tainegillogeeed •oetringg soegaegnemonosl ago nil* p toe toonhing lhogoor. goieetlyt' broirght out otni-odanod origHvo condition of roaevinoing hie hosed. oakrisetrinta, The effect of beholding the 'Onsidints light of oho sun breathing again the pun air oeiv e ilen, as contrasted with the linstheame dungeon in which he had mit end to wllitilt he must return or re manta his belief in the earth's motion, ap for overcome hie Uottiouity that he consented to comply, sod neon his beaded knee., with his halide arm the gospel,• lie abjured Ida belief in the Copertliaart doctrine. Part of his ithattrittion ran in these terms, "With a si.nuere heart and unfeigned kith, I abjure, ' curse soil didettt the tuiid e Ars, that the eseth moves. Re.,) I iweer, that I will never in future my or assert nay thing ver bally or in writing, which may give nee to a similar sitvpienen &gallant me." Rising from hirkknees with his eyes still "used on the earth, he whispered In a friend, "iginte tutors." —lt moves for oil that." So it will be with the loan who is forced to take the oath to save himself, his &mily nod his property. Ile may lake/ it, but to his heart he will despise the autholinty that requires IL Will smelt a 10.1.1 be devoted to or make g good citizen of tee government in it halt he laves Tile history of Poland, offllun gary, cif Ireland and of Italy • fueniallea.an muster to thequest ton. If imperial go %ern - moats are not Ode tb hold in stibmisisivo obedience small portions of a vast empire once in revolt, how numb Ito!, a gLIN erlllllCht having ; for itsbaais tat, et.tscut talks .guv asked. But."auh.l tigat ,s the e gin:Led. •liiberty and :rertioui ror the sla%e and subju ito.l extermination for the waiter .0 • thellopi.lar cry. Meet thein,fight thent.crush tbeht."ski a the gentleman from Kentiteky,( Mr Clay Smith ) Sir, that is easily 'said upon the flour, and is popular with those *leo from day to-day fill the gallery of dale RUNIC- bli_t even the g,ntlentau from Ken tacky as well as a number. of oiLer military gantlet:o2n, were nest° willing to forego the Iltaeure of the performalee anti excha,age th!lr commissions as genstals in theleffi !ur Cerl,:ficitle chilling-theta to a sea( upon this flour: and were I to Judge . 11 the will ingness wpb which they hula on to it, and. the effi.ins some of thou' anakitrg, to re turn here again instead if the war spirit they breath withiti theiril walls I should strongly suspect thew of being iu sympathy with the peach party. Mr. Chairman:- I am no military roan, . . advancean opinion on .affairs, but 1 have been often forcibly struck by a re mark of-Marebel Ney, to reply to Napoleon, as related by Headly in his ‘•Napotetan and his Marshals." '"One day, at Mintrid, Na poleon entered the room where Ney and several officers were wending, and said in great glee, everything goes on well ; Ro mans. will be reduced in a fortnight ; the English are defeated and w.II be unable to &drones ; in three mouths the war will be thitehtd." Theoflieers to whom this was addressed made no reply, but Ney, slinking his head, said with has charaelenstic blunt ness, —Sire, this war has lasted long alrea dy, stud our affairs are not improved. The people are obionate; even their women and children fight; they massacre our men ie detail. To day we cut the enemy in pieces, t r morrow we have to-oppose another twice se ettruerous. I' s pot ant army we have to fight. it is a whole uetion, I see no end Ic thie buiineirs. - -••ltunaporte followed his can ;tie:l/km.lmm, and was eventually de f ,:sted.._' /1... . Mr. Olairman: Is there mot instruction an the blunt yet ()made reply of the old French Morena! to list superior officer_ fur us! Have we not had. from !tine to t;die,, "MT rfedictiohe et Napoleon during the past. •lieg , yew .1, bet witl.tett a Aftrobal Ney to say, •1 see no end to :Las busitiese." , Jul.. Mr A:hairnet:l Low d. we mend in the eyes i the co,“ LI! I writ to day, 11l wig .' a w•i- .if t.••• , ,J0g...0.1 and conquest ego..iie t . pleat., ste ;•-tett.,, ni.ich bate se e, led from tut and up a government of t:ite'r own ! Aar we not :re, naistent with sit our former acts! Hone we slut been etrly to edinit this proper vital regard to othr re v Tuttle net er was a people, tot the lace of the earth that demanded an iudepe•i dent government that did nut have the sym pathy of the American people ; and ought we now to shrink from the doctriuc we have been willmg to apply to others! My ear liest recollection is that sppeal , made by Clay and Webster In behelt of Greece, in 1 24, when they so eloquently dechauned in that behalf on this floor end In the other Manch, of Congress. Whether it wee drake or 'the States of South Ameri ca, or Poised or Ilmigary, or Duty or Ire-, .and, the feat that a large coituit 3, for any cause, demanded a distinct and seperate Government. always received the warmest eympatly and support of the American p.e.ple, trrespectit eut party. Even ae late as December. 