CVM If if ill t rait v v m-rx:i--ar. -x: .- 0. B. GOODLANDER, Uwn. PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS-$1 25 per Annum, if paid in sdvauce. NEW8KUIKS VOL. IV. NO. 17. VOL XXXIV. WHOLE NO. 1731. CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1863. n wxvt h I .14 M . ilw II 14 19 11 M IU LI l For tli Jlepublican. liRCCiRu Tow.Nbuip, Oct. 17, 18G3. Messrs. Editors .-Since writing vou last, event have passed which are almost too checked but checked only to rise a am disgraceful to be indicted event which villi renewed vigor. VVith llio assistance came very near driving our peaceful Tern- of a quart of ''Jordan' but," they were in ocmcy to the verge of strife j and had not duceci to a Ivnnco nut with the most the gond people of Beccnria possessed that friendly demonstialions towards tlio "cop high respect for law and ardor character- pe heads." iatic of that class of people whom "N'igeor- Now commenced (lie war -not upon heads" tj ' Copperhead" and 'VSecea- "copperheads," oh, no! the time had not aionists," "the actors in this drama might arrived for the commencement of open of danger probably more than lby ro nave incurred tor themselves a vast Ueial aware of. "What I am about to narrate is strictly trur, without exaggeration or flourish xcep: wnere nourisn is aeeue'i 10 irimiKal"'""i. "y nrsi wrrnKrn ineir the truth. It appears that, among the many who went to the election on last Tuesday morning was a young man who wore a "badge of Liberty," a very res pectable and inoffensive man who went with other Democrats lo cast his vote in Favor of Woodward, peace. States' Rights, and the Constitution and Union not lo quarrel with niggerheads. And among the followers of C'urtin, and advocates of war and despotism, was a man, (or demon in man's form,) who is noted only for his quarrelsome, turbulent and contumelious propensities. He is the hero of tho "Slide town" battle, of which you were informed nme time ago. He is a man that mindt, other peoples' business a great deal more thau he does his own, and in carrying out his poculiar personal qualities, stepped up to the yonng man who wore the ''copper Lend," when he was not facing him, and made a grab for the "jewel." This attempt kt robbery corngod the young man, whe immediately gave fight, aud handled the robber very severely for a little while, when Sneiih'it (the robber's) friends in terfered and Hived him from a sound drub bing. The consequence was, the robber had lo ''quit" and "skedaddle" on a dou ble quick Bull run home a.-jaia like a cheep-dog with his tail between li s legs. Wonder ifho'il ever again attempt to icare "copperheads " li: oontequenceof Snsatb having to leave so abruptly, and without stealing thesym- hoi ol Liberty, which he swore so vaunt inirlv to "csrrv oil' in Iriitmnh" wi'hout rommitting the robbery he had meditated, I raised the "bile" or the 'ntggerlieads,'' ; who immediately despuched a messenger ("yow lie, I was no messenger," my con-j science tells me. What was it men: 'Why, fool, 'twas a monkey an old mon key, with one shoulder up, and one shoul der dixcn - a uvmkey, not of a high emU. but a very low easte, one wilh his tail crop ped, mid kix face tliaved, wears a thread bare to!, and dirty shirt." "Why, con science, vou are wrong, he can't be a mon key, for he Utki." "He don't talk, he screeches, and when he screech)! his tongn goe. and you thik he is talking." No, uo, conscience, 'tw a messenger 'twas John L McCully. I am right.) I hnperonjcic'iiv will not int errupt me again. Yes, Mensrs. Editors, a messenger wis dis patched to Janesville, with the news of the failure of Sneath's enterprise, and alnui a dozan men, (n not men. idiots,) who had more 'Mersey lightning" than good seme, came Iretting. foaming and sweating up lo tho Crcss-ltoad. sweating vengeance on "copperhead," and vow ine at the samo lime that they would return to Janesville bearing Ihc "rdie of olden times" that the young man wore on his breast, and recover the renown that rMieath hail so ignominious!)' lost, and achieve a victory that the world would certainly le nroud of. Yes 1 they would win back all that glory that our armies lost at Bull Bun. Bull's Bluff, Uichmond and Fredericksburg ; indeed, they weri deter mined to gain a victory that would out shine that won by McClellan n Anlietam After praying fervently for Mars to lead them safely through the gathering storm, they fixed their hopes firmly on glory's bright career, nnd marched forth to the nXd of theii labor in the holy came of whipping "ooppet heads." 