Parke County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 10, Rockville, Parke County, 27 October 1864 — Page 4
PARKE CO. DEMOCRAT.
The Argument in a Nut Shell. Look at This Picture. Then on This.. ELECT LINCOLN and the Black Republican Ticket. You will bring on Negro Equality, more Debt, Harder Times, another DRAFT! Universal anarchy and ultimate RUIN! ELECT McCLELLAN and the Whole Democratic Ticket. You will defeat Negro Equality, restore Prosperity and re-establish the UNION! in an Honorable Permanent and Happy PEACE! "To Whom it May Concern." ABRAHAM LINCOLN, of March 4, 1861, and ABRAHAM LINCOLN, of July 18, 1864, cuts the following figure: Lincoln's Inaugural, March 4, 1861. I declare that I have no purpose DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I believe I have NO LAWFUL RIGHT TO DO SO, and have NO INCLINATION TO DO SO. The right of each State to order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own judgment EXCLUSIVELY, is ESSENTIAL to the balance of power on which the perfection and ENDURANCE of our political fabric depend. - Abraham Lincoln Lincoln to the Rebel Commissioners, July 18, 1864. Any proposition which embraces the restoration of peace, the integrity of the whole Union, and the ABANDONMENT OF SLAVERY, and comes by and with an authority that can control the armies now at war with the United States will be received and considered by the Executive Government of the United States, and will be met by liberal terms on substantial and collateral points: and the bearer or bearers thereof shall have safe conduct both ways. - Abraham Lincoln The Difference in the Character of the Two Men. The following extract from the acceptance of the Presidential nomination by Lincoln and McClellan, aptly illustrate the difference in the character of the two men. Read them: LINCOLN [From the official report telegraphed from Washington.] I have not permitted myself, gentlemen, to conclude that I am the best man in the country but I am reminded in this connection of the story of an old Dutch farmer who remarked to a companion once that it was not best to swap horses when crossing streams. [The prolonged laughter which followed this characteristic remark should have been heard. It was tumultuous.] McCLELLAN [From the official report telegraphed from New York.] I realize the weight of the responsibility to be borne, should the people ratify your choice. Conscious of my own weakness. I can only seek fervantly the guidance of the Ruler of the Universe, and, relying on His all powerful aid, do my best to restore Union and Peace to a suffering people, and to establish and guard their liberties and rights. One is the reply of an accomplished gentleman, a capable and modest man, and the other (Lincoln's) is that of a loose, vulgar, incompetent, one who is a disgrace to his high position. The Cardinal Principles of the Democratic Party. [From the "Platform of Principles" as laid down in the several Democratic Conventions of all the States, including that held at Cincinnati in 1856.] Resolved, That the Democratic party will faithfully abide by and uphold the principles laid down in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798, and the Report of Mr. Madi-
son to the Virginia Legislature in 1799 ; that it adopts those principles as constituting one of
the main foundations of its political creed and is resolved to carry them out in their obvious meaning and import. The Kentucky Resolutions of '98, Drafted By The Pen of Thomas Jefferson: Resolved, That the several States composing the United States of America, are not united upon the principle of unlimited submission to the General Government, but that by a compact
the General Government, but that by a compact under the style and title of a Constitution for the United States, and of amendments thereto, they constituted a general government for special purposes, delegated to that government certain definitive powers, reserving each State to itself the residuary mass of right to their own self government, and that whenever the General Government assumes undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative, void and of no force ; that to this compact each State acceded as a State, and is an integral party ; and its co-States, forming, as to itself, the other party ; and the government, created by this compact, is not the exclusive and