a TSE AA ow THE * The Whigham, Editor. Political Dialogue. No. 3. DEeMocRrAT,—Good evening ; come in and be seated. Iam glad you came over to- night, fur, being at leisure, we can resume our conversation on political subjects ABoLmioN1sT.—Yes, I wish to have a fur- ther talk with you, for I am not satisfied that you were right in our last interview.— Although some of your remarks were un- doubtedly true, I think you lay too much stre$s upon the possibility of usurpations P. GRAY MEEK, * FT BELLEFONTE, PA. Friday Morning, Nov, 13, 1863. 07 Business is quite lively in town at present, ie A gretrcerns [7 The Small Pox is said to be exceed - 1gly badin Lock Haven. rete erionsee E&Y Farmers throughout the county, are generally done taking in their corn. We learn that the cropis rather short. gern ti 077 We should like to have a load of good dry pine wood, could not some of our subscribers supply us ? emi ie, 07 A saddle of venison was brought in town on Monday last that weighed 104 pounds, who's got deers thatcan beat that ? i Wastep, —A fifer and drummer to beat time to the ‘“march of intellect ;”’ a pair of souffers to trim the “light of other days;,’ a ring that will fic the “finger of scorn ;”’ a loose pully to run on the ‘shaft of envy :” a new cushion for the ‘seat of government ;' and every body to know, that the place to purchage gouds, is at the establishments of those who advertise in the WarcuMaN. 8. We have received a neat little pam- phlet of sixty pages entitled “The Institu- tion of Slavery in the South.” by Bryan Tyson. 1t is plainly written and the famml- imity with which he treats the subject shows that he has gained his information from actual experience, We wish every reader in the county could have a copy of it. Price 25 cts, ‘address Bryan Ty- son. Box 64 Washington D. C, = We have heretofore spoken of the merits of the N. Y. Day Book and woald now call the attention of our readers to the prospectus whichappears mn an other column of to-days paper. lt is decidedly the white man’s paper, and one, among the few public journals that meet the great 1ssucs of the day, as they really exist. We hope every man in Pennsyuvania that is able will sub- scribe for it. eel ly A A rn ge The Editor, after his “tilt” with the Parrior Asp Union, thinking. we suppose, that he had used that concern up entirely, has gone to Philadelphia to seesthe sights in that little village, and. probably, to kick up a muss with the Age man, or some oth- er of ‘‘them"” city fellers, We warn the fraternity there to mind their P's and Q's and treat our fiery little editor right—we don’t mean to brandy ani water—else they will cateb thunder when he gets home, Ie 18 rather disposed to argue politics, taking the Constitution for his foundation, and, building his argument on this great rock, he defies all the gates of hell to prevail against it. Democrats will know him by the ur- banity of his manners, his gentlemanly de- portment, and also by the gemial smile with which he invites his friends to ‘‘take some- thing.” Abolitionists cannot fail to recog- nize him by manner in which he holds his nose when he passes them on the street and by the evident disgust which is portrayed 1a every feature of his countenance, Meantime the ht atchman mast come out, aud if our readers observe a deficiency in the quantity and quality of editorial mat- ter in this issue, they will please attrib- ute it to laziness and lack of brains in his substitute, ——— New York Elections. The Federal power in its great struggle to destroy all States’ rights, overthrow &ll form of civil liberty, centralize and consolidate an abolition government, and completely do away with the.ballot box, has in New-York as was done in Ohio and Pennsylvania. effect- nally crushed out the last vestige of remedy at the ballot-box, and inaugurated a reign of absolutism more galling and oppressive than disgraced a Cromwell or a Robespierre. An immense army, organized and equipped $0 stem the torrent of revolution, and restore peace to a distracted country, paid and sup- ported by a lavish outlay wrung from the re- rources of an oppressed people, is now being diverted fiom its legimate use, and made to give the semblance of popular confirmation to the acts and policy of an admiaistration, which if measured by the ballot and not the bayonet, would be so thoroughly repudiated that the plumet would never reach the depth of infamy to which it would de- scend. Forty thousand soldiers according to reli« ble’ data, were transported free to New York to vote as arranged previously to their being furloughe”. I'ae cost of transportation of this immense sruy,in addition t> the other heavy outlay, n-cessary calls for an immense expenditure, and it matters not from what it is met, its “corrupt perversion of the appropriations of the Government money, traizing and useing an iwwense standing army to subvert civil governwe.t, is a fatal stab to constitutional Ji. erty, We think we see a speck upon the } wizon which must ere long take such a )..oul expanse as will overshadow nov only our own but foreign powers, and complete. ly consign us to a condition cf anarchy, chaos, and multiplied revolutions, —Wasa- sngton Union. 4 rt erent apd One kind of wortar is designed to i up chinks ; ancther, to make them, on the part of public officials, while you seem to entertain no fear of the overthrow of cur government fiom the rebellion.