Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 22, 1864, Image 2

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1400 61 0141iitilillt.
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P. GRAMME-_
BELLE 5r i*
Fit:DAY - INOItriACI.JANI*M
RIZZI
,
AdrEllitilil DICNO ' 7' ..p?lnstrilm
i. bEE! , I_TIO. _fp— ileepogete igribir fetobetet ,
to tlielutPotreemtle qop orttllt be
eld-isWe Ml'
Wit; ba ll = ' 'fli t '•t ; ton le tee:
voetkeritlibriKeherg,"st, ..111.bikeek" . shalt be
I 'o'.iia. , :x c hused which w ' leisibtlep shot dole
' - • - •
_jab* to .to .nnakinoto
osaatiti .r I .44 o?tia r e . ut inJ Vire ;WAWA of
the reita4- Salsok IL it ciretall .13.0. Awry
movabecet A* Gestic, will b.
.: l rleewt
utorat:t.f.-
i . t„bi • 1 4. 1 ( •••..' '
JIM e, um., " ... - ... • -, '.....tt
---Ziu war.
N• litie Vat *WI i hem the army. The
whowt,the raid of; Oen.
Lea isto Pasuprivinsh. las, entirely orstodded,s-
Pits Ilagh Lea was the. tsetse of it. Eleven
limbed of Ma eadalri around rho t •roantry for
tea days, domain Northward, at time, alnioet to
Tarry. , , Thy raptured one hOdrA
prierappto lriti.lttrdrwd rattle.ithrce hundred
,hoarepi-ahres:4l Ind twenty mules and
thirty Itottoneotad have tiow retired to !few
Market, niar_Thorhaghtare flap.
There hi very important news from dharleston.
It appears that the ewe Ir to he sbandMied,the
grestoripart of. the Lima foveae withdrawing to
Whoa Dead, 'harp General ttillroorn has es
tablisbeci his head-qaariors, and, old; coon,*
haGilt - t - a - V,r4 - 114 , Morrie I4lni hatterJeg:
sod oecarighatiy spell tbd town, The Novi 'is
In a Ala* of settee preparation r ie meet three
eiads trhich hare bass. lite&
opts Charleatoa and site ready to semi out:
The fear of these vessels is supposed ,to shave
saspe•l Oinsiore's sudden 'Withdrawal; and so
oar predictions bare been verified, end that
terrible nog" of “tralters" is still unsillmiued
want a Chang?
4 is diett;ilt to tell whether our shill f
freighted with the moat precious
upon the rongh eca of discord, without
mind to calculate its-enuree, or compass
to direct 'its way; oi whether a Snn and
powerfhl hand is at the helm, guiding us
upon the Teeter ilesimtism It iv-diffi
cult for an American to conceise . of a
heart wicked enough to desire and labor
for the overthrow or• the best goiern
ment•ever redieir by man. Yet such a
conclusion ii4orcing itself upon the minds
of all, and woe be to those who have been
oontrolling spirits in the work of des
t-uetion, when .the revolutions of time
have laid 'bare thhir plottiiigs, and psisiAe
mistress their' evil intentions. Sua
times of revolntion and-- discord as . are
.now upon i va • tnay serve for a 'while .to
hidethelesigna of those who sek the ru
itt'of Anierics, but all those tiliinglt will be
. .
swept away by the, Jheparing halal of
time and expose in all their hideousness
the men who have taken shelter behind
them. It cannot but he manifest to the
etudessi of history that one of two things
in true, Either we are drifting before
- the derlertem pest without pilot, compass
or rudder, or eli-e out vessel has been
eiseVgy pirate's, who would convert it
no their own use, and ride to klory and a
throne in the tiered bark, which so • long
and so well protected the rights of man
from the dark waves , of despotism. In
either of which easeli the hopes of Amer-
;mend orwmulkind in our institutions
Amami the removal of those upon whom
the world locks as our leaders. If Abra
ham Ulm& is the ass his public paper"
wouhrhidicate, and his cabinet tip fools
they appear to be, the "public safety"
require' that they be replaced, as soon
as possible, by men who will fairly rep-
recent the :American people, now under
the gase ofthe whole world. If Lin
coln is the pliant tc of ambitious and
designing men, whO would not have our
affaiftrotherwise than they are, but teho
have led ne, step by step, from ourproud
position of threayears ago, to the one we
now °wispy, with the design : to weaken
Ultimo mitiohrthionith-loee of bleed, that
we can make imat,lbelblelesistanee when
the tyrsuit's grairp Is on ourthroats, and
the iise . bsisrat the roots of 'the tree of
liberty; thin the lair of self preservation
a6o_A fl to hurl the usurpers from
authority, befere they have made it im
possible to do 'no,
That something is radically wrong all
men knOw, and admit, .and that we
hive been striding rapidly to destrue
tionteven the dullest begin to _ romire
hend, when the briii.h of the tempest is
felt at every lieurth4torte, and -the roar
of the Mtehdrom is 'all avowal WV A
syHtem o><lratitt is hf , opemtion extending
from the official around the
throw to the lowast menial in the train
of Abraham. We admit that it is almost
impoesiblgep i restrain. this entirely; but
wheetht4hst glaring honiirune have
been ejtygmed to the lightof day and the
robbers hien. .continued in piece and
„power weimust conclude that their mas
ter iireitifilly to, bleu*, More than, a
year ago. it was conclusively proved that
Gideon Welles bad not only. -thermided
the merriment- of immense sums of
money bit had_ 'exposed _ the Hues of
thoummintoimininentperil, and 'yet he
continual to shine in the galaxy of Abra
ham, one, •of the most important offi
cers of the esemitive department. Eve
ry ene knows that the army of Gen. Me- s
ClAlan'wes Sacrificed in front of ilia
mond through the incompetency of the
aulhoriilei stVneltington, or ehe with
the designee, ruining:the growing , repo
= !he 'porgfeetti •Oneral by the
fore the woOtiatkitompus.aad ittunong.‘
tics,lhs Amik
asineeii star 44' tiesttite to
hurl stria ~s'oPA°R`
' ' 011010 0 1 K
fist 11•101,4*.5a2
fix. t
; ,,;fit. >''•~i`a.o
;~
GIMI
lOW- ASeiler ie- VW. • gib I
'Winkel* widek,loolealetbeetket the
(.' ' • thiukana4a4l4-cer
telteleteiltii,Altleiretourse aiudr
Ina a ailta a
fried tgrrillt4ot, rows
ritlishrufkri itieblegkt Inter
to the eifein orfAitgirrerusieit, man
kind *ill lose oonficierailk in our risme,
our prestige is gone`upe all the lib* and
sufteriwof uurisiserelsaverjapea mem
AO vain,
_ .
