an elegant geld hioaded cane to ton. C. L. * ites,” When theres anything ‘up,’ they 4 - Jous exclamation was, 1 hope “there wan * ‘enough officers yet to supply the thousand "freedom to ‘the free—honorable alike in “unflinching fortitude in mantaining . principles he believed to be right. spilt from a waganat Columbus, :Ohio and « peration, gn we are glad ef it. . : ! Bt reference to persona call mcr to those made free by ¢ grese abolishing slavery he The plan consiating of th commended, not but thilt 8 tion of: the national authority wonld be accepted withous ita adoption. = Nor will the war, nor proceedings under the proclamation of September 22, 1862, be "oe lal — aabion. of. this plan. not, would bring restoration, and thereby stiy buh. f §24 . And notwithstanding this plan, the re- commendation that Congress provide by law for compensating any State whi adopt emancipation. before this Seve heen acted upon is earnestly renewed: Such would only be an advance part of the plan, and the same arguments apply: to bath. This plan-ia recommended as a means, not in exelusion of, but additional to all others, for restoring and’ preserving the national authbrity thronghout the Union. - Tne sub- Ret in presented exclusively nits economi- eal awpést, © The plan would, I am:confi- dent, secure peace more speedily; and main- tain it more permanently, than can be done by fora alone} while all’ it would cost, cofisidering amounts, and manner of pay want, and times of payment, would be ea- rier paid than will be the additional cont of the war. if we rely solely upon:force. It is wush—very ‘much—that it would cost nu Llaod at sll ! . The plan is proposed as permanent con- stitutional law. It einnet become such without the concurrence of, ‘firet two-thirds of Congress, and afterwards, three-fourths of the Staten. The fequisite three fourths. of the States will iecessarily include seven of the Slave States, Their conengrence, if; obtained, will give assurance of their sever- ally adopting emancipation; at no very dis- tant ‘day, opon the “constitutional terme. This assurance would end the struggle now, and rave the Union forever. : * solos I do not forgetthe gravity which shoul characterize a paper: addressed. to the Con- gress of the nation, by the Chief Magistrate of the nation. Nor do I forget that some of you ‘are my seniors; Ror that many of you have more experience than I, in the conduct of public affairs. - Yet I trust that in.view of the great responsibility restimg upen me, | you ‘will perceive no want: of respect. to Youréelyen, in any undue earnestners I may | weem to display. It iv donbied, then, that the laa I pro- pore, ifadoptad, whould - shorten the war, ‘and thawdessen “its ‘expenditure of none; ‘and of blood. It in ‘doubted thas jt would veators ‘the national “authority and national prosperity, and perpetuate both indefinitely ? i hted' that we here—Congress and 3 Wtive—cnn gecure ita adoption? Will “net fhe goad people respond to a united, and ‘enrrrest appeal fram ue 2 Can we, can they. ‘by’ dy other ‘means, so cettainly, or. so “epeedily. awsnre thews vital objects? “"We oan succeed only ‘by. concert. It is not * ean anv of us imagine ‘better |” but! «ean we a/l do better?” Object whatso- ever in possible; #till: the question recur “oan we it ‘bettér 1 The dogmas of the ‘quiet ‘past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The accasion is piled: high with difficulty, and we must rise with the ocaa- Rion ® Ur cage is mew, go. we must think spew, and act anew. We must dis- enthrall otirselves, and then we shall save our country, © BL, “Fellows citizena, we cannot eseape history. “We, of this Congress ind this administra. “Sion, will be remembered in. spite of out’ selves. No persondl aig-ificance, or insig- nificance, cun spire one. or another. of us. “Phe fiery trinl'thtough which we pass, will light us down, inthoner or dishonor; to the ateat generation, Wa say we are for he Union. The world ‘will ‘not forget that, we eny this, We know how tu save the Union. The world knows we do know how to save it. ~ We—even we here—hold the ‘power and hear the responsibility. In giving freedom ti the slave, we assure what we give, and ‘what we preserve, We shall nobly save, or ‘meanly lose; the beat hope of earth. The way is plain, peaceful, generous, just—a way which, if followed, the world will foreyer applaud, and God ‘must forever bleks. neil ABRAIIAM LINCOLN. December 1, 1862. © «1 3 ; nb A MA i A + Trarron” CiNgn !