@he Watchman. C. T. ALEXANDER JOE W. FUREY, BELLEFONTE, JAN. 16th, 1862. THE LAW OF NEWSPAPERS 1. Subscrib rs who do not give express orders to the contrary, are cosidered as wishing to continue their subscribtion. 2. If suberibers order a discontinuance of their papers, the publishers may contin. ue to send them vntil all arrearages are paid 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their papers from the office to which they are directed. they are held responsible un til they have scttled and ordered them to be discontinued. 4. If subcribers remove to other places without informing the publisher, and the papers are sent to the former direction, they are held responsible. The courts have decided that refusing ’ ] Editors. - Notice. As the time of a number of our advance paying subscribers is about up, we would suggest to them the propriety or examining their receipts. We are badly in need of money, and would be obliged to all those whose time has expired to come forward and renew their subscriptions by paying in ad- vance. As we intend to adopt the cash sys- tem, it may be prcper to observe here, that no more subscribeis will be received at this office unless payment is made in advance. — As week after next will be Court week we hope to see our friends in town with their pockets full of rocks, and shall be happy to receive their subscriptions, vero RESIGNATION OF GeN. CaMeroN.—Gen. Simon Cameron, Secretary of War, has re- signed, and is succeeded by Hon. Edwin M. Stanton, late Attorney General in the Cab- inet of Mr. Buchanan. We are not aware of the reascns for this sudden resignation of the Secretary, but we have half a notion that the radical opinions held by him on the slavery question, have been productive of a row in the Cabinet, which has culminated a polite invitation for him to leave. We understand that the now ex Secretary has been appointed Minister to Russia, in place of Cassius M. Clay, who is coming home— probably as some sort of a balm to his wounded feelings. Negroes in Canada. The following is a Canadia. war adver. tisement : Y AR! WAR!! WAR!!!-TO THE COL- ORED POPULATION. -- All the Col- ored Male Inhabitants of Duunville and the sur- rounding country desirous of joining Her Majesty's Loy al Volunteer Milita can do so by ealling at my office, where the service roll is now lying for signatures. When completed the company will be officered. S. AMSDEN. Capt, Com’g Vol. R. C. Dunville, Dec, 28. 1861. We are glad to see that the colored people are moving, and its likely that in a few days they wil complete a strong military organiza tion. The colored company at Halifax is very cflicient, and one of the best there,— Montreal Gazette. Su it would seem that the colored popula~ tion of Canada are to become, practically, the allies of Jeft. Davis and their masters, against their benevolent friends on this side, who run then to Canada upon the Underground Rail - road. —ee— ——— — PrrERSON'S COUNTERFEIT BANK NOTE DE TECTOR.—This admirable publication is the best of its kind published in this country.— The quotations are reliable and the deserips tion of spurious and bogus notes are arrang ed in such a manner that they can be easily understood. The Financial News, which is glven with each number, is valuable ; it comprises full information upon trade and produce in general, Commerce, Money, Spe- cie, Stocks, Bonds, Banks, Railroads, Insurs ance, &c. Each number of the Detector contains the la‘est intelligence in relation to all the vari- ous failures of Banks and Barking Institu- tions, of the various New Counterfeits and Altered Notes since the publication of the last Detector. Also a complete List of all the Broken, Failed, Closed, Fraudulent and Worthless Banks in the country. Every storekeeperand person -engaged in business ought to become a regular subscri~ ber to Peterson’s Detector. The price is, for the Monthly, One Dollar a year, or Semi Monthly, Two Dollars a year. The Semi Mcnthly is the most desirable, as each subscriber has the advantage of get- ting desciptions of New Counterfeit "Notes Two Weeks in advance of the monthly subs scribers. Subscriptions may commence with any month. ‘lerms always in advance. All letters must be addressed to T. B. PETERSON & BROTHERS, 306 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. eee ly A A pe. 177 Forney in alluding to the action of the Administration in delivering up Mason and Slidell to the British Government, says : «But the more we see of English senti- ment, as manifested in their newspapers and by their public men, the more rejoiced we are at the position the Administ.ation has assumed.” This backdown looks very much like a little “scare.” It is not less than three weeks, that this same Forney was to fight England and France together, and take Canada from the former and annex it to the dic: United States. “You are the horse of whom the proverk goes, Whose valor plucks dead lions by the nose.” tt se 17 A lazy fellow, lying down on