THE WATTHRAN, J. S BARNHART, EDITOR. | BELLEFONTE, PENN'A. YRURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1551. Col. W. W. Brown. The Harrisburg Telegraph states that there is a strong probability that Col. Srown, of the Centre Democrat, will be ten - dered a responsible and lucrative appoint tment from the present administration. - Now, while we abhor Col. Brown's political principles as much as it is possible for us to abhor anything, we can say, in all sincerity, that we hope the ramor may turn out to be well Toanded. If there can be such a thing as deserving an office by political services, anflaging zeal and watiring devotion to a political party, by doing its drudgery when others feared to soil their dainty fingers ; ind always “standing up to the rack fodder or no fodder,” then Col. Brown is entitled 10 something handsome from (he powers that be. We predict that ‘our cotemporary will be taken to “Abraham's besom.” Why fot 7 Carl Schurz, whe has not been a cit- szen ‘of this country leng encugh to wear out a decent pair of boots, has received a first class missien at = salary of §7 500 per year, while Col. Brown is “to the manor born.” — Comment is unnecessary. We hope in a week or two at most to head a lscal item thas: “An Editor in fuck.” Stig Pass Him Round. Mr. Jon's. E. Potter, of 617 Sansom st. Philadelphia, ert us an advertisement Some time ago, with the réquest that wo should publish the same six months, payable in books at catalogue prices. Not knowing anything about the raseality of Potter, we inserted the advertisement ‘in the Lope that we should find no difficulty in getting ott pay. After continuing the same about nine months, we vent ineur order with a friend, and thet friend was politely informed that we'had wot fulfilled the contract. After considerable negotiating, Potter concluded that the best he could do would be to send «8 a Bible worth (twelve dollars. Having shewn our friend one at that price, he un- ‘doubtedly packed up another and forwarded it, with the intention of defrauding us. — We have compared the Biblo sent, with hose kept for sale by Mr. Livingston, and Hind that it is just such a one as he 1s offer- ing for sale, at four dollars and a half, In addition to the foregoing the book sent us was ina damaged condition, This is the anner in which John E. Potter paid us tweaty dollars for advertising. We would say do the putiic, beware of Lim. Thesnan who will cheat the printer, will cheat any person else, and is unworthy of public con- fidence. The bible in question can be seen by call- sng upon the editor of this paper. A Tribute fer an Lippenont. The follewing just tribute te the sterling “merits ef a faithful and patrictic public ser- ¥ant, is frem the Philadelphia. Inquirer, an able organ of the Republican party : Wo deem it to be but an act of justice to Senator Bigler, who has just completed his Senatorial term, to respond to the marked “tribute of respect paid him by Senator Crit- *tenden, on one of the last daysof the late ‘session of Congress. The venerable Ken. ‘tuckiar, ‘according to tie telegraphic report, devoted a portion of hisfinal speech on com promise resokutions to a high compliment to ‘Governor Bigler’s untiring zeal in the cause “of the Union. This was well deserved. — Senator Bigler has shown all through the “secestion controversey, that he is a states- ‘man who can rise superior to party when ‘the country is in peril. But there is annth- «r point upon which he is entitled to the spe- «cial acknowlegements of the people of Penn- “sylvania. ‘fhroughout the long struggle for “the present tariff, commencing mare then a ‘a year age, he proved himself to be not only ‘a faithful, but an able and intelligent guar- “dian of theinterests of his State. To his “assidious and patient labors the success of the measure in the Senate is largely due.— "Differing from him, as we do on many of his party ‘doctrines, we yet feel it to be an act of justice to extend to him, on Uis retirement Arom office, that meed of praise to which he is entitled. AWC ‘Arras begin téhave a warlike aspect. — The Admmistration hes determined to reine force Fort Pickens at-ell hazards, and troops * Republican Peace Policy. | The Administration at Washington pro- | fesses an anxiety to concitiate and satisfy i the South, and thus save the Union from to- [ tal destruction. It has, however, a queer way of showing its peaceful intentions. — Let us see : It refuses to say whether it means war or peace. ft declares that it intends to enforce the laws, except “in the interior.’’ It makes arrangements to reinforce Fort Pickens, and keeps up a standing army at Washington. [t declares that if Sumter is evacuated, it will be from necessity, not choice, and pro- poses, if rumor may be credited, to send the troops now at Sumter to reinforce Fortress Monroe, in Virginia. It sends a Minster to Austria, a man, of all men, most odious: to the South, Anson Burlingame, who in behalf of his party, de- mands “an anti-slaver+ Constitution, an anti slavery Bible, and an anti-slavery God’'— a man who in the last Presidential campaign | addressed a promiscuons concourse of ne- groes and whites, offering them as a reward for their votes participation ia one hundred millions of dollars of spoils. It sends to Spain, as Minister, Carl Schurz, that blaspheming infidel who spuke of the Saviour as * Massachusetts and other holy States of the Lac present day, demanding that the trade should | in out. maintain. The severest pang is, that the solutions was’ much and par ticularly ob- | blow comes in the name of the State of Tex. jected to, and might prove an obstacle to | as. y eir adoption, 1 determined, in my anxiety speak for Texas. ha 3 A her sake, and am willing to do so again. ra compromise, that [ would not insist on, but would consent to have it stricken To accomphsh the great object I had in| th I failure, have yielded to any modifications | th my resolutions, that would not. in my be dgwent, have destroyed the essential char- | Lis ler and their pacifying effect. Indeed, I tended, if the opportunity had been afford- chief object has been fulfilled. I deny the power of this Convention to I have received blows for I protest, in the nama of the people of Texas, against all the ‘acts and doings of is Convention, and declare them null and void, [solemnly protest agamst the acts its members, who are’bound by no oath 1 € was brought about, so “that the great end | he claimed his pound of flesh. ] Lion prescribed that time as the limit, but under their language as little offensive as | ve phraseology of those resolutions, in order to | people is an honor, it may wear it. To pre- ut wy having an opportunity to send a message to the Legislature, which meets on I wish to see reconciliation and union es- | Monday, March 18, I am required to appear blished. It was of no importance by | at its bar to day and take the test oath.— Even Shylock granted the full three days ere The Couven- It was in'that spirit that when the Pence | its President has been léss gracious than em for the restoration of peace and union, | of Wear TUE both in the S thirty in the of fanaticism for a party of principle and | spiritual guidance of the sanctified Beecher, patriotism, who will help him play Jackson | Parker, Gzecity, Seward, and Garrison, were unanimously against it. a Late CoNcress Dip.—The last session of the Thirty Sixth Congress began on the 3d of December, 1860, and closed on the 4th of March, 1861. cember thirty three States were represented On the 3d of De- cnate and the House of Repre- sentatives ; on the 4th of March, twelve members were absent in the Senate and House—six States having de- ositions contained, as 1 thought, the sub- stance of my own, but because they came twenty-one States, and would, therefore, be more likely to be acceptable to Congress certained to my satisfaction that the resolu- tions I had offered would not be adopted in the Senate. will discover the met s of my conduct in the above recited transactions. and that I !scientious convictions. did not so act, either because I was *‘dis- | that the Republican platform was not right gusted”” with, or had ever “repudiated” the | so far as an abstract truth was concerned ; Shylock, and clamors for the bond ere two If I am thus deprived of ¢ poor privilege of putting upon record my ntiments, through the refusal on the part the Legislature to receive my message, 1 will lay the same before the people and ap- al to them, as I[ declared I would do in my augural. Sax. Houston. ——— 4 BP me A SexsisLe RepusricaN.