Tere AE Original Pogtry, {Written for the Democratic Watchman. A LOVE SONG. BY JOE W. FUREY. I. I know a maiden fair and bright, Who wears a snow-white plume ; Whose presence makes dark places light, And drives away their gloom. XL She walks the streets with modest grace, Yet speaks to high and low; And smiles that light her gentle face Like sunshine, ccme and go. IH. Her soft hand’s touch is wondrous joy, Her clasp, a world of bliss; Her smile is love without alloy, And life, her mniden kiss! Iv. Oh! precious more this maid to me Than mines of wealth untold! And dearer far, her purity, Than gems of rarest gold! No Whois this maiden fair and bright. That wears this plume of snow, Whose presence lends such joyous light, To all the vale below? VI, Ah?! ask me not—I would not speak To vulgar crowds her name; I'd scarce inseriboit on the peak Of Heaven's OrirLasiye ! BeLueroxte. PA, Feb. 2d,, 1863. SAT ee SMiceellangous, THE MOST UNREASON/NG DELU- SION THE WORLD £VER SAW. In the painful progress of our race tow-. ard that indefimte peifectability that it for- ever tends to, there are many sad things re- corded in its arnals, but nothing that can cowpare for a moment with the monstrous unreason and bloody stupidity of the exist ing phase or condition of the American peo Ra ta Lo Bn ens STEERS ple. of twenty five years to crush the Democra I'he British Aristocracy waged a war 2g of France, and thus (0 ¢ save’ their own 8 from being corrupted by ¢ French principles,” that was to keep the great ip norant, voteless and voiceless mas-es from comprehending their natural rights, and thus to hold them in shject submission to the ru- ling class. During these many years wm against principles that, once admitted and understood fin England, would have soon upset the aristocracy and given freedom aud happmress to the people, the great, stolid and slavish multitude were ramyan! in their loyaliy and as bitter agains: ‘French principles as the very aristocracy that deln ded them, and made them the miserable ols of their own deadly warfare nga And so with t body of the Spanish people. When i crushed out the miserable and de wy on the Continent. vo tauched Bourbons, snd introduced extensive and benificent reforms ju that prie-t ridden land. the ignorant, blind and bigoted people fought as desperately against their own welfare, liberty, manhood and prosperity. as cver the French themselves fought for Tudeod, history is full of these things, where vast masses of men, giv- en over to monstrous delusions, have battled desperately against their own welfare. But in view of all the cir@@mstances, the free. dom, bra very. intelligence and progress of the American pecple, and the times we Jive in, this civil war ig, without doubt, the mos! amazing and boundless folly ever yet wit nessed in human experience, God Almighty hag made the negro Ta diff. erent and inferior being, and therefore de- signed nm for a d {ferent and inferior social position whenever and wherever in juxta position with the superior whi'e man, and to attempt to reverse the eternal order, to force the white man down or the negro up to a common level, or ** impartial freedom,” is a fully so stupen laous, a crime so awful. and an impic ty so gross and damnable, that posteri y would be less amazed at the de- struction by heaven itself, of a whole gen- eration, thus given up to the work of devils, than that it ever could have had even a score of followers. What would be thought of the madaess of a man or of a party that should attempt to undo the work of the Al- mighty Creator, and give the negro the color of the white wan, or that should try to change the color of the latter or give them an “impartial” color? Every elementary atom of the negro being differs justas wide- ly from those of the white man as the color of his: s§in, and with a specifically different albus ¢h ig, of course, a correspond- ing difference of faculties, wants and neces- sities. If, therefore, a great party should spring up in the North to change the differ: ence of color, 0 get possession of the com_ mon government of the States and use that to force an * impartia!’’ complexion on the country, it would be no more foolish, impi- ous and devilish than the anti-slaveryites. who dream of “impartial” freedom for ne- groes. Of course Massachusetts, the heaa and front of this, as of all other delusions that have disturbed the common country, kills its negroes while thas altempting to set aside the Creator and force them to be men like themselves, but the effect on the whites is not perceived or understood, But the * idea’ of Massachusetts in this yespeet, forced on South Carolina, would their liberty. end, of course, mn the destruction of both ra- ces through amalgamation. Sumner, or Lin- coln, vr Chase would rather a daughter should die than equahze or mate with a ne- gro, that is, rather than live out the dostrine he is now seeking to force on the South !— * Impartial freedom” 15, of necessity, amal- gamation, just to the extent that “it could be forced va the South, and when we reflect that a great party, representing a majority of northern voters, took possession of the common govern ent of the States to force this ** idea” on the people of the South, we surely should not wonder at their course, or at anything they Go, to save society and civ- ilization from a lunacy so abhorrent. Twen- ty-five years ago Mr. Lincoln would be mob- bed in any northern city if he ventured to avow doctrines that he now secks to engraft on this government, and though pledged to force ¢* principles” on the men and women of the South, that, rather than live out in his own household, he would prefer death, he affects to be amazed at this **causeless rebellion!” Heavens and earth ! what mad- ness! The South may have committed fol- lies and mistakes in its turn, but rather than « impartial freedom” with negroes, it better be annihilated at once, for who would not prefer immed ate massacre for bis offepring, ra her than that they should rot out gradu- ally through the veins of the scoty and semi-anmimalized negro? But, afer all, some aliowance should be made for these lunatics, who, for years, have read only one side, and shat their eyes to all the facts of the ease, and, we doubt not, that the next generation will hold men like Dix and Dick- inson to a more terrible responsibility than Chase and Sumner. lad the former said to Mr. Lincoln, ¢ abandon your lunatic notion$ of an ‘equal freedom’ and administer the government on the principles laid down by the Supreme Covrt, and then we will aid you to put down rebellion, if aid be ncces- sary,” the whole secession movement would have been brought to a halt at once, Union i8, of course, as beneficial to the southern man as the northern, to Virginia, who made it what it was. a= well as to Massachusetts, who never furnished a solitary soldier to fight its battles, and therefore a ** War for the Union" is a lie and absurdity, of course. [tis a war, on the coutrary, for * impar- tial freedom’ with negroes, for foremz the luracies and impieties of Massachuseits on the people of the South, for overthtowing our system hy amalgamating negroes into it, for the utter destiustion of the civilization of the South, under a blind aud monstrous delusion of re forming it. But, after all this mighty sacrifice of blood ard treasure will vot be in vain, gro will be settled forever. The status of the ne- This clement of our population, so essential to the cvili- za ion of the great ccufral regions of this continent, will hereafter fulfil its role in the arand futvre of American civilization, with- out interference from distant fanaticism and fotly. The negro has a nataral right io the protection of the superior white man, and the lunacies of the day explod d, this be" nificent and neecssary protection will be given h'm oferywhere, even in heniphted, besotted and cruel Massachuset 8. Mean- while. all honest and truly patriotic citizens should labor for peace, harmony and wnien with our brethren of the South. We have only to “restore the Union” to secure these blessings, to restore the government to the status of two years ago to return to a gov- ernment of white men, as defined hy the Su. preme Court, and obliterate utterly all the diableries of the interval—in short, have only to make the government in the future as wn the past, equdly bentficent tv all sections, to recover the grandeur and glovy of the great Republic. —CAUCASIAN, ——— eee Our Nexr GoverNor.