1 Everything, at they passed, aeemed to gi70 them homage. The trees reverently tofsed thoir tops, as if they were striving to stoop to embrace and bles them ; tlie birds chanted thei' lively lyric strains, whinh the heroesin their heated imagin ation, construed into "Bony o'er the A Ips," and " Washington's March ;" the little aquirls came hopping to the roadside to salute them, and then scampered away into the woo 1 again ; the ephyr, sighing through the treo-tops. they thought, waa the spir its of Generals Lyon and Keno, whispering couraee in their ears, and urg'ng them on to victory; the gently rippling water of lludiy bun sounded like the magic voice of an invisible hero animating them to energy and hope ; their uniforms (for they were mostly discharged soldiers) assumed a deeper hue than even the azure arched firmament above them; even theun it elf bowed, and smiled upon them. By the time that this long train of thought had rolled through their tninds, and all had passAcl their opinion about affairs in general, and particularly the "Outrre a Coutranee." they had arrived almost at their destination, and they looked over the crest oi ine iiiiioca. uruiiiu wnien inev nan i.-ll.l L-l'-.l i!i. i -i hidden themselve, into the crowd that Had gathered at. ine po i.uieir eye caught the ttalely forms of Hindman. Robison, , dy Democrats, and their courage alnoct failed them ; their hopes, that were to igniiier, niiiiim i, iii.v.iin .iB.; bright, of a gloriout victory, almost van ished before the tweeping cloud of despon decry that wa now drawinc it murky wings in tombr aspect around their rea- wings in aomure aspect arouna ineir re. pect.re "lenip es of fancy, (temple of reason they had non.) Meantime, where wa that monkey metsenger that ilrode ay .0 , gaily after 'reintoreemenU? KnJt hl yn'''''j' Uatthehead of that, bpartan band. What I fspartan, did I rr why, Spartan heroism wa atikeri into obscrmty when thii Vand left Janea- vine on iu triumphant roarohlj Yw, tba at tli e i r head, exerliag in arousine the spirits of the heroes which had been to suddenly uosuniies upon mem nut on, uorror I a war of extermination was waged upon the ! inanimate objects that were strewn around nd weie incapable of resisting the mighty j powers that were swayed so furisusly vengeanc. or. a wheelbarrow unnoticed by decent men, but which whs handled with out mercy by the Jaaesvillo "corps de ar tcie;" next their patriotism (?) was prac ticed upon an old flour barrel j and then they attacked the little blocks and chips which biy around (of course saying "noth lag lo nobody ;") then oh 1 oh ! (indeed I cannot describe the bloody scene, and words fail nie ) but twont do to drop the glorious (?) sul ject when I have just arrived at the heat of the contest. Suffice it to say, they continued thestrug gle so long 03 there remained a fence-rail, shingle, lath, block, edging, stick, or in fast any thing which they could pick up and dash down again w ithout fear of being hurt in retui n. Thus proving to the world what every body doubted that "Nig gerheads" could fight, and bravely, ton! Yea, they always said that they were the bravest people in the world ; but the fact has been hidden for the last century or two. liut since these acts have been wit nessed by many of 'lieccaria's noble sons," we must come Out boldly and acknowledge the fact that in personal courage they are not behind the age. Though they aided the British in the war of 1812-14. and op posed the Mexican war, we must give them credit for attending to "raatteiVon last Tuesday ; and, if I was to go back to tho days of yore, when we, or our fathers, rather, were struggling for Independence, or a little back of that peiiod, I might point tbem out to you armring the streets .of Beston in martial style, bearing the ef- Agy of Olliver, the Britsih Stamp distrib- utor, in inuinpn ; ana, n i mistaKe not, they muster! coinage enough to enable mem io oxneai it oeiore uwyer s own door! Messrs. hditors, will you notagree with me, that they are brave and patriot ic ? You certainly will when you reai: that, by the time they had conquered this host ol block and fence-rails, their aonr nge had all oozed out at the palms of their hands, anil, after giving three "rounds" of faint