— That is an objection which I have fo make against all your party. You are constant ly finding fault with the Administration,and yet have no werds of reprobation for Jeft. Davis or any other of the secession leaders. D.—Ishall attempt tosatisly you on these points before we separate. I do think that this Republic is in more danger from usur- pation of power by those whom the people have entrusted with the management of pub- lic affairs, thanit 1s from insurrection or armed rebellion, however formidable. A. - Why do you entertain such a start- ling doctrine as that ? D.—Because the histories of all fallen re publics teach it. If you search the history of former free governments, you wili find no instance in which a republic has been overthrown by the rebellion of a minority of its citizens, who were allowed equal politi- cal privileges with the majority. On the other hand, most, if not all of them, have been destroyed, and despotisms erected on their ruins by persons who have been en trusted with the reins of government A.— But in those republics to which you refer, the people were not educated and en- lightened as they are here in the United States. D-—Possibly not to the same extent. But human nature is still the same that it was a hundred, a thousand or three thousand years ago. The experience of those coun tries was in accordance with the nature of things. An armed rebellion is am open, no- torious and avowed attack upon a govern- ment, of which no one interested in the preservation of the Government can be ig- norant. Every one knows where to meet it and how to contend against it, It arouses all the latent patriot'sm and pride of the people. [Every instinct and feeling of the human breast which impels men to support and sustain human governments, is excited against the attempt of a minority iu a re- public to overturn the government, when the Constitution and laws guarantee to that minority their equal rights. A.—This should certainly be so, 1f the people were really loyal, and willing to give up party for the sake of country. D.—0a the other hand, usurpations come on insidiously. They are not open and avowed attacks upen the government at least when they begin, but come in the guise of putriotism—the usurpers themstives claim- ing to be the peculiar friends,champiors and defenders of the government ; and claiming that what they are doing, thougn not mn strict accordance with the Constitution and laws, is yet imperatively required for the safety of the national life and existence.— Or, in other words, they justify all these usurpations by the old, stale plea of “mili tary necessity,” ‘public necessity” or the «necessities of State,” as the idea has been variously stated. A.—T1t is, however, certainly true, that during a great rebellion, it is necessary todo acts out of the ordinary course of things. Extraordinary emergencies do require extra- ordinary remedies. D.—Thank you for the remark. It helps to establish my point. If no one could be made to believe what they assert, there would be no danger arising from it. The danger to the republic consists in the fact that always these acts of usurpation are justified aud sustained by a portion fre- quertly by a majority of the feople—by persons who are honest and patriotic, as well as by those whom subserviency, venal- ity and corruption control. If the tencency towards despotism of these acts of usurpa- tion could be szen and acknowledged by ev” erybody, there would be no more danger from them than from armed rebellion. A.—But surely, whenever anything is done by those in power which reallT threat: ens the existence of the republic, there will be plenty to give the public warning and rescue the government from danger. D.—Not plenty. There will be some— those who are most sagacious and penetra- ting. But how will their warnings be re- ceived ? Through ignorance, selfanterest, and partizan prejudices, these warning will be scouted at, and those giving them will be denounced as ‘‘disloyal,”’ enemies of tke government, and friends and sympathisers with those who may be in armed rebellion against it ; for these usurpations generally occur fin times of incurrections, rebellions and other civil commotions. Usually, these warnings only serve to make victims and martyrs of those giving them, without re- ally doing the country any good, or in any great degree stemming the tide that is bear: ing the people en fo the gulf of despotism A.—You certainly draw a very dark pic- ture ; but I have no fears for the safety of the Republic from that source, and am glad you think there is no danger of the destruc- tion of the Government by the rebellion. D.—It is just because you and thousands of others think there is no danger from the unconstitutional acts and the usurped pow- ers of an administration, that makes the danger greater. I do not think there 18 no danger to be apprehended from the exist- ing rebellion ; on the contrary, I think there is great danger to the Union from it, A.—You surprise me, for I certainly un- derstood you to say that there could be no danger to a republic from the rebellion of a minority of its citizens. who were not de- nied their just end equal political rights and privileges, Now, you mustadmt that the Sou‘serners who rebelled were but a small ) miu ¢it.y of the people of the United States, « | and I really hope you do not pretend that any of their rights have been trampied up - oun or denied them. D.