C|e Centre Jentflcrat. BELLEFONTE, PA. MG—^ THURSDAY, JAN., 3*d ISGI. WW. BROWN, - - ASSOCIATE EDITOR. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT having the lar gest Circulation, is, therefore, the best Advertising medium in the county. TAKE WARNING. Now friends we must have money. We are in down right earnest when we say must. "We have debts to pay that must be paid, auJ we must look to our patrons for (he means. You can all pay us the two dollars, which is justly due us lor last year's subscription, at the January Court, if you will. Make it a point, then, when you come to Court, to pay the printer before leaving town. AY a know the times are hard, but indeed, we must bve. It takes flour, meat, potatoes, butter other things, to keep printers alive, and it takes money to buy these things in Bellefonte. You would feel very badly if some morning you would see a notice stucx up, " Died of want, the proprietors and hands of the Democrat, in consequence of the patrons of that paper not paying their sucscription." NuW friends, don't do it, don't. BY TELEGRAPH. Seizure of Washington Threatened. THE WARBEGUN. Citizens of Centre County Arouse and Arm. We stop the press when our edition is nearly half worked off to insert the following important dissatch, recieved here last night* WASHINGTON, JAN., 3rd.— Fort Sumprer i s now besieged. Maj. Anderson's communica" tions and supplies have been cut off. For 1 Moultrie has been repaired—the guns bav* been re-mounted and are ready to open on Maj. Anderson. New Batteries are beiDg opened all around him the Secessionists. — It is beyond doubt that a combination is forming to take forcible possession of the Government at AVashington on or before the 4th of March. A Convention in Florida has passed ordinance declaiming that State out of the Union. The Forts and arsenals in Georgia are in possession of the State Troops—Rebels. HO! WIDE-AWAKES, HO! Grand Torch-Light Procession. ON WEDNESDAY EVE., JAN., 30. IS6I. Wide Awakes of Centre Co., reorganize immediately. We want all the Clubs to be in attendtnee at the .Grand Rally on Jan. 30tb- Coma with your.lamps trimmed, and brightly burning—come in full unilorm come with drums beating, and colors flying —come with flags and banners —come bear ing aloft those old b"attle-6moked transpa rencies that you carried so gallently through the last campaign. AVe inscribed upon tlirm our principles, and we bire them in the thickest of the fight. The battle has been fought; the victory won ; and we now must carry out the great principles we contended for in tho canvass. Our opponents charged us with misrepresentations, and false prom' ises, but they will find we were in earnest, when we cried " Homes for the Homeless.'' " Protection to labor." " Free Territories for free white men." These are still our battle cries and we will ring them after as we did before the election in t! e ears of the people. Come then every AVide Awake in Centre Co., and renew your devotion to these great principles on YVcdneday Evening Jan., 30. Let the Ciubs at Hecla, Milesburg Stormestown, Potters Mills Hublars and throughout the County, call meetings with out delay and make arrangements to have a full turn out on the 30. What *Club will move first ? Send ia>Reports so we can pos itively announce next week what companies will be on bands. Hunt up your lamps boys and if you have Dot enough get new ones.— Let UB have one more grand Digbt of it.— AVbat say you ail, Hip, Uip, Hurrah. Ti ger.' Attention Wide Awakes. A crir-is has come and we must meet it.— We know not how soon we may be called up on to march in defence of our glorious flag, our principles, the Constitution and the Un ion. Wide-Awakes of Centre county, are you ready ? Yuu have elected a Piesident and you must inaugurate him. A plot has been laid for the seizure of the Governtmnt at Washington, and thus prevent the inaug uration of Abraham Lincoln. We must foil the designs of the traitors. Your brother Wide-Awakes of Allegheny have already formed themselves into a military body.— Will you imitate their example? We hope B. Wide-Awakes of Milesburg, Bellefonte, Curtin's Works, Ilublersburg, Ileela, Pot ters Mills, Stormstown, and the whole coun ty. Call meetirgs at once ; organize your selves into military companies, and declare with one voice that you will staDd by the Constitu ion and the Union to the last of your breath and your I lood. Let all the Wide Awake Clubs in the county elect dele gates immediately to meet in C invention at the January Court, and take in coneidera tin what is brst to be done. These are dark hours and we must prepare for the worst. Is there a coward among us ? If there is let him refuse to obey this call. Play up again, re-trim your lamps, and if the worst comes to the worst throw them away and take muskets in your hands, and from Maine to Oregon let the earth shake to the tread ol three millions of armed Wide-Awakes, sworn to protect the Constitution and the Union. Do your duty and the Union is safj—fail te do it and all the noble blood spilt in the Rev olution will have been poured out in vain.