The Tatchman, Regeneration, of Democracy. The Tory press of Frgland, Blackwood éspecially, 1s quite confident that our trou. P. GRAY MEEK, } EC ——— tee BELLEFONTE, PA. Saturday Morning, Oct. 18, 1862. enn .VALEDICTORY. With this issue of the Watchman, it be- comes necessary for us to close our connce~ tion with 1t as one of its editors. Our read" ers for this course, being of a private na” ture, we do not choose to state them to the public, and will only add that they are suffi cien’, in our esti : ation, to justifv us in cur withdrawal from the paper. In dong this, however it may be proper to remark that we are influenced by no political prejudices nor personal feeling, and that the paper still has our best wishes for its unbounded suc- Ccu88. Before retiring, however, we cannot for bear to congratulate the Der ocracy upon the great victory which they have just achieved in this County and District. Abolitionism han been stricken down in the full pride of its power, and now liesin the dust, humbled and submissive, at thc very feet of that great party against which 1t raised its hanghty head in derision, and which it strove in vain to overthrow. Thank God! the Democratic banner once more floats tri umhan'ly all over the broad domain of Cen tre county, while the insolent myrmdons of Abolitioniam are compelled to fold up their unholy flag of treason, which, hke a ++ flaunting lie,” has proclaimed a ** higher law’’ than the Constitution and a better Union than that for which our fathers bled soe four score years ago. They have hid den it away in some lone corner, dark and dreary, where, God grant it may remain buricd in oblivion forevermore, * Unwept, unhonored and unsung.” But while we have great reason to rejoice at our fuccesa thus far, there yet romams a great work for the Democracy to do. The indications are that the Republicans have carried the Stare, If this be so, then we muse go to work again and wholly redeem next Fall, what we have only in part re- deemed this Fall. - We have nadea glor.ous beginning —let but the end fultill the brighg prcumse of its coming, and we may yet re- joice over a restored Union and a happy country. : We leave the Watchman in the hands of Mr. Merk, trusting that it may prosper abundantly ; and ask for it an earnest and hearty support at the hands of the. Democ- raey. Its editor, though quite a young man, is possessed of considerable tnlent and great energy ; and although, by sume, con sidered too radical in his opinions and too indiscreet in hiy expression of them, yet we have not a doubt that he means well and “will do all in his power for the success of the paper and the party, o Thankful for the Kindness and patronage which have been bestowed upon us during our eleven months carcer as editor of the Watchman, we retire from the editorial tripod, glad to be once more relieved from the responsibilities and cares which are al- ways incident to that position. During our connection with this paper. we have endeav- ored to do our duty; whether or not we have succceded, is & question we leave to the judgmert of the public. At all events, our conscience acquiis us of any intentional crrors. With a prayer for the restoration of the Union and the future peace and prosperity of our once happy land, we make our bow aud retire. JOE W. FUREY. ra AB ee The Election is past—the battle is fought, and thank God, the victory is won. Infidel Abolitionism is *‘blotted out” in ‘Old Cen tre,” and once more her hills and valleys are echoing with the joyous sounds of tri- umphart Democracy. The people have awakened to a sense of their duty, and spo~ ken in tones that will nake the dictator tremble on his fancied Throne. Old Abe will read in the proceedings of last Tuesday the unflinching spirit and determined will of the worthy sons of fathers who fell on the bloody fields of the Revolution, to wrench from his grasp the power usurped which was trampling upon their rights and abridging their hiberty. He will learn a lesson that a million of bayonets would scarcely have taught, Cheering news comes up to us fiom all parts of the State. The chances are ten to one that our State ticket is elected by a large majority. Old Berks hag wheeled into line, and giv en a Democratic majority ot over 4,000. In Lycoming, the whole Dewocra tie tick. et 15 elected, the lowest majority exceeding £00. Clinton has come up to the work, and given from four to six hundred Democratic majority. Clearfield is all right. Wallace, Demo. cratic candidate for State Senate, has ro- ceived over 1.100 majority. Cambria har done nooly, electing the whole Democratic County ticket, and giving Slenker and Barr over 1,100 majority. +The Star of the West,” (old Westmore- land) still shines out brightly. It has rolled up an overwhelming majority for the Demo. cratic State and County ticket. Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Allegbany and Lancaster have gone strongly Abolition, not enough however to overbalance the Demo- cratic majorities throughout the country. re ly RAPA en {Z= We have kept our paper back until to-day, in order to give the official returns bles are the natural and inevitable result of Democratic institutions, and pretends to be- lieve that, discouraged at their attempts at seif government, the great, proud and intelli- gent American people will be glad to seek shelter under the old, rotten and worn out contrivances of Europe. They say, ** see what the rule of the people. or of the mob, (as they call it) has brought you—civil war, the most extended and terrible ever known in human annals, and destruction of life and property more awful than even that of the ‘Reign of Terror’ in France, and be- yond all these horrors, a national debt in a single year that outstrips any of the old monarchies for centuries.” These facts, these terrible realities, are even go, but they have abont as much 10 do with Democracy as the Crystal Palace or Prince Albert's death. Indeed, we nay say that the absence of ‘mob rule’ or of popular control, hos rendered these awful things possible, for two thirds of the popular vote was cast against Mr. Lincoln, and if the people instead of States. elected Presidents, the *‘anti elavery” party could never have gotten into power, and the country could not have been plunged into this mad delusion about negroes. A majority of the Sta:es elected Mr: Lincoln, and a minority of the States, disfranchised and threatened with social ruin, seceded —withdrew from the Federation, but did not attempt to set up any new eysicm or principle of government ; indeed, 1t is notorious, and known to the whole world, that the seceders are now con- tending, over all and beyond all, for the principles of the Died Scott decision and the perpetuity of a government for white men, that iz, for the government of 1788. All our calamities are the direct and positive re~ sult of the ‘-anti slavery” delusion, and that delusion was gotten up by the enemies of Democracy in Europe for the special pur pose it is now working out, the destruction ofthe Union, and, if possible, the overthrow of Democratic institutions. For his they have labored half a century, and expended almost countless treasures, and lied enough to sink & whole world into the deepest depths of perdition. If the white men of the New World could be so debauched as to affiliate with negroes, Indians, &c., then, of course, there would be no danger to the oppressors of the Old World, for a Democracy thus emasculated would be powerless, as we now witness in Mexico and Central America, &c. The attempt, however, of their dupes and tools to complete their programme, and by impartial freedom” with negroes, revolu- tionize, demoralize and destroy our Demo- cratic system, must fail, of course, for it is warring with the eternal order of God Him- self, as well as with union, liberty and De mocracy. The negro will remain where God and nature placed him, in subordina - tion and under the protection of the white man, Millions of lives as well as treasure may be sacrificed in this hideous and impious warfare on the decrees of the Eternal, but +slavery’’ will remain immovable and evers lasting—tho relations of the races eternal and unchangeable. And when the great, blind, patriotic and deceived multitude com- prehend the ‘anti slavery” delusion, the wrong, and crime, and impiety of the ‘friends of frecdom,’ then will begin a reaction the most s upendous and terrible the world ever saw, a reaction that will restore and regen~ crate Democracy and Democratic institu tions, and that, sweeping on 1ts mighty mis- sion, will visit upon the Oud Word the wrongs of the New, and trample under foot the rotten and worn out contrivances of mon narchy, and enthrone Democracy throughout Christendom. The Congressional Election. There is not a doubt but that James T. Hale, the independent Republican candidate for Congress, in his district, is elected by a majority of from four to six hundred.