screams for C'urtin, they retroated in haste, Unving all the dead nnd wounded on the field ; and we thought we were re lieved of this dread enemy, when lo ! they made their appearance again, marching directly for liie battle-field. The reason of this mysterious reappear ance of theft) invincible visitors was, rs lirar as I can guess, about this: Alter marching away, out of rencli of the missiles which they imagined the "legions" of Jence-rails nuu.u ...jr. ...i, " dead Stand. When they discovered that , . " I'l " he(." and that their struggles bad been entirely against "dogs that couldn't bite," iheir courage begun to "rise," and they again wimigni oi ine rrnc oi ooien urn e, which wa still shining on the breast oi the young min. Just at thisjuna' ore a ; lack bird Happed its wings over their devoted heads, and ung out "cowjucr-ee a con-quer-ee," then, thinking this a good onion of an easy victory, they wheeled to the 'right about" aud marched to lie ''bloodg less battle-field, where ner a hero Jell." and, (surprising Uct !) one ol these mule. catchers" humbled himself by castirg his garments to ine oust, ana inreateimig io whip a "copperhead," when, to Lis dismay he found the "copperheads" were all there," and ready to resent an ituull. Then for the first lime he thought himself belter gifted for rcaking excuses than for making war; told the "copperheads" that he "didn't mean Dcmocrati but 'copper heads!" They were ihen politely told that the words were (now-a-days) synonymous, when they shook hands with the Demo crat and again fell into a disorderly re treat ; but not without another "giBb" for the little 'bijou," and another failure this time by the monkey-messenger, who re ceived a Mow from the young man which made him bow genteely. With martial poo.p they trid l is srth Like liunjr't legions from haughty Krone ; They quit thoir homos leave joy behind They've Bought lo oheer their troubled mind ; Yei, they le ive the lor d land of their bir li , And into war's hloodv field advanua. The soil's tnsde sacred whor'er they trend, Whether Scotia's hiiis or Ireland's bogs; Thric sacred the ground where they were W hero fell the heroe s upon the plain lain Blened by .Mars. Thou who on the Held have bled Wr patriots and heroes-ot JcCVy and Hh djt ! Who went about killinir "copperheads, and failed to accomplish their heinous do- imn. ' i Wicked lietrt ra alwavs scheming : , - - J l - anu cowardly soula are always failing. But I must end oiy long epistle by calling tour is not far distant when these fana- Dei wnl be made ashamed of their devil - - i ,"Tr'"'" io stand nrm. ine ltu aarerir. Vmn. ,u . . nm, ir.itici, . Yovva NcsToa. IlarPostrnRiter General Montjoroery BUlr in a Ul ipH(ch k, . .?Wh ,re we oi undt.r f(ldipa, , ju(, from arpe,Mnc. w, , ,j ; ihai rnu enino nii r..t 1 is. ,t..ii jf you nol aready lbcre. tejrAitemu. Ward says there js bo eUily paper rubluhed io his town, but there it a ladiet' tewing oircle, which aatwert the tame purpose. messenger ivai great influence THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH ANI SLAVERY. UIKIIOP HOPKINS AM) POTTF.lt. In 18G1 liisliup Hopkins, of tlio Diocese of Vermont, wrote a letter containing n " I i i I 1 View of Slavery," which sustained the institution as one sanctioned ly t he Hiblo. More re cently the letter was extensively re published, and the attention which it attracted aroused the Church party hostile to Hiwhop Hopkins' views to the pitch of controversy. JVisliop Potter, of the Diocese of IYnnsyl riia, and a number of clergymen and laymen, published m heptemiicr, a protest against the "Diblo View of Slavery" in the following words: PROTEST. ' 'The subscribers deeply regrot that, the fact of the ext'-r.sive circulation through this Diocese of a letter by 'John Henry Hopkins, Bishop of'tbe Diocese ol Ver mont,' in defense of Southern slavery. rnipels them to make thiH public prot t. u is not tueir province io mix in any political canvass. But as ministers of Christ, in the frotostant Kpii-eopnl Church, it becomes tliem to tlonv Htiy complicity or sympathy with such . H yC- reuse. This attempt lo apologize not only for slnvery in the abstract, lint to advocate it as it exists in the cotton State, nnd in States which sell men and women in the open market as their staple product, is, in their judgment, unworthy of any ser vant of Jesus Christ. As an effort to sus tain, on Bible principles, the Slates in rebellion against the (Jovernment. in llie wicked attempt to establinh by forc of arms a tyranny under the name of a republic, whose 'corner stone' shall be the perpetual bondage of the African, it chullences their indignant reprobution. J'hiladtlphia, September, ISO."