13Wil
-The evils of ihich -We - complain, and
therwrougurunderwhich thersaplergroirr
are not cont.ed to a,' wt:serl depart
bt4trelit wherever federal autb
wily has , while in spots wherTu
vestige ofliate_sovereiguty remains wo
lee the Only Temutint of the integrity of
ri!ich we, o 6 eer_l4o.- This proves
that the fonntainji4 corrupt and nothing
can proceed from it but impurity. And
'that is wherethichange must be made,
and WILL j)e . made, if the wishes of the
people' are carried ent '` If right, succeed'
in the coming election, we' are neat the
dawn ; if it fail,oll - we haye3tetileenis - hut
the evening twilight - to midnight dark
ness, compared 'with what willcome upOn
us. If we fail,let it not be far want of
soden:
Great Firs hi Bellefonte -1
- - The gweatepteenthignittort thit .
cruiretl in this piaae, 'broke out,on Alle
gheny I;lltreet, op Wednesday morning
about one o'clock, raging with intense.
fury until six o'clock.
The origin of the fire has.not yet been
ascertained, and it is provable that it
will ever remain a mystery ; but certain it
is. that Bellefonte, in her most unluiiky
days never experienced so terrible a tills
futtune ass that which beret hes, on Wed.-
neaday morning last.
Beginning somewhere in the second
spread with frightful rapidity, and soon
tliv whole Row was wrapped in one sheet
of terrible flame. Demme volumes of
iek bleek s fmoke came pouring out of
doors andotundows, darkening the• air,
and rendering it ~N 00.4 impossible to
see, while forked tongues of fire and
millions of sparks shotupward in every
direction the wind meantime- blowing
with terrible fury, threatening destruc
.tion to the whole town.
It soon became evident that all the ex
ertions of our Citizens to save - the block
or any part of were iu fain, and the con
viction forced itself upon the minds of
all, that the whole block; includinit'l the.
old " Pennsylvania House," kept by Mr,
Copenhaver, was destined to destruction.
What could be saved out of the different
stores and shops in the Row, was saved,
but that was comparatively little, and the
leas has been immense, falling chiefly
upon Mr. Brokerhroff, who we understand
had no insurance upon hisproperty, and
whose loss will not amount to less then
twenty thousand dollars. In the "Row,"
were the " Pennsylvania House," the
store of Mr. Brokerhoff, Harris's Drug
Store, M'Clellan's Tailoring Eatablish
lishment, Livingston's. Book Store, the
Tailoring Establishment'of Montgomery
& Son, and the Saloon of Mott Ander
son. These -have all been totally des
troyed, notning remaining but the bare
walls and burnt bricks.. - o
Seeing that nothing could be done to
save the " Row," the' attention of otii
citizens was next turned to the resi
dence of MM. Benner, adjoining the'
•' Pennsylvania House," which fine
Mansion was, with difficulty, saved from
the general wreck and ruin.
But nabr a new danger arose, . caused
by the wind blowing strongly across the
street in the direstas' ut-of the "Arcade,"
and soon the cry of Ems in ma AR
CADE," turned the attention of evrybody
in that direction. Sure enough the
"Arcade," (the finest and - most finished
byqing in town,) was on lire, the flames
seeming to redouble their efforts to out
do the exertions which' were made to
subdue them. Here too, there could be
nothing done. 'The fire gained rapidly,
and for want &an Engine, our eitisetut
yere compelled to stand by and see the
finest portion of ear• town become the
prey of the devouring element. Every
thing.burnable was burned to ashes, in
cluding. thelaw Office of"Orvis & Alex-.
ender, Reynold's Bank, (all the effects
of which were saved) the residence of
Mrs. DIIOIIB, the Dry Goods Store of Mr.
Derr and the bloating Eimporinm of Mr.
Steroberk. It was - only by superhu
man exertions that "Garman's Hotel,"
and the " Conrad House," both adjoin
ing
the " Arcade Pere saved, standing
monuments of the Unselfish and gallant
devotion of a lbw men whose exertions
to tave those twnline buildings, should
put the blush of shame upon the cheek
of every lazy hound 'who stood by-and
laughed while •the work of destruction
was going on. .