— This resulted entirely from the vote cast for him by the Demacratic party. In looking over the returns from this and other coun= ties com prising the district, the fact stands plain upon the record that very few republi- can votes were cast for him, which leaves the result a fair test of the rvlative strength of the two parties. It must now be plain t0 many as it was to us before the election, that had we not been cheated out of a regu_ lar nominee ly des‘gning politicians, we would have had a glorious triumph of prin- ciple, as surely as has been shown a major- ity of Democratic votes. Asit is, it cannot be claimed as a Democratic victory ; we have simply shown that we have the numerica) strength to beat the Abolitionists oy defeat. iug their nominee, while to them, although their nominee is defeated, it is a ‘riumph of their principles ! Mr, Hale, notwithstanding he was elected by Democratic votes, is still an opponent of the good old doctrires of the men who pla. ced him where he is, and we can sec but little comfort to be derived by the Democra- cy from his election. He mav, as is alleg- ed by many, become tired of Abolitisnism | and secing its ruinous effect upon our coun- try repented of his many political sins, with the determination of carrying out to sume extent democratic principles. We hope it may be so, but that matter is yet to be tes'ed —if he does. we shall give him full credit whenever deservihg of it.— B ut until he makes some public record of his change of heart politically, and shows by his aqtions a desire to atone for past errors, we cannot rejoice in his election as we could have done had he been a Democrat in prin- ciple. We shall wait until he proves him self to be what Le is claimed by his friends —a Democrat—-before we throw up ou hat. The conterees who defeated a democratic nowination, should be smothered in eternal oblivion, for cheating us out of such a glo- rious victory, when it was just within our grasp. Let the Democrats remember them, and not forget the few, the precious few, TRUE ones, who labored to give them a cane of the County. . ! didate to vote for. —— a a a — The Union AsIt Was, Or the Unign as It Is to Be. { The proclamation of Mr. Lincoln, thrusts aside the mask that has so long concealed the real issue of this great conflict, and now the way is clear to all men, and the path straight —to the restoration of the ‘¢ Union a8 it was’ or to the creation of a new Una ion—to aretarn to.the ‘Union’ of Washing. ton and Buchanan, or the building up of a ‘Union’ on the model of Greeley and Lin- coln ; in short, a Union with the white cit izenship of the South or a Union with their negroes. One or the other of these results mnst happen, of course, for nothing else is possible, and the sooner all men see this and aczept this tremendous truth, the bet ter for all classes and all sections of our people. It cannot be compromised, or cov- ered up, or disguised any longer. We must go back at once to the principles and usa, ges of the old Union, or we must adopt Mr. Greeley's idea of impartial freedom,’” and form a pew ‘Union’ with four millions of negroes, the only Unionists left in the South as declared by the anti slavery leaders.. A party is organized in the North on the sole principle of hostility to the social order of the South. 1t holds that the four million of slaves are natutally entitled to the same rights as their masters and it combines a majority of the States together, gets posses- ion of the government, and seeks to use that as an Instrument to accomplish its av- owed mission— ‘impartial freedom” for ne-~ groes, Indians mongrels &c., everywhere within these S ates. This is the end sought for, while the means so much objected to by hypocrites and fools, is of little cr no mo- ment— indeed were we a citizen of Virginia instead of New York, we should vastly pre fer the John Browr role to the Edward Ev~ erett or George Bancroft warfare on the Dred Scott decision. This anti-social or anti sla- very party never could have obtained a pop- ular majority but with a bare majority of the States, and States alone electing the President, it gets possession of the govern. ment, though really supported by less than a third of the American people. The dis. franchized States, 'hreatened with social ru- in fell back on State sovereignty to save themselves from the mad delusion of the North, or, 83 is more probable, severs; States seceded and left the Union, hopir; thereby to best dictate a final settlement of all scctional troubles, and in 1864 return to the grand American Federation which their fathers had created, and of which the Jeft- ersons and Jacksons of the South had always been the principal champions. But the mad zealots of the North were not then disposed to let slip this opportuni» ty to revolutionize our system, and accom~ plish their mission of impartial frecdow.