final judge of the powers delegated to itself ; since that would have made its discretion, and not the Constitution, the measures ot its powers, but that, as jn all other cases of compact, among parties having no common judge, each party has an equal right to judge for itself as well of infractions, as of the mode and measures of redress. Stick this in Your Hat and Keep it There The following confession was made by the Hon. Mr. Dawes a Republican member of Congress from Massachusetts, on the 25th of April, in which he exposed the corruptness of Lincoln's administration : "THE GENTLEMEN MUST REMEMBER THAT IN THE FIRST YEAR OF A REPUBLICAN ADMINISTRATION WHICH CAME INTO POWER UPON PROFESSIONS OF REFORM AND RETRENCHMENT, THERE IS INDUBITABLE EVIDENCE ABROAD IN THE LAND THAT SOMEBODY HAS PLUNDERED THE PUBLIC TREASURY WELL NIGH IN THAT SINGLE YEAR AS MUCH AS THE ENTIRE CURRENT YEARLY EXPENSES OF THE GOVERNMENT DURING THE ADMINISTRATION WHICH THE PEOPLE HURLED FROM POWER BECAUSE OF ITS CORRUPTION. Look on this Picture. I HAVE NO PURPOSE, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, TO INTERFERE WITH THE INSTITUTION OF SLAVERY IN THE STATES WHERE IT EXISTS. I BELIEVE I HAVE NO LAWFUL RIGHT TO DO SO, AND I HAVE NO INCLINATION TO DO SO." President Lincoln in his Inaugural Address. Then on This. "I ORDER AND DECLARE THAT ALL PERSONS HELD AS SLAVES IN THE SAID DESIGNATED STATES AND PARTS OF STATES ARE AND HEREAFTER SHALL BE FREE." Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. "NEITHER THE PRESIDENT NOR CONGRESS CAN EMANCIPATE SLAVES ANY MORE THAN THEY CAN GRANT BILLS OF DIVORCE." - Ex-Gov. Henry Dalton.
National Democratic Platform, Adapted at Chicago, August, 30, 1864. Resolved, That in the future, as in the past, we will adhere, with unswerving fidelity, to the Union, under the Constitution, as the only solid foundation for our strength, security and happiness as a people, and as a framework of the Government, equally conducive to the welfare and prosperity of all the States, both Northern and Southern. Resolved, That this Convention does explicitly declare as the sense of the American people, that after four years of failure to restore the Union, by the experiment of war, during which,
under the pretense of military necessity or war power, than the Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, and public liberty and right alike trodden down, and the national prosperity of the country essentially impaired, justice humanity, liberty and the public welfare demand that immediate effort made for cessation of hostilities, with a view to an ultimate convention of all the States, or other possible means, to the end, that at the earliest possible moment, peace may be restored on the basis of the Federal Union of the States. Resolved, That the direct interference of the military authority of the United States, in the recent elections held in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri and Delaware, was a shameful violation of the Constitution, and a repetition of such acts in the approaching election will be held as revolutionary, and resisted with all the means and power under our control. Resolved, That the aim and object of the Democratic party is to preserve the Federal Union and the rights of the States unimpaired, and they hereby declare that they consider administrative usurpations of extraordinary and dangerous powers not granted by the Constitution. The subversion of the civil by the military law in States not in insurrection, the arbitrary military arrest, imprisonment, trial and sentence of American citizens in States where civil law exists in full force. The suppression of freedom of speech and of the press, the denial of the right of asylum, the open and avowed disregard of State rights, the employment of usual test oaths, and the interference with or denial of the right of the people to bear arms as calculated to prevent a restoration of the Union and perpetuition of the government deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed. Resolved, That the shameful disregard of the Administration to its duty in respect to our fellow-citizens who now, and long have been, prisoners of war in suffering condition, deserves the severest reprobation, on the score, alike, of public and common humanity. Resolved, That the sympathy of the Democratic party is heartily and earnestly