— Wide-Awakes of Centre county, i n the name of your country, in the name of your glori ous principles, in the name of liberty we call upon you to organize at once. Will you do it? BSP" Tbo election of delegates to the Al abama Slate convention has lesulted in an immense majority in favor of secessslon. Treason! Treason '•! Treason!! ! The Federal officers of New York say they will not resign their offices when Mr. Lin comes into power. They assign as a reason that Mr. Lincoln is not President of the United States. A New York writer says : " Mr. Schell, the Collector, has correspon ded with Attorney-General Black. The lat ter has written to the Collector that if South Carolinia secedes it is a virtual dissolution of the Union, and that the Collector of the Port of New York and his Federal Assistants are relieved from all further accountability, and have a right to collect and retain the revenues accruing here, and keep them until the Legislature of New York or the city au thorities attach the same. " If a single Slate goes out of the Union, Mr, Schell regards it as broken up, and says, 'Mr. Lincoln is not Presidentard neither he nor any of the Federal officials will re sign or surrunder their power and the public money to any exceDt to the City Treasury. " Mr. John J. Cisco, the Sub-Treasurer takes the same views. He has several mill ions at his dispo al. A large portion is in bars of gold, valued at SI,OOO each. These are being pa nted white, so as not to attract atten ion in case of being removed from the Sub-Treasury vaults in case of a riot or of Lincoln claiminy to be the President." "In case of Mr. Lincoln claiming to be President." Ain't that cool ? Well all this proves the truth of the old adage that the " fools are not all dead yet." Mr. Lincoln claim to be President ? wby he is President without claiming anything about it. This is indeed the coolest piece of impudence ex tant. Listen to us, Mr. Collector Schell.— Mr, Lincoln was elected President of the United States on the 6tb day of November last—on the 4th day of March next he will take his seat at Washington, on the sth you will receive notice to quit your office and de liver over to your sueessor all monies and property belonging to the Government.— Should you refuse to obey you will be arres ted for high treason, tried, and we hope hung. If then you have any intention of robbing the Government do it while you have corrupt associates to connive and assist you : do it while thac debased old traitor, Jas. Buchan an, is in office ; in a word, do it before the 4ih of March, for after that time you will not have the opportunity. Who is Afraid ? The time for compromises with slavery has gone by. A majority of the people of tbis nation have elected Abraham Lincoln President, and there is now no alternative but fcr tbe minority to submit or fight. All knew Mr. Lincoln's principles before be was elected, be made no concealments, nor will he now make any. AVe pledged him, in the canvass, to carry out three great principles, and he will do what we said. He will op* pose the extension of slavery in territory now free. He will favor a Homestead Bill, and he will sign a Tariff Bill as soon as it is laid before him. There, gentlemen of the South, are the three propositions upon which we went before the people, and upon which we elected Mr! Lincoln. Pledged to their sup port we will carry them out. They are meas ures for tbe benefit and advancement of tbe people and we' will fight for them if necessa ry. Some are crying out and hauling off, but wc are standing up to the fight and wer mean to stand up to it. AVe have no com promises to make, no concessions to offer.— Those who resist him are traitors and we will hang them. If the South will submit to will of the majority it is well; we will live in peace with them. If they resist we cry defiance to them and their dough-face al lies in the North, and say " Come to, lay on Macduff, And damned be he that first cries hold, enough." The Duty of the North. The ihct stares us plainly in the face, says the llarrisburg Telegraph, that James Bu chanan, once the favorite son of Pennsylva nia, is guilty of treason in supplying the South with arms belonging to the United States. Whilst the Northern Arsenals have been almost entirely stript of public arms, we have not been able.to obtain the quota belonging to us of right. In order tc secure our rights, we hope the Legislature of Penn sylvania, which meets on Tuesday next, will at once appropriate a million of dollars for the purchase of arms to supply our regular citizen soldiers with the necessary weapons to perfect them in military discipline. We shall have no trouble to obtain the money without delay, and the Constitution gives the Legislature full power to borrow any amount for such purposes. We say, therefore, to the members of the Legislature, let such an act be passed the first week of the session.