It waindeed a terrible, Scene, and we
hope we may never again be called upon
to record kelt another• night's work.-- r
.Fire appeared to be everywhere, and for
•awhile, it seemed probable Ehat the de
vouring element might extend its: fiery
tongue.in • inlingted sway, °se& 'oils.,
.whole wn. But, thank Heaven, it
stopped ailast,. and put to rest the: ap
prehensions °few pi ineps. ' •-of , ie
At one ti*Okh Court, *Mee was con
-
'blared in gnsirdangei, andeyery effort
nis guide to Manna it against the al
ly fon* of the dames.
Asseat deal 9, ;wpm*, earned oat
of the Hotels, Stores and DTA* was
stake, - liantit mat dist Wa*ksoluin and
destroPetrisi vrittbsii qtlySaws., *se 1
AftbssilifortialateHA*Vi *TINS,
rx larldliattNeeileialt:hihrrise ,
111=11110M :144TANN VI&
1 4 # •
giesteet tircwe lulyeecetr aeei a s
country tiara, and the wall he ha
mew. • • ' oreasion
line it vaunt '1 • BlircherfOrtaisintr
diePalia=slOriisy: b.
inside trf the figures.
Wesuppeltlineirourltat;
he
+iiU
agehtluio kiigitoti the 'sootier of
prin4Vutst {twill 6e 'won enough to
look the 'stable door after the boric is
stolen." Well we hare bat little to say
in the_maiter . .. W.e.lutte ebrunbeem 9f
the opinion that a town of the site of
Bellefonte should be procided withaoroe
• tatiruptishing-liree r -either— •
the ehoptinfZeglinnix Fire-Plugs, end
we think the. economy which oonsitterd
three or four thomod dollars too great
a Bum apply to r:4. trOuringof thie
Means, is to little Ira:Pose. lkyttar
and Ilts.ye good Engines,
than have our Dnellii4s,burned over our
heads. Corfainly,, the property holders
of this, town, after the terrible warning.
Which they and all of reaeived on Wed
nesday morning, will be willing to con
tribute liberally to thin' purpose: If
they are not, -then they should' not
grumble ifthey shonidfind their dwellings
smoking about th'eir ears.
We May have a fire again Sit -a' 7011'
short time, o=we nuky not have one for
yews. But, at sll even* wishoeld be
prepared for the next one, come when, it
win.
—We do piot know why it is that.
Democratic Members in Congress
who denounce the war as unconstitution
al and wrong, and declare that it an
only end in the jaw' destruction or the
Union, vote men and money, to prolong
it whenever en opportunity to do so, pre
.sents' itsetf. We cannot believe that"!
they demito_ to see the Union broken
into bleeding and contending factions— ,
that they would fasten upon the people
a debt that never, never can be
'in the North a place of mourning—and
convert the enure South into a vast zleg
orate waste , pr that they) would place the
power in the hands of the miserable des
pots at Washington; 'al:bind the white
men of the country, and keep them vas
sals or serfs, and yet their ttOurse would
fully justify such a conclusion. Tura'
know thetas lung amen and money is
furnished to the intik:ea° AdministratiOn
that the war will be continued, #f hey tell.
us that it can only end in the destruction
and desolation of the country. Then
why do they give air the aid their cat ,
cial characters will permit, to firtilarig
:Will some one, who has more faith
-in, '.end respect for, such Demceiracy
than we have, answer?
• —Some one has well said that the
criticism of enemies is often better thin
the advice of friends; and in no case is
the truth of this saying more clearly
shoili than in politics. At least two .
parties are always necessary to conduct a
government successfully, and the
oritici!rn 'gate members aerie is sure to
have a benefigial effect On the operations
of the other. Nethwithstanding this
fact., which history has established beyond
all douht, the party now controlling the
affairs iitthis nation would have all the
political elements'tnergea into one, and
that one composed of men who would ,
blindly follow wherever old Abe chooses
to lead, and they not only ask this but
they Dtaiaivn it, and attempt to enforco
it. They work ripen the same principle
which burnt the - Salem witched and
banished Roger Williams. Their work,
in the case of the Democratic party, will
result as the fanaOcisin ofthe "pilgrims"
'did in that of Williams, their opposition
and unreasonable demands will arouse
every energy of the proscribed party and
the time will come when the Abolitionists
will appeal for syntpathy and protectioe.
•
those whom they now despise and
persecute. And they will not appeal
in, vain, for tlte4riv, e and good arernever
erne' and unchiititabli„'
----Still the State Sedate at Harris
burg, remains unorganized, and the fol
lowers of Sambo, Satan ,Wad Shoddy are
-Malting a great ado because the sixtee
Democrats will not give way and permit
them to elect their officers, Our coun
try has been milk(' almost past re
demption, by Abolition legislation, and
if the Democratic Senators can do no
more than prevent further enactments
by the contemptible cabal of black poli
ticians, they will do very well. Let
them stand firm for their rights and a
grateful peopld will generously reward
them. No flint:Eng—no trading off—
no compromising positions or principles
for expediency's sake will satisfy tho. ,
who have honored them with their suff
rage. Betterby far that the Senate re
main a " Dead Lock" until 4,lie term of
each litemberoxPirtut--butter no ktgislaT,
thin al all than such as Abolitionists will
inflict upon our .State. Let the Demo
eratiemembers stand flrm, they are in
the right , The people so regard it.