! " In October Bishop Hopkins replied to this protest as follows: A Warning against Inililcltty In the Church Pastoral Letter of ihc Itlht Hev. Ilishon Hopkins. Itishop of the Diocese of Vermont, Presiding Itlshnp of 1 lie Protestant ICpisropal (IiuicJi in the Culled Mates. To the llnjhl llev. Alon.o Potter, of the Hocese of Pennsylvania, . and the JSectJiiiy Clergy of Philadelphia : I have seen, with great amazement, a protest against my letter on the " Bible View of Slavery," signed by you and n long list ot your clergy, in li ich you condemn it us " unworthy of any servant of Jisus t.hrist," is "n elloi t to i and your clergy nlso profess lo believe. from his cell nnd lynch him on the spot. I wo have, that Jacob Arni'tronj, a lon'h sustuin,' on Bible principles, tho Siates in I know that the doctrine of thai Church But through the exertions of the Mayor ! er lo the murdered man, ivm pnsing rebellion against the Government in the was clear and unanimous on the lawfulness of the city nnd others, ihey desisted, un- j ihrough tho town and hurrahed for Vai wicked attempt to establish by foi ce of , of slavery for eighteen centuries together ; der Ihe luomise thai Biuwn should re- landinghain, when a crowd of Abolition- arms, a tj ranny in the name or a repuo- ami on uiai point i regaru your " protest lie, whose corner stone shall be the per-, and "indignant reprobation" as the idle petual bondgo of the African," and as wind that passes by. such you say that il challenge jour. I wish you, llieief'oie, to be mlvcrtiscd ' indignant reprobation." that 1 shall publish, within a few month, Now, my Bight Keverend brother. I nm if a gracious Providence should spare my sorry to be obliged to c.hurge you, not Ji'o und faculties, a full demonstration of only wilh a gross insult against your sen- the truth "wherein 1 stand." And J shall lor, but with the more serious ollenee or a lulse accusation. y loiter was tirst p.ib- ililfwl J,, .Innnnre lfctil. mom tlmn throA . months uolore the war tiegsn, at a time j .iel) no one coufi anticipate the form of , government which Ihe Southern States ; s10ll, adopt .or the course which Con- ErP(g might lake in reference lo their Kr.1.Hiol, And a hen 1 consented lo its publionlion. I did not suppose that it would bo med in the service ol any polit - icul party, ahhuugh I bud no right to complain, if il were so used, because the letler, once published, became public Ill'l'eil. OUl ill lis in ciou v ivriii, uivm ii... ... I. i is nothinz whatever in it which liears on r . - . ,)(, ( Jps io ()f .. rt.hr,llicn," or of the pcrt-otuul bondage of the African," or of .. tyri,nny under ,jie name of a republic," 0f wmc, ,avrry should" be tho " corner stone. fin th cnntriirv. 1 referred, on the Inst page, to my lecture published in I'lUlalo in l.NiU, and o my hook caneit you uoiorieiy. "The American Citizen," published in That the nineteenth century is n cen- New York in 157, here " I set forth the tury of vast improvement and w onderful sanie views on the subject of slavery, ad- discovery m tho arts and sciences 1 grant ding, however, n plan for ils gradual aUdt- n willingly as any man. But in religious lion, whenever the South should cousoiit, 1 truth or reverence for the Bib'e, the age and the whole strength of the dovera- in which we live i prolific in daring and ment could aid in its accomplishment " impious innovation. We have seen pro- " Sooner or later," I added, "1 believe fesndly Christian communities divided a at some measure of I liat character must j and subdivided on every side. We have 1. . I 1 Ti... 1. l...l..... . il.. ,L.n!..dn ll.s. on.! l i.i.uu.1 r.t T'l.iuni'in Ilfcni States themselves to lake the lead in such ainovement. And meanwhile their local right and natural feelings must be res - pected, if we would hopo for unity and peace." UP Mlionieil. iitu lb delimits nm ri'OBirr'i uwiraiiu ni.ico.iwi , . . . . . iui iupho iucis wmrejnurvM'f, i him i.i. .. ... i . ...... ... n n ,1... IU .Ull V Ul. IUBS lUlllinulllBlluwfT.ru I lie i. e i ilr I extravagance oi party seMi couiu irame j against me so bitter a