— The course of the Democrats and Conservatives of New York, in the selection of Governor Seymour to th, Chief Magistracy of their Commonwealth, seems to impress the members of our party in this State with the nceessity of present. ing to our people at our nex: Gubernatorial election, a candidate possessing more than orcinary public virtue and abibty. We have received several letters from friends in different Western counties, making inquiries upon the important subject, and asking t whether Gen. Geo. W. Cass is the man for the crisis 27 The question being a-ked and without any desire or intention to champion any aspirant’s cause, sin ple justice compels us to answer that, in every point requisite to make en honest, faithful and high-toned Chief Magistrate, Gen. Cass is thorougly qualified. Singularly uncbtrusive, Gen, Cass has not, perhaps, made so much figure as one of his sound judgment might have ‘done were he of an aspiring temperament. This, however, is so much in his favor, ang is the real cause of his strength with those who are most intimate with him. In the late convention in the county, he would not permit his friends formally to present his name for the nomination for Governor; this was proper because it would imply a neces” sity for endorsement from those who were nearly all his personal and political friends, Gen, Cass’s name will be presented and sus- tained by the delegates of Allegheny county at the approaching State Convention, and. if hy be nomiuated for the important position of Governor of our great Commonweaith, we can assure our inquiring friends that he will be elected, and that he will nobly and faithfully sustain the honor, the dignity and ye rights of Peonsylvania.— P:ltshurg Dai- 1 1y Post. T INGS FINANCIAL. A negro-labor blow has been ttruck at the mechanical interests of the North. The in- fernal operations of Lincoln & Co., are now beginning to tell upon the already over-tesk- ed white workingmen of the country. Read this fact, mechanics of the Northern States, and see what you are coming to under the administration of the enemies of free white labor. There are now in the convict's pris- on at Albany forty contrabands, the freed and paid for slaves of the District of Colum- bia, under conviction as common thieves and vagabonds, incarcerated for crimes in the city of Washington, and sent to the city of Albany, and there, while in prison, put to work as shoemakers under a heavy con- tra’ t ; and are now, these black and erime- stared wrethes, after once having been pur- chased by the white man’s money, after hav- ing, nigger like, thrown the boon of freedom away by crime, being taught by Abolition contractors to take the bread from the white man’s children, put to respectable mechani- cal labor, by which every white man, and every white man’s family, are degraded. — ‘Think of this long and earnestly, white men of the North. The slaves, which have al- ready been paid for with your money, by by the fanatical crew who have control of the government, are now robbing you. Be it known to you, that although the soldier can get no pay. or rather has received buf a moiety of his earnings, the unconstitutional act of Lincoln and Co., in taking the prop- erty in the District of Columbia, has already been squared up, as far as money will do it, by having been settled in full, within the past thirty days, and the fruits ot black free- dom are now being gathered. The fruits ate crime, incarceration and support at the ex pense of the white man ; competition with the white than for daily work ; black erin- inal labor, versus white honest labor ; the family of the white soldier crying for bread, which the nigger war party withlo'ds, and the white artizan, the white laborer, being robbed and plundered by nigger laziness, which he has to support, nigger crime, which nigger laziness engencers, and lastely, plun dered by nigger mechanical competition in nigger prisons. Good God! has it come to this ¢ [ow long! how long! will white men be thus victiczixed by the fanatic who | have surreptitiously ridden into powar ? Nigger criminals, bratal and filthy, first purchased and made free by white men's money, then incarcerated, and supported by white men’s taxes. are taught to be mechan 1cs while serving as felons, and compete for white men’s labor, at wages that honest white men would starve upon. Working- men ! in God's name move on to the ballot- box with the power and might of the huge waves “when navies sre stranded,” and sweep this despicable party from power, and hurl them so far that a vestige of their dirty principles will never be discovered on! thi continent. Financially, we are still in the old track, Tle Sceretary of the Treasury cannot bor- row a dollar on his bonds, and we are to be flooded with greenbacks. . Stocks , raw ma- terials, goods and produce will reach un- ¥" one thousana millions of irredeemable paper money on their hands, with ne use for it. Let me say to the wor kingmen of the North if you desire to understand, as you should, the relation of money to capital, and the theory of true banking, if you wish to add to your store of knowledge, that of a eor- rect understanding of the currency question whenever you hear of a letter or pamphlet by James Gallatin, of New York, get it and study it at your leisure. This gentleman is one of the ablest writers upon moneyed af- fai s in the country, and I'm in indebted to him for some of the soundest ideas I have introduced in my letters to the people, the past year. Mr. Gallatin’s- letters to the Hon, Mr, Fessenden, just published in pamphlet from, on the present great finati- cal questions of the day, shonld be in the hands of every mechanic, farmer and intel- igent laborer.