• — . Loyal Levees and eoereionists
generally call the war in which we are
now engaged a "Eilaibholdere
We should be pleased to 'Wow- where
they get their authority to .iitish it if
inch, it be, Not fiem the . Constitution,
for it gives power to no mart to put down
" Rxitnuaort." It provides means
to-" suppress insurreetion,!'iumf " ri
pen invation ",and pays , meth* about
"mashing illevehoiderY. or anybody
tasks " nettellkst." • • -
—Voir biss4
Mae will give to wait hereafter for
rthimtiy he , 0006 foop70110 : 1Y
""P"'*111-ooloOviii00;.41ow
.; • ' us;l-,
. ct . ."7. 4 . 4., 1 , , :br
, 01 , 1:1 1 p • • -
Or li "the'
d " -
A4diar
1:1311
Una
can Iscoett, l ,o!. hittd epergne
and imms f -mmm.mer---.Themtm.he—pre- .
oarlike not 'duly requires every - southern
all the emancipation proclamations, passed
i
and to Mane, but he shaft devote to death, to ,
the Abolition gibes% ail his leaders, all his
- companlonolnartns, 'above the rank of ca
Lain. "If therelsione man in the South who
would net itoestirlie thstraceept such terms
be is tit only feints oompeadopeldp of the
basest ofnein. And Itthere othuman be-
Mg in the North who Bari restrain his ebn
temptfor the-wretch who deliberately instills
a whole people with an offer of Melt degra
ding•terms, In the nor/Wotan "amnesty," he
top, Is sn abbettor of assassination and
theft. Thertiought' to be' an indignathin
meeting in every 'city and village of the
North, to - wipeout the foul stain, which is
neither more' nor loss than the offer of a
premium upon asesaileation. It simply
mist° the people of the South, you aortae*
to Jet your negroes run,_to give up all your
property, And tunflikates'evidence against
your oompailonaiand friends, and come over
and join us Abolitionists, and help .us mar
derasuirob your-neighbors, thee-you- alma
have our gracious pardon. , That is Mr. Lin
"amnesty." Such amoosty its the
hawk offers to the dove, the wolf to the
lamb, the bighwsy map to his victim. this
message and proclamation ends all chance
Or controversy about the designs of the Ad
ministration in its proesseution of the war.—
It proves what far-seeinA men pave salti
from the beginning, dint it is a war foi the
negro, with disenien for its inevitable result.
It shuts the door and bolts it against the re
turn of the Southern States to the fold of the
Union. It says to them, you shall never,
never, never come batik, except as paupers,
or the pensioned assassins of your compan
ions and neighbors. Thank God this ince
inge and proclamation drops all
the Stolenrobenef--patonotism, -is here- at
last, Uinta boldly out into the very face and
cyos of that non-deveript style of politicians
called the .'War Dentooraoy," with this hier
oglyphicpronundionento blaring at them.—
No more dodging , and fassit-fihding about ths
manner of candetetinsitke war. .1f yam ars for
it at all. you mud be for it not to restore Me
Union as it tads. 4419. 4,gtolish sioscry. TAera
is no tear for the rea/araeson of Me, potion, and
you must take the war f 4 its objects, 'or rojeci
it for jb olyeets. All this is impudence, but
honest. Though Mr. Lincolp meant it not
for honesty. From the degjhs of his shal
lowness he imagined that be was playing
the zunningest trick of all the games of char-
Stoner.? that have distinguished hie Admin..
filtration, Ile line itilopCgalh'ooll - inkry"- -
trig an Immense contidenoa in Ms gullibility.
.9f . the Elrthirja people. Hie whole Troceed
inge,lkthe last year .rid a half, rests dpon
the asaugulaion that all who are not knaves
are fools. And if we eicept the ..Copper
heads," ho has too muoh'ground for his con
clusion. A man who imagines that thst.Un
ion con be restored by war, is fairly. an oh!
ject for the syihpathy of intelligent men.—
Wi may pity while we deplore his slmpliel
ty. But the timer for pity la passed now.
This message ends the dispensation to which
pity belong'', and begins an are in which
infamy and etrrnal thaw attach, to :very
man who gives Nether aid or comfort to the
bloody measures of Mr. Lincoln's , Adtainis
oration. Support not, help not, from' this
time fdrwardAnuaLbe tha-watukwomi of ova
ry man who is not an abolition disunionist.
Mr. Lincoln has run up his black banner so
high that none con fail to see it. The New
York Work!, and of the most persistent War
paperein the United States, says of this
document :
'lt le a proposition which the South will fccl
that It cannot accept without a degree of sultan-
Wry self-dogradatlon which every southerner of
spirit and character will regard as worse than
death."
It might have truthfully ridded; that_
is not one mon of honor in the United States
who would not, in his heart,despise a soak
erner who should accept so degrading a
proposition. A prop:pion which is alike
degrading to North alb, because it
strikes at a principle that is held sacred by
all, hone . rable men everywhere. It was
meant to insult the whole people of the South.