the grass, said, “On how I do wish that this was calied work, and well paid for]”’ Farmers High School. What an idea? (says some old fogy) who ought to have lived and died one hun- dred years ago, to suppose that sending a boy to college will ever make a farmer of him. No sir, it can’t be did, it will only wake my boys lazy, impudent and worth- less to send them to school and I will keep them at home on the farm where they can earn me something and I can teach them how to farm as my father did me. So you can old Mr. Fogy. teach them all that you ever knew, which evidently will be very lit- tle. Yes, you can teach them to plough, and to sow, and to reap just as people did one hundred years ago; and to go through their daily labors just like a machine made to doa certain work ; but, just like that senseless machine, they will never know the why and the wherefore of anything they do, and after you have gone, they, just like you, will continue to carry out your old fogy no- tions. They will plough, and they will sow, and then trust in Providence to make the grain grow. This idea of trusting in Proy- idence to make the grain grow is, as it should be, about played out— faith without work never accompiishes anything, and therefore it is necessary that in order to to be able to reap’cf your labors a luxuriant harvest, that you should plough and sow understand ingly. Why is it, old fogy, that you can not raise as many bushels of wheat or corn to the acre as your fathers did 40. 50, or 100 years ago 2 You say you farm just as they did ; well, it is granted, and hercin lays your error. When your fathers farmed, the soil was rich, just fresh from the hands of the Creator. They and you have been rob- bing it for years upon years, in your haste after the almighty dollar, of its richness, un- ti! nature, in yielding to you both comfort and avarice, has become nearly exhausted, and gives you now but a sparing crop. What you want now is, to supply your wasted and almost barren land, with those rich and productive qualities of which you, by long usage, have robbed it. and it will once more yield you crops as of old. But, by what system of working, or what ma- puring application can you use to effect this wonderful and desirable change ¢ Why, you old blockhead, il you can’t go yourself, send your son to the Farmer's High School, that he may learn. Itis now nearly com- pleted, (thanked be our friend H. N. McAl lister) and is just the place where all the old notions of farming that have been transmit- ted to him as a legacy will be upset, and he come forth with new and better ideas which, when practically applied upon your farms, will wake them bloom and blossom as the rose. The course of study in this valuable In- stitution, combines with the theoretical, the practical, which gives the student the double advantage of testing all his theories by actu- al experiment, and, while he educates the mind in the'great truths of nature. he also trains and developes the physical man, which, in its turn, adds power aud volume to the mind. The course of study comprises all the branches of common and seientific education, and when completed, the student will come forth not only a practical scientific farmer, but a classical scholar, (and we hope a gentleman) fit for any avocation in life. The Farmer's High School is, in truth, the greatest Institution in America, and its originators deserve the thauksof all men who feel an interest in the promotion of Agz- ricultural industry. We shall give it a more extended potice hereafter, and point out in detail a portion of its many advanta~ ges. —er tO Bb mm Public Enemies. Fanatical as the emancipationists are we do not belive that they are so utterly stupid as to credit their own assertions that an attempt on the part of the Genreal Government to lib- erate the slaves would promote the restoration of the Union. They cannot help seeing that the Government would be advertising its own impotence by declaring the freedom of the slaves, so long as the rebel army remains un- beaten; and that there are insurmountable obstacles to using the negroes as allies of the Union army, constitutional and practial.— Who are the men now laboring to commit the Government to the abolition of slavery? Not the true and tried friends of the Union .who in times past were ready to make any sac- rifice for its perpetuity; but the Garrisons, the Greelys, the Beechers, the Cheevers, the Byrants. the Lovejoys and their associates; old enemues of the Union and the Constitution some of them bold disunionists; others the declared foes of constitutional principles; all leaders in the ¢rusade against slavery and the constitutional rights of the States. That these men want the Union restore d “with the institution: and righ s of the seve “ral States unimpaired, no one familiar with | their anteceden's can venture to assert. But! they wan: slavery destroyed—and if that cannot be accomplished they want disunion. They prefer the latter