THE BEDFORD GAETTZE IS PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNINQ BY B. P. IfIEYEBS, At the following termj, to wit: $1 .SO per annum, cabii, in advance. $2 .00 " " if paid within the year. S2.SO < if not paid Within the year subscription taken for leas than six months. ttF"No paper discontinued until all arrearage" a re paid, unless nt the option of the publisher, it bat been decided by the United States Courts that the stoppage of a newspaper without the paymen t of arrearages, is prima facie evidence ot fraud and as a criminal oA'ence. E?~The courts have decided that persona are ac countable for the subscription price of newspa. pers, if they take them from the post office, whett.- l er they subscribe for them, or not. THE VIEWS OF MR. DOUGLAS. The following is an extract from the last speech that Mr. Douglas ever made as a Senator of the United States. -It was de livered in the United States Senate on the 15th of March, just before Mr. Douglas left the Senate chamber never again to enter it. "I prefer such an amicable settlement to peaceable disunion; and \ prefer it a thou sand times to civil war. If we can adopt such amendments as will be satisfactory to Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and the other Border States, the same plan of paci fication which will satisfy them will create a Union party in the cotton states which will soon embrace a large majority of the people in those states, and bring them back of their own free will and accord; and thus restore, strengthen and perpetuate the glorious old Union forever. I repeat, whatever guaran tees will satisfy Maryland and the border states (the States now in the Union) will create a Union party in the seceded states that will bring them back by the voluntary action of their own people. You can re st ire and preserve the government in that mode. You can do it in no other. "WAR IS DISUNION, WAR IS FINAL, E TERXAL SEPARATION. Hence disguise it as you may, every Union man in America must advocate such amendments to the Constitu tion as will preserve peace and restore the Union; while every disunionist, whether openly or secretly plotting its destruction is the advocate of peaceful secession or of war, as the surest means of rendering reunion and reconstruction impossible. I have too much respect for his intellect to believe for ■a moment, that there is a man for war that "is not a disunionist per se. 1 lence Ido not mean, if I can prevent it, that the enemies of the Union—men plotting hup. C.imCT~ fcjttb historian will group these inert, with respect to Statosman ship, iind will say, "Here is a set of one idea fools, who permittecpresenteil. It will be presented in no coward ly, truckling spirit. It will be presented by men who are not afraid to speak their true sentiments, with the panoply of American citizens around them. My fellow-citizens, I can hardly express to you my feelings when I have seen these terrible disasters coming upon my country, and when I reflect that her free institutions are all the her itage 1 have to bestow upon my children. I have seen more of the good results that have flowed from our institutious—more of prosperity and happiness among my fellow-citizens—than most men of my day. And now, in the decline of life, with a sun tending towards the twilight, no longer with a vigorous arm to defend or assail, I shall endeavor cheerfully to accept whatever the Almighty ifly place upon me. But, if it is in the providence of God that lie is to punish us with afflictions, to destroy our government, then I cure not how soon the summons may coine to go hence. I would not desire to live louger. Hence it is that I say that in the dis charge of tile duty before our people, thero is no power on earth that shall prevent mo from telling plainly and candidly wlmt I think ought to be douo for the welfare of our beloved couu try. But not only does every consideration of pa triotism urge us to tho vigorous prosecution of this war, if restricted to its legitimate objects, but every consideration of interest also. As for me, I feel that all that I hold dear is at stake—all is involved in the safety of my country, and 1 would be willing even now to close my eyes forever if I knew that I was be queathing to tuy children, unimpaired, the civil liberties which I have enjoyed under the consti tution. I desire to live long enough to see pence restored all over tbo land from the great lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. I desire to see all my Countrymen worshipping oucc more at the same ullur, and all united in an effort to transmit to posterity unimpaired the glorious privileges won for us by the blood of our patriotic ancestor's, [Loud cheers.] Warning of Henry Clay. Extracts from hu speich in the U. 8. Senate, February 8, 1839. Abolition ikould no longer be regarded as an im aginary danger. The Abolitionists, let mo sup pose, sueeeod in their present uiiu of uniting the inhabitants of the freo States as ono man a gainst the inhabitants of the slavo States. •U --nion on one side will l>eget union on the other, and this process of reciprocal consolidation will lie attended with all the violent prejudices, em bittered and and implacable animosities which ever degraded or deformed human nature. A virtual dissolution of the Union will havo ta ken place while tho forms of its existence re main. EI'OENF. PUJMMEK McCAirniT, formerly a practising solicitor in Quecnstown, Ireland, has been sentenced to eighteen months imprisonment for stealing books from the British Museum. THE Ojibway Indians have volunteered to fight the Sioux, providing the Government of Minnesota will furnish them with arnisand am munition. Governor Rninscy, distrusting their i sincerity, refused. Hates of 3U)oertisitig Ohe Square, three weezsor lass . .ft 00 One Square, each additional insertion lata than three months .... i , 35 3 MONTHS. 8 MONTHS. 1 his One square ; .;. .. . $2 00 $3 00 $5 0 Q Two squares . 3 00 5 00 9 0 Three squaros ...... 400 700 13 0 ® i Column 500 900 IS 00 i Column . 800 12 00 20 00 i Column 13 0(1 18 00 30 0„ One Column ...... 