,THE MONTROSE - DEMOCRAT, IS PUBLISHED TVISDATB3 BY g. J. Gre, VritisooXL4 OFFICE O. PUBLIC AVENUE, TIIREN DOORS ABOVE SF,XI2I.E'S /Mint: trafvs.—*l;so psr annum in Anviorcit otherwise $ will be charged-4nd fifty cents per annath added to arrearav,s; at the opt Idft attic Publisher= expenec of collection, etc. AvFArits payment p . • ADrEIITISEWENti Will he itiaerted at the tate or $1 per t.znnsre, of ten lines nr.h4s, fbi the filet three 4cclur, and 25 cents for each additional tkeek—pay down. and others,. who 'advertiie by lie year; ¶ I he charzeB ht the tollowitig rotes. viz.; Por.one erniare, or - trini, one year. trith changes p Each additional ~ q t:tare, al the rate of s :fu credit given except to those of known responsibility.i B,USINI:SS CARDS. HENRY C. TYJ.ER, EALER jo Dry - Gtlllll%. Groceries, Umberllafl. Tank*, Notions. Boots and-Shoes, Shovels and Faits, tone Ware 'Wooden Wate.and Brooms. Mad olltdvi tation. Public Avenue. Montrone, Pa.; May:M:lE62.4y . • WM. HIINTTINGI mar cn BRUIT IL COOPER & C 0.,, 13 ANKERS,—MontILe, Pa. SUICCCSFOrP to PoO.Oooper ro Cu. Office, Laqmopenew building, Turnplke•st. o. a.sat'cotLux McCOLLUM 4.t . • A TTORNErk. end yinnoviinri at Law,—Montrose, Pa. OPet In L-stlifons new building, over the Ba'nk. 131.. WILLIAM. Vir.,,WiTEATO/kr, -lICLECTIC PHYSICIAN & smunos DENTIST. niril irrno.v T VIM-4 ToN, echinical and Surgical Dentist, recently of Binghamton, Y: tender their professional series to all who appr ttate the •' Reformed Practice of Physic;" carend and iraillful operations on Teeth ith the rntrst nicotine and pprov ed styles_of platework, Teeth extracted without halo and all work, warranted. • - Jackson, Jane IRO, 18M. ' -Dlt. 11. & SON, 10,1L7RGEON DENTTSTS,-111ontrose, Pc - - 11.10ftire in lAtltrop , ' new building, over AA the Rank. All Dental operations will be • 11 114' 4 . A• performed in good style and warranted. J. C. OLMSTEAD. DES.. OL MSTEAII &. READ, .• W°l--).1) ANNOUNCE to the Public that they have enteredinto'a partnerphip for the Practico of MEDICINE& Surgery, - and are prepared to attend to all calle in the line of their proferaion. thlice—the one formerly occupied by Dr. J. C. Oluartead„in DUNDAFF. my 28m. lIIIMMMI Phrician and Snrg, on. FritndFrille, Pa. utratopporite thelachon particular attention do the trentuient -1.1 of diecaece of the Eau and Eye; rend to confident that hie ktiowledD. of, and ea - nem:tux In thnt branch ofprac tice will enable loin to effect cure in the mart difficult caree. For treatina' dievaece df thcoc organs no fee will be char:zed nnlee, the patient s ie hem:fitted by theArest mein_ [Auguet. 30th, 18130. .101IN'SAurrlin, - .. • ASTIIONABL N E TATLOR.-31nntro4e, N. Shop' Fover 1. N. linßurin , (oxen, on Mnin-titreet. Thankful for part fAvoil, lie eoliciti a N crintinutuict —lt ding hinn.elf 10 do till %cork entisUctoril7. Cut- - tin,: dono on rhort notice, and st, .iirrantial to At. • Montrone, Pa,, nlv etr.. 13At.--tf. . _ • P. LIN ES, • • 7l \SINOV.\BLTi TAII-011.- , -litoninaae..Pa. Shop in tionniN oNt.r ,tore or Bead. Waitrons • Fo-ter. All NI ”r).; warrnnted. A. to tit and finial'. done on .ho r n 11011,', in bent :style: Jan Ti." GLOVES, 1 - 4 1. , is111oNABLF. TAlLOlL—Montroe, Pa. Shop llopt I=l livetinz 1i0n.... on 'Turnpike *ANN.!. All orMo, 1111,4 promptly. is first-rate strle. Cuttlini Thine an Ansi notice.:uul maminted to -AL L. B. ISIVEI.L, . ... . . E mill • clock, Watch,. and Jewelry at the R. thsOrt. Int V.co. cud on rmmonnble termp. All work narra.:tcd. Shop in Chutealnr and Jeeenlie et.,ie. ?dol.:m(1-e. l'a. -". 0e..5 tf_ M. W.' smrut a-, CO.; CmtiNET AND Cll AIR 'MANUFACTURER. B,—Foot 0f )loin an:. tf C•. 0. FoIIDILVM, *TANI:FACT" 1 800 TS d SHOES. Montrose:, `II Pa. 51...1, mer 1 .fore. All,tind, of work made to order, and repairing done pcatlya _Jef y - - - .k1;EI, TUIMELL, 6.\lClietnicale, Dye StAtT,. I :11.. s \V Ire. Varnieh. Win in,v Good, .leweley Write term, Sr lgrw 1.•r.111 tiu;nuet popular PATENT .aug ti 11. k \ - I)EN i6 r f II triS, • WID , LESALE DEALERS IN -E-zi_ra - mc...m -AND_ . I • FANCY GOODS• wm. HAYDLN. 1 r 101I\' HAYDEN, 1 . - . TRACY HAYDEN. • I NEW MILFORD, PA GEORGE RAYOEN. P. E. BHUS11; MI D., ItAti \t; Ntt‘‘ I.to7ATED Will stlend to the bales of ht. protestion prizmptir. O Rig a at a. LatbropM •. -INSURANCE COMPANY, C)1" Nervy mircoz•*s.... CASH CAPITAL. ONE MILLION DOLLARS. ASSETTS lit July' 1860, 81,451,819.27. LIABILITIES. • 068.68. T. 11111tem Smith. Sec's.. President. Aio't A. F. Wilmaitlit, Vice I , .ited :mil renewed, h. rhh undelvigaed. It kis Office. our door sib., Moottiiie. novel y BILLINGS STROUD, Arad. mu. 23 'Er mi. xi; • il AS ju4t received a large s 11 toa: or w Stoves. for 110.01, - ..in?.. Parlor. (rlice au d Shop p IMP SCE. fo t Wood or Coal. with Stole r s i tie, Zi a c....te . , , ' ' • His w.ortmeut i.eelect and det.irable. an will , be gold on the trt.l favorable tenni , for Cash. or lo Prvmpl Ai Month, Beryo... . I Sew Milford, Ost. 2...." th. 10;0., --- ---- Dano..elion - Cogee. - , - i A. Lf.E.-1 LTII I twvcrng . e. line ' mime '.); .atio Coffee lira Imtlce at> 10403 at tu 0 puttod. of o• ;ler Cam For e alc by . __.