— Caucasian. DO YOU Evow: WHO WANTS A KY. Returning from cur office the other day, we met at the junction of the Cincinnat and Greenville railroads, a sturdy litile fel- low of German patronage, who inquired, “Da yon know who wants a boy ?7 Ile was weary, for the san was nearly down, and he had been all day seking a place ; yet he stood up bravely, and his voice was as clear as a bell. “My httle friend,” said I, what do you want to do?” “Work,” he replied ; and he put his hands in his pockets and threw ont his chest, as if ts say, “I am not to smali—I can work.” “Yoy arc a brave boy- but don't your mother want you ’ 5 **My mother’s dead.” We felt reproved for asking the question, but it occured to us thal a mother would be proud of the hero. «Where is your father my son 2” ¢ Oh, he lives over in Dayton ; but he hus another wife, and she don’t wart to be both ered with me. But I can werk if IT can find any body that wants me. Young soldier of toil, you will soon find some one who wants a boy, a boy like you we hope, and may some good angle provide you with work not too hard for your small hands; and may cares lizhtly touch you. that yonr spirit may not be younded or crushed. Long life and health to you ! May money flow into your hands, and then some good angle of a woman become enamored of a boy like you, and way you win her and be happy ! clear eyed, flaxen haired BELLEFONTE, FRIDAY MORNING, FEB.6, 1863. [From the Cinciunati Inquirer | THE MONSTER MoNEAL. The following statements of the atroci- ties of this monster have been going the rounds of the Abolition press, accompanied by editorial remarks to discredit or pallia‘e the transaction. If they were not true, the Government should have the matter inves- tigated, but that would only clinch the char- ges, as we are informed by an old friend and an eminent citizen of Missouri, who is conversant with them. Tne fact that the young man giving his life for the sake of the family of the condemned man, is cor- rect. We think it will not be long before the Administration will regret not having promtly disavowed McNeil’s conduct, and dismissed him from the service. The sub- terfuge that he was beyond their control, because he was an officer of the State troops is ridiculous. The State troops are all mus- tered into the service of the United States, though they serve in their State, which 1s all the difference between these and other troops. God permits devils like McNeil to do their work to bring out the sublime heroism of lofty natures like the man who gave his lite for the family, and the touching scene of the importunity of the little boy for his father’s life. This is not the only massa- cre of MeNeil's. He put to death in cold blood a large number previously —twenty at one time, Before the war he was a jour; neyman hatter ; now he i8 Generali McNeil. One of the condemned had a wife and several children, dependent upon him for support, His wife went to General McNeil and entreated him to spare her hnsbend’s life, telling him that she was in ill heal.h, that her children were all young aud en- tirely helpless, and that without their fath- er they would be thrown upon the world entirely dependent upon the public for su - port, and that her relatives were all in a distant country and Ii tle able to give her assistance, McNeil tried to put her away with such unmanly expressions as ‘Go away, woman, I want no more of your sniflling here,’ or, ‘Your husband is a rebel and should be hung’ and such like language ; but he finally said that if the wife could find any one who would die in her husband's place he wouid release him, and spare h's life. This hard condition of release des'royed all hope, for who could ask any one to give up his life in such an emergency ¢ The wife went away witha heavy heart. A short time before the hour appointed for the massacre a young man, nineteen or twenty years ot age, signified