rh iii soe iisiniis aasabiite iii ie ——— Cp - sep: tha pleasure of thosg who committed him. The Constitution provides, as I have » {ore waid, that ** no person shall be depri of life, liberty, or property. without due process of law.” Tt declares that ¢ the right | OF of the people to be secure in their persons, | Di houses, papers and effects, against unreason- | an able searches and seizures, shall not be vio- ob! lated, and no warrant shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirma- | tion, and particularly describing the place | in to be searched, and the persons or things to] to be seized.” It provides that the party ac- tused shall be entitled to & speedy trial, in a court of justice. And these great and fundamental laws, which Congress itself could not suspend, have been disregarded and suspended, like the writ of habeas corpus, by a military or-| der, supported by force of arms. Such is the case now before me, and I can only 5aY, that if the authority which the Constitution has confided to the judiciary department and judicial officers, may thus upon any pretext or under apy circumstances be usurped by the military power at its discretion, the peo ple of the United States are no longer living wvnder 8 government of laws, but every citi- zen holds life, liberty, and property at the will and pleasure of the army officer in whose military district he may happen to be found. In such a case my duty was too plain to ‘be mistaken. I have exercised all the pow- er which the Constitution and laws confer on ine, but that power has been resisted by a 0 force too strong for me to overcome. It is y possible that the officer who has incurred {his grave responsibility may have misun- derstood his instructions, and exceeded the authority intended to be given him. I shall, therefore, order all the proceedings in this case, with the opinion, to be filed and re. | M- corded in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Maryland, and di- rect the Clerk to transmit a copy, under seal, to the President of the United States.— ft will then remain for that high officer, in | ba falfilment of his constitutional obligation to ‘‘take care that the laws be faithfully esecu- | If ted,” to determine what measures he wil] is take to cause the civil process of the Unit States to be respected and enforced. R, B. TANEY, Chief Justice Of the Supreme Court of the U. 8. | 18 ceshed ” too. Minister to Portugal, appointed by President Lincoln, on the secession question ? You ‘| would Hight first. Many of them now, with those of Judge Hale's own party, who then supported him in his efforts to effect an hon- orable compromise, are away down South in xy, fighting for that peace which you, d men like you, rendered it impossible to tain by compromise, while you, Col., are —at home reading ‘‘contemptious’” articles the Warenxan. Next, the Col. proceeds enlighten us upon a very important fact, which is, in hia opinion, a very stubborn thing. No wonder they appear a little crooked to him, as he deals in that commod- ity so rarely, that when he does haPpen to get hold of one accidentally he don’t know w to handle it. ¢ All Democrats are not Secessionists, we are happy to say.” This, Col., is a fact which you have blundered upon, but see you are not accustomed to such things, and you gpoil the whole thing by letting your old failing get the mastery before you get through, for what follows ain’t true : Secession Southern rebellion was a Demo. crat.” 2d. *“ No man living can point to a single Republican North or South who is not opposed to secession,” &c. there is old Sam Houston. “But avery ring leader in this Why, Col., It is strange u should have forgotten him, as he was your favorite candidate for President in the summer of 1860. Was he not a Republi csn 7 Ain’t he down South of Dixy now, very rabid in Secession ? Where stands J. Botts, of Virginia ? Now he has se- Where is James Harvey, the ve heard of the discoveries made by the seizure of telegraph dispatches, haven’t you ? not, we will just tell you that Mr. Harvey a ‘‘secesher’’ too, Where is Andrew J. Doualdson, whom you supported with so much faith for Vice President, in the fall of 56, is he not a seceder foo. There are plenty of others we might name, but thess Il be sufficient to show you what an error you made in the last sentence above quoted. Now, Col., don’t be guilty ef such gross er- The Uhatchman, x ERLLEFONTE, THURSDAY, nes * Hors shall the press the people’s rights main- saa, Unawed by party or unbribed by gain ; Pledged ry truth to liberty and law, No favor sways ns and no fear shall awe.” ALEXANDER & MEEK, Editors and Publishers. Our Last Editorial and the Demoerat. The Centre Democrat, of last week, has init an arlicle headed, ‘ Letting Politics Alone,” to which we wish to call the atten- This article was un- doubtedly intended “by the sap-hcaded edit- or’ as a reply to a set of resolutions adopted st a Union ‘meeting held in Beech Creek, uon of our readors. rors hereafter. You must reflect before you speak, for soon the people (who believe but very little that you say now) won't believe anything you say, You know, Col., you want to go to Congress some day, and when you tell them that fact, they won’t beheve you, but think you are only joking. «That would be very bad.’ But says the Watch- man, says the (ol., ‘the second and fourth resolutions we recommend to those who in times of peace cried war, and now since the war is upon us, instead of shouldering the musket and assisting” &c ; This sentence the Col. takes as having been intended just for him and nobody else, because it was just his fit. Why, Col., we declare we never once thought of you when wo penned that sentence. Dear me, no one ever suspected that a person so windy as you, had a single drop of fighting blood coarsing through his ‘veins, excepting such as prompts ‘you to fight with your tongue and pen, and al, though you did make that speech, in which you said, *‘T won't say go boys, but come boys,” everybody thought you (being snch a funny fellow) were only joking, and didn’t which we published some time ago, (to|m which we refer our readers as they are too lengthy to reprint) with the following com- meant ! ean what you said at all. Lastly, the Col. quotes from us: “The men who talk the loudest are not the men to fight,’’ and Since the day for compromise of the un- happy dilterences existing between the North and the South has seemingly past, the true ‘patriots and good men of both sections hay- tag been overruled in the last Congress by the bad meu in each, we believe these reso- Jutions to be expressive of the feelings of Democrats everywhere, and of all Republi- sans who have not been led astray by the false teachings of abolition preachers.” The second and fourth resolution we recommend asserts that ** six companies have gone from this County numbering five hundred men, and that four hundred of them were Repub- licans.” As to the truth of this, we are not prepared to decide exactly, as we have never considered that it made any material differ- ence what the politics of our army was. It has been enough for us to know that they were men willing to die for their country, but since the Col. has broached the subject, to the caroful study of that small band of Ww political agitators in this County, who. in times of peace, have cried war, and now that war is upon us, instead of shouldering their muskets and assisting to fight the bat- | te tle they have contributed so much to bring about, still remain at home and talk about hanging honest Democrats for the expression of their opinions. Venly is the adage true --the men who talk the loudest are not the men to fight. The Democratic party has always favored the settlement of the diffi- eulty between the North and the South b compromise as long as there was any possi- bility of it being accomplished, and are yet in favor of any compromise that would be honorable for the North to accept, but be- lieving that none such will be offered they show their patriotism and devotion to the Union by rallying to the defence of the Star Spangled Banner, where the fight wages the| hotest. They, like all true American citi- zens, will rush to the rescue when our coun- try is in danger and fight to the bitter end to maintain its honor and those highest and noblest principles of the Constitution, free. dom of opinion, freedom of speech, and free. dom of the press. Ww Cql. vents his rage in the following very elo- quent styje : ‘“ Now we find fault with no man for differing with us in opinion, but at the same time we claim the right to think, to speak, and to act as an independent free- man.” You are perfectly right here, Col., | gi we are of the same opinion. * Wedo not know where we read a more contemptible peice of slang and falsehood than is contain- ed in the above.” We do, Col., and most gladly refresh your failing memory by calling Four attention to that most delectable sheet, the Centre Democrat, of which you have the Lonor fo be the editor, vol. 27, No. 18.— Read it, Col., some day when your spints are calm, and we are satisfied that you will geome to the same conclusion we have—if not. wé give you up as a very hardened case. *¢ The Democratic party say they have been in favor of compromise. but the day for sompromiss has seemingly past.” So they have, Col. They prayed for peace and en- too does not justity such a conclusion. merely set forth that it was the auty of all democrats to adhere to their mottoes of the past, and by so dving maintain the Govern- ment and the Constitution under which we live, and because forsooth we venture to say what others say about the Administra- tion, they flare up as though it were a God to which we should get upon our knees and render homage. Now we beg leave to show e will venture & bet with him, that there are not ten men out of that number that did not endorse the acts of Judge Hale last win- r in Congress, in his efforts to settle the national difficulties without a resort to arms, and therefore have denounced the Col. as an agitator. You can claim no credit, Col, if they were all Republicans. 