alternative to the re-- toration of the Union with slavery. Ilence Southern institutions, and not Southern re. bellion, ure the chief objects of their attacks. Let the Government and the people avoic their pernicious councils, for they are pub lic enemies. Tne Hon. Mr. ELy, M. C. from Yew York, who was taken prisoner at Bull Run, and has been exchanged for Mr. Faulkner, ar- rived in New York on Thursday evening. It may safely be predicted that Mr. Ely will not venture out again to witness the sport of a battle—his curiosity in that par. ticular having been amply gratified, eee - —- | ny Tue good deeds that most sons prefer that [77> Young men who would prosper in their fathers should leave behind them, are real estate deeds. The Governor's Message. In these stirring times official documents posess an interest never before attached to them. The plain business character of the Governor’s Message will secure it a careful and general perusal, it being little more than a historical narration of the operations of the State since the adjournment of the special session of the legislature. The total debt of the State at the close of the last fiscal year, exclusive of military loans amounted to $37,868.516. As the General Government has already reimbursed part of the money raised by special loans for military expenses, and is bound to pay back the whole amount, this cannot be re. garded as an addition to the permanent debt of the State, unless the Legislature should determine to make it such by offsetting the unpaid balance against the direct taxes to be levied upon the State. The Governor notices the fact that at the expiration of the term of the three-months men in July last, some eight or ten thousand discha:ged Pennsylvania volunteers were thrown into Harrisburg without notice, and detained here waiting upon the pay-master, for an average time of some ten days; and after stating the measures taken to provide for their subsistence, he refers in just and complimentary terms to the ¢ liberal and patriotic efforts ot the citizens, and especial- ly the ladies of Harrisburg ” in providing for the wants of our wearied and hungry soldiers. The official exhibition of the fact that Pennsylvania has contributed over onc hun- dred thousand men to maintain the Consti- tution and preserve the Union, is one of the most gratifying features of the Message.— This proportion is larger than that of any other State in the Union, excepting prob.bly the State of Illinois, and much larger than that of the State of New York, which with a population exceeding that of Pennsylvania by one million has furnished few if any more men to the army. The Governor states that assurances have been received from the Treasury Department of the General Government, that the exam- na tion of the military accounts of the State will be completed without delay, so that the State may receive a credit for the balance due, wn time to apply the same towards her quota of the direct tax. The completion of this arrangement is assumed and a saving of fifteen per cent. promised, together with ex- emption from increased taxation during the present year. We do not question the wis- dom of the State’s assuming the payment of the direct tax, but we cannot see the pro. pricty of increasing the permanent debt of the State by the amount of that tax for the present year, in order to put off the necessi- ty of raising the sum required by increased taxation. If the principle of borrowing the money to pay the States quota of Federal taxes is right in the present, it will be right for the futu e; and we may go on borrowing money instead of procuring it by taxation, until the credit of the State becomes ex. hausted, and our debt is more than doubled. Better meet the question at once and boidly and pay as we go. This, however, is a subject for the Legislature to consider and determine. — Patriot and Union. Emancipation —Confiscation. Every test vote in Congress indicates that the Abolitionists, who started out with high hopes of driving the Administration into the adoption of their radical measures, are los ing power and influence. Indeed the more their favorite projects of universal emancipa. tion and confiscation are discussed the more palpable their folly and impracticability be- come. Itinust be apparent to every reflect- ing man not hopelessly besotted by anti~ slavery passion, that this rebellion must be put down by white freemen, or not at all — The negrges can render us no substantial assistance, for the simple reason that we must first whip the rebel armies to place arms in the hands of slaves—and after the rebel armies are conquered the supposed ne- cessity for arming the blacks ceases to ex- ist. The emancipationists won’t see this fact which, is apparent to rational men, but seem to labor under the strange halucina- tion, that a proclamation of emancipation would in some mysterious way be followed by a general uprising of the negroes. We believe that the South understands