—-They were ‘certainly a minority, not over one-fourth of the people of the United States, and it is also true that the govern- ment of the United States had not infringed upon their rights on the subject of slav- ery, the great subject of contention between the North and the South, at the time of the secession of the Co:ton States. A.—Of course not, for Alexander H. Stephens at the commencement of the rebel- lion stated that, and what is more, proved it too. D.—TIt is, however, equally true, that a portion of the people of the North, by their fanatical and wicked opposition to the ‘“Fu- gitive slave law,” and the provision of the constituti>n upon wkich thatlaw was found- ed, and that many’ Northern States by their ¢ePersonal Liberty Bills,” really acts of the Siate Legislatures nullifying a law of Con- gress and also the Federal Constitution ; did deny and trample upon the rights of the Southren people. It was the apprehension people that the Federal Government would do the same thing as soon as its powers passed into the bands of an anti-slavery par- ty. which induced them to follow their pub- lic men in an cffort to set up sepsrate Gov- ernment for themselees. A,—I hope you do not mean to contend that this was a jestification for the rebcll- ion, and. that therefore there 1s danger ro be apprehended from this rebellion, which does not exist in cases of rebellions generally. 1 said nothing of the kind. But the poli- cy of the Administration naturally tends to convince the Southern people that their fears and apprehensions were well founded: It is the course of events since the commence- ment of the war that makes the rebellion tormidable. A.—How so? I do not know thatI un- derstand you. D.—The question could and should have been mads, whether the people of the South should live in the old Union under the Con- stitation as framed by our fathers and their fathers, and in the enjoyment ot all their legal and constitutional rights as individu- als and as communities or States, or should they be allowed to repudiat- the old.Govern- ment and set up a new one for themselves in its stead. If this had been made the con- test, it would have been of short duration. A.- -Why that is the very question at is. sue between us and the rebels, and yet the contest has not been a short one. D.—There you are mistaken. The con- test which Lincoln's Administration makes with the South is, whether that people shall be compelled to live in a government with us, with the Constitution so changed as sto deprive them of the control of their own domestic concerns, and to leave all their po- litical and natural rights at the mercy and disposal of the Northern people, who are taught to hate and despise them ; or wheth- er they shall have a government of their own to protect and defend their rights. It is be- cause the contest is made to take this form by the radicals wh control Lincoln's policy that makes it difficult if not impossible to conquer the South. If the Administration was struggling honesty and faithfully to restore the “Union as it was’ under the “Constitution as it is,” all those who loved the old Government both North and South, in addition to which the whole moral sense of the civilized world, would be on our side. THeN, the Government would unquestiona- bly be in the r2gAt. now its position is much moe equivocal and debateable. A.—1t is getting to be about my time tor retiring, and we will finish this subject on some other evening. So, good night to you, D. —Good night, sir. —— ttt A SpLeNDID ORNAMENT 10 BROADWAY. — It must be a pleasant thing for that vener- able individual, the oldest inhahitant, to run back in recollection to the days when our now palace-beautifiecd Broadway was in a much more crude condiiion than it is in thes: days of progressive utility. Such im- provements have taken place within the past few years in the appearence of our favorite thoroughfare, that it seems us if some arch enchantress had produced the change by one mction of her magic wand, All along that grand avenue, Bowling Green to Union Square, are to be seen some of the wost magmficent structures which ever sprung from the train of art and archi- tecture. And imposing as they are exter- nally, they are equally so within. Some of them are fisted up in a style which would draw tears of ecstasy and admiration from the eyes of the most extravagant Parisian whose hie is devoted to study of luxury and magnificence generally. Recently a novel improvement has been ushered into existence on Broadway. We refer to the splend‘d new Temple of Pharma- cy (the deors of which were for the first time opened to the public bat a few days ago) of Mr. HH. T. Hembold, at No. 594 Broadway, and adjoining the Metropolitan Hotel. Ever since its opening day it bas been favored with full houses, (lo use tie language of the dramatic critics, ) its unique splendor daily and nighly attracting large crowds of admirers. I'he entire building, which is 28 feet front, 235 feet deep and 5 stories in height, has been most tastefully fitted up, the front haif being used for the retail department and the rear portion for the wholesale business and 8s a laboratory. There is probaly no drug store in the world more beautiful and lux- uriously furnished than this new acquisition to our Broadway attractions. Connected with the establishment is a reception room, which is intended for the comfort of those who are obliged to wait while the prescriptions which they desire to purchase are oeing prepared This is something which has long been a desideratum which Mr. Hembold has sup- plied. The room is furnished with costly lounges, chairs, sofas and velvet carpet, Taking this new establishment altogether it deserves to rank as one of the magnficences n our city.