Goy. Morton's (Unionist) majority ever Joseph E. McDonuld was 20,853 votes. CONGRESS. Vote 1864, Union, De Brenler 12610 W. E. Niblack. Gresham. 9,064 M. €. Kerr.. ' Hunter... 12017 H. W. Harrington. 1, 10013 g 3 G 4. Col. Ira €. Grover. 5. George W. Julian. & Gen. John Coburn. .. z olman N. 1. Bundy. Mulor N Capt. John M. Lond. 16,6 Dayid Turpie iams. 14,617 Robert Low ———— T0WA. STATE TICKET. Union. Secrotary of State..Col. Ed. Wright, Auditor hin A. Elliott, ure: Major 8. E. Rankin, Attorney- L B Tog. band Office. Rep'r Sup. Corrt Clerk Sup. Court.. ¥, Gotschalk. At the last -Vudcflhlr) in 1865, the Union candidate was elected by & majority of 21,002 votes. CONGRESS. Vote 1864, R Demoeratie. Fitz-Heary Warren. " - —-— NEBRASKA. STATE TICKET. Dem. Auditor. ohn Gillespie. Frank Murphy. Trewsure ugustus Kountae. John 8 Seaton. Librarian 1t 8. Knox. R. . Jordan. In 1865, an election for the same office was held, and the Union candidate for Auditor bad 852 majority over his opponent. DELEGATE T0 CONGRESS, Tnien. Dem, T. M. Marquette. J. Sterliug Morton, the clection for Delegate, in 1862, Daily's (Union) majority was 153, and at an election for the same office in 1564, Hitcheock (Union) bad 793 majority. Butler, the Union eandidate for Governor in June, 1866, had 145 ma- Jjority over his opponent, Morton. MEMBER OF CONGRESS. Tiion. ndent. Den. Indepe Joln Tatle. A 8. Paddock. Geo. Fraucis Traia, The election of a member of Congress by Nebrasks 13 provisional for its admission as a State. The four States whose tickets are thus given choose 60 members of Congress, of which the Demoerats have at present only 12, though they hope for a gain of 12 more. On the other hand, the Republican- Unionists hope to win as many. The coutest will decide how far the Republican strength bhas been affected by the attempt of the President to make divisions in its ranks, and give a fresh fnspiration to the work tor November. —_—_— 10WA. MASS MEETING AT KEORUK—SPEECH OT GEN. JOWN A. LOGAN. Special Dispatch to The N. Y. Tribune, Qumer, L, Monday. Cet, 8, 1866. A mass mooting was held at’ Kcokuk, lows, on Sat- wrday, Oct. 6, when Gen. Johu Logan addressed tho meeting. He is certainly ono of the ~most effective stump speakers in~ the West, both in matter and manner. I give you some of the points of his speech. Mason has ~ been committed; this is proved by the four years’ war, by the war debt, on our rvpla, by the pensions, and the bounties that we pay to o desolate homes and erippled men in our midst, and by 300,000 soldiers’ graves south of the Potomac and Obio Rivers. Some oue is guilty ; who has committed this trea- son? Has it been the Republican pasty, or its members ? Who can find the chubluu'h&r ‘Abolitionist, who during four years war & gun, ot struck ablow aguinst the Government! The Re- blicaus invariably were found i defense of tho vernment. The blicans were not the guilty encs who committed this treason, who did the Democracy. The speaker_had belonged fo the Democratic party, but he quit that party where it warred upon_ the Goverument. Every military ot clvil offictal, in the Confoderncy was a Demo- erat; Jeft. Davis, Jobn C. Breckinridge, ~Floyd, Alex. Stephens and Gen. Lee. Point’ to any man who held a promincnt place in the Southern Confederacy and you point to & Democrat. There was a loyal perty in tie Government, for the Rebellion has been down. The Southern Democrats did not put 1t down, for their arms and effects were against the Unfon. The Northern Democracy have not done it. A Democrat ko arrayed himsel( agninst treason and troitors and joined the Union Republican party. There are iwo great partios—o: ¢ oyal, and one disloval, "The Democracy are not the loral pny and in the South they were truitors. North they Wero in sympathy with thew; the Republieans were the loyal party, and with them all - Union men shonkd act; he showed in o clear and effective munnee the' injustics that would be doneto the lorul ~Sjates without the Constitutional Amendment. power in the Government. ation and representation go together for for Traitors there iy taxation without and thoy must submit. After a la ble neconnt of e Phila- delphia Convention and of Reve Johnsou's ) w the President, and Andy Johnsou's reply, larly he soldiers witl touching pathos. death as together on the battie-ficld; of the bespital; of men and women who helped them ; praved over the graves at the ith, TJT'.-..- B“',T“"‘”....m’ mm nem&'m el by &'Inll.q" which E::hd.- ! were D to see that loyal mep nhi ANOTHFR NEGRO MASSACRE. ol THE BIACKS SAID TO B2 THE AGGRESSORS. Muupis, Monday, Oct. 8, 1866 miler below here, on . About 50 negrocs themselves, ud-m out, as some say, vith the determination to slsughter all the whites. They first oncountered Tke Turner and com« menced firing on them. latter returned the fire with revoivers, killing Bill the leader, and another, and wounding three others. negroes then flod. Henry Turner was slightly wounded in the Doed e WAIIG i the Belghborsood thea Amad ans wont in pursuit; but after the death of leador the pegroes scattered through the k here in pearch of th cindwlpc:“"' e