its slaves much better than the Abolitionists do, and that while they have a half a million of white men under arms a proclamation of universal emancipation would excite much more ridicule than apprehension. Thus far we have no evidence that the slaves are not devotedly attached to the fortunes of their masters. Of the 32,000 blacks in the Beau- fort District, not more than one thousand have shown any disposition to put themselves under the protection of our army, and they are for the most part old and decrepid men who could not make their escape with the mass of the white and black population. The other scheme of universal confiscation is about as impracticable as emancipation. We had better direct our energies to getting posession of the property of rebels before of it. We should think a penniless man who passed all his time in making arrangements for the disposal of a large fortune, not very likely to attain the object of his ambition. | Sensible men make their money first and | spend it afterwards. So a sensible Govern | ment will devote all its energies to crushing | rebellion against its authority, and leave all | questions as to the disposition of the persons | and property of rebels to the future, when 1 s decrees can be enforced. metre lle love should woo gently. It is not fashion | © . . } making arrangements how we shall dispose | | politicians who forced the Governmeut into | the Bull Run fight, are impatient for another i Fe STATE LEGISLATURE. The Legislatare of this State coivened at Harrisburg on Tuesday. L. W. Ilall, Abo- litionist, was chosen Speaker of the Senate, by a vote of 21, over E. 1). Crawford, Demo- crat, who received 9 votes; and the House organized by electing John Rowe, the can- didate of the mongrels. over Wm. Hopkins, | the Democratic nominee —tle former receiv | ing 53, and the latter 45 votes. The mon- | grels, miscalled “Union” men, after caucus- ing ard nominating Rowe, proposed to the Democrats that if they would vote for Rowe | for Speaker. the committees should be or ganized on a Democratic basis, and the Dem- ocrats should have the Clerk, Assistant Clerk, and some other of the offices, and the Renegades and Abolitionists would take the balance. The Democrats, with great unan- imity and propriety, rejected the proposi tion, and consequently Mr. Rowe became Speaker, as the candidate, and by the votes, of the enemies of the Democ atic party. He conseated to be elected by the Abolitionists of Franklin county, in opposition to the reg" ular Democratic nominee ; and we presume we do him no injustice when we sct him down as going the way of other renegades, who, having got all they could from the Democratic organization, descrt and betray 1it by way of recommending themselves to the favor of its opponents. On Wednesday, the Governor sent in his message, which will be found in our paper of to-doy. Itisof moderate length, and devot- ed, principally, to his military doings. Its exhihit of the State finances 1s not very en couraging, as it shows that the revenue from ordinary sources, during the financial year, falls short of the crdinary expenses more than $126,000. While his excellency was speaking of the sale of the State canals, he might as well have told the people what had become of the purchase money, $3.500,000. And why not say a word about the tonnage tax ? Governor Pollock, in one of his mes« sages, when Curtin was his Secretary, dem- onstrated that with those canals, the tonnag tax, and other means, the State debt would be paid off in less than 23 years. Perhaps it would have been unpleasant to Governor Curtin to state, in his message, that the Commonwealta had, with his approval, been robbed of the purchase money promised to be paid for the canals, and also of the ton nage tax—equivalent, together, to full ten millions of dollars—a robbery which has al- ready caused increased taxation upon the people. What the Governer means when he re- commends that the State assume the pay- ment of the direct tax called for by the Gen- eral Government, we do nol exactly under- stand. If he means that the State pay that tax with borrowed money, (and there is none other now in the Treasury) we think sound and honest financiers will not concur with him. The farmer who borrows money and increases his debt, to pay the interest on the mortgage covering his farm, is on the down hill road to bankruptcy ; and so of a State which borrows money to meet any annual demand against it or its citizens. Besides, Pennsylvania’s share of the direct tax called for by the United States, for 1862, will be due from, and should be paid by, our tax payers of 1862. Gov. Curtin’s plan, if we do not misapprehend him, is, to pay that tax with borrowed money, thus fastening the tax of 1862 as a debt on those who come after ug, and requiring them to pay our taxes and their own too! This may be smart, but 1t 1s certainly neither honest nor just. The Clerks and other officers of both Houses, were carried by the Abolitionists, by about the same vote as elected the Speak- ers. : In the Senate— Chief Clerk, George W. Hammersly ; Assistant Clerk, G. S. Berry; Sergeant at- Arms, Harmen Yerkes ; Assist- ant Sergeants-at-Arms, Joseph L. Moore, Thomas Dickons; Doorkeeper, John G. Martin ; Assistant Doorkeepers, Benjamin Hunnseeker, J B. Hinds. Joseph M. More- head, Jos. Roblet, George Bubb, D. F. John- son. In the House—Chief Clerk. L. R. Rauch; Sergeant-at-Arms, E. D. Pickett ; Door- keeper, Casper Lang ; Postmaster, H. A. Woodhouse. The seats of Househclder, of Bedford, and Bugby, of Adams, are contested by Cessna and Myers.