his willing- «20 sou know any one who wants a boy, | Ah! yes, many a mother’s eye will grow | dim a8 she reads this artless question, and thinks cf the two bright cyes she closed not | long since —of the two little hands aeross | the still br ast —of the boy who is now an | angle, but for whom her heart will yearn | despite her philosophy »nd custianity,un- til she clasps Lim again to he. bos: om And if we could go in spint to Donelson, Roanoka, Pen Ridge a nd Putisburg Landing heaud of prices. Speculation will ruin not; | we shall have a shor life and a merry one, ! in the money way, and then will come the crash. : S. P. Chase, or as he 1s now mora appro- | priately dubbed, ‘Shin Plasters Chase,” has been immeasurably overrated. He is simply a blunderhead: Not only a blunder head, tut he is suspected of dishonesty There is no doubt that in his sndden deci- sion to pay the U. S. bonds of 1862 in gold, about $2, 400,000. that he was in league with some New York aad Boston specula- tors, who bought up all those bonds prior 0 that arnouncement of his and that it was a snug operation for him. aswell as for them | The truth is, there is not an honest man to- | day connected with Lincoln's Adwinistra- | tion" Under the code which rule the dynas ty, honest principles cannot be one of the elements. 3 ie The new Lill of the Committee of Ways and Means will hasten the finatical and commercial ruin of the country. We pro- pose to raise two-thirds of the nine hundred millions asked for by the great shin-plaster Tycoon, through further issues of rags. First comes $300,000,000 legal tender notes. not convertable into bonds’ next §300,000,000 6 per cent Treasury notes, convertable into legal tenders; but not into bonds, and then an issue of $300 00,000 6 per cent, 20 year bonds. We are to have, al! told, about $850,000,000, of rag currency. in the face of the restricted businiss of the country, when two years ago, with an undivided Un- ion and prosperity North and South, our entire rag circulation was less than $400, 000,000. Well may this picture be called appaling, This huge i:flation, when peace comes, will be an evil so fraught with stupendous and destructive result, that the world will stand aghast at the ruin which will spread over the land. The gettling ~day willl be terrible, Property will shrink like a prick- ed balloon, and like a pricked balloon will high hopes tumble to the earth, a wreck. Poor and rich will suffer alike. Millions of men, n w employed as soldiers, boatmen, nurses, manufactures. tailors, all! to-day supported solely by the war will then be id- le. The immence disbursements of govern- ment will cease, the hum of traffic, now heard in so many quarters, will be dead | blest boys. how many an anxious wife and mother, sister and father, would we see on those fields, slippery as they are with blood, land covered with corpses, secking for a boy !! This bloody war is robbing us of our no- “Oh ! my dear boy.” sobbed a farmers wife at the depot the other day. Where is your boy ? asked a sympathizing friend, “He fell at Putsbarg Landing and lTcannot even get his dear body. Oh, my dear boy ee —— WH? MURDER THE INNOCENTS ? Mr. Slashaway, who writes for the Ocean Magazine, says the teachers murder them. Mrs. Prim, who picks the mote out of other people's eyes, says the same Mr. Trade well, who comes home at night with the headache, and does not like to be troubled with the children’s lessons, iterates the same | charge. Ard all the lazy boys and girls of- for themselves as the Ziving witnesses that they expect to lie of hard siudy. We pro- test. . : Who sends the children to bed with stom” achs overloaded with digestible food ? Nog the teacher. Who allows Susan Jane to go out in wet weather with cloth shoes and pasteboard soles ? Not the teacher. Who allows tke little child in cold weath- er to go with its lower extremities half bare or but thinly clad because it is fashionable ? Not the teacher. Who allows John and Mary, befire they have reached their *: teens" to go to the © ball” and dance until the cock crows ? Not the teacher. Who cumpels the children, several in number, perhaps, to sleep, in a httle, close, unventilated hed-room ? «Not the teacher, W ho builds the schoolhouse *“ tight as a drum" without any possibility of ventila. tion ? Not the teacher. Who frets and scolds because ‘‘my child” coes not get along as fist as some other child does? Not the teacher. Who inquires, not how thoroughly * my child” 18 progressing. but how fast Not the teacher. ness