1863, artier gr. Liticdlit was elected, and after the preliminary 31108 for steeseion had'beentaken. the paper having the largest circulation of eel itt the Itepub -1.ei.0 party, and having more'intluence than any other in the formatlen bf Republican opinion, declared Idea it coulti see noreason why, if three millions of iiplpniste could seperaie from the lOWA ei,otan iu 177 U, that five mill,ons of Soot het tiers could not separate from us in 1861. I have been al ;ouch puttied as the distiogniebed Republi can editor, Mr. GA:petty, to rod., looking at it as a reaulutionary right, the .I:ft - erotica in position. Ought we to ehrini num the ap pheatiou of a doctrine ourselves which we wive been era willmg to apply to other na tutus, each tie Aultr,a, littesta and Spain, if we uo what a 11 he the judgment tf impair ' tiel les, ny ? How much bitter il would have Wei for tie end for Abee-astuse of the Demucraey throughout the globe. 15 hat a 'apleirlid tribute it would have been to_is Republ can government if we hail parted in peael with o.tr diaatisfied mister Staten, as Mr. Ettore t ri commended as late ae February ld'il, emita.ned by such i6eding Repuloli eau jouinn:a as the Cinciumiti Cuunnerotal, New York Tritipti. luditihopolis Joifrrull, Clucagq 2: ,Gut.!, New Haven kConnectieut 1 I'othilLum. Cohnebes foiers.lf, • end Salnion F. Chase, now seoretery op the Treasury, ' and infily others of that school. Whet to monerehialdomstries had required a long and bloody war, would have beep accom plished by Democratic principles and re publican sense ofjoetice. What a splendid roof it would have afforded of the' capacity ol the people fur self-government. What a •eluable lesson it would liave-convoyed to the whole civilised world. The fact that We could rise superior to ell prejudices and _passions, and to base conquered ourselves would he're been the highest triumph that we had ever achieved.. I revel as much, .It. Chair - tutus, so_hilLpntlessin upon this &sir, daft any lifpillqiititer States should have desired tomailtatindeit the ligaments that bound 149 p tali's. 'Eone would be more 411- a ring thasin6lelf JO make any reasonable sac iifioe to induce them to yearn to their part nership wait ukstill recto. . sing the trtith of ":he doctrine taught 6 ...r• bees of the Re publland so fg • spree. - . bylebuQuia q :Vim', ILIA" Gower, i lint was a ft e a.l tie flip heart, ; would be i atter, sev is as v old be the pang of regre ' • • - in ft icusfship, rather than to hold sovereign States pinned fo ua,bg tne bayonet, as Mt. Greeley espy it, in 1861. What • o.' 'sues Lava we wade in the fei.PO 4 Pritil l pies of prenunent, Mr. Chairman, If we cannot nee aliiraillfrAludro;Ruislan prin plple Ant - aiding /tabbed provinces by the pow* if Amyl wad adwndon 1 :What b.- towed of ttin paalweitaw at Ind'apendemae, ;1‘4191 eXur taitatoluga fee eighty rwei , -,.. 4fti Ati• chiltos. lit lc 1.30 AP.4.1-. 16 ' 44-ithiak 111° 6•41V 411" & ate IkAter arm .. Ms 041111 - thstaileatoey err 1.- qrallekolt has cor Andra , tug sellels 1 honor ed ough I o,_ alai Iv . wee the • tendon of o N i territory. tii it 1: I t Z sacrifice ev that putelbaW man, competed to hie y. W trata t a Republic when the mouth of the MI 'ppi visions . 1 may i t , t., A as disloyal wait held by a foreign power, when we had and unpatriotic for entettaining them, but nothing west of that river, when Florida it will Only be by shallow fools and arrant wee held against us, end we could exist it guin el' by the obaelisement at Heinen ive knaves who deg not 'know or *lll dot admit the difference between recognizing 'a theirljone siiduld be,curtailed to our old territorial d 4 avitmg its mimeos,mat may not de menetions For fifteen millions of dont° awe sire to die, but itevericele A silis 'belief will I l u ' ehaelid the wh o le of that liateen " e teen not alter the taittelitliis moriedity, - L 11 1 Pen tory, and were if i bemired thfilleand times not in three temeritireviesottse anpfeeitsit as valtudile its Prettervetiten Wuuld not be i in g nonmearteue coniroverey of who. is reel emir( it owe edreitterble !bled Of govertreated .- , e tei on Tar e (4 r h kitanindiedi t ur E ,„ityn o f Prot. of territorial ambition is a vjelgnr and our Republic. Ido not see that any smelt and tow embalm" el national P ilate! '" - I discnenion now would be p r oductive of good . Ititesin and even China can vie with us in I entertain clear and strong hoinvietions up that, but who would not rather reside in one I on that mitt, convictions that I bare no ~if the Came " at tiwue."l"d' or in great' doubt will be Miami in by the impartial his , Britain, than in those countries It Is not I torten of tliC future. For the present 'I am the extent of torritary that we pettistiaa: but i willing oe let a b o put with all its rem m, e _ the manner in whit h we govern it that ten- _ tiers us trap , • t table Many gentleman seem 1 lio ns rest, provide we can snatch• flora the , common ruin some of our old relics of free rather to look to the imietity than to Mee ilon4 ~iI do DOI shanyn the belief entertain iiiialiti All Republic have troy etl by the thirst of territorial eggrail , hue " -dirt " ed by my pobascal fried& en this