— t: Arx TURRELL. —_ TAKE NOTICE! C ash Vox- Sides Sheep Pelts: . Fox:Mink. Muskrat. and all kinds or Flats. A :dud assortment ~r Leather add Boots and Shuns constantly on timd. Office, Tunnerj, 41E Slid? on Maio Street. Montrose, Feb. 4th. A. P. A L. C. KEELER, :A few bold and reel:leas leaders bad . . planned the scheme of dissolution., At the appointed time they plunged• into the rie hellion with a desperate courage that a mazed the country. The very enormity. of the crime gaye them xiTurily. Peace able men,•suitettinded at their deeds of On provoked wroug, were fist inclined ,1,4 doubt their own senses, and next to fter thaples Of insauiay ice, behalf of tit spits : rently enraged and unilinkin " malefic tons: .. I 7•Whilstthe pereeetited fri drof the tn. ienin'the border states were threatened I'i - 11h banishment-because they would not sacrifice personal- freedom to perpesiate slavery, the Governors of South Carolina and Mississippi _were proclaiming to the people of those border slavebolding states that, without comiuttiug with us,those states had ;resolved . ,on sectesion—:-that they. would prohibit the eakoitatitio of slaves from our states to: theirs, in order to forte us to abOlisli• slaVery or to follow them in febellion: Whilst .denouncing the I Coverutnent as inimical to slaVery, and ea lopeßsoNs ad OF BrOIIsIE,SS.. PM % Wanting - cheap 1 — .- . . . . i are., tcc. vertiA:sueut or vioda T ota in another . cry frieuil of The goverumeotas an aboli column. - i ° _ .1 _ _"; _ .:,_ tiouist, they s et a adopting a-policy 'that . kpti.T.by the Ilarrol,Snek or !outfit .7 • • could-only - end in the overthrow Of slave. s.. rRRELL ry in ' the border states, whatever might I, • . Aikt ANT EP .-- L Are I . pee:able peroon of either • . reek Ice !be the issue in the contest. • • o •vtfry-nrttthborbood to sell .1. R. F,tafford r Ouvr. j T..e.. ) 00l also .1. H. Stofford".'inov AND - ISt - Lenox Pow. , To folio* themlhey-knew woulii des ... (Av.: l'ari- a tlittl. tranioaretitt id: 'ii .it‘ tbe ' troy marei:s. to o ur s t a t es , but i n that' iet I.,Tat rent,dy ktp.svo 1, iti-el.eo.or t4,L. I roe.. lance, or ]:.Jamb Al,l, t-,r rtin , llll..ri.t.. :111111. W 000pYric Comb . • struction 'the gulf states • would. receive e: , :. AI v I rOll andtitt'plinrrom.4 - I , ro otrAngthen the eye-...h.i. w had lost;, and, in the language ~ tn. ~Ift :he ,1 , -.:*.tion, !tad tnt.-!% - tne blood I bare & ..'•,,.... e ~, ,, ,,,,,,,,,z1 , ...? h t. , , , , .10 h . ~i ...z no: v xpianatione. and of Mr. Yancey, oar border states, -being 0, , ,,,,, quodred test 1111... ./,- from we:i known proud. the as a break ccul.,-,,,,,,c,,, which I will ' , end to an, one tree by hum. i scene or wars Inuit Bland .-- . J. R. ST. , I4IFORD, Chemist, ' water againit the armies of the cation, 412 Brindwyy. ti. ,T. • DAVID C. kNEY, 'lll .D., v r. , .;G heated f,ornangii . .ly • at New , Milford. Pa.. Ixrill linewl proiulvtly 10 u1T5.A113, wlth erldab be fairy be fAeorel. Orrxe New Stilford,..litly;lA% IsBl • BB L TURRELL for.. tie. M.e..-0 for Sevrlu7 Sllsebrnes. . 7 1„ e k tie fie !, Rat and Monet Poi son. liorneopat 'tie ..r rya, and'a mat ~irlay of t „ and Piaaters7and an e' idle,•< variety of Pa it-. , MEDICAL CARD. DR...E. PATRICK, & DR. E, 1-.1 GARDNER, LATE GRAIWATEIif 'TTIE MEDICALEMPATMEET OF TALE (I.l.l.EGE.,bare formed • 03.Partgerib r S for the mac t ire of 'Medicine and Surgery.and are preps to attend t-i all faithfully -and punanally. that, mny ho irant,tcd to their mare, On terms opmnuMattrate Frith the tone- Dienaz-, tud deformitlea of the EYE. rllrgiCla opera ttotii. Mid all sur=ir.rtl dieeaf-tni. particularly attended to. Urll . - 0 , e over ehlie More. Office hours from Ba. 'm.toft p. . All vort. of eoulitry pryduce . thkenla Pay. nient. at the Inglo,t value. and CAI.I.I•TiLIt JULTIMILD.. Montroae, , . - lat 4- 1. • , . . . . . f ; . . • ' i • . . [ • • • - , • . . . . . . ‘• ' .. 4 • . . -. . . .. • .. •••'i , . . . . -.. -. 1 4, . .. • i . 1 - ' ' ''' ' ''' , I -,.. . . A ...... .. _: . . E _ . . . . .... _ ~. . . _ .. . . .. ~.. . . .. , ..........,. . ..... :_.,. _ . u.. ~ ...,.. ~. . IR \ :.. , •.- ..,, ~. . . ~ I. ... • . 1....••. ...._. ......,11,. , ,It• ._ T. r, j •\r . , , . 'l, , , . 1 . J'• • i r . . 1 Ourselves _to no Party thel tikes' not_ Carry the Flag and- keep • Stisp,lto - trot i 9. lITLACTB bas s) liß HON. JOHN HAMMIIHEION. 4t Hamad, Mo., on as 20th of 'disgust, 1882, &efore a Mass Meeting of Us Oa. sells_Of Marion and Rolls Counties. _ . Faxs.ow 'Cain:ars: When I left the State, di months ago, I had good reason to believe that before. this time would have returned to the people or firs! epuri.. The •queition of peace was then, and is now in their hands. I thought they hid seen enough of-war. I.suppased that its bloody cruelties had antheiently_shock ed the humanity of good risen, and had Well nigh sated the malice of the wit, ' . Even until wvery recent period, err thing indicated a speedy return to law, and order—a period' when the farmer and mechanic could t esume the - work, of en iiching the stele, and providing the means of 'individual comforthen 'private wrongs could again be . .redressed 4 the courts•of the Coning, and martial law.be driven from otilborders. I returned to find this hope an illusion.. Bands of lawless men once more roam the State, and a new reign of terror, even worse than the former, is being inaugura ted. Those who were sworn to keep the peace have forfeited their work of treason. Those who had executed bonds fot good behaviour haVe suddenly plunged into the Wildest excesses of guerilla warfare.