—The St. Louis with the high sanction of a Convention of Republican states that the Hon. W. B. Og- den, of Chicago, member of the Illinois State and the country. Besides that, I felt myself | Seuate, and a very popular gentleman with- somewhat bound to act with this deference | 21, was called upon by a number of gentle- to a Convention so distinguished. I had as- men in that city a few days since. In a speech, he made use of the following lan. guage in reference to his own {the Republi- From this hastily written statement you | can) party :— ‘He could rot be untrue to his own con- le wou!d not say clared themselves out.of the Union, and re- called their delegates in Congress. at Nearly all of the session was consumed in discussion relating to the crisis, and but ninety seven acts were passed by Congress and approved by the President. Of these, one in the House. EA resolutions wlugh I submitted to the Sen- e. 1 am, very respectfully, yours, &ec. J. J. CRITTENDEN. The New Government Loan. ! yo is 4 : Waeninaron, April 2, P. M.—The bids sixteen originated in the Senate, and eighty for the new $8,000,000 loan have just been opened this afternoon. There were in all one hundred and eighty War News. —The Baltimore papers pub- | bids, amounting to $30.000,000. lish a letter from a young Baltimorean now at Castle Pinckney, «Charleston, who has oh m become disgusted with soldiering. Ile says: Wo don’t get enough to eat, and what we | bi do get is of the coarsest and most common | Bank of Commerce, description.” Drexel & Co, 231 2 A good many young gentlemen who now | Whitehouse, Son & Morrison, g Frog g James Gallatin, > Bank of America, disgusted when they are brought down to a | ()s0an Bank, Second joints and tenderloins are | Bank of North America, talk glibly of fighting, will become equally war fare. scarce in camp, and not over soft is the bed | M the soldier has to stretch his legs upon; that is, if he can find them after battle. i GEN. Lewis Cass.—The official career of Gen. Lewis Cass commenced when he was elected a member of the first State Legisla- ture of Ohio, in 1803, and he has been in high public position ever since —a period of | ligved that this heavy bidding was mainly in Within that time | consequence of assurances from high quar- policy on tho part of the nearly fifty-eight years! he has been merhber of the Legislature, Gov- ernor of a Territory, Indian Superintendent, Secretary of War, Minister to France, United hundred. The average of the bids was aximum $95. The highest bids, of course. take the loan. “We are treated worse than negroes here. | The following are the principal successful dders : 5 for one The minimum was $83, and the, $2.500,000 but he would say that the Republican party had made a mistake. The doctrine of that platform, that there should be no more slave States, could not be carried out.” The at- tempt to carry it out would put an end to this Government. He saw the mistake they had made before the eleétion, and had anti- cipated the result. When, on the evening after the election, he stood in the hous? of a friend on Beacon street, in the city of Bos- ton, and saw the long procession of * Wide Awakes’ go by, with torches and banners and shouts of triumph, a lady standing near him remarked, ¢Mr. Ogden, you do not seem to enjoy it.” ¢ Madam,’ was the reply, ‘1 am ever merry at a funeral.” With some surprise she inquired what he meant. His reply was that he FEARED THE PRO- Bliss, Williams & Co., John A Dix, i Sweeny, Rittenhouse, Fant & Co., 500.006 100,000 250,000 | re 180,000 | yy 100,000 arie & Kants, W. Wolcott & Co., Boston, Washington, 150,000 | St No bid below 93.18 will be successful, 1.000.000 | GESSION THEN DP ASSIN Si 400,000 | PRUYE 10 BE THE FUNERAL PROCES. 150,000 | LOX OF THE NATION. THEN PASSING WOULD timo Tra Secepep Stares.