—At a handsome "entertainment at the residence of Judge Morse, in Dayton, on the evening of the 21st, the Democratic ladies of Payton presented Vallandigham as 8 token of their respect. and as evidence of their admiration of his those Val. made a pleasant anc appropriate speech in reply. i ——— eB ee Somehow editors can never be favor- ‘are‘hardly tolerated arid when there is sny thing ‘‘down” woeful prayers are offered for their absence. A country girl, who was had all her finery “mussed’’ and dirtied ay for some time insenaible. Her first tremu- ne Edstox in sight. =A New Oileans correspondent of ihe New York Express writes that Gen, Butler has teut the three remaining Episcopal Clr: gymen of that city to durance vile—fwo to Fort Layfayette, and oneto Fort Pickens— for omitting the prayers for the. President. General Butler is determined to procure goine *'secesh’’ prayers for OL Abe, haviag dotibiless lost all confidence in .the efficacy and saving grace of those “that : prooceed from, the Abolition &lergy.—Cin. Engni- yer. DORSEY 52 Ladin: - KrroseNg.— A few days. ago Kerosene | vil took a tremendous rise. and sold “in, Philadelphia as Tigh as 1,10 per gallon.— It has now taken the other tack and is go- ing down as frst as it: went. vp. It will probably be down to fifty cents again in a few wheka, The rise was unnoubtedly the effest of speculation. A fuw of the specu Iators have probably been ‘bitten’ in the yma eee A-Cormssioner oF CoxTRABAND, —The War Depa: tment is ‘about to nt - from, civil life a Commissioner to loo after the: interests of the negro contrabands:. now. in _ charge of the government. Exchange. i . Certainly. Anything to bleed the Treasu- «ry.»+@o in, gentlemen. Th re ste not half of hungry Abolitionistswho-iare. applying, gor chance to, *“gerve their” beloved coun: ary oils : oe § oi . . & Phe Tis Boston Pest thinks it. singulsr that, while all kinds of printing and wri ting peper should te going up in price, Twa timely adoption, I doubt | a * AN % ha Aa er A RE ANRC GB So Vow P. GRAY : » ¥ BELLEFONTE, PA. Friday Morning, Dec. 12, 1862. ———————————————— “Te PRINTER.” —We have received this elegant publication for the month of No- vember. It contains much of general inter- est-to.the craft, amongst which js a re-pub- lication of the Constitution of the National ‘Typographical Union. Also, sn interesting descriptive article from the pen of T. O. Hansard, upon Dr, William Church and his printing inventions. Every member; of th, fratetwity should have a copy of ¢ The Printer'” if he wishes to keep *‘booked up" Jin all the improvements of the ‘‘ noble art.’, Address John Greason & Co., Publishers, No. ‘HY; Spruce Street, N. Y. Tag Eprtor oN A ‘ Barrer,” — The editor has gone to Philadelphia, leaving the paper | 1n the hands-of ‘the devil. ‘The young imp; of course, feels quite important in view of is promotion, and, as he is a chap of more than ordinary smartness, the readers of the Watchman need not ‘be surprised should the paper prove more interesting than usual. As for the editor, we presume he will come home with the headache ‘or some- thing else,’ He left in company wiih a law- yer—a “Notary Public,” by the way,—a fact which has given us some uneasiness, and which, we fear, is but a poor guaratitee Y [for his good behavior while abroad. How- ‘ever, we hope: fr the best and. earnestly pray. that he be ‘led not into temptation, but delivéred from evil.” jo ) Tue PresiDRNT's MEssacr,—We publish this document on the ou'side .of to-day’s paper. ‘The editor being absent, however, we do not feel authorized tr spend an 6pin- ion upon itiin the columns of the. Watch- man, “preferring. rather, to leave ‘that for him to do when he again returns to his post. In the meantime, we advise all the readers of this paper fo give it ap attentive ‘perusal so that. they may be. able to digest, -under- standingly and intell:gently, ‘ite contents: and whatever remarks the now absent ‘eifi- tor may feel disposed to make upon them. ‘The Message ‘is, probably, .as brief as ¥ document of that kind could. be made at thig perilous and’ most important crisis ins the affairs of our couritry. This'is ont rec- ommendation.. - If. it-have any others, our readers will, doubtless, find them out by the time they finish its perusal. ey Ae Fire 15 Lock HAVEN.—A tremenduous fire broke out in Lock Haven on’ Saturday morning last, about 4 o'clock. The flames raged with uncontrollable fury and in afew heurs two entire squares in the most bus: ness part of the town, were laid in ashes. The fire originated in a furniture shop in the rest of the Bank and spread from 1 uild- ing _to building with the most frightful ra- | pidity. Two fire companies were telegraph= ed:for from Williamsport, but, owing to the occurrence of a fire there near about the same time, they did not arrive till" late in the forenoon, Scott's Hall, the Bank, the « Clinton House” and tho Post-Office are among the most prominent buildings de. stroyed. The wind blew a perfect hurricane all the time, thus neutsalizing all the efforts of the citizens and lending a most appalling grandeur to the scéne. < The:loss is estimated at from three to four hunnred thousand. dol- lars, a considerable portion of ‘which was covered by insurance. The burnt district now presents a mostsorrowful appearance. The. fire in’ Williamsport on the same mght, consumed a large ‘soap and candle manufactory belonging to Taylor & Co.