— Those who were pledged, in honor and gratitude, to abide by the expressed will of the ,people of , .the State, have broken their *plighted faith, and seem resolved upon a war of extermination. I ask the cause of this, and no rational answer is given. Subsequent events have even de monstrated the. falsehood of the original pretext for the rebellion itself, and cer tainly no excuse can now be urged to jus tify this heartless invasion upon the peace and repoie of an exhausted people, whose cup of misery Was already full. Is it to vindicate . the injured, sovereignty of the State, and establish in- Missouri the Con federate interpretation of 'State Rights?! Missouri has solemnly decided, by. a Con vention of her people, to remain - in the Union of our fathers, and therefore every principle of this political heresy itself, as understood by the disonioutsis of the present day,.demands an acquiescence in that decision. Is it to secure-any materi al interest of which our people have been divested by the Federal Government ? No - loyal man dare point to an act of op pression by that fovenimeut. The disloy al themselves I ve, so far, claimed and .reeeived its, tection. Whilst waging 1 vo c al war for its over 'row, and aiding its ene- I m i ca in the work of rebellion, th - eirprop-1 ertyhas , been secure, and ieir ilunllics I have been guarded' by the Federal &mail, Not one man has yet suffered the penalty ; of treason. Not a single rebel yet alp- 1 tared, with hands reddened by the. blood II of his country, has failed ,to receive un-,' ,merited-pardon, upon the simple pledgel; to do that which honor, gratitude, man- I I hood, his own happiness, and the good ofl mankind, equally deniand at his hands: Is it to change oureptire system of g0y..., eminent, building upon its ruins the Con,' federate idea that labor must be owned by, capital P If so; an outraged people, whose rights are at stake, should awake from, 1 their 14thargy, and renew their faith td 1 the principles of republican liberz: Is it' to build-petty •kingdoms or republicsfrim the discifrr i dant elements of the old Union; 1 in order that new places of power and j trust may be provided for clamorous dem; I agogues, whose cot rtitnions have forfeited the confidence of an upright people? :Neil ther the gratification of party - malice, noti• the success of personal ambition, will ever compensate for the burdens and conflicts of sepal ate nationsor , for the contempt of the civilized would. Two years ago it seemed that our syiL tern of government had become a suirei4„ 1 its perinanencY a fact accomplished:' 'Mir most sanguine hopes of its founders tirere , being more than lealiied. The friends of I civil and religious liberty throughout the world could point-with p ode and satisfac tion to the United States as an evidence of prevailing public viroe, and the cap- , city of man for ,elf-goveinment. But _while, at that time. the past and the pres-1 ent coe.dned to give promise . - of a yet more brilliant ilitu e, a I). esidential elec tion was seizedupon as a pretext of don- ger to krecognixed institution. of some of the ' States, and _an excuse for the meat causeless rebellion orwhich history speata. And, as if the clime of treason.wete itself too.tarrie to satisty'the guilty wretches resolved on _their countey's ruin, they' first aided in accomplishing the work they de-' nonnced,as a just cause for dissolving the Union. D..W. 11141113, .J. L. READ DVJ'VERED BY MONTROSE, i*,ITtrESDAY, SEPT. 16, 1862. T I " • atfiered for the pr e se rva ti on o f • • They supposed that, by the tunedialoY silty in the border' slave stateN aided and waited by the armies the cotton eon- , federacY, had been subdued, , , the public . debt would' live swelled to Such alarm ing. proportions as to come the imknowl ,dgement of, the gulf states rathe.r. than incur ; the risk Of financial ruin. They fondly hoped that England.and France; suffering or , the want of cotton, would lend their aid toward the accompliShment of their separate,existence In th is event, theylvould have succeeded in accoMplish- Mg' all they bad ever desireit---i •confed eracy if seven or eight states, having a Monopoly of the cotton etiltiare, with Slavery acknowledged as the.corner-stone 1 Of their -government, and slave labor for the production of this monopoly. ,Them states they hoped would be left unscathed by the fire of war, and .defended . bl the border fortifications. The only burden resulting to them from the revolution,' they supposed, would be - a largepoblie debt, which could soon bedischargedloy the exactions upon American commerce passing from the rich valleys . of the Ohio and Mississippi; They thus would cora niand'the mouths of our great navigable streams, the Southern Atlantic and the gulf of Mexico, They rearded di their 'gulf confederacy, (and 1' am 'inclined, to think they were correct in their opinions,) 'as the most eligibly located on the face of theearth for the purposes designed— the establishment of a small, compact na tion of aristocrats,With slaves to labor for themr a world dependent upon them for Cotton, and their coffers filled with treas ure. wrung from the labor of teeming, mil lions located in the valleys of the great 'West. 1 . Infatuated by these gilded dreains, that promised greatness without merit,; wealth without labor,' and security withwit pow er, they refused to be conciliated. ' They listened to no words of reabon, and offer ed' no arguments except denunciallinis, followed' by the terrors of the mob, But his idle to speculate upon the past —the present, possessing more than we can properly master, is to be dealt In . the earlier days of this rebellion, a somewhat noted politician of South Caro line-made the boast, that should the revo lution fail to secure .the separation of the South, they could . at least "throw their arms around the pillars of the Constitu tien and involve all in . one common ruin." With prudeneelind determination on our part, I cannot suppose that tlie re bellion will succeed iu disruptiug the Un ion. It becomes, in, the next place, im portantto inquire bow the'warl can be most speedily terminated, and our people secured swami. the loss of comitutional liberty and the 'bin:delis of a vast panne debt- inother words, how the ruin, pre dicted may be best avoided. And. while we in .Missouri most, do our part in up holding the government and protecting the interest ot . loyal men in every part of the nation, true patriotism does not ex. elude from consideration the local•weliare of on- own state. We, above all people have -suffered from this war. We are" doomed to suffer yet. more, unless we at once assume an attitude towards" this s@- hellion that places u,s fur beyond . the hopes of treason. 