— It will strike terror in the ranks of the disu nionists of the South, and show them that the North is determined to preserve the Union one and inseperable. Gov. Cnrtin's Appointments. We are informed that Col. Curtin has mado the following appointments: Secretary of State—Eli Slifer, of Union County. Attorney Genera*— Samuel Purviance, of Butler County. Whiskey Inspector —Wm. Butler, of Mif flin County. Physician of the Port of Philadelphia —Dr. Clark, of Philadelphia. Messenger to the Governor— Samuel Miles, of Centre County. The following gentlemen will, in all prob ability, be appointed to office by the Gover nor. Adjutant General— James S. Negley, o f Pittsburg.* Western Flour Inspector —Thos. Collins, of Pittsburg. Sealer of Weights and Measures—J. D. Owens, of Pittsburg. Mark the disunionists! Every arti cle wiitten and every speech made against the Union has proceeded from a professed Democrat; nearly all of tbem from men of the Breckinridge faction. The disunion speeches fulminated in Congress during last week were every one of tbem from leading Democrats, such as Joe Lane, Clingman, Brown, lyerson and Wigfall, They rivalled each other in declarations of enmity to tha Union, and their determination not to stay within it under present circumstanoes. We state these undeniable facts, as contained in the report of Congressional proceedings Readers can form tbe;r own conclusions, THE CE3WTH.E DEIMOCRAT. Treason Consamated. We have not the unexpected news, says the Daily News, of the capture of Fort Mcul trie by the South Carolinians, and the rais ing of the Palmetto flag upon that fort, Cas tle Pinckney, the Custom House and the Charleston Post Office. This would seem to be the climax of the secession movement in South Carolina. Heretofore nothing has been done that could be considered directly treas onable against the Government of the Uni ted States. Taking possession of Government fortres ses, of the Custom House, and the Post Office at Charleston, is an overt act of war upon the Eederal authority, and is tber efore trea son. The gallant Major Anderson still holds possession of Fort Sumpter, to which he re tired yesterday, and he will doubtless main tain his position, if he receives aid from the Government at Washington. His wise de sertion of Fort Moultrie made the conpuest of that defence by the secessionists easy, Should Mr. Bucbanan fail to reinforce him promptly, and with such force of numbers as will render Major Anderson's position im pregnable, he should never be suffered to cross Mason and Dixon's line in a northern direction. Let those complicated with trea son meet the fate of traitors. If South Car olina be so dear to Buchanan that the Fed eral laws cannot be enforced within her ter ritories, let him yacate his position, go thith er, and reside among her rice plantations for the remainder of his miserable existence. One universal volcanic outburst of bitter scdrn and indignation will come, should An derson and his gallant little band besacri" ficed. No name in the long line of history will stand out in such bold relief upon the record of infamy as Buchanan's. Has not Providence imposed him upon us as an espe cial curse, at this time ? B@°" Nobody doubts that if any Free States were lor a moment to assume the position now occupied by South Carolina, she would instantly be coerced into submission to tbe Federal poweT. The stigma of treason would be irrevocably fastened upon ber name— But because South Carolina deifies the in stitution of slavery, and is ruled by a few ar ristocratic leaders, she is quietly permitted, if not directly aided, to bid open defiance to tbe Federal authority. AVhut would be rank treason in tbe mud-Btills of tbe NoTth, it is treated as justifiable spirit in tbe revolution ists of tbe South. When the people of Kan sas took tbe law into tbeir own bands, to punish the murderers and robbers who in fested them, Mr. Buchanan seDt Gen. Har ney with five hundred dragoons to put down the rebellion. Btrt when the gallant Major Anderson petitioned farm for a few more men to help defend Fort Moultrie against the trai tors of South Carolina, he stubbornly relused and bas abandoned that brave officer, with a handful of men to battle single-handed wiih tbe fanatical populace of Charleston. It is strange, with these facts before them, that the patriotic people of this country as one man rejoice over the near-approaching change in the National Administaation ? No Backing Down. It is useless and lolly to expect the Re publicans to back down from the position they have taken and carried before the peos pie h the recent great national eontest.— We have done nothing to apologise for or to repent of. Our platform is the Chicago platform, and on that we stand. Nothing more, nothing less. Wo openly and fairly laid down our principles ef political action. We went forward and elected an Adminis tration to sustain them. We aecomplisbed just what we set out to do, and having accomf plished it in a loyal and legitimate way, we are not disposed to yield one inch that will require any abandonment or sacrifice of the principles we have contended for. The Charleston Arsenal occupied by the State Troops. MILITARY PREPARATIONS, CHARLESTON, Dec 30. —The South Caroli na troops took possession of the Arsenal in this city to-day, containing many thousand stand of arms and military stores. The military preperations are actively and zealously progressing. Volunteers have tendered