— We believe no other damage was done. aad abies 17 The Army of the Potomac” since the remoyal of its great leader, Gen. Mc- Clellan, hss done little or nothing. Gen. Burnside; though an accomplished and gal- lant officer, finds it not possible to accom- plish impossibilities, and ere long, ‘we pre- sume, he, too, will share the ‘fate of Me. Clellan and Buell. The great hue and cry against McClellan was raised ‘by the radi- «als, ost: nsibly, on accourt of his slowness, (though we Tanah privilege of attributing it to an entirély different motive.) . We ask our Abolition friends now, in all candor, to tell us what has been accomplished by and since that removal 2 From the tone of the radical press, we were left to infer that it was MeUlelian alone who stood in: the way of a triumphal entry into Richmond, yet al- most two months have rolled away since his displacement and the army is still station sry. "There isa screw loose somesshere and the conviction involuntarily. forces itself up- on the mind, that the Administration’ has made a great mistake. . McClelian’s removal was only another:of ‘that series.of egregious blunders which haye'rendered this Adminis- tration ridiculous in'the eyes of the world, which have proven: it Hotoriously incom: | petent to manage the affairs of the country if this trying time-and which have paralyzed. all the bravest efforts of the immense arm- ies under its control. We believe’ General Burnside is doing all in bis power. to strive at great results, but the very. fact: taat he. hag, a8 Ie ‘beers ‘unable’ to do” anything, proves, beyond ull doubt, the utter;injustice of Mcllelisa’s removal. We see! no hope of anytting better, until the Administration of allowing its Generals.te: cots interference ; but we have no - jeg that that line of polity will be adopted as ng as the Jreaen nincompoops in pow: er, remain at Washington. In the mean- time, we expect soon to hear of apother Chare's green back paper should be depre- njatice change in the command of the * Army of the Potomac.” deal ot it spi. adopts the policy of work ‘out their owt pl without ‘dny of: Se eT The fol- lowing is the Major's answer. [tis so falf of butnor that we think he otight to be for. was wounded al the battle of Shiloh, and” now, as he gays, unable to do anything. — The poctions'fiarked , qudtationel Bin be recognized 8s extracts from the letter of 7 “Wxsr UsioN, Towa. November 15. 1862. : To the, Books "of the Democratic’ Watch- {imanw—My Dear Bogks :—Not my Books exactly, but the Books of those into whose hands they have fell. "4 1 would say that I have been & reader “of the Watchmayp from Vol, 6, No. 18 to Val. 7 No. 17, and most assuredly can’t find fault certainly due you from me; ad it. is from: you to somebody else. You ought to’ have. your pay in order that you ‘can pay somebody else, That's flat... : Fe + Of course; you don’t’ wish to force the matter, at all, but ’tis as "tis ‘and it can’t be an 'lis-er.” The ‘‘law"” prescribesthe rem- edy, but [dont believe there is a big enough fool,in Bellefonte to-undertake: to enforce the civil law at this stage of the "game. - I * meet you with a hearty response,” but I can’t, for the life of me, see where the $2 .50)s coming from. I-havn't gut it to my name and what makeés it worse, - ‘neither has any acquaintance of mine got ‘it-—that will lend Rectan ui 4 otlardar aunty | The fact is, Mr. “Books,” you must dis- pense with me til ‘the + three-years-ar-du- gon 4 ring-the-war-or-sooner-discharged™ is’ up. — You. see; I've. been so/diering for a litile more than a year and a-half and; conse-, quently, ain’t very ¢*flush.”’« I got. my «lfc stove up. at the little* squirmish” at Shiloh and can’t do much any ‘more,’ wich makes it very bad about: soldiering”’, just abont this ‘ime, for it lays me on the shelf « forever hereafter.” 