'fhb division among our own citizens in Missouri is the source of our increased ca lamitinc., and those cilamities l cannot cease mail the cause is removed. ( We ewe alle g iance'to a good government; to creak that allegiance was a crime against God. and man. With-Abe curse of that crime upon 'us, we (=not expect peace. ,Even. yet "the way of the transgressor is herd." Even yet from the sin Of a t'ew, many auffer, Let all return to their elle ' giance. Let us, by sonieunmistakable dec laration, make known unto all then that Missouri cannot, be shaken . in her attach ment to the Federal' Government—that she is ready to sacrifice everything for the preservation of the triiion,aiid confederate invasions will shrink back from her soil; the guerilla bands that now infest her bor ders will go hence, never to return: So soon as. the masses arise, shake' off their lethargy, and speak that word Of deter mination, the clash of arms %011ie beard' no more. Let them speak --peace, and. peace follows as light lcillowed.the Al-. mighty fiat at the dawn of creation. Cha os, like that of barber ism; will anddeifi take the.foim ou r& will be the itella- Airm of peacef 'Previous to When .the long rolls nafon for ijier :ceased to be a .con 'rider, es we of wrietY of compromise the sake of peace. the dread altereAt... the - door aga . tnit amicable adjustment. and appeal to the sword for that which jus tice old never yield: The day .of 'con lion is past. Treason, defiant, nation refuses, ens; and the 'fights Or its own existence. The Government it required to relinqiiish its authority and übmit tie the. dismemberment ot its ierri pry, as a condition of peace on. the part 4 ot those wholiave grown insolent in the 'enjoy , meat of its blessings. - , Disuniiin is the rise qua nos of• rebellion, and ' , treason would at present reject a joint ! cominir, *ion for fixing the boundaries of its em- Tire: National existence is the synonym .of national integrity., The path to peaceleads through succvssfill war; and war to be succelefut•must, be,waged With renew. .ed real—kith a determination to seize up. on every eiementof power—upon every weapon to be found in, the arsenals of civ; Hired wsrfsre. Let the context be terrible, '1 short and decisive. The anaconda system of surrounding and crushing thti,.rebellion without seriously Wining the rebels,- `should at once be abandoned. Onr armies should be massed and* Marched at once into the heart .of the seceded States.— Their armies should be pursued- and at. tacked by overwhelming numbers. Our . forces should be subsi s ted; upon the enc._ my.. Their-property of every description should be eubjeeted to our wants. It: shoiild not be wantonly wasted,nor should "women and children be reduced to beg gary. - Cootributioas should bolevied by prudent ~d, . ~ ,• co . ~. 0 . s' .t rebellion . a •-,feel the burdens of ~war,., ivithoueLaii; ' 'rig distreasimiOng the ie- Docent. .Whi tktli e mejesty of the Gov ernnielit ti. beinvindleated in the light and spirit tif. niodeqi civilization, justice iodlitimilitity Wee detriand that this yid dication should be at th l / 4 14 expense of its enemies. 't is meet, not, only, that they be punished, but that othe in the future be deteried against the ' mmission of similar offences. Soldiers! should not be to loose to 03.,,t ravage ' and, plunder the _ count - , nor should petty of be permitted levy or adjust the. contributions. No pa, of the military authority should be permitte k d to pass npon the guilt or_ innocence o f T persons in the enemy's country with a view of depriving them of 'property as a punishment for treason. The power ,of forfeiture and confiscation, when it, exists at all, belong to the courts, and can only' be ekercised• when guilt has become man- ifest according to the forms of the law, But the 'admitted rules of civilized, war-• fare, n; well as the approved principles of natural justice, sanction the taking of sifch property ae mayJbe necessary for the sub sistence, transportation and comfort of the army. This should be done Under careful guarded orders of the commanding officers,-so l that general distress to private individuala be avoided, promiscuous plunder prevented, and the ' rigid disci pline of the army preserved. It the prop erty of a leyal man should thus be taken the Government will see him paid for the !lass. If the slave of a loyal owner Should be used in;the construction of fortifica- Lions or other necessary labor connected with the operations of the army,- such owners will be certainly Compensated by a Government, against which no peaca ble citizen has ever come w ilh a well founded charge of injustice. If the property of rebels shall be :taken the Government is under no, obligation for immediate paynien't. It rosy at least be delayed until the war shall be. closed and their hands be washed of innocent blood. jr their slaves shall be taken and used as prescribed by the law, when the war shall be ended I shall be the last to advise a careful 'search for rebel masters, who have Oestroyed my .property and en dangered my life; in order to