It is a characteristic jibe of Abolitionism in
deed to drive men, already goaded to toad
nestl,--to deeper, to. unappeasable despera
tion. After this Message and proclamation
there Is no longer left a vestige of hope • for
the Union, except ft be in the Immediate and
determined action of the Democratic) party
in a trilmsuidous counter Proclamation. The
South mu i be coirvineed that the 'great
Deinoorat partyr the North is Kieft
again—tesek Ut old platform of prin
ciple, in the Kentu cky and Virginia Resol
utions V 1798, on which it firmly, triumph
antly stood, in every campaign, up to the
breaking of this Abolition revolution, before
it will be possible fiir her to entertain a prop
osition to return. How do we ask her to
come back, where there are none to
welcome her, except with hearts of hate and
hands of blood t How du we ask her to
come back?, On terms that devote her peo
ple to. deatli, Jim property to annihilation
and her States to obliteration. Let us pray
Almighty God that she never will come book
on such accursed ground as that. If these
are the only terms offered, then ,her battles
are ours I Her cause is ours, for it the
cause of self-government„ of liberty, of hu
inanity, and of State somireiguty, recognis
ed and claimed by evei7,lstete in *
ion, and which is the solid fotuidatien of the
Federal Government Itself. If the Demo
oratip party does not immediately end defi
antly 'operate itself from ell support of this
w of Abolition and State anuitilfisatiqp,
then farewell the Union, and farewell NM ,
ty in the North, if not in the South.—Old
Guard.-
'—A regiment of negro soldiers some
time since mutinod at Fort idaokson, .drove
off the white guard and held possession of
the place for 24 hours, committing great
(acmes in the Way of. robberies and des
truckle&of property by Am and otherwlitV
The Cause sit the mutiny has been ascertain.
- ed to base been as follows ;—A squad of no!
gioes bad been outside the lines ana when
returning, being *eked by the colonel' by
whom permission had been given, toilthitas
lie,- when he seised *whip and gave them-a'
few ante with it. .This ennead the'mutliy.
Forney's Pries, in referenoe to this says
.• the provoiefielt for mntiny jras im
mense I" Isideedl--.paletiscon Alrerekirl'
“WotnrD,
thetild like 'Whiten t i tni . Mr. War. J.
;Lanni adinteleptertiettt MO, take Be
14 I eraL
amnion e I' I to the American
, people,roue rmlitate the
on a 4th of Mari:l4lB37. io that lad and
meat carefully-prepared ofall hie State pa
perei which 171.4 political wisdom, and
le replete - wit nioW sentiment, °enema
Tao:mon said:
°But the Union can hot be tweeetwedi end*
Constitution maintained Yr the mere comely"
power sonEnetto thellabetal Gorinnicent:
°lts foundation 1119116 be laidin the a ff ections
'of the people, and in the mirky' which it gives
to Ilfsc liberty aqd property.,
°lf mac a struggle Is ever began, aid the
eitiselif Of the Country arc arrayed' in urine
against those of Smother in doubtful Mani
let the battle result may. TAIIRE WILI
BB AN OF TDB UNION, and with it A N
END TO Tipruores OF 'FRENNINEI lac
vletory.of the victors would not swore to them
the blessings. of liberty. It Would ravage their
wrong". bat they mould themselves share fa the
oommou ruin." e .
of boom,
Now do MANI/sr Democrats, who telt=
they rev** the seritiments of JaaNlOn, and
emulate hje example, believe, with him, flit
the Union can not p q reetived asuithaDoos•-
dttufti: by the mere coercive
powtv of theDeneralGovernment? tei,thor
bslieve that if the Cwo sections of the oetuitry
arrayed against each other fhpon the battlal
geld, "let the battle result's' It may; there
will be an end cif the Union, and with it an
end.,to the hopes of frowner' V '
That was JAORION'S dootrinothat was
JAcsacoes, counsel.. Cantheybonistly pre
tencrthat tkey are carrying out the one or
tweeting the other? We all know that
they are not! We all know that they are
opposing JACKSON'S principtes in advocating
a policy which he urged would result in na
tional nib.
In claiming. therefore, to be disciples of
.i.tcursos, while trampling in the dust the
last affectionate counebla of t , e old hero to
..;_...., ",r°9-P A e.. ll fl RV t rfa fnem
ory, a n d are gin ty or Aft set of hypooracy
that is shameless, bold and impudent.
Only think for one moment of the arlro
mi l t
tes of oivilvrar aiminglui their represent
ative a man who old us that such a war
"would be an end the Union, and with it
an end of the hopes .of freemen." . .
Could ANIIIIEW Jecirsom have risen train
his grave, and sta•Aed into the roomwhere
m
the little knot of fitetious renegades had met,
listened-to their sentiments, how the light
nings of hie indignation would have gashed
—how the thunders of his denunciation would
have villa upon thoth who thus dared, on
the anniversary of his grail victory, to claim
political relationship with him, when, in
faet,,,mere the, bitter opponents of his princi
ple. and of the party of whiob he was the re
vered head! He would have driven them
forth„ with the bitterest scourge., as silly
and shameless tatiposterai •
General JACICION was a statesmen as well
as a patriot, and rarther than have favored
an unnatural, war, that (Meld hare no baler
result than the dislruetion OtboLh Union and
liberty, he would have plucked his right arm
from the socket and east It We the flames Of
• onsusting fire. .. ,Mr. Wit• J. FLAGG ought to know that it
has been considered a high offense by the
Administration party, deserving of imprison
ment, to repent the opiniontwe have quoted
froni tile Farewell Address of ANDIMW J AOIC
noN, for in it arc contained the whole philos
ophy of those who are opposing timpresent
madinnd ruinous strife in which we are en
gaged. _Nevertheless, let these 'words Gen
eigirJAololo/1 be printed in let tars of gold and
drstributed all over the land.