1 fecl very bad about it, but can’t cry, for ‘Taughing. * (Between you and me; 1 wonder if that js’ t‘discour- aging enlistmens.”’) © Coo I would say, jast ta fill out this sheet; my dear © Books,” {hat nearly everybody has left here for the: war. but the Belléfont- ers, and if one’ ‘mother's’ don’ of tiem has gone, T°hdpe fo ga to=— Pisgah? + Nary’® a one of them,” Tiicle Jimmy McMasters talked about going, but. you 'kbow: if you do know him (and you. must. know. him il ‘you know anybody) that his taikis a. good ; . oulgin hop orred “Uncle ++ Jonny Irvin” is ‘still on earth and 1 can’t sed but he's just as young as. ever ; but if ‘he was young.enough tobe a baby he wouldn't enlist, ‘for he thinks the war is a ¢ bore.” “Jim'* woulda't go un- less he's drafted, and’ then it'll be only. for nine months, ‘which he thiuks preferable to nine years or during'the ‘war. * Johnny," ho {we call him * bloat” here) bas no idea = 5) (Continued from fast Number. ) 1f the Deity *cominitids - or approves of scts and fruits whieh are wepe bio from | our predecessors; to the Major. Iages, laying waste of fruitful provinces, the letter : ae : EBiroying.- rodaetions of x “4 (Por the Watehsian) § <1 «| art and science, retarding, civilization, pro- encourages intemperance; theft, murder, vi | olence. It'sows the seeds-of vice’ and im- earth, and thus:multiplies moral and . phys- ical'évils on the family of man.’ Strip the custom of war of the fig-leaf covering; and | forms of devotion, which traditional religion- 0 | ists have thrown around it—take away the with'it ; although, at times, it has been a « Jeetlc’* more *“ Democratic” than I have oesn accustomed to. But I cant say that have disliked it to any extent for ** a’ that,” 1 dont olame you for wishing to be ‘sget- tled up,” for who, in" the ‘devil's’ name, wouldn't wish to be, these war times, and that as ‘“goon as possible 2” ‘L here isn'€ a partisle of doubt but what you've been at great “indebtedness” for * paper, ink, &c.,” a part of which I have been the recipient of, and the ‘amount is not approved War. |, + destruction,. ‘how made legal 1 Byis ita instruments ? Men filling high: places. “filling the office of President or Governor, loved country heen the scene of carnage, “of POLITICAL CORRUPTION. ‘Who ¢an deny this? Whe; speaking the * trath, éan’ say ought else, and who.can dery the fact that many misters iol;the gospel have been | and are now deeply contaminated with this mystery of “iniguity,”” POLITIOAL COR- RUPTION 2. And, how compres thelcon- duet of these teachers with the precepts and brother may succeed in butchering brother: suv." “Ndy; verilgmot. . Then said Jesus 13 place ; for all they that take the sword shall | perish. with.the;sword,— Marr. xxV1, 52d, + Plat wars incompa ible with: the will and ‘attributes of God, may ‘be proved by the concurrent testimony of divine revela tion—the scriptures of trath, and the ey- denees of his goodness, derived from & car ful view of external vatare: _ By divine revelation, 1 mean an inward senso or perception of the will of the Deity, ‘spoke or made known immediately ‘to the 86ul ; ‘the only uiiversal and infallible teach: of going te. war at all, for he has registered | erof human duty, a distinct sense of intelli- himself “alien”! and has already gought the gence, differing.from’ the. naturel got science protection of the Norwegian Government. Bill Houk, 1 think, would go if Horace Greeley and the. Tribune, woula go, but not without. - There are a great many wounded soldiers coming back now, who: don,tqmte coerce” With the Abolition “view of the of man, and'as mmely superior: to : natural Teds ad the réasan of man is superior to the insling} of the lowest orders of the ani- mal creation... LT ¥ ; Leip rag ‘it=is called. * ‘the | grace of ‘God ad brings safvation:‘and; hes matter, and sensible mon begin to 100k be-{ appeared unt all me, teaching ‘he to de- fore they Jump. ol ee Hoping that yoa will hold-on awhile fer the §2,50 and hot get mad at mo’ because 1 can’t pay just now, I remain your érippled exDorg” of asoldier. La "woh MAJOR JONES. i BOB Bray _ ¢¢ Stand by Burnside a8 you have stood by me, and all will be well.” + . We have read the speeches of kings and emperors and commanders, . when. sudden adversity overtoek them, ‘and. stripped of power, they Were compelled to go into ‘ex ile... For no man is sure of his ' sceptre or his sword in this.uncertain world... © Bit we ever read'a épeech that, bears ny alk ungodliness and, worldly lusts, to live ‘oberly; righteously, and godly in this pres. ent world.” . Tt ig the «still small voice of divine love,” speaking the langtibge this is the way, walk init.” 4 | “While thé conscleios may become: defi Jed,” perverted, “sealed as witha tiot iron.’’ through: the habitual abiise of man's free agency. until it connives at the irregularities of iuman conduct, even to the shedding’ of 'human-blood, and all the: evils * connected with. the practice of war, this “still small voice of divine love, has, in_ all, ages, and {n all the stages of human progress, howev- er diversified, spoken” the same: langusge, and produced wherever it has been obeyed the same effects. . It has faught’ mankind impress of & nobler spirit; a “truer aman. &'‘in‘évery age, that the only course. of buman better patriot and a