floor ...a thiewline that ant' peace is attainable up dist inent and the lust of conquest. The great on the basis of Union and reeonetrubiron - , liject i f stir go./ ernimut should be to , dera - I p and cultivate the names' resources of It the Democratic party were in power to day I have no idea, and honesty compels me i hose teinidly4 turns yut tedundownenther than to declare it, (lilt they could restore the to extend It uver hostile anti fennel" people. Union over - thirty-four Slates. My mind It is in that character that true /Datrioltsin time endtrgone an entire (dump upon that is to be c ultivated and true national glory PO bject I believe that there are lint two al found Especially should /ill R,eptiblies ternatiVes, and these are , either an acknow ettillvele /he a t" id. peace 51000 it is by t he I, dgrucnt of the independence of the South war power that Free Governments are con- es nn independent nation, or their complete manly overturned Ibe charge Las been I subleigntion lead entennintition as A ',te ntacle that Democracy le turbulent, warlike pie: andef these alternatives I prefer the and aggresaiv i e, but if so it is a terrible mis er nception tif its true interests for upon tne tonne? 'ffr Chairman: I take little or no interest reopte fall the awful calamities of An eminent arm ed in the discussion of the question wlitch ma eollimons po e t Las Sa , n,'' T ley of toy political friends would make an Lord 11.5mw- that w ar was a game . el e''' ea. itsur lea to bow this war shall he proneoue if the people were nise kings and minced ted its milliner ancl object. I regard !brit as would never vlsy at rite venerable Frank - w,, i v e than !rifling with• the great question tin, at the close of his il t stroun elireer, re - Ido notstie wee that Gine run he say pros mei Xed "that there was uert rit good war coition of the war againet it sovereambtate and a bad peace. ' tinder the Constitution, and I do not believe We hare made, Mr I. bemoan by this that n war so carried on can be preneecuted war eight millions oclutter tunnies upon .ias to render it m oper juettlinlile or ex the •American ,confluent. 11 bile . tune shall lass the recollections of this bloody milicnt An unconetit ntional war can only be cnrried pn in an unotoaliltilional milliner , strife will tierce fade front the memories of and to prosecute it fur ulcer under the idea thepenple North and South, but will be of the gentleman from •Penneylvanin (Mi handed down to the Intest generation The e/ / e. ti vi us , us a War waged against the 1 on words Shiloh, Antiettun, Gettysburg, lilac-fedtrate States its an ,independent nation • - 4 11 Willinterwi " 4 "rekwi" , l7ir,r . 4 , pise - dreintifiti - ff - 7114 - ffirbjureit - Fort Donelson are words of division and , tem as he propoees and as the Adminie disunion and will serve to bring u p ewe ' tuition is in truth and in fact doing, lam toms of mortal hate. If it were true as etpuitly oppo . ed wam alleged by a distinguished Senator from / I will say fother, Mr. Munson that it (this !Mr. Wade) In a speech in Portland in t h is war ilt re be Pull further prim. , ited, I 1855 that .he believed/ that no two (110101:18 prefer dint it shell he done under the auspt on the twill limed each oilier as much as• cis of therm who now conduct its monitor - the North an 'I South how much more true meat, 551 do not wish the party 'nth which is the remark now after they have been ter- lam connected to be in any degree reason rayed in such bloody contests It is the I Ode tor its results, which cannot betither obyeet of the sword to cut and dente Wee i nl. then disnstrous and suicidal-let the er, but never to unite. W hat Luton's there responsibility remain where it is until we between Russia and Poland,betWeen Aitetria can have is change of policy instead of men , end Genesi.% between Logland end( wholio trench a thing is mould° Nothing could Ireland. where the sword Med the bayonet be More fatal for the Democratic party than fur centuries liave been employed? Instead Ito seek I i'come into power pledicel to a of conferring national strength, they are continuance of a 'ear paltry.-such a policy *emcee of weakness to countries that held I would be a libel upon its creed In the past, ahem in subjection, and which' would this 1 end the ideas !hilt lie at the basis of all tree day to stronger without them than with governments, and would lead to ins complete Meal demoralization and ruin . Mr Chairman, these lessons of history I I believe the teepees of the Democratic are fail of warning and example Much party are for pence, thatihey would be plo gutter would it hese been for es in the be- ted in a false milkmen' if thky should nomi ginning-loath better would it be for us nate a war candidete foe the Presidency now-to consent to a diviipon of our magni- sail seek to make the Male upon the Mawr fitent empire sad cultmete amicable iela- i basis of how the net should be progeouteth !tens With our tetriteiged brethren, than to For my Own part as I have rib mule indica seek to hold them to us by the power of the ted I feel- that