— West Chester Jeffersonian. Management of the War. We learn from Washington that the joint committee of Congress appointed to inquire into the management of the war meets with little or no success in its investigations. The Commander in Chief of the army declines to give the committee an audience at present to discuss the Ball’s Bluff disaster. Not hav- ing the resolution under which this commit. tee was appointed before us, we are unable to say whether it contemplated only an in- vestigation into the causes of the disasters to our arms, or whether the Committee is designed to act as a supervisory junta to control the future operations of the Com- mander ‘n Chief. 1f the latter power is granted or assumed, it is evident that this Committee may become, in the hands of politicians, an instrument of much mischief and ‘disaster. The same uneasy class of | advance, andi permitted to have their own way would precipitate the army in another defeat before the close of another week. The Commander in Chief is naturally jealous of such interference with his plans, and it is not surprising that he has interposed ob- stacles to an investigation that can accom- Letter from Parson Brownlow. The Nashville Patriot gives the following char- a oteristic letter from Parson Brownlow : K¥oxvILLE JAIL. Dec. 20, 1861: —In your issue of the 17th inst., you say :—“ We learn that W. G. Brow nlow, imprisoned at Knoxville, refuses to eat an ything, desiring to starve himself to death.’ I have no doubt, Mr. Editor, that you have learned such a thing, but it is wond erful intelli- gence. And but for the fact that I do not wish to be understood as trying to commit suicide, I would not care to correct the erroneous state- ment. The truth in my case is that I have now | been in jail two weeks, and I have eaten too much every day, my family, with the permission of Brigadier-General Carroll, furnishing me with three meals each day. But for taking cold, and suffering from a sore throat, I could boast of usu- alhealth. Asit is, I claim to be the most cheer- ful of more than one hundred prisoners I found here on my arrival But, sir, I will now give you an additional item or so, which many of your readers will peruse with interest, if you are allowed to publish thera. I left home about the 5th of November, with a view to collect such claims due my office for ad- vertising, and to relieve the fears ¢f my family, who were daily annoyed with the calls of drunk- en soldiers, bawling before my house, and flour- ishing their side-knives and pistols, and maki ng threats of violence On the 5th of December, I received a brief letter from Major-General Crit- tenden, inviting me to head-quarters in Knoxville and promising me passports into Kentucky, and a military escort to eonduct me safe. At the same time I was furnished with the copy of a letter to the Major General from J. P. Benjamin, Secre- tary of War, advising him to give me passports and a safe conduct beyond the Confederate lines. Supposing the head of the War Department and the Major-General commanding here to be acting in good faith, I reported myself in person and accepted the offer of passports. I agreed to start on Saturday, and the General designated Captain Gillespie's company of cavalry for an escort. But on Friday evening, just before sundown, I was arrested for treason, founded en certain ed- itorials in the Knoxville Whig, since June last, th warrant being signed by Commissioner Rey- nolds and Attorney Ramsey. Iam, therefore, in jail—in elose confinement—perfectly contented and making no complaints against any one. I am waiting patiently to see which is the highest pow- er—the War Department at Richmond, ascocia- ted with the Major-General incommand here, or the Commissioners’ Court for Knoxville. Nay, I am anxious to know whether the high authorities invitng me here were acting in good faith, or were only playing off a trick to have me incar- cerated. I am not willing to believe that the rep- resentatives of a great Government, struggling for its independence, and having in charge the in- terests of twelve millions of people, intend to act in bad faith to me. The chivalrous people of the South and all the journalg have denounced the high-hand ed measures of the United States Gov- ernment in suspending the habeas corpus act, sup- pressing public journals and incarcerating citi