greater. gh , than these few . worda. of . General. M'Clellah, | that in’ which men endeavor He was Having the'srmy he had esiled into being. Degraded'at the moment wher 8ac=| leads man out of the:spirit of - bh from under the ihffuénce of malignant pass- cess was hovering around his, triumphant standard ; turned Lack froth the field where, he was soon to redesm his:country and. res- tore a shatter¢d goverdment #“guperossded | ==theseare the effects, by a subordinate; and ¢onipelled to make over to him the donimand of, the victorious legions who loved him.with devotion verg- ing on idolatry, io “word of complaint breaks from bis bleeding - noble ‘ beart, but with a voice clear, steady, glorious | in its tones, like the clearness that.calls to battle, hie ‘says £°1% 15 ais ob abhpd, | « Sand by Burnside as you have stood by me, and sll willbe wll" °° That gave the keynote to the army and thefcountry. Every soldier stood by ;Bura- side {every cilizen “stood by Burnside. —! fire or For all the friends of M'Clellan are Kidhag nection with conduct, which i& Kbasptable | goodness and, perfe ons, of | don, It vedéends hie Sui the unbiidied in: dulgensen of upgediess asd worlaly lus, Sore, it es, - when | obeyed with positive and undeviating cer tainty, and 88 no éffect can be" produced without sn-adequate cause, 80. it proves with the clearness:of a al démonstra- wars, and fightings Are impossible ; for it and guidance of Divine love to bate Qgsire 10 deitroy bis fellow-man. ~%, hou. shalt love fhe Le with all thy wind soul and strength.” ig the first and eat commandment; and incon. tothe country, and while they do nat o © | thy id a . “Bontaibs, .adoor- him less, they luve Lier more. ary Hlergio man! He that ruleth “his own and that greatoess is thine. ite vey. Te N.Y. Obert od asl Gate avaln on lied (0"a collation ‘at the. Government Contrs- band Boarding House; in Washington, on Thanksgiving dsy. Wonder how the poor soldiers in the field fared on that day *! spirit 18 greater than bo that taketh & eity,f gia. ‘Jesus rived : IF Two thousand negroes were tréated ding to thie testimony of the blessed Jesus; he sibstanse-of sll the law and.the - Proph- were God's coma) | Whiey are justoas they. the days of Jesus“Cbrist:i The Apostle John, says: “ 1fsny man éay he ‘loves God whom he bas not seen and bates bis brother whom he bas seen, he is a liar, and the truth is not in him,’ —shewing the utter hibiting the spreading of christianity ; . war morality broadcast among the nations of the vail of false glory which deluded mortals have attached “to it, and these'ars ‘its reah- ties. , 1t is safe to suy, that’ unless Divine: Goodness approves of these things, bo does WALI war, Bit eget iodo of. death, bloodshed, and murder, wd inequity. . ‘Who are “Study, O man, ‘whothou “arty” Remem- ber. thou {hy destination. Go not dcwn to the grave. with the blood of thousands fas: tened to your garments, though you arenow placed inthe Congress Hall or Senate Cham- ber, you. are still but.man, and sooner or fa- ‘ter you a8 well‘as se; niust appear before the *“JUDGDMENT BAR OF GOD; « What consolation’ will 1K¢ honors of war be'to us then; where true justice will be rendered to ‘all, without respeet to.any. . Think. ye not, that the tears of widows or the cries of the | orphans have fot dlrcady ‘gone ‘up against -you.:. For over eighteen months has ‘our be- bloodshed and murder, the legitimate fruit examples of Jesus Christ, whose injunctions sre directly opposed to all wars and fight- ings *-, Ministers of the gospel, or profess- ing: to be, standing in the pulpit preaching and praying for-the success.of one portion of the army over another," what does: such preaching or praying imply ¥' Simply that Ts itnjot soy: reader # Venly is it so.— Pleading with the Godof «LOVE. to: aid and assist in so-doing, Can authority for: such teaching be found in" and among, the precepts.and examples of him, who came to. unto Péter, Put up again thy sword into its impossibility of fulfilling the first command, the in jolatifig she seven 1f he iid ions ‘Whe and ht! he TROESU | ME There} r ar, Bit wh ceo’ ‘panied with the ¢time of stealing ; robbery and plunder form 8 pat of the system, and are acknowledg who actually grant licenses to men to com- Bw ifemr bye ol * THOU SHALT NOT KILL.” War is IR Be Qu pr -_ pI nd bute beings; which the nations. of the earth have sanctioned, and by which they sim to. do each other the greatest possible” injury.» Thechjef business of war isto kill men, women and children. It isa. low estimate to say that'two millions of human beings have been on an annual average, killed by war during the last five thousand years.