8ays every man who goes to war deserves the thanks of everybody. Here, again, he speaks the truth, but spoilsit all as usual by leaving us to infer from the next sen. tence that he deserves credit for staying at home. But we must part with the Col., and Again, the Col. © hope, forever, upon this subject. Government vs. Administration. The Press has extracted from two differ- ent articles in the last WaromuaN and places them side by side as follows. What are They ¢ ‘- Bhe ia seeking to de. “The Administration stroy that Constitution|lis bringing about & na- : . which is the basis of our|ltional Bankruptoy just Alter reading this, tho courageous paper party platform. —She hasjias fast na possib ni now musters her forces under a banner compo- sed of only threo stripes) and seven stars and our, duty is to support the le.”! sited our flag, and vernment in bringing or back to her alle: ance.” Aad says that either one is proof of antag- onism against the other, and winds up the article as is usual with such poltroons by in- directly flinging the charge of intoxication and treason at the editors of this paper. ‘We hold that the language above referred We dorsed Judge Havrn's efforts last winter, to] the learned gentlemen (who ju ging from effect » peace, while you said you would not ecept peace by compromise, bgt that yoo his ignorance and stupidity must have left shoo! too young) that thers is not eres I x or ig, y seeming inconsistency In the above two ar- tween the Government and the Administra-| tion, The first is founded upon the principles of Eternal justice, and is perpetusl while the second is but temporary, lasting bat four short years at a time. The first are those principles of eternal justice, as set forth in our constitution by our fathers, as the fundamental rules and principles by which the intercourse between the several States is to be regulated. The second is but the servant of the people whom they have chosen to manage and direct our public af- fairs in accordance with thoso established rules. In short, the first is that good old Constitution established by our fathers .in 1789, while the second is but the Chicago Platform—a creature of but recent birth. The first we shall always give our most cordial support, because we believe it to have been ordained by God, while the other we shall support or oppose, as their policy shall seem to us right or wrong. It is but the servant of the people, and when it does what is manifestly wrong, the people, the mighty people who made, have the right to differ with it, and in cases of gross misuse of the powers entrusted to 1t.to bring it to.an account in the manner provided in the Consti- tution. Now, Mr. editor of the Press,cx Mp. —, who penned those com ments, where is our inconsistency ? We will take the liberty of showing you some inconsistencies and sen- timents uttered by you in the past, unless you stop this constant howl of treason, that will make you writhe in agony through fear of that punishment which you appear to be so anxious to see iflicted upon men who never knew but one Union and that ‘the Union of thirty-three States, who never sup. ported but one Constitution, and who never paid homage to but one flag and that the noble Starry Banner without one single star veiled or effaced, all this you would have done to men because they differ with you in politics, and dare to speak their minds as independant, freemen. Do you still ask ** What are they ” we will tell you more plainly what we are. We are free born, white male citizens of the United States supporters and upholders of the Constitution of our Country, and beinz such dare to speak the truth though ‘the heavens fall.” Only a few weeks ago we took upon our- selves the responsibility of editors and pub- lishers of the DEMOCRATIC WATOHMAN under the impression that we still lived in a land of liberty. We are still of the same opinion notwithstanding the efforts of the Editors of the Central Press and a few other men in this community to crush out that sentiment which we trust shall always remain within us. We are happy to know however that there are but few men in this con.munity holding the same notions of loyality that we see manifested by them, as we have always heard that the term loyality was incompata. ble with our free institutions. It § applica. ble alone to that allegiance which is due from a subject to his Prince, King, and not to the human respect obedience and support due from all American freemen to a govern- ment. But these men we believe would love to change our government into a monarchy, a despotism, it would be more suitable to their taste and aristocratic proclivities,— They would have us to be loyal subjects to an Administration and as Administration and Government with them is all one thing the next position taken will be that Govern- ment means monarchy and monarchy a des- potism. Then, Ho! ye loyal subjects, the editor of the Press, or one of his aiders and abetters here in this town, or it may be President Lincoln must be placed upon a throne. Are we not justifiable in coming to such a conclusion ? Ever since this unfor- tunate war has commenced there has been a set of these same rabid frantic fools at- tempting by hurling the charge of treason at democrats, to arouse the prejudices of the people against them, and when we attempt through the columns of our paper to show that democrats have ever been and are now true to the Government, they attempt the same thing with us in hopes that an ex. cited populace may silence us for fear we may by sho wing up the truth interfere with their designs next ; they can see no difference between an Administration and a Govern- ment and hold that to differ with the Admin- istration in some minor matters of policy is opposing the Government.. 