to take the place of the man whose family was dependent on him, saying that he was aware of] that none were dependent upon him, and that after his death he would not he missed, while it would be a serious thing to have one shot whose family, in eon- sequence, world be left alone ard uncared for. He was taken as a substitute, agreea- ble to promise, and gave up his Lfe along with the others on that fatal day. Another case among the ten, was hat of a man with a wife and one child, a boy nine or ten years of age. The mother was lying on a sick bed, and unable to go io the commanding officer and infercede for her domed husband, The little boy went to McNeil, and in the fullness of his affection for his father, entreated, begged and 1m- plored him to spare the life of his father, telling how much h loved him, how good a father he had always been, and how kind he had always been to his mother; that his father kad never done anything wrong, and that without crime there should be no pun- ishment. Said the manly litte fellow :—T den’t know how mother and me will get along if you kill my fathrr. I know that he did not help to take Mr. Allerman away, for he was no! atsent from home fora month before the night the soldiers came and took him out of bed from mother and me. Fa- ther has just got our farm paid for, and was going to build a new and better house than the one we have been living in. We will be very lonely without him, and I don’t know how mother will stand it without him. She says that T will some day be a man and then will be able to supportand protect her, but that will be a gond while yet, I know, General, when you think of these things that you will not kill my father.” In such language he urged the release of h's father, but in this case McNeil was unrelenting, and would not release the father, but con- sented that the boy should ride out wih him to the place of execution, When the wagons passed through the streets with the doomed men seated upon their coffins, this 'ittle boy was seen seated upon his father’s knee, and clinging to him as if determined not to let him go. It is said that when they arrived at the place of exe- cution, aud the men placed in line, it was with the utmost difficulty that they drag ged the boy away from bis father’s embrace clinging as they did so closely together.— The father died with his companions ; and when his remains were put into the rough coffin, the little boy was seen seated upon the rude box that contained all that was left of his kind and guiltless father. emer The general imprission seems to be, in the army and out of it, that the waris play- ed out, but the Abolitionists s+ill hold on to the nigger ! aud the people will have a currency of nea’ Who murder the innocents 7 sleighing s about done in this section, DESTUCTION OF THE IRISH BRIG- ADE. By the hearth of many an Irish family in America, a caione is heard to-day, for the brave brothers, husbands, fathers, whose mutilated bodies lie stretched on the bloody field in front of Fredericksburg! In [re land the ery will be taken up when the de- tails are known, and the terrible list of kill- ed and wounded tels to thousands of anx- ious hearts the n mes of those who have been stricken down in the fiery charge.— Their names !—alas 1t is the names of the survivors that need to be told for they ars the fewest in number. The Irish Brigade went into action 1,300 strong; only 250 came out of it alive ! If ‘this were for Ireland’ we wight not mourn for it; if these were men who had no thought for Ireland. no love for the old cause, no hatred of the old enemy in their hearts, we might feel their loss legs acately ; but they were true patriots to a man—their- burning desire was to strike a blow for the freedom of their native land, their darling hope was that they might one day wreak the vengeance they long nursed. on her op pressor : and they were found in the van of that murderous combat, mainly because they had been deluded into the idea that in taking such a part they were offering an ef- fective opposition to Englands policy, To us of the Nation 1t is soma consola- tion to reflect that we never joined in houn- our gallant but impulsive countrymen on to this war upon the South, We did not chime in with those who cried aleud to the Irish in America, that it was their especial duty, as they loved Ireland, to ‘pat down the re bullion.” We lamented, and we shall not cease to grieve for the severance of the Union, but we clearly saw that when that event had taken place, and when