extended to the soldiery of our army who are and have been in the field under the flag of our country. and on event of obtaining power by us will receive all the care, protection, regard and kind- ness that brave soldiers of the republic have so nobly earned. Who is Responsible for the War! We answer, the Republican party. The Republican party might have prevented the present devastating civil war. It might have saved the lives of thousands of the best men of the Nation, and thousands of millions of the people's money. For proof of what we say, read the following from the speech of Stephen A. Douglas, delivered in the United States Senate, January 3d, 1861, upon the compromise measures, then pending before the Senate: "I believe this to be a fair basis of amicable adjustment. If you of the Republican side are not willing to accept this, nor the proposition of the Senator from Kentucky, (Mr. Crittenden,) pray tell us, what are you willing to do ? I ADDRESS THE INQUIRY TO REPUBLICANS ONLY, FOR THE REASON THAT IN THE COMMITTEE OF THIRTEEN, A FEW DAYS AGO, EVERY MEMBER FROM THE SOUTH, INCLUDING THOSE FROM THE COTTON STATES, (MESSRS. TOOMBS AND DAVIS,) EXPRESSED THEIR READINESS TO ACCEPT THE PROPOSITION OF MY VENERABLE FRIEND FROM KENTUCKY, (Mr. CRITTENDEN.) AS A FINAL SETTLEMENT OF THE CONTROVERSY, IF INTENDED AND SUSTAINED BY THE REPUBLICAN MEMBERS, "HENCE THE SOLE RESPONSIBILITY OF OUR DISAGREEMENT. AND THE ONLY DIFFICULTY IN THE WAY OF AN AMICABLE ADJUSTMENT, IS WITH THE REPUBLICAN PARTY." Here it is proved that the Republican party is responsible for thEwar, that it is responsible for every dollar of National and State indebtedness incurred on account of the war - that it is responsible for the high taxes that have been imposed upon the people, on account of the war - that it is responsible, for the distress and financial ruin, which now exists in every part of the country - that it is responsible for every life lost in the war - it is responsible for, and should receive the curses of every wife made a widow, and of every child made an orphan, by the war. In short, that it will be responsible for the dissolution of the Union, should the Union be dissolved. Shall such a party be continued in power, or will the people change their rulers? Let the Ballot-boxes at the next election proclaim the answer. United States in Account Current with Abraham Lincoln, 1861-4. Half a million of men killed and maimed. Five thousand millions of dollars spent and destroyed. The Monroe Doctrine abandoned. Our foreign commerce swept from the seas. The value of a dollar reduced to forty cents. The cost of living doubled. The breach between North and South widened. Taxes increased five fold. Habeas Corpus suspended. Personal freedom strangled. Liberty of the press trampled upon. The Constitution abrogated. The dignity of the Government lost. Elections carried by terrorism. Half a million slaves transformed to vagabonds. Swarms of contractors enriched. Shoddy blazing with diamonds. The Voice of a Patriot. "The fact can no longer be disguised that many of the Republican Senators desire war and disunion, under pretext of saving the Union. They wish to get rid of the Southern States, in order to have a majority in the Senate to confirm the appointments, and many of them think they can hold a permanent Republican majority in the Northern States, but not in the whole Union; for partisan reasons they are anxious to dissolve the Union; if it can be done without holding them responsible before the people." - Stephen A. Douglas in the U.S. Senate, Dec. 25, 1860. How Significant! "I declare upon my own responsibility as a Senator, that the liberties of this country are in greater danger to-day from the corruptions, and fronm the profligacy practiced in the various departments of the Government, than they are from the enemy in the open field." - J. P. Hale, Republican Senator from New Hampshire.
Secretary Seward's Power. The Secretary of State, while endeavoring to vindicate the vitality of the Federal Government to Lord Lyons, illustrated his position by saying: "My Lord, I can touch, a bell on my right hand and order the arrest of a citizen of Ohio. I can touch the bell again and order the imprisonment of a citizen of New York, and no power on earth but that of the President can release them. Can the Queen of England, in her dominions, do as much?"