~~-N. Y. Com Advertiser Oct. B@y~A New Jersey paper has given an ap- propriate name (0 the wordy and windy ag- itators who are clamoring for war under ex- isting policies but who refuse to volunteer. It styles them ¢ tongue valiants.” We doubt if any nation can furnish a class more valiant in words and dastardly in acts than the abolitionists of this country. Massachus- etts is the hot-bed wherein they are incub- ated, and her rem ssness in volunteering is in proportion to the fierceness ‘with which she has clamored for black policies, and the prosecution of the war for their enforce- went, When Mr Lincoln went to Washington to be inaugurated, he was waited on at Wil- liard’s Hotel by a delegation from Massa- chusetts, who wanted to know in advance what would be the character of his Admin- istration. In reply, Mr Lincoln told them it should be a Massachusetts administration and the ‘““principles’” which John Quincy Adams had so long upheld in Congress would be his landmarks in carrying on is Government. Now, whatever the backings and fillings, and tergiversations of *ifonest Old Abe,” he has been faithful to his pledges on that occasion, and if Massachuset. actu- ally owned the ¢ Governwent and all the other States recognized this ownership and quietly submitted to 1t, its rule could not be more distinctly complete than it is now, and has been throughout the ‘-loyal States.” — True, the **disloyal States” utterly repudi- ate John Quincy Adams and all his doings, his petitions for a dissolution of the Union, his nigger memorials. and treason to Amer- ican principles generally ; but they, we all know, are ‘‘rebels”, and, we repeat, the ‘loyal States’ are 1s absolutely ruled by vlussuchusetts as Ircland is by England, or Algiers by France. Even here in New York, where we have a Copperhead Gov- ernor, a Massachusetts Senator declares that he is a poor, piuful, conquered slave, dragg- | ed at the chariot wheels of Lincoln, who ad- ministers the Government as the Viceroy of Massachusetts. at her capital of Washing- ton. Now, what are the real claims of Massachusetts, that she should thus usurp the Government of these “tates and de- mand submission to her rule 2 In 1796. she managed, with the aid of South Carolina, to elect John Adams and her tyranny was so unconstiint.onal and hateful to the country, that it dem nded, four years, later, that all traces of it should be stricken out and obhit- erated from our political records. Since then she has been cast out into the outer darkness of unavailing opposition and thor- oughly disaffecte | to the Cons:itutional Un- jou. She opposed the acquisition of the Lousiana territory, and the protest of her delegation may now be seen on the records of Congress. where rhey declare the Union diss’ ved for acquiring the very territory | which her Generals Butler and Bauks are | now stiving to conquer ! In 1812 she was | openly and boldly traitorous, not only op- posing the war for the national independ- ence, bot secretly aiding the public enemy. Mr. Cuitin G .vernor of Pennsylvania, said be, “I sent Lim 15,000 votes more than his majority.” ~ Mr. Stanton boasted that he ‘had elected It is pretended that no soldiers are ‘‘brought from the front.” The battle of Chickamauga was lost in order to carry the Ohio election, Gencral Meade was left to be driven into retreat by General Lee in order that the Administration might carry the Pennsylvania election. In the face of these glaring facts, it is no wonder that the abohtion journals try to make it appear th t nothing is lost to our effeciive strength in the field by this fresh depletion of the army of the Potomac to carry the New York election, It would be manlier for the Timcs and Tribune to brazen it out, and declare that suceess in New York election is of more val ue to the country than a victory in Virgin- 1a. Their misrepresentatiors are as fruit- less as they are false. Nearly every citizen in the State has seen some dozen or score of these returning soldiers, Here in New York and in its vicinity hardly any one but has seen hunir«ds of them. 4nd every one has ub-erved that the conva'escents are a very small portion of the whole. The bulk of them are able bodied men and in wigor- ous health In one hospitable near Wash. ington there were 60 patients when the or- der for furlough was p-omuleated, The next day, there were 260 who stayed for a day or part of a day. and they were given leave of absence as “invalids.” it these soldiers do not come from the front. then the disposing of our forces in the field with his usual incompetency. They beloug in the tront, and if they were there might win bat- ties and save us from disgrageful retreats. — N.Y, World. Democratic Clubs. It is among the remarkable characteris. tics of the Democratic party. that in defeat they do not despair, nor in vic‘ory “go crazy lice their opponents. Guided by principles lying at the foundation of their organization, the more they are endangered by assults from opposing ele- She refused to send troops to defend the Federal capital when it was taken and sack- | ed by the British, and the famous sing of | the Star Spangled Banner,” writt:n by a Southern patriot, who was a prisener oft Baltimore at the ime was so distast-ful to | the Bostonians, that when some United Mtates sailors sung it in the streets of that now ‘‘loyal” city, they were bundlel oft to the guard house ! The Florida war, and in- | deed all the wars of the nation, were equal- | ly opposed by Massachusetts, and from the | hour it went into operation to this moment, | she has never furnished a single soldier to | defend the Union from the foreign foe — whether British, Indian or Mexican! True, one of her own gallant sons, a Democrat, and despite the State, did raise a regiment in the Mexican war, at his own expense, | and the gallant fishermen of Marblehead did good service in the war of 1812; but | we repeat it-—and it should sink deep into | the heart of every honest man who may read it-the State of Massachusetts has never | furnished a solitary soldier, in our rcntie | history to defend the vation from its foreign | foes ! 