the Siuth- ern people, with unwistakalle determing: lion, had risen in arms to establib a seper- ate Nationality and a Government for them- selves, the quarrel was likely to be prolong- ed and desperate ; that the endeavor ty beat the seceding people back into the Union, would, probably. prova a disastrous failure, and that in the meantime the Irish in Amer ca could not gratify England more than by rushing into the midst of the deadly strife, as if it were their own. Of the truth of our "views we have had to many melancholy cor- to our countrymen in a d ferent spirit bear the re- spons: bility of their conduct. But the valiant Brigadicrs [the Nation ty Brigadiers, moans the valiant men of the Brigado*-- Ed F. J]. died as brave soldiers. No men of all those fearless 1anks that swept across the fatal plain, and as they went were mowed down by the Confedir- a'c cannon, bore themselves more nobly.— robations—let those who appeal Never aid more nnflineling hearts or more able arms dash into the fi 1d of death at the callof drum or bugle. Flesh and Vlood, however, could not meet the iron hail which was poured upon them, and live. They fell with honor, bravest among the brave, God rest the souls of the slain heroes, Northerns, Southeras and all. God rest the souls of the men of the Jrisd Brgade!—T%e Na- Hon. tees GEN. FITZ JOHN PORTER. We have already announced the fact that the court martial convened for the purpose of trying Major General Fitz John Porter, on charges preferred by Maj. Gen. Pope, have found him guilty and sentenced him to dismissal from the service, and that the Preside t has approved the finding and sen- tence ard ordered General Porter's name to be stricken from the army list. The fol- lowing is the material part of the President's order : . ar « The foregoing proceedings, findings. and sentence in the foregoing case of Major General Fitz John Porter, sre approved and co: firmed and it is ordered that the said Fitz John Porter be and is hereby cashiered and dismissed from the service of the United States as a major general of volunteers, and as colonel and brevet brigadier general in the regular secvice of the United States, and forever disqualified from holding anv office of trust or profit under the Government of the United States. Jan. 21, 1863. Apranmax LiNcoLy.”’ The assertion that the finding was unani- mous we do not believe. We could not be- lieve it without believing also that every member of the court was actuated by im- proper motives ; for it is very cer'ain that he was not convicted on the evidence, unless the testimony of Gen. Pope himself, who is almost universally considered a habitual li- ar. was permitted to out-weigh that of mine- tenths of the witnesses, gentlemen of un- questioned veracity and unjmpeached honor, We incline to the opinion most generally re- ceived at Washington that the finding and sentence were carried by a bare majority, and were the result of military jealousy, political animosity, and a desire to gratify the administration, by whom, it is supposed they were selected and convened for that especial purpose. The result, 8o entirely unlooked for by those who had closely followed the testimo- minds that had narrowly scanned the decis ions of he court ou one or two important al, is not in the least disparaging to the mors [> To the great disappointment of all the ' gallant officer, while it reflects enduring ig- | nominy upon all concernzd in the infamous ny, and only apprehended by a few sagacious | questions that arose in the course of the tri-| plot to disgrace and destroy him. The blow was intended as much, or more for McClellan as it was for his friend and trus'- ed subordinate : hut we are much mistaken if it did not recoil with fearful effect upon the heads of those who aimed it. Remarking upon this fact of gross injus- tice to a brave and meritorious officer, the Journal of Commerce says : “ The work of ruin that is going on is but accomulating work of restoration for he true men who are to come hereafter. The elevation to position and office of the had. the untrustworthy. the untrusted. will ro quire their displacement when an adminis- tration comes to®power which represents (Le people of this great country ; and the dis placement and attempted disgrace of brave, gallant, loyal and honest patriots, will re- quire their future reinstatement. with honor and praise tenfold greater for the wrongs they endure. “A braver or a better man than that Fiz John Porter. a more gallant soldi ru more faithful patriot we