— It is unreasonable and absurd to believe, that this commandment is to be violated with impunity by Divine authority, which would be the case if wars was commanded by. the Deity, or consistent with his will. ** God is love, and they that dwell in love :{ dwell in God, and God dwelleth in them.” “The visdom that cometh down ‘from sbove is first pure, then peaceable, gentle and easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality and without hy- pocrisy,” and by the teachings'thereof man- kind never has been, and never can be, iu- structed in the art of war, or led to practice it’iu any ot its features. **God hath called us to peace,” The kingdom of God is right- eousness, peace and joy in the Holy Ghost." * Live in peace, and :he:God of love and of peace shall be with you." ' «Whosoever | bateth his brother, is a_mardérer, and’ ye now that no murderer hath ‘eternal life abidiog in him.” . I might go on to fill pa- ges with similar passages, taken. from .al- ‘most every scriptare writer, and thus bring forward a+ cloud of witnesses,” whose tes- timony should tend to . one, point, preving thut these writers:believed tho Deity to bes % (3od ‘of love and of p:ace,” and not a God of hatred and of war, and that'it isonly ev- ery *‘good and perfect gift,” that ‘cometh down from the Father of lights, in whom ‘there is neither variableness nor shadow of turning.” Its’ impossible’ for sny one carefully to study eternal nature without perceiving that the benevolence of the Crea- extended dominions. The Universe with all its multitudmous races of Beings with which itis peopled, is manifestly under the ‘care of one .common Father, wko openeth his hand and supplieth the wants : of every living creature. Ho “ maketh his sun to shine on the.evil and on the good, and seu: deth rainon the unjust, as well as on the just.” Fava 40 the Deity are unfolded to our finite under: standings, they reveal a work of benevo- Jence and Tove: All things sre made sub- geryiefit {6°a | universal principle of order, by which bappingss and enjoyment’ are in- tended to be realized by every graduation | of living existenges..- God has assigned to every creature ite sphere in the creation, and within the boundaries fixed for its de- 'velopment, he has placed the means of en- joyment. . As:onestardiftereth from anoth- | er star in glory, so do these ‘his creatures {excel each other in’thb scale of intelligence and being. Man was made for society, not ‘todo injury, but to do good. 4'to live in'continual hostility to his own flesh, ‘and Fegard bis fellow-man as his enemy.— Such an intention on the part of the Crea tor, would be destitute of benevolent design. «God hath made of one blood, all the na- '| tions of mon that dwell apon: the earth,” he, bath sown in the heart of man the seeds | of every, vittuous affliction. These be in- tended should: produce, these acts of veciproeal kindness and friendship which so abundantly widen. the horizon of human en- jogyments, The gift of reason, and that still higher gift, emanation from the Divine mind with Which man 18 endowed, furnishes a sufficient proof of his elevation above the beasts that perish, and bis creation for no- ler pursuits, than to be the enemy and des- troyer of his fellow men. : Ea (70 BE CONTINUED.) f TH a8, The President's Message. CRITICISMS OF THE ABOLITION PRESS. +The fullowing extracts from the Abolition journs edited by men of brain and _ pirit— not mere toadies, like Forney and hi# vlass ‘—give agood idea of the opinion enter: 1 tion { d to be consistent with : the tor is manifest in every part -ofhis widely | ‘As far as thé intentions and purposes of lle was not than their contemptible for the living. { made to the departm ww d , the reader ofthe mess: would fot gles the field and an army on the ocean. that we had an 2 n tis strangely barren of every word or ides’ Goward mi . vi Boat a word of commisers- The: ave wounded and dead. or. si. that could lead one to suppose that war of thousands $ since the preceding message was penned, or that the insurgents had ex- 'haus'ed th eir resources of blood and tre as- ure to overthrow the federal government, lives and their money in noble, self-sacrifi- ing. ‘efforts to sustain tha government under the shock. No word of sympathy with the past, or of cheer for the: furure. * * *We The Bpringfleld Republican says: Not a few will say that the President seems almost wholy oblivious to the great crisis that is upon the country, and the mo- méntous necessity that rests’ upon the gov- ernment; whije he is absorbed in his scheme of compensated emancipation, the realiza- tion of which is int he far oft future, if it is to come at all. Others still will scout plan altogather and declare it 8 wast it'is so palpable to ey war is the business of the hour, and that ia-by war to the utter subjugation ‘of his of time and energy: to censider it at all, while everyone that earuest it the slaveholders, that slavery is to be abolish- ed, and not by the consent of the slavehold- ers themselves. The Oswego Commercial Times, forget- ting that Lincoln's stump speeches were not written by him, and that his messages were says: We confess we are disappointed in the message. , Since he become President, Abra ham Lincoln seems to have abandoned alto- gether that forcible and eloquent style which rendered his speeches famous. We Inok in vain for any such ringing sentences as those contsined in his impromptu speech at the Cooper Institute, prior to his nomina- tion for the Presidency. The message is plain, straight forward and rather heavy.