3rd that we must all be loyal subjects to the Adminis- tration and that it is treason to say ought against it. My God upon what are we verg- 1 1 I . 5 Eon. fellow citizens, we begof you, to stop and think what you are doing, and not be led astray by these men who would have the freedom of speech and freedom of the press forever crushed out, and who are en- deavoring to instil into you such ideas of loyality as are only proper in a monarchial government. If this is once accomplished, the main bulwark of liberty is gone, and it is but a step into monarchy. Now we hope we may not be called upon again to correct such errors of the Central Press, nor to deny the charges of treason with which we have borne so long. We make no such chargas against any man, although we might with the same justness do se against those who oppose the binding force of the decisions of the Supreme Court. ee reat Hon. 8. T. Saocer, Chief Clerk in the Pa- tent Office, and for some time Commissioner of Patents, has been removed to make room for a worshipper of the Chicago Platform. J. B. Mexx, Esq., another Democrat from this County, we understand has been Ker- flamixod on account of his political doctrine. So the work goes nobly on— No Party” bah! a Hl ticles. There ig quite & wide difference be- | The Revival of Partv Lines. In the last issue of the WarcmMax, we took the position, m an editorial of sotite length, that out present national ealatnity had been brought about by the false teach. ings of that band of political hucksters in the North, who have for years been dissatis- fied with our Constitution, our Bible and our God, and who declared t4at nothing would satify them short of a new Constitn- tion, ‘‘anti-slavery Constitution,” a new Bible, * anti-slavery Bible,’ a new God, “anti-slavery God,” on the one part, and a set of political « fire eaters *” who have long hoped, by the promulgation oftheir extreme- ly rabid opinions, to fire the whole southern heart for sccession on the other part, and that the Democratic party in the North was not responsible for the acts of those ¢ fire eaters’’ in the South, any more than the honest portion of the Republican party is responsible for the bad acts of its abolition allies. From these premises we drew the conclusion that the Demoeratic party were not to blame in any way for the present bad state of affairs, as they had no hand in bringing it about. We further showed that the motto and the banners of out party heretofore indicated our position on the se- €'ssfon question, and plainly showed that we were the Union party, and always had been, while the opposition that now ase sails us had repeatedly declared their wills ingness to ¢ let the Union slide, ”’ and carried the only secession flags that ever floated in this country. We then gave many of the men who had done these things oredit for leaving off their old secession nce tions and coming to our assistance in main- taining the Constitution and our country in its hour of peril. For having spoken the aforesaid incontrovertable truths, we have been denounced as traitors all over this town, by a few men who consider themselves the only patriots now living north of Mason & Dixon's line. To these men we have to say that we have nothing to detract from the sentiments uttered in that editorial. — We spoke the truth in attributing the troubles in which our country is deluged to evil, designing men, both in the North and the South, and surely there is no sane man living in this town, county, or elsewhere, that will deny it. The only thing that we are sorry for is, that the necessity was forc~ ed upon us by what claims to be a Republi- can paper in this town, te mention even the ‘name of Democrat or Republican in these troublesome times, when all should be will. ing to stop even thinking of the past, if possible, and unite cordially in their support of the Government in settling the difficulty, in whatever manner may be deemed best— peaceably if possible—by conquest if it must. Bat when that newspaper charges all our present trouble and disgrace upon the Democratic party, without making any distinction between the Southern secession wing of that party, and the northern, Urion loving, which has ever been loyal to the Constitution, even while three fourths of the opposition to it in the North were holding doctrines fundamentally opposed to the Constitution itself, were opposed to the enforcement of the laws made under that Constitution—were opposing the observance of the decisions of the highest tribunal in the land, in the case of Dred Scott, which was part of the law and the Constitution We cannot be expected to be silent and thus give sanction to such a nefarious lie.