1t 1s equally true that she has stead- ily opposed all expansion of te ritory, and could she have couurol ed the national desti- nies, istead of an ocean-bound republic, our western limits, save whut magnanimous old Virginia gave to the Federation, would now be the ancient boundaries of the old thirteen provinces! The reason of this is obvious ; all increase of territory, especially of so-called slave territory, weakened those | always seeks to govern the agricultural and producing classes of the country. But: while in the minority for sixty years past, and thoroughly disaffected to the true prin- ciples of our Federative system, she has managed to lay all the other States under | contribution, and, directly or indirectly, drawn more money irom the Federal Treas- ury than all the other States together ! Even now, when striying so desperately to coerce the *‘dislo “al States,” she has a Morrill tar- iff through which she seeks to pick their po:kets with “one hind, while flourishing the sword with the «ther. Her writers and politicians have m.de the North believe that the South Mas long monopolized the Federal offices. while all tLis time she has held more than double the number held by South (ar- | olina, thuugh out of power, aud South Car- olina has been in harmony with the Demo- | cratic party ! Such is the history of a State that now, in the person of her viceroy, < Abe i Lincoln, rules over twenty millions of ¢Joy- al people,” and 1s desperately determined to | subjugate ‘thirteen disloyal” States, who | refuse to submit to her rule. All these six- ty years that Massachuset's has been war- rng on the Union, Virginia has been its gr at defender, leader and constitutional embodiment. Neither have changed their | principles, and therefore if Massachusetts is | right now, the country has been wrong for more than halfa century past.—N. ¥, Day- Book. tee —& The Soldiers Vote. The Times and TriBUNE are put to their trumps to defend the course of the Admin- istration in carrying the Middle Siate elec- tions by soldiers’ vates. They pretend that no pledge was exacted from any soldier, an 1 that Democratic Jand Republican soldiers were sent home indiscriminateiy. The rad ical journals have no readers so stupid as to believe that ‘cock and bull story. In the first place, pledges were exacted beiore transportation orders were given, in every doubtful case. As to the hospitables, care was taken, we are assured by an eye wit- ness, to canvass the politics of the inmates and new Comers, Afterwards, on arriving at Washington they were submitted to a distinct interrogatory as to their politics, and pledged to vote against the Democrats, or refused transportation.—In the next place every republican captain, knowing of course the political opinions of his men, could and did easily select only those for a furlough who would be sure to vote the Republican ticket, and every Repnblican medieal officer in charge of the hospitables had the same easy means of ascertaining the probable votes of his convalescents.— And now for the abolition journals to deny what is so notorious and so gbvicus, is sim- ply to attempt idly to conceal political infa- my with personal stultification. The sol- diers have boasted of it on all the cars, their officers in all the hotels, A sergeant in Bates’ battery going through Albany the other day boasted in the Delavan House that “he had brought on sixty nine soldiers +‘—all Republicans—on their way to Utica *“to vote. and had left every 4—d Democrat ‘behind to take charge of the battery and | the real and vital issues involved in combinations of cap‘tal through which she ! ents. Our defeat, unexpected by many and most heartily regretted by all, wou'd, under the pecuhar circamstances, have scattered- any other political "party in existence to the wind. But not so Democracy-—-the defenders of ewil liberty and constitutional! nghts. In- stead of sinking down into despair,disolving their political connections and abandoning the country and its laws to the corrupt ty- rants who have outraged every legal res- traint upon the elective franchise and tram- pled over the most sacred obligations which protect the citizen from insult and wreng, we hear ftom eyery part of the State, from points too distant to have held any commu: nication, that our Democratic friends are busy organizing clubs for mutual intelli- | gence, consultation and discussion, and to turnish reading matter for study during the winter months, and thus to keep posted on the pol tical contests and differences among the people. From the letters received it is believed that several of these clubs were to be form- ed on last Saturday nigh: and