their aid from several of the Southern States, and among them are officers of the Army and Navy, and Wect Point graduates. Capt, S. M. Morgan, of Tennessee, has of fered his services, and been accepted. WHEATLAND. —This place, celebrated for a while, as the Mecca of the "Fouth Ward crown,'/ still stands in all its beauty, on the out-skirts of Lancaster city. It was current ly reported on Friday and Saturday that James Buchanan, the owner thereof, had been corresponded with, as to the amount of money he would sell it for. The people of Lancaster seem desirous of getting rid of the 0. P. F., and wish to do so in a quiet, civil way. If he sells Wheatland, as the people wish, it will probably stand until reduced by the decay of time. The people in the vi cinity of Wheatland it is represented, do not desire to do anything rash, that will be at all likely to cause any sympathy to be made for the bache'or President.— Daily News. A Grand Sally for the Union. After consulting with nearly all the lead ing and influential men of the County, we have concluded to issue a call for a Grand Rally of the Republicans of Centre County, on Wednesday evening of the Januarj Court. The object of the meeting is to discuss, in an impartial manner, the causes which ]ed to the crisis in our national affairs, and to ascertain who is for the Union, the Constitu tion, and the enforcement of the laws. These have been imperiled by President Buchanan, bis fire-eating advisers, and leading Demo cratic Demagogues in South Carolina, and elsewhere. We invite fccnest Democrats, and every citizen of Centre County who esteem the Constitution and the Union of greater value than allegiance to any political organization, to turn out in your strength to the meeting. The meeting will be addressed by able and eloquent champions of Liberty and Uni on. Speakers from abroad are expect^ — Come one, come all. "The Union, it must and shall be presorved."— Andrew Jackson. United Sates Senator. The question of the selection of a United States Senator from Pennsylvania, to succeed AVilliam Bigler, is receiving much attention. The- large Republican majority in our State Legislature not only ensures the election of a Republican Senator, but has also had a tendency to briDg many candidates into the field. The men whose Dames have been pre sented for the office are generally good men, well fitted to adorn that high position. But of all the candidates, tb6re is one, who, by his abilities as a Statesman, by bis powers as an orator, and by bis great services to the Republican cause, stands pre-eminent. That man is David AViimot, Many are aware, while perhaps some are not aware of the vast debt which the victorious party that has just carried Pennsylvania by ninety thousand ma jority, owes to Judge Wilmot, When the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, against the prayers and remonstrances of the united North, demoralized and destroyed the Dem ocratic party, leaving tbe opponents of sla very extension without a party name or or ganization, it was through tbe wise counsels and under the calm guidance of Judge YVil mot that order was brought out of chaos, and the friends of freedom in this Congressional District—once ihe Gibralter of Democracy, as it is now of Republicanism—were orga nized and united in one harmonious party. Susquehanna county was tbe first in the State to organize a Republican party, and in the first organization Whigs and Demo crats, in about equal numbers, united, for getting old differences and animosities, and agreeing with their conjoined strength to re sist the dangerous aggressions of the Slave Power, AVhat led tbe free-soil Democrats of this region, 60 far in advance of those in other parts of the State, to Bunder old party ties, and join in the formation of the Repub® lican party? Their principles would natu rally have ultimately led tbem to it, but by the sagacious and far-seeing counsels of Da vid AViimot, they were prompted to take tha lead and form a nucleus from which has grown the powerful and triumphant Repub lican party of Pennsylvania. We believe that without the aid of Judge Wilmot we should still have had a strong Republican party in Northern Pennsylvania ; but we are firmly convinced that bis influence brought to our organization thousanus of voters that would otherwise have been to this day array ed against us, either as part of the Democrat ic party, or of a third party. Let, then, our friends in other parts of tbe State bear in mind, while they point with pride to the great Republican majorities in Northern Pennsylvania, that these are due in no small degree to the personal influence and exer tions of David Wilmot, But we would not urge any man's claims to high office merely on account of services rendered to the party, however eminent. Judge Wilmot has other and still stronger claims to consideration. His intellect is of the highest order, clear, sagacious and prac tical. We have heard the slavery question discussed by many distinguished speakers, but we never heard any who brought to the discussion of the subject so many original ideas, so many evidences of profound thought and a statesman-like