restore to -them a right forfeited by their • ireason. ! There his been an tinfortuslate of Sentiment among loyal iuen at the ses sion of Congress which has just adjourned. The negrokriestion which' should now be ; consi ,, ned to the "tomb of the Capulets,", 4 - -• still lives td distract, the councils of the country. !Is it not sufficient that its agi tation hits4dready burdened our people, North and South with a public debt 'esi eeed;ug itt °mow. , "„.e value of all the states in toe- nation r 1,... :. ~-•---- e ,i• that the Unfortunate controversies . con nected with the freedom or slavery of a few negrees should-have thus endangered the frerdom . of millions of whites, and threatened the overthrow of couStitation ol governinent ? Is it not enough that it should have kindled .t. blaze of 'wars that threatens ito eonsume every_ material in terest, and destroy everymoral sentiment of our peeple ? - . _ In this period of danger and distress ' I for one, though a partismr in days that are past When all parties were friends of the Goveronient, feel inclined to forego party, until it were certain that'a govern ment were left to administer. 'I was ready to acceptthefollowing patriotic• senti ment of the illustrions-Douglai ; the rich est legacy bequeathed by him to his polit caLfriends : - " The conspiracy to break up the Union is a faet now known to all. Armies are beins , raised and - war 1 - ied to accomplish it. There can be- ut two 'sides to the controversy. 'very man must be on the side of the tilted States or. against it. There be no 1 neutrals in this war. Ther un be 'none but patriots and traitors.' There have , not been that cordiality .nd good feeling ie lin Congress, or amon the people, width are needed to acco • plish.great ends, and• without which 91 - horrors -of this wig have jot beg n. Some bare relied too Imuch owpaper bulletins, on legislative co nfisct' a nivisahni'd:t th es e empty threats bay proclamations ft. o hay one and can do - nothing towards s,. pressinirebellion, they have been im-• t ~roperly, permitted, •by our border tatefeiends, to cool their zeal in behalf of the Union.. . This rebellion, now strong 'and 'defiant, must he crushed, or its legions will March upon t he loyal State and dictate terms of capittilation to LVielli y-tltree millions Of American freemen. Our armies! are divi- I tied, smite in Virginia, some in worth Carolirci,-some in Smith Carolina, some lat Near; Orleans,whilst; others are scatter toted. aleng , tlie Itlemphis and Charlekon Itlfroad in Teutiessee and Alabatna. 7 — The dii'tatice between the divisitins is too great to,..admit of 'assistance in . case lof assault. , , Fellow - citizens , the great want, of the eepntry is men. This-is a g?vernment of the .people. Withoet their sustaining 1 voice the novernmeut ;ads. By them it. Was made, by them alone - can it be Upheld , in this hourrof petil. For three quarters of a c.entitiy, our citizens sheltered by its flan, a Protected bylts beneficent laws;' have baked in the sunshine of piosperity And amlumulated fabulous sums of wealth.. The rich and the poor have alike been. the . •objectslof its care: Weed in -- the lam: gnage of one ()film leaders of the rebel,- "ion,.utiered before he had been borne down l4y the - storm orniadnesithat over-. whelmed the Sctuth, "one of the evils that beSet us 184 surfeit of libeffy, an ex uberance of the priceless blessings thr which 'we are ungrateful." . That govern ment Ow demands your ..serviet: 'in. the field.. L ''ott already owe it a debt of grat itude,Which your service in the.suppress ion of rehellion will pot' repay. Then,to reuapittilate,theso ti titbit are self= evident : -.- - Ist We are iu the midst of a;fliir that threatens to continue until rebelltim shall be cruShed Gyforce, or thernion shall be' destroyed. Conciliation is out of the Ines- Lion. 1 ' 2d. That rebellion, against our wishes, was inaugurated by *band of selfish :con epir4orrs, who have but. little sympathy with the republican ideas he at the foundation - of oaf overnnient. •_ , • 3d. The - long cenfintiatiOn' of this war upion the soil of Missouri linusLinevitablr end in the destruction of i every . material interest in the State. I sth. The , destrtiction l:of the Union, thOugh it may bring temporary Peace, will Olive the beginning of endltifili wars, in which Missouri, f m her geographical. I s position must alwa a be the greatesf.auf erer. • • .' • j , sth. Ittbe Unlo is tei be 'restored, .it math be speedily i tored, or tinivrsal ' - bankruptcy will bit -felt 'throughout l the , nation; g souri. - •„. 1 , I• . i • O i l 11111 11, ! , ~' IS It on iS t a :::real be Sen feit tim in idis. )r-is. n last Monda evening , while the ' Re Mr. Rees, w addressing the Meet ing i rout of they ourt House, - a Tele graphic. despatch rought the news of the Letting out of en. M ; ellan ' .for treason.