Dad Aa C. T. ALEXANDER, : JOE W. FUREY, ! Editors. soprre————————— BELLEFONTE, PA. Thursday Morning June, 19, 1862. DemocraticState Convention, In accordance with a resolution of the Democratic State Executive Committee, THE Democracy will meet in STATE CONVEN- TION, at HARRISBURG, on Fray, the 4th day of July, 1862, at 10 o'clock, 4, x. to nominate candidates fer AURITOR GENERAL and SURVEYOR GENERAL, and to adopt such measures as may Le deemed necessary for the welfare of the Democratic party.ard the country. WILLIAM H. WELSJ, Chairpaan of the Democratic State Fx. - ep ts GPO T5~ We understand that some of our Re publican friends take exceptions to &n arti- cle which appeared in the last week's issue of the Watchman, headed “Infamous Lics.” The article alluded to was copied frown thie “Selinsgrove Z'umes. a staunch little Demo cratic sheet, published in Snyder county, sand we copied it, simply because we believe «ed it, and endetsed it with all cur hearts. We understand that the republication of ‘that article has given our politica! &dversa- ries a fine chance to again repeat the old and almost worn out charge of ‘‘sccession 4sm,” which has been so cften and so mali- «clously feveled against tle Watchman. Well, we can’t help it. If to publish wwhat we belieé to be the truth be seces- :sionism, then we are secessionists, and that is all there is of it. We love truth and jus. tice, as mach as we despise lying and mis- representation, and when we hear such slan- derous and contemptible charges against a portion of the American people, who, al- though they may be wrongfully ergazcd in rebellion now, are nevertheless as just and humane and generous as are we of the North, who now presume to accuse them of the most inhuman barbarity towards our sick and defenceless soldiers, because of the unlawful acts of a few of their rowdies and hangers-on, whose cold-blooded atrocities, it they be true, will find just as scvere cons demnation in the hearts of the people of the sunny South, as they can possibly do here among the less excitable people of our own scction. The writer of this article lived too long among the people of the South, “way down in Alabama,” te be easily gulled by such incredible and truly ““infamous’’ storics as Abolition newspaper reporters have sought to impose upon the people of the North since this war commenced. Ile knows the Southern people, whatever may be their peculiar ideas and opinions as to ithe present state of affairs, to be too humane, #00 generous, too enlightened, and too chris- ‘tianized, to be guilty of such inhuman acts as have been laid to their charge. Of course ‘there are always bad men in all armies, who will be guilty of such things, but is it just, is it maguammous to hold the whole Southern people responsible fer the acts of a few miserable savages, whe act irresponsi- bly and always when out of reachof the au” thority which would most certainly be ex- ierted to prevent all such barbarous and in- human actions ? Truly it scems that we have forgotten that the North and South are ‘only branches of the same parent stalk, and that although we are now at war with each other, we were once brothers, and gloried in the same associations, the sare ancestry, and the same blood. eee 17 The order concerning the rebel wo- men of New Orleans, supposed at first to be fals'y imputed to Gen. Butler, tarns out © be genuine. We record this fact with the deepest regret. It is true, the order as explamed by a reference to certain municipal regulations of New Orleans, signifies barely that the wo-