zens upon lettres cachet. and I will not allow my- self to believe that the Confederate Government will resort to similar tricks. I am, sir, very re- spectfully, &e., W.G. BROWNLOW, ———e ee Taking care of Pennsylvania and her In- terests. Simon Cameron is distinguished for his regard for Pennsylvania and her interests. The latest instance of it we find in the Chi- cago Tribune, the leading Republican paper of Hlinois, in its issue of the 28th inst. It says : “Pennsylvania may be truly said to have contracted. What will be thought of trans porting at Government expense rough pine scantling from Pittsburg to Fort Leaven- worth, and yet such a shipment did actually pass through this city with such destination a few days since, The pieces were 4x4, about cight feet long. and rough as when it came from the saw mill. Think of car- rying commo « pine lumber across four States to the west bank of the Missouri, that some Pennsylvania contractor might prefit a lib- eral margin of profits, and that, too, with plenty of lumber yards, full ot stock, slow of sale, on the Missouri river. This almost passes belief, but is an actual fact. The enormities under the name of carrying on this war would ruin financially any naticn upon earth, even if Midas himself were its king. Wko will stay these teeming evils, or is the nation 1eally given up to be spoiled at home and flonted abroad ¢? Are the pe» ple to 1 ok in vain to Congress to attack the great army of fraudulent peculators, and cleanse these aimy Augean stables ? Has the Government the desire to avert the blows that should fall, though nepotism and corrupt favoritism shriek aloud to spare and save those who richly merit the. cord and sword of the Provost Marshal 2” rr ee REMARKABLE ACCIDENT. —A Man Swal- lows his Set of Teeth in his Sleep.— On Fri- day night last, Mr. Madgean, residing in Euclid Ohio, awoke with a sense of suffoca- tion, and discovered that during his sleep he had swallowed a partial set of ieeth, with the gold plate to which they were attached. The plate is crescent shaped, hooked at each end, and having three teeth. set at irs regular intervals on it. How it could have passed into his throat is difficult to account for. As soon ashe discovered the extent of the accident, Mr. Madgean'’s first idea was to send at once for Dr. Strong but afterwards thought the object might pass through him without difficulty. Eventually, it got into his stomach, and caused such excruciating pain that he same into the city on Saturday morning and put himself under Dr. Strong’s care. I'he case is one of great difficulty, and in its present stage but little can be done other than to await the operation of nature, assisted by medicine. No surgical operation can, of course, be performed at present, and from he peculiar formation of the object it is not easy to pass through the stomach and intestines without inflicting serious injury. The Colored People Arming. We are glad to see that the colored peo- ple are moving, and it is likely that in a few days they will complete a strong military organization. The colored company in Hal- ifax is very efficient, and one of tke best there. — Montreal Gazette. The colored people of Canada, tor the most part, are fugitives from the slave Sta tes—sent thither by the Northern Aboli- tionists, over theU. G. R. R. It says as [ litule for the negroes’ ingratitude as for his | appreciation of the blessings of ** freedom,” | | that be should thus be showing an inclinas | Jeff. Davis figat Lis benefactor. Trig MAN THAT D1oN’r TAKE THE PAPER. — Here is one equally funny, got off by a Western editor : The man that didn’t take his coun y pa- per was in town yesterday. He brought his whole family in a two horse wagon. He still believed that Gen. Taylor was Presi- dent, and wanted to know if the ‘ Kankat- kins'’ had taken Cuba, and where they had taken it. He had so'd his corn for thirty cents, the price being fifty five ; and, on go. ing to deposit the money, they told him that it was mostly counterfeit. The only hard money he had was some three cent pieces, which a ‘‘sharper” had given him for half dimes. One of the boys went to the black- smiths to get measured for a pair of shoes, and another mistook the market house for a church. After hanging his hat ona meat hook, he piously took a seat on the butch- er’s stall, and listened to an auctioneer, whom he took to be the preacher. He left before ‘meetin’ was out,” and had no great opinion of the ‘‘sarmint.” One of the girls took a lot of seed onions to the post office to trade for a letter. The oldest boy had sold two ‘coon skins’’ and wason a ‘*bust.” When last seen he had called for a glass of ‘soda and water,” and stood soaking gingerbread init, and making wry faces. The shopkeeper mistaking his meaning, had given him a mixture of sal soda and water, and it tasted strongly of soap.