- - They forced Mr. Lincoln to call out seventy five thousand troops to coerce the seceeding States, and this of course, forced Virginia North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas, to make common cause with their Southern Confederacy, and as this demanded more force to complete the object of coercion, Congress assembled, and voted half a mill ion, and set in operation a steam factory to fabricate means to pay them. Erom that hour, to the proclamation of freedom or, at all events, to tho passge of the confiscation and emancipation bills, there never has been a moment which he has not had power tores- tore the Union in a week, if that had been his wish. lle had only to do what Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, &c., asked him to do before one drop of fratricidical blood had been spilled. He had only to disavow his anti social and free negro creed, and pledge himself to stand by the deci-ions of the Supreme Court, and administer the gov_ ernment on the principles of of every admin. istration from Washington to Buchanan, to restore peace, union fraternity, prosperity to this great country. This truth should sink deep into the mind of every honest ma, and indeed should be shouted into the ears of the millions with the voice of an arch an. gel. Mr. Lincoln could restore the Union any day he pleased by abandoning the free negro creed, and pledging himself to admin- ister the government just as every one of his predecessors, from Washington to Buy chanan, had administered it. But this was the very thing that he was pledged to his party not to do—the Union of Washington, of Jeflerson aud Jackson was not the Union these people wanted, for in that Union they never could hold power and therefore they meant to build up a new Un- ion— a Union on the model of Greeley and Garrison, a Union with negroes instead of a Union with their masters. The proclama tion of Mr. Lincoln now remaves all doubt, and he commits himself to a position that renders salvation for him forever impossible 1f he defeats the armies of the South, and places the eight millions of that scction en- tirely at his mercy, then the four millions of negroes will become American freeman and become duly amalgamated in our political system, and Greeley and Sumner and Loves joy will be the rulers and statesman of the new dispensation, orof that union with ne- groes instead of their masters, which these infatuated people have so long desired. But these madmen have undertaken a terrible work, the conquest of the land of Washing- tou and Jackson, by the besotted abelition- ists of New England. The eigh: millions of the South are certainly unsurpassed by any similar number of people in Christendom, and as they would rather be annihilated ut- terly from the face of the earth than exist in juxtaposition with four millions of free negroes we may form a reasonable estimate of the probabilities of that new Unioa now dreamed of by the Sumners and Greeleys.— Meanwhile let all true and earnest Demo- crats rally about the old standard of ¢ the Constitution as it is, and the Union as it was,’ when the deluded and dangerous party now in office came into power. ben this is restored, and it is settled for all coming time that this shall remain a gov- ernment of white men, in which negroes, Indians, mongrels &o.. have no portion or status. or connection whatever as laid down by the Supreme Court, then there will be no try. ile with secessionists at the South, for then sll Americans will be umted by the same ideas and the same interests that bound them into into one people in 1778 a which until the awful abolition coercion overshadowed the land, which to themsuch boundless prosperity. —Caucdsson. Bellefonte, Benner, Boggs, Burnsides, Loren : erguson, Harris, Huston, Liberty, Milesburg boro, Miles, Marion, Half Moon, Patton, Penn, Slenker’s maj, SLENKER. 109 2687 831 Barn. Bellefonte, 109 Benner, 122 Boggs, 94 Burnsides, 3r Curtis, 37 Ferguson, 185 Hurris, 149 Huston, 20 Liberty, + 35 Milesburg loro, 38 Miles, 202 Marion, 7% aif Moon, 35 ' Patton, 38 Penn, 225 Potter, 20s (Gregg, Hor 60 Snowshoe, 39 Spring, 110 Taylor, 23 Walker, 126 Worth, 42 Union, 40 lioward, 81 Haines, 195 Unionville boro, 20 ¢ 2682 Bart's maj, 823 Congress. CmiLps. Harz. Bellefonte, 9 143 Benner, 30 129 Boggs. 118 Burnsides, 33 Curtin, 40 Ferguson, 85 153 Harris, 1 234 Huston, 41 Liberty, 1 42 Milesburg boro, 45 Miles, 205 Marion, 84 Half Moon, 14 26 Patton, 30 20 Penn, 3 222 Potter, 7 315 Gregg, 104 i63 Rush, 70 Snow Shoe, 5 40 Spring, 4 115 Taylor, 22 Walker, 126 Worth, 7 37 Union, 50 Howard, 79 Haines, 203 Unionville boro. 27 300 2782 Hale’s maj, 1290 Barron. Harris. Bellefonte, 103 126 Benner, 123 81 Boggs. 95 155 Burasides, 31 29 Curtin, 37 19 Ferguson, 201 91 Harris, 148 182 Huston, 20 43 Liberty, 35 17 Milesburg boro, 39 48 Miles, 203 27 Marion. 