—Referring to the sources of the seceded States in order to eet the burdens of their Government, Vice 25.000 | President Stephens, in his recent speech at 300.000 Savannah, held tho following language: — «The taxable property of the Confederate ates cannot be less than $22,000,000,000. ters of a pacific administration. — Se ED re A Fayiny Porsoyep By Mistake—Two A considerable amount will be awarded between 94 and par. About $27,000,000 were bid for. This, T think, L.venture but little in saying, may be considered as five times more than the colonies possessed at the time they ac- chieved their independence. Georgia alone possessed last y ear, according to the report of our Comptroller General, §682,000,000 of taxable property. The debts of the seven Confederate States sum up in the aggregate less than $18 000,000; while the existing debts of the other of the late United States The Spring Elections if ti Maine. Porrraxn, Me., April 2. as, Republican, was to-da of this city. 1 Wm. W. The elected M Connecticut, 4 { Hartromn, April 2, 1 A. M. ~The Re | publicans have elected their State tioket.. They have carried both branches of the LL gislature, and carried the First and Thi Congressional districts. They have ,. it the Second, with the Fourth nit fully heard from. ? New York. Eryira, April 2. —The Democrats to day elected their candidate for Mayor, and al; | the minor offices, with one exception. Ohio. CLEVELAND, April 2.—At the Municipal Election at Sandusky, yesterday, the Dem. ocratic candidate for Mayor was elected by 155. The Democratic candidates for Treas urer, and Solicitor, and the Republican Clerk and Marshal were elected. The Board of Councilmen stands two Republicans to three Democrats. Toreno, April 2.—At the City Eiection, held yesterday, the Democrats elected their candidates for Mayor and Treasurer, and seven out of ter; of the Councilmen. Cixcrsyary, April 2.--Fall returns of the City Election yesterday, show a Democratic Union average majority of 2800, the highes majority being 4196, and the lowest 2077. - The Democratic-Union party elect 26 Coun cilmen, and the Republicans only 8 mem bers. The total vote polled was 23,000. Kansas. Kaxsas City, Mo., April 2.—R. T+ Var horn, the Union vandidate, was elected Ma; or of Kansas City, yesterday, by a larg majority. i —_——eep Our National Affairs, THE RHODE ISLAND ELECTION. De feat af the Repuplicans—Re-clection Gov. Sprague—rioss of two Republica Congressmen. Provibexce, R. 1., April 3, Midnight. — The State election was held to day with th following result : The Republican ticket, headed by James Y. Smith, for Governor, is defeated. Gov. Spregue, the Unign candidate, is re clected by a large majority. The Legislature is of the same politica. character. . The Union eandidates for Congress, Wm P. 8hefficld, from the Eastern, and Geo. If Browne, from the Wesfern District, ar elected over the late Republican ‘members Messrs. Robinson and Brayton. MUNICIPAL ELBCTION. 1 Unica, April 3.—At the village electior held at Rome yesterday, the Democrat. elected all the village officers, and two third of the ward officers. The majorities aver age 350. George Barnard is chosen Presi. dent. ; 3 _— — ta 4 Death of Judge McLean. CixcrvNar, April 4.—The venerable Judge John McLean, of the United States Supreme Court, died this ‘morning. —— eave EvroreaNy DeMasp FoR BREADSTUFFS. — The New York Markets Active.—The Ey; lish news by the City of Baltimore, to th 14th instant, {published yesterday) is favor able to all American interests. Cotton i better ; breadstuffs in good demand at a advance, and a full business in Agerica produce of ali kinds. The private advice received at New York concerning brea stuffs are said to be very encouraging. Tb Erpress of Thursday evening says : There was considerable activity and ex- citement on the Corn Exchange to day, con- sequent upon the receipt of favorable Euro pean advices by the City of Baltimore. There was a very heavy business transactec in breadstufls, chiefly for export, and price: show a decided improvement, the advance being 10a20 cents per barrel on flour, 2a: per bushel on wheat and 1a2 cents per bushe. oncorn. The azaregate business is unusally large, and in fact there has not been so muck: animation and buoyancy exhibited on any one day for a very long time past. Reference to the official tables of Britis! imports shows that of the increased pur- chases of breadstuffs a very large proportio:. is received from the United States, and unti another crop is gathered in Europe, nothing can prevent a continuance of this advantage Agricultural authoritizs are by no mean: sanguine of the crop prospects of the King- dom for 1861, and argue that, by reason o the severity of the winter, which has impe- ded the planting of wheat, there must, with: an averge yield upon the breadth of lan planted, be a serivus deficiency in bread stuffs, to be made up from American source: in a great measure. At this moment th crop prospects of the United States are good and it is proper to assume, no casuality io- tervening, that a large export will be mads to the great advantage of the grain section ¢. the country. In less than ninety days nev wheat from (Georgia and other Souther: States will be in market, and in large quan: tities, judging from the erop reports recent- ly made. (mee Tue New Territories. —Three new Ter- ritories have been lately created by a vot. of Congress ang the approval of the Presi dent. Of these Colorado is made from par of Kansas, Nebraska, and Eastern Utah.