our old government cannot sword line let ins avert to 11. e common, be:pregerred untie, Ilia best auspices and un yet perfeti.y *tenon and apparent error, do , any podgy that may bi. n ,,,,, adopio, that to pail with our yui istlietton rer eleven t yet I it, atee co sci the Penmen tie ity w.lll -.talcs tnvehce the destruction tit our , glee- i wiliril 1 have Wanes been et rou e ted pre ermmni /he e ''''"""' of the F e°l ' ° "'" ue serve its ernaisteue v and republienn char oni no rue. Its al nimbly As well ' 'l'l° rioter unshaken one say, who had a faint of two hundred ac- rem of land, ilia imbed lobt his title deed to "i"""'" ---- all of it, became by some misfortune, lie Lad parted with-lifly„ In losing the South , nut one unctionT of out• Govermatut over 118 is sun•eV. nil It remains over us as cunt pletely sovereign as it ever did. Ilene Icy me say, as the experience of my individual belief, that if it hail been understood in the North, noun the South , that by the terms of the Federal compact a Slate had a right in secede hum the Limon, this disruption would nei et have occurred. Ilad tbe North so understood the matte' there would have been upon Its part a forbearance from the exercise sf wurtzite measures, and n desire not to press its southern sisters to the wall, that would ever have Maintained tke Con federacy unbroken. It was the prevalence of the idea of the t tomlidationiets in the North that the Southern Stales had no right to anti would net secede, that temp ted them, and that fatal policy liatimmetered the Confederacy . It is said that no coufederncycnn exist by a recognition of this principle, but omen was not the view if the lathes s of our Governint t, it was not the view f f Jefferson and Wad mon in their lamortal resolutions of 17;t8 and 1 - ti t It nos been said Mr. Chairman, that it would make a confederacy a rope of mind, but if so it is !orange that the Southern Confederacy, where it is recognized should lucid together through such a bloody 'Wee aloe as we Itave - lrpplied to it for the last three years.it is a strange rope of saint that ten duns all that . But to return, Mr. Chairman. As will be Judged perhaps, by the tenor of these re mai Ics 1 am reluctantly and despondingly forced to the conclusion that the Union 18 lest, never to be restored-I regard all diesinis of the restotaiion of the Union , which was the pride of my life and to restore wtielwAtvesi now, I would pour out my beet's blood, as worse Ilan idle I sec neither Ninth or 'moth any eetiliment on whittle it is posauble toiu ld a L4lion-those elements of the. L nom which Mr Atheists de scribed have by the process of tune been destroyed. Worse, yes worse thou that Ms Chairman, 1 am reluctantly forced to the conclusion ti at in attempting to preserve our jut mixt ion over die Southern States, we Lave lost our constitut „mai tom of gov eminent aver the Northern. What has been predicted by our wisest and moat emineut welcomer' Linn come to pass, in grasping at ebe shadow, we have lest the subsume', In hinving to retain the casket of liberty in which our jewels were confined, we have lost those precious monuments of freedom Our doverument, as all know is not anything resembling what it was three years ago ;- there is nut one single vestige of the Con lititi ion temaining, every cla-ese and every letter of it tits been violated, and I hare no idea myself that it will ever again be re spected. Revolutions never go backward to the point at winch they started. There Las always been a large party in this coda- —On the 4th of May 1862, Gen try faverrabbe, to a strong or monarchial McClellan occupied Yorktown on his government, and they have now el the ele ments upon which to establish one. They Way to Richmond The Abolition press halm a vast army, an immense public debt, denounced, vilified, abused, and the nil an irresponsible Executive. A mhlth Ae"t President at length iremoved him from to retain power, be le a etai)didate for re stem ion, and as Commander-In-cblet,getting a i t , i s command, for not long faster. charged (whether true or false I shall not t Now it is the sixth of May, and GOD undertake to deelde), that he has already Grant hasxot attempfrd to move towards used the Army in the Florida expedition t to e Richmond, he has had every facility a ens " i li a ° lt rl f it il" 0014°ne Fremont) b man eotdd Want, aid still lies quiet on hair' tared the field to a his claim to ,a,„, hiints_Qf theitapidan. The_rasa eital ato mums, !upriser, ea if the Chronic/a that, kooossoreit McClellan for no ma- - of of Mls sity, the IsresidenV. omen. is comsat ___,__„l ia„iisocouarnesies of the suidestanui of the viii t, has not a word of condom- ' h -1 • • New York Salad, , speaking ALieut. Gen ,fatat/On fort ip inact ivi ty of Grant. i Why Gnat, tilltqinition far lrady mooted wheth. i e ise wh im ore th e sriesi to boded elf thestall wlnitukokeir . 19 14". " .... " . AO, 017 bow? '' ' or he. iufsaf/0 11 _ scat sit 111. „,,,L ei1d Nat tiaßikt t !