75 - 36 Half Moon, 36 80 Patton, 39 45 Penn, 227 24 Potter, 311 75 Gregg, 246 45 Rush, 61 58 Suow Shoe, 36 38 Spring, 110 135 Taylor, 23 36 Walker, 126 112 Worth, 42 34 Union, 40 57 Howard, 79 81 Haines, 195 a8 Unionville boro, 20 26 2100 1848 Barron's maj, 852 ceiy Commissioner, Foray. Bellefonte, 118 Benuer, 123 s, “94 Burnside, - 31 Curtin, . 37 Fuarguson, 185. Harris, 146 Huston, 20 Liber y, 39 Milesburg Boro’ 39 Miles, 203 Marion, 25 Halfwoon, 25 Patton, s Penn, 4 - Gregg, 246 ™: 59 Snowshoe, 39 Tayl Se a or, Walker, 128 GLORIOUS VICTORY ! Old Centre Still True ! OFFICIAL RETURNS! Below will be found the full returns of the election of last Tuesday. The Democ- racy of Old Centre have gained another glo rious victory, which will long be remem- bered. Read, Democrats, and be rejoiced at the glad tidings ; Auditor General. COCHRAN. 123 82 156 19 Surveyor General. ARMSTRONG. Assembly and District Attorney. BLAIR. 200 203 248 60 55 292 328 62 112 84 230 108 “oT Mr. Blair, (Dis At.) having no opponent, (being nominated by both Conventions) re~ the whole vote of the County. Hass. Worth, 42 Union, 40 57 Howard, 85 75 Haines, 195 68 Unionville Boro’, 20 26 Total, 2688 - 1854 Furey's msj., 834 Auditor. KeaLss. GLENN. Bellefonte, 106 124 Benner, 12 1 8, BRE: se. 32 28 Cartin, 37 19 Furguson, 181 110 Harris, 146 184 Huston, 20 42 Liberty, 35 7 Mileshurg Boro’, 37 50 Miles, 203 25 Marion, 75 36 Halfmoon, 35 80 Patton, 37 48 Penn, 226 26 Potter, 301 99 Gregg, 243 45 Rush, 66 51 Snowshoe, 39 34 Spring, An 133 Taylor, co xr on 35 Walker, 126 110 Worth, 4 34 Union, © 40 57 Howard, 81 79 flrines, 196 66 Uuionville Boie',: 20 26 Total 2676 1860 Kealsh's maj., 816 Connty Surveyor. Kerr. TRCZIYULNY. Bellefonte, 111 118 Benner, 123 81 Boggs, 94 154 Burnside, 32 28 Ourtin, 39 19 Furguson, 185 109 Harris, 147 180 Huston, 20 40 Liberty, 38 72 Milesburg Boro’, 36 49 Miles, 202 27 Marion, 75 36 Halfmoon, 35 80 Patton, 31 - 47 Penn, 228 24 Potter, 301 93 Gregg, 246 45 Rush, 59 58 Snowshoe, 39 34 Spring, 111 131 Taylor, 23 36 Walker, 126 112 Worth, 42 33 Union, 40 47 Howard, 81 79 Ilaines, 196 65 Unionville Boro,” 20 26 Total 2684 1821 Kerr's maj., 863 Terrible Conflagration On 0il Creek. The followina letter from the senior Edi- tor of the Pittsburg Dispatch, dated Oil Creek, Wednesday evening , Oct, 8. gives a bricf aocountof a most terrible - conflagra~ tion on Oil Creek : : 1 have just witnessed one-of those awful conflagrations which I have pictured in im« agination would take place some day on Oil Creek. 1 came to the Tarr farm a’ noon to day — visitited three or four refineries on the east side of the creek and about 3o0’clock crossed to the west side where are located as many more. [had been there but a few miuvutes when casting my eyes down the creek: I saw flames bursting from the oil wells on the upper end of the blogd farm, where there are four flowing wells withing few hundred feet of each other. The flames spread rapidly, a brisk Lreeze springing up and bearing up the creck, all along which, wells and, barrels, full and empty, were placed. For a timeit appeared that the whole flat, including all the wells on the Blood and Tarr farms, would fall a prey to the devouring clement, so furiously did it rage and so combustible was the nature of the materials. The wind shifted soon 0 the east, then to the west, whirling the vast columns of flame and smoke in every dirce~ tion ; then to the north again, and once more threatening the whole flat ;but a lull followed and the progress of the fire north wara was arrested at the Dinsmore well. — lt tollowed a large basin of water covered with oil southward destroying everything in ts course, including tee refinery of Kelly & Co.. until it stopped at the point where the hill comes blufl' down to the creek. From that point it made a clean sweep keeping he base of the hill on one side and ihe creek on the other—on which floating oil was burning many feet from the bank. 1 cannot give anything hke a description of the terrific granduer of the &:ne pre. sented, — the rolling and surging of the flames, fed by thousands of barrels of oil — crude and refined —and some ten flowing wells adding fucl of gas snd oil—and al quantity of tanks barrels, and frame tenes ments thickly huddled together. Then the rolling volume of smoke suefi as I never witnessed from any o her fire —at times lu- rid with mingled flame, and again ascending 1s black as tophet, until the whole heavens were darkened. Itis now eight o'clock, and although the oil above ground and the vessels containing it are nearly burned up, the flowing wells are supplying a continu ous stream of liquid fire, of gas and oil, pre- senting a magnificient scene. But I must close, briefly summing up that some fifteen acres of the best oil region on the creck has been burned over —oomprising some fifteen wells, ten of them ‘flowing ones— 30,000 barrels of oil burned, a large number of empty barrels, some 23 engines ‘destroyed. and a number of the dwelling of opertors.