Many persons are deluded by Loyal
Ltagnes, and Join them without any evil
intent- Let such ponder what le said below,
These Leagues are simply infernal -in -ail
their purposes, and will be so in their eon
sequences:‘,
The National Council of League lean er
ect counterpart, both in Reconstruction and
the firnotions it aspires to exercise, of the
Jacobin and Cordelier Clubs of the French
Revolution. Like them, It is composed of
delegates from the Provinces, like them,if
is established en permanence, at the seat of
Government; like them it is an unauthorrual
illegal body, having no connection with any
portion of the administrative power; `*lllse
them, it assumes to directly interfere 'with
the policy and dictate the measures of the
Whiteming power; like them, it now fills
the lobbies and the galleries of the balls of
legislation tntimidating with its groans or
eneuraging with its cheers those men or
messurestwhom t disretes oratplands; and
like them, unless the American people soon
put a stop to It we will find it taking possess
ion of their floors, having its own enact
ments, and finally, 'warping in form, as it
does already in fact, the Legislative and
Executive functions.—Then—for men and
the passions of men are ajike everywhere--.
will come hers what happened there; and
then will these who laugh Ulf mock at what
they now all the morbid tbrebodinp 'of
Democratic dislo . ,yalty, avatar, as thosd suff
ered thin Irho:',lrice them; had jeered it the
prophesies of their coming doom.
Thouijhb for tio "Loyd!' I'►
The Connecticut Courant paid in 1,1116:
"Give to the Union the tiumgathat be
long to the Union, and to the States the
things that belong to the States.
"Dissolving the .Union is merely breaking
lip a confederacy voluntarily ma 4 by inde
pendent twitsovireign Auden ; wkeress de.
etroying the independence and sovereignty
of those State, is wirooties the , take of
political life ; either of these notild be it
greet evil, but the latter inonsperably the
greater Of the two." .
Three moitits• earlier the Conneetthat
kerrer Said • .
!Isn't give ,- up the Alp." h,gsred„
But it by Teuton ot most abominable
Age, she mutt needs go down, what t
13hsu all hands sink with her f No ; • yno
taw*. Let 'theta Wok* thwasebres to
-their boats (the idtetes4 which sre. Woody;
tight and strong ;and though old,.yel none•
,tho wirio.fos wait:"
qtie riOnufar yoUriarei to lot legulled
with,taides that neoeulty toile tor extra.
otilihray'useankto save th country, There
Amer eon he. o Isseshadiy whioh juitity
ot,t4o,,,Coustitutipo, • la Jamas
,••• • - • •••, •• • • •
.• 6
owaro mum 11V1P.--it
Ail. 43017 of 14, 'floans
.an
in - -ens • -
•-t ttio:'rV-W4 — f
• -
OM
Loyal League.
..r ,
is ot. th ,4
so Vors sty Of thus
. ..
_ -
.. weer foh r -
• Thcetbollitie digresses, nadir tie
lead of Garritt Smith, lis the Jerry swains
ease, overtionetted lite ..Ifatikal and kb
posse, 'ere! rescued the "gave." 'Were illa(th,
istittie mob inter "Illadela - ober pC:laWll
and keep the pence,
l ike tithirjoise - '"
- In the Boston rendition.asae, when * UPI.
'
States 'Marshal* talsieteatt Awl el*
own Eitts:inieke, wis Adv. one roadi to
•• obey the laws end keep the pate% toe ntess
as otlier_foiks t" When Eloverrwr iteward, as
(taverner er the State of New York; refused'
'to snder • fUgitive from ualaves7" and
fro u s tice, who had escaped from Geor
gia—when the Gorentor or Ohio (*wit ;
P. Ches. 1) refused to surrender
Brown's son—whet the Governor of lowa
refused to surrender Cottle, were these peo
ple made to "obey th e leers tie some es ether
Mks f" • , .
When Satiety! Seward, • etaadbill .la i Jkis.
a f
high Omit of Senator , In the Elia*.
her, proclaimed that.'thero wii a sr'
law thee tie Constitutioa",-,whas .
Lloyd - frirrison's paper. Mboiriii tt" - .
twenty yeers, the banner ery " t4le
Constitution wail a !Gagne with death' an d • a
covenant , with bell"—when • Union-Slide
Banks is iuluitia Major Ge'neral.whoa Thad.
Slovens could say in his pee. in the a COMO
Of Itipresentstives, !get *Wet, "that any
man wbo pratednbout the Co n mlt u y on w i g
a tinitoi"—when you havelb It" batik • on
• y d fetryettrii, to and in the Sid:mesa tbii"
same Thbune, this burst of Abolition song:
"Tear down the daunting Hsi .
Its dais grow pale and dim,
Its stripes are bloody scars,
A lie the vaunting hymn!" .
When sueh men can cm their own words,
belie their whole lives, sing small and de
clare that this warts a war to establish
laws and keep the ponce, As same at steer
folks," it is au acknowledgment of itypoori
sly, running through thirty years of Aboli
tion agitation, and an apostary from poor
old John - Brown, that must make his bones
rattle in his croft. " Tits Caine at Other
folks!.: when those other fehtit,".have been
-coveruint-blcakers, law-breakers and tress
on-tesiehers for thirty years: prostituting,
the press, the.pulpit, the lootura-rboni,thsi
political conventions and the whole (glue'=
Lionel systeni of the worth, , to their loath
some doctrines of sedition and racgrb ('qual
ity !—Llity-Pock. . , ,
A Wonderfni Now Dictionary
Lerner !agave • few eiamples froth
the Manse sheen; of a tiardiatioaary, 10 tie ,
gublolked at ,Conataatinpiolo, sometime be
fore thoyear 2880. The euthor_ t erho is nu
less than the learned Zerip/uress, has polite
ly sent ns some further Ilpecimene of
great forthcoming work, from which we give.
• few specimens for the edification of our
readers:
Eiggtedy-pinfedy—Conglomerationarid
confusion ;.qr the condition tof Anieriaii un
dor linpubliCan Rule,
Scribble-ecrablile--Pagen of Inanity br the
condition of America andel! Republican
rule.