would be con- tinued mn their localities. Many a Republi- can who hus been lied out of his vote, my learn at these consultations and discussions what is his real da'y. as a citizen, to him- self and his country, and where and how he has been deceived and the fate which not only awaits himself but his children after him. if the policy of the present party in power prevails, We do hope that these clubs may spread, anl that speedily, all over the Sate, until therg 18 not a village, ward, township or school districe but what is benefitted by them It is scarcely necessary for us to use ar- guments in favor of such organizations, — They will readily strike the intelligence of every honest Democrat. They are nothing new —they are as old as the party itself, but have been most unfortunat:ly too much neglected of late years. The moment we SAW our victory a year ago, we pressed strenously upon our party to d:lay pot in acquiring a thorough organiz- tion, (rom that of the State down to the most sparcely set tled district. But t0 many of our party could not See it in that light and we were overrulad and organization postponed.— Now we have floating back to us from every quarter, complaints of the want of organi- zation. The people would not be put down under the trying hour for their liberties, by com. miitees nor leaders, and therefore they burst forih in great monster mass meerings?strik- ing t rror and consternation to the hearts of their opponents bat when falling back nto compames (townships and wards) and contesting the enemy on close divisions they found their discipline neglected aud their ranks digjrinted thus losing in detail what they had gained in the aggregate. Let this unfortunate state of things not oecur again. It should not have occurred this time could we have avoided it, but be- ing overrule we hoped that others might know better than we ana hoped on.—The Crisis, - General McClellan's Woodward Lstter. Gen. McClellan's opponents find much fault with his letter in favor of the late Democratic candidate for Governor in Penn- sylvania. We don’t see how he could have failed to write it, when the politicans were using his name against the man he wanted elected. [le would have written no letter if they had let him alone. Everybody knew that McClellan was in favor of the Demo- ‘cratic nominees, and that is all they dis - covered by his letter. It is bad that a ‘military man in active service shall attempt to control politics; but McClellan was not in active service, while other Generals who are, were quite busy in trving to carry this State for Curtin. We notice among those who did not reside in Pennsylvania, that speectef were made during the canvass by Gen.Batler Gen. Sige', Gen. Buste«d. Gen. Cochrane, and Col. Montgomery, and yet the Ab)lition papers do not rebuke their in- terference in our election. It does not mat- ter which side a man favors, for if he has a right to take action at all, he has the right to advocate the claims of the party or the men he prefers, whatever other people may think of them.-—-Sunday Mercury. ee AA ee sey The administration party, in the late elections, took ground in favor of pros- ecuting the war vigorously for what they call an **honorable and enduring peace.— But facts have shown—the course of the Administration, thus far, shows-that peace without suhjugation—peace without the ab- olition of slavery — peace without the con- version of the States into territories—peace without confiscation of all ge property of all the people of the South— peace without a total destrucuion of the Union as and the Constitution as it is, is not the kind of peace which the abolition party wants or “horses.” is fighting for. it was, for | fact simply shows that Secretary Stanton is, ems From our Exchanges. The actor Murdock’s son was killed in the Georgia battles. Every negro in Maryland will soon be an United States soldier. « The Government touches nine millions for exemptions from the draft. The fastest trotting mare in the United States, Flora Temple, is reported dead. The Sons of Temperance now number only 55,000. In 1850, they were 345,000 in numbers. Eleven thousand dollars was the amount of one bet, just paid in Philadelphia, on the election. He who gets angry in discussion while his opponent keeps cool, holds the hot end of the poker. Sinze the first of January last, seventy millions of pounds of tea have been import- ed into England. A French convict has just died of grief because his term of imprisonment expired. He dreaded release. Great preparations are making for the re-burial of the dead at Gettysburg Ever- ett delivers the oration. Valuable lead mines have been discover- ed at Newport, N. II., and immediate steps are to be taken to work them. Manchester, N. H., is really a city— people are knocked down in the streets there and robbed of their watches. The Spaniards are hard at work trying to put down tbe St. Domingo revolution, but they find the job a tough one. About one hundred and seventy six pu- pils have been admitted the present year into the Newport Naval School. A strong decoction of skull-cap is recom- mended for hydrophobia. It must be drank often for a month or six weeks. The railroad from Nashville to Chatta- nooga is guarded every mile of the way with strong bodies of Union soldiers. Never were s0 many diamonds imported as during the present war. A single stone worth $15,000 has just paid duty in New York. One of the wealthiest citizens in Wayne county, Indiana, has