— One hundred thousand dollars it is estima ted, would not cover the ac ual loss, to say nothing of the injury sustained to the wells, and the loss accruing. The fire originated at the filkin well, aud, 1t is supposed, was caused by a leak in the pipe that fed the engine with crude oil, the fuel now used gen- erally on the creek. - InPORTANT TO Business MeN whose clerks and book-keepers have resigned to fight the battles of their country. You can within a few menths, have talented snd reliable young men of your choice thoroughly pre- pared to be entrusted with the charge of yonr books and active business, by placing them in care of the experienced teachers and practical: mea. JesKINS & SmiTH. principals of the—fron City College. Pittsburgh, Pa,, where rapid business writing is taught with certainty and success by the inimitable senman, Proof. A, Cowley. Specimens and Catalcgue sent pon application. . 07 Read Onvis's speech on the out-side { of today’s paper, it will well repay a_care- 1 ful perusal, What the British Press Says of Us. STATE OF AFFAIRS IN AMERICA. [From the London Times. ] If the people of America would only sit down and calmly consider the causes which have raised them during the last half cen tury, from 3.000,000 to 30,000,000, and made their country, unlike so many other lands favored with the most lavish gifts of nature, proverbial for 1ts prosperity and progress, they might derive from the reflec- tion conclusions which would lead them ir- resistibly to a policy of peace and mutual conciliation. America owes much, un- doubtedly, to the wisdom®of those great and enlightened men, the fathers and founders of their Republic. “hey devised a scheme *| of temperate liberty, checked and controlled by every contrivance which might prevent its tendency to degenerate into licentious- ness. To the worn out victims of arbitrary power they offered equal laws, equal rights, u light taxation, a freedom from the necessi- ty of foreign war. No wonder that the world stood amazed at the spectacle of so much virtue and so much happiness, and gladly turned aside from the vicious circle of war and tyranny, in which alone the pol~ it cs of Europe appeared capable of revolving .| to a nation blessed alike by the wisdom of “|'man and the beneficence of nature, apd ca- pable of realising, as far as is possible on earth, the wildest dreaws of the poet and the noblest aspirations of the philosopher.— Not to any peculiar fertility in the race which originally inhabited her, but to the attraction she presented to emigrants; does America owe the position which she held but a year and a half ago. Dees it never occur to her that the pros- perity which has been gained by these .and similar causes is liable to be forfeited by re- versing them ? Lec those who have troken asunder every tie which bound them to their native land and crossed a stormy ocean to bask in the sunshine of American institu- tions, to enjoy the fruit of their own labor in unquestioned peace and unbroken securi- ty, say which of all the hopes they enter. tained the events of the present melancholly year have not utterly deceived and falsified. They came seeking for peace. and they are involved in a war which, for the enormous { scale on which it is carried on, the frightiul loss of life which it bas occasioned, and the bitter exasperation which it has called forth, may challenge comparison with the most disastrous conflic's that have decimated and degraded mankind. The Thirty Years' war reduced Germany to a desert, and cost, Schiller tells us, the lives of 200 000 warri- ors, but the American struggle has realized m a single year the desolation wrought by the Austrian, the Bavarian, the Swede, the Dane. and the Frenchman, and happy would America be could she but estimate her loss for one year at the amount of the butcheries of Tilly and Wallenstein. Nor is this a momentary outburst of fury, A meeting to which significance and importance were given by the presence of the President of the United States resolved on the 6th of this very month of August, in the capital of what vsed to be the United S:ates, that, rather than witness an overthrow of the Un- ion, they would prosecute the present war until their towns ‘and cities should be deso- lated, and they and all that are dear to them, should have perished . with their pos- sessions. This is the spiri of the North.