— No, gentlemen, when agsailed, we will strike back, and if these gentlemen in this town, who returned their paper on account of our last editorial having a tendency to revive party lines, will but give themselves a moment’s calm reflection and then read the Centre Democrat, they will themselves. have to acknowledge the justness of our po. sition. But there appears to be some men hereabouts, with whom it makes a great difference whose ox gets gored. The Centre Democrat has been pawing and bellowing like a frantic bull, and has repeatedly gored ourox. That, with these gentlemen, was all right—they stood aloof and enjoyed the sport highly. But when our ox turns and gores their ox, they can’t stand it no longer —their blood begins to boil, they screw up their courage to the sticking point, toss their horns about defiantly, and pitch into the fight on the side of their bleeding ox.— Shame, gentlemen, on such consistency. — Shame on such partiality. This is forgetting party lines with a “vengeance.” No one deprecates the renewal of party lines at this time more than we do, and we have listened quietly ever since this war commenced, to the taunts of treason, traitor, secessionist, that have been hurled at the party to which we belong, ic hopes that reason would again bs restored. and this thing stopped. We have borae with it until « ‘forbearance has ceased to be a vir- tue,” and now we are determined to defend ourselves and party against these slanderous charges at all hazard. If you don’t wang party lines revived, cease to do it yourselves and set ua the example by denouncing all men in your party, who are so ready to make these charges. Muzzle the Centre Democr 3, your Republican paper here in this town. Have it cease to charge all the frauds that have been committed on our sol- diers, upon the Democratic party, and also cease to charge all those who differ with it in politics, with the charge of treason, se- cession, &c.. &c. Then we shall stop re- plying until we are again assailed. ce tA Ae eee Ir the editor of the Central Press will pub- licly acknowledge that he isso contemptibiy ignorant as not to know the difference be- tween a Government and an Administration, and will give our devil a *‘ quarter ” he will enlighten him on the subject, and for anoth- er *‘ quarter »’ Billy says he will teil him, that a State Adminstration isnot the Na- tional Administration A Certain Merohaht's Opinion bf Layaly. To be loyal 18 to dym-, We are sor} ta pathise with our Gov. Jebat some fow exhibit In a ernment in this hour of {word and deed, a #pirjt Her extreme peril; tojiuot consistent with our feel every stroke that|lidea of loyalty. If & falls upon her suprema- lidifference of opinion is cy; to have a desire to/ihad between the Salary remove every impedi-fland the Government,a ment which may bejja small part of the Su- thrown in the way to mariipreme Eench, with re- |g the harmonious action ofjigard to a writ of Habeas all her departments. —{Corpus, they of course Central Press. fall in wiih Judge Ta- ney ; he is right and the | W (Government is wrong &e. That is, the Government should release her strong- holds, set the captive free T and permit the incendia- ry, the murderer, the spy and the lawless to go forth seeking new vic- tims i whom to lay their bloody hands, —~ Central Press. . The above extracts ate from the Central Press, of this place, in ah afticle headed + Loyalty.” Both extracts aie from the same article, which is so contemptible that we would not have condescended to notice it were it not that its author claims to be a patriot and a scholar, and is striking in the dark at somebody, He first starts out by saying ¢ To be loyal &c., is to refrain from | throwing anything in the way to mar the harmonious action of all the departments of the Government,” and in the same article finds fault with those who think the decis- ion of Judge TaNev is right. Now, we wish to remind the very learned gentleman that our Government was divided, by the men who made it, into three departments, viz: the Executiae, the Legislative and the Judicial. The Judicial is the Supreme Court of the United States. It is the highest and most sacred part of the Government, and its decisions are the supreme law of the land, which every man who supports the Govern- ment must respect and obey. Judge TaNEY is the Chief Justice of that high court, and the decision referred to is the supreme law. Here is a direct blow at the supremacy of the Government, according to his own reas- oning, and, if it be correct, the man who penned that article 1s a traitor, and ‘“unwor- thy he protection of the laws of that Gove ernment which has heretofore protected him, and unworthy a place in the social circle i with which he has been