denunciation. The whole object of my letter was to prove, from the lUblf, that in the relation of master ann slave mere wns necessarily no sin whatever. The sin, if tiiure were any. lay 1 jn the treatment of the slave, anil not in the Te c,n jtsplf. Of course is was liable to 1 abuse, as all human relation must be. n,,, ,hil it. u ronin that. tlmnssniU '. fhriuiisn hrmhn.ii hn bold slaves . w . . n lrentinif lliem with kindness ana ;.,.ii.. JUrV.'s.'O, VS. W.11S 111 OJlll.l v , anj earnestly laboring to improve the comrOI.u and ameliorate Ihe hardships of the institul on. 1 held it to be a cruel and absurd charee 'to ' ...inat the Divi accuse them ft sinners Divine law, when ihvv were only doine what the Wordol (iod allowed, under the Constitution and established oode of their ccuntry. ' I d ndi honk 00 not Know wnrinrr yuui uhhi m ignint reprobaliomsl ever saw . my 1 ....i.t:i..i ;.. U'.T ..r... r...,J H 1 . . ..v ...,ri I have VOIlr letter f acknowledgment, in which while you dissented from tome of my eon- elusions, you did it with the courtesy of a Christian aenleman. In that letter ihere ia nothing .aid about my opinion being "unworthy of any .ervautoCJesu Christ,'. and nothing of "indignant repiobation-" I Biit.i:w;ra vrjlunfur, el nos mantumur in Wis. Yes! ihe times ait indeed tadly cl ang-' ed, and you have charged accordingly.! For many years you hvu mot in brotherly ; council nun mesa Houthern slaveholders. lou invited tlieiu to the hofpitulities of , certain it is that ' this Church" had not linger was violently seized, when n strug your house, and paid them especial defer-: received the doctrine of ultra-Abolitionism gle. 'commenced, tho vh party of assitil encc. J he new light of Kastern Abolition-' at that time, as I trus: she never will re- nnt attacking him. Bellinger drew his mm iiu inn ;n risen wnuin our Uliuicli, ceive it, because it is contrary to tlio Na iindifyou then thought as you now think, j crcd Soriptuios. I also promised "wilh you took excellent care Unit no man' all Init bful diligence lo banUh and drive amongst your Southern friends should away from tliK Church all crroiirrti.- und know it. Moreover, jour favorite Tlieo-' strnrrc doctrines contrary to God's Word," logical .Seminary, onlv three years ego, was the Virginia school at Alexandria, 1 luiseii io great prosperity Dy liisiiop Aleade a slieoelwUlei nnd J urn very sure that . nothing nt variance with my Bible View ! of Slavery was ever taught in that institu- tion. Yes! we may well say of you, as 1 of many others 'unntum mulutvs ab tlio .' . How changed is the Bishop ol I'ennsylvu- nia in three years from bis former course of conservatism, pence and spiiitual con-' sistenoy j But the word of fJod has not changed ; ' the doctrine of the Apostles Iihh not inangeu ; mo constitution ol our country i bas not changed ; the great siuulards of end of my career, I nm to be condemned hling nnd torrnr-stricken, und his assail religious .nd real civic loyally remain just and villified b you and your clergv, be- ants were infuriated, lie hastily new I lis I liv H-pm a rif I I iminii .Inn it w i I li ' 1 - . v ........ ....... wieni, nun. iiiisiunuiiig una umer niin uo- oi my sienoer nullity, uo nssiireu, my i inciuuiiig ins waion una purse, and IiiiikI just assault from you and your clergy. 1 liight Keverend Broliirr, that I shall rev ' ed them to u peisomil liiend. The strug do not intend to imitate your latestylo of ' gret the fact much more on your account j gle for his protection between the citi vituperalion. for 1 trust thai 1 have lenrn- thn.n on my own. : gen, and soldiers continued for au hour. ed, even whan I nm reviled, not to revilo In conclusion, I have only to say that I At a critical liniment during liie coi.llici, iigain. J respect the good opinion of your feel no resentment for the grossly insult- i ono of the girls employed tit the huu.-u cl"igy, arid am not aware that 1 hove done ing style of your manifesto. The stability i nobly threw herself between th v:'i;n uiij tiling to forfeit it. I respect your ol- nnd unity of tho Church of Cod are tliw : and the soldiers, and declared they i.i 1st. i lice, your tnlent", your liersonal chr.rncter and the wisdom and fuoocss n i tit which, for many years, your I piscopalo has been conducted. But I do not respect your dennrtnre from the old and well settled !ruleof the Church, and fioni the Apos tolic law of Cliristain fairiirss nnd cotir lesy. I do not believe in Ihe modern dis covery ol thore F.asiern ihilan(hropita who deny the divinity of our Kedecmer, and ntt..ch no importunce to the Bible except as it tmy suit iliiiiselves. I do nol befteve that the venerated founders of our American Church were ignorant of the Scriptures nnd blind fo the principles of Compel morolity. 