Self-Condemned! "Resolved, That the people justly view with alarm the reckless extravagance which pervades every department of the Federal Government ; that a return to a rigid economy and accountability is indispensble to arrest the systematic plunder of the public treasury by favored partizans ; while the recent startling developments of frauds and corruptions at the Federal Metropolis show that AN ENTIRE CHANGE OF ADMINISTRATION IS IMPERATIVELY DEMANDED" - Resolution of the Chicago Contention that nominated Abraham Lincoln. How Prophetic ! "If these infernal fanatics and Abolitionists ever get the power in their hands, they will override the Constitution, set the Supreme Court at defiance, change and make laws to suit themselves, LAY VIOLENT HANDS ON THOSE WHO DIFFER WITH THEM IN OPINION, or dare question their fidelity, and finally bankrupt the country and deluge it with blood." Daniel Webster, Stamp Duties. Agreement or contract other than those specified in the schedule, any appraisement - or value or damage or for any other purpose, for every sheet or piece of paper upon which either of the same shall be written - five cents. Agreement or contract other than those specified in this schedule - if more than one agreement be written on the sheet of paper - for each - five cents. Bank checks, draft or order for the payment of money - two cents. Bill of exchange, (inland) draft, or order for the payment of any sum of money, not exceeding one hundred dollars, otherwise than at sight or on demand, or any promissory note, (except bank notes issued for circulation, and checks made and intended to be forthwith presented, and which shall be presented to the bank or banker for payment,) or any memorandum, check or receipt or other written or printed evidence of any amount of money to be paid on demand or at a time designated, for a sum not exceeding one hundred dollars - five cents. Bill of exchange for every additional one
hundred dollars or fractional pat in excess ofJ&r Soldiers, Widows and Orphans.
one hundred dollars live cents. Bill of exchange (fortign), drawn in but payable out of the United States, if drawn singly or Mhtwwe than in a set Ot three or nw-v ftuac as inland bi is of exchange. Bill of exchange (foreign), drawn in sots of three or more, fir every bill of each set where the sum made paj-able shall not xceed $100, or th equivalent thereof, in any foreign currency in which such bills shall be expressed two cents. Bill of exchange (foreign; for every additional $100, or fractional part thereof in excess of $100 ten cents. Bill of sale by which any ship or vessel, or any part thereof, shall be conveyed where the consideration shall not exceed $5'J0---25 cents. Bills of sale exceeding $500 and not exceeding $1,000 50 cents. Bills f sale exceeding $1,000, far every additional amount of $1,000, or lractional pa. t there-, of 50 cents. Bonds of indemnity where the penalty is $1 .000 or less--50 cents. Bonds of itidemnity--where the penal! y exceeds $1,000, for every additional $1,000 or iractional part in excess of $1,000 25 eenta. j Bonds of any description, other than such as j may be required in legal proceedings, ot used in connection with mortgage deeds, and 4ich as are not otherwise charged ---23 cents Certificates of stock 25 cents. Certificates of profits of an incorporated" com pany tor a sum not less than $10 nor more than $5010 cents . i Certificate of profits exceeding $50---25 cents. Certificate of damage 25 cents. Certificate of report, if for a man, not exceed ing $1002 cents. Certificate for a sum exceeding $l!)0--five cents. Certificate of any other description 5 cents Charter party, if the tonnage does not exceed 150 tons- $1. " Charter exceeding 150 tons and not exceeding 300 tons - $2. Charter exceeding 300 tons and not exceeding 600 tuns- $5. Charier exceeding 600 tons- -$10. Co.itraet, issued ty brokers, J.C --10 cents. Conveyance, when the value exceeds $100 and does not exceed $500 50 cents. Conveyance exceeding $500 and not exceeding $1,000 $1. Conveyance exceedme $1,000 aud not exceed ing $2,500 $2 t Oonvcya ce exceeding $2,500 and not exceeding $5,000-$5. Conveyance exceeding $5,000 and not exceed ing $10,000 $10. conveyance exceeding sin uuu and not ex ceeding $20,000 $20. Conveyance for every additional $1 000, or lractional part, in excess ot $2it,inJ0- $20. iuniry custom notise, lor consun.i'tion or warehousing, not exceeding $10025 cents. Entry Custom house, exceeding $101 and not exceeding $iUU ott cents Entry Custom house, exceeding $50- -$1. Entry Withdral 50 cents. Insurace Life, when the amount insured shall not exceed $1,00025 cents Insurance exceeding $1,000 and not exceeding tf.V'VfV, WW Wlllf,. Insurance exceeding $5,000 $1. Insurance, (marine or inland,) each policy vo cents. Lease, where the rent is $300 or less 50 cts Lease, whore the rent exceeds $500, for each additional $200 or fraction in excess of $300 oo cents. Manifest, if the tonage does not exceed 300 tons $1. Manifest, exceeding 300 tons and not exceed ing 600 tons $3. Manifest, exceeeling 600 tons $5. Mortgage, or any personal bond given as se curity for the payment of any definite sum of money exceeding $100 and not exceeding $500 ou cents Mortgage, exceeding $500 and not exceeding si.uvu si Mortgage exceeding $1,000 and not exceeding Mortgage exceeding $2,500 and not exceed ing $5,000 $5. Mortgage exceeding $5,000 and not exceeding $10,000 $10. Mortgage exceeding $10,000 and not exceeding $20,000 $15. Mortgage for every additional $10,000 or fraction in excess of $20,000 $10. Passage ticket to foreign ports not exceeding , '1,1 -: i ( o 3,0" ,u ceillH. ' v Passage tickets tp1 foreign ports exceeding $30 $1. Power of Attorney for sale of Ptoefcs, A. 25 cents. Power of Attorney or proxy, ftw otinc 10 cent. ' Power of Attorney to collect rents 25 cents. Power of Attorney to sell real estate $1, Probate of Will or Letters of A.l ministration. where the estate does not exceed thu value of $2,0(H3$l. Probate of Will or Letter of Administration. exceeding $2,000, for every additional $1,000, or fractional part in execs of $2,000-50 cent Probates 25 cent Receipts for the payment of any sum of mos.-y, or fr the payment of any debt due, not
being for satisfaction of any mortgage or judgment, or decree of a court, and a receipt for the delivery of any property, where the amount exceeds $20 2 cents. Warehouse receipts for any goods, merchandise stored, &c. - 25 cents. Legal documents, writ, or other original process by which any suit is commenced in any court of record, either law or equity 50 cents. Medicines, &c.,, retail price not exceeding 25 cents 1 cent. Medicines, exceeding 25 cents and not exceeding 50 cents 2 cents. Medicines, exceeding 50 cents and not exceeding 75 cents 3 cents, Medicines, exceeding 75 cents and not exceeding $1 -4 cents. Medicines, exceeding $1, for each 50 cent or fractional part above $1 2 cents. Perfumery and cosmetics same as above. Friction matches, where the retail price of a package, containing 144 matches or less shall not. exceed 5 cents 1 cent. Friction matches, where the price exceeds - 5 cents, for each additional 5 cents or fraction 1 cent. Photograps, ambrotypes, daguerreotypes, &c, on each picture, when the retal price shall not exceed 25 cents 2 cents. Photographs, exceeding 25 cents and not exceeding 50 cents 3 cents. Photographs, exceeding 50 cents and not ex-
ceeding $1 5 cents. Photographs, exceeding $1, for each additional dollar or fraction 5 cents. Playing cards, value not over 18 cents per pack 2 cents. Playing cards, exceeding 18 cents and not exceeding 25 cents 3 cents. Playing cards, exceeding 25 cents and not exceeding 50 cents 5 cents. Playing cards, exceeding 50 cents and not exceeding $1 10 cents. Playing cards, exceeding $1, for each additional 50 cents in excess of $1 5 cents. Banks, on circulation less than 90 per cent. 1 per cent. Brokers, exceeding 100 shares, for every additional 100 shares or fractional parts, at the rates of for each 100 shares, 50 cents. Succession to real estate, where the successor shall be