— Mark the opinion of the same meeting with regard to the spirit of the South! We are convinced they say, that the leaders of the rebellion will never return to their allegi- ance, and therefore they should be regarded and treated as irreciaimable traitors The practice of Napoleon is revived. War is henceforth to mantain war, and the beauti- ful province cf Virginia is given up to indiss crimmaté plunder. This must, of course, lead to reprisa's, and robbery and murder, are evidently let loose to revel through the land. Peace hax fled, and every day that the war continues, instead of bringing it nearer to a conclusion, seems to render eve ery chance of accomodation mere and more impossible. America will not be sought henceforth by emigrants in search of peace. Personal liberty, the right to express one’s own stutiments and (0 regulate one's own actions, was another of the blessings that men wearied of the arbitrary Governments and artificial societies of Europe sought on the sacred soil of America, - They sought, but they have not found it. The firs: effect of the war long before any one cotld have torescen the magnitude of its scale or the bitterness of its animosity, was to sweep away that one institution oo which personal Jiberty depends. Before any serious effort was made to humble its enemy, the Govern-~’ ment of the United States filled its prisons with disconten ted citizens.. The firs: thing the American Revolution erected was the first thing that the French Revolution des- troyed—a Bastile. The civil courts in vain interfered. Their jurisdiction was trampled mn the dust by military violence, Aud now, as if there was not enough al- ready to remind us of the Old World, the conscription, which English readers ‘know only by the experience of foreign countries, is put in full force. America trusts no longer the voluntary energies of her citizens, a nd impresses them for a service which mon- ey to any amount to which 11 may be offered cannot bribe them to undertake. Not only freedom from imprisonment, but ¢‘the right of every man to seek his own happiness in the way he thinks best,” so confidently sta- ted in the Declaration of Independence, is thus destroyed by a single word of a single man, who assumes to himself. the tremen- dous power of dragging from the orlinary pursuits of life 600,000 of his fellow citizens that they may pass through the fire to the Moloch of civil strife. No Oriental despot ever ventured on so tremendous a stroke of power, and no people of European origin, except the democracy of America, ever stb- | mitted tot, Turn from the question of personalliberty to the hope o f physical wel being. Ina fortnight from this timo will commence throughout the United States the collection ol taxes more ruinous in their na- ture and incidence, and more vexatious and mgquisitorial in the method of their callec- tion, than ever modern times have seen. — As if this were rot euough, all the trangac~ tions of life are embarrassed, the relations between debtor and creditor disarranged, and the intercourse with foreign countries rendered almost impossible by a system of inconvertible paper 1ssued in defiance of all principle and experience, and submitted to with the most perfect apathy and indiffer~ ence. These measures have produced their le. gitimate effect. Already people are flying from the land which was once the desired of all nations. The conscription has restored to England and other European countrieg many subjects who little thought to have ever nceded to plead any other nationality than that of their adoped country. Canada, which has been for so many years passed by with contempt by the millions which flocked to the more popular institutions of the Umted States, has suddenly become a land of refuge, and a thousand are re- emigrating to escape that very governmen which a few months ago they were pre pared to extol as the wisest and best upon earth. But the war pursues its course, and the people bear with tameness absolutely incredible the destruc'ion, one by one, of all the hopes and all the illusions which bad led them to the. other side of the Atlantic. There is, no doubt, something sublime in the spectacle of a nation so fervently wedded to one idea that everything else this world can give seems trivial and insignificant io comparison. Instances have not been rare of communities that have per- ished almost lo a man for the purpose of perserving liberty ; but liberty is among the very Orst things which America has seen fit to sacrifice. To the Union—that is, to the resolution embracing a whole contineat under a single Government— America is sac- rificiog its present happiness and its future hopes. Rather than be a State