consideration of the whole question, as the author of the Wilmot Proviso. Ilis knowledge of national ques tions, his eloquence as a speaker, his bold ness in advocacy of right, and his eminent services, alike point to him as the man for the hour. Pennsylvania has made some wo ful mistakes, in days past, in the selection of men to represent her in the Senate of the- United States, but by the election of David Wilmot to that position she would do herself honor and the whole country a service. Those who advocate the claims of other candidates generally seem disposed to treat Judge Wilmot fairly, acknowledging bis great services and eminent abilities ; but a few are inclined to make old party connec tions the test of merit and the basis of ad vancement under the Republican organiza tion. Such a course would be both unwise aud unfair. The Republican party derives its strength from a union of men from all the old parties. It is composed of men having a common political faith on the great questions of the day ; and what these men formerly thought, on other, or even the same questi ons, is wholly foreign to the inquiry concern ing their fitness for office. What are they now ? Are tbey Republicans—representing fairly and with the ability to represent forci bly the principles of the party? In Judge Wilmot's case, the answer must be most em phatically in the affirmative. He is recog nized throughout the Union as one of the most eminent exponents of Republicanism. Those old fogies and eleventh hour Repub licans, who have been at last borne by the ir resistible tide of publio sentiment into our ranks, ought not now to set themselves up as the only genuine representatives of Re publican principles, and undertake to control the organization which tbey bad so little to do in forming. The leaders of the Republican movement— the men who showed the ability and courage of Dayid Wilmot in the hour of doubtful conflict —are not to be displaced by the fossil leaders of a defunct organization, so soon as the victory has been won by us. The men whose leadership kept the Whig party of Pennsylvania in a minority for a quarter of a century, are not the men to step in at this time and undertake to guide the course of the Republican party. The vital principles that underlie the Republican organization must be maintained, and any attempt to change our platform to that of the old Whig party— as some of these old fogy politicians seem desirous of doing—would, if carried out, most certainly break up the Republican par ty and reduce it to a hopeless minority. To abandon or subordinate the great and vital ideas that have .entered into our late tri umph, would entirely break us up, and re store the domination of the Slave Power up on a stronger basis than ever before. The fate which has successively, and from mainly the same causes, befallen the Whig, the American, and the Democratic party, would, assuredly and quickly, bfall the Republican. It is the coincidence of our platform with the sentiment of the Northern people against slavery extension, that has given us our strength and elected a Republican Presi dent; and when we abandon that platform, the days of the Republican party will be speedily numbered. The election of Judge WILMOT to the Sen ate would have a political sigificance that could not be mistaken or misunderstood. It would be an assurance and guarantee to tbe country that Pennsylvania had taken her po sition on the great questions at issue in the late election, deliberately, and that it would be firmly maintained. With regard to the Tariff question, we are sure that no true friend of the Republican party will make the differences of the part a ground of objection to any member of tbe party, We all agree that the revenue nec essary to meet the wants of the Government shall be raised by duties upon foreign im ports. We agree in support of a Homostead bill, thus cutting off that source of revenue. We agree that protection to our manufactu ring interists and borne labir, in a proper basis of discrimination in the adjustment of a tariff. We agree that certain articles of (tea and coffee, for example,) shall be ad mitted free. Agreeing upon these points, atd having seventy or eighty millions of rev enue to raise, no serious differences can arise in adjusting the details of a tariff bill.— Judge Wilmot's letter to Mr Brown, in the Fall of 1857 was entirely satislactory to the party. It was approved and endorsed by tb® entire Republican and American press of the State. It is now to late to call in question bis soundness upon the tariff. It is ungene* rous, and betrays a spirit of selfishness, and disloyalty to the party of which we are all members, and equally deserving of confi dence and entitled to a fair field for honor able advancement. Those who, in their ea* gerness to grasp honors, thus ■ungenerously and unfairly assail a rival, by attributing to him opinions on the tariff which be does not hold, are, whether they intend it or not, striking at the integrity of the Republican party. The effort to impeach the soundness of Judge Wilmotontbe tariff, illiberal and un just, not ouly to him but to his friends