---W5P4111 6 4410 , ' lag the reins of goterasoce , 1 . emorrali r Ail tato a n Ternne, in &alliance et,t3o P. GYLIVIC MEEK, - - Editor. . _ ' I. El? N E, PA. FRIDAY MORNINQ, MAY .6, 1864. The War. During the part week therm lies been tow lit tle Dbls of importanee from the Army. Fuller details of line disasters of the Federal form on Itei River and m North Carolina, have come in futb' eon(lrmin.; the reports heretofore published. The Confetti rate geport, of the battle on Rod River platen our loan •in -Killed and woun ded at eight thousand, and elaitee In have taken over four thousand prisoners. The Age soya: Affairs at 4 evidently approaching a crisis on the Rapidan. Reinforcements are being hurried forward to Gen. Lee. Ileauregard, with teenty thourand mon, is said Ito bare passed northward through l'eteraburg. The Confederutei aro reported to have with draw their westertirivlng a short distance back from Madison Court 'House, and are concentra ting their forces towards Fredericksburg. They evidently expect Grant to make a dash towards Richmhuil over the route pursued by the Kilpat rick raiding party. As the old telegraph line between Alexandria and Fabirth is being re construt fell this would seem to be probable. The Federal to •pe are evacuating Texas. This bus Loco rendered necessary by the disas ters on the Red itiaer. Nu particulars have beau received of this evacuation boweisr. The Red River expichtion has certainly been abandoned: Gen. Banks bas withdrawn from Grand Ecorc to Alexandria. one hundred miles down the river. The fleet has also nailed down, and the upper waters of the river are given up to the enemy. The• Federal garrison at Washington, North firrolina, have given up.the town and retired to Ncpbr•rn, on the Sound,' twenty miles distant. The enemy are not near the place, and this evac uation was a necessity, caused by the weak Fed al force there. General Polk is said to be treoritempkating gigantic raidrupon Port Hudioa with Arenty thousand men. , It is arety weakly garrisoned by negroes., ron a u {lVppp~. many tion of thellnion, _ sae - destriatic of the ConatitutLn. Yet no sooner ale their °Wane accomplished, 'and the south dttreil,from,,_vf, ' than potty. of Wise" intfin • DemotritSti leid'elVilitite With EEO" most fat:rifle:id - eneidies - de the' CetuOttitiOtik teT 4 litlilin the priateh and destroy all, hope of recotiltruetion, n; iteetratfaar nionther of , thewsr, when its was carried on oxtensak for the purpose of qttelling an armed insurrection, Whereby the people of the Eouth - Were overawed and the laws. of their States set at naught, there was some excuse for those Democrats who were apt well in formed as to the real oondition of af -1 'fairs; as, ore iiorpes.s of Abr. ham Lincoln's Adirdnistraticin, when , they entered the army or supported the war, as they imagined, not to subjugate the Sonth and make war upon States ; lent,-to assibt ' the. crushed majority of those' States in -maintaining their local organizations. But there is no such ex cuse for the leaders of the Democratic party: They Augu , full well that the se cession of the Southern States was not the result of momentary excitement, that the people of those State. l 4 were not overawed I:ordain:lied down by military powers; but that they acted upon ma ture reflection - and with the- flash convic tion that they could no longer remain in the puion without: endangering ~ e-riotd). riotd). that liberty they loved so well. and which they had always been fore uno,t in defending. Reinouratb of the North who' had stood shin by side with -itch teen as Stevens, and Nelson and Houston, in re s isting the progress of Abolitionisa, and in warning the people . the Union front the Northernenerniesof the Constitution, knew that those great statesmen of the South had not cast their fortunes with the new Republic, without 'loin; deliberation .and ti settled cunt icium that their States could no lonttf.r be free in the old. The lenders of the Abolition party have been much blamed fur misguiding Itonest people of the North ; but in imr opinion leading Democrat; are vastly more to blame than tint. This Administration had its purpo-es to accomplish, which were the destruction of the Constitution, the overthrow of the government, the subju gation of the South, and usurpation of tin; powers held -by the States, that a great central despoti-m might latrear kd, underwhich could be carried out the wicked schemes they had been propaga iing for ]limy. years. They were wise enough to know (hat with the great Democratic party or the North arrayed against. tine, their schemes would fall to the ground in six. month., and them fdves fide tjettms . to the bloody monster they had called forth. They were too wise to angle with a naked hook ; and the:, CON CIA uglitte:ss with a specious bate. The 1111M..3 of the Democratic party looked for an example to those who had led them in the past, andupen such men Ils Di , .kimon Dix CodirallC and I hilt. to say nothing of Reast thould the indignation and 1. en geanee of the people tall. A.; men sometimes - steal the livery of the count of 'leaven to serve the Devil in," so the old watch word of the Democratic, party