accustomed to mingle.” | | ““ This is the class of men who can be seen |g, moving from crowd to crowd uttering insin- uations of Gov. Curtin’s complicity with those who have contracts for supplying the army with clothing and provisions.” Thig we never expected to hear of him. as we |n have always thought him to be a very inti- mate friend of the Governer, and it is indeed *¢ ungenerous”’ of him to thus attack him. |, Now please look at the punishment he assigns to those who are guilty of these [8 things. ‘* Away with such men—the sooner we are clear of them the better. Form them into a line and march them from our midst — they are the enemy in our camp, why should we let them fight against us from behind the screen,”’ According to his' awn theory, we look for him to head the line, and march out of town to the tune Dixie’s Land. Out of his own mouth we condemn him. Job A. Green, of New York. T! of America for which their fathers znd otird alike pledged their lives, their fortu: nd their sacred honor? Independence and universal liberty which they planted amid guffesing. and enriched by thair blood ? Where the galaxy of American States—the hope, the pride and the exempler of the world ¢ How then would the spirits of a Washington and? fortunes Where then the nu that glorious Jefferson, and other patriotic sires—long since gone t5 their rest—could. they. revisit the scenes of their labors and gacrifices— wep over the melancholy spectacle of their subjugated kindred ? For myself, I shudder and recoil from the thought!” This is (he ex- tent of my Treason, an if to feel thus be a raitor, I dread not to bear the 1eproachg 1 fear not to repeat the emphatic language of Patrick Heory, to those who on another great occasion raised the malignant outery of reason :— If this be treason, make ths most of it.” eel A eect. If RORACR GREELY does not need the oath of fidelity to the Uniox the Constitution and? the National Flag administered to Lim, we’ don’t know who does. Reed the following stanzas which appeared in the Tribune, in 1854. ; Mini} to the Stars and Stripes. All hail the flaunting vin! The stars grow pais and dim; The stripes are bloody scars— 4 Lie, the vaunting hymn, t shields a pirate’s deck, It binds a man in chains, It yokes the SSDivels neck, And wipes the bloody stains. Jess powN the flaunting Lim f— alf mast the starry flag! Insult no sunny sky Wih HATR'S POLLUTED RAG! DES{ROY: IT ¥& WHO CAN! DEEP SINK IT IN THE WAVES! It bears a fellow man Togroan with fellow slaves. Fory TRE BOASTED Lk '— TILL FREEDOM LIVES AGAIN; To RULR ONCE MORE IN TRUTR MONG UNTRAMMELLED MEX. Roll up the starry sheen ; Conceal its bloody stains ; For in its folds are seen Lhe stamp of rustling chains! ———— eee man Tae Seize TELEGRARINC Despatmas.-— The Commission engaged in examining the seized telegraphic despatches have examined only those of the Washington office durin, February and March. require months at least to’ complete their task.—N. Y, Tribune, * hey think it will The Albany Argus says: : ** Instead of seeing its foes ‘struck by ghtning ”’ as it thought, the Government as burnt its own fingers in the recent cou e telegraph. Harvey’s treason, when it 18 traced to its source, will reach back to the Cabinet of Mr. Lincoln, and leading parti- zans of the Administration, it is said, are implicated in other discoveries. t is for this reason that revelations are ow postponed for three months! The: ob ject of the postponement is to throw the mat. terbeyond the scrutiny of Congress. body, when 1t meets, should force the Gov- That ronment to justify its violation of the Conati- tution, by the proof of vital necessity, or hould impeach the wrongdoers. Fight at Great Bethel, Virginia. Bavrinore, June.—This has been an oxoi- ting and sorrow{vi day at point Comfort. Gen, Butler having learned that the rebels were forming an entrenched camp with bate terios a Great Bethel, and he deemed it neges~ ry to displacs them, Accordingly moves ments were made from Fortress Monroe and Newport News. . At midnight Col, Daryea's Zonavisning™ Col. Townsend's Albany Regiment crossed the river at Hampton and teak up their line to the Syracuse Courier and Union: The following ‘extracts are taken from a letter of Jonn A. GRreeN, Jr., of (New York) of March. The former were. some two miles in the advance of the latter. At the same time, Col. Benedix's regiment and a detachment of the Vermont and Mass achusets regiments moved forward to form a *¢ Let the white men of the North calmly war. 2 a The American people of this generation do not know what war is. They cannot real- 4 ize its sufferings. They cannot anticipate | its horrors War, among thirty millions of | © the most chivalrous, genous, brave, disci. plined and martial free people the world ever saw, must present scenes of terrible tragedy such as the most hardy will shudder to con- template. War in the nineteenth century proposes means and appliances for the de- struction of human life, which convert battle | f into mere butchery, where every wound is fatal, and the death of thousands may be the