— The Rev. esker not:iced the -. intelli gence to the audience, lid:keret/pm I the \ whole crew o tai-at.homepatriots,store box warriors, troa-sm eller* andt i aboli tionists of all colo ' - broke forth in *per- i feet yell' otioy. As - ... las this disgrace ful demonstration ilia. subsided, so that the speaker could he - ; " rd, he declared to the Meeting his l ; utter isbelief of, the •\ despatch,. He said he did o f believe and would not believethat Geol . . e B. McClel. an, was a traitor to his countt to 'God and to humanity, final he had t most in disputable evidence of-the fact. The 'very next horning the vile 'slan der was contradicted, and now George B. )IcClellan; instead of being arrested as a traitor, is foonioted to tie command of the army of Virginia,nett in rank to Gen. Halleck. , The foregoing Lcident, coming unex pectedly as it did,' developed the real feel ings and sentime n ts of some of our super loyal citizens, wb would not like to see their names figuring in the hit of those who raised that ehsgraceful shout, and yet who, in their hearts, wish that, McClellan would prove a traitor. During the whole evening, after the receipt of the above despatch, one cotild hear in every quarter the' knowingones" raying :I' told' you so,"" I knew it,' o 4 knew all \ the time he was a traitor,' "It must come- out," 1 • &e &e. This elass.zeemed to \be more ..iefifirt l / 4 1. with the ideathat McClellan had proved- traitor to the'dountrY, than they would have been bad he achieved a-great victory over the-rebels of the South. Are such men loyal? I Do such men desire the i success of our - artns? Among - the 'most jubilant on the ocasion - wias an editor of 1 :he abOlition paper of this borongb; 31;46 l has made himself notorious for his abuse.. lof Gen. McClella i. i .' I - . -- Wi r '' Oi;r..,i. _ —1.... r. " ....._.•... f, , ... La. liitell;gencer, ass fair illnstration of the abolition-toil sprit in other places. - .... -THE RAD I CAL CAL DOCTRINE. 1 The republican organ at. Washington havin. , declared that "the larce,df t estor- I ing the old Unioi is played ou the New, • Haven Palladian, another abolition-re ' piiblican journa , follow: suit _with the folhiwing decla li on : . 4 This is no itiger isvar - to restore the Union as it was is-a war to make the Union -what it .1 ever was,, but what it ought to be.' . 1 . l' - I • ' By what . utl Prity '., does this abOlition paper the: proclaim t 4 Object of ihe war?. Certain not by the 4400 - city of the goy ernin t,-for the •Pifitident's last letter distinctly stated that ' bps primary object is 1)..e( Constitution. • he writer the U ion as it was- under . the 1 r _ save of the above; I and the o th ers f the radical school who . daily give utteijance tot similar language, I are but expressing their own wishes. But 1 the language i ti none the less-significant I because :it bhows that their late •profes/ I sions of devotior to the , Union of '6.7 was 1 insincere, and „hat' they are impelled in , I their support-of the war by the hope that . it - wilt lead to the accomplishment of their own partizan Signs. llf these men were to become-satisfied to-Morrow that in no event would eniancipation - resultLfrom the war, they would be fond opposing - it and the administration with all that- yebe-w -epee with -which they liaye always oppes= ed all policies vilhich dokiot'chime in with their idea, andfall adniiniierationS which would not . bend to- their dictation and will. They are loyal .1)• abolitionism, but to , no: thing else on earth. ,i - 'i • - • 1 I Stand . . • the Constitution. 1 If the peopl • stand last upon the rock of the Coustitaion, the country is sale.— The waves of itpulareemmotton can nev er overth. ow while we stand there firm ly. Light-De ni ed men may get confused 1 with the nois e f •the waters foaming Mad ly abent--and umble4verboard. The ve- - nal 'and earru may be lured by the rain bow lights tha fl ash uPon the spray of the turbulent sea rouedHand be lost. The. wrecker flame or rocky shorestaay tempt i i the credulous o steer for dangerous . ports in their anxiet " to escaPe the daugers ind duties of the our. But those who Shall cling to the'nation's great law of peace' and liberty, shall alone] be finally.recorded ; 1 • as thetrusty Mariners Who saved the ship in its perilir , ,..:l .- . '. 1: Stand ctst then by the Constitution ! It is God himself who commands it! It is a holy - anti religidas duty. It is a,duty we owe to unborn generations of our own land—to the oppressed millions of other lauds. Stand by .the,party . which makes tha Constitution its platform—by the men who revere it as saoqed and perpetual law. Let that instrument be the pillar oflire to i guide our wandeiingl feet , through this davkitess. Let its altered provisiOns bright. [ en our pathway to unity; Union and per . petual liberty and peace. :Refuse - to do this endear own bayonets beconie blunt ed before .used ; the ears of the eiviliied world will be deaf to one appeals; 'doubt and danger will , daily I thicken upon our pith; the arms of our enemies will be nerved to aterner resistance, and we shall became a divitled `people and - a terror to nobody but ourielves,,ifitteaukie Net& WSwarms ofpoliticians are in Wash ingwil after appo intments under he new tax law. • • i the Music of the. Whole ' tfinion. Indlanahidar est Thitioiton. The following interesting emimunica tion is from a correspondent of the Lon don Monica! New : . • Ainongsfthevarions proposed substi tutes-for cotton, theici is one , which has not its yet attracted the attended of scien tific men—the Indian madar. Plant. It is, nevertheless, admirably adaisted for thispurpose, as both the fiber,, the floss and juice can be employed for commercial purposes. In the year 1854:11e poisoners of the Shalipare %Native Goal„ i Beffgdii were employed in making, mats add cloth from this plant, under the auspices of an officier who took great interest in! the sci-, entifie resource" of India. s • . The madar is a wild jungle plant,which prows to' a considerable bight, fibunshing in almost any soil. Its leaves are ovate, , and_ very • thick, tsomewhat resembling those of the Isurel. l The juice could be - 1 used instead of guile percha; over which it pOssessesa*considerable advantage, as the madar Plant retains its vitality after being repeatedly. cut down to obtain 'the fluid. Moreover, the great abundance of . the madar compared with the