2 P. GRAY MEEK, ma BELLEFONTE, PA. Friday Morning, Nov. 21, 1862. “ Slavery va. Emancipation. + Editor. It will not bo necessary for the people of thi country to wait a century to learn the result and feel tho effect of Lincoln's ewan- cipation proclamation, provided he ard the tocls and fanatics of the North who sustain It, aro successful in carrying it out. For cur part, wo have no fears that the old usurper, with all bis siders and abettors, will be ble to succeed either with dogmati- eal orders or balls and bayonets, in giving {recdom tosthe four and a half millions of blacks io the South, which, ifaccomplished, would ruinat Jesst threo quarters of this Union commercially, and revolutionize one half of Europe, not only commercially, but politically. Every civilized nation on the globo recog- vizes the nicessity of such productions as negro “slavery” alone creates: and to de- 8 roy these productions, would bring want and famine to one half the white population that lives by Isbor. The world cannot exist without the institution called “slavery.” It must prevail somewhere apon tho globe, It has existed from the beginning, and will continue to exist until tho end of time, and tf negroes are not held in that position, the lat oring whitcman mast be. Labor, alone, ia the source of ell wealth, and the me jority of mankind have no dispo- sition to labor if they can possibly avuad it. Ne man, no comunity, no nation, no race of men, have a right to hve upon the earth without creating more than he or they con- sume. A man, or a class, earning less than enough to clothe and fecd them, come an- der the denomination of paupers and va- granig, and are taken by the strong aim* of tho law, and made-to work in alms houses and prisons. As society hes progressed, it has mado customs which daro not now be overstepped, which forces those who are naturally indo- lent and lazy to labor not only for their own support, but to increase and add to the wealth ofthe world, and it is now consider- ed unwise and impolitic by all enlightened governments, to permit a class of beings to exist without their productions, showing a surplus over their consumption, Nations have no right to be a stumbling block in the path of civilization, or to exist upon tho earth a foul blot ; but when, in addition to the fact that the black races do 0 exist—that they are steqped in the grossest and foulest idolatry—coupled with debauchery and ciimes +00 terrible, too shocking, to depict, when we Anow from history that for a thou- sand years Africa has had the means of en” lightenment and civilization, and still to this day herinhsbitants revel in heathenish cer- emonies, sickening atrocities, and idolatrous butcheries, at each yearly festival, tho wisdom of taking tho whole nation and con- verting them into useful beings by making them American “slaves,” no sane mind can for a moment question, . There is no one will deny that tho mind of the Caucasian ia naturally progressive, “and but fora few, who aro followers of Greeley and Phillips, but will admit that tho wind of the negro is stationary, capable only of considering the limited wants of his ani- mal nature. While under the control of the white, ho i tractable and obedient-—-among fits own taco, whenever He gets the position of superior, bois cruelly despetic. Many yeard bave passed sinco the existenco of su- perior and inferier races was discovered, and by the great and universal governing law, each has assumod the positions God in- tended hiey should. As far back a3 commerce can bo traced in- to the earlier periods of East India history, wo find that 200,000,000 of frugal, obedient slaves had been for almost countless centu- ries creating enormous wealth throughout that part of the world. All ths nations of thie East thrived upon the spoils of that vast country for ages. Alexander tho Great, feught long and bloody wars for a chance to lute struggle of a people there is a moving power, an ides, a moral principal. In the despicable form of a serpent the de- il deceived our first parents.In the meanshape of New England ideas, propagated with dia- bolical industry and by diabolical craft, through tho Press, bythe pulpit, and on the lecturer's rostrum--by all the trickery of Barnum-New Enc'and—the Yankee fanatics succeed in elccting Abraham Lincoln to the office of President of the United States, ac- cording to the letter of the Constitution— hence ‘ail our woes.” Intelligence—the light of heaven—was thus perverted from its right lines. Infrac- ted, distorted, it fell at an angle on the wi- sion of an unwary people® Cause produced its effect. - The devil, garbed as angel of light, deceived, a duped people. He has paid them with his own fruits—apples of S.dom, that have turned to ashes on their lips.