been arrested on a charge of circulating counterfeit postage currency. The Democratic Spaniards of Barcelona have sent President Lincoln a very flatter- ing address, on account of bis emancipation proclamation. A Democratic editor in Nevada Territory says of the defeat of bis party in his city: We met the enemy yesterday, and are out on parole this morning,” There may be as honest a difference be tween two men as between two thermome- ters. The difference in both cases may arise from difference in position. The Russian soldiers are plundered with- out mercy by the sharpers in New York. Confederate money, even, has in some in- stances been given to them as change. The seamen on board the gunboat Santi- ago de Cuba will receive as mach as two thousand dollars in prize money. No won- der sailors are 80 eager to volunteer for the Navy. A young man will compliment his sweet- heart by telling her that her breath bas the perfume of roses, without being ashamed that his own has the stench of whiskey and tobacco. A Paris bookbinder lately found twenty- six bank notes of one thousand francs each, hetween the loaves of a book brought for re- pairs. The owner bought the book at a bookstall for three sous, and did not know of the treasure, The last accounts represent the French iron-clads as perfect failures. They voll in a heavy sea in such a manner that the port- holes cannot be opened. They won’t cross the Atlantic in a hurry. The grape crop at Cincinnati is more than half destroyed by the rot. The Long- worth vineyards will not yield more than a quarter of a crop. The Missouri yield, on the contrary, is reported as being a large ome. Advices from Stockholm state that the volunteer corps are now organizing in Swe- den on the same plan as in England. The object is the defence of the country against invasion, in case the regular army should be employed abroad. “Ra)ly Round The Flag Boys.” We wish to encourage enlistsments. The President bas called for three hundred thous- and volunteers, very properly taking it for granted that.if five or six hundred thousand men had endorsed all his war policies, and voted for a vigorous prosecution of the war, in only three States, he ought to have no difficulty in securing three hundred thous and soldiers in the entire North, Now, Curtin men, Brough men, St ne men, where are you 2 You have said to the Ad- ministration, “Go on with this war, just as you have been prosecuting it during the last year. Never stop fighting until you have freed the last slave in the South, Con- fiscate their property, subjugate them, offer them no terms except unconstitutional sub- mission;”” How 1s the Administration to follow your dietatior unless you coms to its support ! To vote for war is not enough. That will never put down the rebellion. — You, who are for the war in the manner and for the purpose the Administration is carry- ing it on, should not hesitate to take our place in the ranks and help it along. Once the President and UOongress declared that the war was prosecuted solely f.r the pur. pose of restoring the Union. and with no in- tention of interfering with the institution of any State. The “Copperheads’ filled the ranks. to fizht for restoring the Union, have declared that the war is waged for something else You have assured the Ad- minisiration and the pecple of the South that you will not have thie old Union or the old Constitation.—You demand ‘mod improvements.” Chief among these is the absolute destruction of slavery, the confis- cation of southern property, and the reduc- tion of the States to vassalage. The admin- istration takes you at your word. Upon whom can it rely, if not upon men who go fiercely demand these policies, for men to prosecute the war under them ? If these men. or enough of them to ans- wer the callof the President, do not emjoy in the war, they add hypocrisy to the mon- strous crime of betraying the Administra tion in the hour of its extremity. The have no moral right to desert it after luring it into the adoption of policies they know to be thoroughly obnoxious to the Democra- cy Those who control the policies ghould fight for their coforcement. ~ Those whose wishes are defied and whose entreaties are ccatemned by the mnianagers of the war ought not to be asked to assist in enforcing policies and principles they believe to be ru. inous, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS But you FEICE OF THE COLLECTOR OF IN- 0 TERNAL REVENUE. Notice is hereoy given that I will attend at the following places between the hours of 10 A. M. and 4 P. M. for the purpose of receiving United Stetes Income Tax, Licenses and taxes on buggies and carriages, recently assessed, to wit. Division No. 1 (Irwin's) at Bellefonte, on Monday, December 7th, for one week Division No. 2 (Stewart's) at Boalsburg, on Tuesday D o. 15th, at the Public House of Mrs. Wolf. Divis- icn No. 3 at Millheim, on Thursday 17th, at the house of Wm. L. Musser. Division No. 4 (Dun~ lap’s) at Port Matilda, on Tuesday, December 23, at the house cf Wm. Black. The said cuties are now due. Al} persSns who neglect to pay their taxes previous to the 24th of December, will be liable to pay 10 per centum upon the amount thereof. It is important to know that all persons who have been assessed and do not pay within the above period, will positive y be obliged to pay 10 psr centum, in pur.uance of the 19th section of the excise tax law, passed by Congress, July 1st, 1862, I will also attend at Bellefonte