rareness . of the gutta percha tree would tend to aug ment the value of the madar juice. This fluid is at first/ milk white, but changes,on . exposure, to:the sun and air, to 'a dull brown, like india rubber. It calild be aps plied to every commercial use hitherto ob tained for gutta perclus. i - -To premed : As regards the use in which it could be substituted for cotton; if the stalks be soaked either in 'water or still better, in ,weak alkaline! lye, -the fibers separate and can be carded like flax 'by the ordinary 'process. ,The natives simply separate the fibers with their teeth. These filaments are pale yelloWish, like fief.; They are very strong, as the na tivei of India use them for fishing linesin place of catgut. • - 4.1 Even supposing the application of :the madar to be but partial, its cultivation, together with that of the -cotton., plant, might be carried on with greet adven t Cage..So far for the fiber. The floss of the madar strongly resembles elision' silk, being yellow covered, and very soft. It can be spun in a manner 'exactly similar to silk, to which it is scarcely . inferior in quality. I have also a small/ Portion Of the cloth of the madar fiber Made , in the native goal at Shalipore f/ 13engsl Presiden by.- From it I inn inclined to. !judge fa vorably of the probable quality of the cloth, tf manufactured With great care.— Moreover, beside the cloth .mado 'from the fibers of the floss separately,f al very fabric/could - be formed isti both, mixed; the/Wool:being made of the ' floss. In this fdrinperhaps, the nridar ' plant :would/be most useful, as the floss contrib. Iste)i/softness, and the fiber st.fength - and tlrgiTeresi t YriVrgentiß a fit4h, l 7 'be happy to enlarge on thein t with ally further information in !my possession, or to show specimens to any genf i leman who might take an interest in the 'matter, Or wish to investigate the subject , more fully. _ • Extracts for s en. • , Give a young man a taste Or reading, and in that single disposition; you_ have furnished him with a great I safeguard. He has found at home that which others have to seek abroad, namely, pleasurable excitement, He has learned to think even when his book is no longer . iii his hand, and it is for want of thinking tbst youtli g,o to ruin. ; • C,ame of those who have been most eni- Ment in learning and science made their first...attainments in snatches o time stol en-from manual employment.i ans Sachs, i. the poet of the Reformation,. and the Burns of Germany, began bfe as did Burns, a poor boy ;he was a lailor's sen• and served an apprenticeship j riit to a .shoemaker and afterwaid to 1 a weaver, and continued - to_work at the loom ' as long as he lived.- The. great -dramatist, Ben Johnson,was a workinglbricklayCr, and a ft erwar a soldier. limmus, -the father of modem botany, was once on the shoemaker's bench. Our immortal Franklin; it need scarcely be said was a primer. Herschel, ',whose name is ~i n scribed on the heavens,-was the son of a poor musician, and - A the age icif fourteen years was placed is a • ,band attached to the. Hanoverian guards. After going to England he undertook_ to teach music and then became an organist.i , But while he was supporting himself in this way be was leaning Italtan,latin and even Greek. in Fra musiche was naturally led to math ematics, prid.thence to optics and astron omy.' Jobn DollOnd, thOnventor of- the - archromatie - 'telescope, /s pent his - early years at the silk - loom ; and dootinued. in his originixtbnainess even for !some years 'after his eldest son came to an age to join. him iult. -Few cases are more celebra ted than that of Gifford, the founder and . editor of the Quarterly Revues. He' :was an orphan, and barely escaped the poor house. He became* ship !'boy of the moss menial sort on board of a coasting vessel. He was afterward for six years apprentice 'to a shoemaker. lb; this last empheyment he stole time from the last for arithmetic and algebra, and for lack of other conveniences, used to-work Out his Problems on leather witk al blunt awl. Few names are more noted in modern lit erature. • .. Efr Iron. F. W. Hughes, Chairman of the Democratic State Central Commit-. tee, a few days ago .submitted the • Ad, dress of the Committee published lately, to the judgment of Secretary Seward, de siring the opinion of that functionary as to its loyalty. Whilst we lonia not have retvimmended such a ()oath, (Believing this to be a free country)yeti we are glad to find that Mr. Seward bas 'not dared • to endorse the spiritof those , villainous sheets which have denounced the' Address as disloyal. end treasonable: r i Mr. Sewerd thus endorses the patriotism of the Ad dress : _ "I have read the doounients thus sub mitted to me,"with a high respect for the authnrity. by *filch they Were mimed; and with a full confidence in did* sincerity of the devotion to the Unioni Which, as their author, youlave &Vowed." 1 . • JOB PRINTING of ALL KINDS,' 12 EM C) °1" NEATLY AND PROMPTLY, AND AT "LIVE AND LET LIVE " PRICES. Tint °flee of the Montiose Democrat has recently been supplied with a new and choice varlet ottiw, etc., and we are now prepared to print pamphlets !elm - lats,, etc., etc., ffi the best style, on shortnotice. 7 Handbills, 'Posters, Programmes; and otter kinds of work in this linei ‘ done taco:ding to order Business, Wedding, and Ball CAJW3 Tteketi,ete., whited with neatness and despatch. Justices' and Constables' Blanks, Not es Deeds; and ill other Blinks, on bind, or printed tr..