work of an instant. Wermvores the stop- page of trade, the cessation of peaceful in- dustry, stagnation and irreparable injury to every interest. Factories are silenced, warehouses closed, fields lie uncultivated, |* ships lie idle at the wharves, the work shop |? and counting room are abandoned, agricul |P! ture receives deminished returns from its labors, taxation increase ten fold, churchs are turned into hospitals, school houses and senate chambers are converted into barracks, the people are impoverished, labor goes un. compensated, property loses its value, debts {b and incomes are uncollectable, starvation walks abroad in the streets and roads, noble cities sink into piles of smoking and bloody ruins, helpless women and innocent children suffer untold miseries, and the wrath and madness of man call down the vengeance of Heaven. This is the entertainment to which we are invited. This is the price we are asked to pay for the liberation ot tie negro and his elevation to cival equallity with the white man! When we are called upon to forget our principals—to fling aside al! that we have hitherto professed—to disregard the claims of our southern brethren fraterni~ ty and equallity—and to hurry forward, up~ on the impulse of homicidal excitement, in support of a war policy, against brethren of a common ancestry, we should first pause, | © and consider our duty to ourselves, to our families, to our country and our God. » * * * * -* - * |W The fundamental doctrine of our political system is, that governments can only derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, Eight millions of white men can- not be coerced to accept a government they | U repudiate or hate, by all the armaments of all the powers of christendom. Why, then, undertake so palpable an impossibility 2— Why endeavor to do so flagrant a wrong ?— Fifty years of war—the expenditure of huns dreds of thousands of lives—and of h of millions of money, —far frome reducing to subjection the men of the seceded States, fighting as they believe in behalf of their liberties, their families, and their Somes, | sh will only end in a permenent seperation to be recognszed by us hereafter ; or if the most sanguine expectations of the war are realized, they can only be held with a large and expensive standing army as subjugated Germans discovered by leftgon the field that the supposed enemy was consider the causes and count the cost of |J9Retion with the regiments {from the Furtress t Little Bethel, about halt way between Hampton and Great Bethel. The Zouaves passed Little Bethel at about, o'clock A, M. Benedix’s Regiment arrived ext and took a position at the intersection of the roads. Not understanding the signal, the Zouave regiment in the darkness o morning fired upor Col. Townsend's column marching in close order and led by Lisut But ler, son of Gen. Betler. the Other accounts say that Townsend's men red first, Atall eyeuts the fire of the Ale bany Regiment was harmless whils that of the Germsns was fatal killing one man and fatally wounding two others. The Albany Regiment being back, the tbe acooutrements friend. They had.in ths mean time fired ine rounds with small arms and a field iece. The Zonaves haaring the fire, turned and fired also upon the Albany boys. At day break Col, Alien’s and Col, Carr's Regiments moved from the rear of the for- tress to support the main body. The wistake at Little Bethel having been ascertained, the uildings were burned, and a Major with two prominent Secseionists, named Livery and Whiting, mada prisoners, The troops then advanced upon Great Bethel in the folliwing order: the Zouaves, Col, Bender, Lieut. Col. Wasbburne, Col. Allen and Ool. Carr, iments formed and succesively endeavored to take a large masked battery of the Saces- sionists, At tbat point our reg- The effort was. fatile, our three small pieces of «rtillery not being able to enps.with the heavy rifled cannon of the snemy, socor< ding to soma nocounts thirty in sumber, The rebel battery was so dompletely maske ed that no men sould be seen, but tha Hashes of the guns only. than 1000 men behind the battery of tie rebs s. There were probably Jese A woll contorted movement might have secured the position, but Brig. Gen. Pierce, ho commanded the "expedition, seomed to bave lust bis progence of mind, and the Troy Regiment stood an hour exposed ton galling ure. en, but at that moment Lieut. Gerbla, of the An order to retreat was at ‘ongth give . S. Army, and in command of the Artif lory, was struck by a éabnon ball and ‘in stantly killed. He had spiked his gun and was galiantly endeavoring to withdraw his command. » There ara probably 25 killed and 100 ondreds | wounded. They brought them to. she for- tress this evening. SBE 0 Rrra telly BAP A etm . The Selinsgrove Times says Oongress ould bring up a bill of impeachment against President LINOOLN, for letying war against the United States. : DrsgoNTINUED. —The Lock Haven: wu ¥ provinces. Where then-will ba the Union [74m Its readers discontinued it some tim of our fathers? Where than the freedom | since &