because , the war cry of its enemies, and upon their standards was entblazoned the name of • the Union" they hated, and at that cry - minibus of armed men rushed to its destruction. As the waichntan who cries tire when his charge is in ashes, so the Abolition ists raised the cry of "Union" when they, knew that by their own efforts it was destroyed, that an excited and madden ed people might tread the blood of their brethren upon its new made grace, and seal the portals of its sepulchre, that no light of a resurrection mot. wraight, ever dawn upon it. The honest rank and file of the' Democratic party too brace to tarry when•they imaginedtheir country in danger, blindly followed the standard which had gone before them in the days of Jackson, little dreiinting that ~ettr noble vessel lad teen• boarded by pir ates, who' hung out the banner of "Un ion" • to lure us, to our destruction. Men who had upheld the hands of Jack son when the strife was' fierce around Ititu.; men who had been leaders in our :did party for a score of years, led our honest peo"file forth, and now from the ensanguined borders of our Republic their blood cries to God, and upon the heads of those same •leaders will the righteous vengeance of Heaven fall. But amid all the terror and 'excite mentof the times, through all the pert mentions to which we have been sub jected, despite unconstitutional lemma& the exercise of arbitrary waiter, men have been found true to our ancient principles, who in accordance with the proposition of the great Douglas, that "war is disunion," have opposed from the•flrst the strife which is destroying us, and more than once have 'endanger ed theirliberties in an effort to stay the bloody hand. • The great heart of the Dem ocracy is right. Their honest convictions have always been that this war was wrong, and the sooner those who occu py leading positions, oinustruct plat forms with no sham iidicii in alibi; but ay.; ery plank composed of the wk. of Jetties and Right, the tiooner• will the storm be ever widat ie koitOk4,l4 to the dust everything irhich we were proud in thepasi, or etnitecillrfer in the fittuJW., Ile -4F4141 • • ±ittraivieti- ftie Eli Pro of hilf-way Democrat who falls flem vs, we will gain a world of strength in the noir energy math a course will give to hap* and hearts of honest men.— Letiltoae_whateach .that ..the "present war, above all °there, it wicked and un ions tliniiithal; Teen urge . % tistir fellow- Men int o it that their awn krec_ice par: caries may escipoiThe rata oi r conscrip tion; %cc say, Tet lipps ge by the • board. They aro the political Jonals who have called upon us the wrath of the elements by which our vessel is threatened with lasts dion, There is no need. to e!ttst lots, the mark is upon them, it cannot into the raging elements of political per dition, and . if swallowed up by the "great fish - of Abolitionism, they will not do is half tie injury that they am working no*. Let us shrink not froth declaring our principles, fearing they are unpopular. PA great majority ,ofour people believe this war to be wioked and unconstitutional. Let us give them a platform upon which they may rally to oppose it, and fear' not for the re . - Progrpss of Miscegenation, \ ' 'We are Sorry to bo oNliged to deal so oft,.n with this tlii;guatilig r theub an the ideas it calls up. But as public jou, nal ists we are Found to wr.r.i the people of t he dangers which threaten them from this trew I fledged monster of the Abolition ists. *Most of' our-people can remember the time when the cloud which now ovediadows our land like the diath an gel's wing, was no larger than A ma't'er ratut a kw yeara since tionirtn was confined to aNnarrow circle in our land, when its theories were only propagated by a few crazy fanatics, whose efforts against our government were subjects of ridicule.' Now it hits grown-intka dark-A:tat —terrible - RUMS tei who strides 'over the grave of the Un ion. "And rears his throne—a pyramid of hones Aland a sea of blood." - He breathes death and desolation, and eNerk hopr of his reign is occupied, in rearing kfaG e ric of despotism, which it will require years of misery and strife to shake down. With such an' example before tts,'with all the woes of our peo• plc fresh in our minds, and before our eyes, whet fwo remember the birth and slo— progress of the theories which have ruined we ca coot but kiok with fear ful foreboding upon the progress of this new invention of the dimities of our count, y and our race. Abolitionism was it coded for the destruction of our Re public, a task which has been but too well accomplished— -ffiscegenst ion i in tetoled to finish the Vbrk, a& our got eminent being, already destroyed,' 'it aims to blot frOm exittenee the rkfte which framed it.' Do any scoff at •uct to effort as absurd and impossible?. .s quartz r of a century ago the spirit whit+ ha de•-t I eyed us was scateely so potent as is this new one whiehla. taken p.m ...c.ision of U. - IVheit Mrs. Stowe's "Uncle Tom" tirt , t made its appearance, it v.a, not Th,p piautled half so much as romances of