- It has been known as Pike's Peak, and ws called, at first, in the Organic Act, Idaho.— It extends from thé 57th degree of Nort Latitude to the 41st, and lies between the 102d and 109th parallels of West Longitude It contains 100,000 square miles, with a pop 1t is chiefly valuable a: pr . 7 ir . o 3 3 A : 9 are being concentrated-at New York prepa aes States Senator for twelve years, candidate | Deatns.—Gn Saturday morning a family re- | Sum up in the aggregate the enormous sum | ulation of 25,000. g edrat. New 3 TR lo The Rocky atory to a descent upon’ the €£outh. Tho ¥outherd Government is algo, preparing for ithe .gontlict, having collected an army of at ‘least four thousand men at Pensacala, which -is being daily augmented, to repel any as- “suult that may be made, or, possitly, to at- SuarL tur UN1oN Dik ?—Tacitus said «it is much casier to praise, than tp establish, a republican government, and when it is es- tablished it cannot be of long duration.” — When Mr. Randolph, of Virginia, in the Convention to frame the United States Con- formidable force in men, ships and material ; and an attempt has already been made, anf partially successful to annex the Island of St. Domingo to Spein ; and this, if entirely successful, is to be fullowed by the gnnexa- tion of Hayti, with the consent of France. for the Presidency, and Secretary of State. | Siding in a portion of a house, Germantown | of $174 000,000. : road and Washington street, Philadelphia, | 10 g 2 tion debts, and railroad debts, which press, He is the patriarch of American Statesmen, - so far as length of official service is concern- | yr ed, and has now retired to private life at the | paper contaming what she sa posed to be lay : P a Tying in one of the : iy The | debts, added to others, make a sum total not advanced age of 79. oved away, and after they had gone Mrs. This is without taking to account the heavy city debts, corpora- ‘Gee, the tenant ‘who rémained, found a |and will continue to press, a heavy incubus upon the resources of those States. rere powder was taken and put into bread, which | m These uch under $500,000,000. With such an present for its mines of gold. | Mountains divide the Territory, and furnis!. the water shed for branches of the Souther Colorado on one side, and those of the Ar- ‘kansas and Platt on tke other. Its, capito! is Denver City. : Nevada includes parts of Utah and Cali- Its boundaries are irregular, and if ws . (6 i 6 ea of territory, with such an amount of | fornia. r PriLApeLpiiis MerRODIST CONFERENCE. nti Sarons Woman ar wim, & climate and soil unsur- | extends South to New Mexico. > It include: The Philadelphia Methodist Conference last | diately taken ill, and a physician who was | Passed by any on the face of the earth, with | Carson's Valley and the newly Fistoresos weds adopled the report of the Committee! called in discovered that arsenic had been | Such resovtoes already .at ll She Binoy bin 16 Joud es ig : 03) hg 8f8te of 48 church repesling he nee aps fhe i 3 0 r Br Ti gs i Ce is ER agricultural os chapter on slavery, inserted in the Discipline bla i dat sbi ihe prehensions as to our success, whether oth- | es, besides béing rich inl ndinerals. 4 y one 1 “ Weare on the eve of stirring events. “tack the fort in case an attempt is made to Stitution; olgjected to the ratio of represen- —_———essoe— “reinfores.it. Charleston was thrown into a | tation, beceusein.a hundred years the House | Ax Inquiry.—Our Legislature is so intent - great state ef excitement on Thursday by | would become an uninanageable multitude ; | upon passing measures in defiance of the ' the appearaize.a® 2 schooner off the harbor, | “who,” said Mr. Graham, of Massachusetts, | will.of the people, that it scems to have {ore