of moderate dimensions, the North will proceed to any degree of selfimmolation that may be requir- ed. It would be a noble sight were the end worthy of the means. As it 13, we stand aghast at this wanton act of destruction, and and at the intensity of that national vanity which can thus sacrifice to some vague imagination territorial greatness not only all that makes a nation great, but all that makes it happy or respected. County Papers. The La Crosse Democrat puts forth the following home truths on the subject vt the country press. They are worthy the con~ sideration of all who feel interested in the prosperity of the community in which they live : We have before us a copy of the Taylor's Falls Reporter, published in St. Croix Val- ley in this State, but from its advertisin® el umns are unable to gather the least idea of the size of the rlace or amount of business done there. We find in ita notice of one dry good store, a lime kiln, watchmaker, cabinet shop. tin shop, milliner store and one or two lawyers cards. From the home patronage of the paper, we should say Tay lor’s Falls contained about a hundred in- habitants. People have a mistaken idea of local newspapers, When the basiness mea of a place realize as they should that the lo- cal paper benefits a place according to its” ° cirenlation out of it, they will hive learned a valuable lesson. The village paper should be the mirror of the place, should mive those abroad an idea of what is done and why is doing it wn the town where published IF» paper could rhow a bundred rn of firs engaged in business, people won'd a: once say that village was a prosperois cre. [If on the-contrary it be compelied to fil un, with love stories in large typ. or wit, prospectuses of the New York pars, il: reader, at a distance. naturally inks the town a sort of dead hole wh rin abide seedy gamblers and played out 2:1} esate speculators. If business men in a village would take of each issue of their wedkly pa per, a dozen copies and send them to their friends in the east, the investment would pay if the paper had a live business look to it.” If uot, the better for all concerned. — We love to sce a paper filled with live ad- vertisements and iozal news. There are a few such papers in Wisconsin, and no mats ter how wuch we may differ with them in politics, the items of local intelligence are always eagerly sought for. The village paper is a weekly messenger, going forth into the world. proclaiming to thousands never seen or thought of by the editor, the resources and busiress of the place where published, as well as the ener- zy of its inhabitants. Patronage extended to local papers is never thrown away. If the paper is a Live one, read: rs at a distance see it in the reflection of the place, and in time the distant vill ize becomes familiar through the local press and at last, dred of this locality in the f:r oft east, the reader starts for a new home among those he knows by reputation. 3 : A neat looking paper, well fillew with home advertisements and local items, indi- cates a live town and thrifty people, as cer * tainly as clean dishes, clean house and clean faced children indicate the neat wife and mother ; .or as children with shirttails flying. littlejclothes half fastened, dirty fa- ces and unkept hair, and greasy knives, forks and plates, and room filled with dirt, is evidence of the slattern. Business men owe it to the place, if not to themselves, to patronize ihe local paper. Let the edilor know that his labors are appreciated, and he will labor hard to retain that good opin- ion, to the benefit of all concerned, = —eses a 97 Out of respect to the memory of Mr. Bond Valentine, the Photograph and Am- brotype car of Mr. Taylor, located just op- posite his residence, has been closed since Wednesday. Mr. Taylor requests us to say that he will not reopen until the first of next week, as he wishes to get some repairing done to his car, nl pA Ap rrr 07” War news is scarce this week—noths ing of importance from the army, the Con federates had possession of Chambersburg and Mercersburg Pa., for a short time last week, they took away with them a good ¢ of horses, clothes, cash and provisions whic they captured in the raid. eee same 0 We had the pleasure of shaking hands with Captain John Boal, of Boalsburg, on Thursday last. The Capt. is slowly «ecov: ering from his long and severe illueas, and anticipa‘es being able to join his regiment before mary days. 7 The Central Press has had its wings clipped, and now makes its appearance a8 8 six column sheet. No wonder, for the par- ‘ty it represents in this County has been so completely whittled down that it makes no appearance at all.