this 3 ear have lictm which have b)r their foundation the amalgamation of the white aitd black races. Yet who butothe ' iecording angel can compute the evils which have flown from the eireitlation ot' "Uncle Tom's Cabin?' We ha‘e oursek es been witness n here whole fam ilies bare fallen into the baleful doe trines of Abolitionistul , froin reading that powerful production of.a great. though ini-guided genius. And now '*e have a work before us, the production of an in telect perhaps more powerful, and cer tainly more mistaken. In a style 'une qualed the plot of "Neig/i/nli Jarkirouir: is worked out by the pen of its gifted au thor J. T. Trowbridge. In the most suldile and dangeroulniknner the doc trines of miscegitation are inculcated, until at last wlpllt the herothe—a negro wefibh marries the son of a high-bred Englishtnen, wetfeel neither disgust nor astonishment.. 'Withzfeelints:''or awful sadness we_ lay the book aside, and think but of the consequencesit may work. It is no conablatien that unto the "day of wrath" is feseryed the reward of its au thor, we can see and feel only the condi tion of -our country, and the dangers which surround us. When, one who wields so powerful a ben becomes the champion of so balefUl a doctrine, it con vinces us that it is no myth. Miscegen ation - is criiin7M7xlrate,.." - raitiiir. and should be met at its very outset with all the resistance of which the lovers of humanity are capable. It is net confin ed to theory only; but it is everyday growing into practice. It will soon ri val it!i*.paront, in hideousriefis and its powey of !king evil, and onr people can not 1,53 too frequently warned of their danger. —We direct all our shifts at 'error, and if any are smitten it Is their feult—and not ours.—Abolition Ez. . , - If the friends ofth is editor have' aoy riC gard forhissafety, Choy will iitioiediate b remove the shaftserith which hodeils death. If he is in the habit of directing thole it error, there isArtat „ . thuitier . of him committing ended —We elliOole that-*e . rowan tO Adultaistrst*piirtn We 6.4 .; filvorefeceilhostieni kimono: the: filir ocitilmhted lietruilitAlANNOVO goaritobit the iiknot t hernifioile;mad itiat Pis • iiW 4. -happiness ofentiliens opt , unborn - =and lasfand least, has compreimised himself and friends more frequendy than any othe. man who ever occupied the Praia- , - --etm;d all the toolSalebte , et the th**e, our course has bee* •ettiththtferwerd durousbook, ,JavAaage . - Your voice for truth, like that of all other Abolitionists, is evidently perfectly stilt —Let Flo ode fail to read the speee h ()few Alexander. Ling, published in hit+. issue of of the- Itirmitster. Some folks may , think that it is "eitrenie." but. in leas than two yetts. they -till ad mit that Mr. Long was right. ---T he Ant e ries') people, a wiAst all the terrors and tibtiples ithiCiv'sditohnd them, have the consolation of the pig on the mit, that "things wit!' tarn." • NEW- ADVERTISEMENTS. 4 DTALoGUE ! how are you this morn Mg! Bills.—Fine thank )nu, how are time/ with you ? .1.--Just tollerablO: usoney'• r, the paper that is ell AMM. rr , rv• ie plet.ty. hut eierything I. P. 1 , 04 er111 , 1% 6 . 01. - good. of sill kinds and everyilting etxVeptirig Frain or what thing• we fanner. hare 'to that a bunch of greenhseks go but • httlo ways in .upply in ones want., But how it Bilinr. that you stlwill go en neatly dressed, with clothe. on curb good quality and each excellent fit, when T know that you'd..not expend half as lunch in the year for clothing m I do, and yet T look like • rsgamufftin, most of The time? ' that you look pretty rough sometimes. and I know you get a 'Mat many cloths. hut perhaps you go to the wrong establielp*ept to maireyour purchases—•some pinee where the merchant is not acquainted with the blighters, and has noth ing on band list none "slop shop" gaff. stuck on to him by the sharers /rt the city. Now. if you will take my advice sad go w Sternberg+. when_yeu wastlyuar neat nit.-you witl know why it k that my clothes tat neatly and ax al ways of a, goad qsuillty. • .I.—But hew is it that he can tell clothing cheaper then other merchants about Veil*. Conte T . IL—lice:Luso he makes it his heal nost,has been brought to it from boyhood and is c m meted with one of-the largest eirithing tobli%hrtients in the city. wbere he gets witeteser be wants whenever he wenta ? El==rilMMl D.—Erri .into he Mlle to Bellefonte; and let inu tell ynwlltribin, nrY clothes dti. not cost mn any more now.--ererything high as it than they did before prices went op end Diorught kola men who know nothing of the Unsinere but to rut trig prices-on poor geode.' I'll try him. for I liner Ryt rick of noy ing ex horbitant pri^l.lfor such things, as I haye been srearinethejspit two nr there years. if he miikes it bin buiditetis Entifnly, nOnrins hn kpow• whet in gong, end I supposn ho has down far istonl,'lte would offer nothing Lot the hist erttelen, I, fear of vain/ his rap ntation and injuring hinJwisisess. B.