— But “‘he’d hearn tell of soda and water, and he was bound to give it a trial, puke or no puke.”” Some ‘‘town feller” camein and called for a lemonade, with a “fly in it,” when our soaped friend quietly turned his back and quietly wiped several flies into his drink. We approached the old gentleman, and tried to get him to ‘subscribe,’ but he wouldn't listen to it. He was oppesed to “internal improvements,” and he thought “larnin was a wicked inwention and & wexa- tion.” None of his family ever learned to. read but one boy, and he ¢‘teached school awhile and then went to studyin’ diwinity A Treasonable Affair. A gentleman who attended the recent lec~ ture of Wendell Philips in New York city, informs the Argus, of an incident which aptly illustrates the character of the audi- ence, aud shows it to have been fully in hare mony with that of the speaker. His orav tion was a complete farrago of treason, one- fifth of which, if uttered by a Democrat, would have consigned the individual in- stantly to Fort Lafayctte or Warren. The incident alluded to is not reported in the daily papers. At the close of a treasonable passage, where Philips avowed that he was for the Union now only because he noped the Constitution would be overridden, a per- son in the hall called ont, “Three cheers for Abe Lincoln and the Constitution!” The response was an instant shout of *¢ Hustle him out!” and he was hustled out, ignomin iously. Gen. Fremont was present, and whenever his name was uttered by the speaker, this: gang of treason mengers and despisers of the Constitution vociferously applauded, while Gen. McClellan's name was passed over in utter silence. Fremont alone of all the Generals of the army, was judged to have shown sufficient contempt for Con. stitutional restraints, and enough of the dictator, to suit this revolutionary conclave, which reminds one of the clubs in which Robespierre used to rant, and the sans cu- lottes of Paris to applaud.—Patriot and Union. per, in alluding to Bishop Hughes's absence: abroad, says: It has been supposed by the people of the South that Archbishop Hughes, of New York, had been sent to Europe for the pur- pose of advancing the interests of the Lin~ coln government, by using his influence to counteract the representations of the com- missioners sent from the South. But the Staunton Speciator expresses its gratifica~ tion at lexrning, from a satisfactory source, that his mission is for a contrary purpose.— From a priest of the church of which Arch- bishop Hughes 1s the head in this country, and who lives beyond the limits of the Southern Confederacy, the Speetator learns that the Archbishop has been deputed by a council of the “Fathers” of his Church to use his influence to secure the intercession of foreign powers in behalf of peace and a recognition of the independence of the South- ern Confederacy. New MobE oF ENLISTMENT. —A General Order relating to enlistments has been issued from Washington. It puts an end, except in special cases, to the raising of new Regix ments or Companies, and takes the business of recruiting entirely out of the hands of the State authorities to place it under the charge of officers of the regular army detailed for that purpose, as far as possible assimilating recruiting for the volunteer forces to thar for the regular army. Regiments or companies now forming in the various States will be completed under the directions of the Gov~ ernors thereof, unless it be deemed more ad~- vantageous to the service to assign the men already raised to Regiments, batteries, or independent companies now in the field, in order to fill ap their organizations to the maximum standard prescribed by law. The order goes into effect from the Ist of January. Major N. C. McRae, U. 8. A,, is appointed a General Superintendent for Ohio, and the General depot for the collec~ tion and instruction of recruits will be at Camp Chase, Columbus. A pn, 07 It is now rumored that because John Bull has compelled the Administra- tion to surrender the rebel ministers to the British authority ; that Mr. Seward will compel Capt. Wilkes to surrender his com- plimentary letter received (rom the Secretary of the Navy for the capture of the Secesh gentlemen, and that he will also be request. ed to discharge his big dinner he ate in Bos- ton on his arrival there, if he has not dispos- ed of it already. The s atesmanship, and diplomacy, of the present Administration is oly magnificent, and almost incomprehen- sible. . Ea {7 It used to be the hoast of the Amer- ican citizen that we eould “lick the world in arms’’ against us. This highfelutin has been ‘knocked in the head’’ by Mr. Se ward in delivering up the rebel Ministers to John Bull,” in doing so he admits that we cannot even lick England. Mr. Seward has indeed aimed a death blow at our Peacock pride, if not at our plish no good, and may work incalculable | tion to take up arms, as it were, (0 help national honor. Brave Statesman !—Clears , able for young ladies to take ardent spirits. | mischief. — Patriot & Union. \ field Republican. , “IMPORTANT—IF TRUE.”’—A Southern pa- ’