1 do net believe that J. F. Bolltoeyer, editor of tho Dayton I'm- ;of soldiers rushed upon him and beat, his Washington and his compatriots, who pire, a Democratic paper, was wantonly a- j brains out- Hi last words, uttered at framed our Constitution with fiioh express saul'ed and murdered in cold blood in the ; this time were ''Ihn'l bogs! Ok, dear!" provisions for the rights of slaveholders, streets of Day ton, by a brawling Abolition- j A few days since, Mr. rbiliip Ann were tyrants and despots sinners agn ins t ist, by the name of Henry M. Brown. i strong, a citizen of Miami, Ohio, was on tho law of (5od nnd the feelings of human- Brown wns arrested and committed to! his way from a political meeting in his ily. But 1 do believe in the teaching of pri-on in Day ton, and so great was (he ex-1 neighborhood, and passing through, Now the inspired Aposiles. end in tho Holy citement and indignation, that a mob was j Carlisle, tvns brutally murdered by tin Abo .Catholic (or universal I t hurch, which you prove m that i.oou, by the most unques- lionable authorities, nun slaves and slave- hoblfrs vmrn in the Cblllnh from ihfi bo- ginning ; lht slavery was held to he con- sistent wilh Christian principle by the ' Fathers and Councils, and by all protest- ant divines and commentators, up to the very close of the last century, and that this fact was universal nmoiiii all Churches and sect IhTourhout the Christian world, , I shall contend that our Church, which maintain the primitive rule of catholic consent and abjures all novelties, is bmuid, by her very Constitution, to hold inuf in f eni.i ...Mi Am niiiiii ruin nr i.n vlij u.v . ikiumi'). abandon her Apostolic claims, and decend . . , . .... . i . to the level of about by every those who are "diiven rind of doctiinc." And 1 shall p with its rint your " indignant reprobation ' . . . lis list of rames, in Hie preface to niv book, so that if I cannot five vou j fame, 1 may, ut least, do my part to give Mlllerism, l'anlheism, Mormonism. and Sjdrit utilum. . We have seen even our 1 venerablo Mother Church of England sorely ngitaied by the contagious fever of change, on t he one hand towardi super- n-M .m, ..rvt.r. , ' 1 "v ' rni nun mm .ml lira i.oi'fi nair I I'll, ill- .....a ... n. ... ... creasing clamor ngainn the niuie, some- tims from the devotees of ecological speculation, sometimes from the bold de- niers of miracles and prophecy, and, not least upon the list, from the 1 jud-tongued apostles of anti-slavery. Wc have marked tne orators wnicn r.tv "iown wien um Bible. t it mair.tr.ina Ihe lawfulness ol slnvery." We have marveled at the sen- ..tmiiil pi,-... 1101.. a uilni.li i,niMainied Ibul "i; wns high time lo have un anti-slaver? bis assailants if another attack was made j thinking what happj' ewi-'ty Soloir,. . God and an ntiti-sluvery Bible." We have upon him. He procured n pistol, loaded musl have had in his day, tj heard the Constitution of our country de- it, and then went out his bjsinets, go-, ,nnnv wiVcs etc., us i rcprc')t)t'"j.', notincel as n "covenant with ieath and , ing into the store of Mr. Both, a personal j '.,,, , . "' replied thewi.e, some hell." We have heard the boasted deter- friend. We lake the remainder of I he re-1 , , . , '. , ' jja(j ttttor think f i mination that tho union thull never be Nation bodily from the Milwaukee AViM : 1 w UilL !11,t!U J . n ;' rotinrnrlntiiil ii. provisions for the tiro- lection of Uavery are entirely abolished. , --- --- , - And wlat is tho result of all this philan throphyf The fearful judgment of God has descended to diusli7.e these multi plied acls of rebellion against his divine Government, and what the final catastro phe shall be is only known to Hiiu who seeth the end from ihe beginning. After forty year spent in the rninislry, more than thirty of which have been pass ed in the otlioe of a Bishop, 1 can look back, with bumble thankfulnest to the Giver of all good for this, at least, that all my bcit labor have been directed to the preservation of the Church