—Gire him &call when you go I. Belle fonte. you will find him just opponitn the ••l ro ts Fropt in !I r• . Cline Boom, one of the toot clever frfiows you 1.. , ,tv 0r... lin will ftirnialryrot anything from n paper collar to the lint at kind of.. coat, at rake, which for Ohs tl.uees is perfectly 111.t. , 1)141141114. 1141,•1 giro •.tt a gtnot rigor to smi4.o:oto the itartzinu• Aa ;r morning John. usintl what +told you, ehers you it not a suit of, lulh,ll. J.-1 n . 111,1.101 much oblige for the infor mation. I hoard others speak sere highly of Sit hertz. and will t.t elothes the n. at time Igo totown. Hood morning. Nay tith • R AUPT A.Co., hate removed their Foundry from the old Stand at Bellefonte to the Ms!eoburg Foundr 31e.chine shops. wfdire they contin ue to eture the Watts Improved plow, cen tre Lev I c 11111 and shears for all the plow,. ever main n this county. They also have an attractive sariety of IRON R '1 !LINO, CEMETERY ENCLOSURES STEAM ENGINES AND MILL tiEAKINCI. To thintlepartnient of the beeriness they givo particularet:entlon, and hate a large stock of Patterns on hand fur steam,llour and Saw Mille, STATIONERY STEAM EZiGIN ES of any desirahle capacity, from ten to tweets% Horne Power built in the bent of style. Thy) also manufacture one and two :lore Tread pox, ere—and four horse sweep Power. and Thresh lug machiues to suit either. Coro anchors and other articles to numerous to mentien. Order* receives' and castings delivered, with a variety of the above named articles kept at the old llayees propeity near the depot at Bellefonte Pa., where they have Machine, Plow and Patera ; makers, the best in the country, that can Le ; consulted at mu time concerning any work that may be wanted in their line of hunincer. (Aro ; them a tell you that wont your work done itp;to ' order. . A. IAUP7, .Co May eta, 1564.—1 y," OORPHAN6 COUR f SALE. Ily virtue of an order of the Orphans Court of Centre county will be exposed to pub lic sale on the premises in Potter twp , - ON SATUR,DAYJUNE 41h. At 10 o'olcullt A. ALA said day. AlYthet certain tract of land situate in Potter township, Centro comity. adjoining lands of John Love, Darid Kerr, Jacob Mule and other', containing ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY ACRES,.. , more or less, having thereon erected a TWO STORY HOUSE, DARN, STABLINO ,110., with a Springpf Nike water running through R, and about ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY ACRES clearoti and in a good state of cultivation with a fine Orchard of choice Writ—the residue well timbereetkoown as the property of Jacob Des ham deed. TERM OF BAht.—One half sf the munhase money to be paid on emillon of Alois, the residue in one yearlhermlWA with interest to be secured by bond and mortgage on the premi um BA/VI:ROYER. JOHN B. BIBLE, Mmintstraton of Jaaob Dm** doted May 6th, 1864 • U N7 P#14. 0 9 3 5-- „ D. O. XELuirit, Propri?tor The subscriber Would respeelliday Inform the public that be bag - recently refitted the above usaPsd BotiLmsad b now-prepanal to accommo , dad ids friends and patrons in a comfortable aranster, , and be will map *API* in it lanilrooahla bona far noieurnen. is table will always be lamariouly supplied from the markatp of country and aides, spa, Ida Bar Ailed with Nemo of 4misa brands. His char salcriaa reirioniible a them bf any other Ho tel in tiro plennonwlilin Seals sardsled,tbey can not be reiriplaGieriitlii moos lill6 favor bhis whiktre etistem: - Expecting to naive a share bf pub patronage, and fully intending to de wave it, be thrall open bin louse to the public and invites atrial. 1:110 . 1111201113ftrdiebifeelik iad but skri• at Wl' girt • . t—k FIE& OV*ID`.IIII-41:iiil A ?rxwaroas AND NE . W GQI2.I2IiL um : if ;ALM " I • • The nlelerelgted will Open on the let of April at LIPPON6 STORE ROOM, in - 1 I 1 . 11 t I • - --L. 444 A Magnifoost entottinant ormitlrenewsooAs. bRtIiOODISt Cons Lang IA part of, Dan goods of every dworiptiolly Cantinas, , Bahasa, Oates, Mamas, Walk • hump illuAlus. Sr* lued Summer shawls, also the latest Style of Cloaks and Circu lars, which cannot be surpassed; in style quality or prides. Also • large as- . eortment of Millinery goods of eves, descriPtiaa, Balmoral Skeli --eton Shirt. Men and— ' Boys' C Clo thing,thing, all kinds of Shirts, &e, &. . E Dicluding • large supply of Salt Bacon, Dried Beef, Lard, Candles, Coal and other Ode. _ . Art ..endleta. variety of Wooden & Willow Ware, (Haws and Queenawara, Ilanlware, Auota and Shoes, Hata and. Cape, Trani:a, -Val,lsee, Stationary. NetiviskChrPettly Floor and Tata* Oil Cloth so., b. =I purchesed oar (foods Ereleaf - rely for Cat* wo are enabled to oiler them for unto cheaper than any Store in Ceetral Pennsylva nia. AO- A p kinds'of Countil produce taklM Exchange, for Whin the higliest Market price will be paid. .Our motto is "grICX lALCI ♦]R 11111/ILL PROVITS." April Ist, 1864—tf LINN 1 WEBS •0 etas' rrni .s.sieet ' it been ktortn 'to Lotanists and tAiiivelers that ui the mountains of Cauensia, in Europe, erc exhd certain plants, hcrhe, and roots which wh s ., ~,mitincsil and prnperly prepared, p Coe eztrn•Ft•linekr} oirtne of elrarting the skin of all