•ree 3, 4 7. gar Job' work and Dlanke,to lie paid for or deliver y. ' Portraits are some evidence,'of popular ity. The calumny and detraction wl•icli have been pitilessly heaped upon.Gen.Me- . Cle!lap, seem to have had no efrert ... on the exhibitiort and sale of his pottniits - where. • Full-face, three quarters side views, on horse back - and oh foot,. forming squadrons in the line of battle, and stand front of his'domestie head-quarter, with 'wife In the doorway and baby at the window, at his - weekday work and at-di vine service on the Sabbath, all ,these va- . rieties of portraits and many ourers, keep their Conspicuous place in the print-shop windows, and in the mixed photographic assortment of the street-stalls. The "coun terfeit presentments " of other Generals,. who are 'always much be-piaised while McClellan is abused, may be..looked fdr in vain ; while he is always there occupying the post Of honor next .to Scott, or. in the centre of a group of other pictured heroes. It is a fact that People still have a faith In'sMajor-General GetStge which no amount of mere . slander can shake. When the proof.. shall 'be made that he is unworthy of -their confidence, his portrait will cease to confront, us at every turn. Until then the people Will look with hope and trust oil that calm de terminhd, face. Nor will they construe the:noble•Silence of the original into any thing but a just contetlapt 'for the petty •revilings of political envy and hate. r - M' The Cincinnati mmereial Rriptt ikon", of Thursday week dmifs • and says • "that ultra anti -slavery 'en in Congress 'have during the se sion of that body, . damaged the Union use by the unseem ly urgency of part' n measures? ocrats want men- elected . to. Congress •whicwill not datnage the Union caue.— Let the people see dila their representa, fives are not of the kind mentioned_ by the Commercial. :DONE AT TUE OFFICE OF VIE Biceiellaikis Igor traiti. • 41111. ` SILENT AVI'ROVAL.-The - Rep üblican paperri have not a word to say in. rebuke of the ahOlitionist who declares that "Loj•- ,alty to • this 'GoVerninent is treason G(41." " A felloW feeling makes us 401i drous kind." .' _ . . _ STRANGE, BUT TRUE. - Capt. Klotz, of Clarion, cane to tills city yesterday with a company from clarion connty,eompose.l. of ninety-seven men, eve' y One of whom is a - DenioOrat.—lfarrisburg pr.. : ' . ,ItOnor to George , McOlellan: - When a•c*organized army was: to ho. formed intaa vast body of invincilAes, itf ter-Greeley's experiment of " on .fo . Rich mond" hail ben %led anfl..failell=S;(ll. McClellan was titanlor th - e stupen4u9 work. When Richmond was to be ,besieged, 11,m .r-A Merl w. "cilrrt '. • important work. - • qs When Gen. Pope got into n . "tight plitee," Gen. 31eCtullitti's . veterans NS!ere the men to extricate him. When Wa,h ingion is again threatened, in eMrierpience platis being interferNl iti ill!: General 31ctiellan, • not wit - lc:talkling the 6 presence of General Halleek in \\'a-liing- . *ton, is called. to the derence:of onr Na-' capitol. - • - - Honor 1;i) General McClellan - 'Seeing your candidate for Presiden t is generally .considered a special ptiVilege --:for the,plebelan - -; but how about this ? One of the soldiers of a Maine- re!riment, -who was in the . battlerof Baton Rom e, stated, afterthefighti - that he-,had the pleasure_ofievellinqhis musket at the man W who_had been his favoritecandidate for the Presidency. He was only too far off, the soldier added, to appreciate the full force of the compliment., tirThe Rev. Mr. Childs, in a Wai• r speech made in Springfield,' Ohio, on the evenhig of the 19th ult., said . : "The wait who desires to have the Union as it wa,., , ought to be )tonged-.up hy the heels until, he 4e dead, dead, - dead ! and the• wolves Und.ravens ought to-eat the flesh from his carcass.". Rev. Mr. Childs is a _pious black republican. _ /WA frend ofours, who had tl - pride • for several years in cultivating '! a full crop of hair-on his face, was called - - 'away from home - on . business somplime since. While absent, an inexperienced barber spoiled-his -whiskers in trimming . , them which so chagrined , him• that he •, directed the - barber to make a clean job of -it by shaving whiskers and mustache both off. The barber obeyed, and our freind's face was as Smooth- and as delicate as when- in histechs. _He returned home in the night. Next morning his little girl, did' dot recognize huh on . waking' p. lug over her - mother, and seeing asslie, Supposed u stranger in. the bed, -she re marked' in herchildish simplicity, tir, your out ofbere tell my pa when lie (mites. komr."4illsbery - Post: MY — Beecher - says - "the devil does riot. tap. us Lwise alike, If yesterday he came 411 , ough vanity, to day . he will conic through - pride. lf to day .116 come on ono bide to morrow he will come - on anthher. And We are always watching at the hole . it, cadre in list, while he is Miming im . at - Anoclier. We-are guarding an etmay.hole, while-he .is digging a. new: one.'? • - W"Well, what next?"- s'ahl Mrs. Part ington, as she interrupted Ike, who was reading the war news—"the picket were driven in -five' miles ? Bless my poor soul; but that will make it strong • ftinee. I suppose they . bad to be driven. in deep to keep the seeessionaders .from digging out under them." fg'By a recent marriage, the mother became the sister, and the grinohnother the mother of the bride, and the sister the mother Of the bridegroetn. ,flow. did this happen?. • - Ido not say that Jones would steal," remarked Mr. °lino !. But Ido say, that if I was. a turkey and ha was around, I should roost hiiil!" >itgr! I. that a lightning bug in the street?" asked a very, short-sighted old lady: 4 No grandma," said t pert little Miss, "it is a - BIG spa with a cigar. •