in this Gibralter of the State, who deserve kin* der treatment at the hands of tbeir political brethren, who but for our constancy and fidelity would have been to-day in a hopeless minority in the State and the [Jnion. For the Democrat. Diamonds by the Wayside. When I see a great and glorious nation enjoying all the blessings of Civil, Political, and Religious Liberty, and commanding res pect on sea and land ; protecting her citi zens m every clime and country ; encour aging literature, science and art; prosperous in her commercial relations; at peace with all the world ; abounding in plenty, and fur nishing food to the starving citizens of other nations, I think she is a diamond. When I see a State brooding disunion, and endeavoring to cut herself loose from such a government, by overturning the institutions for which their fathers died, it seems to me as though the Arch Fiend who once sought to dethrone the Omnipotent, had become in carnate, and in revenge for his fall, sought to bring confusion and destruction on the country and government most highly favored aDd beloved of the Almighty, and I think she is a leather diamond. When I see a man regardless of summer's heat or winter's frosts; without sufficient food or clothing, often barefoot; destitute of arms and ammunition, suffering, fighting, bleeding, dying for his country's freedom, I say what a beautiful diamond. When I.bear a man swear to support the Constitution of his country, and see him re ceive a sacred trust from her, if he desert that trust and betray that Constitution by leaguing with disunionists, I say what an in• famous leather diamond. When 1 see a man exalted to high posi tion by the advice and assistance of friends, and find that he remembers those friends af ter they eease to be ot use to him, and en deavors to return their kindness, I say what a rare diamond. When I see one raised to position and pow er who forgets or treats with contempt old friends and tbeir services, and seeks ODly to reward the political mountebank aud charl atan, I eay what a miserable leather diamond. When I see an Editor toiling from year to year for the purpose of establishing some great political truth calculated to benefit his fellow men through all time as well as ad ding to the permanent glory of his country ; working often in poverty, discouraged by friends, misrepresented by enemies; almost dispairing of success yet never flagging or yielding for a moment until success crowns his labors or death ends the struggle, I say what a magnificent diamond. When I see a man riding into power as the representative of some grand political idea that may have cost an Editor years of unwearied, unpaid, unrewarded, unnoticed labor to establish in the public mind, and see him give the cold shoulder to the man who furnished the idea that made him fa mous, I say what a pitiful leather diamond. When I see a Statesman forgetting party animosity and local prejudice and laboring for the welfare of his whole nation, I say there is a jt? ure diamond. When 1 see the patriot and Statesman re tiring to his closet and there pleading with the Chr'stiana' God for tho welfare, perpetu ity and peace of these United States, I feel that there is no danger of theii dissolution, and I call him a star diamond. When the cry of secession is raised and the country is alarmed ; when weak knees begin to tremble, and the common talk is oi danger, I say don't be alarmed, it is but a leather diamond. When I see a man elected to an office of trust and importanoj, who faithfully dischar ges all the duties of his office to the credit and advantage of those who elected him, I say take care of that man, he is a real din mond. When I see a faithful and effisient officer allowed to retire at the expiration of his term, and bis place supplied by one not only lacking his experience but bis qualifications also, I have to say we have exchanged for a leather diamond. When I see a political party selecting its office-holders from the poor but honest men of its party, I feel that the party is honest and will be permanent, and I call it a dia mond of the icater. When I see a party hunting up the rich and aristocratic to fill their uffices, I think of corruption and oppression, and look for its speedy overthrow. It is manifestly a rotten leather diamond. When I 6ee a man subscribe for a oounty paper and promptly pay the printer for it, I think he is a sound diamond. But vi hen 1 see a man take his county pa per and neglect or refuse to pay for it, leav ing the printer to struggle with all the diffi culties and annoyance of debt, and yet ex pecting his paper to be furnished regularly and promptly, I fear that he is only a leather diamond. PEREMPTORY SALE. Knn PROMISSORY NOTES.— qpJ lOj'JUU On Tuesday, January 15th, 1861, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold without re serve, at the Pheladelphia Exchange, (Phil'a.,) two Promissory Notes, made by John Fallon, amounting to $143,500. jz=a- Sale absolute. TERMS.—Ten per cent, of the purchase money to be paid at the sale, the balance within three days from sale. M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers. No. 139