18 00 30 00 50 Ob _ The space occupied by ten lines of this size of type counts one square. All fractions of a square under five lines will be measured as a half square t and all over five lines as a full square. All legal advertisements will be charged to the person hdnd in them in. VOL. 6. NO. 9 The War Tax—lts Collection— Why Postponed. A month ago, perhaps, the Secretary of tha 1 rcasury gave official notice that operations un der the war tax should commence on the first of September. Assessors and collectors were ap pointed in August, and there the machine appa rently stopped. The first of September came and passed—the 24th of September has been reached—and who litis beard of assessments t Who of collections, or attempts to assess or col lect .' There must be a reason for this—and tho question, what is it? presents itself to every mind. The debt of the country is immense; if it does not already, by-the end of tho fiscal year it will, amount to $2,000,000,000 more or less. Our opinion is, it will be more. On a portion of this the interest will soon be, if it is not al ready, due. The credit of the government is above all value now, and should not be tamper ed with. However unpopular taxation may be, even for war purposes, the administration should meet it promptly, without any postponement of the inevitable hour, or any attempt to dodge the responsibility. If tliey liavo shown no discre tion heretofore, it is incumbent on them to make some display of manly firmness; statesmanlike wisdom, and patriotic determination now. De lay may injure the credit of the government, but cannot lessen the unpopuhuity of the measure. Procrastination, therefore, is folly—and more exhibitions of folly on the part of our rulers than we have already had is useless. The tax: must come. It must be assessed —it must be colled ft/—and why not at once? Why did not the as sessors proceed with their business, as the Secre tary of the Treasury said they should, oh tho first of September?— That direction has not been changed by any public official notice from the head of the department—and yet all isqui :t; not an assessor is in the field; the word tour is not mentioned. Can it be—is it possible that the department is controlled by party considera tions, and that postponement is tho consequence jf a policy that regards the success of the Ke pubiicun party as of more importance then the preservation of the honor, the integrity and cred it of the government? We are loth to believe this. It seems almost incredible. And yet how else are we to account for the present inactivity of the tax officers ? Humiliating as it is, we are forced to believe that there will be no assessments, no collections, jntil AFTER THE ELECTION! Wo have long since ceased to look for states manship in the cabinet; are wo also to dieut the: iiloa tW they oossrai cilhcr.itaJLriiitiiin <>r. But suppose the absence of all these—who would have thought them shallow enough to be iievo that the people could be deceived by so transparent a trick, or depraved enough to at tempt it 1 They must be idiots or knaves. Perhaps to a certain extent both—the relative proportion being, one part idiot to two parts knave. Nicely, however, as they may think they have woven this web, they shall catch no flies if we can help it. Postponement is not payment; and wo take the liberty of suggesting to the people that vo ting the Republican ticket will not settle their bill with the Republican collector, who will call upon them after the election. The tax which every assessed man and wo man must pay after the election, is to pay the interest on a portion of the §2,000,000,000 debt, every farthing of which was contracted by a Republican administration, to carry on a war brought upon the country by the refusal of a Republican majority in Congress to accede to the Crittenden compromise. And this first Republican tax which the Repub lican collectors will call for after the election, large as it may appear in the eyes of many, and onerous as it may prove in some cases, is but as a tlron in the bucket to what it will be next year, and the year after, and for years almost beyond computation after that. Can, then, the people believe that the Repub lican party that caused the tax, imposed the tax, and will collect the tax, is the party to look to for any relief from the tax 1 Mind, we (io not say that any party can re lieve you —good people, voters of Pennsylvania —from the tax necessary to pay the interest on the immense debt already contracted—that nice little Republican bauble which you contracted for when you elected President Lincoln and an Ab olition Congress, you must pay, principal and interest, to the uttermost farthing. It was a costly bon-bon ; but you bought it, and must pay tho price. But by repudiating this Republican party and electing a Democratic Congress and a Demo cratic Legislature, you may save yourselves from an increased burthen of debt and taxation. You may stop the debt where it is, ami taxa tion where it is on the debt already contracted, by placing Congress and the Legislature under Democratic control. And this is the only way in which you can do it—for remember, every Uepublicnn candidate for Congress or the State Legislature is pledged to an " unconditional, un questioning support of the administration" that made the debt, and that, by its utter incompe tency, its profligacy, and gross mismanagement, will double it before the end of its time, unless checked and controlled by a Democratic Con gress, whose superior wisdom and sounder poli cy alono can save the people from utter ruin, re store the Union as it was, and maintain the be*' niguunt rule of the Constitution* Choose, therefore, between the Kepublican party that has saddled the nation with a debt of $2,000,000,000, and burthened you with taxa-r tion, and that will increase the debt and taxa-' tion if continued in power, and the Democratic party, that will, if successful in the Congtaa sional elections, put a stop to any unnecessary increase of debt, and make taxation as equal und light as possible.— [Patriot Union. THERE arc over seventeen hundred volunteers awaiting marching orders in Camp Lincoln, at Portland, Maine-