related to the deceased, or stranger in blood, tax per $100, six dollars. Geo. W. Thompson, A TTORNEY AT LAW, NOTARY PUBLIC and General Land and Collecting Agent, Roekville, Parke County, Indiana Will attend promptly to all business intrusted to his care, including the Securing and Collections of Claims, Investigation of Titles to Lands, Paying Taxes, &c., &c/ Also gives special attention to obtaining Bounty, Back Pay, Pensions. &c. Office, at his residence, on High Street. W. P. Bryant, M.D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, ROCKVILLE, Indiana. Tenders his Professional services to the citizens of Rockville and surrounding country. Office - On College Street, in the office formerly occupied by Judge Bryant. Wright & Prescott's NEW PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, NO. 105 Main Street, Terre Haute, Indiana. - Cartes De Visite, Vignettes or Large Photographs, either from life or copied from old pictures, warranted equal to any from Eastern Cities. Persons having miniatures of deceased friends can have them painted in Oil Colors, Cabinet or Life Size. nl-ly. PRAIRIE CITY BANK, Samu'l S. Early, Pres't, Jno. S. Beach, Cashier. - North Side of the Public Square, Terre Haute, Ind. Organized in 1852. Dealers in Coin, Uncurrent Money and Exchange. Receives Deposits, Collections made and a Genera! Banking Business transacted. nl-ly. H. HULLMAN Wholesale Grocer and Dealer in all kinds of Dometic Wines and Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco, Flour, Salt, Nails, &c., Corner of Main and Fifth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana. G, Weiss & Co., Are Prepared to Furnish By The Barrel or Bottle, for family use, Scotch Ale, London Porter, Philadelphia Porter, Dayton Ale, Detroit Cider, &c., &c., No. 87, Main Street Terre Haute, Indiana. H. H. SHEWMAKER House Joiner and Carpenter, - Highland, Vermillion County, Indiana. Will contract for building, drafting, and all other work pertaining to his trade. All work neatly and substantially done. The best of reference can be given, if required. OLD UNION WAGON YARD Grocery and Provision Store and Boarding House, Corner of Fourth and Eagle. Streets, Terre Haute, Ind. Daniel Miller, Proprietor. HAYTH HOUSE, Montezuma, Ind., Thos. C. Hayth Proprietor. - Good accommodations in connection with a good Livery Stable, and a Regular Stage Line to Terre Haute every day, and also to the State Line City. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, PHILADELPHIA. PA. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS, SEMINAL, Urinary, and Sexual Systems, new and reliable treatment in reports of the Howard Association sent by mail in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Address, Dr. J. SKILLEN HOUGHTON, Howard Association, No. 2 South Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. THE JOURNAL OF COMMERCE, JR., Published at No. 91 Wall Street Br William C. Prime, David M. Stone, Estate of David Hale, deceased, and William H. Hallock, constituting the firm of PRIME, STONE, HALE & HALLOCK. Terms of Subscription: Junior, Daily, in advance, one year, $6 00 " " six months, in advance, 3 25 " " two copies, one address, 11 00 " " five copies, one address, 27 00 " " eight copies, one address, 43 00 " " ten copies, one address, 52 00 " " twelve copies, one address. 60 00 " " (additional copies same rate) Large Daily, in advance, one year. $12 00 " " six months, in advance, 6 50 " " end of each six months, 7 00 " " for one month, 1 25 The terms of the Weekly Journal of Commerce will hereafter be For one year in (advance) $2 00 Money may be remitted by mail, addressed to JOURNAL OF COMMERCE, New-York. New York Freeman's Journal AND CATHOLIC REGISTER. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, NO. 5 TRYON ROW, NEW YORK. TERMS: Single Subscribers one year, $4 00 " " six months, 2 00 " " three months, 1 00 Clubs to one address, one year, each copy, 3 00 All communications should be addressed to New-York Freeman's Journal, New York. JAMES A. McMASTER, Editor and Proprietor.