-- Bhigrshally-=.llesitatti on and trremele flab 1
or Qov. Beymour's manner of Removing the
convicted Folios Commissioners of New
"fork.;
Dingle-Dangk-,Aeirial sustionsion; or a
thing that haunts the imagination of the
Abolitionists,- . _ _
' Mitcompoop,.. Nittoyharnmer --Amain°
wretches; or those Democrats who allow
themselves Co be used as a tall to Lincoln's
kite.
- Rigniarok-- - Miacsourse, incoherent, riinn
and ungrammatical ; Presi dent
Lincoln's Messages. -
Ding-donl—Tintinnabularly chimes, or
Congressional eloquence 'an the negro. .•
Orinktrot•croaktnit—Lines of irregularity
and involution ; or the Army of the Potomac's
march to Richmond.
Feelato-fast—Givatio , iatouationa; or
Mr. Stanton's Scar baletons.
/hews-poem—Pseudo aeoroinancy ; or Mr.
Chase's manipulations of theourroney.
Zip-sap--Transverso angles; or Beecheits
fobt.path to the kingdom of heaven. •••
?tit for-ict--ideqoate retaliation ; or wlost
„those who have been unlawfully imprisoned , '
by Lincoln and satraps mean to do whets
their day comes.
Reiter-ekelttr—Quasi Manier oderiter
i e.. motion of equal jocundity and veloglty ;
or the gait of Mr. Lincoln to We end of his
tether.
Nost-ehance—Manta! torpidity; or the
retiring Mayor of blew York atty.
Three phssta t in-theoleatel-- , Three +ratters
drunk ; or tho normal condition of the
Governors of Pennsylvania and Illinois.
Toperterw—An iversion of capitals and
fundamentals; or the brain of the Press
dent.
iteseinentate preponderation; or
Moe vibration of Mr. 'Lincoln between • the
Bow& and &goners.
Wrira4ll---The execration trf an Oct
with t consentof another; the propene.
.of-tho Seeder members in floigroey wine _
the Will of people - thiiy PiCifess to represent'',
Titas-taitio—Futile talks or theihito,lOWS_
of the therPreekrent.
Hod,cre-pcaiis—N. Cifienary mixture of
hoterogeneons'inwedlepitseordantemea
'bitiations•, or the liarmOny betiirSon the
fightinglwal-dogis of Tammany and . lambs
bf Mozart. This id great work °Met learned'
and truly at complised Lexlpbattes, will be
completed in 804;1 9 folio volumes, AO se
we said, apviar some thsat,_ Within
'the miming
soothed. SnWrlptions reoelied by Abra
ham Lincoln Esq., WeAlltifthn the
office of the .illanfrai Part' ind the P*llo4
New - fork city. 120 biarWei 61 040 , ,_.Te.
that we are the only editor' ln the POI;
States' to Wh lb shall salinclt tie a
chaste of his ti om
caen*thshscw,.:..olci jni f w•A'
• . .•
aust r it
—lt is a histwitil tett - t Aalitlelt
'kw awl WWI* am , lmisoldtigl.t.-j•
• The minister who for •MI of - *1
, o*w ues, preaches tallell °alien le;
AO _ot Mialutil Me traoll,4" !kb to"
irked sbelltleidsts eaUeel'rer Mr 1110 ,, '
hod alai= Iflble.'•"Tar
are nolved eWlast denied. I°
ikon teltb illehtP
bloodeknunlerwoOtbtet eir.
alleil.hilloiele4k -
ilte Ilea elf 94, •
irleout ate
-o.4Agit4
MIMS
f"!!~'r'l~i~h'
other
1
SpeetaM i t •
fitainti off it,* nedlnitor 1111110411
al Asgeralikr die*, dutlf
IPid WNW offilotMit This:Juutbseta dlina *dr
dictation of thane Milani offhe
CetdßNst
tioswhichbsee►talundodtlywt
and witbdul*ldilltlifrinad4==
the adoption et the ourstiWisu, • In
until the aseedag at the gensial Anstialaiy.
lorlBo4. - Tlardpeskir ttfulersur "Haan"
.(ut etch *teak of Ole Petisbitutd "dr
homioated,)anly pronto*, soul dte odour
bile of a sal "t ease"
Then he mat Mine. duties bele ,
Ufa
) 1011 Ormsdt sadjils MOM , SOP WIWI._ lids'
but it in bt
is nttt only aceordl
attlareonartarst In
Itylrh**Slorpe
the saiiiiiltntleu,
.dance of the pant. .
-John Tod, afterwards sor imalusid Jet*
of the Barone Court- of l'enar,fridie, • end
one of the int iswyeis la the fittds,-ue nod
the tortstitution,when, at the nitteduit tithe
Geontsktiasembl,: ‘ ,
look kis sitaLoa-tho T t
Pun rt.-elected to that Anti *like le Just'
vsostea,' He wail' the, quaker anitidi Fete
114
satire peotion vf , l B -14, tend fdtpyer,
and yet he 41§1 not dream of holding, Ht' se
the chair, whei the yew Mende net., in the
seseion of 181548.
The only instance in which a tipeskorman
.hold over, h "when the triter thsiliststi
die the 0111-4' Sr Cliiveinar, 'rind tiont.eigni is
epeeially provided for by the eastsidlaillen.
Recognising the righter, each Iloutte e et the
meeting of the General( Asitenbly, to, sleet
its own speaker, the constitution %utilities
that right, and restrains it. ..when the epee
her of the Senate shall sterols* the olliste of
Oovernor," add providet_for the election of
a speaker . pro tenepore, may, onwuch oecasions.