do not believe exists in the army of the Union. Furcmost in hatije, sage in council fierce as a lion in the hour of war, the accomplished gen'leman, and g faithful {riend in the hour of peace, he is a model soldier and u noble man. The Uni-. ted States owes him a debt of infinite grati- tude for his brave decdy, his arduous 1iber, his unflincLing devotion to the cause of (le Union. That debt will be paid one day. if he lives, and we who defend the Union live to sce the old glory restored. Saying this much let us pass on to the next step in the road of ruin, only warning each other to stand firm by the foundati ns, and be rea- dy for the day of rebuilding when they who now tear down shall step aside and permit us to save the fragmonts,'’ Wo cannot better close this notice than by a bricl hig ory of the military carecr of (he dismissed ofiicer, which we find in the Alba- ny Argus: ¢ Fitz John Porter was appointed a cadet from New Iampshire, and graduated from the Military Academy in 1845. lle waa made a First Lieutenant in 1847, and the came year Brevet Captain for gallant con- duct in the battle of Molino Del Rey. After the battle of Cha, ultepec he was made Bre. vet Major. He was wounded at the taking of the city of Mexico. After peace with Mexico, he was appointed Assistant [u- structor of Artillery at the West Point Ac- ademy. *¢ ths gallantry and skill soon placed him high in command, and he won the confidence of the General-in-Chief and the adiwinistra tion of the country. He fought through the Peninsula campaign with distinzuished snc cess down to the battle of Malvern Hill, where be signally contributed to our victory. Before the retreat of Seven days. his was the honor of having cut through the enemy to Hanover Court House, aud opened the opportunity for a conjunction with M'Dow- «ll, with his 40,000 men. This was ‘Le op- portunity of victory, which the madness of fi ction and the panic-fright of the President and the bungling Brigadicrs about Washing- ton threw away.’ a. —— ae. IT STILL GOES ON. We clip the following particulars of the arrest of A. D. Boileau on the night of the 28th ult., from the Philadelphia Ingnirer. Read them and thea tell us whether this is the republic of America. or the despotisin of Austria ?—[Ed. Watchman.) Barly in the morning rumor obtained cur rency (hat the editors of the Philadel hia Evening Journ:l, a Dem cratic afternoon paper, had been arrested by order of the Governmen: snd sent to Washington, — These rumors were not well defined, inas much as it was stated that one of the par ties imp'ica ed had been seen at breakfast in a restamant, gaarded by a soldier with a loaded musket and fixed bayon t. Finally, the truth was ontmined, but not until infor nation had been sought in vain from Marshall Millward and tie civil au- thoritics. Gencal Montgomery, prover marshal of Philadelphia, was alone able 10 solve the mystery. - A guard of his soldiers wan proceeded, . shortly alfter miduight, tothe residence of Albert D. Boileau, publisher,and elitor of the Freeniny Journal, on Franklin street, and had conveved the nceused to some piace of eonfinc ment. The order for the arrest came from the Department at Wake ington. Mr. EW, Carr, connected, we be- live, with the business department of the paper, was also arrested, but was released by order of General Montgomery about }1 o’clock, a. m. During the mornin other parses, in er- ested as employees of the estub'ishment and friends of the publisher, obtained the aid of Geo. W. Biddle and J. C, Van Dyke, as counsel. The office was visted by the military an- thorities, who, however, did not interfere with the issue of the afternoon paper un 1 about two-thirds of the edition had beer sued as usual, About that time a mi guard of some eighteen men occupied (ie boisiness offiice of the establishment, their arms being stacked in the centre of the apartment, and the men lounging on the desk and counter. A sen iil with fixed bayonet guarded the door, while the entry leading from Third street to the editorial rooms was in charg of a squad of policemen from the Fifh ward, uniera sergeant. — This was the state of aflirs up toa late hour last night. It is understood that an order from W agh- | ington was sent by telegraph, as soon as | the authorities in that city were apprised of i the fact that some of copies of the Rper, with an editorial approved by Geo. W. fia. 'dle and J. UO. Vau Dyke, had been struck off, and that this second order requir 4 the immediate and po ifiwe suppresion of the jayper.