THE CAMPAIGN OF 1864!
ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT IN THE HISTORY OF THE NATION. SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE! FOR THE PARKE CO. DEMOCRAT. IT WILL VINDICATE THE CAUSE OF RIGHT AND JUSTICE! And Labor Faithfully for the Election of the Democratic Nominees, McCLELLAN & PENDLETON. TERMS : TWO DOLLARS A YEAR ! IN ADVANCE, INVARIABLY!
THE PHILADELPHIA AGE
-1864.The Only Democratic Daily Morning Jonrnal Published iN Philadelphia. The Union, ThE Constitution, And The Enforcement of the Laws. The Publishers of THE PHILADELPHIA AGE invite the attention of business men , thinking men, and all who are interested in the various occupations and pursuits of life, to the DAILY and WEEKLY editions of their Journal. The Philadelphia Daily Age, advocates the principles and policy of the Democratic party, and therefore necessarily favors the restoration of the Union as it was, and defends the Constitution of the United States and that of this Commonwealth. It is issued every mornings, (Sundays excepted) and contains the latest intelligence from all parts of the world ; with carefully prepared articles on Government, Politics, Trade, Finance and prompt editorial comments on the questions and affairs of the day ; Market Reports, Prices Current, Stock Quotations, Marine Intelligence, Reports of Public Gatherings, Foreign and Domestic Correspondence, Legal Reports, Theatrical Criticisms, Reviews of Literature, Art and Music, Agricultural Matters, and discussions of whatever subject is of general interest and importance. No event of any importance occurs in any part of the country without being fully and promptly telegraphed and published in its columns. It has all the dispatches of the Associated Press from every part of the United States, and the news from all parts of Europe brought by the steamers instantly telegraphed from whatever point the steamers first touch. TERMS : Ten Dollars per annum for a single copy, Five Dollars for six months, Two Dollars and Fifty Cents for three months, and for any less time at the rate of ninety cents per month. Payment required invariably in advance. The Philadelphia Weekly Age. The Weekly Age is a complete compendium of the News of the Week, and contains the chief editorials, the prices current and market reports, stock quotations, correspondence and general news matter published in the Daily Age. It also contains a great variety of other matter, rendering it in all respects a first class family journal, particularly adapted to the Politician; the Merchant, the Farmer, the Mechanic, the Literary man, and all classes of readers. It has in fact, every characteristic of aLIVE NEWSPAPER, fitted for the Counting House, the Workshop, the Farmer's Fireside, the Politician, and the general reader. The Weekly age is mailed in season to reach all parts of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Ohio and Indiana, on or before Saturday of each week. TERMS : Two Dollars per annum for a single copy ; One Dollar for six months; and Sixty Cents for three months. To Clubs of Ten, One Dollar and Seventy-Five Cents per copy per annum : Twenty Copies one year for Thirty Dollars ; and one Copy gratis to the person getting up the Club. No paper will be sent until the subscription is paid. Specimen copies of the above papers sent gratis to any address, on application. THE CAMPAIGN AGE Is Published Every THURSDAY Morning, During the. Presidential Campaign It will support the nominees of the Democratic National Convention. It will boldly advocate the rights of the white man, and fearlessly sustain all tho constitutional rights of the citizen, no matter from what quarter they may be assailed. Democratic and conservative clubs, county committees, agents, and all interested in the cause are invited to co-operate in the circulation of THE CAMPAIGN AGE. TERMS. Single Copies for the series, 50c In Clubs of not less than 20. to one address, 45c In Clubs of not less than 50, 40c The cash must accompany each order GLOSSBRENNER & WELSH Proprietors No, 430 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