Why do Ibs, if _
the Speaker ue- of
he Speaker after the Meeting Of the new
Senate? it was foreseen (kit areas molt con
tingency were provided for. 'vacancy 'fir oqld •
happen, and the mete Senate, by ideating •
new speaker, would elect a new Governor.
the election must- be. held; gut tho new
Speaker,. sap the constitution, • sh4l be ,
Speaker pro ompore, merely. 7ho present,'
nominaliSpeaker Is a good hwy.'s, and -h
knows, that, aceording a alli-the rabic of
eonatruetion, Oda.. epeeist ~.,--efitentptloa -
minted. in restraint of e e Qn of Spett
ker,sscludes all ether a exception, and
makes it obligatory each new Senate,
itlign the Oettarat-Itattmilly" inlets, to
..chooses Its Speaker- other oaten,".Thus the renmere alibi emanation. ohm.
intlet.4 l - 11 0 1, theAlO901111004 11 —Witinh lag
obtained from that day to this. • -
What right has the retiring Speliust to
know that the thirty4wo' lientforicenai •
tumid not be trusted to erg/anise the i• ?
And bow emit change his petition-if sad
know it ?- Thirty-two Senators hires * very
full Senate: Nhusdenthe of the business of
thit body is transacted by less tunnbsr.
If he be the proper, Speaker of the Benito,
then there is no vacancy, and comb, ao,alets.
tion. If the inmeint notishreritiesher Wil
ling to take that ironed? Will be pnunsite
to soy that seek bones, et the meeting ifthe
General Assembly in 1864, shall mot choose
its own Speaker? Nothing is sutn r . *an.,
that the Senete cuing* c.-4 0 9•9 '
in the dbair. Is bb decide that'
and his diillidreontitintYllidiflifue t at
there shall be .no eleotfoa, This, .1.
ny
opinion, is revolutionary, stud • Ilapast
usurpation of poWer, not • juitibmi by the
practice of the' past, nor sanetiontsd by the
constitution, but in manifest derogation. of
both.
-It is needless for meto : iray ltyan, •after
what I have written, that thspriP7 approve
the course pursued bj those tionebas of the
Senate, who stand by their 'eenstitutimial
rights. To do otherwise, arsialtdmik c.
render your manhood -
I remain, very truly yours, be.
„ • WM. If.'PACKILIt.
FARM 'OR BAL
The subscriber wilder at psblis solo
at the coast Rcisit,in - Oarritorteigli Of IRMlNesite
•
TUBSDAV& WENRIIMAT A 0 011 44
of the week of the Mosso Cons% a vane*
farm or tract of land, berntalaisi hind*d
acres, situate in Inowslio• CCM& err..
adjoining lend fora arly rows*
Baird. About eighty sera of the *ars 'hist
ere well timbered, and shushed 'dad airlrittes'
saw-will. The balsa., of the load $s illeaN` la
high oigte ofinitiratiop, and has onsetsd there
on &TWO '3 RT FRAME ROVER apd Out
buildings. A splendid young orchard of clods,
fruit and a well of good water sPlo *ill to 10,
buildings. Possesabra given Insatuillately, if
sired. •
Tams a Oner.balf the pureirsibioaarhaf %O': *
raid on sonAsniation of the gabs lac %Amiss 16
six • montlr thereafter. For farthitiisidadsaa.
Inquire or dm at aeribihr in Dellefoalsa
sp. /4 MC-a RDWARA 0RAR,411., ,
sum intro MOTE. ,-..•
006 irnd 000 Market Strad; Ph011ar14416,.. .
CHAN. M. ALLMON" Illexoesa. , • "„,,, •
m old sod_ stell_keef ie tta l io,
theltemediets vietetty i
L and to eoutitr: mete hoe . -4 1411111 ; 11 4 ,
A Philadel_phlii on m*.top g a g , : q t.
.b. om, of the most eotlMMe' tole I . i .
-It isoitimailent to ell eks ' -5 -"
l ogt itsPotOsit eittir ti . br' '
`(roe. 4 , 211Mk0f IlWillti. 11l MOW ' eui =
sod eposimu,.and the table. ere simile
with Om bef 4 it e msol0 . 1 1 04LIZIAPF
INSrill th e ptl r ollrart_ 'V I ..
44114, part to EA " 1 0 =1,!C i tV 4001 , 1 .1
respeetiiii*iiiit " , , ' --,.
Tholiartra Fin, 00 ; e4O pat sq.' , 4 , ' '
Jai. lfs 18844.zei . - - :•,' • " • " " ' '.." ..
trouctoreiratt -,
• •
1 - 4: , vii.k.totorbaivel tisor' iii. -
-ftioietillecees*ilakiiititlaw
tont* 00 :171PDAT I
Vo4ld'ileissoodlemu ll e ANA •
Cote 41:400. g v tit
• . 1 31m0kikiri1i - salami:. 411104, ,
•ottAkineet, ''` T maw •
.... • . . - . 'A .4, P., ..
r e tt
r • V , .: . • -
!dwell, ,
, i
~ 4.1.. r, • , ..,,,; I= 7
Igif: '''
• 0.2,
irOr:
*, rir
11, ""-c''''' .9t - " .
,110111, ~ , . i 1111,. +. •
i 1 ,,- -, • -., ' --' •
OW Poe: 111-41: ~ - - -'• • ; ' ''•J I '
_.„..—..
'4 PP/14724130
.
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