during Court week to receive from such persons as shall find it most convenient to pav snid taxes at that time. WM. P. HARRIS, Dept. Cel. 18th Dist. Pa. * VALUABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE OR RENT. The subscriber being Sas in Contracting wishes to sell or Reut his Wool Factory, well known as the Larry's Creek Wool Factory, situated on Larry's Creek Lycoming county Pa.. SaidFactory is in goed Running order and on a never failing Stream of water sufficien’ to run Grist Mill an3 factory, both at one time, There is also about 30 acres of good: Bottom land attached, with six Tenant Houses, store Room anl dwelling and u fine young Or- chard. Will sell or rent with land or “without, to suit purchaserfor Renter. For particulars inquire of the subsariber on the premises. sain given January 1st, 1864. Terms mod- ate AddressJ. G. BLACKWELL Larry’s Creek 0, Lycoming County, Pa. Nov. 13, 3t. Nox. 13 2t. BLACK DIAMONDS FOR SALE AT Snow Shoe Genrge Grahams Coal bank Coal and Coak for Cash. Nov. 7th 1863—3m E STRAY. : (Came to the residence of the sub- scriberin Ferguson twp. about the 10th of Octo- ber, a red cow with a white face, and a notch out of the left ear, - upposad to be about four years old, alsoa red Steer with the.same mark. The. owner is requested to come forward prove prop- erty pay charges, and taks them away, otherwise. they will be dispssed of as the iaw directs. Nov. 13th '63—3¢ SAM’L: HARPSTER. Or PHANS COURT SALE. . By order of the Orphans’ Court of Centre County will be offered at public sale on the premises on SATURDAY NOVEMBER 21st 1863 at 10 o'clock, the followgng described real estate, situate in Gregg Fis adjoining lands of John hishel, Jacob Fry and others,— Containing 3 acres and 140 perches more or less having thereon erected two two story log-houses, a frawe barn and a stable with all the necessary out buildings. a good bearing orchard of choice fruit, and a well of pure water at the door. TERMS OF SALE ;—One haif of the purchase money to be pad on confirmation of the sale, the residue in one year thereafter with interest to. be secured by board and mortage on the premi. ses. . JOHN SHANNON. a D. W. WEAVER, Administrators on Estate Jof Jocob. Weaver deo’d. Sep. 6th '63—3t, VALUABLE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. -By order of the Orphans’Court f Centre county. the subscriber, Administrator of the Estate of Wm. A. Davidson, dec’d, will offer at public sale at the Court House, in Bellefonte, on TUESDAY, the 24th day of NOVEMBER next, at 2 o'clock, P. M., a certain tract of land situate in Boggs township, containing 20 acres more or less, bounded by the Bellefonte and Phillipsburg turnpike on the North, by lands of Jacob Ridelinger on the East, by-Bald Eagle Creek on the South, ana by other lands of said Estate on the West. : Persons wishing to purchase a gite for manu- facturing purposes. will find thisa very desirable location, as it has the advantage of the turnpike on one side, the Bald Eagle Creek on the other and the Bald Eagle Valley Railroad passing thro” it. TERMS OF SALE :—One-half the puroh- age money on confirmation of sale, and the resi- due in one year thereafter with interest, to be se- cured by bond and mortgage. JOHN T. HOOVER, Bellefonte, Oct. 26th, 2863.—3t Adm’r, (QRPHAN S' COURT SALE. By virtue of an order of the Or- phans’ Court of Centre county, will be exposed to pb sale, at the Court House, in the borough of Bellfeonte, on TUESDAY, November 24, 1083, all that valued farm or tract of land situate in Harris township, four miles oast of the ** Agrieul- tural Co'lege,” in Centre county, containing 222 acres. strict measure bouaded by lands of Charles Stam, Mithael Wheeling and others. About ene hundred and ninety acres of the above tract are cleared and in the highest state of cultivation.— The land is of tho best quality of limestone, easy to till, aud produces equal, if not superior to an) farm iv Centre county. A never-failing stream water runs through the premises near the build- ings. A large brick house and bank bain asd other outbuilding, in good repair, are erected thereon, everythiag, in fact, calculated to make horae comfortable. TERMS: One-half on confirmation of the sale and the residue in two equal annual DiTimon with interest. HN HOFFER, Guardian of Enoch and George Hastinge. Oct. 23,1863. STRAY HORSE. Came to theresidence of the sub- seriber in Patton township, on the 23 ult, a large bay horse, about ten years old, blind of the right eye and has on the left hind pastur, a little white The owner is requested to come forward prove property, pay charges and take him away, other- wise he will be disposed 2fas ¢he law directs Sep. 6th '83—3t. &.B. RUMBARGER. JESTRAY, , Came to the residence of the sub- scriber in Union township, about the 1st of Oct. last, three Steers, one b'ack, and the other two red and white spotted, supposed to be two years old, and two Cows mostly red. The owner or owners are requested to come forward, prove proper ty pay charges and take them away, other- wise they will be disposed of as the law py Nov. 6th '63—3t. JOSEPH ALEXANDER. JCSTRAY. Came to the residence of the sab- seriber in Walker township, about the middle of September, a red Steer. supposed to b& about 8 years old—not marked. The owner is requested to come forward, prove property, charges and take him away, otherwise he De ipoged ef socoiding to law. DAVID DUNKLE. They were willing, and are still willing Oct. 30, 1883, “5