— He makes no appeal to the feelings, he louch- es none of the finer emotions of the human heart, he takes no effort to stir up ‘the pa- ‘txsotiem of the people to high and lofty deeds. for Union and Liberty. Does the evation of a man to the Presidency blot el- out of his mind all the eloquence and poetry it may have pr viously contained? The Albany Statesman frankly condemns the message as wholly unworthy the Exe- | cutive who writes it, and the Congress whom it is addressed : to “ We confess to a sad disappointment in the perusal of the President's annual mes- gage, We looked to it with profound inter- est for a full and fair presentation. of the state of the country in view of its pending troubles and impending perils, yet when are looking for bread, we are given a stone. Itis s great pity that Mr, Lincoln could not discern the calls of his bleeding country for plain, straightforward, energetic action in suppressing the slaveholders’ rebellion— adhering to the Uonsti-ution as it is, snd simply availing himself of his determina. tion to employ the slave in the service, if his owner shall con inue in revolt at the end of the prescribed period. He is honest enough in all he says and purposes, ‘but the country is heartily sick of hearing of noth- ing but his honesty. : We hope now that the message is dehver- ed, that Congress wall treat it with all prop er consideration, but go to work to strength” en the army of the Union, for its preserva- tion, and to lighten the burthens of the tion, by preserving it from any further im- positions either in civil or military life The whole loyal population are crying for a termination of the war, by its suppression, without compromise or temporization. The President and his Cabinet do not yet seem to | be fully sensible of this cry. Will the pres- ent Congress prove itself sufficiently: intelli- gent and disinterested to prompt the Execu- tive to a discharge of his duty? If it does not, there is a “manifest destiny’’ for this . 33 nation that only God can avert. These quotations are exclusively from ministration papers, and we regret that cannot add an extract similar in spirit and ad- we | of Gen. Scott. 4h Te T Organizing Taleut of Me- Clellan. ening Journal urlow Weed, the end of Sécretary “He was ealled to Washington. “at the urgent request He was called by the unanimous voice of the loyal people. He found the Army of Potomac. a. hideous mob.—He found mutiny 1ife in the camp, and insubordination the presiding genius of the field. He found Washington filled'with drunken soldiers ; Colonels and Brigadier Generals laying ‘dead drunk’ at mid-day in hotel bar-room: , reg- iment whose commanders had nat visited them for days ; diseci- line laughed to. scorn; riot and ‘lawlesness rampant all a long our lines, le changed all this. He brought order out of chaos. Ile reinstated discipline.. He cleaned Washington ef uniformed sots that liad so long infested it. He compelled incompetant offi cers to resign. He compelled Captans and Colonels and Briga- diers to make their headquarters with their commands, insted of at Willard’s and the National. He quelled the mutinies that threa- . tened to destroy our army. He checked the disorganizing and demoralizing tendency that “had caused such profound and genera alarm through the country. He converted a mob of w orse than undisciplined svldiers—a rabble degrade by defeat and unmanned by panic—into what even Mr. Russell, of the London T'smes, ix compelled to call ‘one of the fi- nest armies in the world.’ ‘Without the organizing genius of General McClellan, where" would we be to-day? What has been the reward of General McClellan for this great - service to the Umted States? His retirement at Trenton an- swers. : GEN. HALLACK AND A DICTATOR. The recent removal of General. McClellan following so soon after that of Buell, gives interest and importance to the views of Major General Nelson freely expressed at Louisviil: a few days before his death. Buell had not: then arrived from Nashville, but it was known that secret negotiations were on foot for his removal. — These movements Nelson denoun- ced with his usual energy: In one of his conversations with a number of leading gentlemen, he uttered the following remarkable production : line ¢ Mark my words, gentlemen ; I know Gen. Halleck thorough- ly. He is unquestionablya man | of great intellect, but heartless and utterly . unscrupulous He will tolerate no man in the army who usurps the -affections of his soldiers. His whole ‘energy is bent upon making himself dicta- tor. McClellan and Buell are in his way, and he is looking for an opportunity, -and. will seize it honesty from a single administration pres | when it comes, to remove “and, it in Pennsylvania. The Abolition press of | this State seems to be cursed with traculeut | editors who seem to glory in nothing more and Union. servility.— Patriot . rte eet ——— 7A clergyman of the Methodist Epis- copal Church, writes. to the Harrisburg Union, as follows . + If the Lord requires aman to be an Abolitionist before a man ta'theDeity, is | 5" Tmitate. the? istration party: Maker. Web 0 ed, ‘and, tion, that in the absence of those tempers: xd gispheRtioif Whisk divine 14vs S3bdgE - us nothing of the progress of the war; ~wet something. should have been said. if riot risiimponsible (or; msn tthe , inflaguee, for the information of our.own people, for or sto nl Davie tained of the message by the mord intelli: gent and independant portion of the admin- 3 a ow From the.N. Y. Evening Post. Mr. Liricoln is not & rhetorician of the Ma-. caulay school, who writes polistied Brittan- { aware sentences.” Neither is he a formal logician, whose premises and conclusions ‘éarry cofiviction’ with:them “as: irresistibly as a cannon ball carries death, His reason- ings are not always rigid oor his illustra- ‘tions happy, ane his methods are any thing but graceful. * * * Ttwill be a disap- intment to the public that the President can be a minister, I. am. certainly misin- formed. I cannot preach a sincere gospel and at the the sane time advocate & false philanthrophy.” : A — ‘GEN. BurnsmE.—A. correspon- dent of the National Intelligencer states that Gen. Burnside was born in Liberty, Indiana, of Scot~ tish parents, his father being something of the Davie Deans school, but wanting its morose- ness and sectarian bitterness. He inherits much of the deep rooted religious conviction, caniion and determination so. eminently pe- culiar to the « sons of Scotia. * Lord “ty God, | “Thou shalt love: ‘true now as they. were in. | that of people abroad: The N.:Y. Commercial Advertiser dwells also upon | this cold-blooded indifference, this apathy of sense and of consience in re- gard to the Rervices and sacrifices of war: , be "In ‘one réapeot the message disappoints us | and is indeed unsatisfactory. Tt is entirely | ‘silent on the-domestic condition of th ¢ coun- |e “Wxcept from incidental mention, . the oo 3 n 5, A y true the duys of Moses as they wire. on jen; .and:| render of the document would have no idea «of. the mighty and exhausting confiiot through which the country is passing, snd which bas been s6 fruitful of events during the past yéar. Our soldiers and sailors with their generals and comwanding aoffi- cers of every degree are passed over in to- THE OLD FLAG FOREVER Every American “Yoves_ and venerates the Stars and Stripes, ‘and is ready to defend it a ginst all foes, he they foreign or domestic. This is his pride and he’ does not | wish to’ see a negro painted on ils field.— Holmes County Farmer. oH i: Naw Tors BLeriofFor City ed Comptroller; ‘Corp je possible, todisgrace. them both. In these views Brigadier Gen- eral Jackson expressed his entire concurrence. Ten “days -after- wards Nelson was assassinated. Within three weeks-Jackson was killed at Chaplin Hills, and with- in six weeks'of the time of mak- !ing the prediction, MeCleHan-and “Buell were dismissed with’ contu- mely:* Time will show whether the dictatorship: is to be gttempt- ed, and thus perfect the prohecy. B&>They are telling a‘good "story in Troy, New. York as fol- “ows: «It was rumored: that a gentleman known to be -a loyal ‘oitizen had a secession flag flying from his house." Of course ' there was a tremendous upror, and an excated party started for the prem- ices. Un reaching the house it was found to be a lady's. balmo- ‘| ral that had’ been washed and hung from a back: window to dry. ‘The husband avowed his | determination to stand-by that flag as long-as he lived, and the effervescent crowd exploded and jppeared.: i - # x0 Shue x ion Coun VaRiEry oF Corors—Republis sel; and: for Alderman in nine cans are usually black ; but Dem- | wan ocrats, wherover you find them, are ‘true blue.’ ards took place on Tuesday, and ! resulted as anticipated, in a com: | plete Democratic trumph.