— The effect has answered to the cause. Two years have rolled round; and the people of the North have again—refusing to be overawed by their creature—their erea- tion—the Federal administration—the peo- le Lave again expressed their will. We ave heard it. “From the Iudson to the Mississippi, the great Central States’ of the North, by their votes as States, and by their thew, and all alike, uttered their wishes and their determinations. This was the programme of recuperation that we announced, a8 the cnly one possible for us, so soon as, last spring, the g-.sp of Federal executive usurpation was so far with- drawn as to have released our person from unlawful imprisonment, and our paper from the lawless prohibition of its circulation, through our Federal servants, the mail car- riers. The programme has been complecely carried out. 1t has been secured that next Congress, dating from the fourth of next March, will, in the popular house, be under Democratic auspices, What is even more important, it has been secured that the Gov- ernor of the Empire State of New York will, after the first of January, be a patriotic, law abiding statesman—not a mercantile trader in shoddy contracts. The full mean ing of these effects, and the evidence of the causes that have produced them, will devel- op hereafter. But, directly upon the Federal Adminis tration, what ought to be the effect of these elections ¢ According to the letter of the Constitution, though by a munority of the Popular vote, Lincoln was elected President his weak and wicked advisers, he supposed that the people of the United* Siates had elected him to carry out the plot of the Chi- cago piatform. He has. this autumn, heard another voice. Already, in the deep roar of cannon, he has heard from Virginia, from the two Carolinas, fiom Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky and Mis- souri. That he has not heard from Mary- land, the silent calls of Fort Warren, filled with her imprisoned statesmen, and the heavy tramp of Federal soldiery on Mary- land soil, sufficiently explain. But, now he has heard from States of undisputed “loyalty.” Even little Delaware, defying the array and the assaults of lawless sol- diery, has uttered jer voice—declaring against his radical policy. His own State of Illinois, notwithstanding the hosts of her Democratic soldiers doing the bidding of his Generals, has poured out a tremendous ma- jority against the policy of hisadvisers. In- diana has uttered a terriblo voice against it. Obio has been revolutionized, even into the strong-holds of fanaticism, ecanting and denouncing the radical policy. Pennsylva- nia joined in the chorus, and says she, like the others, is for the Constitution, and against the radical administration that en- compasses Mr. Lincoln. New Jersey, alone “Faithful among the faithless found,” in: the general defesgion of two years ago, re-utt.rs her voice inore imperatively for the Constitution and the laws, and against rad- icalism. Finally New York: the Empire State, in the most ove rwhelming mannet, re capitulation, we give the majorities for thes Republican candidats for Auditor General tintous in the counties referred to—to show a: a sweeping from office withont a single excep- Lancaster Chester Allegheny 4.428 Lawrence 1,501 | Crawford 1.417 Tioga and Potter 2763 5,191 | State voice raised in his behalf ? 27.220 | go poking among the inlets of the Lakes on Majority in twelve Republican counties | the Canada coast, to find what comfort’ ho Who for a moment could have | 0an in the marshes of Michigan, jo the bleak believed, if they had not been informed by | winds of Wisconsin, or on the snow-clad tho sapient editors of the Republican papers | prairies of Minnesota—and find his retreat that such an overwhelming majority could, have been rolled up for the Republican | stricken lowa. t counties, when at the same time the Repub- | New England States, and foar or five of the licans “were away fighting the lattles of | newest and sparsest in the North west, their country, and the Democrats r emained | among the Northern Lakes, are all that re- | main, to give a word of comfort, as States, Congressional elections, have, every one of of thirty-three Umted States. Listening to | bukes the madness of the Administration, and demands that its course be changed. — The city of New York, whence the encour- agement for the administration to incur far- ther debt has been drawn, has, in a por- manner, by a two-thirds vote, tion every so-called *‘Kepublican” it could reach, said to the President that he must change his policy and his advises. In the radical policy he has been pursu- ing, where can Mr, Lincoln now lock for State support ? lle has heard the united 4.947 | voices of all the Central States—of all the 2.414 great States of tae North, For countenance in farther pursaing that c urse. he must look to the already broken vote of poverty- | pinched New England —that uneasy corner of the Continent—and even there he will {ind Conneticut against him. Outside of those pestilent Stites, where is there a He must cut off when he has gotten through famine- Four or tive of the little to the policy of the man who was elected President of thirty-three Sovercign States, stretching across the content, and from® the Lakes to the Mexican Gulf—abounding in all manner of riches. The country has pronounced against the © radical policy of Mr. Lincoln’s present ad visers. Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. Governments are for the people, not peo ples for governments. Rulers—Governors, Presidents, or what- ever else —when they disregard the duly ex pressed will of the people among whom they bear ralo, and when they add to this, per- sistent violations of the Constitution of their country, are despicable and execrable. In an orderly manner, according to ‘con: stituted forms, all the great States of the North have spoken. From the Hudson, from the Atlantic, to the Mississippi, one is an angry voice! Let its demands be listened to. The people are accustomed to _ demand, not to beg of their official trustees. That demand is that the Administration return into obedience to the Constitution, and strive, henceforth, to avoid the wanton and disloyal violations of it, that have rous ed, and almost united, the North against it EE JOE PARSONS OF BALTIMORE, Joe enlisted in the 1st Maryland regiment and was plainly a ‘rough’ originally. As wo pnassad along the hall of the Military - Hospital we first saw him, crouched near an opon window, lustily singing “I’m a bold soldier boy ;’ and observing the broad band age over his eyes, T said, ‘What's your name, my good fellow ¥ * Joe, gir,” he answered, ‘Joc Parsons.’ * And what is the matter with you ¢ * Bind, sir : blind ag a bat? “In battle 2’ * Yes--at Antietam, Both eyes shot out at one clip.’ : “ Poor Joe was in the front, at Antietam Creek, and a Minnie ball had passed direct- ly through his eyes, across his fl destroy- ing his sight forever, Ie was but twenty years of age ; but he was as happy as lark ! ‘Tt is dreadful,’ I said. ‘I'mvery thankful I'm alive, sir. kt might ha’ been worse, yer see,” ho contin- ued. And then he told us his story. * [ was hit,” he said, ‘and it knocked me down. I lay there all night, and next day the fight was renewed. I could stand tho pan, yer see, but the balls ‘were flyin’ alt round, and [ wanted to get away. I could n’t see nothin’, thongh. [ waited und lis tened ; and at last I heard a feller groanin’ beyond me. ‘Hello? seys I dlello, yourself,” seys he. ‘Who be yer 2’ says [— ‘arebsl ¥' ‘You'ro a Yankee,” says he.— ‘So 1 am,’ says I. “What's the matter with you ¥’ ‘My leg's smashed,’ says he. ‘Cant yer walk I’ ‘No.’ ‘Can you see? ‘Yes. ‘Well,’ saya I, ‘your's a d—d rebel, but will you do me a little favor 3 ‘I will,’ says ho, ef I ken.” The. I says, ‘Weil. ole. butternut, I can’t see nothin. My eyes is knocked out ; but I ken walk. Como over yere. Lets git out of this, You pint the way, an I'll tote you oyer the ficld on my back.” ‘Bally for you,’ says ho.- Wo shnok hands on if. I took a wink outen his can- teen, and he got on to my shoulders. - [ did the walkin for both, an he did the naviga- tin. An ef he didn’t make me carry him straight into a rebel colonel’s tent, .a mile away, 1'm a liar! came up, an says he, ‘Whar d’yer como from, who be yer ?' I told him. He said 1 was done for, and couldnt do no more shootin ; an ho sent me over to our lines. — So, after three days, I came down hero with the wounded boys, whero we're doin protty well, all things considered.’ ¢« But you will never see the light again, my poor fellow,” 1 suggested, sympatheti- cally. ¢ That's 50,’ he answered, glibily ; ‘but 1 cant h Ip it, you notice. [did my dooty —got shot pop in the eyo —an thats my mis fortin, not my fault—as the old man said of hig blind hoss. But— ‘I'm a bold soldier boy,’ he continued, cheerily renewing kis song : and wo left hin in his singular merriment. Poor, sight-less, unlucky, but stont-hearted Joe Parsons !—ZLetter from Alexandria, Va. LL ee Tar GrrAar Woor, Case: —It will berecol- ted that a large quantity of wool, on its way from Montreal to New York, wasgscizad at Green Island a few days ago. It §as char ged that the wool had been entered at tho custom house at less than its value, and competent judges inspected each bale and made an appraisal. On Friday last the in- vestigation terminated. Foty-one bales, valued at $7,000, were confiscated and sent to the custom house at Plaitsbmg, where they will remain until sold for thé benefit of the United States. t The remainder of the wool, valued at a. bout $35,000, was released and forwarded to its destination, —4/bany drgns. ———— ee 07 Blank checks, on W. F. Reynolds & Uo., from five cents upwards for Sale af this Office, united organized voice has been raised. Et Howsever, tho colonel | § | -