from the in- roads of doctrinal innovation. At my or- dinntion I promised " so to minister tho nccTiiiNK and sncraments and discipline of Christ, as the Lord hath commanded, nnd ' fix Art f.infi'li L.ilk I'ffit'ftl tLi s.nH" 'itul and I n.iide these promises in the true sense which tho venerable Bishop White, my irdainer, alt ached to them 1 believed then as ho believed, that our Southern brethren committed no sin in having sIhvcs, and that they were men of as much piety as any minister in our Communion, 1 believed as he believed, that the plain precepts and piuctieo of the Apostles sanctioned '.lie institution, although, us u matter of txpetliency, the rime might (i.nus when the South might prefer, as the North had done, to employ free labor. Those promises 1 have kept faithfully to this day nnd ir, when 1 nm drawing near to the .nnA I ul ill ..... i I .. 1 .. lia ... in 1 1 , a v .. a .i it. i u i.i :iiciu ii; uiv uuin'ii onlv interests which 1 desire lo recurc, nnd 1 am too old in experience to be much moved tiy tie peasiorial excesM-s ol nil- man infirmity. .lonx II. lloesivs, Bishop of the Diocese of Vermont, r.t rti.lM.TON, Vt., Oct. , lSO'i. ABOLITION MURDERS. The Killing nf Three Uemocrnts bg iht Aboli- t'.onists Ar'piilUil the Murderer if Mr, J, '. JioHmegrr in Ohio. It will be remembered by our readers that on the 1st day of November, lStVJ, Mr. raised, w Inch endeavored to take I ho rascal ceive the punishment due for hi crime at the hinds of the lrw. By the manage- was riding, knocked bun out, and com ment cf Ihe murderer's counsel, and the j menced pelting bin) with stones l'liil'lp, action of the Court, the trial was removed , who wns in a carriage a short disuno.i bo out of the county to Miami. T ho trial hind, bustene J to reit-uc his brother, came oil' in September just past, and w hat ' when the mob turned upr.ti hh.i. and ' tio wns the result ? Day after day, whilo it 1 man struck him o'l the b.ic!; of tho neck was progressing, a large crowd of "ympa-j with a corn-outier. ari l another strnek thizing men ami women were in constant him on the head tvitli a stne, smash ii.: attendance, nmj were permnied iy t no tif(rHr? inns fiiiirt. tn mingle ibpir hvnirin - lines with the prisoner and use their in- lluence with tho jury. The Judge upon the Bench, never once, from thebeginning to the end oi the trial, spoke to or of the defendant us " prisoner ' or aj t lie " de - Jrown." fondant." but alwavs us "Mr. lie permitted these Abolition women to piesent the murderer will) bouquets, in open court in the presence of the jury. Kvery possible influence mis brought to bear upon the jury, whoio mind were, as m afij krmtv n ,'j.tinv nuiinpi k m iin.i k , - j .......-. ...... --. ie.i wiiii ' - liticnl hate before the trial. The murder i i ..i ... i .i i i r no ..Inarlu t.l'nifoit ullil t lififl anrrlA tiulf dozer. Abolition hounds, who oed thePOi thcrti Ohio, wo find tlio Ciilowia . . ( it 1 murdered man a grudge, were allowed to testily that Bollmeyer wus a liei ce, uar.- serous, nnd quarrelsome man. when the facts were exactly the reverse, and that ( inun n m iui'.-i, niuutciu unu irai;ri;n, when ho was a notorious villain. Of course he was ncquitteJ, and, on Ihe announce- ment of tho verdict, the Court House rnne with ioiiu shouts tor John Brongh. the Abolition candidate for (Jovernor ol Ohio, e record these as the uctuul proceeding of an Abolition Court in Ohio, as we find thetn in substance in an Ohio pHj er. Tho next case is that of Mr. Bnllifiger, Mil ti an if an W iufinnaill U' llO t 1 1 111 I- I a.. " , i lis'ned a notice ot it heretofore, but the full fact of the ease are worthy of being put on record. I'eterJ. Bellinger, Fxp, of Milwaukee, a promising young business man, a grnlleman courteous in manners , i" 1 t mil i idiifin wiii'in hit i inLini ill I'liiiii- . ... i-rr-. , cul eonrersnunn nun mi uciuu n ,i'i, Secor. The littler, not in an unfriendly nianner.culled the former a "copperhead," and some o!dierf overheard tho remark, '1 hey immediately jostled against Belling - er, pushing bun reveral limes inln llie cuupr, nn anniic nun uun ichitoi. Mr. Bellineer ,n return denounced their ... . violence, and starting to gn to his hotel for a rvvnlver. Ihrealenrd that be would shoot .Tlio i.srtv of soldiers to lowed turn in. ... rlamoring for his arrest on the ground llmt. hi. hml LhrAAtnpti let abonl lhfm. Mr. Both assurtd the soldiers that if they would go out and let him alone thoir d- dozen wives, and allof'tbein auFpunky ire would be grotified. He got the fol-:nr4 J nm !" diera out, when lo protect Bellinger from j Tho farmer bs lat anJ wcnt rurther -intuit .or injury. ? "J'" i (o the Stable to foed the cattle for tho the light and went out hiniselt, jock ing Bellinger up inside, alone. The soldier, night. not thus 10 te foiled, then repaired to the ( - rear of the store and broke in, whereupon J BtafW hy is ambition like a ffoata. Bellinger broke through the front bow- fc , Because it is li vain wid'gllt window. and ran for the Georgia House, . pur.ued by tho toldiers. The door being tenng thing to a spire. f; tened, he could not got into the Lotel b' foie the soldiers caught biin, It is tho iiniiniinou.i belief that at this Itine Bellinger believed that his p'.irsncr meant to kill him, and for this there wn unn'ii.iutit ivrniiti.l li.i 11 1 .I'l.li u ,1 tii 11 11..I- levolver while he rat in the uclual grusp of one or more of tho kuldicrn, uiid whil struggling in vain lo get tvway. lie tired iippiiiently at i andoiu, exploding eiety cup on the piitol, discharging four of the batreUs, killing ono and wounding threo othiirs. lie w;v o buiupei od that ho uould not have controlled Ins unu hud ho o in lenile l. I n tlio terror of the moment oc casioned by lirin" I be pistol, Bellinger ex- Irii'iited hiu.seir und got into tho hotel. '1 he soldiers followed. By thit time, sev eral of the lending ekueiis, had eoino to the rescue, and placed themselves, in front of Bellinger tor protection, h standing behind Hit in. Jn this bnel interval Bwl linger teemed to teuli.o tliut there was liitic hope for his life. 11 o npiiursnt ly hud 10 confideliuc it) the power of tho c.ituens to protect bun. lie. stood tretn- 1. 1. ... .. ..II I. ;.. . .1 ..tr. .. Hiiill uib jiifthcia ru ma jiui Qiunj run. I , I kill her bel'ui a they killed him. At i l ' ihe ut-sailuiit extinguished all the L.tnij'. seized llie c;tir.n. t y 11) o leet, diag;,:ig lliem uown. Jiellmger wa.i then men;. Ienly dragged into the streets, his head beaten wilh t:lub mid lelt for dead. Uno of tliem, not sidibtifd, leuiarked tl.it I. would "give biin another blow." Belling er at this iiioinoat roso to hi feel, appii:- ently delirious, exclaiming, ''I nm notj-et jdeuil!" At the same instant he struck terrible blow ut tho toldier before him, i felling him to thu ground, and ran fifteen ! rods directly against a wood pile, as it i blind or cra.ed, and fell. Hero M' crowd ; lit ion molr It seems, from tho uocouols ists rushed at tho cntraigu in which ho ! in his skull nnd killin;' linn in-i. ! Vfi. trm.lrnii.r una i-w.iM.nnf .In hones fanner, loved and respected b.v all .-hf) knew him. He was about thirty-four years old, and leaves a wife and small children to mourn his fata. This, adds ! one more tolho black and damning ci lines ! of Abolition. How loin! are an out railed people to wait, before they drive this das tard monster into a deep, dark, everlau- inc grave? I Kofoil ON THK Cll AM.AIN. In A pn- ,. i, i-. .. i.:,.i . ', . ' . 1 1 a kfi accimton to remark ts not. 1 1 .r.i I 1 1 1 i- I - uytiuiiui t'ompiitiieni to tuo tnapiain ot t ho rco lmcnt : "You want to knov ifthcro in nut cniploj'incntin the army which wc.li suit j'o.i. Well, I don't know. Ymi inight make a good (tiarterniaster or a Chaplain, hut 1 hardly think 3011 ar (pialttied for tlio latter position. In or der lo be a Chaplain a man must boa yootl judgo of whiskey, and be able to bold his own drinking. JIo must bo an expert poker player, nnd ft Mikity trood horse dealer. A man with thoto . . , . . , . , j '1'i.ui u .mu is w 111 iii.ii.u mi e.(. uiic.it urtny Chaplain. YY e vo got one in ottr I regiment that lifts not ptvachtKl :i 3cr I mon or Ofl'orod a prajer since, ho iia ( j)etn .- tho ,.0!Ii,aont .except, onco, when lie irayi4 lor a Uoad nun. . . . CM.iiul ILrald. Om. K.Nouoa roit Him. A niiddr ajred fanner and 1)U A'ifo enjoy ! wjnt,.r fvcuir." Cosily toilet tier. ",v i ,.,,.,.., ,, , ,.,i;i copnethead. '.,. , .. ... , . , ' , ' i tj" i 1 ri,u mi vti iivu urm 1 1 1 1 ' . . , 1 ., , .m. I' ,1 :i..M mnltom.nH dscnbc l ID U,6 hi'. the man had open bCtc r biin "Wife," Said tllO fltrmtr, "I'vf ; SOini.111111: vui-, v . . , u , mon you would m.iKC v n j wuu" 1 . . . 'A inks nnilier turn ui uuv n uu.i ' pVuro VOU would cut then, wiln a